Youtube Videos I watched In August 2025 That I Think You Should Watch Too
Wow look I actually published one in July, AND I'm making one for August. I hope everyone is very impressed with me. Write more words here so the introduction is longer then a single sentence. Yeah I'll do that later, I'm sure this won't end up actually in the final version. I don't know what people write in the introduction to blog posts. Do they even actually need introductions, the premise is clear from the title. There are videos that I think you should watch listed below.
Videos
Daralyn Makes Pet Sofas - I Built This Simpsons Room for My Cat. Obviously.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UvR3CpaDxUg
I mean it's a person making furniture for their cats! Tiny little human furniture for kitty cats! What's to not love! The process of building the furniture is fun and exciting and features constant cameos from the foster kittens who're absolutely adorable. I don't feel the need to justify or explain this any further, it's an amazing video you should watch.
BlueBoyPhin - How I Solved Pokemon's Biggest Mystery
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qil4OpfOufU
I do not know a huge amount about Japan, let alone Japanese history, Nor have I ever played Pokemon Gold or Silver. I don't know if anything presented in this video is true. But there is something magical about the story this video presents, that trying to understand a small part of these two games literally inhabited by unknown creatures leads to finding that the ruins central to this side mystery in a video game exist in as equally mysterious ruins in the real-life parts of Japan that inspired it. Paired with video of these two exploring Japan and having a wild adventure of friendship together expressed in glowing-golden visuals, it's a strangely emotional video compared to what you'd expect. There is no closure to the mystery in the game other then the journey it leads you on.
Nathan Colby - Your Journey into Analog Glitch Art
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Ap0WK7W32E
I wish I had the money and space for analog glitch art, but it's probably for the best that I don't pick up a new hobby for a while. Digital glitch art has always been a passion of mine that I've not worked on quite as much as I really should have (I am currently writing this while I should be working on (rewriting) a framework for producing generative and glitch art in Go), but there is a magic to analog glitch that is just as alluring. I do want to one day try and play around with more analog methods but until then videos like this will have to do.
Ending
It is the 28th of August when I am writing this. I don't think that I am going to see any more videos that I will add onto this list. I've not seen any videos that have jumped out to me specifically since the analog glitch art one, but if there is any more I will be adding them. I hope you like these videos, and I will hopefully see you in the next post.