We recently stumbled across some interesting info that we thought we’d share. While searching out our first V8TV daily video build blogs from 2006, we found some links that suggest V8TV may have been one of the first to publish these types of muscle car restoration videos. Intrigued, we decided to dig a bit.
Grok Says V8TV Was First!
The earliest documented video blog-style series for a muscle car restoration online goes back to October two thousand six, from V8TV. They kicked off with the “Royal Sport Camaro” build—full episodes tracking the whole process, posted as a video blog. That Chevelle SS496 series from two thousand seven (up to part thirteen) built on it, filmed and shared during a time when almost nobody was doing car vlogs yet.
Before YouTube exploded, stuff like that was rare—think early web videos or personal sites, but nothing muscle-specific pops up earlier in searches. V8TV basically pioneered the format for American classics.
Google Gemini Agrees:
V8TV actually occupies a very prestigious spot in that timeline—they were one of the first professional-grade bridges between traditional television and online “daily” car vlogging.
In the timeline of automotive media, V8TV landed right at the transition point where enthusiasts stopped just looking at photos on forums and started watching serial video content.
V8TV’s Key Milestones
- 2004: Kevin and Kelle Oeste founded V8TV Productions. At this point, they were focused on high-quality television production rather than just web clips.
- 2005 (Early Television): V8TV officially aired its first television episodes on the Dish Network. This predates the “vlog” boom and established them as a professional authority in the muscle car space.
- October 2006 (The Daily Weblog): This is where they made history. V8TV published what they call their “First Daily Video Weblog.” They documented the build of the “Royal Sport” Camaro for the 2006 SEMA show.
- September 2007: They officially launched their YouTube channel, migrating their episodic television style to the platform where it could live permanently and reach a global audience.
Why V8TV was Different
While other early creators were posting 30-second clips of burnouts or “first starts,” V8TV was doing serial storytelling. Because they came from a background at Hot Rod Magazine TV, they applied television-quality editing and hosting to the internet. When they started the “Royal Sport” Camaro blog in late 2006, they were essentially inventing the “Project Car Series” format that dominated YouTube a decade later.
Where They Sit in the “Firsts”
- First muscle car clip? No, those were scattered on forums in the early 2000s.
- First professional muscle car restoration vlog? They have a very strong claim to this title. Their 2006 daily weblog of the SEMA Camaro build is one of the earliest documented “modern-style” vlogs where a host takes you through the step-by-step grind of a build.
Chat GPT Agrees:
V8TV is actually one of the earliest and most important examples of long-form muscle car restoration and build video content that predates most YouTube-era “restoration vlogs.”* It occupies a transitional place between traditional television shows and the online vlog-style documentation that became common with YouTube.
Origins & Timeline
- V8TV Productions, Inc. was founded in 2004, and the very first V8TV television episode was completed in March 2005, followed by the show debuting on Dish Network in April 2005.
- Importantly for vlog history, V8TV published its first daily video weblog documenting a restoration project (the “Royal Sport” Camaro build) in October 2006. That build video blog (essentially a series of online restoration updates) coincided with the preparation for the 2006 SEMA Show.
- The V8TV YouTube channel launched in September 2007.
Why V8TV Matters in Restoration Content History
Before YouTube’s explosive growth after 2005, most car restoration content lived on television networks or automotive DVD series. V8TV was unusual in that it:
- Documented real restoration builds and modified muscle cars with ongoing video content intended for public consumption — not just finished broadcast segments.
- Started publishing web-accessible video logs in 2006, which places it before a lot of the first hobbyist or enthusiast channels on YouTube.
- Transitioned this content to its own YouTube channel in late 2007, where it became part of the early car-enthusiast video ecosystem long before channels dedicated solely to online restoration builds were common.
Where V8TV Fits Relative to Other Early Automotive Content
- YouTube launched in 2005, and early automotive channels like Mighty Car Mods didn’t begin until about 2008 or later.
- Many traditional restoration or rebuild shows were televised first, but they didn’t always publish consistent online video blogs — which is what V8TV was doing by 2006.
First V8TV Video Blog Building The Royal Sport 1969 Camaro for 2006 SEMA Show Part 1 October 3, 2006
Forgive the lo-res video.. but this was uploaded nearly 20 years ago!
While we never claimed to be the first, we are certainly fortunate for the opportunities we’ve had to produce automotive video and TV content all these years, and appreciate our loyal followers and V8 Speed and Resto Shop customers for joining us! If you’re not a subscriber, click the link below to subscribe to our YouTube, social channels, and email newsletter so you never miss an update from V8!





















