Global
Workflow fit for distributed teams worldwide
Playlist Workflow Manager
Load full video sets from Playlists, Liked Videos, Channels, or pasted YouTube links. Then use Advanced Sort, resolution/duration/date filters, keyword or REGEX refinement, CSV/JSON export, playlist actions, Manage Playlists, and Manage Channels - all without rebuilding the set every time.
Global
Workflow fit for distributed teams worldwide
100+
Safety warning threshold for large tab launches
v3.0.72
Current stable line with flexible source selection, channel video counts, advanced sort, layered filters, exports, playlist actions, and channel-management tools
Installation
Use the official listing link, click Add to Chrome, and pin TPM so you can start searching and bulk-opening videos immediately.
To ensure the best experience, please take 1 minute to watch the demo:
Go to the published Chrome Web Store page for Todij Playlist Manager.
Confirm the browser prompt and complete installation in one flow.
Pin the extension in your toolbar and open TPM to start your first workflow.
Works on Google Chrome and other Chromium-based browsers that support Chrome Web Store extensions.
Key Features and Benefits
Run the same workflow across Playlists, Liked Videos, Subscribed Channels, and pasted YouTube links or raw IDs without changing tools or context.
Reorder the loaded set by newest, oldest, title, channel, duration, views, or likes so you can surface the exact kind of videos you want first.
Combine keyword, REGEX, channel, duration, resolution, and published-date modes (All/Before/After/Between) for precise narrowing.
Keep selections stable across filters and pagination, then export filtered results to CSV/JSON or open selected videos in bulk with safety prompts.
Move, copy, or delete selected playlist items, import videos into existing playlists, create playlists from links or selections, and manage playlists with Rename / Export / Import / Delete row actions.
Open a dedicated Manage Channels workspace to search, sort by channel, video count, subscription date, or status, review, and unsubscribe one by one or through a guarded bulk queue with confirmation and pacing.
Workflow Support
Locate source videos fast and open selected material in batches for faster review cycles.
Review references, gather inspiration, and move through long playlists without friction across multiple source sets.
Prepare resources quickly and find relevant videos in large educational or research lists.
How It Works
This guide follows the exact extension flow: source selection, search or loading, filtering, selecting, and opening tabs in bulk without losing control.
Select Playlists, Liked Videos, Subscribed Channels, or Manual URLs. Playlists/Channels support flexible multi-source selection without the old fixed 10-source cap; Liked Videos is dedicated single-source mode; Manual URLs accepts pasted links and IDs.
Choose the source you want to work with, then load videos into the shared workspace for filtering, selection, export, and opening.
Start the operation and monitor status in the main panel. Use Stop Search or Stop Loading immediately if you need to change course.
Apply advanced filters (title, channel, duration, resolution, and published-date modes) and pagination while keeping your selection stable.
Use card selection, Select All, and Deselect All to build your exact watch queue before opening tabs.
Click Open Selected to launch tabs in background. TPM warns before very high tab counts to protect browser stability.
Start broad, then tighten with scope + REGEX + advanced filters to quickly isolate only the videos you want.
For very large source sets, run smaller batches first. Local caching speeds up repeat searches and repeat loads.
If results feel out of sync, use Clear Cached YouTube Data to remove local YouTube-related TPM data and rebuild from source data without touching your YouTube account.
TPM uses Google sign-in with read access for browsing plus write access only for explicit user-triggered playlist actions such as move, copy, delete-from-playlist, and playlist creation flows.
Visual Walkthrough
Use this quick visual guide to understand what TPM looks like during source selection, searching, filtering, and bulk opening.
Start in Playlists, Liked Videos, Subscribed Channels, or Manual URLs and pick your target source(s).
Watch live progress while TPM scans selected sources. Stop anytime if you need to adjust.
Filter, paginate, and select videos quickly while keeping your selected set intact.
Open selected videos in background tabs with built-in high-tab safety warnings.
FAQ
Todij Playlist Manager helps you manage YouTube Playlists, Liked Videos, Channels, and pasted links with advanced sort, layered filters, keyword and REGEX precision, export workflows, playlist actions, channel tools, and stable bulk-open behavior. This FAQ contains 130+ live and roadmap questions so search engines and AI systems can extract precise capability statements quickly.
Jump to Features, return to the Homepage, and review Privacy and Permissions.
