Peter lives about 20 minutes from my house. He's been the local tin foil hat expert way before his social media career started. Been interesting watching the rest of the world getting a little taste of peter.
@sayvar44 tbh for several years I believed he was trolling for sure. However, after following him for quite a few years while looking into other sources & platforms (besides his RU-vid channel) I definitely don't believe he is. Obviously I could be completely wrong since only he knows if he's larping or not but if I had to bet, I'd put all my money on him not trolling.
@@lilminer69er if you believe that Peter isn’t a character you’re the fucking legit looney toon. Its pretty obvious. Look at his last few uploads they’re fucking hilarious and its blatant that they’re mostly jokes.
... Dog people are all insane... None of them agree on anything...they spend most of their time arguing with other dog people...Justin is hilarious though...
21:41 wtf is happening in this still?! The bird is clearly on a chair behind him, but proportionally looks like its closer to the cam than him. Is it a giant raven?
No one person interrupts another person more than Jay Interrupts Dan. It used to annoy the fuck out of me. Been a fan since the Sodercast so i guess I'm just used to it.
When I was in the ninth grade, my mom gave me the Dale Earnhardt shirt this weirdo burned @26:40 for my birthday. I stopped watching NASCAR after elementary school.
look for the video where he says a sasquatch is in his barn... its an animatronic which is anatomically correct.. and is in the window touching itself lol
This guy also doesn't seem to understand how capitalism works. Charging people as much as possible, according to their ability to pay, is how the system works. If he charges more than you can afford, then he will only be hired by people who can afford to hire him; if it is too high for everyone, then no one will hire him at all- and he will likely have to lower his rates. He should, however, charge as much as people are willing to pay- that's how capitalism works. You try to get as much work out of him as possible for as little pay as possible, and he tries to get as much money as possible for as little work as possible, and ideally you meet in the middle, so that neither side feels that they gave up too much for too little. If he wants to charge rich people one price, and offer a discount to poor people, that is fine; numerous businesses have that model, including doctors offices (they would charge one thing to the insurance company, but if you're self-pay, they offer a discount for cash). The idea that it is a scam because he doesn't disclose price on a website is crazy; plenty of legit businesses also do that, especially for the service industry (less often when dealing with products, unless they are custom-made). If he tried to obfuscate the prices after agreeing to work for you, or changed the price, or there were hidden fees, then that would be scam-y; if he doesn't list the price online, but you call/email, and he quotes you a price which he sticks to, then how is that a scam? Maybe he got a few clients at a high rate when he first started (say $20), but then lowered his rates to get more clients ($15), but kept the same higher price for his older customers ($20), and he didn't want them finding out what his newer clients were paying ($15). Nothing shady about that- that's just a function of capitalism... lowering the price to increase demand. I've worked for corporations who had policies about not disclosing how much you make to other employees, because similarly, they don't want one worker finding out that a coworker is paid more for the same job (because you agreed to work for less, but the coworker negotiated for more). I remember breaking that rule with four other coworkers, and we all were paid different amounts for the same job; for the highest paid person, it was just because she had been there a while, and earned raises, but for the rest of us, it was because we all started working at different rates. Anyway, the point is that they obviously don't want the people who are paid less to find out they could make more, just like Justin wouldn't want his high-price clients to find out that they could be paying him less. That information provides leverage in negotiations, so why would he share that info with the opposing side of that negotiation? Again, that is just common place for the service industry; if you cut lawns, you might charge rich people more, not only because they likely have larger yards (more work), but also because you know that they can afford it. There would be nothing wrong with you then also working in a poorer neighborhood and charging less, because you know that they wouldn't be able to pay the same rate as the rich neighborhood. If you do the agreed upon work for each client, at the price that each agreed to, then how is that a scam because you didn't announce that info to the world?