Nickofthewoods
WKR
Recently I came across a fishing "influencer" type on YouTube who has some sort of sweepstakes for his subscribers in which they win a day of fishing with him on public waters. This youtuber has well over 10k subscribers but is probably still considered a small player in the outdoor space. Nevertheless, according to various sources that still qualifies for Youtube adsense revenue in the range of anywhere between $500-$1500/month (from what info I could loosely find online). Not a terrible side hustle if accurate. However, when I looked up the entities with special use permits for the particular water they were fishing I could not find this person's name or the name of their YouTube channel so unless they operate under a totally different name I don't think they are allowed to guide there. So this is a roundabout way for people to become guides/outfitters without having to apply for outfitting permits? And unlike traditional Outfitters who must apply for permitting of specific areas these people can literally go anywhere and do this type of thing. If they are making money from SM by advertising "free" trips on that SM platform and then posting videos of that trip which in turn gets them more viewers subscriptions and ultimately more money, how is this not illegally guiding when on public lands? Just because no money directly changes hands? Also, they use different verbage other than "guided" in their ads such as "win a day on the water with us" but we all know what's really happening.