i got to admit, you got a talent where you could answer a question that i wouldnt have asked in a million years and make it interesting, i am sure if you only used 1 percent of your brain in something relevant, you would find the cure for cancer.
Grey got Lost in the Forest of all Knowledge again. This time He discovered the woods of Parish Registers and Familie trees. All because someone made the wordplay of Tiffany epiphany.
This honestly feels like the most quintessentially "Grey" video in a while. Thoroughly researched, genuinely interesting, and completely irrelevant to my daily life.
My 5-yr-old daughter is named Tiffany. She loved every minute of this, watching with wide eyes bright with excitement. She said, "He made a video about me!!"
The funniest part about this all is that I watched this video AFTER the sequel....and the fact that the poem is nowhere to be seen cracked me up despite being the one to cause you much pain.
I feel like Grey’s channel has turned from a mostly history related channel, into an embodiment of the “Wait… how did I get here??” sentiment we all have when falling down the UA-cam rabbit hole. I love it.
I feel like the turning of “I really don’t care about this” into “why do I actually *really* care about this” is solidifying as the niche of this channel. Love it
you and I are the only people who remember the singer Tiffany. There were thousands of us, it was once common knowledge. But alas, I think we're alone now
Let's not forget Grey traveled to another continent just to find a museum of an old dead person closed, then went into a cementery to find an old person's grave.
The dinosaur eating historical records is the most accurate metaphorical description of any historian's feeling when trying to desperately find just even one source of a historical element.
In case you are a historian, I have a question: how does one even find potential sources, let alone access them? Are a lot of them replicated or digitized? Grey said that he looked at basically anything and everything that seemed like it could've been a list of names, but how might he have found them, do you think?
@@yuuri9064 It really depends on your subject matter. Generally speaking, the Industrial Revolution with its explosion in literacy and writing made it so that there are many, many sources on, say, WWI. Once you get to the Early Modern period (the time between the discovery of America and the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, reading and writing becomes a hobby and means of communication of the church and the remaining other social elite. Even though common people often had some basic understanding of reading, their oftentimes everyday writing basically never got preserved, as you wouldn't preserve your shopping list, for example. So, to finally answer your question. If you are just looking for new information, grab a handbook and check out the sources cited within, working your way down to the originals. If your subject matter is of some interest, chances are someone wrote an index of sources (which is not the case in the Tiffany question). Finally, if you've gone through all of the paper trail that exists and all of the secondary literature, you have to do very basic work yourself. This means going to archives, reading old church records, that kind of thing. However, this is like looking for a needle in a haystack and most historians do NOT do this, unless it is their personal field of highest experience and it has basically become their main source of work. As an example, a naval historian on the Spanish Silver Fleets might have an intricate knowledge on, say, the naval archives of Sevilla, where he personally scanned or transcribed many hundreds of pages from Early Modern ship and freight records, analysing those and publishing articles or even books on it. I hope this helps.
I love how Grey's video topics are, increasingly, selected primarily based on the strength of the alliterations and rhymes he can use in them. "a Tiffany epiphany"
AAAAH!!!! I just saw the Scotichronicon!!! The hints! The Hearne Hints! The Hidden Hearne Hints! The hidden Hearne hints half-heralding a horoscope of heroic historiography only revealed today!
"And here is the Philosopher's Stone, the Godhead of Reason, the Alchemical Heterodyne, the Sacred Hermaphro . . . dammit, Grey, stop taking notes about the Shrub of Tiffany!"
people: "omg you need to make more videos!" grey: **literally puts 400 hrs of research and scripting into an 9 minute alliterate video about "tiffany" that no one knew they needed**
@White wolf maybe so, but its hard to chase relevant topics when it takes a month or even more to finish a single video. And I personally wouldn’t like it if he started talking about current politics like the US election and start a war in his comments. Grey fits in right where he is
@White wolf I really like the random deep dives into obscure topics. There are a lot of other people doing the more relevant topics, but few really excel in Grey's niche.
@White wolf That will make him no different than any other channel that does trending topics. Grey is doing well staying in this niche so frankly talking about the pandemic or current politics isn't unique at all.
@@Engieman909 not to say that he shouldn't do this but let's be honest, this isn't reaallly a historical video, it's a fictional entertainment piece based on a few facts of the time, yes it's well researched but you could say game of thrones is well researched... covering different more relevant topics don't necessarily have to be current events. it could be the description of the life of someone living in different areas to give perspective of why certain beliefs are the way they are in certain areas. division is a problem relevant to current day, so a video to address division could literally be a video based on the lives of nobility vs the lives of a commoner in ages past and talk about their different interactions what they heard, learned, society productivity roles. personally though I think it's fine to give entertainment for entertainments sake but I can see why the other commenter would like more relevant videos.
If you ever want someone to understand the butterfly effect, show them this video. Random guy moves to America, suddenly thousands of people are named Tiffany a couple hundred years later.
This is actually unironically a topic I really enjoy, there's just something really fun about perceived anachronism when history actually had a lot more things we just assume couldn't have or didn't exist then.
Ridley Scott had to remove a sequence involving merchants sponsoring gladiators from the movie Gladiator because even though it was (as far as we can tell)m a thing that happened, studio execs thought it would be too anachronistic.
Yeah, it seems like a lot of the time people think that the people of the past were idiots, not just ignorant of modern knowledge. They came up with a lot of clever ideas and applications of what they did know that are really fascinating, since even without our modern knowledge they were for the most part just as smart as people today.
@@LordOOTFD yeah, it’s kind of like how people think that people thought the earth was flat till recently, the greeks knew about it and even calculated the circumference with surprising accuracy edit: spelling
Grey is exactly the right kind of crazy. I point my students to his videos for what REAL research looks like; spiraling down irrelevant rabbit holes when trying to research larger topics.
