Summary of "El Aterrador Canal Chino Que Estuvo Apareciendo En Las Suscripciones De Todos"
Overview
The video recounts a “dark” and unsettling episode in YouTube history. It centers on a specific mystery: a Chinese-titled YouTube channel that has reportedly appeared unexpectedly in many users’ subscription lists. This happens despite the channel having very few subscribers (about ~300) and unusually fast/high early view counts for new uploads.
Main Points and Analysis
Context of YouTube “strange events”
The narrator frames the story as part of YouTube’s earlier unexplained incidents, including:
- “The Inside”: a channel that shifted from tech/helpful content into incoherent and disturbing material.
- “Web Driver Torso”: linked to a wave of mystery involving rapidly uploaded videos with strange visuals/audio, later associated back with Google.
The new/terrifying channel’s irregularities
Several details are presented as unusual:
- The channel has a Chinese name (a direct Spanish meaning is suggested to imply “girl in a dress”), but the description is in Vietnamese, which—when translated—becomes incoherent.
- Early video metadata allegedly doesn’t match typical new-channel patterns, such as:
- Meaningless titles/thumbnails
- View counts that are hard to explain for a channel so new
Evidence from a viewer report
The narrator says the investigation was sparked by an email from subscriber Joaquín Ríos (dated Aug 16). Ríos reportedly:
- did not remember subscribing
- still had the channel appear automatically in his subscriptions
Collective “same-day” confusion
The narrator claims that dozens of users made similar comments:
- they also did not remember subscribing
- the timing is emphasized: soon after the channel’s first video (around Aug 14), comments arrived quickly across multiple languages
- many users allegedly expressed the same surprise as if they were all recommended the channel at once
Content described as cryptic and unsettling
The first video is described as:
- very short (about 4 seconds)
- featuring lighting effects
- appearing to show a person (“a girl”) looking at the camera
Additional unsettling themes appear in:
- the channel descriptions
- user comments, including fear of dying and a statement implying the person is no longer afraid
Competing Theories Raised
-
Communication after death theory A commenter suggests the former owner may have died, and the account is being used to communicate through YouTube.
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More sinister impersonation theory The narrator reframes the possibility by arguing the person in later videos doesn’t look like a child and may not be a woman at all. The claim is that physical cues (body shape, sitting posture, hair possibly being a wig) suggest a man impersonating the “girl.” This leads to an extreme speculation: someone may have harmed the girl, is using her identity/clothes to publish videos, and potentially mocking or reenacting her death.
Unresolved Question / Call for Discussion
The narrator concludes by asking whether the situation is an elaborate setup, and how to explain both:
- the rapid subscriber-growth mechanics
- the phenomenon of the channel appearing in subscriptions
Presenters / Contributors
- Breitman (main narrator/presenter)
- Joaquín Ríos (subscriber who sent the email referenced in the video; named as a contributor)
- Unspecified commenters/users (collectively mentioned as offering theories about appearing in subscriptions and “communication after death”)
Category
News and Commentary
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