I would strongly advise against relying on videos to present the problem in your question, if you expect to get an answer, that is.
Video is generally a very poor resource to reproduce a problem for the following reasons:
Videos are not searchable. This means that someone will have to watch the entire video, instead pressing ctrl-F and going directly to the part of interest.
Videos are not always available, various policy reasons may prevent someone to watch a video. It may be technically possible to watch it, but who would go into the effort of doing it, when they can just answer the next question that doesn't rely on video.
Videos often rely on spoken instructions, but sound is not always available, because the potential answerer may be in a room with other people (both at work and at home), and will probably not be interested in finding earphones just to answer a question.
Videos are not easily searchable by search engines, which would mean that the next person with the same problem will probably not find your question.
Videos are not copy-paste friendly. Am I supposed to retype the code from the video to reproduce the problem and answer the question? I expect almost nobody would do that
If it was up to me, I would completely ban all videos related to software-development everywhere on the internet, but unfortunately some people still produce such videos, thus forcing people to use them, instead of a text description.
For the people claiming that the problem is that it relies on off-site resources, this is only the smallest of their problems. If a question uses a snippet from a gist on github, an editor can simply fix the question by copy-pasting the snippet into the question. With a video, an editor would need to spend very much effort to properly transcribe the video into text to fix the question.
So NO, don't use videos in your question, unless there is absolutely no other alternative source.