YouTube Videos: Where Is the Line?

When it comes to analyzing YouTube videos, where’s the line?

“CPS stole my baby” videos can be immensely informative. They can be heartbreaking. They can be maddening. They can be what amounts to five-minute slices of the ongoing trainwreck that is somebody’s life. And while estranged parents’ forum posts are much the same, print is more or less anonymous. You have to work at it (or be staggeringly careless) to make yourself identifiable. Video, on the other hand, is immediately identifiable–if not to you, then to everyone near the poster.

On top of that, video is… huh. How do I explain? When you post in a forum, you’re one voice among many. It’s a conversation. When you post a video, you’re the star. People react differently to videos because of that. Videos feel more momentous. They’re statements, not comments. People expect more of a YouTube poster than a forum poster.

And video is easier. So, so much easier. You prop your phone on the dashboard of your car, blather for ten minutes while you drive to the store, then park, post the video, and go get groceries. You don’t need any more literacy than it takes to type the video name. For people who aren’t good at finding communities on the web, who don’t like to read, or who find writing a challenge, dropping a video on YouTube is infinitely easier than typing up a forum comment. It’s so easy that active meth addicts do it. 1

And that means that, well, meth addicts do it.

And people having mental breakdowns. People in the grip of folie a deux with severely mentally ill partners. People who shouldn’t be posting, but are, because there’s no one there to stop them.

People who are just plain dumb, and don’t realize you shouldn’t blare your personal details to the planet on the biggest media platform known to humanity.

People who think the biggest media platform on the planet is just Facebook with moving pictures.

A lot of people I’ve run across shouldn’t be exposed to public comment. Some of them want exposure anyway, and the exposure will make them worse. Some want exposure but aren’t ready for the criticism it will bring. Some don’t realize they’re exposed.

So where do you draw the line?

I’m still prodding my thoughts into place. For example, there’s a woman on YouTube, 22, with three children, formally diagnosed with borderline personality disorder (among other things). She broke up with her ex, and he got the kids. She’s jobless, homeless, dumb as a stick, and prone to flipping out so badly at authority figures that when she gets to court, they propose drug testing her. She’s also pretty good at coming across as a hurt, weepy, helpless loving mother who can’t live without her kids. Her videos would be a great tool for teaching people to look deeper. But I’ve seen how badly she breaks under the gentlest disagreement. I’m no fan of hers, but post her? No.

There’s a family that’s under the sway of an aggressively insane father. Both mother and son are extensively broken on their own, and the folie a famille isn’t doing them any good. On the other hand, I don’t think they’d get much worse unless the attention was way more high-watt than my little blog is capable of. And they want attention like burning. They beg and plead for it. Post them? …I don’t know. Tempting. But I don’t know.

There’s a family whose spokesperson is the mother, a polished, educated woman who had a small following for her beauty videos long before CPS took her children. Her channel has since turned to all CPS videos, all the time. If you watch the videos that feature just her, you can see how the pieces of her story don’t quite fit together, but nothing stands out as the reason her kids were taken from her. As soon as you see the videos she takes in the visitation center, with her husband at center stage, you know why the kids were taken. (You think you know. Once you read the court filing, you discover it’s so, so much worse.) She and her husband want attention, too. They have quite a few enablers who take everything at face value and would also be a fascinating study.

Post this family? Maybe. Mmmmaybe. Can’t make them worse. They’re well insulated against criticism. But would it make the mother even more committed to staying with the father? Is the father too ill to use as a training tool? Does the nature of his illness–aggressive, not broken and wounded–make a difference?

Are things different if the person is the subject of a video that’s meant to draw attention to CPS abuse? There’s a video that frames the mother as losing her baby because she used medical marijuana, but the mother’s account makes it clear that CPS was more worried about her partner’s wee habit of beating her. The mother seems pretty fragile. But she did the video to publicize her situation. What’s more important, her fragility or her intention to get publicity?

Where would you draw the line?

  1. Not well. But they do it.
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