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YouTube Shorts algorithm favors entertainment after politics

Watching politics on Shorts? YouTube may push you to lighter content, study finds.

byAytun Çelebi
September 2, 2025
in News
Home News

Researchers from the University of Arkansas and the Center for Information Technology Innovation conducted a study analyzing 685,842 YouTube Shorts videos. The investigation explored how the platform’s recommendation system alters suggestions based on viewing time and the sensitivity of the content consumed by users.

The core finding of the study indicates that YouTube’s algorithm actively shifts recommendations toward entertainment content when users spend excessive time viewing political content within the Shorts format. Mert Jan Chakmak, one of the study’s authors, stated, “When you start [watching] specific political topics, YouTube tries to push you towards entertaining videos, funnier videos, especially in YouTube Shorts.” This assertion highlights a potential mechanism by which the platform manages user engagement with different content categories.

The research methodology involved an initial collection of approximately 2,800 videos across three distinct topics: the 2024 Taiwan election, the South China Sea conflict, and a broader, more general category. The study then implemented three viewing duration scenarios: a brief 3-second view, a 15-second view, and a complete viewing of the video. The analysis tracked 50 consecutive recommendation transitions. Results showed that, irrespective of the initial video topic or viewing duration, the algorithm consistently transitioned from political content to entertainment content.

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The researchers classified video titles and transcripts based on topic, relevance, and emotional tone using the OpenAI GPT‑4o model. This classification allowed for a quantitative assessment of the content being recommended. The algorithm appeared to favor videos exhibiting positive or neutral emotional tones, suggesting a preference for content that elicits less controversial or negative reactions.

Furthermore, the study revealed that high-performing Shorts, characterized by a greater number of likes and views, were disproportionately promoted by the recommendation system. This promotion reinforces a bias toward popularity, potentially amplifying already trending content while diminishing the visibility of less popular videos. Chakmak commented on this aspect, stating, “Maybe some people know about it, but I’m sure most people don’t realize what the algorithm does. They just go and watch.”

Neither YouTube nor its parent company, Google, provided any comments regarding the findings of the study. This lack of official response leaves the implications and motivations behind the observed algorithmic behavior open to interpretation. Chakmak posited that the shift toward entertainment is not necessarily an act of censorship but rather a strategy to maximize user engagement and, consequently, revenue. He suggested, “YouTube is trying to take you out of that area or topic and push you to a more interesting topic so that it can increase engagement and bring in more money.” The presence of advertisements, even for YouTube Premium Lite subscribers, in Shorts further supports this revenue-driven interpretation.

YouTube Shorts, launched in 2020 amid the rising popularity of TikTok, features short, vertical videos with a maximum duration of 60 seconds. By January 2022, Shorts had accumulated over 5 trillion views. Additional data indicates that individuals spend more than 1% of their waking hours watching YouTube Shorts, and these short videos garner approximately 200 billion views daily.


Featured image credit

Tags: youtube

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