SciShow is good people making science content aimed at a general audience.
Ask Lemmy
A Fediverse community for open-ended, thought provoking questions
Rules: (interactive)
1) Be nice and; have fun
Doxxing, trolling, sealioning, racism, and toxicity are not welcomed in AskLemmy. Remember what your mother said: if you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all. In addition, the site-wide Lemmy.world terms of service also apply here. Please familiarize yourself with them
2) All posts must end with a '?'
This is sort of like Jeopardy. Please phrase all post titles in the form of a proper question ending with ?
3) No spam
Please do not flood the community with nonsense. Actual suspected spammers will be banned on site. No astroturfing.
4) NSFW is okay, within reason
Just remember to tag posts with either a content warning or a [NSFW] tag. Overtly sexual posts are not allowed, please direct them to either !asklemmyafterdark@lemmy.world or !asklemmynsfw@lemmynsfw.com.
NSFW comments should be restricted to posts tagged [NSFW].
5) This is not a support community.
It is not a place for 'how do I?', type questions.
If you have any questions regarding the site itself or would like to report a community, please direct them to Lemmy.world Support or email info@lemmy.world. For other questions check our partnered communities list, or use the search function.
6) No US Politics.
Please don't post about current US Politics. If you need to do this, try !politicaldiscussion@lemmy.world or !askusa@discuss.online
Reminder: The terms of service apply here too.
Partnered Communities:
Logo design credit goes to: tubbadu
In addition to the others mentioned.
Kyle Hill
Steve Mould
Physics Girl
The Action Lab
Anton Petrov
Scott Manley
Veritasium
Minute Earth
Minute Physics
VSauce
SciShow
Hank Green
Cleo Abram
Hannah Fry is great too. Becky Smethurst as well.
I approve of your list but Anton Petrov is a bit much for a 12 year old, I think. Kyle Hill gets a bit dark for a 12 year old sometimes.
It certainly doesn't hurt to just start off on the right foot with Carl Sagan and Cosmos.
God I can't stand Veritasium. Even the name is so fucking pretentious. Dude is in deep love with himself, I can't watch it. There's just something about narcissists, I get an allergic reaction listening to them.
I can see that. I, like you, appreciate the content, but I have found myself watching fewer of his videos. I guess that’s also because he seems to be farming out his content production now. I like the self-produced stuff more than larger-scale productions.
Also Nile Red and 3brown1blue.
for a more adult audience - Technology Connections. I say adult because I don't think Alec would hold the attention of a teenager.
Slop for my horses. Used AI to parse the comments and make a cohesive list with it's best shot at links
Then hand checked the links, fixed any broken ones I could find.
The classifications to the right are AI generated, feel free to comment and have me change things.
- 3Blue1Brown (Grant Sanderson) — math; advanced
- Alexis Dahl — science/history; kid‑friendly
- AlphaPhoenix — physics/engineering; advanced
- Amateur Chemistry — various chemistry, some dangerous
- Anton Petrov — astronomy/space; kid‑friendly but dense
- Atomic Frontier — physics/engineering; kid‑friendly
- Beakmans World — general science; kid‑friendly, high‑energy also Internet Archive
- Becky Smethurst (Dr Becky) — astrophysics; kid‑friendly
- Bill Nye — general science; kid‑friendly also archive
- Bob MacDonald (Quirks & Quarks) — general science; kid‑friendly
- BobbyBroccoli — science history/controversies; sometimes heavy topics
- Carl Sagan (Cosmos) — astronomy; kid‑friendly
- Chemical Force — chemistry; dangerous experiments
- Chubbyemu — medical case studies; sometimes intense
- Cleo Abram (Huge if True) — science/tech explainers; highly accessible
- Computerphile — computer science; kid‑friendly
- COSMOS (Neil deGrasse Tyson) — properly on Netflix, astronomy; kid‑friendly
- Crash Course — general education; kid‑friendly
- David Butler (HowFarAwayIsIt) — astronomy/cosmology; kid‑friendly
- Dr Angela Collier — physics; advanced
