Monday, February 1, 2016

Dealing with Death and Loss in the Extreme Sports Community

Our videos always try and show the greatest moments in life. Taking on the world. Living your dreams and working hard to achieve them. With that being said, we very rarely talk about the opposite side of the spectrum. Showing and dealing with loss.I feel it's very important to talk about loss, because there must be opposition in all things. Going through adversity makes the triumphs and the little simple moments have so much more meaning.
This week two of our favorite people we've ever worked with passed away, both of them being totally unexpected. :(

Our video with Mandy:


We do extreme sport videos for a living, so it exposes us to a lot of these people who put their lives on the line. Because of that, we often hear about these deaths in the extreme sports world, and since it is such a tight knit community, there is often a chance it will be connected to us. Everyone of them hits hard, but especially this one since it was so close to home with people we have just filmed with.
Last month we did a video for Christmas time where we found someone in great need, we had our fans suggest someone, and they had suggested a woman we had never met, Mandy. We were able to play a small part in her life, and she had played a major part in our lives. She was a single mother fighting a battle against cancer, had two children, and she had a chance of coming out okay, however that sadly was not the part of God's plan for her. Mandy passed a way a few nights ago, and hearing the news broke our hearts because of the experiences we had and the love we have for her.
This morning when I woke up I had several emails from friends letting me know that one of my favorite people we had filmed with a year ago, Kelly McGarry had also passed away. He had collapsed while mountain biking in his home country of New Zealand. When we filmed with Kelly last year, he was one of the most talented, hard working and positive people I've ever worked with. We had only planned on filming one day with Kelly, but once we started working together we realized how well we worked together, so we ended up spending three days working together. He was all about doing whatever it took to get the right stunts/shots. Kelly hands down was one of the most genuine down to earth professional athletes I've ever worked with, and it makes me sick to my heart that he isn't with us any more, but despite the circumstance, I'm glad he was able to pass away doing what he loved.

Main Video with Kelly:


Behind The Scenes:


Life never goes as expected, we are often time thrown for loops and surprises. I'm super thankful for the time I had with both Mandy and Kelly, they have forever changed my life. Take advantage of every moment you have with family and friends. Life is precious, you never know when it will end, so take every moment to seize the day and make the most out of every moment you have.  God has a plan for all of us and I am so grateful that His plans for Mandy and Kelly included me in them.


Tuesday, January 19, 2016

The Division - The Ultimate Colab!

Ubisoft is hands down one of my favorite companies we have worked with. They get social media, they give us opprotunities we could never have without a brand backing it up and they trust us with our audience, which is key and doesn't happen with every brand we work with.

We have been working with Ubisoft for over 4 years now.  In fact some of our most watched videos we have made with them. Here's a few:

Assassin's Creed Meets Parkour  - 52 Million views and rising.



Assassin's Creed Unity  - 32 Million views and rising



Watch Dogs Parkour in Real Life   -    8 Million



Far Cry 3 in Real Life




With that being said, we have an awesome relationship with Ubisoft. It has been a company I've always genuinely loved, even before I had the opportunity to work with them. This brings me to our most recent colab we did with Ubisoft. The preproduction for our latest colab started roughly 2 years ago. Two of my all time favorite YouTube channel's would be involved as well, Corridor Digital and Rocket Jump/FreddieW. Even when I first got involved with YouTube, it was these two channel's that got me loving the space. They were people I greatly looked up to. So I was stoked when I found out we would all be working together on this project.

Corridor Digital and Ubisoft came up with the idea that each of the three youtube channel's would show off a different agent from the videogame world of "The Division" and it would show how each agent was called to action. Then on Ubisoft's YouTube channel, there would be a 4th video that would show all three agents from each of our episodes coming together. This would make each video stand on it's own, yet it would also give you full reason to watch each episode, which in turn would not only promote each YouTube involved but give everyone a reason to go to Ubisoft's YouTube channel. It was a win win for everyone involved.

Sam and Niko at Corridor Digital were the ones that produced all 4 episodes. Adrian Picardi would direct the three episodes that would go on the other YouTube channel's, and I would direct the one that would go on our channel. By having Sam and Niko produce all 4 episodes it would ensure all 4 videos would stay consistent and flow smoothly. We would also film in the same city in Minesota as well, each episode back to back to make sure we could be cost effective. This whole process of the behind the scenes can be seen with this video that Sam and Niko created on the making of The Division series. Watch that below:



We filmed all these videos in February of 2015, over 11 months ago. The videos were going to come out sooner than a year later, but because the video game that our videos would be promoting got pushed back, our videos did as well.

The stories for all four videos were written by the Corridor Digital team, with the mindset of the channel they would be living on. Corridor Digital and I had gotten together before the writing process to discuss what would work for my channel. We try to stay away from too much violence, but we love action sports and we love showing the good in the world. So with that mind set, Corridor Digital took the world that The Division is set in, and wrote a story that would fit really well with our channel/audience. By staying true to who we are, everyone would win. The same was done for Rocket Jump, where their channel is based on the humor and their video set in the Division World has exactly that, more so then any other of the 4 episodes. Creating content that represents you, while working with a brand is crucial, and Ubisoft understands the value in that.

It really was an awesome experience working with so many YouTube powerhouses that I've looked up to for so long. I had worked with FreddieW before on a couple colab videos, but never with Corriodor Digital. It was great working/learning from all of them on a project we are all very proud of.

With that being said, here's all 4 episodes from this project, starting with my episode first.

