This is what the 21st Century has brought us — People being People. People convincing People to believe Unbelievable Bullshit.
I hereby present:
MY THOUGHTS While Clicking on What >_Platform / AlgorithmYouTube Recommendation EngineBy 2018, YouTube's watch-time-optimised algorithm had become the dominant pipeline for pseudoscientific and politically extreme content. The system surfaced videos based on what kept users watching — not accuracy, not credibility. If woo performed well, the algorithm promoted woo.→ Wikipedia: YouTube radicalisation
Or: A RESPONSE TO ALL THE >_NeologismFucknuggets of InternetThe author's affectionate-hostile taxonomy for content creators who deploy the aesthetics of intellectual rigour — complex graphics, expert guests, dramatic music — without any of its substance. Earnest grifters. Confident idiots. Believers in their own baloney.
At least these folks did us the courtesy of joking about the fact that they're lying, whilst trying to distract us from the awful >_CritiqueMath-SorceryThe technique of invoking mathematics or physics as authority — not to explain, but to intimidate. The audience cannot follow the equations, which is the point. The conclusion is presented as flowing inevitably from the math, bypassing the viewer's critical faculties entirely. See also: the Gish gallop..
Don't promise me the ol' >_ReferencePewDiePie / YouTube Thumbnail Trope"Johnny-Pie-Face" reads as a mangled version of PewDiePie (Felix Kjellberg), but the author's point is broader: the open-mouthed, wide-eyed thumbnail face that YouTube creators use to signal shock, revelation, or outrage. A visual promise of delivered drama — which pseudoscience videos routinely fail to honour for anyone paying attention.→ Wikipedia: PewDiePie and then not deliver as if you were lying when you promised. That hurt my feelings. Also, if mathematics is the backbone of your argument, you seem to shoot and cut all the 'technical' sections like... well... like you don't actually want us to engage with the logic. You're counting on people who listen for the conclusion, not the argument.
"Here is Math. You won't understand it. Look at the Man Looking Bored With These Pages."
"According to the Math, There is Thing. Thing is Important."
"Here is Physics. It does things. We don't understand. Look at how pretty the patterns are."
"According to Physics, Things happen. Things are important."
"Don't Worry, here is a Man. He is Grey, coz Brain. He Will Say Some Stuff about the Thing and Things. Things That Seem... As Good As Any Other Greek I Suppose. Look... You don't need to understand it, just wait for the bit where we cue the "Mind Blown" bit. You'll know how to feel about all this then. Man has got you covered. It's his face in the video."
Thing from the Math, and Things in the Physics
Keep Doing Things We Don't Understand
Until We Do, Then It's Oh Soooooo Grand!!!
But until Then, we have to suffer these kinds of fools.
If the research is legitimate (and it could be) then tell the people who produced this video to get >_Platform / Communityr/explainlikeimfiveA Reddit subreddit (community) where users request simple explanations of complex topics, as if explaining to a five-year-old. The author's point is sharp: if your research is real, a skilled explainer can make it accessible. The refusal to explain accessibly is itself a red flag — real scientists typically want to be understood.→ reddit.com/r/explainlikeimfive to write you some explainer clips based on your findings and whatever else is published. Good research may be tedious to do, but that does not mean it should be impossible to engage with.
It seems to me that your film is about how >_Video SubjectSimulation Hypothesis / Simulation TheoryThe philosophical proposition that reality is a computer simulation — associated academically with Nick Bostrom's 2003 paper. By 2018 it had become YouTube woo staple, backed by misread quantum physics and celebrity endorsements (Elon Musk, Neil deGrasse Tyson). The author's "God exists" framing catches the genre's theological sleight of hand: simulation theory is often creationism in a lab coat.→ Wikipedia: Simulation hypothesis.
Whether it's true or not needs to be subject to
Scrutiny.
Or don't make cancer jokes. They're not cool. Neither is the way we treat homeless people, but we can still Rag on a Bum from Time to Time. It's fine. They're homeless. It doesn't matter.
Oh, I met a Homeless Guy —
Which leads me to the following conclusion, based on my evidence presented.
Either this video is lying to me, or Once was Jesus, and I'm going to Hell for Putting a Receipt from a
(No sign-off. The nomad just ran.)
The essay's verse parody nails a specific rhetorical move: invoking a field (mathematics, physics, neuroscience) not to explain but to silence. The math appears on screen. The narrator acknowledges it's beyond most viewers. The conclusion is then presented as flowing necessarily from that math — but the step connecting equation to conclusion is never shown.
This is a cousin of the appeal to authority but cleverer: the authority is not a person but a discipline. You can't check the expert's credentials or look up their publication history. You can only feel your own inadequacy in the face of the equations, and accept the presenter's summary.
The grey-haired expert who appears briefly is playing a related role — lending credibility by association. The viewer doesn't need to evaluate what the expert said; they need only register that an expert was present.
