@@user-bn2st5kx8h there were kings or one king in particular( which I dont remeber) that actually took small amounts of poisons daily to develop a immunity against it, so its possible to tank it
*google* : The short answer is that both spellings are correct. Dammit and damn it are two variations that mean the same thing, with dammit being the more phonetic spelling since you don't pronounce the N in damn it.
I had all but one of my kids recently get taken out by a plague. Ironically my oldest kid, my daughter who wouldnt have inherited, never caught the plague even though literally everyone including me did.
Chewkz... you need a Emmy bruh. No lie. You have the most creative ways of getting me engaged with your videos. I hope your creativity continues to bloom and doesn't go unnoticed 💜
What a greek chef told me was that the clink is just for the senses. You already have touch, sight, taste, and smell with your drink so clinking the glasses together gives you the fifth sense. A tradition around before Medieval Europe :)
The whole "poison sharing" is just foolish anyways. There are some poisons that have very high toxicity, but even then, I wouldn't bet that a drop in the other party's cup would be significant indicator that my drink isn't poisoned. I can't even express my thoughts properly on how this would even make logical sense over time. It would have to stem from someone poisoning someone, then cheers, then death for this to be the explanation, which then puts you into a chicken and the egg scenario.
@@Anextgameis1229 I have a feeling it was another way to show wealth. "Here let us clink our fine crystal cups together so the poor people can hear us"
Also the "clinking" of glasses originated in the medieval days when wine was often spiked with poison as the sediment concealed it quite well. If a host wanted to prove that the wine wasn't poisoned, he would pour part of the guest's wine into his glass and drink it first. If the guest trusted his host he would just clink glasses when the host offered his glass for a sample. Hence the clinking of glasses has become a sign of trust, honesty and toast to good health.
It really wasn’t it was working class people mimicking the aristocracy and somewhere along the line they started making contact with the glasses. And then producers started making films with it in. Upper classes still think clinking glasses is a faux pa.
To clarify, you were to pour a bit of the drink into the hosts glass to ensure it wasn’t poisoned. But if you trusted the host and wanted to forego this, you would touch glasses but not pour any in as we do today. It symbolizes we trust each other
I heard that clinking of glasses goes back to ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt. Back then, they drank their beer from a large shared glass through straws. It was an important cultural practice and social event. Once the process for making beer was refined, people would use individual glasses. But they clinked glasses to symbolize the shared glass that started everything. I’m sure there are a number of reasons and no one really knows, but this is my favorite explanation.
It says online that clinking the glasses is to show that you trust that the host didn't poison it, so he like tries to switch glasses to taste to show that he hadn't poisoned it and you kinda clink the glass away to be like "don't stress it bro I trust you 100"
"Why do we clink glasses when we toast? In most cultures, there existed some form of honoring the gods before drinking. Wine was commonly offered in exchange for good health. The act of clinking them together would spill some to leave behind for the gods, or perhaps to bribe evil spirits to leave you alone." "The origin of the toast, Myth and tradition To answer the question, we’ll dispel a myth. You may have heard that the tradition of toasting originated out of a fear of poisoning- the idea being that clinking two glasses together would cause the liquid from both to spill into one another; thus, the people you’re drinking with wouldn’t poison you as they’d then be poisoning themselves. However, there is no evidence to support this assumption. In fact, most ancient societies show evidence of doing this. For instance, as early as the 6th Century B.C., the Ancient Greeks would offer libations to the Gods as a ritualistic practice, as well as make a point of drinking to each other’s health. The Romans placed such an importance on drinking to health that at one point in time the Senate passed a decree that stated that all must drink to Emperor Augustus at every meal."
It’s also been said that mugs/glasses were clinked together, sometimes accompanied by shouts and cheers or banging the mug on the table, with the purpose of warding off evil spirits
Vassal: My lord, I bought you this famous wine! King: I don't drink alcohol. Vassal: What? King: Yeah, after I went crazy last time I swore it off. Vassal: ...(Quickly pulls out dagger) For the Duke!
Well in history theres like 5 dfiferent origins and reasons people would clink glasses, From proving you were using crystal instead of glass, In one origin clinking the glass was the opposite of this, you would like clink glasses to signify that you trust the poured drink and dont require the guest to sample it
Not exactly true. Your're actually offering your guest your glass. His clink against your glass is his indication that he is satisfied with his own glass and that he trusts your hospitality.