Which is how I ended up stumbling upon the origin of the word "tarmac" while trying to figure out whether it was, in fact reasonable for an R-2800 to fail catastrophical after 5 minutes at 66" with methanol water injection. Yes, that's a real thing...
I love this kind of "irrelevant" research, because it's totally relevant. It's human history. The fact people call it "irrelevant" is incredibly sad. What else that we consider important today will be called irrelevant tomorrow? It's exactly how history is lost. Every bit of human history is worth holding on to.
I swear, I absolutely CANNOT predict what subject this guy is going to cover next. Voting, nuclear weapons, medieval names...his next video could be either about colonising the moons of Jupiter or how turnips are farmed in Uzbekistan and I wouldn’t be surprised!
I can't honestly believe Grey decided it was worth picking up and reading "Transcripts of Charters relating to Bilbertine houses" just for 30 seconds of video content.
That's what's history is most of the time. Sometimes it's even more tomes and even less knowledge, not to mention the trouble you have to go through to get to see some of them.
@@miobiuscrimson2828 Tome: the sound my brain makes when it realizes that in it's quest for the grail of knowledge it must suffer a journey through perilous caverns of dry verbiage.
I feel betrayed... He went on and on and on about how it must always be spelled _Sharks!_ And then he just.. doesn't?! My disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined! Ruined I say!
People who haven’t seen this video’s sequel: “aww this is a cute, simple video!” People who have seen this video’s sequel: “My deepest apologies, Grey.”
Grey’s Wife, Tiffany: “Babe, you didn’t forget my birthday, did you?” Grey: *snaps out of Forest of All Knowledge induced haze* “Wha-of course not! Here, I made a video all about you!”
Grey's super power is an overwhelming addiction to solving history mysteries. Grey's super weakness? An overwhelming addiction to solving history mysteries.
I've just came back from the newest video about the poem and I just realized there's a Scotichronicon laying under Grey's desk from 5:34 onwards. Those details!
As a Gen Z Tiffany, I appreciate this. Thank you. I carry my neon torch given to me by my 80’s mother who named me after a truly awful 80’s singer, with pride.
I love that pop culture shaped a generation so drastically. It's an interesting point to observe how strongly a piece of art that resonates with you can change your choices
lets be honest. He is lost there. he even used the doomsday book this time. he is slowly becoming part of the Forest and someone will have to save him.
Can Tiffany be a reoccurring character in your videos? I love the way she talks and she provides an excellent contrast to your serious, studious character. Plus, hearing you do her voice is hilarious.
This channel is just magnificent. Taking a random topic that seems uninteresting or unimportant at a surface level then turning it into a fun learning experience.
@@soghitankoiko6059 No idea, but my head canon is he has this enormous partial dyson sphere a few systems over that has only 1 purpose: Spin a planet sized roulette wheel with every conceivable topic in existence on it. Next week: *spins wheel* The origin of mashed potatoes.
There are videos on this channel about really important topics, like "Rules for Rulers" or "How the Electoral College works", and then there's this... Pirates, tumbleweed, and now Tiffany
This weird progression of history for Tiffany has led to the coinage of "The Tiffany Problem". The phenomena where things which were contemporary in medieval times seem too modern to be believed by audiences, much like a woman named Tiffany in the 1600's
I remember a post about that going viral a few months back (which I suspect Grey was inspired by). Some other fun examples are that Rome not only had what were basically fast food restaurants -- stores where the lower classes could buy cheap, pre-prepared food and eat standing at the counter -- but also had athlete sponsor deals, where famous gladiators and chariot racers would be paid to endorse products. They also celebrated birthdays -- in a class on Roman history I took in college, we read a translation of a letter from one highborn woman in Roman Britain -- presumably an officer's wife -- to another, inviting the latter to her birthday party. It's one of the Vindolanda Tablets, if you want to look it up; I think the names were Cornelia something or other and something Lepidina.
Yup, he's talking about that in the director's commentary! Almost what this video was going to be about. Turns out to mainly be based in Lady Godiva stories though.
@@maddie9602 I guess I don't fall for it as a problem. My favorite I guess not quite example of this is still the graffiti in Pompeii because if you saw it written on a bathroom stall today you wouldn't bat at an it. We've been people the whole time it turns out.
@@eyesofthecervino3366 Ok, scathing, but not uncalled for. I guess what I saw before me was really more a neon-lit Belle Époque or something. Cthulhu Gaslight but the gaslight in question is a neon sign.
I am a teacher. And I can't wait to show students some of your videos as a way to see different kinds of animation, but also how someone can go research topics that they find interesting and then use that information to create some thing interesting and entertaining. I love your rabbit holes.
This is what happens when you wish on a monkey's paw to have everlasting knowledge of the universe, and every trivial thing becomes equally fascinating as the creation of the universe, or the meaning of life. I just want to thank Grey for sharing a drop of that beauty he sees with us every time he decides to make a video.
This is amazing. I love studying genealogy and census records, the oldest Tiffany I was able to find with that spelling was one Tiffany Catyll from Devon in England, born in 1572 (according to Devon Parish Records)
I said, "What about Breakfast at Tiffany's?" She said, "I think I remember the film." And as I recall I think we both kind of liked it. And I said, "Well that's one thing we've got."
I have no relative named Tiffany nor I am named Tiffany nor I know someone named Tiffany so this educational video about Tiffany is perfect fit for me. Thanks grey
Now I'm imagining some expectant parents in the 80s complaining that they can't find any preferred names in common, til they remember they both kinda liked Breakfast at Tiffany's.
