Now that you know who invented spoons, forks and knives check out this video and find out about That Time the Inventor of the Whac-A-Mole Accidentally Blew Up His Warehouse: ua-cam.com/video/ybm2dBZxFNE/v-deo.html
I believe that Louis XIV of France bathed regularly, and that story about him not bathing is false, perhaps propaganda. His grandson made a huge bath in Versilles but before that water woukd be heated and brought in.
Thomas W except it does fit, like it's not hugging his sides? These buttons are confusing me, but I do have some shirts that do that no matter what. Maybe it's just his chest. Which I don't mind lol
6:52 "However, knives weren't domesticated or fashioned exclusively for table use until the Bourbon dynasty in France." ...For some reason when he said "domesticated" I instinctually started imagining some dudes running around in an open field trying to tame wild running knives.
During the US Civil War forks were still considered too dainty for most of the soldiers to use for eating and usually only officers carried mess kits that included forks. The rank and file used extra wide knives that were rounded at the tip to scoop their food like a spoon. You can still commonly find such cutlery today in old silver sets.
I can't help but think about the part in Mel Brooks "History of the World Part 1". When the cavemen are holding meat over a fire with there bare hands , in obvious agony. And then when one of the caveman skewers the meat with a stick. And the rest of the cavemen gasp in amazement!
I love how Theodora from the Byzantine Empire brought forks, but the usage of forks in the Byzantine empire and to Greece before the Byzantine Empire isn't even mentioned.
I've always wondered who invented toothpaste? and what promted them to figure it out? Also what people used before toothpaste, like what did the Egyptions/Romans/Greeks and people before them do about their teeth?
One thing I can tell you is that in the US, there were tooth powders. One was made by Colgate and it was spearmint flavored and very popular. It was a regular thing throughout the 1950's and early 60's. There were even commercials for it. You tipped a bit out of the can into your palm and dipped a damp toothbrush into the powder. It foamed a bit and that's how you brushed with it. The ease of a paste was that you didn't get your hands involved in the brushing process. Google up Ipana, Pepsodent, and Colgate histories and you might find your answer.
People in the past had less problems with their teeth as we would imagine. They consumed virtually no sugar (coca cola, ice cream, sugared tea, ...) and therefore caries and so on was not really an issue. If we go even further back in history (hunters and gatherers), people back then had even less dental problems. They did not eat bread, which contains starch and other things that stick to your teeth and has a lot of energy (that feeds bacteria in your mouth). So bad teeth are only really a problem due to modern diet
@ 1:48 fun fact: the Jannissary cap's brass front was supposed to be a nod to the first Janissaries and their habit of tying spoons to the front of their headgear (this symbolized comradeship: you ate with your comrades in arms, and died with them).
It was just one of those weird things that came from upper class people in medieval europe. They thought having seperate meals at certain times of day makes them more sophisticated and now it’s a thing adopted all over the world. Not exactly a bad thing, just unnecessary for the most part
Ok, here are some questions for you: When we say that people of a certain era "rarely bathed", what does that really mean? Did they never wash themselves at all? Did they only wash particularly visible parts more regularly? Or maybe particularly stinky parts? Or something else? I know it's because I'm just used to being clean, but I feel absolutely miserable (sticky, stinky, itchy, etc) when I'm dirty. Were people in those times miserable all the time or were they used to it? I guess they also had to deal with things like fleas and lice more than we do, so maybe they took itching in stride. In any case, I'm really interested in the details of this subject.
In Europe, baths had always been associated with the Roman baths, which after a while came to be places of ill-repute, and given that Europe was mostly Christain, they thought it was a sin to take baths. Usually, people only had one bath in their lifetime, when they were baptized as babies. Many people, often rich women would carry around strong perfumes and fragrant bunches of flowers to mask the stink. Poorer people just ignored the stink and the bugs, they were usually too drunk to notice anyway.
How about an episode about the Turkish - Cypriot conflict and the Turkish invasion of 1974? Few people outside Cyprus, Greece and Turkey know about this and each side has its own version. I would love an independent and impartial view of historical facts. Love your videos Simon, they are part of my daily routine! Cheers!
