Skip to main content

Watch the YouTube video that launched the site exactly 20 years ago

Me at the zoo

It lacks the high production values present in so many of today’s YouTube videos, but then Jawed Karim wasn’t aiming for anything slick. It was merely a little something to launch his new video streaming site.

Filmed at San Diego Zoo by a friend and posted on April 23, 2005, Karim says straight to camera: “All right, so here we are in front of the elephants. The cool thing about these guys is that they have really, really, really long trunks, and that’s cool, and that’s pretty much all there is to say.”

The clip, titled Me at the Zoo, lasts a mere 17 seconds and has been viewed more than 350 million times. Not bad for an elephant video. 

Within 18 months, Google had seen the potential of the fast-growing site and acquired the platform for $1.65 billion. The deal has since proven to be highly valuable as YouTube now generates more than $35 billion annually in ad revenue alone.

On that April day 20 years ago, a mere 17 seconds of video was uploaded to YouTube. These days, up to 500 hours of video are uploaded to the site every single minute, which amounts to an astonishing 82 years of content added daily.

The most-viewed video on the platform is currently Baby Shark Dance. The children’s song video was uploaded to YouTube eight years ago and has since amassed more than 13.5 billion views. The platform is also filled with content made by talented creators who are able to make a living out of their efforts. And there are still lots of cat videos on it, too.

Despite having 5.34 million subscribers, Karim, who founded YouTube along with Chad Hurley and Steve Chen, has never uploaded another video to his channel. He has, however, occasionally changed the text in the description, his most recent update, made in the last few months, saying, “Microplastics are accumulating in human brains at an alarming rate,” along with a link to a video on the subject.

Karim keeps a pretty low profile these days, but remains active as a software engineer, investor, and mentor in the tech industry. He may even visit San Diego Zoo occasionally to marvel at where it all started.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
The 25 best YouTube videos for kids (April 2025)
Mark Rober balancing on top of a moving train in a YouTube video.

Trying to find a good video for your little ones to watch on YouTube can be a challenge. Even if you limit the search to YouTube Kids, there's so much out there. How can you determine what's good and what isn't, what has educational value and what doesn't, and what will have your kids pressing play over and over so you can take that quick rush shower or finish up dinner?
When it comes to older kids like teens, YouTube is an even more challenging subject. How can you ensure they're watching valuable content if you allow them to watch? Let's be real: most tweens and teens will watch brain-rot content, gameplay videos, and silly content from their favorite YouTubers. We can help you sneak in some valuable, educational, and insightful content. Here, we have compiled the 25 best YouTube videos for kids, with options ranging from videos for babies and toddlers to coming-of-age videos for older kids.

Head Shoulders Knees And Toes + More Nursery Rhymes & Kids Songs | NuNu Tv
NuNu TV - Nursery Rhymes
Best for Ages 1-5
Head Shoulders Knees And Toes + More Nursery Rhymes & Kids Songs | NuNu Tv
As babies grow into toddlers, they explore the world around them and learn things like colors, numbers, letters, body parts, and objects. “Head, shoulders, knees, and toes” is a popular tune that all kids learn at some point. This video walks little ones through this with an engaging animated guide. The characters point to each body part, repeating it over and over to help toddlers learn as they mimic the movements and try to say the words.
Halfway through the video, it switches to a new scene with additional nursery rhymes, including the longtime favorite of kids, "Baby Shark" (doo-doo-doo-doo-doo-doo). At under five minutes long, it’s a video your toddlers will probably want to play again and again.

Read more
10 great free sci-fi movies you should stream right now
The alien hybrid in Species

Good news for viewers everywhere — tons of great sci-fi movies are streaming completely for free! There is plenty of free content on services like Tubi, Pluto TV, and Peacock's no-cost options. In recent years, the free content has improved because major companies are investing in free streaming services.
This is especially great news for sci-fi fans since many fantastic new and classic sci-fi films have made their way to these free streamers. Whether you want a big box office hit, an award-winning indie film, or a legendary cult classic, you can find them there for free. Here are 10 of the best sci-fi movies you can stream right now without paying a dime.

We also have guides to the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.
Stargate (1994)

Read more
Forty years ago, the first Coen brothers movie set the tone for their filmography. Here’s why you should watch it now
Dan Hedaya and M. Emmet Walsh in Blood Simple.

Blood Simple is a gloriously clean, well-constructed darkly comic noir that rides the border between pure satire and utter nihilism. Forty years after its release in January of 1985, the first Coen brothers film remains one of the defining debut features of the past half-century. Like Athena springing full-formed from the head of Zeus, all of the Coen motifs perfectly formed right out of the box.
A beautiful visual language

Like all Coen films before 2004’s The Ladykillers, Blood Simple is officially directed by Joel Coen to conform with DGA regulations at the time which allowed only one credited director on a project. But the brothers have always directed, written, produced and edited their films together, and Blood Simple, with its stylized shots -- a view down the barrel of a discarded gun, two lovers framed in a massive arched window -- is, like all of their movies, a succession of perfect images, gilded in neon purples and deep, dark blues. With director of photography Barry Sonnenfeld, himself later an accomplished director (of 1991’s The Addams Family, among others), the Coens create a parade of painting-like frames almost startling in their ceaselessness, clearly influenced not only by classic noir but also roughly contemporary films like Terrence Malick’s Days of Heaven, with its uncanny sense of the big-sky American west.
Joel Coen and Frances McDormand

Read more
OSZAR »