10 Incredible Moments Caught On Camera REACTION | OFFICE BLOKES REACT!!

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 16 січ 2023
  • Join this channel to get access to perks:
    / @officeblokes
    linktr.ee/TheOfficeBlokes
    Comment Below with More Reaction Ideas!
    Show some support and sign up to our Patreon for exclusive videos not on UA-cam, Access to our Banned Videos and to guarantee we react to your request
    Email - officeblokesreact@gmail.com
    Link to original video: • 10 Incredible Moments ...
    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. ALL RIGHTS BELONG TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS
  • Спорт

КОМЕНТАРІ • 142

  • @Ecl1pse09
    @Ecl1pse09 Рік тому +26

    8:40 Hail is deadly, especially for the one with softball/baseball size. If it’s strong enough to put dent in car and breaking windows, it definitely can practice a few skulls; the bigger they are, the worst the damage, like all thing. Hails is basically a dense/compact ball of ice, and it’s heavy. So imagine something that big and heavy fall from thousands of ft in the air hit you. That velocity will definitely put you in hospital

    • @smallsparry
      @smallsparry Рік тому +4

      I remember that day. I was trapped in the Salon I was working at.
      We all stood inside and watched as every single one of our cars were trashed. Broken windshields and dented hoods. It was crazy!

  • @anirtakgaming
    @anirtakgaming Рік тому +6

    lol, I am from Plano Tx with the falling water tower, I moved away when I was 19 and I am 30 now so I haven't lived there for several years but it's funny it made it onto the list.

  • @Kjetilstorm
    @Kjetilstorm Рік тому +10

    The first time I saw lightning, we were on a nature retreat. it hit a tree behind the cabin and I remember the most annoying thing was that I couldn't seem to unsee it for 2 or 3 days. It's hard to explain but every time I blinked I could see something that looked like bright tree roots.

  • @mfree80286
    @mfree80286 Рік тому +13

    4:15 This always gets under my skin.. the engine didn't stall, the wing stalled. Air's a lot thinner at 16,000 feet and all the extra drag of the parachutists and the flaps being deployed took it under stall speed and it simply lost lift.
    ED: Picked through and found the ident ZS-OHB, and google came up with a story that indeed, too many jumpers outside. Not so much drag though, but all the bodies shrouded the left elevator (as well as moving the center or gravity aft) and the plane pitched up beyond control authority and stalled. Elevators push the tail up when CG is aft, which is not what they're intended for to begin with, so when there's no airflow over one the tail drops... meaning the nose pitches up, a wing drops, and suddenly you're in a spin.

  • @Bunch007
    @Bunch007 Рік тому +7

    I follow the weather, A LOT. I love thunderstorms and love sitting out on the porch with a coffee while a storm rolls by. But short term on how hail works is the UP draft in a storm. It raises the precipitation so high in the storm that it freezes into hail. The hail will fall when the hail is heavier than the updraft. So, the bigger the updraft in a storm, the bigger the hail will be.

    • @04m6gto
      @04m6gto Рік тому

      Partially true. The size of the hail will also depend on the the freezing level, temperature gradient beneath that level, and the melting that occurs before reaching the ground. Storms can have strong updrafts, but the hail produced can still be minimal or nonexistent.

    • @madeincda
      @madeincda Рік тому +2

      I'm pretty sure, too, that the larger diameter hail is the result of the same water droplets riding the updraft multiple times, and as a result it freezes multiple layers of water onto itself making it heavy enough to fall.

    • @04m6gto
      @04m6gto Рік тому

      @@madeincda This is exactly right. You'll see this, as well, when you look at a hailstone. It looks exactly like a bunch of smaller stones melded together.

  • @lisahumphries3898
    @lisahumphries3898 Рік тому +47

    For the sky diving one, I picture the people inside the plane being tossed around as the plane spinned. Maybe they couldn’t get out.

    • @jeffreykelley8598
      @jeffreykelley8598 Рік тому +9

      Centrifugal Forces had them pinned against the inside walls of the fuselage until the pilot regained control and flew out of the stall thus releasing the forces holding them. If you look closer one more comes out the plane just as it disappears in the clouds....