I’ve heard this story about “cheers” before but I’m skeptical and wonder if it’s just a post-hoc explanation rather than actually being true. I wonder what the earliest citing of this explanation is, and what it’s based on.
I feel like I’m in a matrix. I just had a flying thought today about why we clank our glasses when we cheer, and suddenly this video pops up as soon as I open YT.😬
Hold up. Lil bro just walked in there with a posion drink expecting big bro king to swap drinks with him? So he knew it was likely poison and still drank it. And final bro litterally saw little bro die from having a little bit of his drink mixed into the glass and still drank.
I was fully expecting that last guy to just tank it
Yeah right..makes no sense
@@user-bn2st5kx8h Mithridates VI of Pontus microdosed poison until he became immune
@@user-bn2st5kx8hthats what makes it comedic
@@user-bn2st5kx8h there were kings or one king in particular( which I dont remeber) that actually took small amounts of poisons daily to develop a immunity against it, so its possible to tank it
@@kanalbenenner7830 He fell victim to one of the classic blunders
Imagine watching two people be poisoned, and then still drinking your drink.
Right!?
666th like
imagine giving up on your drink just bc your drinking buddies are lightweights 🥱
Lightweights 😩😩
He thought his drink was the only one poisoned so he switched it to be safe, well he was wrong
Bro sealed his fate at the end 💀
Cheeky bugger! 🍻😂💀
Stealed his faith is crazy 😭
Jesus loves you. He is your savior. Repent for the kingdom of God is at hand!!!!!!
@@josephjoshuamadine1293Wrong comment section
@@josephjoshuamadine1293Stop spreading your cult brainwash. Thanks.
"to me as king now"
*drinks*
"ah goddamnit"
Edit: thanks for the likes lads
"Damnit" isn't a word.
*google* : The short answer is that both spellings are correct. Dammit and damn it are two variations that mean the same thing, with dammit being the more phonetic spelling since you don't pronounce the N in damn it.
@@justamatchstick7535 In other words, I'm correct, and "damnit" still isn't a word. Thanks.
@@billydelacey in other words 🤓🤓🤓👆
@@billydelaceyNERRRRRD!!!!!!!!!!
"I appreciate your..... sudden generosity"🙏🏾 💀
🥂
🥂
@@thelocalguest awe 😂☠️ tryna sneak in some poison are we? Back off my king!
The face and sound the king made when he died is the funniest thing I've seen all day. And the last guy just went into an invisible elavator.
the undercase "aaaaarghhhh"
'Invisible elevator' 😂😂😂😂😂😂
average crusader kings 3 playthrough ._.
So... No heir?😅
@@DBT1007 rubs hand and laughs while started a murder scheme
I had all but one of my kids recently get taken out by a plague. Ironically my oldest kid, my daughter who wouldnt have inherited, never caught the plague even though literally everyone including me did.
Fr
@autisonm holy shit maybe monarchs really are chosen by God
I swear at this point I don’t let a single short pass because it might turn into a chewkz skit 😂
What an absolute turn that took 🥂
forgive me if I'm being rude but you could just check the username of who posted the short
Chewkz... you need a Emmy bruh. No lie. You have the most creative ways of getting me engaged with your videos. I hope your creativity continues to bloom and doesn't go unnoticed 💜
frfr
What a greek chef told me was that the clink is just for the senses.
You already have touch, sight, taste, and smell with your drink so clinking the glasses together gives you the fifth sense.
A tradition around before Medieval Europe :)
The whole "poison sharing" is just foolish anyways. There are some poisons that have very high toxicity, but even then, I wouldn't bet that a drop in the other party's cup would be significant indicator that my drink isn't poisoned.
I can't even express my thoughts properly on how this would even make logical sense over time. It would have to stem from someone poisoning someone, then cheers, then death for this to be the explanation, which then puts you into a chicken and the egg scenario.
I have heard the version with the engaging the fifth sense as well. I like that version.
@@Anextgameis1229 I have a feeling it was another way to show wealth. "Here let us clink our fine crystal cups together so the poor people can hear us"
@@saladdressing2781 This tradition existed long before cristal or glass cups.
