What I'm saying is that if you hold a lecture or publish a how-to which others will be watching/reading (and investing, or wasting their time on) then you should -- in my opinion -- at the very least have tried what you're going to show before you do the recording, and have a good plan, and some preparation done. That is, no such thing as "uh, I'm doing this for the first time, you know", or "uh, I don't know why this doesn't work right now".
Sure, I'd prefer a well prepared lecture with only necessary and interesting info as well, but there's room for different formats to coexist. It's a serious time investment from the content creators, they're not doing it to get paid, nor is it forced upon anyone so IMHO they get to decide the terms on which they wish to operate. It's okay that it's not for everybody.
Personally I haven't followed it closely, and I'm seriously disturbed at people learning programming or changing their habits based on Casey's ... opinions.
Do you mean generally speaking from some dude or Casey in particular? Would you care to elaborate?
Discussions about the pros and cons of OOP or standard containers miss the point so spectacularly that it's disappointing to see those arguments rehashed.
Missing the point seems to be the point of online discussion fora :P. It's why I mostly abstain from non-technical discussions, there seem to be a lot of points and everyone is arguing their own. For example, I'm not sure what 'the point' is that you're referring to, I don't have a team :ph34r:.