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Citing podcasts, videos, and social media — the 2026 rules

Podcasts, YouTube, TikTok, X posts, LinkedIn: when they count as a source, how to cite them in APA, MLA, and Chicago, and the mistakes that get noticed.

6 min read CitationSocial mediaPodcastsYouTubeThesis

Frequently asked questions

Can I actually cite a TikTok post in a bachelor's thesis?
Yes — but only if the post itself is your object of study, for example in a communication, media, or sociology paper. As evidence for a factual claim, social media posts don't carry weight; you need peer-reviewed sources for that.
Do I need a timestamp for videos?
For direct quotes, always. APA 7 requires it explicitly, MLA and Chicago in the same spirit. A timestamp is the page number for audiovisual media — without it, nobody can verify that the statement was made the way you claim.
What if the post or video gets deleted later?
That's exactly what two practices cover: provide an access date, and save a screenshot or an archived version (e.g. via archive.org) locally. Ideally link the archived copy. Without this safety net, your bibliography eventually contains a dead link.

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The 12 most common citation mistakes

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