Video deep dive ยท interviewNA ยท NA

Solution To Poverty In USA ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

The Brief

A Muslim nurse's 20-year poverty operation in Dearborn has built more moral credibility with Peter's audience than the entire U.S. Congress.

The top comment โ€” 'That woman cares more about this country than all the people in Washington DC combined' โ€” drew 1,399 likes, the highest on the video.

Peter frames Zaman as the answer before the tour starts, then lets Najah walk him door-by-door through a functioning facility, converting skepticism through physical evidence rather than argument.

Watch outNearly 20% of comments use the video as counter-programming against Fox News and anti-Muslim media โ€” the emotional lift is partly political validation, which means a single controversy around Najah or Zaman could flip the comment section fast.

If the Rising Hope Bakery lands Whole Foods and Zaman becomes a household name, the real test is whether the model scales or whether everything runs on Najah's irreplaceable personal force.

Summary

Peter Santenello visits Zaman International, a 40,000-square-foot nonprofit in Dearborn, Michigan led by founder Najah, a nurse who started the organization after finding a refugee baby dying in a laundry basket during a home visit. The video presents Zaman as a model solution to poverty that goes beyond charity by training women in marketable skills โ€” industrial sewing and culinary arts โ€” and providing wraparound support in one location. Peter argues that giving without accountability is a 'Band-Aid,' while Zaman's skills-based, one-stop approach is what actually breaks the cycle. The video ends with a call for replication of this model nationally.

  • ยทPeter frames the video as a departure from documenting problems: this time he is showing a concrete solution to the poverty he has observed across American cities.
  • ยทZaman International ('Zaman' means 'time' in Arabic) is a 40,000-square-foot facility in Dearborn, Michigan, on the border of Detroit.
  • ยทFounder Najah is a Dearborn-born nurse who started the organization after finding a refugee baby near death in a laundry basket during a home visit โ€” the family had built a makeshift crib out of the basket itself.
  • ยทNajah describes the core philosophy: stabilizing clients (food, clothing, shelter) is the easy part; the harder and more important part is helping people who actively want to change their lives and their children's trajectory.
  • ยทZaman focuses primarily on single mothers living in extreme poverty, defined as income below $12,000 per year, but also serves refugee families and does not turn anyone away based on faith or background.
  • ยทThe facility runs an industrial sewing program progressing from beginner sewing to math, cutting, design, and eventually factory-floor work; the goal is to secure manufacturing contracts and employ graduates at a living wage.
  • ยทPeter notes that the Midwest has many empty factories and that manufacturing jobs returning domestically is necessary at a macro level for this kind of workforce development to scale.
  • ยทZaman operates a culinary arts program with a 12-week course followed by a one-year track designed to make graduates highly employable.
  • ยทThe culinary program has produced a commercial cookie line called 'Rising Hope Bakery,' positioned as a social enterprise to generate revenue for the organization; a Whole Foods distribution deal is being pursued.
  • ยทFood assistance is not one-size-fits-all: Najah describes learning that homeless individuals in different situations (sleeping in a car vs. in a motel with a microwave) have different food needs.
  • ยทFunding comes from a mix of grants, private donations, and organizations across faiths โ€” Najah, who is Muslim, highlights a donation from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as an example of cross-faith collaboration.
  • ยทZaman trains approximately 120 to 150 women per year.
  • ยทNajah describes refugees as typically resilient and arriving with existing skill sets, challenging the assumption that they are a burden on receiving communities.
  • ยทPeter distinguishes between giving without accountability (hotel rooms, cash โ€” the California model he references) and skills-based programming that holds people to a path; he calls the former a 'Band-Aid.'
  • ยทPeter outlines four categories of people experiencing homelessness he has observed: those with mental illness, those with drug or alcohol dependency, people who are genuinely down on their luck, and a smaller group who choose not to work โ€” arguing the label 'homeless' obscures this complexity.
  • ยทNajah says that after nearly 20 years the organization is 'on the cusp of breaking the cycle of poverty,' and that the bakery opening made her cry because it represented the culmination of that journey.
  • ยทNajah's stated ambition is for Zaman to become a household name on the level of the American Red Cross or Girl Scouts, to expand into other U.S. states and internationally, and to present the model directly to the U.S. Senate.
  • ยทShe emphasizes the organization was built primarily on private donations rather than government funding, framing this as proof the model is replicable.
  • ยทPeter closes by saying the country needs more organizations like Zaman and encourages viewers interested in the cookies or in supporting the organization to follow the links he provides.
Views
317k
316,628 total
Likes
13k
4.25% like rate
Comments
1.2k
0.37% comment rate
Solution To Poverty In USA ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
Comment deep diveExplore all 1,180 comments โ†’filter by sentiment ยท theme ยท superfans ยท questions ยท what to fix
ยง01

Summary

Peter visits Zaman International, a 40,000-square-foot community center in Dearborn, Michigan founded by a former nurse named Najah after she found a refugee family's baby dying in a laundry basket during a home visit. The facility trains single mothers and refugees in industrial sewing and culinary arts, provides food pantry services calibrated to individual circumstances, and is launching a cookie brand โ€” Rising Hope Bakery โ€” intended to generate revenue and employ graduates at living wages. Najah's stated ambition is to stand before the U.S. Senate with a replicable poverty-breaking model built primarily on private donations, without waiting for government.

Content pillars
poverty_solutionsMuslim_Americansworkforce_developmentsocial_impact
ยง02

Engagement vs the rest of the channel

How this video's like-and-comment rate compares to this channel's running average.

Engagement vs channel avgโ–ฒ 4.62pp
4.62% this video
0.00% avg
Like rate
4.25%
of viewers tap like
Comment rate
0.37%
of viewers leave a comment
ยง03

The hook

medium

Opening 15 seconds โ€” the bit that decides whether a viewer keeps watching.

โ€œ

[0:48] Good morning, guys. If there's one theme I'm seeing through all American cities right now it is people living on the fringes but today's video isn't about the problem per se. It's more about the solution. We're gonna go to an organization called Zaman. Which doesn't just give things out it trains women, helps children and puts families back on their feet.

Assessment

The problem-to-solution pivot is a sound contrarian frame but lands softly because it's preceded by a greeting and a vague urban observation โ€” no character, no inciting moment. Compared to Peter's stronger hooks (Amish series, Detroit block segments), this one delays the actual hero of the video, Najah, by nearly a minute.

Hook quality
medium
Call-to-action
present
Archetype
investigator
Composite score
5.2/10
Hook score ยท 6 dimensions
character presence
3/10
clarity
6/10
curiosity
6/10
specificity
5/10
stakes
7/10
time to payoff
4/10
Anti-patterns detected
greetingmeta commentaryslow context
ยง03b

Hook rewrites

Three alternative openings, each in a different archetype. Each is under 40 words โ€” completable in 15 seconds.

