Here is a possible concise summary:
The speaker is Philip DeFranco, a YouTube news commentator. He talks about three main topics:
- President Trump's suggestion that voters in North Carolina should try to vote twice, by mail and in person, to test the system. He criticizes Trump for encouraging illegal and chaotic behavior and reports that Twitter and Facebook have taken actions to flag or remove his posts.
- Facebook's announcement of new policies to protect the election, such as banning new political ads in the week before the election, removing posts that discourage voting or undermine the results, and adding labels and information to posts that claim victory prematurely. He asks for viewers' opinions on whether these policies are effective or enough.
- Nintendo's new releases and updates for Mario games, such as Super Mario 64, Super Mario Sunshine, Super Mario Galaxy, Mario Kart Live Home Circuit, and a Mario battle royale. He expresses his excitement and bias as a fan of Mario.
He also promotes his sponsor Robin Hood, an investment app, and shares some other videos and links that he likes. He ends the show by thanking his viewers and asking them to subscribe.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text:
1. Cr1TiKaL received a community guidelines strike for a video featuring a viral clip of people dressed as cartoon characters fighting on the road.
2. YouTube rejected his appeal and also gave Markiplier a strike for featuring the same clip in an older video.
3. Cr1TiKaL and Markiplier criticized YouTube's inconsistent and unfair enforcement of their policies and started the hashtag #AnswerUsYoutube.
4. YouTube eventually reversed their decision and removed the strikes, admitting that it was an over-enforcement of their policies.
5. Trump encouraged voters in North Carolina to vote twice, by mail and in person, to test the system and make sure their vote was counted.
6. The North Carolina state board of elections warned that voting twice is illegal and a felony, and advised voters to use online tools to track their ballots instead of showing up in person.
7. Twitter and Facebook took actions to flag or remove Trump's posts that violated their rules about civic and election integrity.
8. Facebook announced new policies to protect the upcoming election, such as not accepting new political ads in the week before the election, removing posts that use COVID-19 to discourage voting, and adding labels to posts that seek to de-legitimize the outcome of the election or voting methods.
9. The new policies received mixed reactions from different stakeholders, with some saying they went too far, some saying they were not enough, and some saying they were cautiously optimistic.