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Crash Course (web series)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Educational YouTube channel
Crash Course
Crash Course YouTube channel icon
GenreEducational[1]
Created byJohn Green
Hank Green
Developed by
Written byVarious
Directed by
  • Stan Muller
  • Nicholas Jenkins
  • Brandon Brungard
  • Nicole Sweeney
  • Hannah Bodenhausen
Creative directorThought Café (Formerly Thought Bubble)
Presented by
List of presenters
Theme music composerJason Weidner
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons55
No. of episodes1548[n 1]
Production
Executive producersJohn Green
Hank Green
Heather Di Diego
ProducersStan Muller
Nicholas Jenkins
Nicole Sweeney
Brandon Brungard
Hannah Bodenhausen
Production locations
Editors
  • Stan Muller
  • Brandon Brungard
  • Nicholas Jenkins
  • Nicole Sweeney
  • Hannah Bodenhausen
  • Brigid Kennison
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time6–15 minutes
2–4 minutes (Kids;Recess)
Original release
NetworkYouTube
ReleaseJanuary 26, 2012 (2012-01-26) –
present
Related

Crash Course (sometimes stylized asCrashCourse) is an educationalYouTube channel started byJohn Green andHank Green (collectively theGreen brothers), who became known on YouTube through theirVlogbrothers channel.[2][3][4]

Crash Course was one of the hundred initial channels funded by YouTube's $100 millionoriginal channel initiative. The channel launched a preview on December 2, 2011, and as of March 2022[update], it has accumulated over 16 million subscribers and 1.8 billion video views.[5] The channel launched with John and Hank presenting their respectiveWorld History andBiology series; the early history of the channel continued the trend of John and Hank presentinghumanities andscience courses, respectively.[6] In November 2014, Hank announced a partnership withPBS Digital Studios, which would allow the channel to produce more courses. As a result, multiple additional hosts joined the show to increase the number of concurrent series.

To date, there are 44 main series ofCrash Course, of which John has hosted nine and Hank has hosted seven. Together withEmily Graslie, they also co-hostedBig History. A second channel,Crash Course Kids, was hosted bySabrina Cruz and completed a series onScience. The first foreign-language course, anArabic reworking of the originalWorld History series, is hosted by Yasser Abumuailek. The main channel has also begun a series of shorter animated episodes, calledRecess, that focus on topics from the previousCrash Course series. A collaboration withArizona State University titledStudy Hall began in 2020, which includes less structured learning in its topics.

History and funding

[edit]

YouTube-funded and Subbable periods (2011–2014)

[edit]
Hank (left) and John Green (right) co-createdCrash Course and hosted the initialBiology andWorld History series, respectively.

TheCrash Course YouTube channel was conceived by the Green Brothers after YouTube approached them with an opportunity to launch one of the initial YouTube-funded channels as part of the platform'soriginal channel initiative.[7][8] The channel was teased in December 2011,[9] and then launched on January 26, 2012, with the first episode of itsWorld History series, hosted by John Green.[10] The episode covered theAgricultural Revolution, and a new episode aired on YouTube every Thursday through November 9, 2012. Hank Green's first series,Crash CourseBiology, then launched on January 30, 2012, with its first episode covering carbon. A new episode aired on YouTube every Monday until October 22 of that year. The brothers would then go on to end 2012 with two shorter series, with John and Hank teaching English literature and ecology, respectively.

Following their launch year, John and Hank returned in 2013 withUS History andChemistry, respectively. However, that April, John detailed thatCrash Course was going through financial hardships;[11] in July, Hank uploaded a video titled "A Chat with YouTube", in which he expressed his frustration with the ways YouTube had been changing and controlling its website.[12][13] Eventually, YouTube's original channel initiative funding ran out, and shortly after Hank's video, the Green brothers decided to launchSubbable, acrowdfunding website where viewers could donate monthly to channels in exchange for perks.[14] On launching Subbable, Hank Green stated: "We ascribe to the idealistic notion that audiences don't pay for things because they have to[,] but because they care about the stuff that they love and want it to continue to grow".[14]Crash Course was the first channel to be offered on Subbable, and for a time the website crowdfunded the channel.[15] In March 2015, Subbable was acquired byPatreon, andCrash Course's crowdfunding moved over as part of the acquisition.