- Dr Iain Stewart — geology/earth science; kid‑friendly
- Dr Karl Kruszelnicki — general science; kid‑friendly
- Dr Pamela Gay astronomy; kid‑friendly
- Emily Calandrelli (The Space Gal) — space/engineering; kid‑friendly
- Emily the Engineer — engineering/maker; mild language possible
- Explosions and Fire — chemistry/physics; dangerous experiments
- ExTrAcTiOnS aNd IrE — chemistry; dangerous experiments
- Fascinating Horror — disasters; not science education; sometimes intense
- Fraser Cain — astronomy/space news; kid‑friendly
- Gutsick Gibbon (Erika) — biology/evolution; kid‑friendly
- Hannah Fry — math; kid‑friendly
- HowFarAwayIsIt (David Butler) — astronomy; kid‑friendly
- Hyperspace Pirate — chemistry; dangerous experiments
- Isaac Arthur (SFIA) — futurism/space; advanced
- James Burke (Connections) — history of science; kid‑friendly
- Jeremy Fielding — engineering/maker; kid‑friendly
- Jeri Ellsworth — electronics/engineering; advanced
- Journey to the Microcosmos — microbiology; kid‑friendly
- Kyle Hill — physics/pop‑science; sometimes dark topics
- Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell — general science; sometimes heavy existential topics
- Labcoatz — chemistry; dangerous experiments
- Laura Kampf — maker/engineering; kid‑friendly
- Mark Rober — engineering/science; kid‑friendly
- Medlife Crisis — medicine; adult themes possible
- MinuteEarth — earth science; kid‑friendly
- MinutePhysics — physics; kid‑friendly
- Monterey Bay Aquarium — marine biology; kid‑friendly
- Mr. Green Guy — chemistry; dangerous experiments
- Mr. Wizard (Don Herbert) — general science; kid‑friendly
- Myron Cook — geology; kid‑friendly
- MythBusters — engineering/physics; occasional mild violence HULU and MAX
- NileRed — chemistry; dangerous experiments
- NileBlue — chemistry; dangerous experiments
- NOVA (PBS) — general science; kid‑friendly
- Numberphile — math; kid‑friendly
- PBS Eons — paleontology/evolution; kid‑friendly
- PBS Space Time — physics/astronomy; advanced
- PBS Terra — climate science; sometimes heavy topics
- Periodic Videos — chemistry; dangerous experiments
- Physics for the Birds — physics; kid‑friendly
- Physics Girl (Dianna Cowern) — physics; kid‑friendly
- Practical Engineering — civil engineering; kid‑friendly
- Rational Animations — math/logic; kid‑friendly
- Richard Feynman (lectures) — physics; advanced
- SciShow — general science; kid‑friendly
- Science and Futurism with Isaac Arthur — futurism/space; advanced
- Science Max — general science; kid‑friendly
- Scott Manley — space/rocketry; kid‑friendly
- Sebastian Lague — computational physics; kid‑friendly
- Simone Giertz — engineering/maker; mild language
- Smarter Every Day (Destin Sandlin) — physics/engineering; kid‑friendly
- Stand‑up Maths (Matt Parker) — math; kid‑friendly
- Steve Mould — physics; kid‑friendly
- Stuff Made Here — engineering; kid‑friendly but complex
- Styropyro — lasers/physics; dangerous experiments
- Technology Connections — engineering/tech history; kid‑friendly
- The Action Lab — physics/chemistry demos; sometimes dangerous experiments
- The Crash Course — Large educational project, cross disciplinary; kid-friendly
- The Octopus Lady — marine biology; kid‑friendly
- The Royal Institution — general science; kid‑friendly
- The Thought Emporium — DIY science/biology; dangerous experiments
- This Week in Science — science news; kid‑friendly
- Up and Atom (Jade Tan‑Holmes) — math/physics; kid‑friendly
- Veritasium (Derek Muller) — physics/general science; kid‑friendly
- Vi Hart — original channel gone, linked to someone re-uploading, quality is marginal, math; kid‑friendly
- VSauce — general science/philosophy; sometimes heavy concepts
- Xyla Foxlin — engineering/maker; mild language
- Ze Frank — biology/nature; kid‑friendly but sometimes emotionally heavy
Added from posts: Fraser Cain, The Crash Course, Beakman's World, Cleo Abram
Added from my own list: nile blue, my green guy, hyperspace pirate, smarter every day, jeremy fielding, stuff made here, laura kamph, jerri ellsworth
Simone Giertz
That link format is unfortunate because Lemmy thinks you're trying to link to a /c/ community.
