I am subscribed to dozens of channels. Some that consistently put out interesting/good content are:
Donut Media (with SponsorBlock enabled)
The Proper People
Tom Scott
The B1M
Vox
Joe Scott
BBC Earth Lab
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I am subscribed to dozens of channels. Some that consistently put out interesting/good content are:
Donut Media (with SponsorBlock enabled)
The Proper People
Tom Scott
The B1M
Vox
Joe Scott
BBC Earth Lab
The only YouTube channel I currently wat h is Cracking the Crypic. It's 2 British guys that solve various logic puzzles; mostly sudoku and most of those are crazy variations on sudoku. Each video also has a link so you can also play the puzzle if you want to.
There is one of the presenters I much prefer to the other but the entire channel and community around them is one of the most wholesome things on the web.
Highly recommended if any of that sounds interesting to you.
I've also been watching CtC quite a bit for the last couple of years. Unfortunately, they've lately been doing a lot of long, highly technical puzzles, which I don't find as interesting (though their shorter videos are still good). If anyone's interested in checking them out, I'll recommend a couple of older videos that I really enjoyed:
If you enjoy watching people solve sudokus and other puzzles, I'll also recommend Rangsk (generally does the daily NYT hard sudoku, a 6x6 intro-to-nonstandard-rules "sudoku adventure", and a collection of wordle-ish (but not not actually wordle) games), Bremster, and zetamath (does quite a few live solves with audience participation, as well as reaction vids to other people solving his puzzles).
Those videos are a result of people min/maxing for the algorithm; the fact that you see them so much shows that they are unfortunately succesfull. Its a symptom of people being able to make (good) money from it.
There is still plenty of good content, but you would find it in the recommendations. You have to go searching for it. Search for your hobbies and interests. The more niche your search terms the better.
Mattβs off road recovery, Real Civil Engineer, Heavy D (Sparks), Practical Engineering.
Hermitcraft and Red Letter Media
I use newpipe to not have to struggle with all the ads.
My goto channels that id always recommend and support via patreon/ donations:
(General stuff) Clickspring Ben Eater Sebastian Lague Steve Wallis Luetin09 JunsKitchen
(Gaming) TomatoAnus Pete Complete Rhadamant Nivarias
I absolutely hate all the screaming that some youtubers think they have to do....
If anyone has any great (calm) youtubers, especially something strategy gaming related, please drop them!!
Tom Scott - short documentaries about places and things that are are out of the ordinary
Climate Town - comedic video essays on how certain parts of our lives impact the climate
CGP Grey - in-depth animated video essays on nerdy topics like flag designs or airport runway numbering
Dashner Design and Reatoration - realistic furniture restoration where the guy is honest about flaws and failed techniques. Not too much talking, but enough to let you know why heβs doing certain things
I watch Audit the Audit and CodeBlueCams, but I don't subscribe to them. And Mark Rober, sometimes. I don't have a Goog account, so I only browse as a guest. This is by choice.
Beau of the Fifth Column is a channel I love to watch. He offers really good insights to news and politics.
Sounds like your algorithm is pretty badly poisoned.
It's my primary video entertainment service. I have a premium family plan so I don't have to deal with ads on any device and neither do my wife kids or parents.
I don't see any crypto scams. I do occasionally see clickbait BS in the suggestions, but I've gotten pretty good at avoiding it. Even creators who put out things I like, I'll delay watching stuff with clickbait thumbs or titles so as not to reward it. I found the Veritasium video on clickbait informative. (Funnily enough he's now on my shit list for clickbait)
An inexhaustive list of my follows off the top of my head:
Gaming:
Many a true nerd, mainly for the fallout stuff but I like their other content.
T90official, for AoE2 match coverage, the nearest I get to watching sports
Best Guest (he deserves more subs, with his surreal challenge runs)
SorcererDave.
Karl Jobst
Science:
PBS space time.
Anton Petrov.
Sabine Hossenfelder.
