Wikipedia

Wikipedia

Views:
139,863
Subscribers:
245,000
Videos:
100
Duration:
???

Wikipedia is a content creator on YouTube with at least 245 thousand subscribers. His content totals more than 139.86 thousand views views across 100 videos.

Created on ● Channel Link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgIIsBhcseFH1Kghmo0ULbA





Top 100 Videos With The Longest Duration by Wikipedia


Video TitleDurationCategoryGame
1.Groups like BTS and BLACKPINK are global sensations, but K-pop history goes even further.0:00
2.This map uses orthographic projection to represent seeing Earth from space ๐ŸŒ0:00
3.What does it take to run Wikipedia? | A WIKI MINUTE0:00
4.Imagine cats that could glow to save your life ๐Ÿˆโœจ0:00
5.A math problem so simple anyone can understand it โ€“ but no one can solve it.0:00
6.This center of trade and power has continued to stand the test of time.0:00
7.International Workers' Day has been a rallying point for generations.0:00
8.Ever seen a glacier collapse in real time?0:00
9.German folklore, springtime festivals, and chocolate eggs.0:00
10.It started with silent films, and now shapes global pop culture.0:00
11.How did gaming become portable? ๐ŸŽฎ0:00
12.A simple bridge puzzle with big ramifications for mathematics.0:00
13.It may not be perfect, but you made it. So IT IS perfect.0:00
14.Regular computers: 1s and 0s. Quantum computers: What if we did both at the same time?0:00
15.The Bechdel test has sparked conversations about gender representation in film for decades.0:00
16.๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘„๐Ÿ‘ ๐Ÿคก๐Ÿ˜ญ๐Ÿ’€โ˜•๐Ÿฅฐ๐Ÿ‘€๐Ÿ”ฅ0:00
17.๐ŸงŸโ€โ™‚๏ธ๐Ÿ„ What if a fungus could hijack your body and control your every move?0:00
18.From tragic operas to viral clown sightings, the fear goes way beyond face paint.0:00
19.What does the world need from Wikimedia now?0:00
20.Wikipedia can be a valuable classroom tool for teachers and students alike.0:00
21.Hydrogen peroxide + soap + a little yeast = boom.0:00
22.This light show is called an aurora.0:00
23.These mechanical โ€œbeach animalsโ€ move like living organisms and have evolved over three decades.0:00
24.Worse than catching your own face on the front-facing camera?0:00
25.This is not a face. But your brain really wants it to be.0:00
26.From Slender Man to The Backrooms, creepypasta turned digital text into modern myth.0:00
27.A logic trap that plays with your assumptions: There is no missing dollar.0:00
28.Sometimes, your greatest achievement can also be your greatest enemy.0:00
29.Where can journalism truly be safe from censorship?0:00
30.This is what a black hole sounds like ๐ŸŽง0:00
31.Did you know Japanโ€™s famous cherry blossom festivals started over 1,000 years ago?0:00
32.Roopkund, also called Skeleton Lake, holds a mystery buried in ice.0:00
33.Start your engine ๐Ÿ Our new WikiRun online game pits you against a daily speed race.0:00
34.๐ŸŽถ๐Ÿ”„ Sound tricks arenโ€™t just cool; they shape how we feel about the stories we love.0:00
35.Emmy. Grammy. Oscar. Tony. ๐ŸŽญ Only 27 people have ever received all four.0:00
36.A scene from "The Witch", a silent film from 1906 by French director Georges Mรฉliรจs.0:00
37.Imagine a dog so iconic that an Egyptian pharaoh constructed a tomb to honor him.0:00
38.Could this be the key to living on the Moon?0:00
39.How quickly can you hop from "Karate" to "Grasshopper"?0:00Karate
40.Did you know that only 20.03% of all biographies on Wikipedia are about women?0:00
41.Who is ready to experiment?0:00
42.Wikipedia is just the beginning โ€“ the Wikimedia movement is changing how we share knowledge.0:00
43.Want to tap into the internetโ€™s most vibey genre?0:00
44.Led by @wikimediaarmeniaofficial, Wikicamps blend digital education with outdoor experiences.0:00
45.They launched astronauts, saved lives, and solved impossible equations.0:00
46.This is "Colpidium colpoda": a single-celled organism that thrives in ponds, soil, and even sewage.0:00
