She never monetized it. Some things, she learned, are worth more than money. Some things are just the right light, at the right time, reaching a stranger's screen.

Her first video was simple. She held up a rusty can labeled Cathode Ray Tube Manufacturing, 1956 and said, "My dad has eight thousand movies. This is the weirdest one." She showed a two-minute clip: silent, shot in a Philly factory, glassblowers shaping funnels while women in pearl necklaces inspected grids.

One night, she uploaded her final video of the year. Not a tube film. Just her, sitting on the garage floor, surrounded by steel cans. She said: "My dad taught me that filmography isn't just a list of movies. It's a memory of light. And tubes? They were the first light we learned to control. Not the sun. Not a fire. An electron, aimed by human hands, to make a face on glass. That's magic. Don't let anyone tell you different."

The most-viewed videos reflect a dominant trend of children's educational content and global music hits. Video Name Primary Audience Key Impact

If you are looking for the specific series of South Korean films (often confused with the Train to Busan style of blockbuster), here is the breakdown.