The Morning News Instruction Videos Are Why the Internet Was Invented
Credit: XPrize Foundation.

If you needed a really explicit reason to believe that humanity is embarrassing, wikiHow formalizes it in a judgment-free zone.

After a breakup, a writer turns to wikiHow, a network of self-help spawning a community of anonymous care.
↩︎ Real Life
Sep 30, 2016

The Catalog of Human Knowledge

"Now that YouTube is 10 years old, it's clear that video tutorials are among its most valuable—if sometimes mundane—contributions."

The case for the instructional video's place in the catalog of human knowledge is strong. The most famous tutorials, like the Khan Academy math videos, attract millions in venture capital money and aspire to replace the university.

Sep 30, 2016

Modern instructional and self-help videos have origins in a wave of sententious, moralizing films from the 1950s. Strangely, to our ears, these weren't produced by conservative cultural warriors but by liberal Hollywood types who wanted to instill a public ethic beyond the family. 

How to Get a YouTube Slave

YouTube doesn't do enough to find harmful instructional videos and delete them. As of now, you, too, can learn on YouTube how to make thousands of dollars off "slave" users hacked to stream their lives on webcam.

Sep 30, 2016

Alan Resnick is the batshit Baltimore genius behind Adult Swim's contribution to the instructional genre with "Live Forever As You Are Now," which parodies the credulous TEDxAnything attitude plaguing the tech industry

But his most meta exploration of the concept is really in the serial Alantutorial project, where a series of bewildering events beset a man incapable of processing the world around him except by producing a constant stream of instructional YouTube videos about his nonsensical daily challenges.

When Julius Yego couldn't find a javelin coach he turned to the internet to find one, and he did—YouTube.

The man who won Kenya's first field medal learned javelin by watching videos in cyber cafes.
↩︎ CNN
Sep 30, 2016

The How-to Video Was How Most Indians Discovered TV

In the '70s, Indira Gandhi's government conducted a massive social project called the "Satellite Instructional Television Experiment," installing community televisions in villages that sometimes barely had a car battery to power them with.

It was a more forward-thinking plan than even Gandhi could see: "The state was the one to detonate the information bomb of the 1980s, but it couldn’t control the force of the explosion or see past the smoke of its own grand plans."

Sep 30, 2016

There is, to an extent unparalleled in history, the promise that anyone, anywhere in the world, without cost or travel or the embarrassment of public failure, can learn just about anything. Some take it too far.

How-to videos are "catnip for the brain," and yeah, cats can get addicted to catnip.
↩︎ Nautilus
Sep 30, 2016
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