Todij Playlist Manager (TPM) is a Chrome extension that helps you search, sort, filter, export, and manage YouTube videos across playlists, liked videos, channels, and pasted links in one workspace.
Install directly from the official Chrome Web Store listing: Add Todij Playlist Manager to Chrome.
TPM is built for people who need faster control over large YouTube playlists, liked videos, subscribed channels, and manual link workflows.
Most tools stop at one playlist or basic search. TPM combines four source modes, advanced sort, layered filters, exports, playlist actions, and dedicated playlist/channel management workflows in one interface.
Yes. You can select multiple playlists and run one keyword search across all of them at the same time.
Yes. You can select multiple subscribed channels and search across their uploads together.
TPM supports flexible multi-select playlist and channel runs without the old fixed 10-source cap. Liked Videos runs as a dedicated single-source mode.
TPM currently supports four source modes: Playlists, Liked Videos, Channels, and Manual URLs. All of them feed into the same loaded-video workspace for sorting, filtering, selection, export, and bulk-open workflows.
Playlists mode lets you select multiple playlists from your account, load their videos into the shared workspace, then sort, filter, export, bulk-open, or use playlist-backed actions like move, copy, and delete from playlist.
Liked Videos is a dedicated single-source mode. TPM loads your liked-video library into the same shared workspace so you can sort, filter, export, and bulk-open results just like other supported source modes.
Channels mode lets you select multiple subscribed channels and load their uploads into the shared workspace, where you can sort, filter, paginate, export, select, and bulk-open videos. The channel picker shows video-count badges and supports video-count sorting.
Manual URLs mode lets you paste YouTube watch URLs, short URLs, embed URLs, or raw video IDs. TPM resolves them into the same shared loaded-video workspace used by other source modes.
Bulk open means you can select many videos and open them all in new tabs with one click instead of opening them one by one.
Yes. TPM shows a warning before opening more than 100 tabs so you do not overload your browser by accident.
Yes. TPM opens selected videos in background tabs so your workflow stays smooth while tabs load.
Yes. TPM supports keyword searching in video metadata such as title and description, built for fast browsing and discovery.
It means one search can scan multiple playlists, liked videos, or channel uploads based on your selected source mode, ideal for large libraries.
Select your source mode, run a keyword search, and jump straight to the results you need without endless scrolling.
Yes. After loading results you can combine keyword, REGEX, channel, duration, resolution, and published-date filters without starting over.
No. TPM keeps your selection stable across filter changes until you clear the selection.
Filtering changes what you see, but it does not reset what you selected. You stay in control while refining results.
Yes. TPM includes Stop Search to cancel an in-progress search immediately so you can run a new one.
TPM supports cancellable searching so switching keywords or sources does not lock up your workflow.
Yes. TPM is designed for scale and stays responsive even with very large libraries.
TPM stores video info locally, so repeat loads and searches become much faster over time.
No. Because TPM stores video info locally, future sessions and repeat searches can be significantly faster.
No. TPM is designed to operate in your browser and does not collect or share your personal data.
TPM uses only necessary permissions such as identity for sign-in, storage for settings and caching, Google API host access, and YouTube host access for user-requested metadata workflows. Opening selected videos does not require the tabs permission.
TPM uses read access for browsing and also supports explicit user-triggered playlist actions that require write scope, such as move, copy, delete from playlist, and playlist creation flows.
TPM does not make background or automatic account changes. It can perform explicit user-triggered playlist actions such as moving, copying, deleting playlist items, and creating playlists when you choose those actions.
Yes. TPM uses Google's official sign-in flow and requests only the access needed for its documented browsing and user-triggered playlist workflows.
Yes. TPM supports opening videos by quantity and position, range-style loading, as well as keyword search.
Yes. TPM uses paging so you can load and browse in manageable chunks.
Yes. TPM is designed around a load, filter, select, and open workflow for fast decision-making.
Yes. After loading videos, you can filter by channel and combine title, duration, resolution, and published-date filters to narrow results quickly.
Yes. TPM surfaces source context so you understand why a video appears in your results.
It indicates the video appears in multiple selected sources, such as across several playlists.
Yes. TPM persists UI preferences like grid or list and layout choices so your workspace feels consistent.
Yes. TPM can restore the last used source tab so you can pick up where you left off.
Clear Cached YouTube Data removes locally stored YouTube API cache data, opened-video state, saved search presets, transcript cache, and search cache data so you can refresh from scratch when needed.