Now I know why people gave us spoons when I had a baby. It also explains some odd decor choices I've seen... tiny spoon collections seemed super weird.
Never have I been so happy to be alive in this time period. How humans managed to get through such a poor hygiene area is impressive, but ugh I've been around people who don't bath, and I can't get away fast enough. I'm polite if I have to hold conversation, but the bath, and soap are the greatest inventions ever created.
Why is every historical thing about Egyptians, Roman & Greeks? Weren't the Chinese, Indians, the Indus valley civilizations, Babylonians, Persians, Japanese, the empires in these lands, the arab tribs, even existing? I mean, surely they might have had spoons..... wouldn't they?
At 4:00 : Not every mention of something in the Bible is a stamp of approval on the object or its use. With regard to the use of forks cited from 1 Samuel 2:13-14, that practice was actually the way that the evil priests (sons of Eli) would steal the offerings that worshippers were making to God. Granted, this is an abuse of a fork (itself morally neutral), but that might have been why forks were looked on somewhat suspiciously. "Thieves use forks, so maybe they are kind of creepy."
I liked this one a lot. I'm not sure why; the content was no more spectacular than other episodes. Oh the thing about the fork having a negative stigma shows up out of sequence at 0:39
Peter Damian describes Maria Agrya - the inventor of fork and knife eating “Such was the luxury of her habits that she scorned even to wash herself in the common water, obliging her servants instead to collect the dew that fell from the heavens for her to bathe in. Nor did she deign to touch her food with her fingers, but would command her eunuchs to cut it up into small pieces, which she would impale on a certain golden instrument with two prongs and thus carry to her mouth. . . . this woman’s vanity was hateful to Almighty God; and so, unmistakably, did He take his revenge. For He raised over her the sword of His divine justice, so that her whole body did putrefy and all her limbs began to wither.”
Louis also suffered from a ruptured anal fistula that reeked of pus and faeces. The royal barber miraculously performed a successful operation to treat the fistula, which later led to the operation becoming fashionable regardless of whether one was a sufferer or not.
Could you do another video on Medieval hygiene and hygiene throughout history and different places on earth in general? Like where do these ideas come from and how they developed.
Queen Elisabeth 1 popularized bathing when she had her bathtub taken with her on "progress". Her servants had to heat water for her daily baths which were thought to be insane. She also forbid her court to see her at any time unless they bathed first. She had a sensitive nose and could not tolerate body odor.The rest of Europe was stinky at the time. In fact infectious diseases were terrible because of unsanitary conditions. Peasants may have bathed more frequently than the upper classes. Queen Elisabeth 1 also popularized forks during her time, much to the disgust of many of her courtiers who couldn't understand what was wrong with knives and spoons. She lived to be 70 years old, a veritable ancient person in her time.
@@nigelmarvin1387 after two years, i give you WHY the Chinese move on from fork to chopsticks. Simple answer is because chopsticks is easy to get and useful. Because at that time there are no such metal or plastic fork. And they are more hard to make than chopsticks, so if someone need to eat at any place but didn't bring the chopsticks with them, so they just need to find small tree branches to made it. So they left behind fork.
@MrBigEnchilada but with a fork you can cut meat (even without a knife section to the fork, depending on the meat) while chopsticks ... can't really? I also can't see what chopsticks can achieve that forks can't, for noodles you poke the fork in and twist, and that works just as well, for anything that requires picking up, you poke with the fork and that works better and more accurately than having to learn the delicate balance of the chopsticks What am I missing with the functionality of the chopsticks?
Some of the overlay text in this video shows at the wrong time or just cuts off weirdly. Unusually sloppy for TIFO =P I'm just messing, keep up the awesome work guys
Nice video. Thank you. I'm curious about Eastern eating utensils. Chopsticks, of course, but also spoons for soup, and the shallow, saucer-like cups used for drinking. Why the differences, and who uses what eating implements on a global basis? Cheers.