I was really confused why Theophania was the empress of the HRE when we were still Byzantium, but it turns out she was a Greek princess of the Byzantine Empire, and then was married to Otto II of the HRE. Very cool! They do be trying to pull another Charlemagne and Irene.
I don't know, it's getting to be too much. I find myself having trouble getting through the last few fully scripted videos. The rhyming and alliteration has become an over used trope and its cleverness has worn off.
You spent an ungodly amount of hours researching this video. I'm just glad you're doing something you enjoy, like going through centuries worth of census books from both england and france..
@@justcallmeSheriff This has been discussed elsewhere in the comments. Born in Constantinople, married the Holy Roman Emperor. I will grant you Grey should've clarified that, though.
@@hotdogvan3399 but if he meant the German state, he shouldnt have show the Eastern Roman Empire, Constantinople, a clearly "Byzantine" lady, and discussed Greek pronunciation. He goofed. Big time.
I couldn’t help but smile while watching this video. None of the people mentioned had a chance of knowing all this and this whole chain of events would have been lost forever. But fortunately we have Grey, putting all the pieces of the puzzle together…
I thought this would be a video on the Tiffany Problem, where things that seem anachronistic really aren't and make a piece of media seem unrealistic. Ex: you could write a story set in the middle ages with a character named Tiffany but it wouldn't seem realistic because it feels anachronistic when it isn't.
@@maximumforce8275 People's perceptions of the past don't match with how it actually was. So when the past is portrayed accurately, people mistakenly believe the portrayal is wrong.
I just realized that the music, while keeping the same melody, slowly evolves throughout the video to fit the current time until the VHS then its "shocked" into the 80s.
A sequel of sorts: ua-cam.com/video/qEV9qoup2mQ/v-deo.html
YAY
Unnyay
@@Daniel.Li.1 NOO
@@Daniel.Li.1 >:(
Hi
all hail tiff
i got to admit, you got a talent where you could answer a question that i wouldnt have asked in a million years and make it interesting, i am sure if you only used 1 percent of your brain in something relevant, you would find the cure for cancer.
How did you put a custom image into a UA-cam comment? Oh, is it a custom emoji, which can be used for your stream chat?
@@jarzz3601 The top tiff!
The best tiff, the top tiff
In few years im expecting a spike in people named Tiffany, and 700 years from now someone mentioning grey as the reason
I'd expect an even larger relative bump for Theophania.
Which I'm sure Grey would want to be alive for.
I'm putting money on this. Get out your cryogenics, lads, we have a bet to win.
I'm betting against the OP, for the record.
Careful what you say everyone. This is now a landmark of history.😉
Very much so! Pretty sure it would become “Teff” or plain “tiff”
Grey got Lost in the Forest of all Knowledge again. This time He discovered the woods of Parish Registers and Familie trees. All because someone made the wordplay of Tiffany epiphany.
It's not even a pun, since it's named after the Feast of the Epiphany. Thus the serpent eats its tail.
At this point, Grey has set up camp there.
@@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 he is building a Kingdom there.
@@TalasDD With rank choice voting, of course
I love this community!
Tiffany, incredible military strategist, knows when a battle is doomed. Tells people it's astrology.
Wow this might actually be true. Given how females had basically no say in anything.
@@jennychen1297 certain ones. And certain ones had almost all the say. Whoo!
...this is surprisingly plausible. Movie when Hollywood
Oh right, never, because you'd rather fart out C- Marvel movies forever.
Prequel to "Psych"
Well if she said she's a master strategies.. she could have been killed immediately especially in 900s
This honestly feels like the most quintessentially "Grey" video in a while. Thoroughly researched, genuinely interesting, and completely irrelevant to my daily life.
Thoroughly researched, possibly after Grey was researching a bigger topic before falling down a rabbithole that was meant to be a small tangent
I Love this Comment 😅
Queen lion is very relevant though
I'll never need to know or will be the pope, but I'm still glad Grey made a video about it
As I type this, your comment now has 4K likes. Before I upvoted it, it was 3.9k. Here's Tom with the weather
Theory: Grey chooses his subject based on his opportunity for alliteration and wordplay
It certainly feels that way!
Call it "The Tiffany Theory"
It definitely feels like the constant alliteration distracts from the actual content. He really overuses it.
@@hOREP245 He did repeat "hexagon is the bestigon" way more often than I was comfortable with 😂
@@miriamrosemary9110 Not alliteration
My 5-yr-old daughter is named Tiffany. She loved every minute of this, watching with wide eyes bright with excitement. She said, "He made a video about me!!"
This is so adorable!!
glad she doesn't have a tiff with the video.
Well that's just adorable.
Aw
Presenting Tiff, Empress of the Empire! The Top Tiff!
The funniest part about this all is that I watched this video AFTER the sequel....and the fact that the poem is nowhere to be seen cracked me up despite being the one to cause you much pain.
It’s not completely absent. Look at the books at 8:25, Grey left a reference he alone understood before the poem video.
Sameee
Same!
LMAO SAME
same
I feel like Grey’s channel has turned from a mostly history related channel, into an embodiment of the “Wait… how did I get here??” sentiment we all have when falling down the UA-cam rabbit hole. I love it.
I love seeing you everywhere man, one of the most active ppl on yt
I’m so deep in this rabbit hole that by now I shall never escape. SEND HELP NOW I’VE BEEN STUCK AT MY COMPUTER FOR NEARLY ONE AND A HALF DAYS STRAIGHT
@@TierosIsBetter "Help" will be there shortly ... just close your eyes, count to 10 and power down the PC
Exactly
Seriously how does he decide on his topics? (Not complaining it's just funny)
I feel like the turning of “I really don’t care about this” into “why do I actually *really* care about this” is solidifying as the niche of this channel. Love it
Grey basically just says "I care about this now, for some reason, and I'm dragging the rest of you along with me!"
