And the Fandom Rejoiced: When clicking on a replying comment, one can now see the previous comment that was being replied to, a huge fix from having to previously search hundred of comments to find it.
Never Live It Down: Some dislikes are on accident. Have fun being harassed about contributing to the dislike meter in future comments anyway. Though it is all anonymous.
The whole account was taken down, not just that video, so if there was also Super Sentai, Power Rangers, Kamen Rider, or Digimon on that channel, that would explain it, and thus not be CRF. However, there are probably other examples of this trope.
Additionally, this can also occur with certain songs, such as this video of the song "Madonna", which has its artist inaccurately labeled as "Madonna". That is not correct, as the song's actual artist is the K PopGirl Group known as Secret. Coincidentally, Madonna herself has also recorded a song called "Secret", although the video's label manages to give correct attribution to the song's original artist.
Crowning Moment of Funny: Among the seemingly unending pile of comments, many witty remarks can cause this to occur, nowadays usually located in the "Top Comments" section.
Discredited Meme: Comment memes tend to stick around past their expiration dates.
Dude, Not Funny: Most of the community, which is made up of incredibly rude young people, fails to be funny in the first place.
Fan Dumb: The comments are filled with this. Best examples are probably in comedic videos, where fans of the parodied artist will miss the point and insult the author (just look for any "Weird Al" Yankovic video).
Then there are the people who talk about wanting to kill or beat up people for disliking a video they like. It's a joke, but not a real funny one after a while.
Fan Hater: Some people will not only troll videos of bands/works they don't like, while harassing their fans—but some will even go as far as to upload videos that insult said fans of the band/work.
GIFT: The YouTube comments section can be filled with this. Quite a few Youtube videos often lampshade and parody this.
The forcing of the Google Accounts. Hope you got a Yahoo! account instead. Otherwise, you'd better have a mobile phone. Don't have one? You're screwed.
They also completely screwed up the main page, making it fairly unorganized.
"YouTube Channels 2.0", introduced in 2009, got a lot of flak.
And then history repeated itself with 3.0.
Also when they removed the 1-5 star rating system, changing it simply to "Like" or "Dislike".
The decision to remove the dislike count has been very poorly received by the community. Even though the higher-ups at YouTube claim that it was supposedly done out of concern for the mental health of YouTubers, the reality is that this decision had little to nothing to do with that at all. Luckily, the ability to view the current number of dislikes a video has can be restored with an extension called Return YouTube Dislike.
"Content Made for Kids". It was introduced to YouTube to comply with Child Protection Laws and help minimize exposure children's exposure to negative content, by disabling the, often quite negatively charged, YouTube comment section on videos marked as such. Which would be fine except that the algorithm that labels videos as "Made for Kids" can judge content as being made for kids on rather vague "factors" to the point that What Do You Mean It's Not for Kids? content, such as Futurama clips[1] can fall under that description thanks to the Animation Age Ghetto. It's a decision that's seen many content creators ponder if it's time to leave YouTube.
Ruined FOREVER: Any video that gets a dislike. If you dislike a video, you're a piece of trash who hates everything remotely pleasant in the world and needs to be murdered, according to some of the comments.
↑A show that discusses topics such as prostitution, recreational substances, corporate greed, dirty politics and climate change among others.