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Google's new Ask YouTube feature leverages Gemini to help you find videos to watch, but you can also use Gemini to watch videos for you. ChatGPT and Claude can't claim the same. If that doesn't sound useful, that's just because you don't realize how powerful this functionality really is. Keep reading for the five ways this feature makes my life easier, and make sure to try them out yourself.
How to Make Gemini 'Watch' Videos for You
To get started, simply send Gemini a link or a video file wherever you use it. Then, you can ask questions about it just like you would about anything else. However, my favorite way to use Gemini with videos is directly on YouTube. When you open a video, an Ask button appears below it on the right. Click this button to open YouTube’s native Gemini integration, which accepts your prompts.
You don’t need to pay for Gemini or YouTube to take advantage of this feature, but you do need to sign into whichever service you want to use first. If you don’t, the Ask button doesn’t appear on YouTube, and Gemini can’t access the video in question. Furthermore, you need to sign in to Gemini to upload files. You likely already have a Google account, though, so it's easy enough to access these features.
1. Turn Long Videos Into Quick, Searchable Summaries
If you ask Gemini for a summary of a video, it can generate one in about a second, complete with timestamps for exactly when each event occurred. For example, if I want to go back to a game I haven’t played in a while but don’t want to watch a 20-minute video on the best control settings, I can just ask Gemini to summarize it for me. In testing, it just did that, conveniently breaking down the settings I ought to adjust.

Alternatively, you can ask Gemini to summarize a video up to a certain point. If you started a superlong video a while ago and aren’t quite sure what happened before you left off, you can just ask for a summary instead of rewatching the whole thing. Gemini’s video summarization capabilities open up endless possibilities, so I recommend playing around with it yourself to see what’s most useful to you.
2. Get Answers to All Your Questions Up Front
If you don’t need an entire summary of a video, you can use Gemini to get answers to quick questions, too. You can use this capability for something as innocuous as finding out whether a title delivers on its premise, for example. Did Coffeezilla really expose a $300,000,000 scam? Ask Gemini, and you get an answer with timestamp citations in seconds. As you might expect, you can ask pretty much any question about any video—your imagination is the only real limit here. This is especially useful if you’re consulting a video for the sole purpose of getting an answer, as Gemini saves you from having to watch the whole thing.

3. Instantly Jump to the Exact Moment You're Looking For
Ever love a certain moment in a long video and just want to see that clip again? If so, rather than looking for a dedicated video of that particular clip, you can open the source video and ask Gemini to find said moment. Gemini’s answers include clickable timestamps that take you to these parts, so the process is trivial. For example, I asked Gemini when Digital Extremes announced its next stream in its stream announcement video, so I could spend my time watching the part I cared about most.

4. Cut Through the Noise and Pull Clean Recommendation Lists
The internet is absolutely overflowing with lists, whether on what laptops to buy, which shows to watch, or a million other things. However, you might just want the actual list and not care much about sitting through a lengthy video discussing its contents. In these instances, you can just ask Gemini for the list directly. For example, I asked Gemini for the names of the anime Gigguk recommended in his spring 2026 new releases video, netting me a clean list. If you just want a recommendation on something to watch (or anything similar), Gemini makes this easy.

5. Turn Cooking Videos Into Clean, Written Recipes
It has become something of a meme in the cooking community about how long the preamble in articles or videos can be before a recipe appears. Gemini can solve this problem, especially if the video in question doesn’t include its recipe in a pinned comment or the video description. For example, I saved this Joshua Weissman breakfast sandwich video for later, but if I don’t want to replay it a dozen times to write the recipe down for myself, I can just ask Gemini for it. As expected, Gemini presents the recipe to me in seconds along with timestamps.

What Gemini's Video Analysis Still Can't Do
Although you can use Gemini for a variety of video processing tasks, it definitely can’t do everything. For example, it sometimes struggles with exceptionally long videos and is reluctant to list a video’s sources, such as a news clip. It also isn't currently adept at identifying products, pulling out lyrics, or recognizing people.
Gemini has access to the internet and video descriptions on YouTube, so depending on what you ask, it might be able to provide answers for some videos but not others. Suffice it to say that it’s not a perfectly consistent feature, and you'll need to try things to see whether they actually work.
That said, Gemini can save you tons of time and effort by outsourcing the worst parts of the viewing experience. The most important thing to remember is that Gemini is an AI chatbot, so you can talk to it using natural language, asking questions about what it can and can’t do with videos as you go. I wholeheartedly recommend trying out Gemini’s video processing for yourself to find what’s useful.


