YouTube channels that actually teach useful information?

Yes, I would recommend reading a couple of books first to understand the vernacular and technical nuts and bolts.

Good point. Kids these days seem to be forgetting about these things and yet they are as good as videos. Videos appeal more to our lazy side, but laziness will not win you this game.
 
Good point. Kids these days seem to be forgetting about these things and yet they are as good as videos. Videos appeal more to our lazy side, but laziness will not win you this game.

It's not quite about laziness in my opinion. I happen to have been friends with the TV a bit too much in the 1980's, and then of course the whole school system itself was a big part of my time, and those two affected how I learn most effectively. It's not about being entertained or distracted either, it's because videos are a significant step closer to being taught directly by another human being vs just absorbing information.

It's a great and useful innovation that we have video in addition to books available as a teaching medium nowadays. A book is great for structured reference material. A video is more like a private lesson, or in some cases, mentorship.
 
It's not quite about laziness in my opinion. I happen to have been friends with the TV a bit too much in the 1980's, and then of course the whole school system itself was a big part of my time, and those two affected how I learn most effectively. It's not about being entertained or distracted either, it's because videos are a significant step closer to being taught directly by another human being vs just absorbing information.

It's a great and useful innovation that we have video in addition to books available as a teaching medium nowadays. A book is great for structured reference material. A video is more like a private lesson, or in some cases, mentorship.
When air powered nail guns became widely available, carpenters began to use them because they increased productivity by a large amount. Nonetheless, the old timers thought it was cheating. They would say that the new guys weren't real craftsmen.
 
When air powered nail guns became widely available, carpenters began to use them because they increased productivity by a large amount. Nonetheless, the old timers thought it was cheating. They would say that the new guys weren't real craftsmen.

I agree.

As a fun side-note however, in construction it's amazing the amount of nails that missed the stud when you look from the inside (i.e. a roof) with their crazy habit of punching 4-5 of them per second... What's the rush? I'm always amazed, given the overall (high) cost of those projects, at how much quality is lost by trying to shave 2% off the overall time. I suppose nails are cheap and they just use a bunch more to compensate, but it's not intuitive to a perfectionist like myself. :P
 
I agree.

As a fun side-note however, in construction it's amazing the amount of nails that missed the stud when you look from the inside (i.e. a roof) with their crazy habit of punching 4-5 of them per second... What's the rush? I'm always amazed, given the overall (high) cost of those projects, at how much quality is lost by trying to shave 2% off the overall time. I suppose nails are cheap and they just use a bunch more to compensate, but it's not intuitive to a perfectionist like myself. :p
You can hear it right away when you miss. Once in awhile is normal, but if they are missing a lot, they're probably going too fast.
 
Here's one you don't see recommended often, who shows some real chart "artistry" in my book (but also constantly reinforces strict risk management and patience for newbies): Timothy Morge: https://www.youtube.com/user/MarketGeometryVideos/videos - A vast majority of his webinars (2008-2014) hosted at Interactive Brokers are also worth one's time, from which I gained perspective that trade management and psychology (for discretionary traders) might be more important than nailing great entries. I like his "where are the positions now?" attitude as bars develop, almost feels like lessons in poker. It's also entertaining to get the occasional anecdote of when he throws some tens of billions at a (Forex) market to "slap it around" and shake weak hands out. He does sell a membership thing, but barely mentions it in passing, and there's nothing "special" hidden there, it's just a way to offer more of his time.

Adam Grimes was mentioned earlier, although he doesn't have much on YouTube his free content stands on its own. He does sell research, but his education is much more than mere bait. He also does have (free) webinars at I.B. but they seem to mostly cover what one would learn from his book.

One which I enjoyed for the entertainment and reinforcement of patience, simple horizontal vision and risk management for newbies is Jason Stapleton, specifically his live trade videos. Forget the click-bait title (which is the only reason I checked it out, I admit it!) it's actually fun to watch: first, second. He does up-sell memberships, but I personally found value in his handful of live videos like those two, if nothing else as reminders that the #1 tool to master is one's own mind. He likes Fib ratios which I can tolerate, and usually has nothing else on his charts, focusing on re-testing recent levels. Sometimes he throws in a "Gartley pattern" which I don't care for, but that's it, not even moving averages.
Here's one you don't see recommended often, who shows some real chart "artistry" in my book (but also constantly reinforces strict risk management and patience for newbies): Timothy Morge: https://www.youtube.com/user/MarketGeometryVideos/videos - A vast majority of his webinars (2008-2014) hosted at Interactive Brokers are also worth one's time, from which I gained perspective that trade management and psychology (for discretionary traders) might be more important than nailing great entries. I like his "where are the positions now?" attitude as bars develop, almost feels like lessons in poker. It's also entertaining to get the occasional anecdote of when he throws some tens of billions at a (Forex) market to "slap it around" and shake weak hands out. He does sell a membership thing, but barely mentions it in passing, and there's nothing "special" hidden there, it's just a way to offer more of his time.

