I have seen some not-advertisements on Youtube that work better than advertisements: it's the success stories, like rescued animals and so on.
A word of caution on some (not all!) of those animal rescue channels: some are made by <insert preferred insult here> who put animals in danger or worse, harm them, to produce revenue from the views and likes. A notable offender was located in Vietnam and had/has several channels with the same poor animals that were either drugged, half drowned, tossed into pits with snakes or onto a dumpster fire to show the 'hero' saving them.
The more people reports these assholes to YT, the better. (unfortunately as soon as a channel is shut down, another one springs up with the same people behind).
Of course there are real animal care institutions and shelters that really do good. But the world is a wicked place.
Absolutely true! I'm sorry I didn't mention that myself.
My typical morning starts with looking at
I Can Has Cheesburger?, except that my ad blocker and browser settings block posts/images from Instagram etc. Some of the Youtube channels I was referring to are
Howl Of A Dog,
Flatbush Cats,
Vet Ranch, and
Walter Santi (just taking care of a backyard cat colony).
Remembering there are good people and good things, no matter how small, being done all around the world, is IMO a good way to start ones mornings.
There are others, but me being so suspicious/paranoid, I prefer channels where the most cases are ordinary, i.e. just neglected and scared, as opposed to abused; and who emphasize the need of good vet care and neutering/spaying. (The vet channels are the ones that have the real special/hard cases, and they may not be morning-coffee/breakfast viewing material.)
If a channel constantly focuses on abused animals "just found by accident", you can be pretty sure there is a reason for that, and it unfortunately usually is financial incentive, no matter where the channel is from.
I also like channels like the box cat
Maru; that cat is amazingly calm even when washed or nails being clipped, constantly giving everyone the "I'm happy with you here" eye squints, even when his tail swishes around like he was really mad.
Right now he's dealing with a new kitten, Miri, in a delightfully playful and friendly manner, for a 13-year old male cat.