Rewrite โ„–1 ยท investigatortechnique: lead_with_outcome

โ€œI found a Muslim nurse in Dearborn who discovered a baby dying in a laundry basket โ€” and spent 20 years turning that moment into America's most complete poverty-fighting operation.โ€

WhyNames character, origin wound, and scale โ€” the three elements that drove 21.6% of comments to express deep personal admiration for Najah specifically.

Rewrite โ„–2 ยท scenetechnique: cold_open

โ€œShe discharged a baby to die at home. When she showed up for the home visit, she found it alive in a laundry basket the family had built into a crib. That's when Zaman started.โ€

WhyDrops in media res at the inciting moment Najah herself leads with โ€” the emotional anchor that made comments call her a 'modern day Mother Teresa'.

Rewrite โ„–3 ยท contrariantechnique: identity_callout

โ€œThis is what Fox News never shows you: a Muslim woman in Dearborn running a 40,000 square foot facility that's done more to fight American poverty than any government program I've seen.โ€

WhyDirectly mirrors the Muslims/media bias cluster (19.6% of all comments) and the 631-like comment that became the video's defining quote โ€” the counter-narrative that drove organic sharing.

ยง03c

Title gap & rewrites

Gap 70 ยท undersell

Comments almost never engage with the abstract concept of 'poverty solution' โ€” they fixate on Najah personally (21.6% pure admiration) and on the Muslim-American representation angle (19.6%), neither of which the title signals. The title strips out both the human story and the ideologically charged context that generated the video's highest-liked comments and cross-community reach.

What commenters actually quoted
  • ยท modern day mother Teresa (3 mentions)
  • ยท break the cycle of poverty (4 mentions)
  • ยท what Fox News doesn't show about Muslims (1 direct quote, 631 likes, broadly echoed across thread)
Anti-patterns in current title
vague identityimplied universalthumbnail duplication
Thumbnail recommendation

Close-up of Najah mid-speech with the industrial sewing floor or commercial kitchen visible behind her โ€” the combination of strong face and institutional scale is the visual evidence that comments responded to, and it signals a story rather than a think-piece.

3 title rewrites
  1. 01 ยท The Muslim Nurse Fighting American Poverty Better Than Washington
    contrarian
    Compresses the two dominant comment clusters โ€” admiration for Najah + Muslim/media bias โ€” into a single frame that challenges political expectations, mirroring the top comment at 1399 likes.
  2. 02 ยท She Found a Baby Dying in a Laundry Basket. Now She Runs a 40,000 Sq Ft Poverty Factory.
    specificity
    The inciting story Najah tells is the emotional peak of the video; the square footage adds the scale signal that made commenters say 'we need this in every city.'
  3. 03 ยท What Fox News Won't Show You About Muslims in America
    curiosity gap
    The @iskandarshah8940 comment ('This is what Fox News doesn't show about Muslims') has 631 likes and is a verbatim search query โ€” this title hands that organic intent a direct doorway in.
ยง04

What viewers said

Explore all โ†’

1,180 comments analysed and clustered into themes.

Sentiment breakdown

Mostly positive

positive 70%neutral 20%negative 10%
Real breakdown over 1180 of 1180 root comments โ€” every comment analysed, not sampled.

Commenters were overwhelmingly moved by Najah's framing of poverty as something to solve with dignity rather than charity โ€” the phrase 'take a bite out of poverty' was quoted back approvingly, and 'she walks in and sees hope, not poverty' was paraphrased across multiple threads. The LDS-donations-to-Muslim-org moment triggered the deepest emotional response, with commenters calling it 'the world as it should be.' Muslim commenters specifically cited the video as proof of representation they rarely see: 'this is what Fox News doesn't show about Muslims in America' (631 likes) became the de facto summary line for that thread.

Top comment themes

10 clusters surfaced

  1. 01
    Najah as an extraordinary individual โ€” 'modern day Mother Teresa,' 'she deserves sainthood,' 'she gets it' (~270 mentions, dominant thread)
  2. 02
    Muslims as positive American contributors โ€” counterpoint to Fox News / mainstream media framing (~220 mentions, emotionally charged)
  3. 03
    Islamic faith as the motivation behind the work โ€” blessings, Quranic values, 'this is what Islam teaches' (~190 mentions)
  4. 04
    Skills-based poverty solutions vs. government handouts โ€” 'hand up not handout' framing resonated strongly (~180 mentions)
  5. 05
    'We need this in every city' โ€” calls to replicate the Zaman model nationally and internationally (~150 mentions)
ยง04a

Audience pulse

How the audience feels โ€” a Net Sentiment mood score, how split the room is, and an early churn signal. All from the comments, not YouTube analytics.

+59Warmly receivedmood ยท โˆ’100 to +100
Mood (raw)
+60
before channel-norm adjust
Polarization
0.73
0 = uniform, 1 = spread
Divisiveness
0.20
is the room split?
Warmth
50%
warm / emotional tone
Analysed
1180
comments (confidence)
Churn signalnormal11 comments flagged dissatisfaction (0.9% โ€” channel norm 4.0%)
Emotional tone breakdown
  1. Warm
    50%
  2. Excited
    14%
  3. Neutral
    12%
  4. Angry
    7%
  5. Concerned
    6%
  6. Curious
    5%
  7. Funny
    2%
  8. Sad
    2%

Net Sentiment Score over 1180 analysed comments; headline adjusted toward the channel norm (Bayesian, C=20). Polarization = normalised entropy. Comment-derived โ€” not YouTube analytics.

ยง04a

Audience composition

โ˜… algo-friendly ยท +60

Who actually showed up in the comments โ€” psychographic, topical and language mix. Computed deterministically from 1180 labeled root comments.

Identity signals

Who they are

  1. Devoted fan
    14%
  2. Debating
    11%
  3. Found inspiring
    6%
  4. Sharing a story
    3%
  5. Relating personally
    1%
  6. Mentions subscribing
    1%
Topic mix

What they talked about

  1. Other
    39%
  2. politics
    23%
  3. Culture
    22%
  4. relationships
    6%
  5. Identity
    3%
  6. Money
    3%
  7. Travel
    2%
  8. Food
    1%
Language mix

In which languages

  1. English
    86%
  2. other
    14%
Algorithm signal ยท proxy

How YouTubeโ€™s satisfaction model likely reads this

โ˜… algo-friendly ยท +60

YouTubeโ€™s 2025 discovery shift now weights satisfaction signals โ€” comment sentiment, tone, and depth. We canโ€™t see the model, but we can estimate its inputs. Directional only.

Positive ratio
70%
share of comments labelled positive
Curiosity share
56%
curious / nostalgic / warm tones
Critical share
2%
critical / sarcastic tones
Net satisfaction
+60
pos% โˆ’ crit%, โˆ’100..+100
ยง04b

Moments that landed

Key transcript moments โ€” tap a timestamp to jump to that point in the video.

