How to Chat With Multiple YouTube Videos at Once
One video gives you a transcript. Two or three videos give you a research library you can question across sources.
Most YouTube transcript tools stop at one job: paste a link, get text, leave. That is useful, but it still makes you compare videos manually. If you are watching lectures, interviews, product reviews, tutorials, or competitor research, the better workflow is to save several transcripts and ask one question across all of them.
This is the difference between extracting a transcript and chatting with your YouTube library. The second workflow lets you ask: what do these videos agree on?, where do they disagree?, or what action items appear in more than one video?
Don’t stop at one transcript
Save 2 videos, then search across both
The “aha” moment is cross-video search: ask /search what do both videos agree on? and pull answers from every transcript in your library.
Open the Telegram bot — no card →Free trial: 3 videos — enough to test cross-video search. Basic is $1 first month after that, then $5/month.
What does “chat with multiple YouTube videos” mean?
It means your question is not limited to the current video. Instead, the answer is pulled from every saved transcript in your library. For example, after saving two videos about the same topic, you can ask:
/search what do both videos agree on?/search compare the action items/search which advice is repeated across these videos?
Utubetalk searches the transcript chunks, finds the relevant moments, and returns a concise answer with the source videos that supported it.
The simple 3-video workflow
- Save the first video. Paste a YouTube link into the Telegram bot and wait for the transcript.
- Save a related second video. Choose a video that covers the same question from another angle.
- Ask across both. Run
/search what do both videos agree on?before adding more videos. - Add a third video if the topic matters. Three transcripts are enough to test whether the library is worth keeping.
The important part is step 3. Do not collect transcripts forever before searching. The useful moment appears as soon as you have two related videos.
When is this better than a normal transcript tool?
A normal transcript tool is enough when you only need to copy text from one video. Cross-video chat is better when you are trying to compare, decide, study, or reuse ideas:
- Students: compare two lectures and ask what concepts overlap.
- Creators: collect several videos in a niche and ask what hooks or claims repeat.
- Researchers: save interviews and ask for recurring themes.
- Product teams: compare tutorials or reviews and ask what users complain about.
Why Telegram helps
YouTube research usually happens while you are already on your phone. A Telegram bot removes the setup step: forward or paste the link, get the transcript, then ask a search question in the same chat. There is no extension to install and no desktop-only transcript panel.
Free test before paying
Utubetalk gives you 3 videos free, which is enough to test the real use case: save two related videos and search across both. If you only need one transcript, you may not need a subscription. If you start building a reusable library, Basic keeps it growing after the free test.
Don’t stop at one transcript
Save 2 videos, then search across both
The “aha” moment is cross-video search: ask /search what do both videos agree on? and pull answers from every transcript in your library.
Open the Telegram bot — no card →Free trial: 3 videos — enough to test cross-video search. Basic is $1 first month after that, then $5/month.
Related: How to Search Inside a YouTube Video · How to Save YouTube Transcripts · YouTube to Text: 5 Methods Compared