The Most Loved and Most Hated Car YouTubers

Car YouTube spans the entire spectrum, from creators who spent a decade building real trust to channels pulling massive numbers on pure shock value. The gap between the ones we love and the ones we avoid isn't about budgets or production quality. It comes down to something simpler: respect. The loved creators treat the audience like smart people who actually care about cars. The criticized ones treat them like views and dollar signs. This video breaks down the real cases, the community drama, and the exact moments that built or wrecked these channels. On the loved side: Doug DeMuro, who built rare credibility on honesty and the DougScore, then turned that trust into Cars & Bids. Rich Rebuilds, who fought Tesla over Right to Repair for eight years and actually won. Tavarish, whose whole strategy is admitting his opinions are sometimes wrong while rebuilding salvage hypercars like the McLaren P1. And Mat Armstrong, the enthusiast's enthusiast whose thumbnails show the real wrecked cars he actually buys. On the criticized side: Scotty Kilmer, the 6-million-subscriber Emmy winner whose repair advice professionals openly warn against. Supercar Blondie, the biggest creator in the space who serious fans say never says a negative word about any car. Alex Choi, whose escalating stunts ended in a federal court case. And Shmee150, who holds the positioning of a reviewer while operating under the constraints of a brand partner. The specific failures differ, but the pattern is identical: a gap between who the creator pretends to be and what they actually deliver. This is a community whose standards are far higher than they look, and where a broken promise outlasts any algorithm cycle.