I completely understand the nature of a loaded question; my own assumption is that no one worth their weight in common sense would answer one, or accept a yes/no response, without scrutiny of the facts to clarify and unload it. In tstorm's example, "yes" and "no" are not the only, least of all "best," responses to "have you stopped beating your wife." I'd personally say "I've never beaten my wife." Then we'd be discussing facts and dismissing presupposition as any good faith inquisition should proceed.Those aren't all the reasons a loaded question may be asked. Loaded questions are also sometimes intended to mislead. A loaded question may not be a lie, but it can imply to the reader that the presupposition is confirmed and true, depending on context.
Now, I don't think Legal Eagle's loaded question title is intended to mislead. Video titles are short by practical necessity, and I think there's an understanding that anyone watching the video is smart enough to know that a possible answer to the question is, "no time at all". But it should've been titled something else (though I hardly think this is a significant issue).
But let's face it; the semantics aren't lost on those like tstorm; it's just convenient to dismiss anything against their grain by throwing around malicious labels when confronted when something contrary to their liking.