After ten years, it's time to stop weekly videos.
Chapters6
The creator recalls starting in 1999, enduring years of slow growth, and establishing a disciplined weekly cadence and varied formats.
Tom Scott announces a break from his weekly YouTube cadence after ten years, choosing quality and balance over chasing growth.
Summary
Tom Scott reflects on a lifelong run of content creation that started in 1999 and culminated in ten years of weekly videos. He recalls the rough beginnings, when he filmed 90-second takes with almost no research, and notes how some early formats evolved into the channel’s signature style. He marks the exact milestone: the first Things You Might Not Know video published 4pm on January 1, 2014, and a steady weekly rhythm since then, despite experimenting with other formats. Facing rising production demands and the creeping fatigue of a relentless schedule, Scott acknowledges burnout and the difficulty of maintaining quality at scale. He presents two paths: continue expanding into bigger projects or scale back to be happier, concluding that he is not suited to running a large business or managing a team. The decision is to take an extended break, with no promises of a weekly return in this format, while the podcast Lateral, his newsletter, and other ventures remain ongoing. He emphasizes that his passion for making stuff endures, even as the weekly routine ends, and invites viewers to share future ideas that he might pursue someday. The message ends with a candid, affectionate montage-style farewell that signals a new phase rather than an absolute goodbye.
Key Takeaways
- Tom Scott reaches a self-imposed ten-year milestone for weekly videos, published 4pm on January 1, 2024, and announces a break from the cadence.
- He differentiates between a burnout apology and a genuine need to slow down, citing exhaustion and the impossibility of returning to pre-breakneck quality.
- Two future paths are presented: continue growing into a larger business with management duties, or produce less to preserve happiness, with the latter chosen.
- Despite stepping back from weekly output, Scott confirms ongoing projects (Lateral podcast, newsletter, Plus channel) and hints at experimental, high-risk new work later on.
Who Is This For?
Essential viewing for long-time YouTube creators or fans of Tom Scott who are curious about the realities of sustaining a decade-long posting cadence and how to balance passion with burnout.
Notable Quotes
"This isn’t the standard YouTuber burnout-apology video. And it’s not “oh, woe is me, I’m leaving forever”. I’m going somewhere with this. Literally."
—Introduces the framing that this is a real shift, not a dramatic exit.
"There’s been a few guest videos, of course, and occasionally some blatant filler."
—Acknowledges imperfect past content and mixed quality over the years.
"As the YouTube game changed over the years, ... I decided that my goal was ten years. And that is today, as this is published."
—Pins down the ten-year milestone and its personal meaning.
"So I’m taking a break for… some time. I don’t know when or if I come back, but when I do, it won’t be weekly."
—States the core decision to pause the weekly format and set expectations.
"Because I miss doing stuff like that. And when some fool comes along and goes, ‘oh, you fell off, this new stuff isn’t getting the views is it?’… Yeah. Okay."
—Addresses external pressure and reaffirms his choice to pursue non-traditional or experimental work.
Questions This Video Answers
- Why did Tom Scott decide to stop weekly videos after ten years?
- What does Tom Scott plan to do after taking a break from YouTube?
- How does Tom Scott differentiate burnout from a lack of motivation in his career?
- What ongoing projects does Tom Scott indicate will continue after the break?
Tom ScottYouTube burnoutweekly video cadenceThings You Might Not KnowLateral podcastcontent strategycreative burnoutvideo production
Full Transcript
This isn’t the standard YouTuber burnout-apology video. And it’s not “oh, woe is me, I’m leaving forever”. I’m going somewhere with this. Literally. I’ve been throwing stuff at the internet since 1999. And for many, many years, that stuff went almost nowhere. I had occasional bits of success, but could never make any of them last long-term. I remember thinking, so many times during all those years… will any of this stuff I’m making ever work? Well, this did. I didn’t know that, back when I was filming the first videos for the series that was then called Things You Might Not Know, I just held out my phone at arm’s length and talked into it for 90 seconds with almost no research!
I really don’t like those videos now. But the first of them was published exactly ten years before this one. To the minute. 4pm, January 1st, 2014. For the first month of that format, I was publishing a video almost every day, and then I settled down: one video a week. Mostly on location, near windswept infrastructure, although there’s computer science and linguistics in there too, and occasional green-screen animated videos. I experimented with other formats on other days, but the rule I set myself was: Monday, 4pm, something interesting. I never got to space. I never got to the ocean depths.
And I never got to fly harnessed underneath a helicopter, I couldn’t find an excuse to do that one. But I never missed a week. There’s been a few guest videos, of course, and occasionally some blatant filler. One time I just uploaded two and a half hours of unedited footage of garlic bread flying to the edge of space, and that turned into one of the most viewed videos I’ve ever had. Sometimes a video would be a day or two early or late for one reason or another. But to my own satisfaction, which is ultimately the only thing that I’m counting, there’s been a video a week for ten years.
I never broke the streak. I don’t know when I decided to try for ten years. It felt like a good, round number to reach. As the YouTube game changed over the years, as the channel became bigger, as my own standards became higher and higher to keep pace with all the people I was collaborating with and competing with, as this became my life– I decided that my goal was ten years. And that is today, as this is published. 4pm, January 1st, 2024. So now it’s time to take a breather. I can’t keep this up. This is my dream job, and I have a lot of fun doing it.
I know I’m incredibly lucky. But a dream job is still a job. And it’s a job that keeps getting bigger and more complicated and I am so tired! There’s nothing in my life right now except work. I did get close to burning out, but fortunately I always knew when to step back from the brink. And it’s not like I can drop the quality back down? That’s not how YouTube works these days. Over the last year or so, I have talked to some folks who are more successful than me, who were in this position a few years back.
And it’s clear that I now have two possible choices. I could keep making bigger and better things, keep climbing the ladder, build a business, hire full-time employees… and end up as a manager. And that would be great for someone who isn’t me, but I know I’m bad at that, and I’d hate every second of it. So, option 2… I could not do that, I could do less, and be happier. So I’m taking a break for… some time. I don’t know when or if I come back, but when I do, it won’t be weekly. At least, not in this format, not here.
This probably isn’t goodbye-goodbye? Like, not forever? The podcast I host, Lateral, is still going out weekly, my newsletter’s still going out, the Plus channel will probably return at some point, there’ll likely be new Technical Difficulties episodes, there are links to all those things around here somewhere. And there will probably be all-new projects here or somewhere else, projects that are experimental and weird and can fail. Because I miss doing stuff like that. And when some fool comes along and goes “oh, you fell off, “this new stuff isn’t getting the views is it?”… Yeah. Okay. That’s fine.
This project has worked, and it’s time to move on. I’m still going to be looking for interesting things to film here, there’ll probably still be videos here from time to time, I really do love doing this. There is a part of my brain that desperately, desperately does not want this to end. So if you’ve got an idea for a future video, you can still tell me about it. And one day, I might make it. But right now, I need to spend time with people I hold dear, I need there to be things in my life that are not work, and it’s been years since that’s been true.
I never celebrated the milestones. Subscriber numbers weren’t ever my goal. So I never did any big so-many-subscribers thank you videos. But, still… thank you. To you watching, and to everyone who’s helped along the way. I did think that I should end this with a big, syrupy, sentimental, self-indulgent montage and head off into the sunset… …and you know what? Just this once, for the first time in ten years… that’s exactly what I’m going to do.
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