__"If a picture is worth a thousand words, a video must be worth millions (of words)"__.  
A Looong and dense FAQ/Checklist seems like a logical candidate for a video.  

__Current Situation:__  
Significantly, it took at least 30-40 minutes to find an ok stackoverflow how-to video. Seems like SO is a text-only site (for ex-usenet users maybe?). Joel Spolsky claims in his talks that SO is a break from Usenet email-style conversations.   

__Maybe it's time to add some video help for newbies at least.__

__Entry-Barrier :__
It's an oft-repeated complaint newbies don't __RTFM__, __FAQ__, __Checklists__ etc. Given the primary urge to 'Answer my question/Solve my problem/Do my homework Already!!' it's a bit much to expect them to read at all.  

__Upfront Effort :__  
a) __Communication-medium has to suit your Cognitive Style - Video, Audio, Kineaesthetic (jsfiddle)__.  
b) __A playlist of multiple short 10 minute clips would be more useful than a single big video__.  
This would also help moderators get the message across for specific misbehavior.  
This will help "goal-oriented"/"attention-deficit"/"reading-disabled"/clueless newbies latch on fast and bridge the learning-gap with __least effort__.

__Some good starting points :__  
[Video - Learning from Stackoverflow](http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NWHfY_lvKIQ)  
[Video - Good Stackoverflow Citizen by Jeff Attwood](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HRRWDf-xB2Y)  

__NOTE: The video itself can be user contributed and remixed via [Mozilla Popcorn](https://popcorn.webmaker.org).__

__Advantages :__  
If a newbie learns top 80% of proper usage from the videos, the site should see a lot of happy users - newbies as well as moderators. The rest can come from links to FAQ, experience etc.  

YouTube is full of newbie learning videos (from Arduino to Graphene to Cooking). Searching video-first and text-next saves time/effort and gives a starting point if it's worth following up.