This should work: https://www.youtube.com/@simonegiertz
The queen of shitty robots!
Her new brand is more product design and inovation focused, but its all amazing (plus, Scrapps is adorable).
Technology Connections
Periodic Videos
Computerphile
One Blue Three Brown
MinutePhysics
Kurgezagt (probably misspelled it, search for in a nutshell)
in german the z and s sounds are switched. and you missed the actual z. its Kurzgesagt (from the word "Kurz" (short) and the 3. person singular perfect of the verb "sagen" (to say), "gesagt" (said)).
(sorry but i couldn't not correct you and explain where the word came from)
Lots of great recommendations already, but I haven't seen mention of Nebula, and I was looking for something like it last year.
I'm not affiliated with Nebula, I'm just a fan.
I look for ways to support creators more while supporting Google less, and Nebula is my favorite for science video creators, at the moment.
Some of the creators recommended here also post to Nebula with ad-free versions of the same videos and with a little bit of extra content (think DVD bonus features) - slightly longer videos, sometimes extra or extended interviews with interesting people.
And pretty much any creator who is on Nebula will say so at some point in their YouTube videos.
Since I didn't see many creators who are women, here are a few recommendations:
The Space Gal (Emily Calandrelli)
Emily the Engineer (content can be pretty rough - profanity and simulated danger)
Sometimes, I think science educators aren't political enough.
Cleo Abram's interviews with Nvidia's CEO, Zuck and Sam Altman are her only interviews to date, and they all paint them in a good light without being critical of their work. I get wanting to make it to the top, but simping for the capitalist elite is just not a good look in my book, especially when science communication should try to minimize bias.
I also remember her video about John Deere last year, giving the impression the company is only doing so much good in the world...
Bill Nye the Science Guy from the 90s.
I was always the Beakmans World side.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8SFNbbOmAYNMcH8uywT24j5YXJTC2WTZ
you tube has pbs space time, nova, terra and the sci show along with others.
Seconding this. PBS has a TON of YouTube channels for all kinds of interest areas. Not all are going to be geared to a middle school audience, but much like the TV stations themselves, at least you don't have to worry as much* about the potential content as a parent (in terms of quality or appropriateness) vs random YouTube channels.
*I would say all their stuff is high school appropriate, but some of the more local/news-related stuff could be a bad fit for younger audiences depending on the kid, only because we don't live in a world that's child-friendly. Also channels like PBS Terra do a lot of videos about how fucked we are re: climate change (not in so many words of course) and although they do try to put an optimistic spin on it, sensitive kids might get freaked out by how bad things are (which would be an accurate response of course, so it depends on how much you've been trying to shelter your kid from this kind of thing I guess).
Cleo.
She's not a scientist but a journalist, but a pretty good one, like, my top 1. She always covers science and engineering and always communicates extremely well.
Physics girl on YouTube, even though she hasn't made any content anymore for years due to long term Covid, she's still recovering, but her videos were always very inspiring, very happy and curiosity inducing
if your 12yo is interested in space, physics, pbs space, is another one, but it might be hard to follow if your not versed in the field though.
