United States
Deep Look is a science video series produced by KQED, the San Francisco-based PBS member station, in partnership with PBS Digital Studios. The channel…
Total Followers +0.0%
2.7M
Across YouTube, Instagram, TikTok
Primary Platform
YouTube
2.4M followers · 88% of audience
Engagement
4.2%
vs. 1.5% category median
Sponsorship Tier
Macro
Est. $719–$2K / IG post
| Window | YouTube | TikTok | Combined | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Last 7 days | +0 +0.0% | +12 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +12 |
| Last 30 days | +0 +0.0% | +273 +0.9% | +0 +0.0% | +273 |
| Last 90 days | +10K +0.4% | +555 +1.9% | +0 +0.0% | +11K |
| Last 365 days | +10K +0.4% | +555 +1.9% | +0 +0.0% | +11K |
Daily follower snapshots from CreatorDB's longitudinal index.
Deep Look is a science video series produced by KQED, the San Francisco-based PBS member station, in partnership with PBS Digital Studios. The channel launched with a distinctive editorial premise: use extreme macro photography and microscopy — shot in 4K resolution — to reveal biological phenomena that are invisible or easily overlooked at normal scale. Episodes zoom in on the mechanics of insect behavior, marine invertebrates, parasites, and small mammals, turning subjects like mealybugs, roly-polies, flatworms, and ticks into cinematic short documentaries. The production approach is methodical and visually driven, with titles engineered to provoke curiosity rather than sensationalize. That combination of rigorous sourcing (rooted in KQED's journalism standards) and genuinely arresting imagery has earned the series recognition as award-winning science media and built a multi-million subscriber base on YouTube as its primary platform.
The audience skews heavily male and spans a broad adult age range, with the largest cohort in the 25–44 bracket — a profile consistent with science enthusiasts and nature documentary viewers rather than a casual general audience. Roughly seven in ten viewers are based in the United States, with meaningful reach into the UK, Canada, and India. Engagement rates run well above the category median, which reflects the channel's loyal, topic-driven subscriber base rather than passive algorithmic discovery. A sponsorship from Opera places Deep Look adjacent to the tech-literate viewer segment its demographics suggest. With an active presence across YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram and a Patreon revenue layer, the channel is well-positioned as a trusted institutional science brand — one whose non-commercial credibility and distinctive visual format make it a durable fit for sponsors targeting educated, curiosity-driven adults.
Deep Look reaches an audience concentrated in United States primarily through YouTube, and is best activated via long-form YouTube integrations, Instagram Reels and Stories, TikTok branded content. As an education creator they map naturally to brands targeting that space. Demonstrated partners include Opera. Engagement on YouTube runs around 4.2%, pointing to an audience suited to category-relevant, mid-funnel brand campaigns rather than pure-reach buys.
Benchmark estimates for a creator at Deep Look's tier (Macro, 2.7M combined followers, United States). Pulled from CreatorDB's category benchmarks.
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Deep Look is produced by KQED, the San Francisco Bay Area public media organization, in partnership with PBS Digital Studios. It's part of the broader PBS Digital Studios network of educational YouTube channels, with KQED handling production and PBS Digital Studios providing co-branding and distribution support.
Deep Look is based in the San Francisco Bay Area, where its parent organization KQED is headquartered. The series covers science and environment stories from the Bay Area and beyond, though its macro-scale filming takes viewers into the microscopic world of creatures found across the natural world.
Deep Look uses a combination of macro photography and microscopy to capture subjects at scales far beyond what standard cameras can achieve. All footage is shot in 4K resolution, which preserves extraordinary detail when the image is magnified, making the bodies of tiny insects and biological structures look almost alien.
The mealybug destroyer is a predatory ladybug larva — Cryptolaemus montrouzieri — that hunts and eats mealybugs, the sap-sucking pests that can devastate grapevines. Deep Look highlighted it as a biological pest control solution for vineyards, capturing its feeding behavior through extreme close-up footage.
An acoel is a type of tiny marine flatworm that lives in symbiosis with photosynthetic algae inside its own body tissue. Because those algae convert sunlight into energy, the flatworm can essentially run on solar power — which is why Deep Look described it that way in a post about the species living on coral reefs.
Insects are a major recurring subject — the channel has covered ticks, hissing cockroaches, mealybugs, geckos, and snails — but Deep Look ranges much more widely across biology. Recent videos have explored why mammals evolved away from egg-laying, the birthing process of roly-polies, and solar-powered flatworms living on coral reefs.
Yes, Deep Look has an active Patreon page where viewers can directly support the series. The Patreon link is featured prominently in their YouTube channel bio alongside their TikTok, making community funding a visible part of how the show operates alongside its public media backing from KQED and PBS Digital Studios.
KQED, the organization that produces Deep Look, describes its science and environment coverage as award-winning. Deep Look's approach — using 4K macro photography to turn microscopic biology into visually stunning short-form video — has made it one of the most recognized science series in the PBS Digital Studios network.
Opera, the web browser company, partnered with Deep Look for sponsored content on YouTube in 2024. As a science education channel whose audience engagement runs well above the typical category average, Deep Look attracts brand partners looking to reach a curious, intellectually engaged viewership.
Deep Look has grown to well over 2 million subscribers on YouTube, placing it in the Macro creator tier. The channel's engagement rate consistently runs far above the science and education category median, which reflects an unusually devoted audience for a nature and microscopy series.
Stats (followers, engagement, audience demographics, growth) are pulled live from the CreatorDB API covering YouTube, Instagram and TikTok. Bio and FAQ content is AI-assisted; news items are sourced from cited public press at generation time. Read the full methodology →
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@kqeddeeplook · YouTube
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