About a year ago, I lost my job to a layoff. It was one of three layoffs in 18 months for me, and it made me realize: There isn’t a stable enough future for me, or many other people, in digital media. When I started car blogging at Jalopnik a decade ago, things were generally fine. We worked hard, but we got to have fun and be creative. I drove a Monster Jam truck; we read our hate mail on video; and some of our staff even drove a McLaren 570S on a dirt oval. Our audience had fun with us, and they rewarded our creativity — and our website that wasn’t inundated with ads — with loyal visits.
A decade later, the digital-media landscape is far different. Websites are plastered with ads and infinite scrolling. A lot of them are owned by investment firms that hire and fire staff at six-month intervals. A few companies have stability, either due to their tenure (Hearst Autos) or enthusiasm (the Autopian).


It was after the second layoff that I decided I didn’t want to be washed up to shore and out to sea every six months. I wanted to do my own thing and feel like I had control, so I became a YouTuber. A year in, I’ve learned a lot.
Becoming a YouTuber Takes A Lot Of Money, A Lot Of Luck, And/Or A Lot Of Risk
My husband and I run a two-person YouTube channel. I write, edit, and present the scripts, as well as coordinate our loaner cars, trips, and sponsorships. I also find historic footage, edit and record voiceovers, and write all the descriptions for the videos based on search-engine optimization. My husband, who likes to be anonymous online, films and edits the videos. He also photographs everything, makes our YouTube thumbnails, and writes most of the titles because he has a good grasp on what’s clickable on YouTube.
We also do a lot of research and fine-tuning together. I mostly read car content for years, but now I watch a lot of it to see what other people are doing.
We knew going into this that it wouldn’t be super profitable, at least for a long time. YouTube ad rates vary, but they’re not a livable wage unless you’re raking in views — and to get there takes years, especially if you’re not a YouTube-native personality. (Even then, the wages come with no full-time benefits.) I’ve seen people have near-immediate success on YouTube, but that’s because they came from big video-native brands like Hoonigan and Donut. I’ve always been a writer, so the YouTube crowd is less familiar with me. That makes the runway longer.
Our plan going into YouTube was to freelance and scrape by on our channel’s income, and it’s working. I don’t have a consistent salaried income coming in, but I also don’t buy a lot. My expenses are low, which allows me to focus on building our channel.
For a lot of people, foregoing salaried income is a non-starter. For us, the risk was: What if we try to build this, “fail,” and miss out on years of income? Will we regret it? My answer was no — failure is subjective, and I don’t consider things a failure if I’m able to live comfortably and have fun. I’ve enjoyed my life, and that’s not a failure.
Past the money and risk, YouTube takes strategy and luck. You’re not just building an audience there. You’re learning an algorithm — thumbnails, titles, topics — and trying to get the most out of it. You’re also trying to ensure you don’t get too many “quick” subscribers from one viral video; if they don’t watch the rest of your videos, they’ll hurt you in the long run because their lack of engagement will count against you in the algorithm.
Algorithmic platforms like YouTube are a fine balance of doing well but not too well, until you’ve grown enough to do “well” every week.
You Have To Pick A Lane, Even If You Don’t Want To
My least favorite part about YouTube is that it’s not good enough to make quality videos; you have to make videos your audience wants, which means you have to pick a lane. My husband and I mainly do car content, and some of my favorite videos lately have been the McLaren 750S, Hyundai Ioniq 5 N, Lamborghini Revuelto, Hyundai Elantra N, and Acura Integra Type S.
I also love motorsports, and two of my favorite racing videos — about becoming a NASCAR spotter and why oval racing is so hard — did some of my worst views. That’s because even though my audience generally likes me, they’re more willing to skip a video about something they’re less interested in. That counts against it in the algorithm, and unless those videos magically find an audience outside of mine, YouTube will stop feeding them to people. (This similarly happens with cars that “car people” are less interested in, but sometimes, Google views will counteract that. Our audience didn’t go wild for a hybrid Toyota RAV4 Prime, but Google searchers? They loved it.)
This means every video opportunity is a conversation: Do we want this to do well? If so, how do we frame it? We recently hung out with Mazda at the St. Petersburg Grand Prix, and knowing our audience isn’t big on motorsports (unless we’re driving on track ourselves), we did a review of the Mazda CX-70 instead. In the middle, I talked about where we were and why we had the car. We put a snippet of motorsport content there, and it flowed perfectly.