    • @jeffreykelley8598
      @jeffreykelley8598 Рік тому +2

      If you're ever lost grip on a merry go round and we're thrown of it. That's Centrifugal Forces at work..

    • @Bravo-Tango
      @Bravo-Tango Рік тому +2

      Yeah, very hard to jump out of a plane when it’s doing anything other than coasting without turbulence

    • @rukus9585
      @rukus9585 Рік тому +1

      I agree, it stalled before they got out and were trapped.

    • @biffbarely7045
      @biffbarely7045 Рік тому +2

      @@jeffreykelley8598 Yeah, and they'll be cleaning the vomit out for weeks 😁

  • @bmbandit
    @bmbandit 2 місяці тому

    Just found your channel. I actually remember that hail storm as I've lived in Phoenix all my life. It really came out of nowhere. I remember a ton of people got windshields replaced on cars, and got their roof replaced due to all the damage.

  • @_WeDontKnow_
    @_WeDontKnow_ Рік тому

    16:12 i was waiting for the entire thing to start moving forward from the propulsion in the back 😂

  • @andrewvalentine6977
    @andrewvalentine6977 Рік тому

    I feel the 1st clip with the parachutists is the very definition of "I'm alright Jack".

  • @michaelm.1947
    @michaelm.1947 Рік тому +8

    It was cool seeing the train in the snow. I've been on the inside of the engine blowing through snow drifts in the Palouse region of Washington before, but never have seen what it looks like for anyone outside the train.
    Side story: Years ago, Burlington Northern Railroad bought a jet engine and mounted it on a flatcar (IIRC) intending to use it as a snowblower. I'd only seen it sitting in the yard - don't recall seeing it in action. Don't know what ever happened to it, but I'd heard rumors that it didn't work as well as hoped (there were maintenance issues, I think?).

    • @Peg__
      @Peg__ Рік тому

      I can see how it was a maintenance issue. My partner was a jet engine mechanic for the airlines for decades. From what I understand, RR workers aren't paid or treated fairly, so bringing in engines as a snow blower, would mean the RR would have to pay the mechanics their fair Union wage and that would make RR owners look bad for not being fair to their own workers.

    • @michaelm.1947
      @michaelm.1947 Рік тому

      @@Peg__ "the RR would have to pay the mechanics their fair Union wage"
      I don't know what the maintenance staff got paid, but if it's anything like the guys riding the rails, they were paid very, very well. The problem is in scheduling, days off, long stints away from home, etc. When I was there, it seemed like the workers did every little thing they could to screw the company and vice versa.

  • @petersloan581
    @petersloan581 Рік тому

    I’m from Plano, TX and I have no recollection of the falling water tower. Plano is a suburb, right outside of Dallas, blokes!

  • @brianmoore6724
    @brianmoore6724 Рік тому +1

    strength of the storm determines the size of the hail. Water starts to fall, gets sent back up into the cloud by the updraft, freezes, begins to fall again and begins to melt, gets sent back up into the cloud by the updraft and refreezes and gets bigger and continues this process until it gets heavy enough to fall out of the updraft and down to the ground. And yes they can kill

  • @davidterry6155
    @davidterry6155 Рік тому +2

    In 2016 a town real close to had softball size hail. It punched holes through walls and roofs. When you drove through that area in the following days you could tell who lived in that area by the holes in their front and back windows

  • @ORagnar
    @ORagnar Рік тому +2

    8:06 The way I understand it, hail is formed when ice is continually forced back up into the atmosphere by strong winds and slowly more and more ice builds up on it forming a bigger and bigger ball of ice. Eventually it falls to the ground and sometimes reaches softball sizes. That has to be able to kill you, but I've never heard of anyone dying from hail. .o0

  • @Marndarrr
    @Marndarrr 9 місяців тому

    Y’all should check out the Plano balloon festival. Nothing huge, but a really fun hot air balloon festival held yearly that’s been iconic to the town since before I was born. Can be stunning from the right angles, like when you’re 7 and jumping on a trampoline while they float right over your house. My elementary school’s hallways were covered in murals of the balloons.
    Plano has fairly rich parts and fairly poor parts. Lots of homeless. Born and raised there, so I love the town. Less so the picky traffic cops.