Devinsupertramp Channel


Corridor Digital Channel


Rocket Jump Channel


Ubisoft Channel



Here's also the behind the scenes for the making of our video.


Monday, January 18, 2016

My Life Sucks! The truth is out there.




Last week our channel got attacked hard. It got attacked in a way we have never experienced and we had no way of defending ourselves.
Every year we release a video that represents our entire year of work. Filmed in half the countries of the world. More time, money and energy goes into this because it represents who we are and everything we have worked so hard for.
We use this video as our reel to get jobs for the rest of the year.
The first week of a videos release is always the most important and it determines the success of the videos life span.

When we released our best of video this year, we wanted to title it what we thought it represented, we titled it "People Are Awesome 2015 - ULTIMATE DevinSuperTramp Edition in 4K".
On the day of releasing our video it had become our most "liked" video in 24 hours of all time. It had gotten 28,000 likes and over 400,000 views in the first 36 hours.....
On the second day of waking up our video on our channel was gone. I had gotten several phone calls from companies we had sent the video out to saying "Where had the video gone?" We had no idea. When we looked at our videos that only our channel could see we saw this:



Usually on YouTube you have the option to edit a title or description.  This was the first time in the 200 videos we have uploaded over the last 5 years that we had no option to edit it. It just said: "Video Removed: Trademark Issue". We had no idea why it had been removed. We owned 100 percent of the video content, we had release forms for the people in it and the locations. The music that we featured in it was by Boyce Avenue, who has an amazing YouTube Channel that we have always wanted to collaboration with, and they had given us full permission to use the song with the video on YouTube, with ads. Since we had full permission on every front, we had no idea where this was coming from.

We contacted YouTube and FullScreen, who is our MCN, aka Multi Channel Network (they represent YouTubers and help with a lot of things). We asked FullScreen to look into this problem for us, to see what had happened. They were shocked because they had never seen a video shut down like this without a single warning. They were able to find out the strike had been given to us by a company called Jukin. They had copyrighted/trademarked the phrase "People Are Awesome". Because of this, they have the power to shut down a video channel with what seems like a push of a button, without any warning. FullScreen was shocked that they had been so aggressive with instantly taking down our video. They had a good relationship with the company, so that's why this was such a surprise. When they reached out to Jukin, there was no comprise with the video, since we had titled it a phrase which they owned, which we had no idea. It was simple in the title, never appearing on screen in any way.



So where did this leave us? After spending the rest of the week to try and get an appeal, their legal team wouldn't give us any leeway. We asked if we could change the name to "People are amazing - Devinsupertramp edition", we then asked if we could keep the word awesome and change the word people, and even then they said it was too similar, so we couldn't do anything with the video. We couldn't even take it down to remove the copyright strike on our channel. After a full 7 days of going back and forth Jukin agreed to remove the copyright strike as long as we removed the video.... Even if we changed the name of the video completely, we still had to take down the video.... And at this point, truth of the matter is the video had gotten taken down right as it went out to all of our 3.8 million subscribers, and because it was blocked anyways, even if we were able to make it public we would already lose on all the momentum we had worked so hard with.

As we looked into this whole situation with the company that had shut down our video, Jukin, we found out that several other MCN's have had the same problem, Jukin coming at them and shutting down entire video's without warning as well, so this isn't just our problem with Jukin, it is across the board with other YouTuber's/MCN's as well.

We just now finally reuploaded the video, with a totally different phase, "My Life Sucks - Devinsupertramp Edition". We actually had to look into the phrase "My Life Sucks" to make sure no one had trademarked that phrase so this video didn't get taken down either.

The saddest thing about everything with this experience is Jukin/People Are Awesome have uploaded so many videos featuring our content on Youtube and other social media, where they never once asked for our permission and we never once had them take down the video... Yet they had no problem with taking down a video on our channel because of a title we had used.




This has been an awful experience and truthfully the worst experience I have had on the YouTube and as a content creator. In my opinion this is what needs to happen in the future.

- The creator must be warned and have a chance to fight back when someone else try's to take down their video. YouTube has this in place to an extent, but something like this we didn't have the chance to even voice an opinion.

- Phrases being trademarked is lame...ha. Not sure how you can trademark a phrase used so often by so many people. There needs to be a website that says every phrase that is trademarked, so we are not surprised later that you can't have something as a title. Sony last week tried to trademark the phrase "Let's Play" which would mean anyone who put a video with that as a title, they could take down and claim it as their own... Luckily they got turned down for that phrase, but word on the street is they just tried to appeal it.

- I understand YouTube has to stick with "what's legal" but I wish they had something to help defend their content creators that have invested their lives into the platform to help it grow. I did feel I got a little help from them, but I still felt abandoned and had no way of fighting back.



With everything said and done now, here is where we are headed. Our video is now re-upload (which is the same exact video we had to take down), it will never get the same exposure our first video did. The damage has already been done, which is sad when it was our most important video of the year. When people see a re-uploaded video very rarely to they click on it.

I hate confrontation more then anything, so writing this blog has not been easy for me in the slightest. I do feel it needed to be done though to let people know what truly happened and to warn others of the potential problems they will face. To give a voice to the voiceless or the people that have already been effected by this, but not had a voice to do so. The best is yet to come, Carpe Diem.

-Devin


For more info on what went down, here's a video/vlog that explains it in even more details:


Here's also the reuploaded video that went live again today after it was taken down because of it's title being trademarked without any warning.