As our channel grows, we’ll branch out more. But for now, we want to get the most out of each video, both to grow our channel and justify our car loans. That means staying in our lane, at least temporarily.
You Have Freedom — Use It
Starting a YouTube channel was my husband’s idea, and it took him months to sell me on it. I was almost exclusively a reader at that point, and I thought all of automotive YouTube was explosive headlines and shocked faces. I didn’t want to do that. I wanted to put out educational, fun, well-produced videos, and I didn’t know at the time if that was possible.
A year in, I’m thrilled with every aspect of our YouTube channel. The production quality is high, the videos are so much fun that even I enjoy watching them back, and I spend almost every day of my life either filming, driving, or traveling with my husband. It’s perfect.
We also have so much freedom. There’s no heavy-handed editing; we barely comment on each other’s work, because he enjoys what I write and I enjoy what he sees through his camera. The only time he’ll cut one of my sentences is if he can’t find B-roll that matches, and the only time I’ll ask him to make a video edit is if he forgets color correction on a clip. We work in harmony.
We also have the freedom to do and write weird things, without having to justify them. Last year, I asked the singer from my favorite band, Craig Mabbitt, to drive a manual Ford Mustang Dark Horse with me. I thought it would be fun to show what a non-car reviewer thought about the car, and the only permission I needed was from Ford for him to drive the car. They said yes.
I spent the whole weekend thinking about how it would have gone if I’d pitched this at a “normal” job. Most editors would say: “Your favorite what? Who? You’re the car reviewer, not him. You review the car by yourself.”
Instead, I needed no permission, and our audience loved Craig’s perspective. It was relatable to see a normal driver get excited about a car, not just hear the “This is good, this is bad” ramblings of people who drive different cars every week.
We’ve also learned that we have the freedom to write weird headlines, and that they do well. Our Dark Horse review with Craig is nearing 100,000 views, and the title is: “The Mustang Goes Emo.” Is the Mustang really emo? No! It’s inanimate! But does the Dark Horse’s front grille look like eyeliner, or a raccoon, or a bank robber with a black mask? Yes! And people liked that silly title enough to click!
YouTube is a blast. I’m making less money, but having more fun than ever. You can’t take money with you when you die, but you can die with the knowledge that you had a good life. Right now, that’s exactly what I’m doing.
Top graphic images: Alanis King; JVC
I’ve heard YT is kind of like the scheme from Office Space, where you get fractions of a penny per video, but if you have enough videos, and enough people click them, you get actual pennies. Also sponsors is where the real monies are.
Glad you’re making out ok, and it frees you up to drop by cool blogs and write when the opportunity presents itself.
You’re right on every count! Thank you : )
Well, $%@&. Now I’m subscribed to ANOTHER youtuber that I’m gonna have to go back and watch their entire catalog.
There goes the weekend…
Omg thank you Tony!
Good on you for finding Life After Layoffs. I’m a big YouTube watcher (I pay, it’s pretty much my Netflix) and subscribe to about thirty channels, a mix of car (Number 27, Harry, Tyrrell, Shed racing), music (Beato, various artists), and model engineering/shop stuff (Blondihacks, Tony). I appreciate the amount of work it takes to put out enjoyable content regularly, and it’s cool that there’s a platform where people can make a living doing it. I do worry that YT could suddenly change the rules of the game and instantly make things harder/impossible for my favourite creators – that must keep a lot of you up at night.
We worry about this a lot too. I do think there are enough creators on there to where the platform wouldn’t mess up their livelihoods too badly
They already have, multiple times. Want to know why your favorite YouTubers have suddenly started doing compilation videos that are just 2 hour long combinations of several of their previous videos? It’s because The Algorithm suddenly started prioritizing watch time over most other things.
Alanis, can you put some actual numbers to what a “living” adds up to on YT? Not your bank statements, but maybe a rough sense of what kind of cash flow to expect.
Also, does AI figure into your workflow at all? Either on the content/creative side or the SEO/algorithm side?
It varies from video to video (and also topic to topic), but ad revenue on the platform is usually about $100 for 10,000 views on long-form for a “normal” car. Specialty cars are usually lower
Thank you for sharing this. It confirms my assumption that trying to monetize my hobby channels wouldn’t be worth the hassle. I suspect I would be making tens of dollars annually. 😉
I’ve enjoyed your work for ages, and am glad to hear that this is working out for you.
