Did some server maintenance yesterday, including driver updates. Broke my system since it updated my Nvidia driver to 590.x which no longer supports our little 1060s. Had to roll back the driver, thankfully easy. Suppose I better start keeping an eye out for some sort of upgrade...
A&W for root beer floats, Mug preferably over Barqs, but almost no fast food place around here have Mug. Barqs does have caffeine as well which is a nice pick-me-up
As another user said, sources for updates should definitely be required. If your goal is to educate people, provide them with the sources you yourself are pulling the facts from.
I'd also suggest curating what "facts" are being presented and how. I put in 2011 for myself, and according to the website it was "taught in schools around the world" (copied from your mission statement) that "The 5-Second Rule for Dropped Food". Yes, that is a nonsense sentence. What exactly is the fact you are stating was taught around the world? What science or fact was being taught that was disproven or updated?
Of course we can infer that this refers to the old wives tale/childhood joke (I cannot think of a better term, sorry) that when food is dropped, you have 5 seconds to pick it up for it to be "safe". I'd be concerned if this was taught in ANY school as somehow being scientific at any point in time (after germ theory was widely accepted).
You might also have different categories or subjects instead of saying things are "facts". The old food pyramid wasn't taught as being "the best nutrition guide" or that it was irreplaceable. It was the best we had at the time, and any competent science class will remind you that these things change as we learn more. I'd label that as "Guidelines" or similar instead.
Entirely fine if his videos aren't to your taste, but to be fair to him he keeps his videos different. The ads are ads, but they're not just script reads; they're often actually entertaining (Also see TomSka who turns his ads into full blown short skits, often worthy of re-watches because they're just damn funny). He has a style that's actually unique, the videos are well thought out and researched, but it's definitely not everyone's style. The paper dolls are fun and have a lot of work put into them. The sets often continue from the last video and have fun continuity (IIRC in a Need for Speed video a car destroyed the cardboard house and it's been in ruins since)
There's a LOT of slop on YouTube, but I wouldn't lump Noodle into that category.