It should concern the Nim community though when videos like [this](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DCfDLWfPqiA) has one of the higher view counts on the topic of Nim. The video is attempting to answer the question "Should you Learn Nim over Python?" He essentially reads a Medium article which seems to misrepresent Nim as an interpreted pythonic language.
He then goes on to say that Nim is not good enough to replace what is currently in the field and is not worth it to learn if you want to make money. He muses over the evolution of web tech over the past 25 years and basically claims that Nim is another technology that will eventually die off, seeming to forget that Python itself took many years of niche programmers using Python until they could effectively evangelize the use of Python to their peers. I point out this video because even though any kind of press is good press, it should be mildly concerning to see that one of the more popular Nim videos is predicated on a misrepresentation of the language from a Medium article with absolutely no appeal being made to information on the Nim website itself. Nim will benefit from good press across the board: company adoption and library development foremost, but social media is a tool that should be utilized as well, at least to counteract the negative press found there. I personally found out about Nim through the youtube channel [Context Free](https://www.youtube.com/c/ContextFree). All that channel did was put Nim on my radar along with languages like Zig and Dart. I then knew I could continue to check up on this language and see how it evolved. Once it hit version 1.0 and I was sufficiently pissed off at Python at work and other languages when developing my game engine, I went back to Nim. [Context Free](https://www.youtube.com/c/ContextFree) did not sell the language to me, but without it I likely would not have found Nim as early as I did.