The Great War

The Great War is a history YouTube channel and web series which covered the events of World War I week-by-week until November 2018,[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]  now focusing on the events that followed it in longer episodes. The series debuted on July 28, 2014. It is currently hosted and written by Jesse Alexander, a Canadian historian. It has been previously hosted by American historian and actor Indiana Neidell. The channel produces weekly content that follows the events that occurred one hundred years prior during the war.[9]

After the centennial's conclusion, Indiana Neidell, the first host and writer of the series, left the project. Jesse Alexander was picked to replace Neidell. It currently focuses on World War I's aftermath, abandoning the week-by-week format and focusing on longer, more in-depth documentaries about events that followed it, such as the German Revolution and the Russian Civil War.

Premise
The Great War channel produces a number of different types of content, the main feature being a weekly recap of the war that corresponds to the events of the same week 100 years prior. The events presented are also summarized quarterly in their own videos.

The channel also presents other segments such as:
 * "Out of the Trenches" - an informative segment in which the host answers questions asked by subscribers on a wide range of topics.
 * "Who Did What in World War I?" - a biographical segment that focuses on the actions of famous individuals during the First World War.
 * "Countries in World War I" - A segment that gives a summary of the situation of individual countries just before and during the war.
 * Technology and Warfare in World War I - Experts inspect and discuss weapons and tools from the war.
 * World War I Essential Knowledge - A segment which is designed to provide background information on the war, such as tactics and politics.
 * Visits to significant European sites of the war, including Verdun and Przemyśl fortress.

History
Indiana Neidell and the producers of the channel tried a number of different show formats with only The Great War surviving. Mediakraft Networks, the production company of The Great War, originally planned to launch as well German, Polish and Turkish language versions of the show.[10]  However, unlike the English channel, these ambiguous projects did not prove to have a chance to recoup their costs.[11]  This quickly led to the termination of the Polish channel. On August 17, 2015, the German series ended its run after a total of 102 episodes. The English channel continued substantially due to support by crowdfunding.

The show got a big boost in viewership when the Battlefield 1 first-person shooter video game developed by EA DICE and published by Electronic Arts was released worldwide for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One on October 21, 2016. Neidell, with research assistant Markus Linke, also contributed research and wrote in-game codex entries for Battlefield 1 and named the "medals" that serve as the game's achievement trophies.[12]

The channel has been in operation since May 2014. It continued to produce its regular content, involving the war's centennial, until December 2018. In early 2019, the channel started to produce longer in-depth episodes[13]  under a new host, Jesse Alexander,[14]  who replaced Neidell as he moved on to other projects such as World War Two. As of March 2019, the channel has posted more than 650 videos.[15]

Reception
The web series has been well received by digital media.[16] <sup id="cite_ref-17">[17] <sup id="cite_ref-18">[18]