I don't think there's a more perfect description of this video
SHARKS!
This one stayed in the I don't care about this category. But had someone not recommended it I wouldn't have clicked on it anyways so oh well
If you gave 1 million Grey fans 1 million years, there's no way any of them could guess what the topic of the next Grey Explains video will be
Pumpkin pie
Makes you wonder what he was actually researching when he fell down this rabbit hole.
Well, let's start guessing.
Birbs and areoplane design.
the topic was your mom
@@Blox117 And what about moms?
The scotchronomicon in front of his desk is a nice homage to his struggle.
...but where the chuthlu-like book named "the struggle" go?
(Refferrence to :Brexit and Brexit: revisited video).
@@nfspbarrister5681 that was "the troubles"
@@rodlurks66 ah yes. Mea culpa. But grey has to talk about it! Especially now.
Scotichronomicon
the crotch gnome what now?
I imagine the second mini explosion in the late 1980s was also because of the pop star Tiffany who was popular in the late 1980s.
You here
I was surprised she wasn’t mentioned.
I had to google to find out who she was, but thanks spotify I find out I've heard her before.
you and I are the only people who remember the singer Tiffany. There were thousands of us, it was once common knowledge. But alas, I think we're alone now
@@munkyphunkable Flying in to say there is a 3rd person who remembers the singer Tiffany.....That song was way overplayed some days.
Grey is slowly going insane with his recent videos and the lengths he goes to for them and i'm totally here for it
What is the pursuit of knowledge but
the insane leap into the unknown?
Maybe Tiffany is just his girlfriend
_Sharks!_ is listed as a related video. I'm not entirely sure how you would think those two related, but Grey made the leap.
The pandemic is just letting him make videos on random things he finds on the internet
Let's not forget Grey traveled to another continent just to find a museum of an old dead person closed, then went into a cementery to find an old person's grave.
As a Tiffany I can confirm I own and carry a neon torch with me at all times.
Wouldn't help, the bag is also neon
just saying because if you're reading this and still trapped in religion it's not too late to leave and seek truth
but are you also a divine manifestation?
@@awsomeabacus9674 that's illogical.
I'm halfway through the video and paused it to scroll down and see if there were many tiffanies commenting. There are not. Thank you for speaking up!
The dinosaur eating historical records is the most accurate metaphorical description of any historian's feeling when trying to desperately find just even one source of a historical element.
In case you are a historian, I have a question: how does one even find potential sources, let alone access them? Are a lot of them replicated or digitized? Grey said that he looked at basically anything and everything that seemed like it could've been a list of names, but how might he have found them, do you think?
@@yuuri9064 It really depends on your subject matter. Generally speaking, the Industrial Revolution with its explosion in literacy and writing made it so that there are many, many sources on, say, WWI.
Once you get to the Early Modern period (the time between the discovery of America and the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, reading and writing becomes a hobby and means of communication of the church and the remaining other social elite. Even though common people often had some basic understanding of reading, their oftentimes everyday writing basically never got preserved, as you wouldn't preserve your shopping list, for example.
So, to finally answer your question. If you are just looking for new information, grab a handbook and check out the sources cited within, working your way down to the originals. If your subject matter is of some interest, chances are someone wrote an index of sources (which is not the case in the Tiffany question). Finally, if you've gone through all of the paper trail that exists and all of the secondary literature, you have to do very basic work yourself. This means going to archives, reading old church records, that kind of thing. However, this is like looking for a needle in a haystack and most historians do NOT do this, unless it is their personal field of highest experience and it has basically become their main source of work. As an example, a naval historian on the Spanish Silver Fleets might have an intricate knowledge on, say, the naval archives of Sevilla, where he personally scanned or transcribed many hundreds of pages from Early Modern ship and freight records, analysing those and publishing articles or even books on it.
I hope this helps.
@Love Law Thank you!
@@leagueoflags Thank you for such an in-depth response! I didn't know that there were indexes of sources at all.
@@yuuri9064 You're welcome!
The authentic Grey experience: "Well, I have no idea what this is really going to be about, but I know it is going to be interesting"
I'm actually very confused about the title
I was expecting a video on a "Tiffany" stereotype lifestyle or something.
Not a video on how you trace names through history.
Was expecting him to be cry-laughing in a random graveyard again
Wait... *again?*
@@dgreegmdz yes
@@dgreegmdz Staten Island race episode or rather the behind the scenes episode about that.
I'm sad he didn't
Ok now what is all this
I love how Grey's video topics are, increasingly, selected primarily based on the strength of the alliterations and rhymes he can use in them. "a Tiffany epiphany"
Hexagon is the bestagon?
@@pafnutiytheartist eh, that's the truth, Ruth
Carol Brown just took a bus out of town.
@Electroboss I think that's an emoji Grey made for channel members
@Electroboss that is only available for people with membership for his channel. Pay up!
AAAAH!!!! I just saw the Scotichronicon!!! The hints! The Hearne Hints! The Hidden Hearne Hints! The hidden Hearne hints half-heralding a horoscope of heroic historiography only revealed today!
Oh if only I could punch hearne
@@Trekeyus go punch his grave (when it’s safe to travel)
@@anonymouscausewhynot i might do that too. (When its safe to travel)
The Horror!
Grey has lost all pretense of safely and accurately navigating the Forest of All Knowledge and now has just become an aimlessly wandering resident 😂
"And here is the Philosopher's Stone, the Godhead of Reason, the Alchemical Heterodyne, the Sacred Hermaphro . . . dammit, Grey, stop taking notes about the Shrub of Tiffany!"
