Irrelevant
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Who needs Cokslide when we have our own in-house used optics dealer @Schaaf?I have considered noting that but I have this nagging interest in maintaining access to the optics classifieds...
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Who needs Cokslide when we have our own in-house used optics dealer @Schaaf?I have considered noting that but I have this nagging interest in maintaining access to the optics classifieds...
Guys like Randy, Steve R are definitely bringing awareness and advocacy, which in theory "should" help on the supply side. The problem is that they, along with gohunt and all of the commercialized demands on the resource are greatly increasing the demand side. Which side are they having a bigger impact on? Are they flattening the curve on the supply destruction more than they are contributing to growth on the demand side?
Did you ever scroll through the Covid threads over there?I bailed after a couple debates about the intrinsic worth of bobcats to the outdoor experience and the legal process national monuments go through after presidential designation.
Pretty hard to take that place sersly when some dude from Florida is espousing the need to kill all bobcats because they are a carnivore, and one of the moderators is offering up mistaken facts on how multiple use planning works.
Oh heavens no. I left prior to that. The hardcore bro culture with no semblance of conservation ethic wore me out.Did you ever scroll through the Covid threads over there?
correct, but they do have moral currency, even if we're simply a bank of one. Much of the research around happiness points to "meaning" or "giving back" as a critical component. Instead of volunteering to coach basketball you can participate in some conservation political advocacy and feel like you're actually doing something for a greater cause.Because the actions we want to see out of hunters (stewardship, political advocacy, conservation) don't have any value as "social currency" in the face of mimetic desire (what drives the whole process) since you don't have something visually impactful to display after completing any of those actions.
Thanks for contributing to this thread and this idea.Just off my biweekly call with our social media firm. We went over what was posted on IG the last three weeks and the results of each.
This information gives some credence to asking the question, that is not addressed in Matt Rinella's comments, "Is the hunting audience being truthful about their social media behavior when contrasted with their criticisms of social media?"
Q: Which of these 18 Instagram images do you think has the most engagement, which would include likes, shares, DMs, etc?
A: The upper right, with Dale and his elk in a classic "grip and grin."
So, one could ask, "Is the hunting audience driving what is being shown on social media or is the content creator driving the social media dynamic?"
As much as I think Matt is making some great points, there is also the realities of how audiences respond to different types of social media content. We continue to make the traditional "grip and grin" a very small part of our posts. In the case of what we reviewed today, 1 of 18 posts were the traditional G&G post and it was the post that got the most attention. Most every time we go through this exercise, the results are the same.
In spite of these consistent results, we will continue to make G&G a very small part of our content, with some months have more and some months having almost none. We have no contracts to monetize our social media, so none of what we post is driven by any monetary result. As part of our video content creation contracts we do share content from sponsors and help them with some of their promotions. I know for some people, their primary revenue source is social media posts and maybe that is what drives their social media content decisions. For us, not the case, but still an interesting fact to add to this discussion is what the audience continually engages in with the highest level of interest.
Just something more to think about in the context of this discussion about social media and hunting.
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Right and anyone that truly does probably left social media behind a long time ago, hahaNot everyone is going to follow through with that logic, but not every wants to be happy either.
This is a simpler way to get at the point I was trying to get at earlier.So, one could ask, "Is the hunting audience driving what is being shown on social media or is the content creator driving the social media dynamic?
I wonder if the medium itself doesn't preclude the kind of messaging you refer to as the salad in your metaphor.Thanks for contributing to this thread and this idea.
However, my initial response to your conclusion is... "Duh." I think one of the issues we've been talking about is the creation of content that is most "liked" not the content that should be most liked.
It's like offering your kids candy vs a salad. One is good for you, good for us as a demographic, and good for society at large, but the other tastes better so that's what they prefer.
Also, the lower left is hands down the best pic, and the migration route was the best post.
Are platforms like Instagram just not conducive to salad, because candy is a better "strategy" per the "game's rules?"
That leads us to the point that in all digital media, the algorithm uses the viewers behavior/choices to drive more of what the viewer sees. So, the viewer, via the algorithm is building the funnel that determines their viewing options.
DittoI gave up on RS, MM and 24 when I found HT. No insta or FB. So my perspective is this informed:
Hunting and outdoor sports have long been the antithesis of competition to me. I'm no longer baffled or incensed when people post live updates or record their exploits and publish them. But I feel like those posters are missing out on the best things about being outdoors. Time with friends, time alone, time with nature which for me surpasses all the rest, heals the broken places, reconnects us with the authentic world. Time away from work, current events, devices, traffic, noise, civilization. Time to think, to feel. space and time to just be.
Videos and photos can't fully capture a hunt, a powder run, making love. They can only represent the most obvious aspects, pruriently and poorly.
There was absolutely racism, slob hunting, poaching, swollen egos, toxic personalities, feudal lord landowners, scofflaw trespassers. Some wardens were arrogant, others were professional. When you killed the reward was success, meat in the freezer, handshakes, perhaps a mention @ the family Christmas. There was Boone and Crockett, Pope and Young for those counting inches. Both groups said their highest goal was conservation of game species. However, trophy hunting monetized game and gave more visibility to those who seek to elevate themselves by their hunting "accomplishments."
I wasn't raised with likes, emojis, gifs, icons; they are little cartoons, not reality.
All those moments and emotions I treasure are still available, still sought by many through their lives outdoors. Now social (and all) media distract from those deeply personal experiences, hard to identify and express. The bruh mentality that more is better and biggest is best elevates the outcome above the accomplishing, the grip and grin above the blood, sweat and tears. Images have replaced experiences and stories. "The media is the message," McLuhan wrote in 1964, when hunting media was bragging boards @ local sports stores and articles in a few magazines. Now images are reality, video convicts or exonerates in court, "It didn't happen without pics." We've stopped trusting our own eyes, hearts and minds.
Our role models stopped modeling or we stopped admiring; yielding that authority to counted clicks by faceless strangers, and charlatan influencers with the ethics of a carnival huckster who preaches Sundays as a side hustle. With no live connection between influencer and viewer the video clip is now the expectation of greenhorns. How can these hordes catch a glimpse of the richness of the moments of a blown stalk? How can they come to value anything short of killing the Spider Bull? What are the odds they'll discover the passion of pursuit separate from the dirt nap, when brown is down, DRT? Without real mentors showing real examples by really hunting w them, odds are zero. I wanted to learn all that more than anything, I would have never figured it out without my dad and his friends breaking trail. Without quality mentorship of hunters, the fall woods will continue becoming the video games that used to represent them.
“Civilization has so cluttered this elemental man-earth relationship with gadgets and middlemen that awareness of it is growing dim. We fancy that industry supports us, forgetting what supports industry.” ― Aldo Leopold, A Sand County Almanac and Sketches Here and There