1:55Najah's founding story โ€” finding a baby dying in a laundry basket during a home visit โ€” lands as the emotional anchor the entire video earns credibility from.3:04'Food, clothing, shelter, that's the easy part' reframes Zaman from charity to transformation, separating it from every government Band-Aid program in the audience's mind.5:22The Rising Hope Bakery reveal and cookie tasting shifts tone; Peter's candid 'these are solid' verdict makes the product feel real rather than a PR gesture.6:41'I cried so much on Friday when we opened this up โ€” this has been a 20-year journey' is the emotional peak; the bakery becomes proof of concept, not just hope.8:50Najah shows a donation from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints while identifying as Muslim โ€” the interfaith cooperation moment that the comments consistently cite as a standout.9:42'People walk in here and see poverty. I walk in here and I see hope.' โ€” the line the audience quoted most often; functions as the video's unofficial thesis.12:05Peter's critique of give-with-no-expectations programs (California's Project Room Key) introduces friction and keeps the video from reading as pure feel-good content.21:49Najah's Senate ambition โ€” 'Stand in the Senate chambers and say: this is how you break the cycle of poverty, and we did most of it without government help' โ€” closes the policy arc.
ยง04c

What viewers reacted to

Each comment theme mapped to the transcript moment that sparked it.

Appreciation for Peter

Peter's opening statement that he's tired of covering problems and wants to show a solution โ€” audiences responded to him framing himself as intentionally seeking positive stories rather than outrage content.

โ–ถ 0:49โ–ถ 2:24โ–ถ 24:10
Admiration for the woman

The baby-in-laundry-basket origin story at 1:55 established Najah's emotional credibility; her 'I walk in and see hope' line at 9:40 became the most-quoted moment in comments.

โ–ถ 1:55โ–ถ 9:40โ–ถ 21:21
Muslims and media bias

The LDS-donated-food-to-Muslim-org moment at 8:50 โ€” Najah holding up the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints box and saying 'I'm Muslim, just to show you how the world can work together' โ€” triggered the strongest cross-faith emotional reaction in the comment section.

โ–ถ 8:50โ–ถ 1:43
Praise for poverty solution

The skills-vs-handouts contrast at 11:53 โ€” Peter and Najah agreeing that giving without accountability is a Band-Aid โ€” resonated with commenters across the political spectrum as common-sense pragmatism.

โ–ถ 3:04โ–ถ 11:53โ–ถ 21:44
Islamic faith and blessings

Najah's closing 'Salam' and the interfaith funding moment at 8:50 prompted the largest cluster of Arabic/Islamic blessing comments; Muslim viewers saw the entire video as evidence their faith's charitable teachings were being publicly validated.

โ–ถ 8:50โ–ถ 24:42
ยง05

Friction points

All criticism โ†’

Severity ร— frequency โ€” ranked. Each point has an evidence quote and a concrete before/after suggestion.

Religion/refugee framing triggers anti-Islam and anti-immigrant pushbacksev 3/5 ยท 3 mentions
โ€œName one people that Islam , (not all Muslims) can get along with? Nobody. It is an ideology of hate & vi o le nce.โ€โ†— view
FixThe 'refugees are coming soon' line and Muslim framing draw predictable hostile replies. Keep the framing (it's authentic), but consider a pinned context note or letting the beneficiary-outcome testimony (WeyardWiz) lead, which preempts the 'freeloader' objection.
Cookie purchase link / availability missing โ€” strongest unmet CTAsev 3/5 ยท 2 mentions
โ€œWhere can i get the cookies? Link pleaseโ€โ†— view
FixRising Hope cookies aren't sold yet ('probably in about another month'), so the 629-like demand goes nowhere. Pin a comment + add a 'notify me' email capture link in the description so the spike converts instead of evaporating.
'Personal responsibility' viewers reject the structural-solution thesissev 2/5 ยท 2 mentions
โ€œIn the end, it comes down to personal responsibility of the individual. Billions have gone into this issue. And its not fixed.โ€โ†— view
FixA minority read the org as another failed handout. Foreground the accountability/skills-training angle Najah herself makes ('if you're just giving with no expectations... doesn't lead to a good outcome') earlier in the edit to disarm this objection.
Series underperforms vs other Peter content โ€” audience-noticed reach gapsev 2/5 ยท 1 mentions
โ€œWhy are the views on this series so different from the amish series ๐Ÿ˜žโ€โ†— view
FixThe Muslim/poverty series isn't pulling the views of the Amish series. Test a less issue-loaded, more curiosity-driven title/thumbnail (the org's story, not 'Solution To Poverty') to widen the top of funnel.
Title overpromises โ€” 'Solution To Poverty' invites skepticismsev 2/5 ยท 1 mentions
โ€œBillions have gone into this issue. And its not fixed.โ€โ†— view
FixAn absolute claim ('The Solution') sets up the 'it's not fixed' rebuttal. Soften to 'A Model That's Breaking the Cycle of Poverty' โ€” still strong, less attackable.
ยงSp

Sponsor fit

Ready to pitch ยท 82/100

What a brand or agency would see evaluating this video โ€” which sponsors to pitch, why, what to charge, and what's safe.

This audience converts on trust, not on hype โ€” and the trust is exceptional. At least 3 comments show unprompted purchase/referral intent: '@brendonusman705: Where can i get the cookies? Link please' (629 likes), '@apb9869: We will be sending her donations now and in the future' (600 likes), and '@anniekhan6494: I hope they start selling their cookies internationally (up in Canada), I will definitely support'. When Peter vouches for something, viewers act โ€” the cookie endorsement at [6:24] alone generated a buy-link request that out-liked most top comments. Ad tolerance is high because the audience already treats Peter as a credible filter ('a true journalist, a true unbiased reflection' โ€” @gaggabadmaash, 48 likes), so a clean mid-roll read will be received as a recommendation, not an interruption.

