Dudes a state ecologist, but yeah no one would care what he would have to say.If it was for his social media icon of a brother nobody would give two shits what he says..
And more of a #conservationist than 99% of the instabros.Dudes a state ecologist, but yeah no one would care what he would have to say.
what grabs me and a lot of other people is MR's honesty and the balls to call a spade a spade. no one else is saying what he's saying, and broadcasting it to as many hunters as possible. i couldn't care less that his brother is famous.If it was for his social media icon of a brother nobody would give two shits what he says..
“Elites” a stretch, but we can take it.Careful calling out the Rokslide elite they don't take it well
Unofficial guide to determining whether you're a hunter/influencer-bro or a crusty curmudgeon traditionalist:
Topic Bro Traditionalist RiflesAnything chambered in a caliber invented within the last 12 months will do...as long as it has a 25X scope with adjustable turrets Any caliber invented after 1906 is just another new fad Electronic devices in the field GPS with continuous tracking is essential gear...for accurately reporting to your followers the precise mileage & elevation gain of those BRUTAL hikes Can't spell GPS..."been fearsome confused for a month or two, but I ain't never been lost!" Chest rigs Essential gear...bino pouch + GPS pouch + RF pouch at a minimum No go...can't obscure that majestic mane of chest hair poking out of my half-buttoned mackinaw Baseball caps Flat brim...probably worn over the ears Want 'em like my woman...with a good amount of curvature Photos with dead animals Long-arm grip & grin from multiple angles, painstakingly select the shot that best represents "the brand" & post to every platform known to man Single Polaroid (maybe), goes into a photo album that no one is allowed to open Ethical limit on number of animals taken per year As much as the members of your Crossfit box & their dogs can eat in a year 1, maybe 2...as long as you eat all the organs & process the meat yourself with a manual grinder Social media #hunterathlete #publiclandowner @vortexoptics @fhfgear @mtnops
Solely responsible for the decline of western civilization
I lean strongly curmudgeon, but I'll gladly poke fun at both camps.
That's the whole point. He's trying to be an outsider with a platform. Most outsiders don't get a platform, he does, because of his brother.If it was for his social media icon of a brother nobody would give two shits what he says..
What, do you hope to accomplish? What's the mission?If they can't stand the heat, get the hell out of the kitchen. That old line of "don't divide hunters" is the lamest bullshit excuse for people to hide behind.
I take these comments, assess them in the context of what we do and what we hope to accomplish, and then use that process to try craft a better product. That's how business works. Create a better message and do more toward what the customer (audience) is asking for and do it while sticking to you business plan.
Nobody owes any of us in the media world a like, a share, or a living. I've been self-employed most my entire adult life. If I can't handle the realities of operating a business, I should be flipping Big Macs (and nothing against the hard working folks at Mickey D's).
Not elite in a financial or societal sense. More the fact that they are unable to receive or respond to critique, even when 100% relevant to a thread, without responding with ban threats, name calling, or disregarding completely....Just read a post on this thread calling rokslide admin elites'. HAAAAHAAAHAAA, prime example of the real problem. These guys are working regular jobs. monitoring this monkey fest. Acquiring deals for us. Taking time to review gear. Put out in depth videos explaining some of their testing process for gear. along with other things. Blue collar folks being of service it seems to me....
Since I'm stuck indoors today, I'm happy to answer any of those questions. Over the years, on a forum I own, I've written many pieces about what follows, so I've summarized some of that here in hopes of answering your questions, however rhetorical the questions were intended to be.What, do you hope to accomplish? What's the mission?
..............................................
The first 2 questions I asked are completely rhetorical! Also aimed at everyone who wastes a few minutes reading my pontification
Just read a post on this thread calling rokslide admin elites'. HAAAAHAAAHAAA, prime example of the real problem. These guys are working regular jobs. monitoring this monkey fest. Acquiring deals for us. Taking time to review gear. Put out in depth videos explaining some of their testing process for gear. along with other things. Blue collar folks being of service it seems to me.
Reading your posts on this thread and a couple other threads have given me a change in perspective about you. I still do not agree with some of the anti outfitter stuff. I also don't agree with MOGA. I do however, respect your effort on behalf of public land. Outfitters play just as vital of a role in our community as anyone else. As do landowners. Once again greed and ego is their problem. Until money ceases to be peoples driving force, not much change can or will happen.
Consumers are the only ones that can give money power!
Inventories are essential to any business. Businesses go broke without them. From what I can tell you definitely take inventory and adjust fire as needed.
