CTRMAXXING ∕∕ SIGNAL DROP · MAY ’26NETWORK ONLINE · 1,248 OPERATORS
ctrmaxxingv0.4 · invite-only
MEDICAL · NICHE PROFILE

Anatomy curiosities.

The strange, counterintuitive, and overlooked facts about how the human body is actually built. Family-safe, evergreen, strong science-curious audience and high shareability.

AVG RPM
$6 to $12
GROWTH
Hot
UPLOADS
1 to 2 per week

What works in this niche

  • Leading with one body part or system and revealing what most people assume wrong
  • 3D graphics and labeled diagrams that make an abstract structure visible on screen
  • Comparing the human body to other animals to make the quirk land harder
  • The evolutionary reason a strange feature exists, held to the back half
  • A responsible caveat that flags open scientific debate rather than presenting one view as final

Format: 7 to 13 minute curiosity explainers over medical illustrations, 3D body models, and B-roll. Documentary voice, familiar-assumption-then-surprising-reality structure, re-hook at 90 seconds.

Hook patterns that earn clicks

  • Myth bust: the organ everyone thinks they understand that works nothing like they imagine
  • Data shock: how much of a familiar process the standard explanation gets wrong
  • Comparison: the body detail that only humans or only a handful of species share

Sub-niches to mine

Narrower angles inside this niche with room to own a lane.

  • Organs that do something entirely different from the textbook description
  • Body structures that only appeared late in human evolutionary history
  • Systems that work in opposite ways in different people
  • Vestigial structures and what they once did
  • Rare anatomical variants found in a small percentage of the population

Top performers we track

Anonymized to protect operators. Revenue figures are estimates from public engagement, not declared earnings.

Channel A
~$44k
10 min body-curiosity explainers
Channel B
~$22k
organ-system deep-dives
Channel C
~$11k
8 min myth-bust videos
Channel D
~$5k
comparative anatomy breakdowns

Common pitfalls

  • Presenting contested anatomy claims as settled fact without flagging the debate
  • Diagrams that are inaccurate or out of date, which the science-literate audience corrects fast
  • Drifting into medical-advice territory, which creates liability and demonetization risk
  • Padding a single fact across twelve minutes instead of finding three strong points

FAQ

Do I need a medical degree to run this channel?

No, but careful sourcing and explicit caveats matter more than in most niches. Cite peer-reviewed work, flag what is debated, and never present anatomy content as personal medical guidance. The audience punishes loose claims fast.

How do I source the visuals?

Public-domain medical illustrations, licensed 3D anatomy assets, and educational stock supply most of what you need. Accuracy matters more than polish here; a wrong label on a diagram erodes credibility faster than a low-budget look.

Why is the RPM mid-range rather than high?

Science and health content attracts premium advertisers but also carries cautious ad placement. The range is conservative while new channels calibrate their inventory. Channels that stay clearly educational and avoid medical-advice language tend to stabilize at the higher end.

· pipeline · founding waitlist ·

Want the full pipeline tuned for anatomy curiosities?

Script, five A/B titles, SEO description, and thumbnail. Tuned per channel archetype. From operators with 1B+ views.