Integration rate
$17,000โ€“$26,000
60-90s mid-roll
Dedicated video
$28,000โ€“$42,000
full sponsored video
Basis: View count wasn't supplied, so this is estimated from comment volume: 1,180 comments on a Peter Santenello video typically means roughly 800kโ€“1,000k views, because his channel draws about one comment per 700โ€“900 views. Starting from ~900k views at a blended sponsor rate of $25 per 1,000 views (the going rate brands pay creators, already higher than plain ad money because a host's personal recommendation outperforms a banner ad), that's about a $22k base. We nudge it up because this audience is unusually loyal and emotionally invested (people pledging donations and asking for buy-links unprompted), and because an engaged, faith-respecting, civically-minded American audience is hard for a brand to reach anywhere else โ€” scarcity makes each viewer worth more, not less. The lower-end integration number is the safe ask; the dedicated (whole-video) figure is higher because the brand gets Peter's full storytelling treatment, which is what converts this audience.
Brands to pitch
โ˜… Ground Newsmedia-bias news app19.6% of comments are about media portrayal/bias ('This is what Fox News doesn't show about Muslims' โ€” @iskandarshah8940, 631 likes); Ground News' entire pitch is 'see how outlets spin a story' โ€” exact thematic match
Wiseinternational money transferRefugee-success and immigrant-pride is a core thread (@WeyardWiz's 1,122-like refugee-to-engineer story; refugees discussed [7:56]); Wise targets immigrant/remittance audiences sending money cross-border
BetterHelponline therapyMental-health-as-root-of-poverty is explicit ([11:22] 'mental issues', [22:40] 'mental health issues'); @Vandervรถkken (334 likes) flags social-worker burnout โ€” therapy fits the caregiving audience
Policygeniuslife insurance / financial planningAudience is mainstream-American, family-and-stability minded ('hand up, not a handout' โ€” @TeresaDorey, 279 likes); life-insurance brands chase exactly this older, responsible, US-domestic demographic
MasterClassskills/education subscriptionWorkforce-training and 'teach a man to fish' is the video's thesis ([3:28] industrial sewing, culinary arts [4:37]); @TeresaDorey's top-15 comment is literally about learning skills โ€” education brands fit the self-improvement frame
Incognidata-removal/privacyPeter's audience skews privacy-and-institution-skeptical ('Basically the government doesn't care' โ€” @McFlashh); privacy/data brands are the #1 documentary-channel sponsor category and read well to this distrust-of-institutions base
Sailytravel eSIMPeter is a cross-border documentary traveler ('I was out of the country for four years' [22:57]); eSIM brands (Saily/Airalo) are the dominant travel-creator sponsor and his audience follows him globally
Avoid
  • โœ• alcohol / gambling / lottery16.7% of comments are Islamic blessings ('May Allah bless her'); a visibly Muslim-respecting audience treats these as haram and would read them as an insult to the guest
  • โœ• crypto / get-rich-quick / trading appsThe video's moral core is earned dignity through work and 'no Band-Aids' [12:16]; a speculative money scheme directly contradicts the values the audience just praised
  • โœ• payday loans / predatory fintechAudience is poverty-empathetic and would see exploitative lending to the vulnerable as tone-deaf next to a video about breaking the poverty cycle
  • โœ• fast fashion / disposable consumer goodsClashes with the sustainable-livelihood, anti-'junk' ethos the guest voices ([23:46] 'no junk in hereโ€ฆ they're killing us')
How to integrate

Run a 60-90s host-read mid-roll placed after the emotional peak (~[10:09] 'love, belonging, understanding, and a chance') so the sponsor inherits the goodwill โ€” this audience tolerates ads when Peter personally vouches, but a cold pre-roll before the story lands would waste that trust.

Brand safety
Toxicity
Clean โ€” of 115 surfaced comments only ~3 are hostile (@solvingpolitics3172 anti-Islam, @kaceydillin7367 poverty-blaming, @nismosaki4550 partisan hashtag); >95% warm/supportive
Controversy
Low but non-zero โ€” the topic touches Islam, immigration and US partisan politics, so a brand averse to any political adjacency may hesitate; no FTC/disclosure/strike risk detected, no existing sponsor in the video to conflict with
Audience conduct
On-topic ~96%; troll/spam rate ~3-4% (a handful of partisan one-liners and one '5 steps to success' self-promo); civil and high-effort, with multiple multi-paragraph testimonials
Sponsor evidence quotes
โ€œWhere can i get the cookies? Link pleaseโ€
โ€” unprompted purchase intent (629 likes) โ€” proof a Peter endorsement converts to 'where do I buy' instantlyโ†— view
โ€œThis woman and her staff embody how every American should feel about helping all others. We will be sending her donations now and in the future.โ€
โ€” audience opens their wallet on Peter's say-so (600 likes) โ€” exactly the behavior a sponsor pays forโ†— view
โ€œI hope they start selling their cookies internationally (up in Canada), I will definitely support!โ€
โ€” cross-border buy intent โ€” signals reach and conversion beyond the USโ†— view
โ€œto me you're a true journalist a true unbiased reflection of the country we live inโ€
โ€” deep host trust (48 likes) โ€” the trust transfers to whatever brand he readsโ†— view
Algorithm read ยท what to do next 14 days

Push Hard Now ยท score 91/100

breakout
The next 14 days
  1. Day 1 (0-24h)
    Pin a comment with the Zaman website, donation link, and cookie/Rising Hope Bakery purchase link, replying directly to @brendonusman705's 'Link please'.
    Buy-and-donate intent is already the top behavior (629 + 600 likes on link/donation comments) and is currently going unanswered.
    WatchClick-through on the pinned link and reply velocity in the first 24h.
  2. Day 2-3
    Cut a 45-60s vertical Short around the interfaith donation beat ([8:46] LDS gift to a Muslim-run charity) titled around 'Muslim and Mormon, working together'.
    That moment drew the highest-emotion reactions and the 'just to show you how the world can work together' line ([8:50]) is the most shareable hook.
    WatchShort retention >70% and swipe-through to the long video.
  3. Day 4-7
    Reply on-camera or in a community post to the 'why fewer views than the Amish series' comment, and re-thumbnail the video with Najah's face + a tighter hook (e.g. 'She Found a Baby Dying in a Laundry Basket').
    @vl3525 surfaced a real reach gap; the laundry-basket origin story ([1:55]) is the strongest curiosity hook and the current title buries it.
    WatchImpressions CTR before/after the thumbnail swap; views/day trend vs. the Amish-series baseline.
  4. Day 7-14
    Greenlight the audience-requested follow-ups: a Native American reservation visit (@rentedguccimink1948) and an African-American Muslim community piece (@defrocker0569), and tease one in a community post.
    These are the two concrete next-episode requests in the comments, extending the high-trust 'solutions/communities' series the audience is asking to continue ('keep your muslim series coming' @fk9400).
    WatchCommunity-post upvotes/poll response and comment demand on the teased topic.
Why it could lift
  • +Sentiment is ~95% positive across 1,180 comments โ€” almost no critical drag on watch-satisfaction signals
  • +High story-share behavior: multiple long first-person testimonials (@WeyardWiz refugee story 1,122 likes, @William-2015f homelessness story 164 likes) โ€” comments this substantive correlate with long watch time
  • +Strong emotional payoff drives rewatch/share ('made me tear up' @jordanpetty4356 646 likes; 'I cried happy tears so many times' @geoffcasias9367) โ€” emotion is the strongest share trigger
  • +Explicit 'we need more of this / share with the world' demand (@jodyslater6969, @gifigigi) signals organic distribution intent
  • +Curiosity + debate threads (poverty causes [11:13], refugee policy [7:56]) keep people in comments, lifting engagement velocity
Why it might stall
  • โˆ’Direct in-comment evidence the series under-indexes on views: '@vl3525: Why are the views on this series so different from the amish series ๐Ÿ˜ž' โ€” the Muslim/Dearborn series reaches fewer viewers than Peter's top series despite high engagement
  • โˆ’Politically/religiously charged topic can suppress suggested-video placement and trip advertiser-friendly limits, capping algorithmic push
  • โˆ’Title 'Solution To Poverty In USA' is thematic but low-curiosity โ€” no person, place, or tension hook to drive click-through from impressions
  • โˆ’Heavy US-domestic + Muslim-community framing narrows the addressable audience vs. Peter's broad-travel content
  • โˆ’Long runtime (~24min) with a slow non-narrative structure (facility walkthrough) risks mid-video drop-off for casual viewers

Algorithm Signal is a proxy. YouTubeโ€™s satisfaction scores arenโ€™t public. Directional, not predictive.

