There’s no way a barely out-of-high-school kid from York County, Pennsylvania, could have imagined how a phone call he answered during a day trip to New York City in late 2019 would change his life in so many ways.
But that’s precisely what happened when hopeful young videographer Macoy Fisher answered a ring from top Yamaha pro, and highly popular YouTube angler, Scott Martin, telling him he’d chosen Fisher as his new lead cameraman from a vast pool of applicants.
Step one of Fisher’s life transformation was moving 17 hours south to Martin’s hometown of Clewiston, FL, at Lake Okeechobee. Next was the realization that he’d be part of a traveling circus better known as the Bassmaster Elites Series, in which two men old enough to be his dad would be his roommates.
Not just any ‘ol middle-aged men, but instead Martin’s tournament road mates, and multi-time world championship qualifiers, Scott Canterbury and Team Toyota’s Matt Arey, who before long, in large part thanks to Fisher, became a huge part of Scott Martin’s social media show that’s seen by an average of 70,000 people each time a new episode drops.
Part of the secret sauce of any ultra-successful fishing-based YouTube channel is not just teaching viewers a few fishing tips, tournament coverage, and high-quality video production, but also the daringness to take fans behind the scenes, or inside the VRBO rental home, of top tournament pros, which includes getting in their personal space at times to capture the emotional good times and bad times of life on tour.
In Fisher’s case, that might mean capturing anything from Martin doing push-ups and burpees en route to losing 40 pounds, Canterbury’s famous cooking, or Arey telling Fisher to take a hike when it’s time for bed at 9:00 p.m...
“Oh, Matt is the Paw Paw of the group. He’s got a strict 9:00 p.m. bedtime. He has to have his own bedroom at every house we rent, and he gets mad if we’re too loud when it’s his bedtime,” grins Fisher.
However, there’s a shared magic between “Paw Paw Arey” and Macoy Fisher that simply makes the production better. Mutual respect.
“Matt Arey is a straight shooter. Brutally honest. But I know he genuinely cares not only about the value of what I do for the YouTube show, but my life as well. He even invites me to hunt with him in the off-season, and everybody knows Matt takes his deer hunting super seriously. So that’s an honor,” says a genuinely appreciative Fisher.
“Oh, we definitely like to pick on Macoy,” says Arey. “He likes to sleep in. But he’d do anything for ya to make our jobs as pros easier. And let me tell you something: Macoy is a dang worker when it’s time to work and make video magic! Whether that’s capturing my nappy head getting out of bed at 4:00 a.m. or turning the lights out at 9:00 that night, Macoy is always working,” says Arey.
“Sometimes they treat me like a kid, but they always treat me with respect,” says Fisher.
Respect. Indeed, the common thread virtue between two guys a generation apart, making constant social media magic while sharing the tribulations and triumphs of life on the road as part of pro bass fishing’s traveling circus. A life Macoy Fisher could never have fully imagined when he answered Martin’s call that day four years ago in New York City.