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Me at the Zoo: The 18-Second Video That Launched YouTube

March 28, 2026 ยท 3 min read

The Fact

The first YouTube video, 'Me at the zoo', was uploaded by co-founder Jawed Karim on April 23, 2005.

Elephants and the Beginning of Everything

On April 23, 2005, Jawed Karim โ€” one of the three co-founders of YouTube โ€” uploaded a short video to the brand-new platform he had helped build. He was standing in front of the elephant exhibit at the San Diego Zoo. "Alright, so here we are in front of the elephants," he says, "and the cool thing about these guys is that they have really, really, really long trunks, and that's cool." He adds a brief comment about their long trunks being "cool" โ€” a word he uses four times in eighteen seconds โ€” and the video ends.

The video was called "Me at the zoo." It was not intended as a manifesto or a demonstration. It was simply the first piece of content uploaded to test that the platform worked. Yet that modest clip, now with hundreds of millions of views and still publicly available on YouTube, marks the beginning of perhaps the most significant transformation in media consumption since the invention of television.

Why YouTube Was Founded

Karim, along with Chad Hurley and Steve Chen, had been frustrated by a practical problem: sharing video files online in 2004 was genuinely difficult. Video files were large, formats were inconsistent, and there was no easy way to embed a video on a webpage so that someone could simply click and watch. Karim has cited the difficulty of finding footage of the 2004 Super Bowl halftime show controversy and the Indian Ocean tsunami as moments that crystallized his thinking โ€” there should be a central place where video could be easily uploaded, found, and shared.

The three founders registered the YouTube domain in February 2005 and launched a beta version of the site shortly after. Karim's elephant video was the proof of concept that everything was working.

The Acquisition That Changed Media

YouTube's rise from a personal video-sharing experiment to the world's dominant video platform happened with extraordinary speed. Within months of launch, the site was hosting millions of videos and receiving millions of visitors. Google acquired YouTube in October 2006 for $1.65 billion in stock โ€” at the time, one of the largest internet acquisitions ever made and widely considered a wildly expensive bet on unproven technology.

The bet proved spectacularly correct. YouTube became not just a video hosting service but an entirely new entertainment ecosystem. It gave rise to a new category of media creator โ€” the YouTuber โ€” who operated independently of traditional broadcast networks and could build audiences numbering in the tens of millions. Music videos, educational content, comedy, cooking, fitness, news commentary, and virtually every other form of human expression found a home on the platform.

The Long Trunk of Internet History

Karim's elephant comment โ€” specifically the recurring use of "cool" to describe pachyderm anatomy โ€” has been analyzed, mocked, and celebrated as a kind of accidental poetry. That the video that launched a platform now hosting more than 800 million videos should be so utterly unremarkable is part of what makes the story compelling.

YouTube did not start with a polished corporate launch video or a carefully crafted brand narrative. It started with a founder pointing a camera at some animals and narrating what he saw. The platform was built, at its core, for exactly this kind of ordinary human moment โ€” people sharing things they found interesting with an audience they couldn't quite imagine but hoped existed. That spirit of casual authenticity, embedded in YouTube's very first upload, shaped the culture of the entire platform that followed.


F

FactOTD Editorial Team

Published March 28, 2026 ยท 3 min read

The FactOTD editorial team researches and verifies every fact before publication. Our mission is to make learning effortless and accurate. Learn about our process โ†’

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