Puppycow
Penultimate Amazing
I agree with you in spirit and the same question has occurred to me.It sure is amazing.
So why call it ridiculous? Why call it insane?
The simple answer appears to be that more people will watch the video when it contains certain words in the title. It's unfortunate, but what would you have them do? Simply accept that fewer people will watch a video that a lot of work went into the production of?
There's another YouTube channel that I sometimes watch which does something similar, but the videos themselves are quite well done, imo. Each video is about a different kind of animal or lifeform, like dragonflies, for example. And the way they title their videos follows a formula: It's always "The Insane Biology of _________". Example:
That's one that I haven't actually watched, but it has 4 million views, so apparently a lot of people have watched it. 4 million views is pretty good for a YouTube video. Apparently the biology of every kind of animal is "insane" (haha). Of course, if that were actually true, it would probably go extinct. The biology actually makes perfect sense for whatever ecological niche the animal occupies.
Now, if they just titled the video "The Biology of _________" or even "The Amazing Biology of _________", would 4 million people have watched it? I don't know, but I'm pretty sure that they have A/B tested the question and arrived at the answer that maximizes clicks.
It may even be that a few people refuse to watch it because they don't like clickbait titles. Grumpy old skeptic types maybe. Nevertheless, more people overall watch. I'm not a fan clickbait titles myself, but I'm willing to overlook the issue if the channel puts out quality content. In the end it's just capitalism doing its thing. We get clickbait titles because collectively that's what consumers of content seem to prefer. It's a revealed preference. What people claim to like, and what they actually consume don't always match.