  • @Ecl1pse09
    @Ecl1pse09 Рік тому

    3:05 Trevor Jacob: Exactly!!! Your honor, I rest my case

  • @rmlrl1971
    @rmlrl1971 11 місяців тому

    3 people have died from hail storms in the US. Colorado 2017 we got hit with some hurricane force winds. These winds destroyed roofs. A yr later in 2018 after having roofs replaced, we got hit with massive hail. Roofs had to be replaced. Insurance companies dropped so many homeowners due to excessive claims in a short amount of time.

  • @lukejohnson6798
    @lukejohnson6798 Рік тому +1

    i was living in phoenix when the hail happened. it was actually on my 8th birthday the storm came, october 5th. we went to peter piper pizza and were the only ones in there, what a time

    • @lukejohnson6798
      @lukejohnson6798 Рік тому

      our windshield also got broken during that hailstorm, shit was unbelievable

  • @StackRunItUp
    @StackRunItUp Рік тому +2

    Three OB videos a day keeps the boredom away.

  • @Marndarrr
    @Marndarrr 9 місяців тому

    I didn’t know they knocked down the Plano water tower (my hometown down the street) until I saw it in your thumbnail. So sad they demolished it, it was so pretty.

  • @michaelhoward142
    @michaelhoward142 Рік тому +1

    13:40 (Chinese building demolition) It's always interesting to me that certain words (or sounds) like "ooh!" or "woah!" are pretty much universal in all languages.
    15:39 (First luxury Wal-Mart) "Wal-Mart" and "luxury" will always be oxymorons.

  • @karenthompson8038
    @karenthompson8038 Рік тому

    And when you hale like that, and usually comes right before a hurricane, but the best thing to do is just cover your head with your arms if you have an umbrella, that would be nice even though the umbrella is going to get ruined, at least it protects your head a little bit. Luckily, hail doesn’t last very long! You just say about 10 minutes maybe 15 but even when you cover your head, your arms are going to be bruised and possibly break one of your arms, but it’s better than breaking your head.

  • @d2ndborn
    @d2ndborn Рік тому +3

    Love the footage of the train, that was awesome!

  • @sparkysjoint1616
    @sparkysjoint1616 Рік тому

    terra cotta roofs are massively popular in Arizona which is no bueno against 100 mph ice balls. Massive damage.

  • @dougbowers4415
    @dougbowers4415 Рік тому

    In spite of the enormous crop and property damage that hailstorms cause, only three people are known to have been killed by falling hailstones in modern U.S. history: a farmer caught in his field near Lubbock, Texas on May 13, 1930; a baby struck by large hail in Fort Collins, Colorado, on July 31, 1979; and a boater on Lake Worth, Texas, on March 29, 2000.

  • @BTinSF
    @BTinSF Рік тому +1

    Hailstorms like this break car windscreens and dent up the cars themselves so I expect it could kill someone. We had two storms similar to this in my area of Tucson, AZ last summer. Broke lots of skylights and damaged many roofs.

  • @Rocco1332
    @Rocco1332 Рік тому +3

    With the skydiving, I assume it's dangerous to jump from an out of control plane, easily be struck by it. It is better to see if you can at least level it off if there is time. With the hail, there have been fatalities, but only a handful. I remember it hailing during one of my highschool ballgames. Was fairly small hail but so much that the entire infield was covered in minutes, couldn't see the dirt. Shortly after, it melted, and the field was nothing but mud.

  • @skittles5347
    @skittles5347 Рік тому

    When I saw the rocket engine test video, I wanted to reach for a stick, some marshmallows, and a couple of ball park franks... 😂

  • @jaycooper2812
    @jaycooper2812 5 місяців тому

    In the first clip the skydivers were the reason that it stalled. When you have 8 guys hanging on the outside of the aircraft like that it created a disturbance in the air around the left wing root causing the wing to lose lift from the disturbed airflow. Hopefully the pilot had enough altitude to be able to recover from their stupidity.