So, he's a Knowledge Hobo?
Aren’t all smart people
Not all who wander are lost
He's become the Rama of the forest of knowledge! 😂
Expectations: Grey talks about how names form over hundreds of years.
Reality: Nope, he is actually specifically talking about Tiffany
If he did all names, we'd probably be here for at least as long as Tiffany has been.
spending hundreds of hours gaming fan
spending hundreds of hours scouring census books enjoyer
Which begs the question: Why Tiffany?
My guess: He's got a thing for a girl named Tiffany.
If so, nicely played.
Teophany
@@notmee2388 Yea that'd make sense, my guess he's probably either married to a Tiffany or in need of baby names.
people: "omg you need to make more videos!"
grey: **literally puts 400 hrs of research and scripting into an 9 minute alliterate video about "tiffany" that no one knew they needed**
@White wolf maybe so, but its hard to chase relevant topics when it takes a month or even more to finish a single video. And I personally wouldn’t like it if he started talking about current politics like the US election and start a war in his comments. Grey fits in right where he is
@White wolf I really like the random deep dives into obscure topics. There are a lot of other people doing the more relevant topics, but few really excel in Grey's niche.
@White wolf I think its hard to know how much research a topic can require before you've already got your nose in it
@White wolf That will make him no different than any other channel that does trending topics. Grey is doing well staying in this niche so frankly talking about the pandemic or current politics isn't unique at all.
@@Engieman909 not to say that he shouldn't do this but let's be honest, this isn't reaallly a historical video, it's a fictional entertainment piece based on a few facts of the time, yes it's well researched but you could say game of thrones is well researched... covering different more relevant topics don't necessarily have to be current events. it could be the description of the life of someone living in different areas to give perspective of why certain beliefs are the way they are in certain areas. division is a problem relevant to current day, so a video to address division could literally be a video based on the lives of nobility vs the lives of a commoner in ages past and talk about their different interactions what they heard, learned, society productivity roles.
personally though I think it's fine to give entertainment for entertainments sake but I can see why the other commenter would like more relevant videos.
If you ever want someone to understand the butterfly effect, show them this video. Random guy moves to America, suddenly thousands of people are named Tiffany a couple hundred years later.
a couple hundred years later is hardly "suddenly".
This is actually unironically a topic I really enjoy, there's just something really fun about perceived anachronism when history actually had a lot more things we just assume couldn't have or didn't exist then.
Ridley Scott had to remove a sequence involving merchants sponsoring gladiators from the movie Gladiator because even though it was (as far as we can tell)m a thing that happened, studio execs thought it would be too anachronistic.
Yeah, it seems like a lot of the time people think that the people of the past were idiots, not just ignorant of modern knowledge. They came up with a lot of clever ideas and applications of what they did know that are really fascinating, since even without our modern knowledge they were for the most part just as smart as people today.
@@LordOOTFD yeah, it’s kind of like how people think that people thought the earth was flat till recently, the greeks knew about it and even calculated the circumference with surprising accuracy
edit: spelling
Now do it for Karens. I'm pretty sure Homer wrote somewhere "release the Karen" 🤣
Once again, Grey makes me care about something I could never imagine caring about seconds before the video started.
As a Tiffany, that’s an uncomfortable amount of Tiffany being said in a short amount of time
But do you have a Neon Torch?
Username checks out
@@albevanhanoy of course for I am but a Tiffany
@@internetperson3436 why thank you for your observation
@@internetperson3436 well she already said she is a Tiffany
“If you look in English you won’t find much” ah yes. Because of a certain poem… perhaps?
Me who come from the "Backstage" video: XD
what
Shu’p
Sertain/ I didn't notice the joke
I was sure the Tiffany thing would be a metaphor or way to explain his methodology for the main subject, but nope it was just the main subject.
"Wait... It's all Tiffany...?"
@@Maxoverpower always has been 🔫
And I'm glad it wasn't. This was very interesting.
Man the internet just cant get enough of the christmas sneezing photo
It’s Tiffanys all the way down
Grey is exactly the right kind of crazy. I point my students to his videos for what REAL research looks like; spiraling down irrelevant rabbit holes when trying to research larger topics.
Which is how I ended up stumbling upon the origin of the word "tarmac" while trying to figure out whether it was, in fact reasonable for an R-2800 to fail catastrophical after 5 minutes at 66" with methanol water injection.
Yes, that's a real thing...
@@HarryVoyager wow that must've been a trip and a half
Wooooo
@@HarryVoyager I have no clue what an R-800 is, but I feel you.
I love this kind of "irrelevant" research, because it's totally relevant. It's human history. The fact people call it "irrelevant" is incredibly sad. What else that we consider important today will be called irrelevant tomorrow? It's exactly how history is lost. Every bit of human history is worth holding on to.
I swear, I absolutely CANNOT predict what subject this guy is going to cover next. Voting, nuclear weapons, medieval names...his next video could be either about colonising the moons of Jupiter or how turnips are farmed in Uzbekistan and I wouldn’t be surprised!
That’s exactly what Grey would do
I swear his next video better not be about turnips because of you. though it would probably still be amazing
Uzbekistan turnips are the Best-i-stan turnips?
How about planting turnips on a moon?
Why Uzbekistan is the Bestistan?
this, and the "dead person ruined my life" videos are WAY more interesting then they need to be. Holy crap, I am sharing this with everyone
Same.
than*, not then
Science journalism.
Most 'alternative' news avoids this frustration by _going by memory._ Which is blasphemy.
Grey down the Tiffany rabbit hole: "I think we're alone now..."
