Edit: Thank you for your responses! I’ll be sure to upvote and check out everyone’s annswers even if I don’t reply to each one individually.
Want to learn about mining, beekeeping, chemistry, gardening, ecology, and off-planet habitats? Cody’s Lab has got you covered.
Not Just Bikes
Tales from a Canadian from Suburbia, Ontario who moved to the Netherlands. He talks about public transit and city planning.
They say falling into this rabbit hole is to take the “orange pill”.
Most of my youtube subs are educational/informative in some way or another, so I’m gonna break it up by category a bit…
General
- Half as Interesting
- Wendover Productions
- Answer in Progress
Religion/Philosophy
- Religion for Breakfast
- Esoterica
- Bart D. Ehrman
- PhilosophyTube
- Wisecrack (though it’s dead as of a month ago it still has tons of great content)
- Michael Burns (the guy who did Wisecrack, now has his own channel, though it’s more politically-oriented)
- UsefulCharts (not exclusively religious content, but largely)
- SatansGuide (I keep hoping they’ll make more videos like their original 2, but it’s been a year…)
General Science:
- Veritasium
- Dr Ben Miles
- Kyle Hill
- Stand Up Maths
- Primer
Science Experimentation:
- Nile Red
- Thought Emporium
- Styropyro
- Tech Ingredients
- Alpha Phoenix
- Applied Science
- BPS.Space
Programming/AI:
- Sebastian Lague (his Coding Adventure series is super fun and informative)
- Emergent Garden
- Code Bullet
Engineering:
- Practical Engineering
- Real Engineering
- SuperfastMatt (guy builds crazy cars for fun, love his sense of humor)
History:
- History Matters (great short videos on historical topics)
- Miniminuteman/Milo Rossi (mostly archaeology and such)
Geography:
- Daniel Steiner
- Map Nerd
- Jay Foreman (Map Men is hilarious, and the rest of his stuff is pretty good too)
Garry’s Economic
I’m waiting got hbomberguy to come back.
Esoterica is great. It’s mostly about gnostic side of western religious history. Dr. Justin Sledge is doing awesome research on the relevant topics. I’m watching that to know more about to put religion in a historical context.
Crash Course! They have series on history, politics, games, psychology, philosophy, folk tales, and almost every host is very good.
Ooo just thought of another. Animagraffs — https://youtube.com/@animagraffs
Takes large scale things (Hoover Dam, locomotive, F1 car, etc) and breaks them down into their components in a long-scale video format (30+ minutes). It’s oddly soothing to watch.
I think the Steam Locomotive one is my favorite so far. https://youtu.be/Hszu80NJ438
PBS Space Time
Best channel on YouTube.
Kurzgesagt is my go to. I love the art and the style of narration
Folding ideas is pretty cool https://youtube.com/@foldingideas
FYI, if you love long-format videos, be sure to share on c/mealtimevideos
!mealtimevideos@lemmy.cafe - is this the one?
Yes!
CGPGrey
Ordered randomly.
- RobWords — Lots of trivia about English as well as some other languages, some focusing on etymology, others on alphabet and so on…
- Tapakapa — Quick explainers, recently focusing on country flags (there should be a -logy word for flags knowledge, I don’t remember) EDIT: vexillology, as a few people pointed out
- Carefree Wandering — Philosophy; Religion: specifically Daoism and Confucianism; Media theory; Identity “technolgies”, specifically the concept of “profilicity”
- Unsolicited Advice — Philosophy explainers; more approachable and less academic than the previous one, I guess
- Ben Eater — 8-bit CPU made on breadboard fame, hands on explainer of computer architecture, networking, electronics and so on
- Patrick Boyle — On finance, mostly for entertainment purposes
- LegalEagle — In-depth analysis and discussion on American law and reporting on recent prominent legal cases
- TechAltar — “Analytical videos about tech companies”
- rewboss — A Brit living in Germany, with some videos on recent events, local history, cultural tidbits from a personal perspective
- PolyMatter — In depth analysis of almost random, yet important matters
- Computerphile — Like Numberphile, but with computer scientists instead
- Artem Kirsanov — Computational neuroscience explainers
- LowSpecGamer — History of (home) computing with focus on gaming; I am most impressed with the story/lore of 6502, 8080, Z80, ARM CPUs, how they came about etc.
- NativLang — Linguistics, going quite in-depth, yet remaining approachable for the rest of us
- Reducible — Computer science explainers with high quality animation, reminiscent of 3blue1brown
- Faultline — “Telling human stories through geography”
- Explaining Computers — Operating systems and computer hardware, SBCs review, explainers
- The Present Past — History
- Lawarch — Deep-dives in politics, history etc.
- fern — “Armchair documentaries, almost weekly”
- Acharya Prashant — Spirituality
(there should be a -logy word for flags knowledge, I don’t remember)
Renaissance Periodization - working out, dieting, bodybuilding and steroids.
Dr Mike Isratel is a Dr of exercise science and doesnt chat shit. They make their money pretty transparently, and give honest to god research backed information. Lots of information that can be extracted from Beginners to Advanced and he loves a good dick joke enough for all of his content to feel fun.
I watched a couple of Mike’s videos. Seems like good information and he is entertaining. No music, no ads, no goofie sound effects.