I do almost kinda feel bad not clicking on every video from creators I really like because I know how aggressive and health-draining the algorithm and metrics are to them. As soon as a video is doing much worse than a previous one, YT is warning you about it as if it’s the worst thing you could do.
Happy you and the husband are enjoying it and I really applaud the risk-taking, lord knows I’m not nearly that brave. And I love the calmer presentation style, I can’t stand the hyper-energetic stereotypical YT creator.
Thank you : ) We appreciate that you think about us and how your clicks impact our algorithm. It’s not something you have to do, and it means a lot that you care
If you are able to find enough success to keep doing what makes you and your husband happy, you’re better off than 76.8% of everyone else. Keep at it!
That’s how I feel. It’s not about making a ton of money — it’s about having fun on a survivable wage. And with freelance, we are!
I went freelance in 2019 after 28 years of working in corporate jobs. Even though it’s scary at times, it’s much more satisfying to realize that ultimately you have more control over your outcomes and your satisfaction.
To have fun while avoiding homelessness sounds amazing! Suffering through a day job only to be too tired on the weekends to actually do anything is so depressing.
I’ve seen a lot of your videos and enjoy them. You look like you’re having a good time and you’re never smug. Always a treat. It’s so nice to see you here regularly. It’s a blessing to do what you enjoy.
Awwww hi thank you : )
Love your videos and your style, but also your willingness to engage with people on YT and Twitter as well. It’s clear you’re not just dumping content and waiting for the money, you genuinely have fun making it and like to hear what people think about it.
This makes me happy. Thank you. I really do try to engage with everyone as much as possible. It takes a ton of time, but y’all invest time in me so I want to invest time in you
If I may ask, what hardware and software do the two of you use?
Yes! Lumix S5II, DJI Air 3S, DJI mics, DJI Osmo Pocket 3 camera, DaVinci Resolve, Adobe Suite
Fantastic – thank you!
Davinci Resolve is really amazing. It’s FREE. Has a learning curve, but it does most of what I was using Premiere/Audition for (though not After Effects).
Using it for the Hooniverse Podcast and it’s been great
Liked and Subscribed! I even turned on notifications.
This is so kind of you. Thank you
No problem, your channel is great – glad to hear it’s gaining ground and you’re enjoying the progress!
It’s crazy talking to people who have found success in YT. They often feel very pegionholed. While they are passionate about their subject manner they often burn out. It seems like YT is really causing havoc lately and people are looking to other platforms and even creating their own. I fear because of the typical corporate chasing their tale nonsense it will become fragmented like streaming has become. Who knows this has happened before with some very long form creaters developing new platforms for videos that wouldn’t do well on YT. Hopefully you find success wherever that may lead you.
I really hope YouTube/long-form video doesn’t become fragmented. Social media in general is becoming very hard because there are so many platforms, therefore it’s harder to connect with people
I’ve been a fan of your work since you started at Jalopnik – those hate mail videos with Kristen Lee were so good, I could swear they were a whole series (apparently it’s just two?). I literally only read about american motorsport when you or Elizabeth Blackstock wrote about it.
The youtube channel is great, been following it since the beginning. Good to know you get to have fun with work and collaborate with your husband on a shared passion. Hope you find ways to make motorsport-focused content work with the viewers. I’m sure those views will come if y’all keep working hard 🙂 Rooting for your success!
This made me smile so much. Thank you. For real. Thank you for being here for me
No, thank YOU! You’ve been providing us with top quality content for years and you’ve been at the forefront of a much needed shift in automotive media towards gender equality in recent years (still a loooooong way to go, let’s not fool ourselves). I will always be proud to have been active in Jalopnik back when that shift started to occur, and I feel blessed for having people like you, Kristen, Elizabeth, Mercedes or Erin help break the goddamn glass ceiling and share such amazing insights on car culture. Thank you.
It’s always weird what the internet likes.
I’m more likely to watch your race coverage then a review of an anonymous SUV or unobtainable super car.
Yeah! A lot of people say this. Unfortunately, that group is way smaller than the other group, so the other one wins out in the algo
Throw in something quirky every once in awhile. I only watch that other guy when he features something weird like a metermaid tricycle. Dunno how that works with the algo, but it is entertaining.