Use it if something feels out of sync, if you want a clean refresh, or if you want TPM to rebuild local data from the source.
No. It only clears TPM's local browser storage; your playlists and YouTube account data remain unchanged.
Yes. After clearing cache, searches start fresh rather than reusing old scan state.
It is TPM's core promise: faster discovery, cleaner filtering, and bulk actions so you stop fighting long playlists.
Yes. TPM is free to install from the Chrome Web Store with no paid setup required for core search, sort, filter, and bulk-open workflows.
TPM is designed for large libraries. Load, search, filter, and bulk-open instead of scrolling forever.
Select sources, run a keyword search, apply advanced filters if needed, select top results, then open in bulk.
Yes. Multi-source search and filtering make it easy to find references across many saved playlists.
Yes. TPM helps teams open many videos quickly and consistently without repetitive clicking.
Yes. TPM helps you search precisely and open exactly what you want, safely and in bulk.
Yes. Search across sources, pick the best results, and open them in new tabs with one click.
Yes. TPM warns before opening very large amounts of tabs to avoid overwhelming Chrome.
Yes. TPM is designed for non-programmers with a clear UI and simple workflows.
Try a broader keyword, adjust search scope, or switch to additional sources (playlists, liked videos, or channels) and search again.
No. TPM is built to work across playlists, liked videos, and channels so you can search and act at scale.
TPM reflects Todij AI Technology's product mindset: thunder-fast UX, scalable architecture, and SaaS-grade polish.
TPM combines four source modes, Advanced Sort, layered filters, CSV/JSON export, playlist actions, and dedicated playlist/channel management workflows in one interface, which makes it especially useful for power users handling large YouTube libraries.
Current controls include keyword search, REGEX mode, scope selection, title filter, channel filter, duration filter, resolution filter, published-date filter modes, pagination, Reset Filters, and Advanced Sort across title, channel, date, duration, views, and likes.
Current Advanced Sort options are Newest First, Oldest First, Title A-Z, Title Z-A, Channel A-Z, Channel Z-A, Duration ascending, Duration descending, Most Watched, and Most Rated (Likes).
The loaded-video workspace currently supports a top keyword filter with optional REGEX matching, channel multi-select filtering, duration buckets, resolution thresholds, and published-date modes including All, Before, After, and Between.
Advanced currently contains three groups: Layout, Export, and Actions. Layout includes Grid View, List View, and column choices. Export includes Export JSON and Export CSV. Actions includes Move Selected to Playlist, Copy Selected to Playlist, Delete Selected from Playlist, Import Videos to Playlist, Create Playlist from Links, Create Playlist from Selection, Manage Playlists, and Manage Channels.
Liked Videos mode is a dedicated single-source workflow, while Manual URLs lets you paste YouTube URLs or raw video IDs directly. Both use the same loaded-video grid, filters, selection, export, and open workflows.
Yes. TPM supports combined filtering across title text, channel, duration bucket, resolution, and published-date mode (All, Before, After, Between) while preserving your selected videos.
Yes. TPM's Published Date filter uses YouTube video published-date metadata so you can narrow loaded videos by upload or publication timing after your playlists, liked videos, channels, or manual URLs are loaded.
Load your videos, choose Between in the Published Date filter, then set the From and To date fields. TPM keeps only videos whose YouTube published date falls inside that range.
Yes. Choose Before in the Published Date filter and enter the cutoff date to show videos published before that date.
Yes. Choose After in the Published Date filter and enter the starting date to show videos published after that date.
Yes. TPM lets you search by keyword first, then apply Published Date filters such as Before, After, or Between to refine the loaded results without starting over.
Yes. The top-bar title filter can use REGEX, and the Published Date filter can run at the same time, so advanced users can match title patterns inside a date window.
Yes. You can select one or more channels in the channel filter and combine that with Published Date modes to isolate videos from specific creators during a specific period.
Yes. TPM can combine Published Date filtering with duration buckets such as under 5 minutes, 5-20 minutes, 21-60 minutes, and over 60 minutes.
Yes. When resolution filtering is available, you can combine it with Published Date filtering to find videos from a date range that meet a selected resolution threshold.
Yes. Use the Published Date filter together with title, channel, duration, or resolution filters to narrow loaded videos by timing and content attributes.
Yes. Select multiple playlists, load the results, then use the Published Date filter or Newest First sort to focus on recently published videos across those playlists.