  • @04m6gto
    @04m6gto Рік тому

    With the skydiving video, the stall was of the plane itself, not the engines. Every airplane has a "stall" speed. The speed at which the air moving around the wings is no longer generating lift. Once this happens, the plane falls out of the sky. If you have enough altitude, which was obviously the case in the video, you just direct the plane downwards until you gain enough speed to generate lift again. Intentionally stalling an aircraft is actually a part of all pilot training.

  • @pablozee6359
    @pablozee6359 Рік тому

    “Tornado Valley, USA” lol.

  • @conorstewart2214
    @conorstewart2214 Рік тому

    During the eruption of Vesuvius that destroyed Pompeii, it was raining gravel for hours before the main eruption, I think that would be worse than hailstones.

  • @betsyduane3461
    @betsyduane3461 Рік тому +1

    A storm occurring near Moradabad, India, on 30 April, 1888. This hail event is said to have killed as many as 246 people with hailstones as large as ‘goose eggs and oranges’ and cricket balls.

  • @rgood66
    @rgood66 Рік тому +2

    at 4:09 the engine didn't stall, that's an aerodynamic stall. When air flow over the wing is too slow to create lift.

  • @syre97
    @syre97 Рік тому

    Thank you for calling my country stunning 😊🇿🇦

  • @iceman590444
    @iceman590444 Рік тому

    As for #2 I have felt that feeling twice second time it was closer that video did it perfect there was milliseconds between the light and the thunder it is fucking terrifying... The cracking sound... I don't ever want to hear it again it took me a good 2 hours to calm down

  • @dougbowers4415
    @dougbowers4415 Рік тому

    The lunar module is propelled by several thrusters like small rocket engines that either lift the module or control its descent. Propellers would serve no purpose on the moon where there is no atmosphere. Propellers depend on the displacement of air which is impossible where there is no air.

  • @inhumanjoey310
    @inhumanjoey310 Рік тому

    The Blokes are some cool brothas

  • @jaycooper2812
    @jaycooper2812 5 місяців тому

    The Lunar Lander has it's own rocket engine.

  • @Justin-gm2fi
    @Justin-gm2fi Рік тому

    Crazy, I live 30 minutes away from Mossel Bay lol

  • @ranger-1214
    @ranger-1214 Рік тому

    Armstrong's training came into play. The autopilot had them landing on a rocky spot on an angle of a crater. He went to manual and piloted safely to a spot about 500 meters away. He and Buzz Aldrin, the co-pilot of the module and second man to walk on the moon, don't have stones - - those are coconuts.

  • @bigron725
    @bigron725 Рік тому

    During the late afternoon of May 5, 1995, a large cluster of severe storms approached the DFW Metroplex. These storms produced extremely large hail, damaging winds, and heavy rainfall as they passed over Tarrant County. The hail swath included the bank of the Trinity River where the outdoor festival, Mayfest, was in progress. The storms caused an estimated $2 billion in damages in Tarrant and Dallas counties. This event remains one of the costliest hail storms in history.
    The storms struck Mayfest at 7:10 pm, where over 10,000 people were caught in the open with little shelter. Hail up to the size of softballs fell, resulting in over 400 injuries. There were no fatalities at the festival, although 60 people suffered serious injuries requiring hospitalization.

  • @bombud1
    @bombud1 Рік тому

    The plane had a stall spin. He had a slight turn when he pulled up during slow flight and the left wing stalled before the right wing. He had plenty of altitude to recover. As long as he's above 5500ft he's got time.

  • @paulcochran1721
    @paulcochran1721 Рік тому

    The LLRV was only used on earth. It had an air breathing jet engine pointing down with thrusters to control its attitude. Neil lost thruster propellant and / or fuel for the thrusters and that made it go out of control. The LLRV did NOT land on the moon as stated in the video, that was the LM, or lunar module, a completely different machine.