Adam Grimes was mentioned earlier, although he doesn't have much on YouTube his free content stands on its own. He does sell research, but his education is much more than mere bait. He also does have (free) webinars at I.B. but they seem to mostly cover what one would learn from his book.

One which I enjoyed for the entertainment and reinforcement of patience, simple horizontal vision and risk management for newbies is Jason Stapleton, specifically his live trade videos. Forget the click-bait title (which is the only reason I checked it out, I admit it!) it's actually fun to watch: first, second. He does up-sell memberships, but I personally found value in his handful of live videos like those two, if nothing else as reminders that the #1 tool to master is one's own mind. He likes Fib ratios which I can tolerate, and usually has nothing else on his charts, focusing on re-testing recent levels. Sometimes he throws in a "Gartley pattern" which I don't care for, but that's it, not even moving averages.

Dear VPhantom,
Timothy Morge (Market Geometry) is not who he claims to be, so please be careful. I also viewed the IB Webinars, where he claims to be among the 10 largest FX traders in the world, and to have three PHDs (Math, Physics, Economics). Through the Wayback Machine, I found he only has a Masters, NO PHDs, and Blackthorne Capital, his sovereign wealth fund which supposedly manages more than 100 Billion, had only less than 4 Million in AUM.

Shane Blankenship, his partner, just declared bankruptcy, which I found through this Forum:
https://www.elitetrader.com/et/threads/tim-morge-and-the-well-chosen-example.305061/

You can view the real Timothy Morge here:
http://web.archive.org/web/20050211033314/http://blackthornecapital.com:80/btnewindex.html

I contacted Cynthia Tomain at Interactive Brokers, and Tim will never be allowed to speak there again.
 

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Here's one you don't see recommended often, who shows some real chart "artistry" in my book (but also constantly reinforces strict risk management and patience for newbies): Timothy Morge: https://www.youtube.com/user/MarketGeometryVideos/videos - A vast majority of his webinars (2008-2014) hosted at Interactive Brokers are also worth one's time, from which I gained perspective that trade management and psychology (for discretionary traders) might be more important than nailing great entries. I like his "where are the positions now?" attitude as bars develop, almost feels like lessons in poker. It's also entertaining to get the occasional anecdote of when he throws some tens of billions at a (Forex) market to "slap it around" and shake weak hands out. He does sell a membership thing, but barely mentions it in passing, and there's nothing "special" hidden there, it's just a way to offer more of his time.

Adam Grimes was mentioned earlier, although he doesn't have much on YouTube his free content stands on its own. He does sell research, but his education is much more than mere bait. He also does have (free) webinars at I.B. but they seem to mostly cover what one would learn from his book.

One which I enjoyed for the entertainment and reinforcement of patience, simple horizontal vision and risk management for newbies is Jason Stapleton, specifically his live trade videos. Forget the click-bait title (which is the only reason I checked it out, I admit it!) it's actually fun to watch: first, second. He does up-sell memberships, but I personally found value in his handful of live videos like those two, if nothing else as reminders that the #1 tool to master is one's own mind. He likes Fib ratios which I can tolerate, and usually has nothing else on his charts, focusing on re-testing recent levels. Sometimes he throws in a "Gartley pattern" which I don't care for, but that's it, not even moving averages.

Please refer to the following, regarding Timothy Morge:
https://www.elitetrader.com/et/threads/tim-morge-and-the-well-chosen-example.305061/page-3
 

Sure. I doubt anybody should be spending actual money on his services given what we now know.

However I found true value in his free webinars, so my suggestion still mostly stands. He insists on conservative, methodical money management, and the rest mostly boils down to reading charts from left to right thinking about the market instead of just looking for visual patterns out of context. That helped me make an important step in my evolution.
 
Sure. I doubt anybody should be spending actual money on his services given what we now know.

However I found true value in his free webinars, so my suggestion still mostly stands. He insists on conservative, methodical money management, and the rest mostly boils down to reading charts from left to right thinking about the market instead of just looking for visual patterns out of context. That helped me make an important step in my evolution.

Dear VPhantom,
I totally agree with your statement. His free webinars and PDFs (I went through all the free material) were all part of a very elaborate hustle/conjob. Very sophisticated work, but it’s all over now...
 
His free webinars and PDFs (I went through all the free material) were all part of a very elaborate hustle/conjob. Very sophisticated work, but it’s all over now...

Not at all my point. Just to be clear, my point is that regardless of the author, this material stands on its own as one of many sources which were beneficial to me in broadening and ultimately greatly simplifying my way of looking at price movement. Even if it had been anonymous, I would've derived the same benefits from it.
 
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