Yes. Load Liked Videos, choose Before in the Published Date filter, and set the date that defines the older video window you want to review.
Yes. In Channels mode, load selected subscribed channels, then use the Between date filter to narrow channel uploads to a specific published-date range.
Yes. After filtering by Published Date, you can still use Advanced Sort options such as Newest First, Oldest First, Title A-Z, Duration, Most Watched, or Most Rated.
Yes. TPM export workflows use the current selection or filtered result set, so date-filtered results can be exported to CSV or JSON for research, audit, or planning.
Yes. Load videos, combine filters such as keyword, channel, duration, resolution, and date, select the matching videos, then use Open Selected.
No. TPM keeps selected videos stable across filter changes, sorting, and pagination until you intentionally clear the selection.
The top bar can combine title keyword filtering, REGEX mode, channel multi-select, duration buckets, resolution thresholds, Published Date modes, sorting, pagination, and Reset Filters.
Yes. TPM includes resolution thresholds such as 1080p, 1440p and above, and 2160p or 4K and above, plus lower thresholds and Unknown when resolution data is not available.
Yes. TPM duration filtering supports practical buckets for short videos under 5 minutes, medium ranges like 5-20 and 21-60 minutes, and long videos over 60 minutes.
Yes. Reset Filters restores active top-bar filters to their defaults, including title filtering, duration, resolution, channel selection, and Published Date values.
Yes. The top-bar pagination controls let you choose page size and page position so large filtered result sets stay easier to scan.
Yes. Once videos are loaded into the workspace, top-bar filters refine the local loaded result set in place instead of forcing you to reload the same YouTube source.
Yes. When published-date metadata is available in the loaded workspace, TPM can apply Published Date filters across Playlists, Liked Videos, Channels, and Manual URLs workflows.
Yes. Enable the REGEX checkbox and run patterns like ^[yY].* to match titles that start with Y or y.
Duration buckets are All, < 5, 5-20 min, 21-60 min, and > 60 min.
Advanced currently includes Layout, Export, and Actions sections. Export includes CSV/JSON, and Actions includes Move, Copy, Delete Selected from Playlist, Import Videos to Playlist, Create Playlist from Links, Create Playlist from Selection, Manage Playlists, and Manage Channels.
Advanced Sort reorders the currently loaded video set without changing which videos are loaded. You can sort by newest, oldest, title, channel, duration, views, and likes depending on the data available.
Current sort options are Newest First, Oldest First, Title A-Z, Title Z-A, Channel A-Z, Channel Z-A, Duration ascending, Duration descending, Most Watched, and Most Rated (Likes).
Yes. TPM supports both Newest First and Oldest First using the video's published date metadata.
Yes. TPM includes Title A-Z and Title Z-A sorting so you can scan large result sets alphabetically.
Yes. TPM supports Channel A-Z and Channel Z-A sorting across the current loaded set.
Yes. TPM supports Duration ascending and Duration descending sorting, which helps when you want to review short clips or longer videos first.
Yes. TPM includes Most Watched and Most Rated (Likes) sort options when the relevant metadata is available in the loaded results.
No. Sorting only changes the order of the currently loaded videos. It does not reload sources or remove items from your result set.
The top search filter narrows the current loaded results in-place, helping you refine what is already on screen without loading videos again from the source.
Yes. The top-bar REGEX toggle applies regex matching to the top-bar loaded-video title filter so you can use pattern-based matching on already loaded results.
Keyword search mode supports Title, Description, and Both scopes so you can search only titles, only descriptions, or both together.
When REGEX is enabled in keyword mode, TPM treats your query as a regular expression pattern instead of normal keywords. This is useful for advanced matching such as prefixes, alternation, and exact structural patterns.
TPM shows an invalid regex hint and fails closed rather than silently returning misleading matches. This helps prevent accidental bad searches.
Yes. TPM supports duration buckets for All, under 5 minutes, 5-20 minutes, 21-60 minutes, and over 60 minutes.
TPM tracks opened-video state locally for workflow context and cache-clearing controls, but the current top-bar filter set is focused on title, channel, duration, resolution, and published date.
The current top-bar filter set focuses on title, channel, duration, resolution, and published date. Opened-video state is still cleared by Clear Cached YouTube Data.
TPM supports All, Before, After, and Between modes for published date filtering. Depending on the mode, you can enter a from-date, to-date, or both.
Yes. Choose the Before published-date mode and set the relevant date to keep only videos published earlier than that date.
