I'm 18 and I live in one of the counties shown in this video. I've never seen anyone cover us like this, and the fact it's got 8 million views in just 5 days is blowing my mind. Thanks for bringing light to us, it really feels like the rest of the world has forgotten we exist. It's a rough way but I don't plan on moving off. These mountains are my home.
Why: Local 18-year-old resident with 18k likes โ the most authentic validation the video could receive. Replying publicly signals to the entire region that Peter sees them, and this thread has massive viral legs.
Draft replyThis comment stopped me cold. You living it every day and still choosing to stay โ that means more to me than any view count. Thank you for being out there.
What's even more sad, is that closed walmart came in, killed off all the mom and pop grocers that had probably been around for a century, then realized they'd overestimated and closed it down, leaving a massive, brutalist brick store to decay in the beautiful woodlands. Walmart and large grocery chains are convenient, but they're also tragic.
Why: Top comment by a wide margin at 70k likes. Sharp, adds real substance to what Peter only touched on โ engaging here validates the insight and deepens the discussion for a massive audience.
Draft replyYou said it better than I did. Come in, undercut everyone, then walk away. That's its own kind of strip mining.
I was an international student from Ethiopia when I first came to the Appalachians as part of our senior retreat . I went to a very expensive high school in Chicago and at first our teachers were warning us how we may receive racist comments from the locals . First, I'd like to say how welcoming they were to me. Secondly I never thought poverty at this level existed in America . We stayed there and built them a house and everything they needed. That was an eye-opening experience and I would do it again ! I hope every American visit the Appalachians ! America is NOT only New York or California !! โค๏ธโค๏ธโค๏ธ
Why: 22k likes, a story that flips multiple narratives at once โ braced for racism, left having built a house. A reply amplifies one of the most shareable comments on the video.
Draft replyYou came in warned, and left having built a house with those people. That's the whole story of Appalachia in one comment. Thank you for sharing that.
I'm from Russia, and it's so eye-opening to see people from the other part of the globe having the same problems as my people do. It makes me think we are way closer than politicians want us to believe. Thank you for giving voice to these people, great work!
Why: 12k likes and one of the most-quoted lines in the thread. A Russian and an Appalachian feeling the same pain is exactly the cross-cultural bridge moment this channel is built on.
Draft replyThat last line is going on a sticky note on my desk. Hard times have a way of showing us we're basically the same people, everywhere.
As a Kentuckian I can not express how happy I am that you are visiting these places and giving these folks a voice. You are humble and open minded and this kind of journalism (or whatever you want to call it) is desperately needed on the internet today. Thank you for your work- you can be assured that you def aren't part of the social media problem you talked about :)
Why: 11.6k likes from a Kentuckian โ the next stop in the series. Replying creates a direct bridge to Part 2 and keeps series momentum alive.
Draft replyThat means a lot coming from a Kentuckian โ because you're next. Stay close.
The history kid needs a long-form episode and an occasional check-in. I want him to succeed SO bad.
Why: 1.8k likes on a direct content request echoed by dozens of other comments. A reply confirms Peter heard the demand and teases a follow-up, driving series retention.
Draft replyYou and about a thousand other people in these comments. He shows up more in the series โ keep watching.
As a black woman watching this, I was moved to tears. The kids on the bridge captured my heart in this one statement, "racism is stupid, it's meant to divide us." Love the people, the outdoors, the hope even in the midst of sadness with drugs so rampant.
Why: 1.4k likes, deeply personal response that highlights the most important line of the bridge scene. Replying amplifies the most cross-demographic moment in the video.
Draft replyWhen he said that I just let the camera roll and stayed quiet. Those kids understood something a lot of adults still haven't figured out.
As a Appalachian I urge you to keep spreading awareness to our area. It's a beautiful area with lots of beautiful history and a lot of tragic history as well. Awareness is what we need to show that we're not just dumb hicks, but people who have a lot to offer. We were just unlucky to have our communities dealt the hand it was and it's been that way for a while. There's a tragic saying in Appalachia and it's not as trues as it used to be, which goes "coal mine, moonshine, or down the line" which just goes to show that there isn't much, and likely won't ever be much here without the help of people like you.
Why: 919 likes from a local resident. The 'coal mine, moonshine, or down the line' phrase is a cultural artifact Peter likely didn't know โ acknowledging it shows he's still learning from his audience.
Draft reply"Coal mine, moonshine, or down the line" โ I hadn't heard that before and it says everything. Thank you for teaching me. More episodes coming.
Fun Fact: The book the nice woman in the holler passes to him is 'They Died in the Darkness' by Lacy Dillon, which is an examination of accounts of the various mine disasters. It is a really rare book, with most copies being owned by university libraries. Not even available in a digital form.
Why: 4k likes. Peter didn't catch the book title on camera โ this comment adds a layer of meaning to that scene. Replying rewards engaged viewers and deepens the story.
Draft replyShe handed it to me so naturally I didn't catch the title on camera. That makes the whole moment even more meaningful โ thank you for tracking that down.
Recently, my wife and I drove from Niagara Falls to Washington D.C. We ended up taking route 219, and it took us completely through back roads, and towns just like these. What amazed me is how similar these towns are to the towns that my parents and family came from in Mississippi. The people are the same, the way of life is the same, the economy is the same. What upsets me is how much politics and the media have attempted to divide us and paint these people in such a negative light.
Why: 418 likes from an African American commenter drawing a direct parallel between Appalachian and rural Black poverty in Mississippi โ exactly the kind of cross-cultural understanding Peter's work aims to build.
Draft replyThe parallel between Appalachia and rural Mississippi is something I want to go deeper on. The extraction, the abandonment, the same industries leaving โ it really is the same story with different scenery.
I moved from Sรฃo Paulo, Brazil for college in Bluefield, WV and met many people from that area. The cultural shock was significant, especially having grown up viewing America through the Hollywood lens. However, I spent 4 incredible years of my life with amazing, community-minded people who embraced me as family. Now back in Sรฃo Paulo, West Virginia remains my second home. I left a piece of my heart with the people there.
Why: 451 likes, someone who actually lived in Bluefield โ the town Peter starts from. A personal story that anchors the video in a real life and validates Peter's entry point.
Draft replyYou lived in Bluefield โ where this whole journey started. That you still carry it with you back in Sรฃo Paulo says everything about the people there.
As a resident of Appalachia, I appreciate your respect of the people living in these very poor communities. This video actually made me shed a prideful tear. Because even though southern WV is mocked by most of the country, even though Big Pharma enabled an opioid epidemicโฆeven though humble coal miners have had a rough go while building the industrial foundations of Americaโฆ you will still encounter people here who are the salt of the earth. โค
Why: 952 likes, Appalachian resident expressing pride despite hardship. 'Salt of the earth' captures the whole video's thesis and deserves a brief acknowledgment.
Draft replyPrideful tears are the right kind. The people out there built this country's energy supply and got very little back for it. That deserved to be said out loud.