Simulation theory has everything an algorithm-friendly YouTube video needs: it's unfalsifiable (so it can't be disproved on camera), it's cosmic in implication (which triggers wonder, a high-engagement emotion), it references real physics (quantum mechanics is genuinely strange, and that strangeness is invokable without explanation), and it flatters the viewer's intelligence while asking nothing of it.
Nick Bostrom's original 2003 simulation argument is a rigorous philosophical paper — a trilemma with specific conditions. YouTube simulation content typically discards the rigour and retains the vibes. The conclusion ("we might be in a simulation") gets extracted from the careful conditional logic that generates it and presented as a standalone revelation.
Celebrity endorsement accelerated this: Elon Musk's 2016 claim that "the odds we're in base reality is one in billions" became a meme that circulated independently of any argument. The author is watching this cycle in motion — and unimpressed.
The author's ELI5 suggestion is not philistinism — it's a diagnostic. Real science can be made accessible. The constraint is difficulty of communication, not difficulty of content. Carl Sagan, Richard Feynman, and more recently channels like 3Blue1Brown demonstrate that genuine scientific complexity can be rendered understandable without losing its substance.
Pseudoscience cannot afford ELI5 treatment because the clarity would expose the gap. When you strip away the production values and the technical-sounding language, what remains either does not say what the presenter claims, or says something trivial, or is simply not supported by the evidence shown.
The tell is in the editing. As the essay notes: "you seem to shoot and cut all the 'technical' sections like you don't actually want us to engage with the logic." Legitimate science communication lingers on the mechanism. Woo cuts away from it.
The essay's moral logic is precise and a little brutal: the YouTube video and the homeless man's street prophecy were experientially identical to the author. Both delivered unfalsifiable claims about the nature of reality through a fog of references the listener couldn't verify. Both required faith in the presenter's authority rather than engagement with evidence.
This is not a put-down of the homeless man — it is a deflation of the video. The production budget, the dramatic score, the physics citations: none of these make the claim more true. The narrator is equally unable to evaluate either one. The fancy wrapper is irrelevant to the epistemic situation.
The joke also implicates the narrator: they ran away from possible Jesus. They are not above this. The comedy is self-directed as much as outward — which is what saves the essay from being mere smugness.
By 2018, a specific genre of YouTube content had crystallised: high-production-value videos promising to reveal the hidden nature of reality. Common formats included "The Science of Consciousness," "Is Reality an Illusion?", "We Are Living in a Simulation — Here's the Proof." Production quality was professional; intellectual standards were not.
The genre owed something to legitimate science communication (Nova documentaries, Carl Sagan's Cosmos), something to Joe Rogan-style "what if?" speculation, and something to the long tradition of metaphysical grift. It monetised intellectual insecurity: the pleasure of feeling like you now understand something important, without the discomfort of actually having to learn anything.
Channels in this space attracted millions of subscribers. The algorithm loved them: high completion rates (the drama kept people watching), high share rates (revelations feel worth sharing), and reliable re-watch behaviour (people come back for the feeling).
The genre did not decline — it evolved. Post-2020, pseudoscientific YouTube merged with COVID misinformation, anti-vaccine content, and a broader epistemological crisis in which the audience for "alternative explanations" grew rapidly. The production values increased; the evidentiary standards did not.
The introduction of generative AI (2022–present) added a new layer: videos can now be produced at scale with synthetic voiceovers, AI-generated visuals, and algorithmically optimised scripts. The "Grey Man Who Knows Things" can now be entirely fabricated. The math-sorcery sequences can be generated in seconds.
Ironically, the author's prescription — take the research to ELI5, subject it to peer review — has also found its expression: science communication on YouTube has become genuinely excellent in the years since 2018. Channels like Veritasium, Kurzgesagt, and 3Blue1Brown demonstrate that the author's ask was reasonable. The woo channels and the legitimate ones co-exist; the algorithm does not reliably distinguish between them.
Cypherpunk — a movement that emerged in the late 1980s and crystallised in the 1990s — advocated for strong cryptography and privacy technologies as tools of individual liberation from state and corporate surveillance. Its manifesto tradition (Eric Hughes, Tim May) held that code was speech, that privacy was political, and that decentralised systems were inherently more honest than centralised ones.
Publishing this essay on Steemit — a blockchain platform — places it structurally within that tradition, even if the content is a comedy rant about pseudoscience. The author is using a decentralised, censorship-resistant platform to mock the content promoted by a centralised algorithmic one. The form is the argument.
The essay also enacts a cypherpunk epistemology: verify, don't trust. Peer review is the scientific community's version of cryptographic verification. The author's demand that the video subject its claims to scrutiny is the same demand that cypherpunks make of any system that asks for trust: show your work. Open your source. Let me check the math myself.