Legal commentary:
Leonard french.
Steve Lehto.
Tech:
Linus Tech tips (although they're all in on the clickbait titles & soyface)
Gamers Nexus
Der8auer EN
Louis Rossman (I've become less of a fan over the last few years, but not enough to drop him)
Other
Meatcanyon/papa meat
Rainman rays repairs (the algorithm offered him up, and I've found him fixing stuff pretty compelling lately)
There are more but that all I want to type out right now. Some also broadcast on Twitch, but I'm not a fan of that platform. I like some editing, and can't stand the "look at me, look at meeeee" aspect of twitch chat (or any 'live' content)
Watcher is a fun channel, educational and stupid at times.
Wristwatch Revival is a great turn off your brain kind of channel but now I'm building watches in my free time.
Primitive Technology is just fantastic all the time.
Chubby Emu is a great medical channel and his meme game is on point.
Brutalmoose is a beautiful storm of chaotic editing techniques.
Sam O'Nella!
Kurtzgesagt.
Technology Connections.
Goniloc used to be kick-ass.
Smarter Every Day.
I'm not even deep into the algorithm. You need to stop clicking on garbage.
I watch more YouTube then I'd like to admit honestly, but with ad blockers it's not too bad. Some of my frequented channels/creators:
Gaming:
Music:
Other:
I might have a problem....
A lot of my favourites have already been mentioned, but one I didn't see is Peter Santenello.
He makes vlogs going into dangerous areas, ghettos, gang and criminal areas in general, or in really rich neighborhoods, and he hangs out with some locals asking them a lot about their life.
It's really interesting stuff
there's still plenty of great content on YouTube it just depends on what you're watching
Mostly Townsends and Steven1989 with some Primitive Technologies thrown in for light watching, plus ContraPoints and Philosophy Tube for when I have an hour to sit down and focus on really heady topics.
You absolutely should keep on watching YT. In fact I can specifically highly recommend the channel DukeUnivLibraries. This video with almost 1M views will sway in just the first 15 seconds but you will not be able to peel your eyes away for the entire 3 minutes and 14 seconds. Prepare yourself. Get some popcorn. https://youtu.be/e1iGEM9NMFM
Tomatoanus does speed run explanation videos and they are always interesting to me
RedLetterMedia. I re-watch their 'best of the worst' movie reviews over and over.
Hyperspace pirate is currently working on making a cryocooler to make liquid nitrogen, out of cheap and readily accessible components. He's not done yet, but the progress videos are very interesting to watch. https://www.youtube.com/@HyperspacePirate
Rick Beato - music theory Meat Canton - animation James Lee - animation Tasting History - food and history Bunch of cop watchers and civil rights folks. Bad Cop No Donut stuff.
Oh. Also:
Captain Disillusionment - VFX and skeptics Corridor - VFX Movies with Mikey - film video essays In/Frame/Out - film theory and savage commentary Emmet Short - pop tech Daryl Talks Games - psychology of video games. I cry. WrySci - small channel but funny science stuff. Wish itβd have taken off.
Been watching a lot of Ordinary Sausage lately. Such absolute culinary insanity and yet weirdly wholesome.
On the more soothing side of things, Townsends' cooking videos are usually just plain nice, not to mention surprisingly tasty. Never would've thought "literally put an unpeeled onion in the oven until it smells delicious" would be a viable recipe but it turns out it's amazing. Also, Mushroom Ketchup rules.
Block those channels.
Autorestomod mechanic is one I watch.
Joel haver.
Lots of long-form bedroom dj mixes.
Honestly I donβt see any of what youve described on YouTube but Iβve spent years blocking garbage.
I love CallMeKevin, heβs so funny and generally wholesome, his content is great. Beyond that itβs all over the place. Tolkien Untangled, Wendigoon, Contra Points, Cracking the Cryptic for wild sudoku solving, Ryan Hollinger, a lot of history channels, things like Real Engineering, and coding stuff when needed