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 Most Controversial Videos by Wikipedia


Video TitleRatingCategoryGame
1.Is the internet โ€ฆ dead?7
2.Satellites measure how green and alive an area is through the NDVI4
3.Cottagecore is an aesthetic love letter to simpler times...9Simpler Times
4."The Blue Marble" was the first clear image of Earth in full view.2
5.It started with silent films, and now shapes global pop culture.7
6.A scene from "The Witch", a silent film from 1906 by French director Georges Mรฉliรจs.8
7.This center of trade and power has continued to stand the test of time.12
8.Your brain can tell when something is pretending to be human, even if it looks perfect.21
9.Nitrocellulose film gave us the early days of cinema โ€“ but it came with a fiery twist!7
10.If volunteers edit Wikipedia, how can you trust it? | A WIKI MINUTE27
11.A logic trap that plays with your assumptions: There is no missing dollar.24
12.Who is ready to experiment?11
13.A simple bridge puzzle with big ramifications for mathematics.13
14.This light show is called an aurora.5
15.This is what a black hole sounds like ๐ŸŽง23
16.Knowledge gets connected on Wikipedia.16
17.Start your engine ๐Ÿ Our new WikiRun online game pits you against a daily speed race.12
18.๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘„๐Ÿ‘ ๐Ÿคก๐Ÿ˜ญ๐Ÿ’€โ˜•๐Ÿฅฐ๐Ÿ‘€๐Ÿ”ฅ8
19.From tragic operas to viral clown sightings, the fear goes way beyond face paint.18
20.Sometimes, your greatest achievement can also be your greatest enemy.24
21.What does the world need from Wikimedia now?12
22.This is "Colpidium colpoda": a single-celled organism that thrives in ponds, soil, and even sewage.10
23.How quickly can you hop from "Karate" to "Grasshopper"?10Karate
24.Maybe trees are pioneers of personal space.10
25.Worse than catching your own face on the front-facing camera?15
26.๐ŸŽถ๐Ÿ”„ Sound tricks arenโ€™t just cool; they shape how we feel about the stories we love.8
27.This is not a face. But your brain really wants it to be.9
28.Could lightsabers really exist?8
29.Led by @wikimediaarmeniaofficial, Wikicamps blend digital education with outdoor experiences.8
30.Is it an arcane medical guide? A secret code? Or a clever hoax?21
31.It may not be perfect, but you made it. So IT IS perfect.17
32.Did you know that only 20.03% of all biographies on Wikipedia are about women?8
33.Did you know Japanโ€™s famous cherry blossom festivals started over 1,000 years ago?12
34.The Titanic was supposed to be the height of luxury and safety โ€“ but an iceberg changed history.2,200
35.From dreamlike colors to intricate forest scenes...6
36.In a group of 23 people, there is a 50% chance of at least two of them sharing a birthday.7
37.They launched astronauts, saved lives, and solved impossible equations.16
38.A math problem so simple anyone can understand it โ€“ but no one can solve it.21
39.Pi is everywhere!6
40.Six UK prime ministers have come and gone, but Larry the Cat still holds office.11
41.Memes are older than the internet. But how did they take over our screens?52
42.From Slender Man to The Backrooms, creepypasta turned digital text into modern myth.18
43.How did gaming become portable? ๐ŸŽฎ12
44.Still exploring Gale Crater on Mars after 10+ years.7
45.While not a formal diagnosis, Peter Pan syndrome is a pop psychology term.16
46.For 60 years, math searched for a single tile that could cover a plane without ever repeating.11
47.Roopkund, also called Skeleton Lake, holds a mystery buried in ice.20
48.๐ŸงŸโ€โ™‚๏ธ๐Ÿ„ What if a fungus could hijack your body and control your every move?18
49.Some architects take "thinking outside the box" very literally. ๐Ÿ—๏ธโœจ16
50.It has a reputation for mysterious disappearances...7
51.The Ides of March symbolized a betrayal that changed Roman history forever.13
52.Could this be the key to living on the Moon?5
53.These mechanical โ€œbeach animalsโ€ move like living organisms and have evolved over three decades.59
54."No mail, low morale"25
55.Every November, black-footed albatrosses return to Midway Atoll after months at sea.30
56.What does it take to run Wikipedia? | A WIKI MINUTE33
57.Want to tap into the internetโ€™s most vibey genre?14
58.Where can journalism truly be safe from censorship?34
59.Wikipedia is just the beginning โ€“ the Wikimedia movement is changing how we share knowledge.29
60.Ever wondered how AI makes decisions? It all comes down to intelligent agents.5
61.German folklore, springtime festivals, and chocolate eggs.6
62.Imagine a dog so iconic that an Egyptian pharaoh constructed a tomb to honor him.1,400
63.Emmy. Grammy. Oscar. Tony. ๐ŸŽญ Only 27 people have ever received all four.14
64.Hydrogen peroxide + soap + a little yeast = boom.16
65.What happens when you only eat meat and nothing else?7
66.The Bechdel test has sparked conversations about gender representation in film for decades.5
67.Want to escape reality for a while?6
68.Indonesia is home to more than 400 museums.12
69.What is the role of Wikipedia in the age of AI? | A WIKI MINUTE30
70.The vinyl revival has made records cool again, with sales hitting 30-year highs.7
71.The Tsavo Man-Eaters turned a railway project into a horror movie.1
72.Did you know that prohibition was not just an experiment in the United States?24
73.Used in travel videos, drone shots, and more, hyperlapse makes everyday movement look cinematic.5
74.Wikipedia โ€“ the largest encyclopedia in history โ€“ is made possible by people like you.13
75.What happens when dancing turns from joy to terror?8
76.Have you ever seen a dik-dik in person?31
77.What is 72 seconds long, came from space, and left scientists totally stumped? ๐ŸŒŒ16
78.๐Ÿ† Game-changers. Record-breakers. History-makers.7
79.What happens when nostalgia meets internet culture? You get vaporwave.11
80.Some believe this disease inspired the Mad Hatter in "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland"8
81.This map uses orthographic projection to represent seeing Earth from space ๐ŸŒ22
82.Groups like BTS and BLACKPINK are global sensations, but K-pop history goes even further.18
83.Your brain loves to fill in the blanks.18
84.Did you know spaghetti grows on trees?11
85.Ever seen a glacier collapse in real time?22
86.International Workers' Day has been a rallying point for generations.22
87.For over a decade, @WikilovesearthOrgofficial has been capturing our planetโ€™s natural heritage.10
88.These three women redefined leadership across business, conservation, and media.2
89.These teenage girls convinced 19th-century USA they could talk to the dead.15
90.Regular computers: 1s and 0s. Quantum computers: What if we did both at the same time?715
91.This sweet disaster crushed buildings and lives in 1919 Boston.21
92.Drop your food? The five-second rule says it is still safe if you pick it up fast...12
93.Wikipedia can be a valuable classroom tool for teachers and students alike.10
94.They wrote stories the world could not ignore ๐Ÿ“–โœ๏ธย 7
95.Beating a game is one thing; beating it in record time is another.6
96.Arctic expeditions are not just about polar bears and snowstorms.6
97.Imagine cats that could glow to save your life ๐Ÿˆโœจ5
98.Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo โ€“ yes, that is a real sentence.20
99.What do a pirate queen, a revolutionary, and a famous pilot have in common?13
100.Anime is an iconic global art form with a fascinating history.6