@peykargar4900 Channel Audit: 10,200 Subs vs 6,157 Views Across 1,900 Videos
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@peykargar4900 has 10,200 subscribers but only 6,157 total channel views across 1,900 uploaded videos — a sub-to-view ratio that's almost unheard of for an organic UK-based channel. Recent uploads register zero views, and most public titles appear empty in the metadata as of June 2026.
Channel data · captured Jun 18, 2026
- Handle
- @peykargar4900
- Subscribers
- 10,200
- Videos
- 1,900
- Country
- United Kingdom
Hi, Welcome Business Email: peykargar.es@gmail.com
The numbers tell a strange story before you even look at the content. 10,200 subscribers, 1,900 uploaded videos, and 6,157 total channel views — across the entire channel history. That works out to roughly 3.24 views per upload as a lifetime average, and a sub-to-view ratio of about 0.6:1 (more subscribers than total views ever recorded). For context, a typical organic channel sits somewhere between 50:1 and 200:1 views-to-subs. So whatever's happening here, the standard 'creator built an audience from content' model isn't the explanation.
The recent upload pattern doesn't clarify things — it deepens the puzzle. The last 30 uploads are all long-form (zero Shorts), and the 10 most recent surfaced through the public API as untitled with zero views logged at scrape time on June 18, 2026. The metadata appears either hidden, region-restricted, or scheduled in a way that's blocking standard view counters from indexing. Channels normally show at least some view count within hours of publishing — even private or unlisted uploads typically register differently from this.
The 'Hi, Welcome' description and the business email (peykargar.es@gmail.com) are two of the only clear identity signals from outside. The .es in the address suggests a Spanish-language or Spain-based connection, even though YouTube lists the country as United Kingdom. That mismatch isn't a problem on its own — plenty of creators live in one country and target audiences in another — but it does raise the question of whether the channel is using the UK as a registration anchor while serving content meant for a different audience entirely.
If you back out a rough sub-to-view economy on a 1,900-upload library that totals 6,157 views, you're looking at an account where almost no individual video has done meaningful work. Either uploads are being scheduled and pulled, the channel is recycled from a previous use case (the subs may predate the current upload pattern by years), or there's a private/unlisted strategy where public counters stay at zero by design. Without internal Studio access there's no way to tell which it is from outside, but each scenario points to a very different next step.
For a UK-based account at the 10K-sub mark, the natural growth move would normally be to publish a recognizable flagship video — strong title, tested thumbnail, single clear topic — and let it sit on the homepage as the channel's calling card. Right now, with empty visible titles across the recent slate, the channel page itself can't pass the five-second test for a new visitor. If someone clicks through, they need to see what the channel is about. That signal is currently missing.
One more thing worth noting: the 30-day content mix is 30 long-form videos and zero Shorts. In 2026, that's an aggressive stance. Shorts continue to drive most new-subscriber discovery on the platform, and an account with this much existing sub equity but apparently no recoverable recent view count would normally use Shorts as the cheapest way to wake up dormant subs. The absence of Shorts here suggests either a deliberate format decision or that the creator is focused on something other than view recovery — a private audience, a client deliverable, or something off-platform entirely. None of that is wrong, but it does mean standard YouTube growth advice doesn't quite map to whatever's actually happening on this channel.
The forward-looking observation worth flagging: 10,200 subscribers is real audience equity, regardless of how it accumulated. Even if most of those subs are dormant or stale, recovering a fraction on a single well-titled, well-thumbnailed video would change the sub-to-view picture fast. The cheapest test is one upload, one clean topic, one title that names the topic, and a 7-day window. If the channel can pull 500 views from a 10K-sub base on a single deliberate upload, that's enough signal to suggest the account is still reachable. If it can't, the diagnosis is harder — the subs may not be on the algorithm's reactivation list anymore.
Common questions
How many subscribers does @peykargar4900 have in 2026?
As of June 2026, @peykargar4900 sits at 10,200 subscribers on YouTube. That puts the channel in the small-to-mid creator band — past the 1K monetization threshold but well below the 100K Silver Play Button mark. What stands out more than the sub count is the gap between subs and total channel views: only 6,157 views across the entire 1,900-video history. That's unusual for any 10K-sub channel regardless of niche or country, and it's the single most diagnostic number on the account.
Why does @peykargar4900 have so few total views?
That's the central question this audit can't fully answer from outside data. 1,900 uploads with 6,157 cumulative views works out to roughly 3.24 views per video lifetime. Possible explanations include videos being set to unlisted or private (which hides public view counts), uploads being deleted and reposted, region restrictions blocking public counters, or a channel that was repurposed from an older identity. Without internal YouTube Studio access, none of these can be confirmed — but the pattern is unusual enough to flag, and it's the first thing any honest audit has to acknowledge.
What niche or topic does @peykargar4900 cover?
From outside data alone, the niche isn't clear. The description reads only 'Hi, Welcome' with a business email, and the 10 most recent uploads show empty titles in the public metadata. The country is listed as United Kingdom while the business email uses a .es address, hinting at a possible Spanish-language audience overlap. Without visible titles or descriptions on recent videos, classifying the channel into a clear niche would require either subscriber-only access or digging through older video archives where titles may still be visible publicly.
How often does @peykargar4900 upload to YouTube?
Recent activity shows 30 long-form uploads in the most recent 30-video window, with zero Shorts in the mix. The total library is 1,900 videos, which suggests a very high historical upload rate — possibly daily or near-daily over several years. The cadence itself isn't the issue; what's missing is the visible payoff. Even at one upload per day, a 1,900-video channel would normally accumulate hundreds of thousands of views across the full library, not 6,157 total.
What can other creators learn from @peykargar4900's channel data?
The clearest takeaway is that subscriber count alone doesn't tell you whether a channel is healthy. 10,200 subscribers paired with 6,157 lifetime views shows the gap between vanity metrics and actual reach. For newer creators, the practical lesson is to focus on view-per-video performance over sub growth, and to make sure each upload has a clear title, thumbnail, and topic — three things that are currently missing on @peykargar4900's recent slate and that quietly determine whether subscribers ever come back for the next video.
Is @peykargar4900 worth subscribing to right now?
Hard to say from outside without seeing actual video content. The public metadata doesn't reveal the topic or quality of recent uploads, which is the main signal most viewers use when deciding whether to subscribe. If you've landed here researching the channel, the most useful step is to click through to a few of the recent videos directly and judge the content yourself. Audit data alone can't substitute for watching what's actually posted — especially on a channel where the public counters are sitting at zero.
Free creator diagnostic
Run a free YouTube channel audit on your own channel
Paste your channel handle and get a free read of the bottleneck holding back your Shorts, uploads, or channel positioning. No signup and no card for the first read.