Monetize your videos













         Rumble vs. YouTube

Ever since YouTube started hiding specific videos from their search results, people began looking for a new option that will allow them to publish their videos without being concealed from the YouTube audience. At this point emerged Rumble – the best video management system – which allows everyone to create and upload video content and have it rank in search results, unlike YouTube, which buries certain videos in their search results. According to an article in the Verge: “…creators often feel abandoned and confused about why their videos are buried in search results, don’t appear on the trending page, or are being quietly demonetized.”

With recent events proving that YouTube is a discriminating platform towards certain people, Rumble has decided to show equal treatment to all content creators on their platform. If you take a quick look at Rumble’s Twitter profile, you will notice many people opting for Rumble when it comes to publishing videos, thus turning their backs to YouTube. One of them is the conservative radio host Dan Bongino who has gotten an equity stake in Rumble – a platform that protects free speech. 

In an exclusive interview for the Washington Examiner, Bongino shared his search journey for a new video platform where his “…views won’t be discriminated against.” And luckily for him, he came across Rumble. Although Bongino has 600 thousand subscribers on YouTube, he says that 80 percent of The Dan Bongino Show daily episodes have been demonetized. “I’m sick of it, and I wanted to do something about it.” Since September 2020, he started uploading The Dan Bongino Show – the 12th most popular podcast on Apple podcasts – to Rumble before posting it to his YouTube channel.

Who else joined Rumble recently?