In May 2014, John mentioned an upcoming 10-episodeCrash Course season onBig History, funded by a grant from one ofBill Gates's organizations.[16] The series outlined the history of existence, from the Big Bang forward into the evolution of life. Both Green brothers hosted the series, withEmily Graslie also participating as a guest host.[17]

Partnership with PBS Digital Studios (2014–2017)

[edit]
Craig Benzine, host ofUS Government and Politics, was brought on as part of thePBS Digital Studios funding deal.

In 2014,Crash Course announced a partnership withPBS Digital Studios, which began in 2015 with theAstronomy andUS Government and Politics series.[18] In addition to funding the channel itself, the partnership also entails PBS Digital Studios helpingCrash Course to receive sponsorships.[19] As a result of the partnership as well as John commencing a year-long hiatus from the show in 2015, additional hosts were added to increase the number of concurrent series. Though the partnership meant PBS Digital Studios would assist with the production ofCrash Course, the channel continued to receive funding from its audience throughPatreon.[20] In April 2015,The Guardian reported thatCrash Course received $25,900 per month through Patreon donations.[20] Aside from the new series on the main channel,Crash Course Kids was launched in February on a newCrash Course Kids channel.[21] The series was hosted bySabrina Cruz, known on YouTube as NerdyAndQuirky.[22]

On October 12, 2016, theCrash Course YouTube channel uploaded a preview forCrash Course Human Geography. Hosted by Miriam Nielsen, the course was to discuss "whatHuman Geography isn't, and what it is, and discuss humans in the context of their world." Two episodes were posted during each of the following two weeks; however, the videos were removed on October 27, with John Green stating on Twitter that "...we got important things wrong. We'll rework the series... And we'll bring a better series to you in a few months."[23] On October 31, John further explained that the videos were removed due to "factual mistakes as well as too strident a tone," and that the mishap was caused by a rushed production stemming from a lack of staffing and budgeting.[24] The following October, during an "Ask Me Anything" (AMA) session onReddit, John indicated the course may not return for some time, noting that "we don't feel like we've cracked it yet."[25] The channel would go on to launch theirGeography course in November 2020, intended to cover both physical and human geography over its run.

In 2017,Crash Course launched three film-related series: one coveredfilm history, anotherfilm production, and the last of which coveredfilm criticism.[26] Also in 2017, Thomas Frank began hostingCrash Course Study Skills, which covered topics such as productivity skills, time management, and note-taking.[27]

Complexly branding and YouTube Learning Fund (2018–2019)

[edit]
Anna Akana hostedBusiness: Entrepreneurship in 2019.

Starting with theStatistics course in early 2018,Crash Course series that are not PBS co-productions began to directly identify asComplexly productions. Also that year,Crash Course launched anArabic-language edition ofWorld History hosted by Yasser Abumuailek and produced byDeutsche Welle (DW), which was uploaded to DW's Arabic YouTube channel.[28] In July 2018, YouTube announced its YouTube Learning initiative, dedicated to supporting educational content on the platform. A few months later, as $20 million was invested into expanding the initiative,Crash Course secured additional funding via the initiative's Learning Fund program.[29][30] However, PBS Digital Studios remained one of the primary sources of fundingCrash Course, and the network also continued to help in finding sponsorships for the show.[19]

The channel surpassed 1 billion video views in February 2019.[31] In July, YouTube launched Learning Playlists as a continuation of their Learning Fund initiative;[32] while videos in Learning Playlists notably lack recommended videos attached to them, in contrast to videos included in regular playlists on YouTube,[32] they also include organizational features such as chapters around key concepts and lessons ordered by difficulty. After Learning Playlists' launch,Crash Course's video content was formatted into several of these playlists.[32] The channel reached 10 million subscribers in November 2019.[33]

Partnership with Arizona State University (2020–present)

[edit]

A collaboration withArizona State University (ASU) titledStudy Hall was announced in March 2020, which includes less structured learning in its topics. It was hosted by ASU alumni and advised by their faculty, with episodes posted on the university's YouTube channel but production and visual design by Complexly in the Crash Course style.[34] The partnership was renewed in 2022, with two new series premiering: Fast Guides is appearing on a new dedicated Study Hall channel, focusing on showing what students can expect to study in a givenmajor; and How to College on the main Crash Course channel, showing the process of choosing, applying for, and starting at a given institution.[35]

In January 2023,Crash Course announced that they would be offering college courses on YouTube, in continued partnership with ASU and Google. The course content would be available online for free, with the full online course available through ASU forUS$25, which would be led by ASU faculty and include direct interaction. Students would then have the option to spendUS$400 to receive college credit for the course that would be transferable to any institution that accepts ASU credits.[36][37][38][39]

