Opening Argument: Five YouTube Circuit-Breakers For Bad Days
I don't believe in hiding your head in the sand during bad news weeks, but I also don't believe in a 24-hour constant stream of uninterrupted panic, for the simple reason that I don't think your body and brain are meant to sustain that. I thought about that quite a bit this week, as a whole cascade of bad news -- we're still in a global pandemic that's nowhere near over, and it wasn't even the most upsetting thing that was on my mind -- threatened to swamp me. And as silly as it seems, it reminded me how helpful it can be just to have a few circuit-breakers handy. By circuit-breakers, I mean things that are just not connected to anything -- anything -- that worries me, and can interrupt the cycle of panic-Panic-PANIC-PANIC!! that really can get out of hand. So with no apologies, I give you five of my circuit-breakers from the category of "diverting YouTube channels."
1. The photographer Jessica Kobeissi does a couple of different things on her channel. She talks about taking pictures, and she talks about equipment, and she talks about working with clients, and she takes you through the process of editing photos. But she also does reaction videos to episodes of America's Next Top Model and points out, in short, that this is not how you would ever do a photo shoot and these are not things you would ever say to models.
2. The hair guru Brad Mondo starts every video coyly saying "Hi, beautiful," which is the kind of thing a lot of people can't stand about YouTube. I get it! But for some reason, I gradually became infatuated with his reaction videos where he watches the footage people for some reason choose to share with the public in which they attempt to bleach or color or cut their own hair at home. He's not afraid to congratulate people who are successful, and he gives actual concrete advice to people who aren't. He gave a lot of lessons during quarantine about how you can manage your own hair when you need to, and in general, I find him a delight.
3. I like a lot of food channels, but the one I've been into in the last couple of weeks is Food52. I'm particularly enamored of Erin McDowell's detailed, thorough baking demos, which can run upwards of an hour as she explains variations on pie crust or layer cakes. It's a restful but not soporific kind of watch, friendly but not wildly chipper. Food52 is also home to work from some of the chefs who left Bon Appetit's video operation in 2020, including Sohla El-Waylly and Rick Martinez. I also love the NYT Cooking channel, for the record.
4. How To Cake It is the home of baker Yolanda Gampp. If you've seen those videos where a thing that looks like a real thing turns out to be a cake? She makes that kind of cake. A sneaker, a mango, a burger, whatever. Gampp recently stopped putting out new cake videos (and took a break to be a judge on Crime Scene Kitchen), but there are years of incredible creations to check out.
5. Wired and GQ are both good channels, but what I love is a series that's very similar on both of them. Wired calls it Technique Critique and GQ calls it The Breakdown, and it features experts looking at scenes from movies and saying how realistic they are. (For example, on The Breakdown, Free Solo subject Alex Honnold talked about climbing scenes.) Over on Technique Critique, I'm a huge fan of surgeon Annie Onishi, whose dry wit brings a lot of flair to her opinionated takes on medical shows and films. The Breakdown also has medical stuff, though, including the wildly charming Dr. Italo Brown, who works in an ER, talking about movie injuries.
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