Ryan Beer I've seen that too but only with heavy rain. I think they'll suffocate since all the little spaces between soil particles would be filled with water, but... why do they go to side walk and not only to the surface of the soil they are in??? 🤔🤔
Thats what i was thinking. I find them on the sidewalk or out in the middle of a parking lot. Why not borrow father underground or just to the surface and not on to cement. That's what i am hoping Simon can find out :-D
I think all worms surface, crawl for a bit on the surface, and then dig down again. The ones that found their way on to a hard surface cannot dig back down... and those are the ones you see dying on side walks. All the rest of them managed to dig back down and live (if a bird didn't find them, anyway).
I get the sense that Simon wanted to wash his hands of the content in the video once it was done (especially the part about Louie the 14th not bathing).
A coworker told me he saw a medieval movie in the 1960s in which people were introduced to forks and balked at using them. He thought it might be The Lion in Winter (it isn't). Anyone know?
There’s an old joke in France that the average French person bathes only 3 times in their lifetime: Once when they are baptised; once when they are about to get married; and once for their funeral. In other words, they bathe *voluntarily* only once!
It is noted that the Americans are still using their fingers to eat their hamburgers and fries along with fried chicken and any sort of fruits. Anyone using forks and spoons would be quickly ridiculed.
High heels for men make more sense when you find out they started as a practical item first and foremost, the idea was to hook a chevalier into his stirrups.
"Forks in the western world continue to carry this negative stigma due to their association with eastern decadence." 0:41 I think somebody got the call-out text mixed up.
"I wonder men dare trust themselves with men: Methinks they should invite them without knives; Good for their meat, and safer for their lives."--Apemantus in Timon of Athens, by William Shakespeare
Ummm how did people prevent getting galded if they didn't wash? Like in the USA here we tend to wipe with toilet paper and that can get you through on day but after then, well delicate parts get "sore" if you don't wash and in the summer areas like the thigh can get sweat trapped there but washing every day easily remedies what could potentially turn into an infection in like say a week or a month depending on bacteria level. I think if I didn't wash for a month my man parts would be red and swollen and nasty.
Does anyone else think that in 30 years Simon will look just like Mr. Burns from the Simpsons? If they ever do a live action version of the Simpsons, he'll be a lock for the part... :) (Just kidding, in case he actually reads this comment. HAhahahahaha...)
Didn't know there was a stigma around forks until today, heh. Also - it's a bit crazy how much stigma built up around bathing and washing. Especially among Christians - bathing and washing are mentioned a lot in the Bible, to the point where baptism is considered a sacrament. I suppose they had too many run-ins with contaminated water in the middle ages.
Now that you know who invented spoons, forks and knives check out this video and find out about That Time the Inventor of the Whac-A-Mole Accidentally Blew Up His Warehouse:
ua-cam.com/video/ybm2dBZxFNE/v-deo.html
So who actually invented cutlery ?
I believe that Louis XIV of France bathed regularly, and that story about him not bathing is false, perhaps propaganda. His grandson made a huge bath in Versilles but before that water woukd be heated and brought in.
You guys are constantly answering questions I had no idea I wanted answered. This is awesome!
Those shirt buttons are stronger than my relationships
Thomas W except it does fit, like it's not hugging his sides? These buttons are confusing me, but I do have some shirts that do that no matter what. Maybe it's just his chest. Which I don't mind lol
and your relationships are stronger than mine... :((
Thomas W I think they're trying for the first real reason to have 3-D UA-cam. *points screen away from face
Thomas W it's a sweater
David Francis Oh shit I just got fucking roasted!
Simon man! Watching this video and compared to your more recent ones I can see how you have matured. Like a good wine, you’ve gotten better with time
6:52 "However, knives weren't domesticated or fashioned exclusively for table use until the Bourbon dynasty in France."
...For some reason when he said "domesticated" I instinctually started imagining some dudes running around in an open field trying to tame wild running knives.
@@Amlaeuxrai They were attracted by the smells of cooked meat.