ยง05

The audience asked & asked for

All questions โ†’

Unanswered questions and explicit requests from the comment thread โ€” fuel for the next upload.

Questions

12 unanswered

  • ?Where can I buy the cookies right now? Is there an online store? (~629 likes on comment asking this โ€” highest-urgency unanswered question)
  • ?How can I donate to Zaman International? (~10+ comments asking for a link)
  • ?Are there Zaman chapters or similar organizations in other U.S. cities? (~15 comments)
  • ?How do I volunteer at Zaman? (~8 comments)
  • ?Did Zaman land the Whole Foods contract mentioned at the end? (~6 comments)
  • ?What happened to the baby in the laundry basket โ€” did the family stabilize? (~5 comments)
  • ?What is the acceptance criteria / how does a woman apply for the program? (~5 comments)
  • ?How many women has Zaman helped over its 20-year history total? (~4 comments)
  • ?How was the 40,000 sq ft building funded โ€” grants, donations, who? (~4 comments)
  • ?What percentage of program graduates get jobs at living wage? Success rate data? (~3 comments)
  • ?Can the Zaman model be licensed or franchised to other countries? (~3 comments)
  • ?What does the sewing center contract pipeline look like โ€” which brands? (~2 comments)
Requests

8 explicit asks

  • askContinue the Muslim American series โ€” 'keep your Muslim series coming, it's awesome' (@fk9400, ~8 explicit requests)
  • askFollow up on Zaman โ€” cookie launch, Whole Foods deal outcome, expansion progress (~6 requests)
  • askVisit Native American reservations (non-touristy) โ€” 'less touristy one' specified (@rentedguccimink1948, ~4 requests)
  • askInterview African-American Muslims, especially those who transitioned from Nation of Islam to Sunni practice (@defrocker0569, ~3 requests)
  • askMore solution-based content generally โ€” 'we need content like this right now more than ever before' (Beverly, ~10 implicit requests)
  • askVisit Tacoma, Washington โ€” commenter says the city 'needs the solution' (@TheRaindancer10)
  • askVisit different sides of London โ€” multicultural angle, similar to New York framing (@frankiewebber5036)
  • askFeature refugee success stories โ€” inspired by @WeyardWiz's comment about going from refugee to engineer/homeowner
ยง06

What to make next

Three video ideas pulled directly from what the comments asked for.

โ„–01

Follow Zaman's cookie launch โ€” did Rising Hope Bakery land Whole Foods? Track the women from apprentice to employed

TitleDid They Break the Cycle? Zaman's Cookie Business 6 Months Later
HookSix months ago they were baking cookies in a brand-new kitchen. Here's what happened next.
Why nowPeter promised a link to buy cookies and hinted at Whole Foods; the audience is primed and asking โ€” a follow-up closes the loop and lets viewers see outcome, not just aspiration.
โ„–02

Refugee-to-American-success portraits โ€” structured around @WeyardWiz-style stories: people Zaman helped who are now engineers, homeowners, donors

TitleWhat Happened to the Refugees America Took In
HookHe came as a refugee in 2006 with nothing. By 35, he paid off his mortgage and donated back.
Why nowThe WeyardWiz comment got hundreds of likes and replies, signaling massive appetite for concrete data on refugee outcomes vs. the 'burden' narrative.
โ„–03

Muslim Americans doing community work in other U.S. cities โ€” extend the series to 3โ€“4 orgs, showing the model is not unique to Dearborn

TitleThe Muslim Americans Quietly Fixing America's Hardest Problems
HookDearborn isn't the only city where this is happening.
Why nowMultiple commenters explicitly asked for more of this series; the 19.6% media-bias cluster shows an engaged audience that feels underrepresented and wants more proof points.
โ„–04

Native American reservation visit โ€” poverty, self-sufficiency models, and tribal economy, framed through the same solution lens as Zaman

TitleThe Poverty Problem Nobody Talks About: Inside a Native American Reservation
HookAmerica's oldest poverty crisis has the fewest cameras on it.
Why now@rentedguccimink1948's comment got engagement, and the 'fringes of American cities' frame Peter established in this video extends naturally to reservation communities.
โ„–05

The four types of homelessness โ€” a structured documentary expanding Peter and Najah's off-camera taxonomy with real interviews from each category

TitleThe Four Types of Homeless in America (And How to Fix Each One)
HookThere isn't one homeless crisis. There are four. And each one needs a different solution.
Why nowThe taxonomy (mental illness / addiction / bad luck / freeloaders) generated debate in comments; the audience wants the nuance unpacked โ€” it's the most intellectually contested claim in the video.
โ„–06

How private organizations are out-performing government on poverty โ€” Zaman as the case study, then contrast with Project Room Key in California

TitlePrivate vs. Government: Who's Actually Solving Homelessness?
HookCalifornia spent billions giving homeless people hotel rooms. Here's what actually worked.
Why nowThe Band-Aid vs. solutions framing landed with the audience and multiple comments referenced California as the counterexample โ€” there's a ready-made argument structure that's already engaging people.
ยง07

Creator action items

Concrete, testable changes for the next upload. Each cites a timestamp, a comment quote, or a metric โ€” and names what to watch.

Do 01

Add a pinned top comment + description block with Zaman's donation and cookie-purchase links the moment they exist

Evidence@brendonusman705 'Where can i get the cookies? Link please' (629 likes); @apb9869 'We will be sending her donations now' (600 likes); Peter says 'I'll leave some links below' [24:13]
Watch forLink clicks and a drop in repeat 'where do I buy/donate' comments within 7 days
Do 02

Re-thumbnail/retitle to lead with the laundry-basket origin story or Najah's face instead of the abstract 'Solution To Poverty' framing

EvidenceOrigin story at [1:55] is the emotional hook; @vl3525 'Why are the views on this series so different from the amish series ๐Ÿ˜ž'
Watch forImpressions click-through rate improves vs. current; views/day closes the gap with the Amish series
Do 03

Clip the interfaith LDS-Muslim donation moment into a standalone Short

Evidence[8:46]-[8:55] 'how the world can work together'; @melmil9836 (28 likes) 'the most amazing words for my ears'
Watch forShort retention and swipe-through to the long-form video
Do 04

Commit to and announce the next entries in this 'solutions/communities' series

Evidence@fk9400 'keep your muslim series coming' (27 likes); @amalyako 'I love this series, I wish it never ends'
Watch forSubscriber-to-view ratio and comment demand on the announcement
Do 05

Greenlight a Native American reservation episode

Evidence@rentedguccimink1948 (32 likes) 'I'd love to see Peter visit some Native American reservations next'
Watch forEngagement on a community-post poll testing the topic
Do 06

Plan an African-American Muslim community piece (Elijah/WD Muhammad lineage)