  • @jaycooper2812
    @jaycooper2812 5 місяців тому

    Golf ball sized hail has killed people. One of my neighbors was caught in a bad storm and the hail fractured his skull in 3 places.

  • @braders790boop
    @braders790boop Рік тому

    I did some number comparisons and it appears that a single rocket launch is roughly equivalent to what 1000 cars usually emit in a year in terms of co2 output. 140 rocket launches in 2022, means that it was the equivalent co2 of 140,000 cars driving 10,000km. adding up all the testing, manufacturing, transport etc, I wouldnt be suprised if the figure is much higher.

  • @TheTussman
    @TheTussman Рік тому

    If you live in the US/CAN, you'd call that Spanish tornado a l'ill puppy.

  • @Levi_Amongst_the_Watchers
    @Levi_Amongst_the_Watchers Рік тому +1

    Hail storms have been known to kill cattle, horses and other livestock so I'd imagine that it could kill a human.

  • @RogueNL
    @RogueNL Рік тому

    Hearing Daz say “godverdomme”… ❤️

  • @davidhull8046
    @davidhull8046 Рік тому

    When I was a kid in south Africa, some guy died on Christmas day after getting hit in the head by a hailsone in Johannesburg. They are the size off grapefruit. No shit.

  • @gregorywright2798
    @gregorywright2798 Рік тому

    Well, People say Tornadoes Sound like Freight Trains they sure do. But that is a Small Tornadoes Compared to the Ones in America.

  • @Levi_Amongst_the_Watchers
    @Levi_Amongst_the_Watchers Рік тому +1

    Rockets are the source of propulsion in the lunar lander.

  • @Charlee1776
    @Charlee1776 Рік тому +1

    Best part = Where not even Mike remembers the name of the guy named Mike from the video. 🤣

  • @mustafaahsan1999
    @mustafaahsan1999 Рік тому +1

    Blokes please react to 'Asian PS4 delivery fail prank' by Ownage Pranks, you guys will enjoy it.

  • @michaeldey1894
    @michaeldey1894 Рік тому

    That said, let's now examine larger hailstones typically found in severe thunderstorms that range from quarter to golf ball size. These stones can reach speeds of 25-40 mph.

  • @LancerX916
    @LancerX916 Рік тому

    My guess is the G forces in the plane stopped those on the inside from getting out. The way the plane was spinning most likely pinned them to the walls.

  • @ORagnar
    @ORagnar Рік тому

    25:08 When Neil Armstrong had to land that on the moon he almost wasn't able to, because he had a hard time finding a good landing spot. .o0

  • @ItsAVolcano
    @ItsAVolcano Рік тому

    Most of those unfinished skyscrapers had a ton of building defects, it's quite clear at least 1/3 of them were likely pure scams that would never have functioned.

  • @bondzo7184
    @bondzo7184 Рік тому

    Yeah over 2 million people live in queens, over 8 million in NYC also over 2 million people live in Brooklyn alone

  • @wildnate02
    @wildnate02 Рік тому

    You guys should watch the chiseled Adonis cowboys vs buccaneers highlight commentary video. It’s hilarious😂

  • @gregorywright2798
    @gregorywright2798 Рік тому

    The Simulator that Neil Armstrong flu on Earth was not the lunar lander! It was the simulate, So Niel could Practice the Movements of Lunar Lander. This Simulator had a jet engine on a Gimble which used air and had little directional jets so Niel could Guide it while He tries to Gain Practice time. Look Up Lunar lander and You will see it's quite different from the Simulator!!!

  • @jeremyjdl713
    @jeremyjdl713 Рік тому

    Plano Texas is a nice area. A lot of nice new cities/suburbs north of Dallas.

    • @FLQueerLiberal1982
      @FLQueerLiberal1982 Рік тому

      But it's still in Texas. Like I've got room to talk. FL is turning out worse than TX.

  • @petermalutin7407
    @petermalutin7407 Рік тому

    nice....a narrator that we can understand.

