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As a 'returning' guitarist I like Brian Kelly, www.zombieguitar.com. No nonsense style (I find Justin and Paul Davids a 'over familiar' ) Loads of lessons I could cherry pick and it meant I could get up to speed on the theory side quickly.
He's also doing 1-2-1 (send him video of your self for advice etc. ) on Patreon now (although I havent tried that yet).
He also makes a massive amount of stuff available for free on his site and on Youtube so you can see if you like it before signing up for the site or patreon but when I got my membership it was half the price of a Paul Davids course
I think that in-person lessons would be better than online, but even via zoom or skype, having someone listen to you and offer feedback is something that online courses are lacking (although Fender Play is introducing their Feedback mode, which listens to your playing and gives you a score and visualisation of your note and tempo accuracy, which seems to work pretty well).
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A YouTube video can't talk back and give you feedback on your playing, whereas I can see and hear what you're playing and give advice and even correct anything I see that's not right. I've taught a learner who I've never met before in real life from scratch and he can play 30 songs. This isn't an accident. So it depends on the quality of the teacher and how good they can communicate the concept, regardless of whether they're behind a screen or in front of you in the room.
I signed up to an online chord melody course, which took place via live Zoom meetings every week for six weeks I think. It was absolutely terrible.
I would probably go for one to one and just pay as you go for lessons, don't sign up to a six or eight week course etc. If you don't like the teacher then at least you can change quite easily, instead of being locked into lessons that you've paid for and you don't like the teacher.