Thank you for capturing the Amish community here very well! So many misconceptions about Amish and Mennonites! We live here in Sarasota! I grew up Amish and we are Mennonite now. I enjoy sharing things on my channel as well!
Why: Top comment by likes (2133), insider perspective โ grew up Amish, now Mennonite, lives in Sarasota, has her own channel. Collab or follow-up interview is the obvious move, and a public reply surfaces her credibility to the whole comment section.
Draft replyLynette, finding your comment made my day โ someone who actually grew up in it watching this is exactly the feedback I needed. I'd love to connect and hear what I got right and wrong. Would you be up for being part of a follow-up?
rodholmes-singersongwriter1010 ยท highโ view So, I live in one of the largest Amish settlements in the US. The Amish go to Pinecraft to get away from the Amish lifestyle. Pinecraft is nothing like what an Amish community is like. In Pinecraft all the typical Amish rules get thrown out. He would never get a random group of Amish men to speak on camera in a typical Amish community. That would be a major no no.
Why: Sharp, accurate, substantive correction that reframes the whole video โ this context should be in the public reply thread so viewers understand Pinecraft's unique nature. Ignoring it lets a misconception live in the comments.
Draft replyThis is fair and I should've flagged it better in the video. Pinecraft really is the vacation mode โ relaxed, open, nothing like walking into a Lancaster settlement uninvited. Appreciate you adding this for everyone reading.
My uncle retired several years ago and bought a farm in an Amish community near Chambersburg, PA. He was a gruff, hard drinking, swearing (every other word), non-religious construction contractor from NYC. He was single but frequently brought in various women from the NY area for weekend trysts. So he was everything the Amish were not, but they embraced and accepted into their community. After a heart attack, they took care of him like he was family. They brought him breakfast, lunch and dinner, washed his clothes and cleaned his house, and everything required on a small farm, and did it all as if he were an Amish family member. Oh, and one other thing, these people were by average American standards quite affluent, even wealthy. They have my respect and admiration โthe Amish I met were wonderful people in every respect.
Why: 698 likes, the most viral story in the comments โ a gruff NYC contractor accepted as family after a heart attack. High engagement, deeply human, totally on-brand for Peter's channel mission.
Draft replyThat story hit me hard. Your uncle sounds like a real character โ and the fact that they just showed up and took care of him without being asked, without him being one of them, that's the whole thing right there. That's what community actually means.
Now it's time to see the native Americans, maybe the badlands or Arizona
Why: 1054 likes โ the single most-liked content suggestion in the thread. Multiple other commenters echoed it. Responding signals to the audience that Peter is listening and building toward this.
Draft replyIt's on the list โ I want to get out to the reservations and really see what life looks like there today, not the history-book version. If anyone has a connection or a community that would be open to it, let me know.
I didn't think anything would pique my interest quite like your Jewish segment. But here we are; VERY interested to see where this goes. Please keep them coming.
Why: 385 likes, cross-series loyal fan connecting the Jewish and Amish episodes โ exactly the audience retention pattern Peter wants to reinforce publicly.
Draft replyBoth of those episodes taught me more about America than anything I learned growing up โ that's what keeps pulling me back in. More coming, I promise.
The Amish are saviors in my eyes..I had a little girl adopted by a Amish family and they saved both of are lives. Thank you to the Amish community and the family of Layla Miller ๐ฅฐ your the bliss in my life
Why: Powerful personal testimony โ a child adopted by an Amish family. Emotional and very human; exactly the kind of story this channel surfaces. A warm reply rewards the vulnerability.
Draft replyAnna, thank you for sharing something so personal here. Sounds like the right family found Layla at the right time โ and that's a beautiful thing.
True Amish wouldnt let you tape them.....
Why: Fair skeptical pushback with real basis โ and many viewers may share this assumption. A public reply that explains Pinecraft's unique character adds credibility and context for thousands of readers.
Draft replyYou're right that in a traditional settlement this would go very differently โ Pinecraft is essentially the Amish vacation community in Florida where the usual rules are relaxed. It's one of a kind, which is part of why I was so surprised by how open everyone was.
as a jew, i was so happy when i was able to see how well you portrayed us, and i can only imagine how happy they would be if you played this back to them (if they would be open to watching it, of course) so they can see how amazing this is and what a window into their world it serves as
Why: 92 likes, Jewish viewer connecting both series โ validates the cross-community humanizing mission Peter is known for and threads the two most-watched episodes together publicly.
Draft replyThat means a lot coming from you. Both communities get reduced to caricatures constantly โ glad the videos are landing differently. The trust people give when they let you in is something I don't take lightly.
my mom grew up Mennonite and has dozens of Amish relatives all over. We were watching this together and she was pointing out relatives every second LOL
Why: 109 likes, warm and shareable โ the image of watching together and spotting relatives is exactly the kind of comment that makes threads come alive. Easy reply, high return.
Draft replyHa โ I love that image. Tell your mom she's got a better eye for Pinecraft than I do, and that her family is clearly doing something right.
Lynette Yoder lives near there. She's a Mennonite YouTube blogger! I bet she'd talk with you. She grew up Amish!
Why: Suggested Lynette Yoder as a collab โ who has now commented as the top comment. Replying here closes a satisfying loop publicly and rewards the tip.
Draft replyHa โ she's already in the comments! Great tip, and clearly the algorithm agreed. Already planning to reach out.
these are like the cchristian version of hasidic jews right?
Why: Genuine educational question that probably represents many lurkers thinking the same thing โ a quick answer adds value to the thread without much effort.
Draft replyPretty close as an analogy โ both are traditional religious communities that intentionally separate themselves from mainstream culture, though the theology and practices are very different. Worth digging into both if you're curious!
I love that everyone knows each other's names and says hey. I've lived in the same apartment for over a year and i've never had a conversation with a single one of my neighbors
Why: Captures the video's emotional core better than almost any comment โ the contrast between Amish community and modern urban isolation. High relatability, good thread-starter.
Draft replyThat contrast is exactly what hit me too. They weren't doing anything exotic โ they were just talking to each other. That shouldn't feel rare but it does.