Google Just Made Your YouTube Videos Optional
Episode Description
This week at Google I/O, Google launched Ask YouTube — a feature that pulls the answer out of your video and shows it to the viewer in a clean comparison table. The viewer never presses play. It’s the AI Overview moment for video, and it changes how every solo creator should think about titles, chapters, descriptions, and revenue mix.
In this Saturday Edition, Carrie breaks down what Ask YouTube actually does, why it’s the same playbook Google ran on web publishers a decade ago, and the AEO posture every creator should adopt before the math shifts on them. She also walks through Instagram’s new 30-day aggregator rule that’s actively transferring reach from reposters to original creators, plus the audit you should run on your own grid before Sunday.
Then she goes deep on how creators are actually making money this week — Kountry Wayne pulling eight figures a year from Facebook reels, two coaching case studies showing how interactive products are 3x’ing ebook and course revenue, and a Singapore-based creator earning $70K outside her day job by stacking content with options income. Plus quick hits on YouTube’s deepfake detection going wide, Beast Industries building creator-to-brand ad-tech, and the Substack departure essays from Caroline Beuley, Alison Roman, AHP, and Lyz Lenz.
If you publish on YouTube, Instagram, Substack, or any platform that has an algorithm in the middle of you and your reader, this is the episode.
-Google’s new Ask YouTube feature, which uses Gemini to extract answers from multiple videos into comparison tables without requiring a view, threatening watch-time-based monetization and pushing creators toward Answer Engine Optimization (clear question titles, real chapters, on-screen verdicts, structured descriptions) and owned channels like email lists;
Instagram’s live 30-day aggregator rule that makes repost-heavy accounts non-recommendable while transferring reach to original creators and favoring collab posts;
and growing writer dissatisfaction and migration from Substack to platforms like Ghost and Patreon, highlighted by stalled paid-subscriber growth.
She also notes YouTube’s AI likeness detection tool rollout, MrBeast’s creator-to-brand ad tech effort, and case studies showing stronger revenue from diversified income streams such as paid challenges, memberships, and adjacent monetization rather than relying on AdSense or any single platform.00:00 Google I /O Shockwave01:57 Ask YouTube Explained03:34 AEO Video Playbook05:20 Monetization Fallout06:53 Instagram Aggregator Crackdown09:50 Quick Hits AI and Brands10:33 Where Creators Made Money11:42 Coaching Offers That Scale14:45 Substack Reality Check15:59 Own the Relationship18:13 Wrap Up and Next Steps
Key Takeaways
* Ask YouTube extracts your video’s answer into a comparison table. The watch may not happen. Structure your content so Gemini extracts yours and not someone else’s.
* AEO (Answer Engine Optimization) is the new SEO. Title with questions, use real chapters, put verdicts in on-screen text and descriptions.
* Instagram’s 30-day aggregator rule is live: if most of what you posted in the last 30 days is content you didn’t create, your account is no longer recommendable. Existing followers still see you. Strangers don’t.
* The Collab post is the cheat code for accounts that lean on UGC — it counts as original because you co-own it.
* The money plays that actually worked this week were cross-platform: Facebook reels at 8 figures/year, paid challenges 3x’ing ebook revenue, and adjacent income (options trading) outperforming YouTube ad rev for one creator. Substack alone is not the answer.
* The portfolio of paychecks — 4–5 revenue lines that don’t share a single algorithm — is the only setup that survives Mosseri announcements and Gemini launches.
Quotables
“Google is going to extract the information. The person isn’t even going to watch the video anymore. So you have to think about how you structure your content now that you know how Google is going to use it.” — paraphrased from a Spanish-language I/O recap creator
“The platforms are not your business partner. They are your distribution channel, and the rules of every channel just got rewritten in your inbox while you were trying to make Reels.” — Carrie Loranger
“This is the part of the promise I think Substack is failing to keep. And that failure is why I almost quit — why I still might if things don’t change.” — Caroline Beuley, “I Almost Quit Substack”
“Audiences are not different. Distribution mechanics are universal.” — Carrie Loranger
“Five lines beats one line every time, especially when any one of those lines could get rule-changed by a Mosseri announcement or a Gemini launch.” — Carrie Loranger
Episode Links
Story 1: Ask YouTube + Google I/O
* Lenny’s Newsletter — What Launched at Google I/O 2026 [https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/p/what-launched-at-google-io-2026-30]
Story 2: Instagram aggregator rule
* This Week in Social Media — IG’s New 30-Day Rule Will Kill 50% of Accounts [https://thisweekinsocialmedia.com/p/ig-s-new-30-day-rule-will-kill-50-of-accounts]
Quick Hits
* Tubefilter — YouTube AI Likeness Detection Rolls Out [https://www.tubefilter.com/2026/05/18/youtube-generative-ai-deepfake-likeness-detection-rollout/amp/]
* Robb Montgomery — Creator Journalism Is the New Mainstream (Beast Industries) [https://robbmontgomery.com/creator-journalism-new-mainstream-2026/]
How Creators Are Making Money This Week
* AfroTech — How Kountry Wayne Built an Eight-Figure Annual Media Empire [https://afrotech.com/how-kountry-wayne-built-an-eight-figure-annual-media-empire]
* CommuniPass — Creator Monetization Trends 2026 (Coach Lena + Coach Tara case studies) [https://communipass.com/blog/creator-monetization-trends-2026/]
* YouTube — Singapore creator $70K side income breakdown [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwwJIpvqZOI]
Substack departure essays
* Caroline Beuley — I Almost Quit Substack [https://fairytalesbycaroline.substack.com/p/i-almost-quit-substack]
* The Blog Herald — Publishers Are Leaving Substack for Ghost [https://blogherald.com/content-digital-publishing/n-publishers-are-leaving-substack-for-ghost-and-the-reasons-reveal-something-uncomfortable-about-what-owning-your-audience-actually-means/]
Worth Reading (from the issue)
* Danielle Desir Corbett — More Subscribers Won’t Save Your Newsletter Business [https://www.revenuerulebreaker.com/more-subscribers-wont-save-your-newsletter-business-takeaways-from-the-2026-newsletter-conference/]
* Jay Clouse — 9 Things I’m Changing in My Business [https://www.linkedin.com/posts/jayclouse_9-things-im-changing-in-my-business-activity-7462102391220285440-AKg8]
* Neil Waller — Why Creator-Led Networks Will Be the Next Media Business Ecosystem [https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/why-creator-led-networks-next-media-business-neil-waller--djioc]
Carrie’s stuff
* 9-to-Thrive on Substack [https://thrivewithcarrie.substack.com/]
* Join the Creator Cashflow Club [http://thrivewithcarrie.substack.com/subscribe] http://thrivewithcarrie.substack.com/subscribe
Who is Carrie Loranger?
Carrie Loranger is a Substack strategist and portfolio business architect. She's the creator of the Portfolio of Paychecks system, which helps creators turn one newsletter into multiple income streams. She's also the founder of the Secret Substack Society community on Skool, where she teaches the system. Carrie was named Most Influential CEO [https://www.ceo-review.com/winners/click-digital-consulting-2/] by CEO Monthly two years running, in 2025 and 2026, and she's grown her newsletter, 9-to-Thrive, to over 9,000 subscribers in just 15 months. You can find her at thrivewithcarrie.substack.com [http://thrivewithcarrie.substack.com].
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