There doesnt seem to be anyooooone arooouuuund
"And as I recall, I think CGP kinda liked it."
The beating of our hearts is the only sound
What would they say?
@@Nerdykid95 I think we're alone now
I can't honestly believe Grey decided it was worth picking up and reading "Transcripts of Charters relating to Bilbertine houses" just for 30 seconds of video content.
It's a riveting read.
That's what's history is most of the time. Sometimes it's even more tomes and even less knowledge, not to mention the trouble you have to go through to get to see some of them.
@@miobiuscrimson2828 Tome: the sound my brain makes when it realizes that in it's quest for the grail of knowledge it must suffer a journey through perilous caverns of dry verbiage.
@@erinmcdonald7781 I'm not sure what you are getting at exactly.
*Gilbertine
Shoutouts to all the people named Tiffany watching this
imagine being a dude and named tiffany lmao
@@soulsidejourney2693 Imagine not being named Theophanus
Imagine having no mustache
hey
UA-cam LITERALLY PUSHED UR COMMENT TO THE TOP LMFAO
5:03 “No sharks allowed!” Brilliant callback.
Sharks!
I don’t get it *cry*
@@snowleopard064 reference from the sharks episode
Thanks, didn't see it until now :)
Have a look at the barrels on the right ;)
CGP Grey: The man who can monetize going down a UA-cam/Internet rabbit hole
Don't forget the guy who literally puts out a series called "down the rabbit hole"
@@someguy7412 ???
Except this isn't a internet or UA-cam rabbit hole
@@ringostarr6167more of a history rabbithole
@@Raptor810Blue the channel is Fredrick Knudsen, great videos but they stretch out a bit longer then greys.
"No sharks allowed."
Loving these subtle callbacks to past videos Grey.
SHARKS!
I feel betrayed... He went on and on and on about how it must always be spelled _Sharks!_
And then he just.. doesn't?! My disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined! Ruined I say!
Sharks!
in this picture there is a shark hidden in the background
@Patrick Chang ever heard of a joke
"I am known by many names."
"Mountain Slayer."
"Thunder Lion."
"The Chocolate Axe."
"But you? You may call me... Tiffany."
Did not expect SAO Abridged reference, but it fits perfectly xd
I watched the video and was going to put this if someone else hadn't. 10/10
Man, this username fits.
Damn how did I not think of this myself… I need to go rewatch all of SAO abridged
SAO Abridged is better than SAO...Fight Me!
"While I can't prove the Tephany-Hugh connection 100%--which kills me..."
Welcome to every genealogist's life.
I see Grey spent his lockdown in a totally sane way
day 510 of "15 days to flatten the curve" will do that to you.
that made me laugh
Spaceship Grey is sailing smoothly.
Ah yes, my favorite medieval movie:
Breakfast at Theophanu's.
I also like the late-Medieval French remake, Dejeuner chez Tiffaine.
underrated comment
GATHER, TIFFANY ARMY, WE FEAST ON THE MORN'
I don't know how safe I'd feel eating breakfast at Theophano's.
If he doesn't propose with a Tiffany & Co cavalry saber, that's not your man
Omg I love your sword where'd you get it?
Omg thank youuu i got it a Tiffany's
Truer words were never spoken.
already married, he is (he proposed with a tungsten ring)
she'll pretty much have to
*Well, that was a romantic fantasy I wasn't expecting. I'd love for a partner planning to make commitment vows with me to offer a sword*
People who haven’t seen this video’s sequel: “aww this is a cute, simple video!”
People who have seen this video’s sequel: “My deepest apologies, Grey.”
Grey’s Wife, Tiffany: “Babe, you didn’t forget my birthday, did you?”
Grey: *snaps out of Forest of All Knowledge induced haze* “Wha-of course not! Here, I made a video all about you!”
is his wife really named Tiffany?
@@odhynth8404 let's not let facts get in the way of a humorous story!
@@odhynth8404 No one knows
His wife is named Lady Grey.
No, his wife is named Jean. She's super.
Love the little mistake monster hiding in the book stack when Grey is annoyed he can‘t prove the connection between crusader Hugh and Tephany.
3:35
@@fazdoll thank you for that
This man and his rhymes. I feel like I'm watching Dr. Seuss if he had a history channel
*+*
That's a Tiffany epiphany right there.
And even more alliterating.
I love the rhymes 💖💖
So much alliteration
2:26 For anyone wondering, this is the conversation:
"Should we verify it?"
"We do not want to break this beautiful history."
Grey's super power is an overwhelming addiction to solving history mysteries.
Grey's super weakness?
An overwhelming addiction to solving history mysteries.
That's like, totes, a gnarly video Grey! Tubular!
Lmao
radical bro
Oh gosh!!! The 80s back!!
As a Tiffany, I thank you for this magical journey, sir. You have my utmost respect!
ok tiffany
ok theophania
You aren't alone now...
Go get your neon torch, and be top tiff!!
I've just came back from the newest video about the poem and I just realized there's a Scotichronicon laying under Grey's desk from 5:34 onwards. Those details!
As a Gen Z Tiffany, I appreciate this. Thank you. I carry my neon torch given to me by my 80’s mother who named me after a truly awful 80’s singer, with pride.
Children Behave...
Tiffany wasn't that bad
Come on, she had at least one great song. :)
@Male 09 Yup. Born 2002. 19 years old.
tiffany was a great singer
“The Top Tiff” is one of the highest titles and honors in the land.
Now if only there was a Pope Tiffany... The Pon Tiff
"The Top Tiff" with the top stiff?
With almost a million views, there's bound to be someone in the audience that names their kid Tiffany because of this video.