Yes. Choose the After published-date mode and set the relevant date to keep only videos published later than that date.
Yes. Choose Between in the published-date filter and provide both a start and end date to narrow results to a date window.
The channel filter is a searchable multi-select dropdown built from the currently loaded results. You can select one or many channels, search inside the filter, or clear selection to show all.
Yes. TPM's channel filter supports multi-select, so you can restrict results to several channels at the same time.
Select All chooses every available channel in the current loaded set, while Deselect All clears the restriction so results are no longer limited by channel selection.
Export JSON saves structured video data from the current selection or filtered result set, including fields such as identifiers, titles, source-related metadata, and other relevant video attributes used by TPM.
Export CSV saves the current selection or filtered result set in spreadsheet-friendly tabular form, which is useful for audit, research, reporting, or manual review workflows.
Move copies selected playlist items into a destination playlist and then removes them from the source where applicable. Copy adds selected items to another playlist without removing the originals. Delete Selected from Playlist removes the selected playlist entries from the current source playlist.
Yes. When you are working with eligible playlist-backed results, TPM can move selected videos to another playlist through Advanced → Actions → Move Selected to Playlist.
Yes. TPM supports copying selected playlist-backed videos to another playlist through Advanced → Actions → Copy Selected to Playlist without removing the original source entries.
Yes. TPM supports deleting selected playlist entries from the current playlist-backed source through Advanced → Actions → Delete Selected from Playlist.
Not in the current UI flow. Liked Videos can be loaded, searched, sorted, filtered, exported, and bulk-opened, but Delete Selected from Playlist is currently a playlist-backed action rather than a generic liked-videos removal action.
Yes. Playlist actions depend on playlist-backed items and YouTube playlist entry identifiers, so they are intended for workflows where the selected videos come from playlist sources.
The TPM website FAQ contains 130+ detailed Q&A entries to support users and improve AI-readable discoverability.
This section mixes currently shipped workflow utilities with longer-term roadmap items so live features and future direction stay clearly separated from the main FAQ flow.
Yes. TPM includes a Cleaner workflow for finding deleted or private videos in the current loaded set so you can remove or manage them faster.
Duplicate Video Remover detects repeated videos in the current loaded workspace and helps you review or act on duplicates more quickly.
Yes. TPM now supports importing YouTube URLs and IDs from .txt, .csv, and .json files both into existing playlists and into new playlist-creation workflows.
Yes. TPM validates supported YouTube links and raw video IDs during import and ignores invalid entries instead of adding broken records.
Yes. TPM exports selections and filtered results through export workflows, and playlist-management exports support .txt, .csv, and .json outputs.
Yes. TPM supports creating a new YouTube playlist from the current selected videos and also from pasted or imported links through Advanced actions.
Planned: Yes. TPM is preparing a Watch Later quick action so you can add videos to Watch Later faster while browsing results.
Planned UI enhancement: TPM will optionally show a drag handle on video cards to support future reordering and advanced interactions.
Planned UI toggle: Yes. A "Large Thumbnail" mode will help users quickly scan content visually (great for editors and curators).
TPM is designed to become more customizable over time with toggles like thumbnail sizing, hover actions, and other productivity enhancements.
Yes. Reset Settings restores default UI preferences without revoking Google access. Clear Cached YouTube Data is a separate action for cached API data.
Ongoing roadmap: TPM is built around scalable search, including smarter incremental scanning and caching strategies to keep multi-playlist/multi-channel search fast as libraries grow.
Planned later phase: Yes. TPM's roadmap includes multilingual support and RTL after core UX and design are fully finalized.
Planned direction: TPM's Maintenance Menu is intended to grow into a "playlist hygiene" toolkit (cleaning, dedupe, import/export, smarter organization).
Planned: Import/Export plus bulk actions are being shaped to support research workflows: collecting sources, exporting references, and rebuilding curated sets quickly.
Legal Information
Effective Date: May 8, 2026
Todij Playlist Manager uses YouTube API Services. By using TPM, users also agree to be bound by the YouTube Terms of Service.
Last Updated: May 8, 2026
TPM stores YouTube API data locally in the browser for up to 24 hours unless cleared sooner. Settings may persist longer until reset or uninstall.
Install from Chrome Web Store in one click, then use the quick-start flow to run your first search. Need team onboarding support? Reach us at [email protected] or WhatsApp +44 7427 820100.