Evidence@defrocker0569 (14 likes) specific request; @alanali (38 likes) 'As an African American Muslimโ€ฆ that lady is my SHE-roe'
Watch forComment and poll demand from the existing Muslim-American audience segment
Do 07

Lean into the 'media doesn't show this' framing in future thumbnails/intros for this series

EvidenceMedia-bias theme = 19.6% of comments; @iskandarshah8940 'This is what Fox News doesn't show about Muslims' (631 likes)
Watch forClick-through and share rate on media-contrast-framed episodes
Do 08

Tighten the facility-walkthrough middle section (more story, fewer room tours) in future docs

Evidence~24min runtime with repetitive 'one door to another' tours [5:01],[9:08]; risk of mid-video drop-off
Watch forAverage-view-duration retention curve flattening through the middle third
Do 09

Foreground first-person guest origin stories early โ€” they are the proven retention/share driver

Evidence@WeyardWiz refugee-to-engineer testimonial (1,122 likes) was prompted by the refugee theme [7:56]
Watch forLong-form-testimonial comment count and average watch time
Do 10

Surface mental-health-and-dignity framing the guest used as a recurring series theme

Evidence[11:22] four categories of homelessness; @CassWomack (98 likes) 'have love and support in the home โ€” that is the root issue'
Watch forEngagement on episodes that explicitly address root causes vs. symptoms
Do 11

Moderate/limit-reply the handful of partisan one-liners early to protect advertiser-friendliness

Evidence@nismosaki4550 partisan hashtags; @solvingpolitics3172 anti-Islam comment
Watch forToxicity stays <5% of new comments; no monetization-limited flag
ยงR1

Reply queue

Who to reply to first โ€” ranked by impact, with a ready-to-send draft in your voice.

@WeyardWiz ยท highโ†— view

ZAMAN! when I came as a "refugee" in 2006 to the USA, besides the DHS, zaman was amongst the organization that helped us immensely, providing some furniture and even getting us a van to help in daily necessary transportation. 15 years later, I'm a 27 year old engineer who has finalized our house mortgage just last year, and now I'm giving back to the institutions that helped us through taxes and of course donations to the poor. Immigration is a good thing, I hope Americans see this as evidence. We middle eastern folks dont aim to siphon off of food stamps and government assistance, were too proud to ever do that. Our aim is just to get on our feet momentarily and intend to give back surely

Why: Former Zaman beneficiary with a concrete success story โ€” engineer, mortgage paid off, now giving back. This is the entire video's thesis proven in real life. Pinning this reply could turn the thread viral and is the single best social proof in the comments.
Draft reply

This is exactly the story Najah is building toward โ€” thank you for sharing it. Mortgage paid off, giving back, 15 years later. That's Zaman working.

@brendonusman705 ยท highโ†— view

Where can i get the cookies? Link please

Why: Unanswered direct question with 629 likes โ€” hundreds of people want the same answer and no one replied. Easy win, drives real traffic to Zaman.
Draft reply

Links are in the description โ€” they're working on Whole Foods distribution right now. Once that lands I'll post an update.

@iskandarshah8940 ยท highโ†— view

This is what Fox News doesn't show about Muslims in America

Why: 631 likes and taps directly into the 19.6% 'Muslims and media bias' comment cluster โ€” the most politically charged audience segment. A measured reply here anchors the thread and discourages it from going negative.
Draft reply

That's kind of the whole point of coming here โ€” there's a lot that doesn't make the cut on any cable channel. Najah is the story.

@weareallbrainwashed5101 ยท mediumโ†— view

Imagine this woman here in USA, and Jenner wins the woman of the year, and the media glorifying the Kardashian's.

Why: 821 likes โ€” third most-liked comment. Sharp cultural contrast that resonates broadly. A reply keeps the spotlight on Najah rather than the comparison.
Draft reply

She's been doing this for 20 years and most people have never heard of her. Hopefully that changes.

@rawaalabbas379 ยท mediumโ†— view

I volunteered at Zaman for a couple months and it was such an amazing experience. Its difficult not to cry listening to this incredible woman! Her mission, dedication and vision have been my source of inspiration!

Why: First-hand volunteer testimony โ€” exactly what potential donors and volunteers need to hear. Replying surfaces this in the thread and could recruit more volunteers.
Draft reply

Really appreciate you sharing that โ€” having someone say 'I was actually there and it's real' means more than anything I can film.

@AMakki7491 ยท mediumโ†— view

Gal was my neighbor growing up, her husband would always welcome the neighborhood children to their home and coach us all in basketball. Cannot say enough good things about her and her family.

Why: Personal community connection to Gal, Zaman's first hire โ€” humanizes the organization beyond Najah and could be shared with Gal herself as morale.
Draft reply

That's a beautiful detail โ€” Najah lit up when she talked about Gal. Pass this along to her if you ever get the chance.

@rentedguccimink1948 ยท mediumโ†— view

I LOVE this content. I'd love to see Peter visit some Native American reservations next. Maybe a less touristy one(although similar with the Amish IDK how much you can remove the tourist aspect of the equation).

Why: Content request from an engaged fan with a specific, actionable idea โ€” good to acknowledge publicly so the audience sees the creator listens.
Draft reply

That's on the list โ€” the reservation angle is one I've been thinking about. Less curated access is harder to get but that's exactly the point.

@blokcomNativeFaces ยท mediumโ†— view

I like her and her perspective on this situation, but when she said, "refugee's are coming soon..." I know it's not her fault but we have to stop taking so-called "refugee's" when we cannot even take care of our own.

Why: Fair, non-hostile pushback from someone who actually liked the video โ€” the 'take care of our own first' argument is widespread and worth a factual response. WeyardWiz's comment is a perfect natural counter.
Draft reply

Najah's point โ€” and I think she's right โ€” is that refugees tend to come with skills and work ethic, not to drain resources. Check the top comment on this video for a real example.

@kaceydillin7367 ยท lowโ†— view

Poor people make poor decisions. If you are poor, stop having children you cannot financially take care of on your own. Put the bottle down. Stop smoking herb and cigarettes. Invest in yourself, with a skill. Plumbers, welders, electricians etc do damn well. You do not "need" college. 24 hours in a day. You sleep for 6 or 7. Work 8. Leaves 9 hours a day. Oh but you want to watch tv, play Madden, chill out. So whats your excuse?

Why: Provocative but not entirely wrong โ€” the video itself touches on personal accountability. Worth a brief reply that redirects to the 'four types' nuance without validating the dismissiveness.
Draft reply

Najah actually agrees with you on some of this โ€” she talks about the four categories and says you can't lump everyone together. The women in that building are making the choice to change. That's exactly who she's there for.

@vl3525 ยท lowโ†— view

Why are the views on this series so different from the amish series ๐Ÿ˜ž

Why: Viewer concern about the channel's reach โ€” shows they care and are invested. Worth a one-liner to acknowledge the algorithm reality without making it weird.
Draft reply

Different audiences, different algorithms โ€” that's just how it goes. The people who find this one tend to stick around though.