During the US Civil War forks were still considered too dainty for most of the soldiers to use for eating and usually only officers carried mess kits that included forks. The rank and file used extra wide knives that were rounded at the tip to scoop their food like a spoon. You can still commonly find such cutlery today in old silver sets.
I can't help but think about the part in Mel Brooks "History of the World Part 1". When the cavemen are holding meat over a fire with there bare hands , in obvious agony. And then when one of the caveman skewers the meat with a stick. And the rest of the cavemen gasp in amazement!
An intelligent channel for intelligent people. The amount of research you guys do is what makes the difference. Bravo.
Thanks :-)
I love how Theodora from the Byzantine Empire brought forks, but the usage of forks in the Byzantine empire and to Greece before the Byzantine Empire isn't even mentioned.
I randomly wondered this and it comforts me that ppl have already thought and figured this out
Everyone: Does Simon whistle?
Simon: ummm....eating utensils!
Can we get a history of multiple shirt sizes
Brian Fitzpatrick haha
I don't think Simon has any expertise on this subject
Brian Fitzpatrick maybe he's just super buff under that shirt and he wants people to know
I've always wondered who invented toothpaste? and what promted them to figure it out? Also what people used before toothpaste, like what did the Egyptions/Romans/Greeks and people before them do about their teeth?
just found out that the Egyptians are believed to be the first people to use a paste to clean their teeth!! the more you know..
One thing I can tell you is that in the US, there were tooth powders. One was made by Colgate and it was spearmint flavored and very popular. It was a regular thing throughout the 1950's and early 60's. There were even commercials for it. You tipped a bit out of the can into your palm and dipped a damp toothbrush into the powder. It foamed a bit and that's how you brushed with it. The ease of a paste was that you didn't get your hands involved in the brushing process. Google up Ipana, Pepsodent, and Colgate histories and you might find your answer.
they used Taback
People in the past had less problems with their teeth as we would imagine. They consumed virtually no sugar (coca cola, ice cream, sugared tea, ...) and therefore caries and so on was not really an issue. If we go even further back in history (hunters and gatherers), people back then had even less dental problems. They did not eat bread, which contains starch and other things that stick to your teeth and has a lot of energy (that feeds bacteria in your mouth).
So bad teeth are only really a problem due to modern diet
charcoal and salt
Who ever invented the 'spork' deserves a reach-around.
KFC still holds the rights to the spork. lol
Excellent, fast paced, informative presentation. Thank you!
I want to know who created the layout for keyboards we use today
Jailan Simon go Simon
Jailan Simon Just search for "qwerty" on google.
Lukas Schmidt
then search 'dvorak' for an alternate keyboard layout.
There you go :-) ua-cam.com/video/OI1F_c8MPVc/v-deo.html
Then search for the alphabet
@ 1:48
fun fact: the Jannissary cap's brass front was supposed to be a nod to the first Janissaries and their habit of tying spoons to the front of their headgear (this symbolized comradeship: you ate with your comrades in arms, and died with them).
Why do we eat 3 main meals a day? Where did it come from and when?
metabolism
@@JonathanSmyth5 I eat 2 meals a day
@@JimmyMon666 no way!
@@JimmyMon666 I don’t eat. Starving is way more fun.
It was just one of those weird things that came from upper class people in medieval europe. They thought having seperate meals at certain times of day makes them more sophisticated and now it’s a thing adopted all over the world. Not exactly a bad thing, just unnecessary for the most part
0:40 wrong text?
Patrick Wienhöft saw that glad someone saw it
Yeah. It's at both 0:37 and 4:37. It only belongs at 4:37. Maybe it'll be fixed?
Yeah, I had to pause and read it. Then I was just like, "ok, maybe he's getting around to that point."
Ok, here are some questions for you: When we say that people of a certain era "rarely bathed", what does that really mean? Did they never wash themselves at all? Did they only wash particularly visible parts more regularly? Or maybe particularly stinky parts? Or something else? I know it's because I'm just used to being clean, but I feel absolutely miserable (sticky, stinky, itchy, etc) when I'm dirty. Were people in those times miserable all the time or were they used to it? I guess they also had to deal with things like fleas and lice more than we do, so maybe they took itching in stride. In any case, I'm really interested in the details of this subject.