Anyway, I think you are on the right track mostly. HAAHAAHAAA, not that anyone cares what this monkey thinks.
I am glad you got on here and responded to some of this.
Hmmm....well there is a entire forum for feedback. Also difference between critical and critique. Also imagine running this site could be closely compared to taking a dozen 12 yr Olds to work with you. Why this, why that, what's this do, you're doing it wrong.....5 million questions and comments before noon. Kind of stuff that would even give the pope wrinkles.Not elite in a financial or societal sense. More the fact that they are unable to receive or respond to critique, even when 100% relevant to a thread, without responding with ban threats, name calling, or disregarding completely.
This is in contrast to Randy, who has provided thoughtful responses to questions, complete with reasoning for his views and allowing that he may not know it all.
If me my mods are calling anyone names, make sure you let me know, the rules apply to us too. I try to never do that but can’t say that I havent when emotions get high. I had to apologize to members on more than one occasion.Not elite in a financial or societal sense. More the fact that they are unable to receive or respond to critique, even when 100% relevant to a thread, without responding with ban threats, name calling, or disregarding completely.
This is in contrast to Randy, who has provided thoughtful responses to questions, complete with reasoning for his views and allowing that he may not know it all.
Holy moly...lots to go through. Glad you're inside today. That was great reading.Since I'm stuck indoors today, I'm happy to answer any of those questions. Over the years, on a forum I own, I've written many pieces about what follows, so I've summarized some of that here in hopes of answering your questions, however rhetorical the questions were intended to be.
As to anti-outfitter comments, not sure where that is traced to, given I refer dozens of people to outfitters each year. Some take my position against industry subsidies as being anti-outfitter. Being self-employed most my life, I'm just not a big fan of government picking winners and losers when developing policies or handing out public assets, such as hunting opportunity. If some view my anti-subsidy positions as anti-outfitter, I guess that's how it goes.
As for your idea of having another job, I've had a "real job" the entire time that I've done this media gig. In my real life I'm a CPA, I make my living by "disinheriting the Federal Treasury." If not for that job and rental properties, there is no way I could have kept the media platforms going. The platforms have been money losers when operated the way I have chosen to do it. But, that is my decision and I'm completely comfortable with the investment made. I've stepped away from the CPA firm in the last year to focus more on this, retaining my largest client so I still have money for "bait and bullets" (my wife's term). My wife made me promise this would not be our livelihood, as she knew it would cause me to eventually hate hunting. Good advice on her part, as after all the years of creating content I still enjoy doing this.
Note - The "per post character limit" requires that I post my response in more than one post.
Sorry think I might of been misunderstood about any job comments. I know you are a CPA, which seems to me like another thankless job/painful one.Since I'm stuck indoors today, I'm happy to answer any of those questions. Over the years, on a forum I own, I've written many pieces about what follows, so I've summarized some of that here in hopes of answering your questions, however rhetorical the questions were intended to be.
As to anti-outfitter comments, not sure where that is traced to, given I refer dozens of people to outfitters each year. Some take my position against industry subsidies as being anti-outfitter. Being self-employed most my life, I'm just not a big fan of government picking winners and losers when developing policies or handing out public assets, such as hunting opportunity. If some view my anti-subsidy positions as anti-outfitter, I guess that's how it goes.
As for your idea of having another job, I've had a "real job" the entire time that I've done this media gig. In my real life I'm a CPA, I make my living by "disinheriting the Federal Treasury." If not for that job and rental properties, there is no way I could have kept the media platforms going. The platforms have been money losers when operated the way I have chosen to do it. But, that is my decision and I'm completely comfortable with the investment made. I've stepped away from the CPA firm in the last year to focus more on this, retaining my largest client so I still have money for "bait and bullets" (my wife's term). My wife made me promise this would not be our livelihood, as she knew it would cause me to eventually hate hunting. Good advice on her part, as after all the years of creating content I still enjoy doing this.
Note - The "per post character limit" requires that I post my response in more than one post.
Recon I got some things to look into.@Deadfall - Here's some more to your questions.
So, to your first question - What, do you hope to accomplish?
To make sure that public land hunting and hunters have a voice. To deter the trends that I felt were efforts against public land and public access. To get more hunters to volunteer or contribute to conservation, either through their individual efforts or as part of a larger organization. To show that hunting is mostly about food acquisition, along with some adventure, challenge, and intrigue to make hunting the unique activity it is. And, to show hunts that tie many of those points together.