Production

[edit]

In an interview withEntrepreneur,Crash Course producer andSociology host Nicole Sweeney detailed:

Every year we have a big pitch meeting to determine what courses and things we're going to do the next year. In that meeting, we talk about a number of different things, but the rising question that motivates that meeting and then down the line as we're making decisions about what we're doing is what we think would be most useful for people.[19]

To make its content as useful as possible to viewers, theCrash Course channel hires experts relating to the topics of its series to work on the show.[40] The Missoula-filmed series are produced and edited by Nicholas Jenkins, while Blake de Pastino serves as script editor. The Indianapolis-filmed series is produced and edited by Stan Muller, Mark Olsen, and Brandon Brungard. Script editing is credited to Meredith Danko, Jason Weidner composes music for the series,[41] and Sweeney serves as a producer, editor, and director forCrash Course.[19] Raoul Meyer, anAP World History teacher and Green's former teacher atIndian Springs School, wrote theWorld History series, with John providing revisions and additions.[42] Sweeney has said that she and the respective host go over each script after it is edited to assess it for content.[19]

Sweeney also stated that each ten-minute episode takes about an hour to film.[19] ThePhilosophy series and all series relating to science (with the exception ofComputer Science) were filmed in a studio building inMissoula, Montana that also housesSciShow.[43] TheBiology andEcology series were filmed in front ofgreen screen, but from theChemistry season onward, each series was filmed on new custom-built sets. TheComputer Science series and all series on the humanities (exceptingPhilosophy andEconomics) were filmed in a studio inIndianapolis, Indiana. In addition,Economics was filmed at the YouTube Space in Los Angeles, whileCrash Course Kids was filmed in a studio inToronto, Ontario.Crash Course Kids was directed by Michael Aranda and produced by the MissoulaCrash Course team.

Once filmed, an episode goes through a preliminary edit before it is handed off to the channel's graphic contractor. Graphic design for all of the series exceptBiology andEcology is provided by Thought Café (formerly Thought Bubble),[19] and the sound design and music for these series are provided by Michael Aranda (and in later series, his company Synema Studios).

Formats

[edit]

Crash Course video series feature various formats depending on the host's presentation style as well as the subject of the course. However, throughout all series, the show's host will progressively elaborate on the topic(s) presented at the beginning of the video. Early on in the history of the show, the Green Brothers began to employ anedutainment style for episodes ofCrash Course, using humor to blend entertainment together with the educational content.[44]

TheWorld History series featured recurring segments such as the "Open Letter", where Green reads an open letter to a historical figure, period, item, or concept. Occasionally he converses with a naïve, younger version of himself whom he calls "Me from the Past"; this character usually has naïve or obvious questions or statements about the topic of the video.[6][45] A running joke throughout the series is that theMongols are a major exception to most sweeping generalizations in world history, noted by the phrase "Wait for it... the Mongols". Mentions of this fact cue the "Mongoltage" (a portmanteau of "Mongol" and "montage"), which shows a drawing of Mongols shouting "We're the exception!" followed by a three-second clip of a scene from the 1963 filmHercules Against the Mongols depicting a village raid. Green also frequently encouraged his viewers to avoid looking at history throughEurocentric or "Great Man" lenses, but instead to be conscious of a broader historical context.

ForUS History, Green followed the tone set byWorld History and put an emphasis on maintaining an open, non-Western view of American History. In addition, the "Open Letter" was replaced by a new segment called the "Mystery Document", in which Green would take a manuscript from the fireplace's secret compartment and read it aloud, followed by him guessing its author and the source work it is excerpted from. If incorrect, he would be punished by ashock pen. While the Mongoltage was largely absent, mentions of America's national pride during the series would cue a new "Libertage", which consisted of photos associated with America atop an American flag, with a guitar riff and an explosion at the start and end of the montage, respectively.

