Why Pleasant Green belongs in the creator graph
Internal links: Pleasant Green, Scam Investigations, Internet Crime, Fraud, YouTube Creators, Consumer Protection, Online Scams. Source links: YouTube .
Pleasant Green is a YouTube creator focused on scam investigations, internet crime, and fraud. According to the supplied YouTube channel metadata, the channel has about 1.5 million subscribers and 297 videos. Its own channel description sets the tone plainly: "I seem to run into scammers a lot. Most people ignore them. I like to get to know them." That mix of curiosity, confrontation, and education is the foundation of the channel's true crime relevance.
A scam-baiting channel with a human-interest angle
Pleasant Green's public bio describes a creator who does not simply ignore suspicious messages or calls. Instead, he follows them, talks to the people behind them, and tries to expose the mechanics of the fraud. The channel description also says he wants to "make good men out of the people behind them," a line that points to a more personal and sometimes reform-minded approach than straightforward scam-baiting. That claim should be treated as channel self-description, but it helps explain why the work often includes conversations, backstories, and attempts to understand how scams operate from the inside.
Recent investigations show the channel's range
The latest long-form uploads supplied for review show Pleasant Green moving across several scam formats. In "The Secretary of State Just Emailed Me", published June 26, 2026, the premise is an email claiming that Secretary of State Marco Rubio wants to give him 60 million dollars. "A Scammer is Stranded on a Cruise Ship!", published June 10, 2026, connects to a claimed cruise-ship emergency story. "Don't Buy AI Bath Bombs", published May 23, 2026, investigates suspicious Facebook ads and too-good-to-be-true products.
Fraud stories built around everyday fears
Several of the supplied episodes focus on scams that exploit ordinary anxieties. "Scammers Have My Daughter" centers on a text claiming a daughter is in custody and that bail money is needed. "Sorry Scammers, My Dog Ate Your Money..." follows a scenario where a scammer believes money has finally been secured. "Don't Pay Psychics to Draw Your Future Soulmate!" looks at paid soulmate-sketch services. Taken together, these episodes show a creator using specific hooks to explain broader fraud patterns.
A representative starting point: classic car scams
For viewers looking for a single example of the channel's investigative style, "Classic Car Scam Exposed!" is one of the supplied standout videos. Published March 2, 2024, it has a supplied view count of about 2.5 million. The video description says scammers were going to significant lengths to appear like legitimate car dealers and that the episode would show how victims were being targeted for large sums of money. It also credits Gambit for helping generate fake bank statements to fool the scammers, based on the supplied description preview.
Longer-form and collaborative scam investigations
Pleasant Green has also used longer live and collaborative formats. "Come Spy on Scammers with Me and Jim Browning!", published July 28, 2022, is listed at 5,449 seconds and features Jim Browning in the title. "Calling Scammers and Saving Victims!", published August 3, 2023, is another long live-format entry tied to an anti-scam call center. These videos position the channel within the wider online anti-scam creator ecosystem without requiring claims beyond the supplied video data.
The Other Line and the person on the other end
One of the most revealing supplied references is "Befriending a Scammer in India | The Other Line Chapter 1", published October 26, 2020. Its description frames the project around a question: what happens if someone takes time to get to know the person on the other line of a scam call? The supplied summary says the five-part documentary series follows a scammer from India who turned against employers running Canada Revenue Agency and Social Security Number phone scams. The final chapter, "Fate of the Scammer | The Other Line Chapter 5", continues that arc.
Why true crime audiences may care
Pleasant Green's work sits at the intersection of creator-led investigation, consumer protection, and internet true crime. The channel does not focus on traditional murder cases or court coverage in the supplied record. Instead, it documents fraud attempts, suspicious online commerce, impersonation schemes, and scam-call operations. For True Crime Gods, that makes Pleasant Green a useful addition to the creator graph as coverage expands beyond violent crime into digital victimization, social engineering, and the everyday mechanics of online fraud.
Source note
This profile is based on the supplied creator record, the Pleasant Green YouTube channel, and the full-length YouTube videos listed in the source package. The biography content was seeded from YouTube channel metadata and should receive editorial review before publication.