  • @user-tv4uc4nh2c
    @user-tv4uc4nh2c Рік тому

    The old man is "not sure " a lot 😉

  • @jehoiakimelidoronila5450
    @jehoiakimelidoronila5450 11 місяців тому

    Uh, about Neil's training vehicle, have y'all forgot that it's powered by jet engines...if you haven't figured it out? Just how backwards are your noggins to think it's powered by propellers, mateys? 😂😂😂

  • @karenthompson8038
    @karenthompson8038 Рік тому

    Seriously they call that a tornado? Yeah come to tornado alley in the United States during September and let’s compare! That’s a baby a little dust twister there but I’m sure it’s scary to them because they’re not expecting it. He’s right, it does look like the dementors from Harry Potter!

  • @dimetime35c
    @dimetime35c Рік тому +1

    Not all bad from the Aries one rocket. The solid rocket boosters from that program are what's now powering the SLS producing roughly 3.6 million pounds of thrust each for a total of 7.4 million pounds at lift off.

    • @weezydoots8468
      @weezydoots8468 Рік тому

      Huh My daughter working on solid rocket boosters Cape Canaveral. Artemis. Was on shuttle rocket boosters.

    • @dimetime35c
      @dimetime35c Рік тому

      @@weezydoots8468 yes but they were upgraded to be more powerful. They thrust was increased.

    • @weezydoots8468
      @weezydoots8468 Рік тому

      @@dimetime35c Just wondering if you maybe work with her
      I don't understand particular of her job LOL

  • @ItsDefOver9000
    @ItsDefOver9000 Рік тому

    Crazily enough Queens (2.4 million) isn't even the most populous borough. That would be Brooklyn (2.7 million). If they were independent, they'd rank 3rd (Brooklyn) & 4th (Queens) on the list of most populous cities. Goes to show how disproportionately populated NYC is relative to the other cities in the top 5.

  • @kingbrutusxxvi
    @kingbrutusxxvi Рік тому

    I can't believe some company spent all that time prepping 21 skyscrapers to be demolished. They were made in China so they probably only needed a good shove. ;-)

  • @TreyM1609
    @TreyM1609 Рік тому +1

    Yayyyy!!!

  • @stavperides2060
    @stavperides2060 Рік тому

    246 people on record have died as a direct cause of hail stones

  • @emwungarand
    @emwungarand Рік тому

    "Is he still in it?"
    Not sure but someone else jumped out literally half a second before you asked that. You can see if you look closely.

  • @paulweber1095
    @paulweber1095 Рік тому

    Most jumps are at 10,000 feet I think, Thats what I did in Aruba.

  • @04m6gto
    @04m6gto Рік тому

    Yes, hail can kill people, and has. Baseball sized hail can hit the ground at baseball speeds of around 100 MPH. Hail can also be up to 8 inches, or so, in diameter and weigh more than a kilo. Imagine taking a grapefruit to the head at 100 MPH......ouch.

  • @indowneastmaine
    @indowneastmaine Рік тому

    Mike Akers! 🌩⚡

  • @randychase305
    @randychase305 Рік тому

    The deadliest-known hailstorm lashed the Indian city of Moradabad in 1888, dropping hail the size of oranges. By the time the storm had moved on, 246 people lay dead.

  • @johnmonk66
    @johnmonk66 Рік тому

    Video one, both engines stalled at the same time? It were they filming a movie?

  • @betsyduane3461
    @betsyduane3461 Рік тому

    Propellors? The lander had jets underneath, they almost ran out of fuel on the first moon landing.

  • @gardenlover9663
    @gardenlover9663 Рік тому

    Where did they put all the rubble from those buildings?

  • @TheForsakenEagle
    @TheForsakenEagle Рік тому

    19:26 HOW DARE YOU!?!

  • @Kenneth_James
    @Kenneth_James Рік тому

    That was Neil Armstrong's training vehicle. It was hydrogen peroxide powered I believe. It was engineered so that one engine would take 5/6th of Earth gravity away and the rest would be controlled by thrusters by Armstrong.

    • @caterpillakilla
      @caterpillakilla Рік тому

      seriously curious though how that technology was working (kinda jankily) but still hovering and then it took til this decade to “sortve”master jetpacks.