@defrocker0569 ยท lowโ†— view

I like your content. It would interesting if you interviewed African-American Muslims that were followers of the Hon. Elijah Muhammad, but transitioned to sunni or traditional practice of Islam who following his son WD Muhammed after Elijah passed.

Why: Specific, well-informed content suggestion that fits the Muslim America series โ€” acknowledging it publicly signals the creator does historical research.
Draft reply

That transition is a massive and underreported story โ€” W.D. Mohammed's influence especially. Adding it to the list.

@charleslivingston4697 ยท lowโ†— view

GREAT JOB PETER! KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK ๐Ÿ‘Š๐Ÿ™ SAILING ACROSS THE ATLANTIC LOVING YOUR STORIES โ›ต๏ธ MY TEXT IS STUCK ON CAPโ€ฆ IM NOT YELLING ๐Ÿคฃ๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿคฃ๐Ÿ˜‚

Why: Devoted fan watching from a sailboat mid-Atlantic โ€” the kind of specific detail that makes a public reply memorable and humanizes the audience.
Draft reply

Watching from the Atlantic โ€” that might be the best viewing situation anyone's ever described. Stay safe out there.

ยงR2

Promo pull-quotes

Shareable social-proof quotes โ€” ready for thumbnails, community posts, or a sponsor deck.

โ€œThat woman cares more about this country than all of the people in Washington DC combined. Amazing work.โ€

@BelayeAssefa1 ยท community postโ†— view

โ€œThis is what Fox News doesn't show about Muslims in Americaโ€

@iskandarshah8940 ยท community postโ†— view

โ€œThe World needs 5 million more of this lady!!!โ€

@jayking3486 ยท thumbnailโ†— view

โ€œMan made me tear up a bit seeing what this lady is doing for people. She's amazing.โ€

@jordanpetty4356 ยท pinned commentโ†— view

โ€œNaja means in Arabic salvation. She is truly living up to her name. What a great story. Best wishes!โ€

@hankramo1196 ยท pinned commentโ†— view

โ€œI see a lot of social workers and legal advocates in my job but they're always just all talk, no action kind of people. This lady is taking action. Glad to see Najah creating SOLUTIONS instead of dividing and tearing each other down!โ€

@paranoidhumanoid ยท sponsor deckโ†— view

โ€œHer name is Najah, which means "success" in Arabic. She's definitely living up to her name <3โ€

@schreingeiss ยท community postโ†— view

โ€œImagine this woman here in USA, and Jenner wins the woman of the year, and the media glorifying the Kardashian's.โ€

@weareallbrainwashed5101 ยท community postโ†— view
ยงR3

Clip & Shorts finder

Moments worth cutting into Shorts โ€” each with a title and a ready hook line. Timestamps link to the video.

[1:55] โ†—She Found a Baby Dying in a Laundry Basket~28s
HookI found a baby that was dying in a laundry basket.
The single most emotionally charged moment in the video โ€” 'tears' appear across multiple top comments (@jordanpetty4356, @beverlystickney3289). The 21.6% admiration-for-Najah cluster reacted hardest to her origin story. Strong hook, contained in under 30 seconds.
[9:40] โ†—I See Hope. Not Poverty.~20s
HookPeople walk in here and see poverty. I walk in here and I see hope.
One of the most quotable lines in the transcript and a natural Short ending. Connects to the 18.7% praise-for-solution cluster and @sagetanner4129's reaction ('gave me chills'). Clean setup-punchline structure.
[5:25] โ†—Take a Bite Out of Poverty~35s
HookWe're on the cusp of breaking the cycle of poverty. It's taken 20 years.
629 people asked where to buy the cookies โ€” this moment already has proven demand. The cookie tasting is light and shareable; 'take a bite out of poverty' is a ready-made Short title with built-in wordplay that travels.
[8:48] โ†—Muslim Leader. LDS Donation. This is How the World Works.~25s
HookThis is from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. I'm Muslim. Just to show you how the world can work together.
Directly speaks to the 19.6% 'Muslims and media bias' cluster โ€” the biggest conversation driver. A faith-unity clip counters the polarization narrative and is highly shareable across religious audiences.
[6:01] โ†—They Are Fearless. They Are Champions.~22s
HookOur clients, they are fearless.
Emotional, self-contained speech that ends on 'heroes and champions' โ€” strong inspirational Short arc. Connects to the 21.6% admiration cluster and works as standalone motivation content.
[21:49] โ†—Her Plan: Stand in the Senate and Say This~35s
HookI would like for Zaman to be a household word. Like American Red Cross or like the Girl Scouts.
Vision statement with a specific, surprising destination โ€” the Senate floor. The ambition is quotable and the framing ('we did most of it without government help') resonates with both liberal and conservative audiences, maximizing share potential.
[11:13] โ†—The Four Types of Homeless People (And Why Labels Are Wrong)~40s
HookYou can't put a label on it. You can't just say, 'Homeless.'
The most intellectually substantive segment โ€” @TeresaDorey's top-ten comment engages with exactly this nuance. Nuanced takes on homelessness categories drive comments and watch time from viewers who feel seen on both sides of the debate.
[10:05] โ†—What Everyone Really Needs (A Nurse Figured It Out)~18s
HookMost of all โ€” love, belonging, understanding, and a chance.
Short, universal, emotionally resonant โ€” works as a standalone motivational clip with no context needed. The 16.7% Islamic blessings cluster and the 21.6% admiration cluster both reacted to Najah's humanity; this line is its distilled form.
ยง08

Top comments

Explore all 1,180 comments โ†’

Verbatim โ€” the 5 most representative comments from the thread.

BelayeAssefa1โ™ฅ 1,399 ยท positiveโ†— view

That woman cares more about this country than all of the people in Washington DC combined. Amazing work.

Why picked: highest-liked comment โ€” frames Najah as outdoing government
WeyardWizโ™ฅ 1,122 ยท positiveโ†— view

ZAMAN! when I came as a โ€refugeeโ€ in 2006 to the USA, besides the DHS, zaman was amongst the organization that helped us immensely, providing some furniture and even getting us a van to help in daily necessary transportation. 15 years later, I'm a 27 year old engineer who has finalized our house mortgage just last year, and now I'm giving back to the institutions that helped us through taxes and of course donations to the poor. Immigration is a good thing, I hope Americans see this as evidence. We middle eastern folks dont aim to siphon off of food stamps and government assistance, were too proud to ever do that. Our aim is just to get on our feet momentarily and intend to give back surely

Why picked: first-hand Zaman beneficiary testimony โ€” validates the org's claims with a 15-year outcome
weareallbrainwashed5101โ™ฅ 821 ยท mixedโ†— view

Imagine this woman here in USA, and Jenner wins the woman of the year, and the media glorifying the Kardashianโ€™s.

Why picked: third-highest liked โ€” media-bias resentment, ties to the 19.6% media-bias topic
iskandarshah8940โ™ฅ 631 ยท mixedโ†— view

This is what Fox News doesnโ€™t show about Muslims in America

Why picked: crystallizes the Muslims-and-media-bias theme (19.6%)
1slamExplainedโ™ฅ 636 ยท positiveโ†— view

May Allah bless her, beautiful human being.

