After 10 years, YouTube is nixing YouTube Rewind, its annual video-recap celebration of creators — saying that one single video can’t reflect “the full breadth” of its creator community. The ...
Pam's Colecovision was her babysitter, from the age of 4 or 5, but the family only had one game. Over and over, hour after hour, she'd climb and jump through the three levels of Donkey Kong. But the ...
YouTube has announced that it will not be releasing a ‘YouTube Rewind’ video for 2020 because of how "different" the year was. Every year, YouTube releases a Rewind video which acts as a recap for all ...
YouTube just unlisted all of its old YouTube Rewind videos. But, why? - Christoph Soeder/picture alliance via Getty Images YouTube Rewind may have ended back in 2019, but it seems like YouTube has ...
YouTube can’t seem to get Rewind right. Like Tumblr’s year-end fandom rankings or Spotify’s personalized playlists, YouTube finishes the year off by aggregating notable moments on the platform.
For the first time in years, YouTube has announced that it will not be releasing its YouTube Rewind video series at the end of the year. The reason is exactly what you've guessed: 2020 isn't a great ...
Who wants to remember 2020? Not YouTube. It has canceled plans for its annual wrap-up video, which traditionally shares the best of YouTube and its creators each year. Does anyone want to replay 2020?
YouTube Rewind is no more. After canceling last year’s Rewind because nobody wanted to look back at 2020, the company has decided to cancel rewind for good (perhaps because 2020 never really ended, ...
It seems that Youtube Rewind 2018 was a failure as soon as it was uploaded. The video, with over 6.8 million dislikes, became the second most disliked video in the history of YouTube within the course ...
YouTube Rewind 2018 is the most-disliked YouTube video ever made, beating a record that was previously held by Justin Bieber's "Baby" music video for almost a decade. YouTube has acknowledged that ...
Hating on the YouTube Rewind video is an annual Internet tradition, mainly because the video can come off as more for advertisers and corporate board members than for the YouTube community. That very ...