Been on youtube myself for something like 3 years now. I’m neither very good nor very popular. I’ve slowed down quite a bit as I lost a lot of motivation since I found little traction. Like you said, cars that don’t on their own generate a lot of interest are hard to move videos on. My primary project is a 1971 Travelall swapped on to a Tahoe floorpan and frame. I’m quite confident if I was doing the EXACT same project with a classis Suburban, my clickthrough rate and watches would be significantly higher.
My most watched video, by a HUGE margin, is how to install a new 220v harbor freight compressor motor. Maybe I would be better off doing tool repair videos, but that doesn’t interest me as a focus, so oh well.
I feel your pain. Wish you all the best of luck on there.
And always remember, your success on a platform doesn’t define you. Always do what makes you happy, and if you’ve lost motivation on YouTube, that’s okay! Life is short and we should do what we enjoy
But what about ‘bobs’ guy? 🙂
Great guy
It’s always nice to have another YTer that doesn’t display jazz hands and a punch-me-I’m-goofy face in every thumbnail under an obvious clickbait title, not that I’d think you’d do that.
One of the negative things about the relative ease of access of media creation today is that, with nearly endless options for entertainment in varied media, so many people have no idea what it takes to create, merely consuming and moving on, possibly complaining why it takes so long for a creator to come up with more content. There’s minimal anticipation with so many options and videos/books/songs get forgotten or only given cursory consideration rather than being savored or having much thought given to it. In a sense, it’s almost as if everything has become “fast foodized” whatever the quality. Of course, while I lament it and am a creator myself, I’m also guilty of this to some degree. Anyway, I’m glad you found a niche that’s doing well enough to enjoy the work, which is the most important thing after satisfying survival requirements. I hope it will get even better.
You’re so right in every way. It’s hard to make this stuff, but people have so many options that it sometimes seems less monumental than it is!
This article should have been a slideshow!! – Jalopnik.
Jalop management* : )
Talk about your revolving doors…
Congrats. Really enjoy your videos.
Thank you so much <3
I’ve got some buddies who recently started a YouTube channel (shout out to the Michigan Automotive Relic Society) and while they have a very clear vision for what they want the channel to be, the work behind the scenes is immense.
Shooting locations, pickup shots, host/subject audio, car audio, call sheets, lighting, drone shots, editing… It is intense! I was involved in one episode and it confirmed that a YouTube career is a TON of work. Anyone who can make that a full time career and avoid the mouth-agape, face slapping thumbnails that plague YouTube car content is a hero in my book.
It’s a wild amount of work. We’re amazed at how much time we spend on the channel. But you know what? It lets us have so much fun, so we’re rolling with it
How does one break into the press car rotation though?
I don’t imagine I could call up McLaren and ask for a 750S if I promise to make a video about it.
You will have to work to build your channel and your audience for a while before you get into the press vehicle rotation. You might be able to wrangle an invite to a regional media/influencer event hosted by an automaker product comms rep.
You’ll also need to start introducing yourself and your outlet to those folks and expect silence for a bit. Cover their news and share that coverage back with them so they can include your outlet in their reporting about the reach of their earned coverage.
It’s work. Being established and having an established outlet to publish your stuff helps if you jump from one masthead to another, but cars are tighter than ever, and understand it costs a few thousand dollars to put your tuchas in the seat, so you’d BETTER be giving something (as much as you possibly can) in return for that favor. It’s a favor.
Enthusiast journalism is kinda like political journalism – horseshoe parasitism. You get access (to product, people), and they get coverage.
Long way of saying you earn your way onto the press car rotation.
This is the precise reason why I am basically skeptical of most car reviews.
I’d pay a higher member fee here if the site rented or borrowed its vehicles without relying on the good graces of manufacturers. Not because I feel there’s a conscious effort by the regulars to bias the coverage (though I have wondered with some of the occasional contributors), but because it simply removes any possibility.
It’s a fair concern, though I’ll say that this site, staffed as it is with experienced practitioners, is not afraid to call things out. Really, what matters is context:
Sites without enough experience or knowledge tend to basically regurgitate the entire press release and don’t know enough about the industry, the sub-genres of enthusiasm, the industry, history or what’s coming soon to be useful. The ones who realize this and take the time to research figure it out (I mean, that’s called journalism).
On the flip side, if you do it long enough, you get used to everything, and your baseline shifts. You can wind up snobby because you are treated to luxurious vehicles and experiences regularly. It’s helpful to buy a car with your own damn money very few years as a car writer to help keep that in check.
