this post was submitted on 06 Dec 2023
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VideoEssays

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About

Videos that give you a new perspective. Here you'll find videos that range all the way from bite-sized snacks to a multi-hour deep dives into the strangest rabbit holes you never even knew you cared about.

Rules

1. Content of posts

All top-level posts should be a link to a video essay that isn't hosted behind a paywall. Any topic is welcome, provided it doesn't break one of the other rules. What's a video essay? See below.

2. Title format

Each post title should include the title of the video, its creator, and its duration in the format [MM:SS] or [HH:MM:SS].

3. Be nice

Be respectful and constructive. No harassment. No grossly offensive images. No hate including expressions of racism, misogyny, transphobia, ableism, xenophobia, homophobia, etc. (although videos where these topics are merely being analyzed are okay).

4. No shitposts

Noticeably low-quality content and videos that stretch any reasonable definition of "video essay" will be removed. If you're not trying to break this rule, you probably aren't.

5. No spam

Don't post the same video multiple times in a short time frame. Don't flood the community with many videos from a single creator at once.

"Video essay"?

"Video essay" is loose genre classification for a type of video that makes an argument or critique, or explains a point of view, usually from a single creator's perspective. They can be short or long, casual or formal, modest or theatrical, and cover any topic.

Video essays are slightly different from documentaries, media reviews, and video journalism, but the lines are blurry, and videos that aren't neatly classifiable are still welcome.

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TL;DW summary written with claude.ai:

The video explores the confusing and convoluted system behind the 3-letter IATA airport codes used to designate airports worldwide. It explains that IATA, the International Air Transport Association based in Montreal, coordinates these codes between airlines and aviation agencies globally to aid communication and logistics. However, conflicting interests, overlapping jurisdictions (like the separate FAA codes in the US), and legacy holdovers have resulted in a somewhat chaotic lack of standardization or location information encoded in codes. For instance, codes don't always match airport names, countries wanted certain letters like Canada claiming all the Ys, and larger cities have multiple codes and "mega-codes." The video traces the tangled history that led to the current codes, such as how the Ys relate to Canadian radio call signs. Ultimately, the IATA codes are primarily for logistics in routing baggage, not passengers. The speaker concludes that while airport codes don't make much sense systematically, they remain a critical and ubiquitous part of global air travel.

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