My Decade in YouTube

Playlist

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLs98jVIvB8hl-_78S9kJurnuSqODtLhMz[/youtube]

If you have already glanced at my playlist, you’ll have noticed that it’s essentially a mixtape. However, I swear it’s not the self-flattering kind designed to showcase my superior tastes, or cultivate a sense of eccentric distinction. (And if you have seen the list already, you’ll know that I’m telling the truth). Instead, it’s my best attempt at a faithful chronological record of my engagement with YouTube over about the last decade. It begins with my lightbulb moment, my first glimpse of its potential usefulness, and continues over the years until the present, where I continue to realize more or less that same tiny fraction of potential. As this last sentence might suggest, I am perennially behind the technological curve, at least in my peer group, but I will elaborate on that in a moment. For now, about that light bulb…

 

…It flickered on, I think, sometime in the year 2005, straddling my Freshman and Sophomore years of high school.[1] I was sitting at my family’s desktop computer, contemplating the online purchase of a Red Hot Chili Peppers concert DVD, when it occurred to me that perhaps on the internet, the footage I sought was already available, instantly, for free. So I Googled YouTube. Now up to that point, I was only dimly aware that YouTube existed. I knew it by the buzz that had been surrounding it in school for the past several months, but from that I’d gathered only a vague association to videos. As brilliant as YouTube’s concept sounds now, hearing the idea back then made almost no impression on me. It wasn’t until I had a specific, urgent need, to see and hear my favorite band play live, that I ventured tentatively to its homepage.

Ted

My playlist tells the rest of the story. The first video of RHCP performing “Otherside”, while not exactly the same video, likely contains the same footage as the one I first watched on YouTube that day. Since then, YouTube has been by far and away my primary platform for music. Maybe in another few years I’ll come around to Spotify, but until then, YouTube will continue to be the source of my daily music fix, especially for live music. The first two thirds of my playlist are all examples of this. I tried to pick not just the songs but the actual videos which stick out most prominently in my memory. I’ve tried to keep an interval of one or two videos per year since 2005.

 

Within this bunch of songs, you’ll notice one exception. “Salad Fingers 1 – Spoons”, is the first viral video I ever saw. I watched about thirty seconds of it peering over a bunch of shoulders in somebody’s basement back in high school. As I compiled this playlist, all I remembered was something about spoons. Amazingly, I searched YouTube for “spoons”, and this video is like the third result. I still haven’t watched the whole thing, but I’m including it for the record, and also for diversity’s sake.

rockabilly-guitar-lesson

Speaking of which, the final third of my playlist are all various ways in which I’ve begun to expand my YouTube horizons: watching movies, video game walkthroughs, guitar lessons, cute videos, and sports highlights. The deeper I delve, the more I kick myself for being late to the game, especially now that I see YouTube more broadly as a tool for self-education. Too that end, I am definitely going to check out the Idea Channel, which I discovered in my teammate John’s playlist.

 

The last video on playlist is actually the last YouTube video I’ve watched before submitting this playlist. My girlfriend just sent to me on Facebook two minutes ago. It’s pretty cute.  And not only does it complete the list chronologically, it represents one of the ways YouTube has become a way to connect with people in my life.

 

In summary, I now sense better than ever before that there’s a wealth of exciting educational and creative content on YouTube, surrounded by a vibrant, dedicated community. It’s completely accessible to me, I just have to start doing it, and I will make that one of my goals for this semester.

 


[1] In case you were wondering I’m 23, and very much a super senior.

7 thoughts on “My Decade in YouTube

  1. jwsander

    Hey, thanks for the shout-out!

    Ah…Salad Fingers…Heard so much about it, but never saw the whole thing until just now on your playlist. Ah…the weirdness of the YouTube, how I love it!

    Also, see you have Janelle Monae on there. Never seen “Many Moons,” but I’ve listened to some of her music (through another class with Professor Russworm, actually), and I love it! Good taste!

    Reply
  2. acogan Post author

    Hmmm… For some reason my playlist only appears to be embedded in the post when I navigate to it from the Dashboard, not when I go to it through the site directly. Not sure why that is, so until then I added another link at the very top of the post. I’ll try and fix the problem asap.

    Reply
  3. jdrooney

    I like that you discuss expanding your use of YouTube. I am very similar to you in that I have only recently began using YouTube for more than just listening to music. While l still use YouTube primarily to listen to music, I have lately been using it more frequently for educational purposes. When I was struggling with my PS Gen-Ed last semester, I watched a lot of videos that helped explain scientific concepts that I, without YouTube, may never have understood.

    Reply
  4. ldrosos

    I think it’s really interesting how you Googled “YouTube” to get to YouTube. Just because of the articles we’ve read and how Google and YouTube intertwine with one another, I find that to be really ironic. Yes, YouTube makes education exciting and more versatile. That’s one of the most attractive things about YouTube, in my opinion.

    Reply
  5. mksulliv

    Love that you included a TED talk on your list. I use YouTube to watch specific TED talks as well — particularly relating to entrepreneurship and innovative thought leaders in business. Glad to see there are some more TED fans out there.

    Reply
  6. nblackwo

    I think it’s really cool how you used your playlist as a sort of timeline of your life over the past decade. It’s so interesting to see how tastes change and evolve over time. It’s also impressive that you can remember what you were watching that far back!

    Reply

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