🎯 YouTube / Google Algorithm Rigged: Failure
📍 Chapter 1: AI Tools, Rock Dreams, and a Divine Comeback
Let’s start where it gets interesting. I’ve been creating content for over 5 years, running the Boon Family YouTube channel, experimenting, learning, and evolving, and my experience with the Google Algorithm and how the industry is rigged. Garanteed failure for hundreds of thousands of creators, here is why!
Recently, I took things to the next level with AI-powered tools—generating music, scenes, and characters. I built wild videos in which my sons, the Boon Boys, jam alongside a resurrected Jesus shredding an electric guitar.
And guess what? It was awesome.
Not mocking, not offensive — just a creative, fast-paced blend of music and story. But what did YouTube give me? A hard no on ads. Reason: “Religious Content.”
Showing a joyful Jesus with a six-string is more dangerous than a guy pretending to be a jellyfish.
📍 Chapter 2: 101,000 Subscribers — 0 Views from YouTube?
No blood, gore, or controversy.
However, the first 2,000 views came from Facebook when I uploaded that video on YouTube.
YouTube’s own analytics confirmed that zero views came from their platform.
So, with 101K subscribers, the video got exactly zero traction. Not even 0.5% engagement.
What happened to “hit that bell, and we’ll notify your subs”?
My bell’s been disconnected.
📍 Chapter 3: Google Algorithm vs Advertise or Die
Here’s where it gets juicy.
When I run an ad, BOOM, 40,000 views.
When I don’t advertise? Hello, darkness, my old friend.
The algorithm learned fast: “Oh, you’re the guy who pays? Better make sure nothing performs without it.”
It’s like owning a food truck that only works if you feed it $100 daily. Otherwise, it just sits there, judging you. Rigged? you be the judge!
📍 Chapter 4: Let’s Play “Compare the Nonsense”
Case Study 1: My friend uploaded a random video of his kid. It does not have tags, an SEO high score “title,” or a description.
3.4 million views.
Me? Perfect SEO title. Music. Editing. Promo 123K
Still solid, but if this were boxing, I’d be out cold in Round 2.
Case Study 2:
This video has 141 million views.
No story. No editing. Just water balloons, chaos, and maybe a GoPro from 2007.
I made two similar videos with real Water fights and great thumbnails with a storyline and promoted them with 100$ each. They got like 52K and 82K and almost no views organically? Hey Google Algorithm what happened?
Promoted with $100 each. But compared to that balloon orgy? I’m an invisible wizard in a soundproof cloak.
📍 Chapter 5: TikTok — Same Video, Different World
I learned a little bit more about storytelling and editing, but comparing the videos, I still would have to say that my videos were lightyears ahead. If I had an organic growing YouTube video, it would have been flagged for some violation policy and thrown out. Now, you would say, well, that’s what all content creators say; they think their content is the best or much better. Well, that would be maybe the case if it was not for a comparing platform. Let’s see one of my shorts on TikTok, the best performing shorts there is a short video I made about ants attacking the Boon Family at the pool, which has 3.8 million views
This is where the algorithm mask slips or is rigged!
Now, let’s compare the same video upload on YouTube, except with YouTube. I made a correct title, the highest SEO scores, thumbnails, and everything you can think of. It gets 369 views. Hey Google Algorithm, what happened?
Lets do another one:
Water prank with my son on YouTube 2.1 K views.
That same video on Tik Tok does 1 million:
This video on Tik Tok does 900K and has 3.9k likes
That same video on YouTube
392 views and not one like????
The proof is YouTube/Google’s analytics report!
This only makes sense if somebody at Google or YouTube is doing something to the channel to make the content less visible, as this is proof in your face of rigging. Now, it could have one or two videos or even more, but not with pretty much all of them. The difference is tens of hundreds of thousands.
The same videos uploaded to TikTok — no SEO and no money spent, just raw uploads:
- Ant Attack Short:
- TikTok: 3.8M views
- YouTube: 369 views
- Water Prank:
- TikTok: 1M views
- YouTube: 2.1 K views
- Pool Chaos:
- TikTok: 900K views 3.5K likes
- YouTube: 392 and zero likes
The footage, title style, and editing are the same. One platform promotes it, while the other pretends it doesn’t exist. Whose failure is this?
📍 Chapter 6: YouTube: “We Value Engagement”
Also, YouTube automatically disables my comments
Engagement, Rigged, huh?
Please explain why the comment section on my kids’ swimming video shuts off faster than my internet on a rainy day. Is this a failure of mine?
There were no violations, no weirdness, just kids playing in the pool. YouTube says, “Protect the kids,” but punishes creators featuring their families.
📍 Chapter 7: The Double Shinbone Hypocrisy
One of my boxing videos was removed because it showed a double shinbone fracture (a real fight I promoted).
I appealed. YouTube said no.
But Anderson Silva Le Snap? Is all over the internet!
Still up. Multiple versions. Better angles. No issue.
Same thing with Chris Weidman’s injury — still up.
So what’s the difference? I guess I don’t have the Dana White license pack.
📍 Chapter 8: The Flagged Channel Effect
Once your channel gets flagged — even for the later overturned nonsense — the algorithm starts acting like your ex after a breakup: petty, passive-aggressive, and unpredictable, and you become the failure.
Your content gets buried, views tank, and even your thumbnails get judged like a high-school talent show.
Better audio? Upgraded visuals? AI magic? Doesn’t matter if no one sees it.
📍 Chapter 9: 5 Years, 101K Subs, $10 a Month
I didn’t get into this for the money — I got into this because I love making videos.
My kids love seeing themselves on screen. The Boon Family is part of our lives.
But YouTube now clarifies that if you don’t pay, don’t expect reach.
Don’t expect a promotion if you push boundaries with creativity or bold storytelling — even if it’s clean.
A little bit of blood slipped through my editing, and the video got throttled immediately, while I always put not made for children and 18 years and older.
📍 Final Words: The Algorithm Isn’t Broken. It’s Working Against You.
The “I Gave a Resurrected Man a Rock Guitar” video was the final proof.
Not one view from YouTube.
Just Facebook shares and diehard fans, produced 2000 views in the first day.
So here’s my message to YouTube and Google:
Fix this for me and the hundreds of thousands of creators putting time, heart, and money into your platform. I did not leave any room for failure as a lifelong successful producer!
We’re not asking for favors — we’re asking for fairness.
Censorship Solution for TikTok, Google, YouTube, and Facebook.
https://basboon.com/censorship-solution-for-tiktok-google-youtube-and-facebook/
(C) Bas Boon www.basboon.com