In Europe, baths had always been associated with the Roman baths, which after a while came to be places of ill-repute, and given that Europe was mostly Christain, they thought it was a sin to take baths. Usually, people only had one bath in their lifetime, when they were baptized as babies. Many people, often rich women would carry around strong perfumes and fragrant bunches of flowers to mask the stink. Poorer people just ignored the stink and the bugs, they were usually too drunk to notice anyway.
I can imagine how pissed off people would be trying to eat spaghetti with a spoon. lol
How about an episode about the Turkish - Cypriot conflict and the Turkish invasion of 1974? Few people outside Cyprus, Greece and Turkey know about this and each side has its own version. I would love an independent and impartial view of historical facts.
Love your videos Simon, they are part of my daily routine! Cheers!
I just heard the word "spoons" so many times that it lost meaning and now I'm questioning my sanity
brilliant, informative, articulate. congratulations on the excellence of presentation.
And I'm over here eating a sandwich and chips with my hands like some sort of savage.
Now I know why people gave us spoons when I had a baby. It also explains some odd decor choices I've seen... tiny spoon collections seemed super weird.
How have I not thought of this ?
Kabir Pankaj i know, right!?
because you're a forking idiot
Never have I been so happy to be alive in this time period. How humans managed to get through such a poor hygiene area is impressive, but ugh I've been around people who don't bath, and I can't get away fast enough. I'm polite if I have to hold conversation, but the bath, and soap are the greatest inventions ever created.
Why is every historical thing about Egyptians, Roman & Greeks? Weren't the Chinese, Indians, the Indus valley civilizations, Babylonians, Persians, Japanese, the empires in these lands, the arab tribs, even existing? I mean, surely they might have had spoons..... wouldn't they?
wow.... That is A LOT of cutlery knowledge!! great video!
No mention of the great Aussie invention the Splayd, not to be confused with the spork, it has a dull blade on one side
Do a video about Chop sticks please! Always been curious why they chose 2 sticks over anything else lol.
Finally! I've been wondering this for quite a while, but I'm too lazy to do the research. Thanks for the video and research!
Loved the bonus facts on this one.
At 4:00 : Not every mention of something in the Bible is a stamp of approval on the object or its use. With regard to the use of forks cited from 1 Samuel 2:13-14, that practice was actually the way that the evil priests (sons of Eli) would steal the offerings that worshippers were making to God. Granted, this is an abuse of a fork (itself morally neutral), but that might have been why forks were looked on somewhat suspiciously. "Thieves use forks, so maybe they are kind of creepy."
I went from studying to looking to background music to eventually this. And I wonder why my homework takes hours.
Cool! Thanks for answering the question I posed in the comments on your chopsticks video!
I love this channel
Just when the sweaters starting fitting right, now it's the button-downs!
I liked this one a lot. I'm not sure why; the content was no more spectacular than other episodes. Oh the thing about the fork having a negative stigma shows up out of sequence at 0:39
Peter Damian describes Maria Agrya - the inventor of fork and knife eating
“Such was the luxury of her habits that she scorned even to wash herself in the common water, obliging her servants instead to collect the dew that fell from the heavens for her to bathe in. Nor did she deign to touch her food with her fingers, but would command her eunuchs to cut it up into small pieces, which she would impale on a certain golden instrument with two prongs and thus carry to her mouth. . . . this woman’s vanity was hateful to Almighty God; and so, unmistakably, did He take his revenge. For He raised over her the sword of His divine justice, so that her whole body did putrefy and all her limbs began to wither.”
Can you tell how you research all this stuff? Just google or...?
Loved the bonus facts.
Louis also suffered from a ruptured anal fistula that reeked of pus and faeces. The royal barber miraculously performed a successful operation to treat the fistula, which later led to the operation becoming fashionable regardless of whether one was a sufferer or not.
