If you’re writing a thesis in 2026, sooner or later you’ll hit this question: there’s an expert interview on a podcast, a TED Talk on YouTube, a conference thread on X, or a viral TikTok with a statement that fits your argument. Can you cite that? And if yes — how? This post shows you when audiovisual and social media sources carry academic weight, how to cite them in APA, MLA, and Chicago, and the pitfalls reviewers spot immediately.
First the prior question: is it even a source?
Before you worry about formalities, clarify the status of the source. There are two clean cases:
- The source is your object of study. You’re writing a content analysis on climate communication on TikTok, a discourse analysis of podcast talk shows, a media paper on YouTube influencers. Then you must cite the posts and videos — they’re your material.
- The source is an authorised statement by a relevant person or institution. An official WHO account, a head of government in a recorded press conference, a verbatim statement by a researcher on a science podcast.
What does not work: using a TikTok as evidence for a factual finding that belongs in a peer-reviewed source. “Studies show that …” backed up by a 60-second reel is academically sloppy — no matter how correctly you format the citation. Form doesn’t rescue bad source selection.
What you always need to include
Whatever citation style you use, five fields belong in every audiovisual reference:
- Author — person, channel, account, or institution
- Title — episode title, video title, or for posts the text in excerpt
- Platform/format — podcast series, YouTube, TikTok, X, LinkedIn
- Date — for videos and podcasts ideally to the day
- URL and for ephemeral content an access date
For direct quotes, add a timestamp in hh:mm:ss format. It replaces the page number. Without it, the examining department can’t scan through an hour-long video — and that’s exactly what stands out negatively.
APA 7 — the most common variant
APA 7 was the first major style to publish dedicated rules for YouTube, podcasts, and social media. The main forms:
YouTube video
Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell. (2023, September 14). Why we cannot focus anymore [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=…
In-text for a direct quote:
(Kurzgesagt, 2023, 03:42)
Important: the channel name is the author if no individual is named. The [Video] label in square brackets stays in English even in non-English texts — that’s APA convention.
Podcast episode
Sina, M. (Host). (2024, March 7). Academic writing with AI (No. 142) [Audio podcast episode]. In Research Radio. NPR. https://…
In-text:
(Sina, 2024, 18:05)
If you want to cite an entire podcast series (rarely useful), the series title and the date range are enough.
Tweet / X post
WHO. [@WHO]. (2024, January 22). Air pollution causes 7 million premature deaths every year [Post]. X. https://x.com/WHO/status/…
The account handle (@WHO) goes in square brackets after the name. APA 7 changed “Tweet” to “Post” after the platform rebrand, so unless your supervisor insists on the older label, use “Post”.
TikTok / Instagram Reel
AP News. [@apnews]. (2024, May 12). Election aftermath in 90 seconds [Video]. TikTok. https://www.tiktok.com/@apnews/video/…
If the post has no title, take the first 20 words of the visible text and italicise them. Period, then [Video].
LinkedIn post
Schmidt, A. (2024, November 9). Three lessons from 200 hiring interviews [Post]. LinkedIn. https://www.linkedin.com/posts/…
LinkedIn is surprisingly common in 2026 in business, HR, and communication theses. Treat posts like stand-alone texts with author and date — no special form needed.
MLA 9 — the logic behind it
Since the 9th edition, MLA no longer has rigid templates but the Core Elements: Author, Title, Container, Other Contributors, Version, Number, Publisher, Publication Date, Location. You fill in what’s available.
YouTube example:
Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell. “Why We Cannot Focus Anymore.” YouTube, 14 Sept. 2023, www.youtube.com/watch?v=…
Podcast example:
Sina, Max, host. “Academic Writing with AI.” Research Radio, episode 142, NPR, 7 Mar. 2024, npr.org/…
X example:
WHO [@WHO]. “Air pollution causes 7 million premature deaths every year.” X, 22 Jan. 2024, 2:32 p.m., x.com/WHO/status/…
In-text, MLA only requires what leads to the bibliography — for social media, usually just the account name: (Kurzgesagt). For direct quotes, the timestamp goes in parentheses: (Kurzgesagt 03:42).
Chicago 17 — Notes variant
Chicago Notes & Bibliography handles audiovisual sources thoroughly in footnotes, compactly in the bibliography.
Footnote (first reference):
- Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell, “Why We Cannot Focus Anymore,” YouTube video, 14:23, September 14, 2023, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=…
Bibliography:
Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell. “Why We Cannot Focus Anymore.” YouTube video, 14:23. September 14, 2023. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=…
For direct quotes, the timestamp goes in the footnote: …, 03:42. The same form applies to podcasts — “YouTube video” becomes “Podcast” and the series goes in italics.
The most common mistakes — and how to avoid them
Mistake 1: No timestamp for direct quotes. This is the most common defect and the most expensive — reviewers spot it on first skim. A timestamp is not optional.
Mistake 2: Account handle as the author. “@elonmusk” is not an author. Use the real name, handle in square brackets. If you can’t find the name, that’s a signal in 90 % of cases that the source isn’t citable.
Mistake 3: Dead link. Social media posts and some YouTube videos get deleted. For every cited source, save a screenshot with visible URL and date locally, ideally plus an archive version via web.archive.org. If you spend years on a dissertation, some of your sources will disappear — fact.
Mistake 4: Translation in the quote without flagging. If you quote a German video verbatim in an English paper, the original belongs in the text and your translation goes in a footnote — not the other way round. Otherwise you’re quoting yourself, not the source.
Mistake 5: Sponsored or paid content without disclosure. If the YouTube clip you cite carries a “Sponsored” or affiliate disclaimer, that’s relevant — note it in a footnote. Source criticism is part of your work.
When you should look for a different source
Audiovisual and social media sources are never the foundation of academic claims, at best a supplement. Ask yourself before each citation:
- Is there a peer-reviewed publication, a research report, or a government publication for the same claim? → Take that one.
- Is the person on the video or podcast the originator of a theory or method, or just talking about it? → If they’re just talking about it, go to the original publication.
- Could the podcast excerpt also be found in one of their published works? → Then cite the published form.
Social media is solid when treated as a primary source: political communication on X, activism on TikTok, PR statements on LinkedIn. As secondary support for factual claims, it’s almost always the wrong choice.
Acurio checks this too
Audiovisual sources are particularly error-prone: timestamps are often off, statements get sharpened when transcribed, and nuance gets lost when transferred into the running text. When you check your work against the source transcripts with Acurio, exactly these spots surface — claims that were not actually made that way in the video or podcast but acquired a different meaning through paraphrase. That’s the most common, hardest-to-find, and most harshly graded error with audiovisual sources.
Form is learnable in hours; source selection decides whether your work convinces. Audiovisual and social media sources can carry weight — but only when you use them where they belong, and document their form cleanly enough that your reviewers can verify each citation in seconds.