A little about my upcoming Youtube channel

Very nice, I have a YouTube channel but haven't seriously started putting any content on it yet. I'm far too busy with school stuff right now but I have an idea of a channel that basically explains how and why old cars can still be relevant, and showing how to work on them from the perspective of a "millenial" (I'm 29). Far too many people my age are intimidated by carbs and distributors and it's stupid, anyone who can turn a wrench can tune them if they understand the fundamentals. They also underestimate the performance potential, and not just straight-line performance that's another thing I want to focus more on; chassis and brakes upgrades to make them more up-to-date. I want to try to make classics appealing to young people, I don't think there are any channels currently which focus on that. There are young people who have channels about doing classic car stuff but when I watch them it's obvious the content is only viewed by people who are already into it. Plus I've always felt I had a knack for explaining complicated subjects in simple ways, I'd like to put that to the test.
What really shows youth today that muscle cars can still be relevant is when FCA produces a 2018 Demon that is pretty much a purpose built drag car.

A 100k dollar drag car.

Notice they didn't make a 100k drift car. Far too many millennials believe that doing doughnuts in a car is real muscle. "Weeeee lets do doughnuts and then we can race a nissan in a Japanese parking garage, weeee"

When drag racing returns to being the American cultural icon and sport that it was in the 60s, that's when real muscle cars will be relevant again, and FCA is helping.