Here is an example provided by the Media Resource Center of the University of California at Berkeley, which should serve as a formatting guideline:
Shimabukuro, Jake. "Ukulele weeps by Jake Shimabukuro." 04 April 2008. Online video clip. YouTube. Accessed on 22 April 2006.Since the new 7th ed. of the MLA came out this year, the correct citation is as follows:
Obama, Barack. "We Have a Lot of Work to Do." Speech. 2 Nov. 2008. YouTube. 23 June
2009.
"Midnight Train to Georgia." Perf. Gladys Knight, Ben Stiller, Jack Black, and Robert
Downey, Jr. American Idol. 21 May 2008. YouTube. 6 June 2009.
Citing YouTube will differ based upon style. If using APA, it will need to follow this example: Last name, first initial. Second initial. [Author username can be substituted in this section]. (Year, Month Day {of post} ~sample_html ). Video title [Video file]. Retrieved from [URL]. MLM style follows this format: Last name, First name. [Again, the username of the author is acceptable as a substitution]. "Title of Video." Title of Site. Name of institution, organization or publisher [in this case, YouTube], Day/Month/Year of publication. Medium cited [in this case, internet or web]. Day/Month/Year of access. Finally, Chicago Citation style, which is perhaps the easiest to attempt: "Title of Video Here." YouTube video [literally stating here that the citation is a YouTube video], length of video. Posted by "username," upload Month/Day/Year. URL.
Cite youtube in accordance with the information in the related link.
I don't believe YouTube channels are something you can cite properly. For each video you've used, you should cite it in MLA.
How would you cite a DVD in MLA format for a bibliography?
To cite an interview video posted on YouTube in APA format, include the following elements: Interviewee's Last name, Initials. (Year, Month Day). Title of interview [Video]. YouTube. URL In MLA format, cite it as follows: Interviewee's Last name, First name. "Title of interview." YouTube, uploaded by Uploaders name, Date of upload, URL.
One popular site for generating MLA citations is EasyBib. Simply enter the information for the source you want to cite, and EasyBib will format it into the correct MLA citation for you.
In MLA format, cite a memoir by including the author's name, title of the memoir in italics, publisher, publication year, and format (e.g., print or ebook). A sample citation would be: Last name, First name. Title of Memoir. Publisher, Year. Format.
Yes, it is necessary to cite movies in MLA format when writing a research paper or academic work. MLA citation provides detailed information about the movie being referenced and gives credit to the original source.
Go to the Purdue online writing lab, they have varieties of styles that you can cite your sources. There's also a conversion program in Microsoft word where you just enter your sources in any format and Word automatically formats it for you.
To cite an almanac in MLA format, follow this structure: Author(s). "Title of Entry." Title of Almanac, edition, Publisher, publication year, page range.
To cite The Canterbury Tales in MLA format, include Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Canterbury Tales. Follow this format for an in-text citation: (Chaucer line number) or (Chaucer Prologue line number). For the works cited page: Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Canterbury Tales.
go to bibme.org or if that's not it go to bibme.com and it will teach you how. It will also do it for you for research papers.
The newest way to cite a website in MLA format includes listing the author's name (if available), the title of the webpage, the name of the website, the publication date or date last updated, the URL, and the date accessed. Make sure to follow the latest MLA guidelines for formatting and punctuation.
To cite Harvey Levenstein's "Paradox of Plenty" in MLA format, you would follow this pattern: Levenstein, Harvey. Paradox of Plenty: A Social History of Eating in Modern America. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.