47.Maybe trees are pioneers of personal space.0:00
48.Is it an arcane medical guide? A secret code? Or a clever hoax?0:00
49.Six UK prime ministers have come and gone, but Larry the Cat still holds office.0:00
50.In a group of 23 people, there is a 50% chance of at least two of them sharing a birthday.0:00
51.Could lightsabers really exist?0:00
52.Is the internet โ€ฆ dead?0:00
53.From dreamlike colors to intricate forest scenes...0:00
54.While not a formal diagnosis, Peter Pan syndrome is a pop psychology term.0:00
55.What happens when you only eat meat and nothing else?0:00
56.The Titanic was supposed to be the height of luxury and safety โ€“ but an iceberg changed history.0:00
57.Memes are older than the internet. But how did they take over our screens?0:00
58.These teenage girls convinced 19th-century USA they could talk to the dead.0:00
59.It has a reputation for mysterious disappearances...0:00
60.The vinyl revival has made records cool again, with sales hitting 30-year highs.0:00
61.Pi is everywhere!0:00
62.For 60 years, math searched for a single tile that could cover a plane without ever repeating.0:00
63.Drop your food? The five-second rule says it is still safe if you pick it up fast...0:00
64.Arctic expeditions are not just about polar bears and snowstorms.0:00
65.Wikipedia โ€“ the largest encyclopedia in history โ€“ is made possible by people like you.0:00
66.Still exploring Gale Crater on Mars after 10+ years.0:00
67.The Ides of March symbolized a betrayal that changed Roman history forever.0:00
68.Beating a game is one thing; beating it in record time is another.0:00
69.Anime is an iconic global art form with a fascinating history.0:00
70.๐Ÿ† Game-changers. Record-breakers. History-makers.0:00
71.Some believe this disease inspired the Mad Hatter in "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland"0:00
72.Your brain loves to fill in the blanks.0:00
73.Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo โ€“ yes, that is a real sentence.0:00
74.Want to escape reality for a while?0:00
75.Indonesia is home to more than 400 museums.0:00
76.Did you know spaghetti grows on trees?0:00
77.For over a decade, @WikilovesearthOrgofficial has been capturing our planetโ€™s natural heritage.0:00
78."The Blue Marble" was the first clear image of Earth in full view.0:00
79.Did you know that prohibition was not just an experiment in the United States?0:00
80.These three women redefined leadership across business, conservation, and media.0:00
81.This sweet disaster crushed buildings and lives in 1919 Boston.0:00
82.If volunteers edit Wikipedia, how can you trust it? | A WIKI MINUTE0:00
83.What do a pirate queen, a revolutionary, and a famous pilot have in common?0:00
84.Knowledge gets connected on Wikipedia.0:00
85.They wrote stories the world could not ignore ๐Ÿ“–โœ๏ธย 0:00
86.Some architects take "thinking outside the box" very literally. ๐Ÿ—๏ธโœจ0:00
87.Cottagecore is an aesthetic love letter to simpler times...0:00Simpler Times
88.Every November, black-footed albatrosses return to Midway Atoll after months at sea.0:00
89.What is the role of Wikipedia in the age of AI? | A WIKI MINUTE0:00
90."No mail, low morale"0:00
91.Nitrocellulose film gave us the early days of cinema โ€“ but it came with a fiery twist!0:00
92.Ever wondered how AI makes decisions? It all comes down to intelligent agents.0:00
93.Used in travel videos, drone shots, and more, hyperlapse makes everyday movement look cinematic.0:00
94.Satellites measure how green and alive an area is through the NDVI0:00
95.The Tsavo Man-Eaters turned a railway project into a horror movie.0:00
96.What is 72 seconds long, came from space, and left scientists totally stumped? ๐ŸŒŒ0:00
97.Your brain can tell when something is pretending to be human, even if it looks perfect.0:00
98.Have you ever seen a dik-dik in person?0:00
99.What happens when dancing turns from joy to terror?0:00
100.What happens when nostalgia meets internet culture? You get vaporwave.0:00