I'm not sure if you are making fun of people who use a variety of media other than print. Many people have disabilities that make reading more difficult, like dyslexia or vision issues that require using audio media.
I use video all the time because I have slight dyslexia and I can absorb material much faster that way (running videos at 2x).
So, I not sure I understand what you are saying...
@Pat
To be clear, if you sourced a scientific journal in your research- it is very unlikely it will base its scientific findings on a YouTube video or Wikipedia page
If you're simply reviewing for personal use, by all means- go ahead.
@Pat
"If you cite a source, you don't cite Wikipedia or YouTube. You cite the actual source. You look at the citation for the claim (the footnote) in Wikipedia and go there to verify it and cite it."
This was my intended argument. Though many people feel free to cite the platforms directly instead of supposed sources of the contributed material. in cases like Wikipedia, many content is pending citation- and remains to be proven accurate. I'm not saying Wikipedia is always wrong, but cannot be consistently relied upon to be 100% accurate enough to cite the platform instead of the sources or lack thereof.
@lucifargundam
I guess we're on the same page here. Your OP
(original post) didn't mention anything about citation in research papers, it sounded like it was making fun of people who use video media. I've never seen anybody cite Wikipedia in a published paper (although I've heard stories); that's a freshman mistake.
I cited a Wikipedia article today here on qoto in a toot. But that's completely different. We're just shooting the shit here, not performing science. A toot doesn't require that kind of rigor and if anybody wants to dig deeper the sources are there in the article.
(and that should be "whomever", not "whoever"; he said correcting his own grammar...)