Pressing Play on Politics: Quantitative Description of YouTube
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51685/jqd.2025.006Keywords:
YouTube, comments, quantitative descriptionAbstract
We present a large-scale quantitative analysis of anglophone politics channels on YouTube, with three distinct units of analysis: channels, comments, and videos. We demonstrate that although channels have been entering the YouTube system at a roughly constant rate since 2008, there is serious inequality in the attention received by different channels and videos. Furthermore, prolific commenters are responsible for an astonishing amount of activity: 50% of total comments are written by just over 2% of all commenters. The toxicity for which YouTube comments are famous tends to be more pronounced among these super-users than among infrequent commenters. Our findings have important implications for the way in which YouTube viewers interpret what they see as representative of public opinion.
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Copyright (c) 2025 kevinmunger PhD, Matt Hindman, Omer Yalcin, Joseph Phillips, James Bisbee

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.