I'm thinking it's more likely that they use "Theophanus" and call 'em "theo" for short.
*their
yeah im going to do it. but its going to be spelled tifanny and is going to be pronounced like fanny pack
@@dave2.077 just make sure that they don't go to England then; fanny means something different over there....
@@RainbowFlowerCrow i dont know what you mean by that but i am already scared of the english
I love that pop culture shaped a generation so drastically. It's an interesting point to observe how strongly a piece of art that resonates with you can change your choices
I love the fack that not being able to prove a 1100 family connection "kills" Grey.
It's alright Grey, you can call that one.
Did you mean 'fact'?
@@paulbelanger7383 Didn't you watch the video? English spelling is whatever
@@rolosfriend7553 tat es uh phakt
I seriously respect Mr. Grey’s ability to “utilize the Forest of Knowledge,” so to say.
lets be honest. He is lost there. he even used the doomsday book this time. he is slowly becoming part of the Forest and someone will have to save him.
"Trusses of trust betwixt the islands of evidence" - I really like this line, it keeps popping back into my head
Can Tiffany be a reoccurring character in your videos? I love the way she talks and she provides an excellent contrast to your serious, studious character. Plus, hearing you do her voice is hilarious.
This is why I love grey: I couldn't have cared less about this topic and still I loved learning about it
"Hackney, No sharks allowed!" And that little shark behind the barrels, all at 5:03 . I see what you did there Grey
Damn you got eagle eyes!
Wait, Thats A Shark?
Nope, INJUNCTED!!
Sharks!
SHARKS!
This channel is just magnificent. Taking a random topic that seems uninteresting or unimportant at a surface level then turning it into a fun learning experience.
You just summed up exactly why he does it. "There are no uninteresting topics"
I wonder what encouraged him to made video about Tiffany 🤔🤔🤔
@@soghitankoiko6059 No idea, but my head canon is he has this enormous partial dyson sphere a few systems over that has only 1 purpose: Spin a planet sized roulette wheel with every conceivable topic in existence on it. Next week: *spins wheel* The origin of mashed potatoes.
There are videos on this channel about really important topics, like "Rules for Rulers" or "How the Electoral College works", and then there's this... Pirates, tumbleweed, and now Tiffany
@@kysier6015 Now I want to know the origin of mashed potatoes lmao
This made me weirdly emotional and I don't know why. Thank you, Grey, what a wonderful story
I’m married to a Tiffany and she rules. I will call her “Top Tiff” from now on.
If she's Top Tiff... wouldn't that make you Bottom Adam (Not that there's anything Wrong with that)
Unfortunately top tiff was already claimed in the 14 century.
You mean Tip Top Tiff
@@Mark01962 tippy-top tiff!
Grey is now the one and only Tiffany-ologist in the world.
A Tiffanologist if you will.
Theophanologist since ology is from greek
The Second*
Although by far the supperior one
Unless someone out there is really interested in high-end New York jewelry.
This weird progression of history for Tiffany has led to the coinage of "The Tiffany Problem". The phenomena where things which were contemporary in medieval times seem too modern to be believed by audiences, much like a woman named Tiffany in the 1600's
Fun thing: I was literally reading up on that yesterday. What fun timing!
I remember a post about that going viral a few months back (which I suspect Grey was inspired by). Some other fun examples are that Rome not only had what were basically fast food restaurants -- stores where the lower classes could buy cheap, pre-prepared food and eat standing at the counter -- but also had athlete sponsor deals, where famous gladiators and chariot racers would be paid to endorse products. They also celebrated birthdays -- in a class on Roman history I took in college, we read a translation of a letter from one highborn woman in Roman Britain -- presumably an officer's wife -- to another, inviting the latter to her birthday party. It's one of the Vindolanda Tablets, if you want to look it up; I think the names were Cornelia something or other and something Lepidina.
Yup, he's talking about that in the director's commentary! Almost what this video was going to be about. Turns out to mainly be based in Lady Godiva stories though.
@@maddie9602 I guess I don't fall for it as a problem.
My favorite I guess not quite example of this is still the graffiti in Pompeii because if you saw it written on a bathroom stall today you wouldn't bat at an it. We've been people the whole time it turns out.
Two "phenomena", one "phenomenon"
As a Tiffany, I thoroughly enjoyed this video and will now be requesting a neon torch of my own.
"Neon Victorian" is now a setting I desperately need to see realised in fiction!
"The Diamond Age" is kinda close, but it's like Snowcrash explores nano-assamblers and everyone's very into Victorian styling (it's a sci-fi).
Cyber-steampunk.
@@eyesofthecervino3366 Ok, scathing, but not uncalled for. I guess what I saw before me was really more a neon-lit Belle Époque or something. Cthulhu Gaslight but the gaslight in question is a neon sign.
@@orCane
Oh.
Well, I definitely wasn't going for scathing. More like a glory-days-of-Doctor-Who zany mashup.
ima already happy with the slew of neon noir movies that came out this year.
I think it's now a theme for Grey to get slightly deranged every time he tries traveling past the 1800s.
yes
I am a teacher. And I can't wait to show students some of your videos as a way to see different kinds of animation, but also how someone can go research topics that they find interesting and then use that information to create some thing interesting and entertaining. I love your rabbit holes.
This is what happens when you wish on a monkey's paw to have everlasting knowledge of the universe, and every trivial thing becomes equally fascinating as the creation of the universe, or the meaning of life. I just want to thank Grey for sharing a drop of that beauty he sees with us every time he decides to make a video.
Best part of CGP Grey videos: They get you interested in a random topic that you never would have considered holding any reason to research
"Hey Grey, wanna come hang out tonight?"