So – I get your point, but the quid pro quo is less of a thing to worry about vs. the usefulness of the information. You can tell pretty quickly – especially if the outlet has been invited to the same event as every other outlet and hasn’t looked between the lines of the prepared materials. Everyone else is gonna eat the steak and paraphrase the release.
Be braver than that. An article that lists specs is not useful unless you want to write the last two pages of the brochure.
Just because they lend you cars for free doesn’t preclude them from harsh criticism when it warrants it.
Most manufacturers are surprisingly ok with it. They know it comes with the territory.
Ask Chris Harris about Ferrari if you really believe this.
There are of course the occasional one or two exceptions.
I was pretty hard (and continue to be on Twitter) on Ford about the new ‘Capri’ and they still lent me a Transit.
It’s not realistic for freelancers (or even outlets) to hire cars for review because the economics wouldn’t stack up, even if you personally are willing to pay more. I understand your concern, but as Dan says it’s misplaced.
Every outlet is getting review units from the manufacturer whatever the product. It’s not only cars.
To be fair, I’ve been doing this professionally for 10 years and have known the McLaren folks for most of that time
Understood, but the post is framed as a “here’s some tips about how to be an automotive YouTuber” guide when it seems to me the most important step is getting access to the cars in the first place!
If having a pre-existing relationship with the manufacturers via previous employment with a traditional (or at least a larger) media outlet is a prerequisite to get on or stay on their lists, that would seem to make it tougher to break into the business.
Not that I’m planning on it any time soon or anything.
While this is speculative on my part as a casual viewer, there’s a guy, Tedward, who’s local to me who appears to have started by being friends or otherwise acquainted/employed with/by the Bond Group, which preps high end cars for sale to do drive videos of those vehicles. From there, it seems he’s used that to get test cars outside of that. So, connections still, but a little different avenue.
Start by creating car content outside of test drives first. After that, build your relationships and network by attending events, reaching out, creating awareness of your work etc. Knowing the right people helps a lot.
This, exactly. You don’t start with press cars. You get to them eventually.
Covering their latest news and asking for an interview with an exec will get you on their radar AND give you some content nobody else has. Automakers will play ball with you.
When I was car shopping recently, I discovered that there are a bunch of channels that just partnered with their local dealer to do walkarounds and short test drives of vehicles on their lot. I would think that may be an easier way to get access to a bunch of vehicles without having to break into the national press fleet.
I assume they sell it to the dealers on the basis of nearly free advertising. The dealer always gets name dropped, usually multiple times, and all it costs them is a few miles on cars they were already going to let people test drive.
They aren’t always the most informative reviews because they seem to only have a couple of hours with the vehicle so they don’t learn all of the quirks and features, if you will, but they do have their uses. And I assume if you got big enough doing that you might have enough clout to at least have the press fleet people pick up the phone when you call.
These are the MOST suspect; you think the dealer’s gonna lend you another car if you give anything more than the mildest of critique?
Approach those videos like the dealer advertising supported husks of your local newspaper’s Automotive section that existed before they all died.
Is the videocamera in the topshot the one from Back to the Future?!
Yep
Whoa, that’s heavy.
I appreciate the insight, I consume a lot of content on youtube and I’m always a little curious about how the sausage is made.
https://www.theautopian.com/we-went-to-the-moon-on-the-back-of-wet-meat/
I gotchu fam
Thank you for reading : )
Congrats on the youtubiversary! I was always a fan of your motorsports coverage at the old site, but I understand why that wouldn’t be youtube gold.
You and your husband have the best outlook on life. Enjoy yourselves and keep up the good work.
This made me smile. Thank you : )
kinda disappointing to hear that most people who are subscribed and enjoy your videos on one subject, wouldn’t also enjoy your videos on a different yet still closely adjacent subject.
I don’t hold it against them. I appreciate that they watch at all. I think the main issue is that there’s a ton of stuff to watch — they can watch any content they want, so if it’s me doing motorsports vs. another creator doing a car they really like, maybe they pick that person and forget about my video!
Great story, Alanis. And geez, I always figured that doing serious YouTube stuff involved more than just turning the phone camera on to “video” and recording stuff, I never imagined it took the kind of work you’re talking about. Hats off to you and your husband.
Thank you so much, Mike : )