The more I learn about French court culture during this period the more I am amazed that anyone actually lived through it
Could you do another video on Medieval hygiene and hygiene throughout history and different places on earth in general? Like where do these ideas come from and how they developed.
De Medici is pronounced "De Medichi" since it is an Italian name
Assassins Creed 2 was fucking sweet
Simon, stop being comfortable, stop eating crap, you look like the Incredible Hulk.
Great video, loved the bonus facts.
"Forks were an insult to God. You have perfectly good natural forks: your fingers. Why not use those?"
Oh my fork, really?!
What I want to know is, what is that plate and cutlery set that keeps being shown, like at 7:39? It looks super cool!
Queen Elisabeth 1 popularized bathing when she had her bathtub taken with her on "progress". Her servants had to heat water for her daily baths which were thought to be insane. She also forbid her court to see her at any time unless they bathed first. She had a sensitive nose and could not tolerate body odor.The rest of Europe was stinky at the time. In fact infectious diseases were terrible because of unsanitary conditions. Peasants may have bathed more frequently than the upper classes. Queen Elisabeth 1 also popularized forks during her time, much to the disgust of many of her courtiers who couldn't understand what was wrong with knives and spoons. She lived to be 70 years old, a veritable ancient person in her time.
Chinese invent the fork, an now they use chopsticks
@Randi M Roble in the past ,using chopsticks means you are noble or high class while using folks and knife is too low....
chopsticks can do manything fork can not do. its the most useful tool to use!
@@nigelmarvin1387 after two years, i give you WHY the Chinese move on from fork to chopsticks.
Simple answer is because chopsticks is easy to get and useful.
Because at that time there are no such metal or plastic fork. And they are more hard to make than chopsticks, so if someone need to eat at any place but didn't bring the chopsticks with them, so they just need to find small tree branches to made it. So they left behind fork.
@MrBigEnchilada but with a fork you can cut meat (even without a knife section to the fork, depending on the meat) while chopsticks ... can't really? I also can't see what chopsticks can achieve that forks can't, for noodles you poke the fork in and twist, and that works just as well, for anything that requires picking up, you poke with the fork and that works better and more accurately than having to learn the delicate balance of the chopsticks
What am I missing with the functionality of the chopsticks?
Alternatively we could all accept that knives are superior to both forks and chop sticks as you can cut and stab with a knife.
Who invented buttons should be his personal favorite. His nickname must be "Too Tight Timmy"
The use of cutlery doesn't tell us who actually invented cutlery .
@6:45 love how much of a knife guy you are!
the ale also helped you to "accidentally" stab the annoying baron who keeps making comments on your wig
Some of the overlay text in this video shows at the wrong time or just cuts off weirdly. Unusually sloppy for TIFO =P
I'm just messing, keep up the awesome work guys
Additional bonus fact the spork is the result of a drunken one night stand between a spoon and a fork.
I sit here while being freshly bathed and eating my breakfast with a fork. lol.
YES! He mentions sporks!
Nice video. Thank you. I'm curious about Eastern eating utensils. Chopsticks, of course, but also spoons for soup, and the shallow, saucer-like cups used for drinking. Why the differences, and who uses what eating implements on a global basis? Cheers.
Tri means 3 so 3 pronger is called a trident. Four pronger of course is fork. Bi means 2 so is 2 pronger a bident or a bik?
Everyone in here picking at Simon, but he's a well handsome chap.
Why do worms crawl to the sidewalks after it rains?
Ryan Beer I've seen that too but only with heavy rain. I think they'll suffocate since all the little spaces between soil particles would be filled with water, but... why do they go to side walk and not only to the surface of the soil they are in??? 🤔🤔
Thats what i was thinking. I find them on the sidewalk or out in the middle of a parking lot. Why not borrow father underground or just to the surface and not on to cement. That's what i am hoping Simon can find out :-D
Ryan Beer QQ
I think all worms surface, crawl for a bit on the surface, and then dig down again. The ones that found their way on to a hard surface cannot dig back down... and those are the ones you see dying on side walks. All the rest of them managed to dig back down and live (if a bird didn't find them, anyway).