  • @caterpillakilla
    @caterpillakilla Рік тому

    The hail isnt that crazy for that area. I lived in Denver for a bit and they get random 5-15 minute hail storms in summer with paintball to golf ball sized hail. its there and then gone. every corner has a dent removing mechanic shop

  • @caterpillakilla
    @caterpillakilla Рік тому

    I dont know how I feel about living in a “lifestyle complex”

  • @daggerwulf338
    @daggerwulf338 Рік тому

    propellers wouldnt work on the moon anyway since it has no atmosphere for the propellers to spin against

  • @merakki
    @merakki Рік тому

    Why am I getting American Ads when I'm watching blokes television.

    • @LancerX916
      @LancerX916 Рік тому +1

      Ads are based on the region you are in, not the nationality of the channel.

  • @donaldmccombs5566
    @donaldmccombs5566 Рік тому

    I've never jumped at less then 10,000ft.

  • @protonneutron9046
    @protonneutron9046 Рік тому

    the practice lunar lander used rockets

  • @brandonhinrichs4393
    @brandonhinrichs4393 Рік тому +1

    Compared to the central and south central united states that was the weakest tornado I've ever seen

  • @Blondie42
    @Blondie42 Рік тому +3

    12:30 I cannot believe that the narrator just said "lead train car" instead of engine or locomotive

    • @c_n_b
      @c_n_b Рік тому +1

      You can't believe some people don't use correct train terminology? That's weird.

    • @Blondie42
      @Blondie42 Рік тому

      @@c_n_b I can't believe that you're not educated

    • @vaahtobileet
      @vaahtobileet Рік тому

      how unbelievable!

  • @rx7dude2006
    @rx7dude2006 Рік тому +1

    Lets see how many rocket about 70 per year which is a tiny tiny fraction of pollution almost un measurable.

  • @jaheedi
    @jaheedi Рік тому

    When are you doing a second video of playing basketball? Play a game of horse or two bounce

  • @user-hi1is7sc9c
    @user-hi1is7sc9c Рік тому

    Lol. Rockets are fueled by hydrogen....so that stuff is not really the "smoke" that is produced by burning refined oil. What's hydrogen plus oxygen in a violent reaction?

  • @Chyrnobyl66
    @Chyrnobyl66 Рік тому

    filming a tornado tearing through a bunch of greenhouses seems like a good way to catch a metal pole to the face

  • @betsyduane3461
    @betsyduane3461 Рік тому

    How is a planned event caught on camera?

  • @OzzyCoop
    @OzzyCoop Рік тому

    An F.004 tornado.

    • @OzzyCoop
      @OzzyCoop Рік тому

      Also "sky literally falling" triggered me.

  • @emwungarand
    @emwungarand Рік тому

    revoke Dave pause priviledges.

  • @karenthompson8038
    @karenthompson8038 Рік тому

    And that rocket somebody’s like abort abort do you know what gas prices are?

  • @Squeaky-oy1fl
    @Squeaky-oy1fl Рік тому

    You should react to some of the USA country music musicians, like Buddy Brown and Alen Jackson along with others.

  • @jodo7814
    @jodo7814 Рік тому +1

    “When Christopher Columbus set sail for America”
    Oh yah, of course he knew where that continent was. It’s why he called native Americans Indian right?
    Just one of many critiques held back after watching this catastrophe of a narration.
    Gonna stop being mean now.

    • @FLQueerLiberal1982
      @FLQueerLiberal1982 Рік тому

      No, don't stop being mean. You are absolutely right. Asians found it first. I really, really hate it when Columbus is given credit, or even the possibility of vikings that beat HIM to parts of it. The proto-natives from Asian regions beat them by thousands of years. And their descendents populated all of the Americas until Europeans showed up.
      Edit: some people just don't like the truth.

  • @Chyrnobyl66
    @Chyrnobyl66 Рік тому

    maybe im old, but when did "ko-may-ah-may-ah" become "commie-hommie-ha" ?