Not to mention the people who directly poisoned the glass, plus taste testers existed for a reason@@Anextgameis1229
I love how he took a really dumb theory and made an amazing skit out of it 😂
Oh no, it's real Look up the Borgia's the family of Pope Alexander VI
you do realise the king in this died from nothing. his glass had no poison
@@PoshYoshii62think the idea is that his brother poisoned the glass and was hoping to swap with him all along
Just found this channel and I'm addicted😅 cheers mate
I would be SO HAPPY to see this guy in a real crown-war-series!!😁
"Lightweights"💀. Then sips too
This reminded me CalebCity's skit of the in-game character dying from drinking water too fast xD
Also the "clinking" of glasses originated in the medieval days when wine was often spiked with poison as the sediment concealed it quite well. If a host wanted to prove that the wine wasn't poisoned, he would pour part of the guest's wine into his glass and drink it first. If the guest trusted his host he would just clink glasses when the host offered his glass for a sample. Hence the clinking of glasses has become a sign of trust, honesty and toast to good health.
“I appreciate your..SUDDEN GENEROSITY” made me cackle 😂
Bro forgot he had to poison his drink to poison the kings and then he killed himself 😂
Wow. This guy’s gorgeous and statuesque. Looks like a king for sure. God bless❤️
😂😂😂 i love it, especially the last guy
It really wasn’t it was working class people mimicking the aristocracy and somewhere along the line they started making contact with the glasses. And then producers started making films with it in. Upper classes still think clinking glasses is a faux pa.
It's crazy that you made a whole skit out of a historical fact 😂😂👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
"cheeky buggers are ya.." comes walking in like he's jack the lad. Lol
''Sudden Generosity" cracked me
To clarify, you were to pour a bit of the drink into the hosts glass to ensure it wasn’t poisoned.
But if you trusted the host and wanted to forego this, you would touch glasses but not pour any in as we do today.
It symbolizes we trust each other
Solid acting (: "ooh-ah-eeh *croak..."
(Finally some lighthearted entertainment among these shorts)
While we’re at it, let’s talk about handshakes, putting our hands on the table, and our elbows off the table.
the british accent bro😂😂
Did you know he’s actually British?
whos gonna tell him
I appreciate your SUDDEN GENEROSITY 😂😂😂
I heard that clinking of glasses goes back to ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt. Back then, they drank their beer from a large shared glass through straws. It was an important cultural practice and social event. Once the process for making beer was refined, people would use individual glasses. But they clinked glasses to symbolize the shared glass that started everything.
I’m sure there are a number of reasons and no one really knows, but this is my favorite explanation.
He drank a little bit of that poison, increasing amounts every day, until he was immune.
The sound of the poison when it flows into the other cup is just cheff's kiss
Okay this was really cute. :)))
And people tell me i'm clinking too hard, i'm just an honorable guy.
I thought it was to prove how valuable the glassware was by how it chimed when clicked together
Yeah I think that poison bit makes no sense at all.
“They were both poisoned, I spent the last few years building up an immunity to iocaine powder.”
*Smashes glass into other glass*
It was invented when there where only wood or metal cups, glass cups came much later ...
Lolol idk why that got me so good, but it did hahaha love it!
It says online that clinking the glasses is to show that you trust that the host didn't poison it, so he like tries to switch glasses to taste to show that he hadn't poisoned it and you kinda clink the glass away to be like "don't stress it bro I trust you 100"
dang bro had that "INCONCEIVABLE!" moment before dipping off screen
I caught that Stardust poison scene reference. 😂 brilliant
3 different dead animations, good job! My favourite was number 2, so comical!
It wasn’t for that it just sounds good. This is a myth and a story but there is no formal evidence for it
Yeah it’s interesting how stories can just permeate society as being true.
Cheers!
"Why do we clink glasses when we toast? In most cultures, there existed some form of honoring the gods before drinking. Wine was commonly offered in exchange for good health. The act of clinking them together would spill some to leave behind for the gods, or perhaps to bribe evil spirits to leave you alone."
"The origin of the toast, Myth and tradition
To answer the question, we’ll dispel a myth. You may have heard that the tradition of toasting originated out of a fear of poisoning- the idea being that clinking two glasses together would cause the liquid from both to spill into one another; thus, the people you’re drinking with wouldn’t poison you as they’d then be poisoning themselves. However, there is no evidence to support this assumption.
In fact, most ancient societies show evidence of doing this. For instance, as early as the 6th Century B.C., the Ancient Greeks would offer libations to the Gods as a ritualistic practice, as well as make a point of drinking to each other’s health. The Romans placed such an importance on drinking to health that at one point in time the Senate passed a decree that stated that all must drink to Emperor Augustus at every meal."