TheBiology program featured the recurring segment "Biolo-graphy", during which Hank relayed a shortbiography of someone who was associated with the topic of the episode. Additionally, at the conclusion of each episode, Hank provided YouTube annotations with links to every subtopic he explained within the video. He also noted that the successor series toBiology,Crash CourseEcology, would follow in the spirit of the former series.[46]

Other releases

[edit]

DVD box sets of the complete run of theBiology series and of season 1 ofWorld History were made available for pre-order on October 31, 2013.[47] In June 2016, the show's official site launched, providing free offline downloads of all episodes of every series completed to date.[48] In May 2020, an official mobile app launched, providing easy access to all of the courses' video content along with rolling out flashcard and quiz study aides for particular courses.[49]

The series was also made available for streaming onCuriosity Stream.[50]

Related and spinoff projects

[edit]

In 2022, a series calledOffice Hours began, in which hosts of previousCrash Course series and professors host a livestream and answer viewer questions. In 2024, aLectures series began, with long-form videos enabling a deeper dive into a single topic. The channel launched its firstpodcast in 2024. In October 2024, the creation of "Crash Course Books", a new imprint ofPenguin Young Readers, was announced, with the first bookEverything Is Tuberculosis by John Green set to be released in March 2025.[51]

Series overview

[edit]

Main series

[edit]
SeriesEpisodesSeries premiereSeries finaleHost(s)Writer(s)
Launched in 2012
World History
World History 2
42
30
January 26, 2012
July 11, 2014
November 8, 2012
April 4, 2015
John GreenJohn Green
Raoul Meyer
Biology
Biology 2[n 2]
40
50
January 30, 2012
June 6, 2023
October 29, 2012
July 16, 2024
Hank Green
Samuel Ramsey
various
Jaime Chambers
Ecology12November 5, 2012January 21, 2013Hank GreenJesslyn Shields
English Literature
Literature 2
Literature 3
Literature 4
8
16
9
12
November 15, 2012
February 27, 2014
July 7, 2016
November 7, 2017
January 24, 2013
June 12, 2014
September 8, 2016
February 13, 2018
John GreenJohn Green
Alexis Soloski
Launched in 2013
US History48January 31, 2013February 6, 2014John GreenJohn Green
Raoul Meyer
Chemistry46February 11, 2013January 13, 2014Hank GreenKim Krieger
Launched in 2014
Psychology40February 3, 2014November 24, 2014Hank GreenKathleen Yale
Big History
Big History 2
10
6
September 17, 2014
May 24, 2017
January 9, 2015
July 12, 2017
Hank Green
John Green
Emily Graslie[n 3]
David Baker
Launched in 2015
Anatomy & Physiology47January 6, 2015December 21, 2015Hank GreenKathleen Yale
Astronomy46January 15, 2015January 21, 2016Phil PlaitPhil Plait
US Government and Politics50January 23, 2015March 4, 2016Craig BenzineRaoul Meyer
Intellectual Property7April 23, 2015June 25, 2015Stan MullerRaoul Meyer
Economics35July 8, 2015June 9, 2016Adriene Hill
Jacob Clifford[n 4]
Patrick Walsh
Jacob Clifford
Scott Baumann
Launched in 2016
Philosophy46February 8, 2016February 13, 2017Hank GreenRuth Tallman
Physics46March 31, 2016March 24, 2017Shini SomaraAlyssa Lerner
Games29April 1, 2016December 16, 2016Andre MeadowsMathew Powers
Launched in 2017
Computer Science40February 22, 2017December 21, 2017Carrie Anne PhilbinAmy Ogan
Chris Harrison
World Mythology41February 24, 2017January 28, 2018Mike RugnettaRaoul Meyer
Sociology44March 13, 2017February 12, 2018Nicole SweeneySteven Lauterwasser
Film History
Film Production
Film Criticism
16
15
15
April 13, 2017
August 24, 2017
January 11, 2018
August 3, 2017
December 14, 2017
April 26, 2018
Craig Benzine
Lily Gladstone
Michael Aranda
Tobin Addington
Study Skills10August 8, 2017October 10, 2017Thomas FrankThomas Frank
Launched in 2018
Statistics44January 24, 2018January 9, 2019Adriene HillChelsea Parlett-Pelleriti
Theater50February 9, 2018March 1, 2019Mike RugnettaAlexis Soloski
Media Literacy12February 27, 2018May 15, 2018Jay SmoothAubrey Nagle
History of Science46March 26, 2018April 29, 2019Hank GreenWythe Marschall
Engineering46May 17, 2018May 2, 2019Shini SomaraMichael Sago
Ricky Nathvani
Launched in 2019
Navigating Digital Information10January 8, 2019March 12, 2019John GreenAubrey Nagle
Business: Soft Skills
Business: Entrepreneurship
17
17
March 13, 2019
August 14, 2019
July 3, 2019
December 11, 2019
Evelyn Ngugi
Anna Akana
Rebecca Upton
Madeline Doering
European History50April 12, 2019August 28, 2020John GreenBonnie Smith
Artificial Intelligence20August 9, 2019December 27, 2019Jabril AsheLana Yarosh
Yonatan Bisk
Tim Weninger
Launched in 2020
Organic Chemistry50April 30, 2020April 13, 2022Deboki ChakravartiKelley Donaghy
Kat Day
Andy Brunning
Kristen Procko
Linguistics16September 11, 2020January 22, 2021Taylor BehnkeGretchen McCulloch
Lauren Gawne
Geography50November 30, 2020April 12, 2022Alizé CarrèreJane P. Gardner
Zohra Calcuttawala
April Luginbuhl Mather
Launched in 2021
Zoology14April 15, 2021July 15, 2021Rae Wynn-GrantBrittney G. Borowiec
Black American History51May 7, 2021November 9, 2022Clint SmithClint Smith
Danielle Bainbridge
Nia Johnson
Lynae Bogues
Outbreak Science15September 7, 2021December 21, 2021Pardis SabetiRicky Nathvani
Launched in 2022
How to College15March 24, 2022July 14, 2022Erica BrozovskyMichael Lodato
Kaila Kea-Lewis
Public Health10August 4, 2022October 6, 2022Vanessa HillDylan Reynolds
Climate & Energy12December 7, 2022April 26, 2023M JacksonJaime Chambers
Leila Battison
Launched in 2023
Botany15May 18, 2023September 7, 2023Alexis Nikole NelsonJaime Chambers
Leila Battison
Molly Edwards
Launched in 2024
Art History22April 11, 2024September 26, 2024Sarah Urist GreenJaime Chambers
Religions24September 10, 2024March 4, 2025John GreenJaime Chambers
Political Theory13November 7, 2024February 13, 2025Ellie AndersonJaime Chambers
Launched in 2025
Sex Ed15March 13, 2025June 26, 2025Shan BoodramJaime Chambers
Native American History24[52]May 6, 2025Che JimJaime Chambers

