I've mentioned this before, but in general, I never trusted video reviews, I like charts so I look at charts, then I look at my use case and find something that can quantify it and end up comparing charts on that.
Before Antutu went into 6 digits, it was a quick and easy way to compare devices and how they'd be for my photo editing work flow.
For battery life, GSMArena's metric has been pretty great and consistent over the years. Along with camera specifcations and charging technology.
For camera quality, there was DXO Mark, which works great as a comparison tool. Like how much better is a newer phone than what I currently own?
That's changed in recent years with computation photography and my own preference for Leica's colour science. We have iPhones at home but my own device is a Redmi something with a modified camera apk that I'll probably only ever give up when the next Leica associated flagship becomes available on a >12 month emi.
I could never buy something on someone else's recommendation, there needs to be something that attracts me to it in a meaningful/intangible way (form factor, design, components, style, branding, materials).
But I still watch video reviews because I'm a blatant consumerist, I like new stuff and I want to buy new stuff. Usually entry level or mid range stuff but still new stuff. EMIs have always been about half my income (bad practice, do not recommend).
The reason why I like videos is because they're a product showcase and I like the videography involved. So I haven't any preference to any single presenter or channel. In fact, I find myself preferring channels that do not show off the make up or beard line on the presenter's face. Sometimes I go through boring low effort channels like ShortCircuit just to see the hardware/product even if I'm never going to buy it.
It's kind of like peering through a magazine back in the 90s just to see what's new. That's what videos are for me.