Why picked: top exemplar of the Islamic-blessings cluster (16.7%)
ยง08

Threads that sparked discussion

Explore all 1,180 comments โ†’

Top reply-magnet comments โ€” where the real debate happened. 0 replies across 0 roots ยท max chain 1 deep ยท creator replied to 0%

โ„–01 ยท @BelayeAssefa10 replies ยท โ™ฅ 1,399โ†— view

That woman cares more about this country than all of the people in Washington DC combined. Amazing work.

โ„–02 ยท @WeyardWiz0 replies ยท โ™ฅ 1,122โ†— view

ZAMAN! when I came as a โ€refugeeโ€ in 2006 to the USA, besides the DHS, zaman was amongst the organization that helped us immensely, providing some furniture and even getting us a van to help in daily necessary transportation. 15 years later, I'm a 27 year old engineer whoโ€ฆ

โ„–03 ยท @weareallbrainwashed51010 replies ยท โ™ฅ 821โ†— view

Imagine this woman here in USA, and Jenner wins the woman of the year, and the media glorifying the Kardashianโ€™s.

โ„–04 ยท @jordanpetty43560 replies ยท โ™ฅ 646โ†— view

Man made me tear up a bit seeing what this lady is doing for people. Sheโ€™s amazing.

โ„–05 ยท @1slamExplained0 replies ยท โ™ฅ 636โ†— view

May Allah bless her, beautiful human being.

ยง09

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1.9M
views
32k
likes
1.9%
engagement
2 years ago
Syrian/Ukrainian Refugee Finds Her Place in Kyiv, Ukraine (#4) ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ
โ„–12 ยท interview

Syrian/Ukrainian Refugee Finds Her Place in Kyiv, Ukraine (#4) ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ

31k
views
1.3k
likes
4.6%
engagement
8 years ago
American Moving To Ukrainian Village ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ
โ„–13 ยท travel

American Moving To Ukrainian Village ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ

167k
views
5.1k
likes
3.3%
engagement
8 years ago
What INDIA'S CHILDREN Can TEACH YOU ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ
โ„–14 ยท interview

What INDIA'S CHILDREN Can TEACH YOU ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ

75k
views
2.3k
likes
3.2%
engagement
6 years ago
Foreigner's Thoughts About IRAN ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท
โ„–15 ยท travel

Foreigner's Thoughts About IRAN ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท

61k
views
1.9k
likes
3.7%
engagement
7 years ago
BLM in the Whitest State in America - Vermont ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–16 ยท interview

BLM in the Whitest State in America - Vermont ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

488k
views
12k
likes
3.2%
engagement
NA
MY FIRST HOUR IN IRAN ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท
โ„–17 ยท travel

MY FIRST HOUR IN IRAN ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท

43k
views
782
likes
1.9%
engagement
NA
Living Off the Grid in Arizona Desert ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–18 ยท interview

Living Off the Grid in Arizona Desert ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

6.1M
views
78k
likes
1.3%
engagement
NA
The Most Underrated City | Kharkiv, Ukraine ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ(ัƒะบั€ะฐั—ะฝััŒะบั– ััƒะฑั‚ะธั‚ั€ะธ)
โ„–19 ยท travel

The Most Underrated City | Kharkiv, Ukraine ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ(ัƒะบั€ะฐั—ะฝััŒะบั– ััƒะฑั‚ะธั‚ั€ะธ)

497k
views
22k
likes
4.9%
engagement
7 years ago
The Mormon Settlers of Rural Arizona ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–20 ยท interview

The Mormon Settlers of Rural Arizona ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

876k
views
17k
likes
2.0%
engagement
NA
The Florida Nobody Knows ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–21 ยท travel

The Florida Nobody Knows ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

6.1M
views
94k
likes
1.6%
engagement
NA
Exploring New Orleans - America's Wildest City ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–22 ยท travel

Exploring New Orleans - America's Wildest City ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

2.9M
views
46k
likes
1.7%
engagement
NA
How These Hasidic Jews Can Save Your Life ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–23 ยท vlog

How These Hasidic Jews Can Save Your Life ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

675k
views
18k
likes
3.0%
engagement
NA
New York Cityโ€™s Hidden Corruption ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–24 ยท interview

New York Cityโ€™s Hidden Corruption ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

1.1M
views
24k
likes
2.2%
engagement
NA
Meeting The Amish - First Impressions ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–25 ยท travel

Meeting The Amish - First Impressions ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

2.1M
views
42k
likes
2.3%
engagement
5 years ago
San Francisco โ€“ Whatโ€™s It Really Like Now? ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–26 ยท interview

San Francisco โ€“ Whatโ€™s It Really Like Now? ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

5.2M
views
87k
likes
1.8%
engagement
NA
Why Would You TRAVEL To "UNPOPULAR" COUNTRIES?
โ„–27 ยท personal_story

Why Would You TRAVEL To "UNPOPULAR" COUNTRIES?

15k
views
900
likes
7.2%
engagement
6 years ago
Life on the Edge of the Everglades ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–28 ยท travel

Life on the Edge of the Everglades ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

4.8M
views
53k
likes
1.2%
engagement
NA
MINSK, BELARUS Metro ๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡พ(ั€ัƒััะบะธะต ััƒะฑั‚ะธั‚ั€ั‹)
โ„–29 ยท travel

MINSK, BELARUS Metro ๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡พ(ั€ัƒััะบะธะต ััƒะฑั‚ะธั‚ั€ั‹)

149k
views
4.0k
likes
3.1%
engagement
6 years ago
THOUGHTS ON IRAN ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท
โ„–30 ยท travel

THOUGHTS ON IRAN ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท

34k
views
1.2k
likes
3.8%
engagement
10 years ago
Being A Muslim Woman In America ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–31 ยท interview

Being A Muslim Woman In America ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

422k
views
9.9k
likes
2.9%
engagement
4 years ago
Inside Chicana Lowrider Culture - LA ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ
โ„–32 ยท interview

Inside Chicana Lowrider Culture - LA ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ

6.0M
views
68k
likes
1.2%
engagement
4 years ago
The City Split Between Two Countries ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ
โ„–33 ยท culture_comparison

The City Split Between Two Countries ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ

2.8M
views
49k
likes
2.0%
engagement
9 months ago
Hanging With The Sikh Motorcycle Club Of America ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ
โ„–34 ยท interview

Hanging With The Sikh Motorcycle Club Of America ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ

1.4M
views
33k
likes
2.6%
engagement
4 years ago
Jodhpur, INDIA - What Tourists Don't See ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ
โ„–35 ยท travel

Jodhpur, INDIA - What Tourists Don't See ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ

134k
views
3.0k
likes
2.4%
engagement
6 years ago
Inside Biggest Cuban City In USA ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–36 ยท culture_comparison

Inside Biggest Cuban City In USA ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

272k
views
7.5k
likes
3.2%
engagement
5 years ago