Kids series

[edit]
SeriesEpisodesSeries premiereSeries finaleHost
Science[n 5]95March 3, 2015March 16, 2016Sabrina Cruz

Foreign language series

[edit]
SeriesLanguageEpisodesSeries premiereSeries finaleHost
تاريخ العالم (World History)Arabic[n 6]42January 19, 2018July 5, 2018Yasser Abumuailek
Fundamentos de Química (Fundamentals of Chemistry)Spanish[n 7]11March 14, 2023May 21, 2023Corina Perez
Biología (Biology)50June 6, 2023July 16, 2024Mini Contreras

Miniseries

[edit]
SeriesEpisodesSeries premiereSeries finale
Recess2March 5, 2018October 2, 2018
A History of Crash Course1December 4, 2018
How Crash Course is Made[n 8]6March 22, 2019April 10, 2019
Covid-19 and Public Health[n 9]1October 19, 2020
History of Wales[n 10]1September 14, 2022

Study Hall series

[edit]

A partnership withArizona State University and hosted on theStudy Hall channel.

College foundations

[edit]
SeriesEpisodesSeries premiereSeries finaleHost(s)
Rhetoric & Composition29August 8, 2022March 29, 2023Emily Zarka
Real World College Math30August 9, 2022April 13, 2023Jason Guglielmo
Intro to Human Communication29August 10, 2022March 15, 2023Cassandra Ryder
US History to 186530August 11, 2022May 5, 2023Danielle Bainbridge
Power and Politics in US Government30August 7, 2023April 1, 2024Dave Jorgenson
Carmella Boykin
Chris Vasquez
Code and Programming for Beginners28August 9, 2023March 20, 2024Sabrina Cruz
Modern World History30August 10, 2023April 4, 2024Robert Fuller
Intro to Psychology30May 7, 2024December 10, 2024Déja Fitzgerald
Macroeconomics31August 5, 2024March 24, 2025Matt Sopha
Sustainability31October 2, 2024June 4, 2025Miriam Nielsen

Learning playlists

[edit]
SeriesEpisodesSeries premiereSeries finaleHost(s)
Composition15March 31, 2020July 7, 2020Yumna Samie
Algebra15April 23, 2020July 30, 2020James Tanton
Chemistry15September 10, 2020December 15, 2020Will Comar
Data Literacy15September 10, 2020December 17, 2020Jessica Pucci