When I started this in 2008, I had grown frustrated that the previous ten years of my time working against the sale /transfer of public lands seemed to be getting nowhere. I would say these trends of that time, "State Transfer," "no Net Gain" and other anti-public land efforts, were what caused me to do this and formed one of the primary goals I had hoped to accomplish
I had been a volunteer and board member for some national hunting organizations and it was hard to make much progress, at least at the pace as I was accustomed to in the business world. And, I was looked at as some sort of fool by saying there was an effort underway to trade, sell or otherwise impair the public lands that host 70% of the western hunting.
At the time, outdoor TV was also the primary driver of hunting media, having overtaken print. YouTube had just started and social media was yet to gain traction. What was the message of outdoor TV - hunt private estates, show nothing about the food aspects of hunting, and talk nothing about conservation.
I wanted to give a different voice to what people could watch on TV. So, I hired a production company ($300K) and bought airtime ($180K) and set out to film public land hunts that reflected how hunting occurred for me and most my friends. 2008 was a terrible year to start a business like this, as two months into it the stock market crashed and every business that committed to this new idea of "self-guided public land hunting" pulled out. I ended that year with $25K of sponsorship revenue. You don't need to be a CPA to conclude that was a stupid idea.
But, when I got the ratings after the first season, we ended up as the 7th rated show out of the 100+ that were on the network. That told me that at least the message had some resonance, even if it wouldn't make any money. So, my wife and I, along with a few CPA clients who wanted to be minority owners in a company promoting public land issues, ponied up enough money to film a second season, and then a third season.
I give that background to explain what motivations I had at the time; my concern about how public lands were being viewed and compromised. And, how I thought outdoor TV and its refusal to show any of the food aspects were contributing to the image the public had that hunters did not do so for food and was a complete disconnect to how hunting happened for most people.
The approach was this - For us to get people to understand the value of public lands, it required that they have a tangible connection to those land. Not just hiking or camping, but going out and hunting them. To this day, my connection to lands I hike or camp is only a fraction of my connection to the lands I hunt. Just a function of how immersive one activity is, hunting, compared to any other activity.
With the need to connect people to hunting these public lands, it required showing them that this could be done on their own, thus the name of the first TV show, "On Your Own Adventures." That also required a lot of information, details, ways to obtain tags, how to navigate the public/private, etc. Most of that informational stuff got cut when drafts were sent to the network, eventually making digital platforms like YouTube much more useful for me.
We donated many of our commercial slots to non-profit groups, or sold them at our cost. The idea was that you cannot disconnect hunting from the public lands where it occurs or from the conservation groups that were helping secure more access and/or improving the habitat on public lands. So, we had to continue to support conservation organizations. And, I continued my advocacy in the political arena, as I knew the strategy of the opposition was to take our issues to state legislatures and Congress.
So, that has evolved today to the current content spectrum that has four main categories; 1) entertainment, 2) information, 3) education, and 4) advocacy. It involves a YouTube channel that me and my crew operate, social media that I hire to be managed by a firm, two podcast that I operate, a forum that me and my wife moderate, and a new subscription based channel that allows people to consume our content without paying the big tech companies via their time (ads) or their personal information.
I hope to accomplish the same thing today that we set out to do in 2008. Just using the different platforms that exist today. I will likely add or drop platforms as distribution options change, just like I did when we left TV after 2017. Will we ever make any money at it? I don't know, we might. If we do, I'm not going to make any apologies for it. I will continue to keep my day work that pays my bills and managing my commercial rental properties that have been my retirement strategy, keeping my promise to my wife that this endeavor will not be our livelihood.
And I will continue to do it the way I want, the way I think is best for what I set out to do, making some mistakes along the way, learning from those mistakes, and realizing that no matter what we do or how we do it, some will disagree. Feedback is always helpful, even it if causes some consternation, thus why I have my own forum where I get more feedback than I can read.
Now to your second question - What's the mission?
That is pretty much explained above, but in the first paragraph of the business plan I crafted in 2008, it is written as this....."To promote self-guided public land hunting and create advocates for that cause."
Hope that answers some of your questions. That is why I like that Matt Rinella is out saying what he is. I like that conversations are happening around the messaging of hunting, who is doing it, how it is being done and I don't shy away from that discussion. I encourage the discussion.
Hopefully that explains why I don't give two chits about likes, views, shares, or whatever. That has zero impact on what we produce and what we put out there. If I was concerned about that I would drop all our content related to conservation, access, politics/policy, how to be an advocate, etc., given those get almost no likes, shares or views, and generate very little revenue and have a high cost. That content is part of our goal, so we're gonna do it no matter what.
Thanks for asking. Thanks to all who are engaging in this discussion. It is helpful to me.
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