Ryan Beer because they cannot breath underground when the ground is wet
I get the sense that Simon wanted to wash his hands of the content in the video once it was done (especially the part about Louie the 14th not bathing).
Well that was nice of Queen Isabel to bathe that one time for her husband Ferdinand. Lucky guy.
Fun fact cannibals of Papua New Guinea, used wooden forks for eating.
Hi. I love the spork. I ordered a stainless steel one with a kind of cartoon character stamped in and it's been months of waiting, for it to arrive.
Should we start calling Simon 'The Beard of Knowledge'?
Something about this reminded me of the bald eagle...
Can I get a hell yeah for the "Master Spoon"?
Breath of the Wild releases in 2 days, baby!!
#NintendoSwitch
Heck yeah
Text incorrectly shows up at 0:37, having nothing to do with what's being talked about, and then shows up later (correctly) at 4:37.
interesting. I never knew Kings used to wield their mighty spoons of Christ.
And remember what Yogi Berra said, "when you come to a fork in the road, you take it."
Everything has changed. And yet, nothing has changed.
A coworker told me he saw a medieval movie in the 1960s in which people were introduced to forks and balked at using them. He thought it might be The Lion in Winter (it isn't). Anyone know?
I've never found a naturally spoon-like rock. Handle or no.
did you ever look for one?
I. Never. Stop. :-)
I literally had this thought earlier this day! What a coincidence!! 😂😂
Love the videos watch everyday now. My question is why do people say drink a hot drink on a hot day to cool you down
Can you do an episode on the orgin of bows or guns? Who and where were they made first?
There’s an old joke in France that the average French person bathes only 3 times in their lifetime: Once when they are baptised; once when they are about to get married; and once for their funeral. In other words, they bathe *voluntarily* only once!
I was just thinking about this while eating and then this video!
0:38-0:41 Did the editor mess up which text to add?
It is noted that the Americans are still using their fingers to eat their hamburgers and fries along with fried chicken and any sort of fruits. Anyone using forks and spoons would be quickly ridiculed.
didn't talk about the king of the dining table, the noble Spork!
spewns folks, and knives. lol thats awesome.
I personally love the titanium spork
Do the history of the U-boat, Please!!
High heels for men make more sense when you find out they started as a practical item first and foremost, the idea was to hook a chevalier into his stirrups.
Those bathing habits are even worse than mine XD
Yet ppl say I'm disgusting for not always bathing on my weekend...
"Forks in the western world continue to carry this negative stigma due to their association with eastern decadence." 0:41
I think somebody got the call-out text mixed up.
"I wonder men dare trust themselves with men:
Methinks they should invite them without knives;
Good for their meat, and safer for their lives."--Apemantus in Timon of Athens, by William Shakespeare
1:48 that spoon looks like a coffee bean on a stick
"You call that a knife? This 🥄 is a knife!"
Graphics guy goofed up; the text at 0:40 is a premature copy of that @ 4:40!
The "Barack" period lol. I love British accents!
Ummm how did people prevent getting galded if they didn't wash? Like in the USA here we tend to wipe with toilet paper and that can get you through on day but after then, well delicate parts get "sore" if you don't wash and in the summer areas like the thigh can get sweat trapped there but washing every day easily remedies what could potentially turn into an infection in like say a week or a month depending on bacteria level. I think if I didn't wash for a month my man parts would be red and swollen and nasty.
Does anyone else think that in 30 years Simon will look just like Mr. Burns from the Simpsons?
If they ever do a live action version of the Simpsons, he'll be a lock for the part... :)
(Just kidding, in case he actually reads this comment. HAhahahahaha...)
Who invented the very tight buttoned shirt?
🤣🤣🤣
this Guy always asks the right answers
Didn't know there was a stigma around forks until today, heh. Also - it's a bit crazy how much stigma built up around bathing and washing. Especially among Christians - bathing and washing are mentioned a lot in the Bible, to the point where baptism is considered a sacrament. I suppose they had too many run-ins with contaminated water in the middle ages.