I have done it many times. Get to altitude, trim for hands off climb, cut power. Always the exact same thing happens. Nose drops to maintain airspeed that aircraft is trimmed for. No stall.
The whole push-the-stick-or-die thing is partially a myth, and partially a teaching method to force pilots to remember not to pull back. Because yes, if you lose your engine and respond by pulling back to hold altitude, you will stall and die.
This is not a model specific thing. It is basic aerodynamics. People who don't know basic aerodynamics should perhaps not make YouTube flying videos.
One good exercise is to trim for best rate of climb, which in most aircraft is the takeoff mark, and then fly laps in the pattern without changing it. You will find you can control pitch, airspeed, and vertical speed almost entirely with throttle. Just need a little back pressure at rotation, flare, and turns. Lesson: an airplane wants to fly at the speed it is trimmed for, and will seek the pitch necessary to do so.