Other video series

[edit]
SeriesEpisodesSeries premiereSeries finaleHost(s)
How to College15March 24, 2022July 14, 2022Erica Brozovsky
Fast Guides to Electives and Majors47March 25, 2022Hank Green
Erica Brozovsky
Naia Butler-Craig
Cassandra Ryder
Sabrina Cruz
Vanessa Hill
College Journeys6June 6, 2024Hank Green
How to Become7September 19, 2024Kim Holst
Philip Lindsay
Things to Know8September 26, 2024Erica Brozovsky

Office Hours series

[edit]
TitleSeries premiereHosts
Anatomy & PhysiologyApril 21, 2022Hank Green
Brandon Jackson
GeographyApril 25, 2022Alizé Carrère
April Luginbuhl Mather
World HistoryApril 26, 2022John Green
Cathy Keller

Lectures series

[edit]
TitleSeries premiereHosts
Tuberculosis ExplainedMarch 25, 2024John Green

Podcasts

[edit]
TitleEpisodesSeries premiereSeries finaleHosts
Crash Course Pods: The Universe11April 23, 2024September 11, 2024John Green
Katie Mack

Reception

[edit]

TheCrash Course project has been successful in its reach, withWorld History alone having attracted millions of viewers.[53] It had a particular appeal to American students taking theAP World History class and exam; many students and teachers use the videos to supplement their courses.[3][54][55]

Awards and nominations

[edit]
YearCeremonyCategoryResultRef.
2015Streamy AwardsScience or EducationNominated[56]
2015Webby AwardsOnline Film & Video - Science & Education (Channel)Honoree[57]
2016Streamy AwardsScience or EducationNominated[58]
2018Webby AwardsFilm & Video - Science & Education (Channels & Networks)Honoree[41]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^as of March 16th 2022
  2. ^A reimagining of the original subject matter from 2012.
  3. ^Graslie is the sole host of the second season.
  4. ^Clifford departed after the 29th episode, with Hill presenting the remainder solo.
  5. ^Hosted on the Crash Course Kids channel.
  6. ^Hosted on the DW عربية channel.
  7. ^Hosted on the Crash Course en Español channel.
  8. ^A partnership withAdobe and hosted on the Thought Café channel.
  9. ^A partnership with Operation Outbreak and the Sabeti Lab atHarvard.
  10. ^Included in episode 7 ofWelcome to Wrexham.

References

[edit]
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  14. ^abEifler, Emily (August 20, 2013)."Crowdfunding Matures with a Lesson from Public Broadcasting".KQED.org.Archived from the original on July 23, 2019. RetrievedNovember 30, 2018.
  15. ^Gutelle, Sam (July 22, 2013)."Vlogbrothers Launch Subbable, A 'Pay What You Want' Video Platform".Tubefilter.Archived from the original on August 22, 2013. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2013.
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  21. ^Crash Course Kids Preview!.Crash Course Kids.YouTube. February 23, 2015.Archived from the original on January 17, 2019. RetrievedAugust 31, 2019.
  22. ^Lanning, Carly (September 16, 2015)."#WCW Sabrina Cruz is the queen of the nerds".The Daily Dot.Archived from the original on August 31, 2019. RetrievedAugust 31, 2019.
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  26. ^Gutelle, Sam (April 7, 2017)."Educational YouTube Channel Crash Course Goes To The Movies With Trio Of Film Classes".Tubefilter.Archived from the original on August 31, 2019. RetrievedAugust 31, 2019.
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  28. ^@johngreen (January 19, 2018)."Really excited about our partnership with @DeutscheWelle on Crash Course in Arabic. World History in Arabic has launched, hosted by @The_Abumuailek" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
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  31. ^@TheCrashCourse (February 14, 2019)."Crash Course just hit 1 BILLION views!! Our Valentine's Day love goes to all of you who helped us get there ❤️ #AcademicValentine #ValentinesDay" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
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  40. ^Bernstein, Hannah (August 22, 2019)."Fake climate science videos have millions of views on YouTube. Here's what scientists can do about it".Ensia.Archived from the original on August 31, 2019. RetrievedAugust 31, 2019.
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  52. ^Introduction to Native American History.Crash Course. May 6, 2025. Retrieved May 7, 2025 viaYouTube.
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  56. ^"5th Annual Winners & Nominees".Streamy Awards. 2015.Archived from the original on April 1, 2019. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2019.
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  58. ^"6th Annual Winners & Nominees".Streamy Awards. 2016.Archived from the original on April 1, 2019. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2019.

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