Hmmm - not the greatest woodworking video I have ever seen - no commentary at all, and no explanation in the text about the processes - so of little use to a beginner.
The internet has now been demonstrated (from the beginning where there was appreciation and lack of commentary (freddy, this isn't any critique of your post - I like it because if someone will tell me something that they're doing and they're experienced, I want to know what they're thinking. It's not usually what we're thinking they may be thinking). So at the start of this thread, we find favor because the guy doesn't talk, and probably not just you and I sat on that thinking, I sure wish he'd give us at least some brief talk about the objective else it's just entertainment more or less. And we end at you, and now me agreeing with you.
The more I want to know about something, the more I'd like to hear from the presenter, even if I can't digest all of what they're showing in one sitting - I'll come back and review and repeat. I think before the internet, we all did that - it was on us a little bit more to stimulate our own brains, and not just on someone to entertain us.
In this case, though, I sense from another video that autoplayed, the guy is finding out that he needs to add a social media component to the business to make it viable. Like a million other folks struggling, he's turned from looking at customers to finding someone else who might want to do what he's doing. But drawing those people in is more about making them feel a certain way.
Sort of like why most of my resentment for Paul Seller's schtick is that the underlying theme is that you can maybe have the carrot that you could learn from him to be a woodworker and make money at it.
What he doesn't tell you is that he doesn't really know that - his expertise is at drawing in beginners - that's his business. If he were making things and living the lifestyle that he sort of floats out there like a tent revival preacher, we wouldn't have heard of him - his customers would.