I dont really know whats age appropriate for a 12 year old but BobbyBroccoli has some good science controversy videos. He has a good series of videos on a physics scandal and a video on another physics scandal. He uses some cool visualizations and I like how he talks about the science and the people involved. Theres also cold fusion. One of the fusion videos has a title thats worrying but no one dies, its making a point.
Too dark at her age probably but maybe good as a teenager. I listen to Fascinating Horror who covers various disasters in 15 mins or less. I liked that the videos arent sensationalized. He always says the victims names and backgrounds, the circumstances leading up to it and the fallout. Like theres a video about a woman who was rushed the hospital and made the staff sick. Theres a lot of videos calling her the toxic lady. His video refers to her by name, mentions that moniker doesnt match how positive and loved she was, and her prior medical issues that likely caused her desperation.
Lots of good channel suggestions.
But I would also nominate COSMOS.
Both the original hosted by Carl Sagan, and the new series with Neil deGrasse Tyson.
For me, they brought the epicness of reality, scientific history, and the vastness of the universe, into focus in a way nothing else did.
They made me feel a hopeful and powerful "humanity is fucking AWESOME, and can do INCREDIBLE things". It's not just informative. It lights a fire in you for the way humanity fights its way through the dark, using the scientific method as our guide.
I was about 12 or 13 when my parents taped a series from TV called "Connections" featuring a historian called James Burke. I've probably watched it over 30 times since and have shared it with my daughter (then about 8, now 13).
Anytime she's home sick from school, that's what she wants to watch with me now. Highly recommended.
Found it streamimg on curiosity stream. $3-4 isn't much to try the service for a month and see if it's worth it to us.
Thanks for recommendation.
I have started becoming a supporter of my local PBS station so I've been watching a lot of pbs content on pbs.org
It seems they have quite a few options for young kids learning science
i feel like Ze's humor is fairly adult
Carl fucking Sagan.
watch mythbusters with her, maybe?
Well I was closer to 6 and 7, but I grew up with Mr. Wizard. He was probably Bill Nye's inspiration. Unpatronizing, simple, and straightforward science for kids. Man was a national treasure.
Technically more of an engineering / maker channel, but Xyla Foxlin is great. She does occasionally swear, but a 12 year old has probably heard those words before. Yeetmas, where she launches a Christmas tree rocket, would be a good place to start. (Not a Christmas tree themed rocket, a decorated pine tree on top rocket motor as long as your arm.)
Myron Cook is the Bob Ross of Geology. His channel is a treasure:
Oh my God I love the fact that you are using Lemmy for this! :D
#lemmy4everything
Tons of great recommendations here. I didn’t see it mentioned. For somebody into biology, especially apes, Gutsick Gibbon is superb. Erika is wonderful and crazy knowledgeable on the topic of hominins among other things.
Dr Becky (aka Dr Rebecca Smethurst) for Astrophysics / Space news.
Any of the channels run by Brady Haran like Numberphile and Periodic Videos.
Most of my other picks have been mentioned already or else lean into spectacle which might not be appreciated by a 12-year-old girl. (Quite a few of the chemistry channels I watch are like this. In order of decreasing silliness: Nile Blue / Nile Red, Labcoatz, Amateur Chemistry, Chemical Force... Actually CF is pretty good by comparison.)
But I'm not you or your daughter. Check them out anyway and see if either of you likes what you see.
Science Max: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbprhISv-0ReKPPyhf7-Dtw
Also Myth Busters - not sure if available on YouTube, we ripped the DVDs long ago. Most episodes are pretty PC but some are definitely not appropriate so vetting required.
I really like physicist Dr. Angela Collier. Not all of her videos are about science, but at least the plurality are. Her videos are generally pretty casual, and she doesn't really script.
I also really like Practical Engineering for civil engineering stuff.
Maybe NOVA?
pbs.org/nova
youtube/@novapbs
They cover a wide range of topics, show professionals at work & explaining their work (glimpsing a life/work of an actual scientists).
Also good for having a sense of the context the modern irl world exists in, not just the here & now of personal bubble experiences.