"Sorry, I can't, I'm busy looking for Tiffanies in the 1300s"
"Oh okay then maybe ano- wait what?"
Came here to say: Pratchett.
@@TheDAPler Came here to ask: what?
This is amazing. I love studying genealogy and census records, the oldest Tiffany I was able to find with that spelling was one Tiffany Catyll from Devon in England, born in 1572 (according to Devon Parish Records)
Absolutely adored the "No Sharks Allowed" sign when you mentioned Hackney.
5:55 there's a SHARK! in the bottom right.
EDIT: SHARK!
In the directors commentary he said how his mind was blown when they found the Hackney connection!
Came here to say this 😁
Sharks!
I cannot stop thinking about that happy little dinosaur eating those documents, it is ingrained into my memory.
If Mine from Ascendance of a Bookworm see that she'd make sure they went extinct again. XD
I love how giddy Grey is throughout this video. You can just tell how excited he is to take us all with him to explore his Tiffany epiphany.
I said, "What about Breakfast at Tiffany's?"
She said, "I think I remember the film."
And as I recall I think we both kind of liked it.
And I said, "Well that's one thing we've got."
"Hackney: No sharks allowed" The lore runs deep!
Sorry but Grey perfectly encapsulates what it's like being a historian
These people had lives, stories, now forgotten but by luck of history remembered again
That's the thing that's beautiful about record keeping. History will forget you, until it doesn't
like I needed another reason to visit mont st michel
@@Bangpath247 what is that?
@@nanananaxhhd4330 the castle in France highlighted in the video. It’s packed with history, and a very cool location.
I have no relative named Tiffany nor I am named Tiffany nor I know someone named Tiffany so this educational video about Tiffany is perfect fit for me. Thanks grey
Now I'm imagining some expectant parents in the 80s complaining that they can't find any preferred names in common, til they remember they both kinda liked Breakfast at Tiffany's.
Well, that's the one thing they've got.
*guitar solo*
I love this entire comment chain
It’s actually insane on how Grey can hyper-fixate on these random topics and enjoy doing it. But, i’m not complaining.
And then we enjoy listening to his "tangent" about it. Also not complaining.
"But, I'm not complaining." -- Neither is Mr. Grey's bank account.
Grey and his crack team of researchers. They are all legends.
Welcome to ADHD
I was really confused why Theophania was the empress of the HRE when we were still Byzantium, but it turns out she was a Greek princess of the Byzantine Empire, and then was married to Otto II of the HRE. Very cool!
They do be trying to pull another Charlemagne and Irene.
Thank you for finding the specific guy that's quite possibly responsible for the Tiffany Explosion
The amount of alliterations astound and amaze all.
I don't know, it's getting to be too much. I find myself having trouble getting through the last few fully scripted videos. The rhyming and alliteration has become an over used trope and its cleverness has worn off.
@@ASolzhenitsyn cease your silly dissatisfactions, Sol. Sate yourself with something more soothing. 😃
@@TheMister123 Nice one, but keep in mind the non-native english speakers! :p
I have to burst your bubble to correct you that it should be "number of alliterations".
Affirmative
The fact that I'm totally engrossed in this video is a marvel unto itself, as usual CGP Grey has blown me away
Answering questions no one has asked, this is probably the most solid research anyone will ever do on this topic.
The Truss of Trust is my favorite part of history. It allows the injection of crackhead energy into an otherwise stiff and boring academic field.
You spent an ungodly amount of hours researching this video.
I'm just glad you're doing something you enjoy, like going through centuries worth of census books from both england and france..
And yet he still confused the Eastern Roman Empire with the Holy Roman Empire...
@@justcallmeSheriff neither of which were in france or england.
checkmate
@@justcallmeSheriff This has been discussed elsewhere in the comments. Born in Constantinople, married the Holy Roman Emperor. I will grant you Grey should've clarified that, though.
@@hotdogvan3399 but if he meant the German state, he shouldnt have show the Eastern Roman Empire, Constantinople, a clearly "Byzantine" lady, and discussed Greek pronunciation.
He goofed. Big time.
I couldn’t help but smile while watching this video. None of the people mentioned had a chance of knowing all this and this whole chain of events would have been lost forever.
But fortunately we have Grey, putting all the pieces of the puzzle together…
I thought this would be a video on the Tiffany Problem, where things that seem anachronistic really aren't and make a piece of media seem unrealistic. Ex: you could write a story set in the middle ages with a character named Tiffany but it wouldn't seem realistic because it feels anachronistic when it isn't.
That's interesting, and it's pretty closely related to the conclusion Grey came to. Tiffany is, like, totally Medieval.
Exactly what he (Grey) says in his explination video.
English please?
@@maximumforce8275 People's perceptions of the past don't match with how it actually was. So when the past is portrayed accurately, people mistakenly believe the portrayal is wrong.
gnu Terry Pratchett
I just realized that the music, while keeping the same melody, slowly evolves throughout the video to fit the current time until the VHS then its "shocked" into the 80s.
The absolute talent of this man to create content about the origin of "Tiffany" and for it to be fascinating
"Tracking Tiffany Through Time" would be one hell of a series. Basically Dr. Who, but sassier.
and valley girl american English instead of British english would be spoken
@@surf124 "Like OMG! Totes adorbs."
I would watch this.
Being a British Tiffany who is a huge fan of Doctor Who, I would definitely get behind this idea! 😆
With a pink faux fur coat, a martini in hand, pink shaded sunglasses, and a bedazzled pink cellphone. YUS.
N A M E S
E X P L A I N
N A M E S
N A M E S
I knew I’d find you here somewhere.
K A R E N
this made me smile today. the amount of research grey puts into things is absurd and wholly needed at the same time. thank you