Watch the Very First YouTube Video, a Defining Second in Web Historical past


Giv­en the dom­i­nance YouTube has achieved over massive swaths of world cul­ture, we’d all anticipate to remem­ber the primary video we watched there. But many or most of us don’t: reasonably, we sim­ply actual­ized, sooner or later within the mid-to-late two-thou­sands, that we’d devel­oped a dai­ly YouTube behavior. Like as not, your individual intro­duc­tion to the plat­kind got here via a video too triv­ial to make a lot of an impres­sion, assum­ing you could possibly get it to load in any respect. (We for­get, on this age of instan­ta­neous stream­ing, how sluggish YouTube may very well be at first.) However per­haps the triv­i­al­i­ty was the purpose, a prece­dent set by the primary YouTube video ever uploaded, “Me on the Zoo.”

“Alright, so right here we’re in entrance of the, uh, ele­phants,” says YouTube co-founder Jawed Karim, stand­ing earlier than these ani­mals’ enclo­positive on the San Diego Zoo. “The cool factor about these guys is that, is that they’ve actual­ly, actual­ly, actual­ly lengthy, um, trunks, and that’s, that’s cool. And that’s pret­ty a lot all there may be to say.”

The run­time is nineteen sec­onds. The add date is April 24, 2005, two years earlier than “Char­lie Bit My Fin­ger” and “Choco­late Rain,” 4 years earlier than The Joe Rogan Expe­ri­ence, and sev­en years earlier than “Gang­nam Fashion.” The pop-cul­tur­al power that’s MrBeast, then a baby identified solely as Jim­my Don­ald­son, would have been antic­i­pat­ing his sev­enth beginning­day.

“After the zoo, the del­uge,” wrote Vir­ginia Hef­fer­nan in a 2009 New York Occasions piece on YouTube’s first 4 and a half years, when the location con­tained naked­ly any of the con­tent with which we asso­ciate it right now. When you have a favourite YouTube chan­nel, it prob­a­bly did­n’t exist then. Hef­fer­nan approached the “fail,” “haul,” and “unbox­ing”  movies going viral on the time as new cul­tur­al types, as certainly they have been, however the con­ven­tions of the YouTube video as we now know them had but to crys­tal­lize. Not each­one who noticed the likes of “Me on the Zoo” would have beneath­stood the promise of YouTube. Per­haps it did­n’t really feel par­tic­u­lar­ly rev­e­la­to­ry to be told that ele­phants have trunks — however then, that’s nonetheless extra infor­ma­tive than lots of the depend­much less clarify­er movies being uploaded as we communicate.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Easy methods to Watch Hun­dreds of Free Films on YouTube

The Very First Net­cam Was Invent­ed to Maintain an Eye on a Cof­price Pot at Cam­bridge Uni­ver­si­ty

Is the Viral “Pink Costume” Music Video a Soci­o­log­i­cal Exper­i­ment? Per­for­mance Artwork? Or Some­factor Else?

The Com­plete His­to­ry of the Music Video: From the Nineties to Right this moment

Based mostly in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. His tasks embody the Sub­stack newslet­ter Books on Cities and the ebook The State­much less Metropolis: a Stroll via Twenty first-Cen­tu­ry Los Ange­les. Fol­low him on the social internet­work for­mer­ly generally known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.



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