Fully expected this to be Crusader Kings 3 sponsorship
The way bro reduced. 😹😹
i had to watch twice to understand whether the last guy was innocent or not lol
It’s also been said that mugs/glasses were clinked together, sometimes accompanied by shouts and cheers or banging the mug on the table, with the purpose of warding off evil spirits
Got that "Oh I should not have done that." look.
"sudden generosity" is so funny 💀
How is the last guy even a king 😭. Bro saw TWO people go down and STILL drank it🫠
"Long live me... I'm sorry... I poisoned your wine. For the good of the land"
"I poisoned yours... aswell"
"To me being king 😎"
Proceeds to say the english vowels 😂😂
😀I was expecting the third king to figure it out after the second king bit it.🤷🏾♀️Missed opportunity for good character and plot development.🤦🏾♀️😆
Yo my google voice assistant went off when he said sudden generosity 😭😭
The last one won the Darwin award
I knew it was all over when he came in with the British Accent!
Inception level comprehension... I can't bro😂
This is a theory about where cheers came from but it’s far from confirmed. There are several other proposed origins that are equally plausible
Has this ever happened in history? Everyone poising each other at the same time?
“Cheeekyyyy 🍔s” 🤣😂🤣
Such a good take on a urban legend.
Its supposed to be like that scene in the bar from beauty and the beast, beer is kinda supposed to slosh around everywhere
I love a happy ending!
Well, there was some type of peace in the end
And another Kingdom 👑 become history.
The cleaner comming afterwards: "Oh not again..."
Mate's playing Rise of Kingdoms IRL.
Hence the origin of the toast: "to your health"
"It's all poison"
"Always has been"
Hold up… the first music being played is the same music Luxintrus used right before she summoned the wardens on CSMP!
Okay, whoever the first clip was is completely wrong, but I enjoy their confidence.
The last one deserves it! 😂😂😂😂
Why was the brother coming in with his own drink poisoned already?? 😂😂
Vassal: My lord, I bought you this famous wine!
King: I don't drink alcohol.
Vassal: What?
King: Yeah, after I went crazy last time I swore it off.
Vassal: ...(Quickly pulls out dagger) For the Duke!
I thought this was sponsored by Crusader Kings 3 for a sec 😅
The Greeks clinked glasses in order to scare away negative spirits.
we 3 kings of mortum are drinking wine in our temple of doom
"it runs in the family"
nope, you are supposed to run from the family
literally just the ending of Hamlet
Cheers
Well in history theres like 5 dfiferent origins and reasons people would clink glasses,
From proving you were using crystal instead of glass, In one origin clinking the glass was the opposite of this, you would like clink glasses to signify that you trust the poured drink and dont require the guest to sample it
His last thoughts weren't about being posiend but realized he was also a light weight
I love when people go on podcasts and pass off untrue or speculative bullshit as fact.
Cheeky buggers. Best British accent ever
That's why you stare at cheers then drink
Not exactly true.
Your're actually offering your guest your glass. His clink against your glass is his indication that he is satisfied with his own glass and that he trusts your hospitality.
(FORTINBRAS enters.)
FORTINBRAS: what the fuck
I’ve heard this story about “cheers” before but I’m skeptical and wonder if it’s just a post-hoc explanation rather than actually being true. I wonder what the earliest citing of this explanation is, and what it’s based on.
“Man dont smashed the pints so hard look all our beers are on the floor”
Me, who fears of getting poisoned: “sorry I got too excited, Waiter!”
I feel like I’m in a matrix. I just had a flying thought today about why we clank our glasses when we cheer, and suddenly this video pops up as soon as I open YT.😬
just give them a Bo'Oh'O'Wa'er they'll be fine
Hold up. Lil bro just walked in there with a posion drink expecting big bro king to swap drinks with him? So he knew it was likely poison and still drank it. And final bro litterally saw little bro die from having a little bit of his drink mixed into the glass and still drank.
History channel
This is the story of how history's first gay (Rome and Juliet) committed su*""ide.
Acting of Netflix level... Well done!
The mono got to all of them!
The clinking glasses doesn't really work because you can build a tolerance to certain poisons
That king is from a netflix special.
It was a viking tradition made for wooden beer mugs. Obviously not for glass.