I have a better idea than binge viewing a lot of videos, most of which are mostly crap to start with. Get out your camera's manual and read it from cover to cover. As you read it, try out the different settings to see how one compares to another. Then, pick one setting combination and shoot an array of shots starting in the am and working through the pm to see how the camera and those settings react to the change of light throughout the day. Next day, pick a different combination, say shutter priority and go shoot a bunch of moving things, same time frame. Keep doing this until you've explored all the settings your camera offers. Keep a notebook and compare your notes to the frames. LEARN. It's a process and there is no video in the world that is going to compensate for your own learning.
I learned photography in high school from an old geezer who shot a 4x5 view camera during the Battle of the Bulge, in full combat. I learned that even with such a large format camera, even in the worst of the worst conditions, that camera knowledge was the best knowledge there was. We shot football and basketball games with Speed Graphics. We did all the Senior portraits using Speed Graphics, and we shot all the yearbook photos...and we shot only film, of course which meant 2 frames per holder. Know they camera first and how to expose properly, then learn about composition.
The fallacy to your post is that you do not know the basics.