EDIT - [4K]
"Bullying" Beginners

Some advanced players may feel the content aimed at beginners lacks relevance for them and demand more advanced material.

Twitch and YouTube should be a backup for learning chess, not your go-to primary source. I find it much more effective to study with a book or by analyzing games myself.

I get what you are talking about SagebrushSea about certain content creators, but there are some creators on YouTube that are better at keeping to their "made for beginners" content and not advancing it too much. I like ChessBrah's content by GM Aman Hambleton. He explains beginner concepts really well and shows example games of him demonstrating those concepts.
I'm a relatively raw beginner. I'm not ego tied to results and I enjoy playing for its own sake, but I've noted two trends that put me off with a good number of higher rated players.
First, I try to study by watching YouTube, Twitch, and other sources which provide instruction that is explicitly labeled and constructed for beginners. Invariably, a number of players will being asking, even demanding, that the content be revised or readjusted to address players rated 500-1000 points above the range of the beginners. They want the provider to include instruction at the higher levels and they keep asking questions that are clearly above the beginner level. In short, they attempt to hijack the content.
And, few of the providers seem able to handle the advanced players wedging themselves into the instruction. The providers generally seem to pacify the advanced players by responding to the higher level interactions. So the beginners' lesson becomes something else.
Second, I note that in situations where a beginner and a more advanced instructor are interacting, a good number of more advanced players will interject themselves. They will answer beginners' questions and provide a version of advanced instruction -- seemingly showing off their advanced status and their chess acumen. Again, they appear to hijack the lesson in order to stroke their own egos. And, again the beginners' lesson becomes a platform for bullies who have to demonstrate their chess prowess.
Which makes it difficult to find and engage in sources for true beginners' instruction ... it doesn't stay beginner for long.
Am I reading this correctly? Or am I the only one with this experience?