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YouTube’s first ever video upload acquired by Victoria and Albert Museum in London

A reconstruction of an early YouTube watch page shows the 19-second clip "Me at the zoo" from 2005

Gareth Harris
18 February 2026
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Me at the zoo video and player Courtesy of the Victoria and Albert Museum

Me at the zoo video and player Courtesy of the Victoria and Albert Museum

A new exhibit at the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) in London captures the moment YouTube was born more than 20 years ago. “The V&A has acquired a reconstructed early webpage and the first video ever uploaded to the platform by co-founder Jawed Karim,” a V&A spokesperson says.

The reconstruction of the early YouTube watch page features the first-ever upload entitled Me at the zoo, showing then 25-year-old YouTube co-founder Karim at San Diego Zoo talking about elephants. The 19-second clip has been viewed 382 million times and received more than 18 million likes since it was first posted to the platform on 23 April 2005. “The cool thing about these guys is that they have really really really long trunks,” Karim says.

“Our digital conservation team have spent the last 18 months rebuilding the design and experience of the platform from 8 December 2006, the oldest timestamp documented online,” the spokesperson adds. The V&A team collaborated with YouTube’s user experience team and the London-based interaction design studio oio on the project.

The YouTube watchpage featuring Me at the zoo Courtesy of the Victoria and Albert Museum

The inaugural YouTube work is on display in the Design 1900-Now gallery at V&A South Kensington, while the process involved in creating the reconstruction will be explored in a mini display at V&A East Storehouse in Stratford.

Neal Mohan, the chief executive of YouTube, said in a statement: “By reconstructing an early watch page, we aren’t just showing a video; we are inviting the public to step back in time to the beginning of a global, cultural phenomenon.” Corinna Gardner, a senior curator of design and digital at the V&A, adds: "This snapshot of YouTube during the early days of web 2.0 marks an important moment in history of the internet and digital design.”

YouTube continues to be an important platform for arts and culture, with original content from museums and galleries often outperforming streaming services. During the pandemic, our podcast host Ben Luke selected five key art YouTube channels that host high-quality videos and films on art and artists. Some of the most popular videos on the platform, meanwhile, show the late US television art instructor Bob Ross creating his recognisable pastoral scenes; Ross’s channel currently has 6.4 million subscribers.

AcquisitionsVictoria & Albert MuseumMuseumsYouTubeSocial mediaDigital AgeDigital
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