Municipal building inspector here. One time I had a house built in my jurisdiction that had an astronomical observatory on it. An actual observatory. The full-on rotating dome, with hydraulics and everything. I had to be like "hey uhhhhhh I have never once dealt with this sort of thing in my life, no one has ever provided me with a single second of training for this eventuality, so I'm just gonna have to blindly trust this letter your engineer handed me saying everyone did their jobs right".
"Disgustingly rich." Oh boy, this brings me back to a job I had years ago. I used to work for an exceptionally affluent family that lived in a generational commune. Hidden deep within a several hundred acre property was a line of multimillion dollar homes beside their own private lake. Picture the nicest house you've ever seen. These were homes straight out of a real estate magazine. The nicest house on the lot was three stories with an attached two story guest house. Each had a three car garage. They had their own custom in-ground pool with a built in waterfall and hot tub. Their basement had an in-door basketball court, full service gym and an additional hot tub. The interior had polished marble on every floor and the decor was exclusively items worth my entire annual salary or more, per item. They had multiple boats, luxury cars; anything they could have ever wanted. All of the homes on the lot were of similar caliber. These were not their only homes. What's my point? They never used any of it. They never left their homes to enjoy their property. They never used their pools, their sports courts, their boats. They had an army of contractors and servants tending to them constantly. These people didn't have to do anything for themselves. I cannot comprehend how you can have such immense wealth, and yet you don't even indulge in the things you've invested in. Such a waste.
buddy of mine worked the front counter for Mcy'ds. one night a dood walked in and my buddy said he looked high as a kite. He looked at the menu for like 5 minutes and then asked for a burger. My buddy asked if he wanted cheese and he said it looked like he blew the doods mind. So I would say yeah, with how humans work and (sigh) act it has happed at least 100K times already
@@demon-hunter1498 wait a minute.....nope that was a White Castle I went to at 3:15 am on a Thursday about a decade ago. A sack of 10, 20, 30+ is a pothead's friend when ordering.
I used to work for an armored car company as a guard. It was a great job, really good pay and the work was easy without being boring. The problem was every time we came back to the depot. Our manager had a habit of screaming at people like a drill sergeant about things that weren't their responsibility, only for the guy whose responsibility it was to turn up and the problem to be resolved instantly, because the manager never bothered to check with the people whose job it was to keep track of stuff when he needed to find said stuff
I worked security, my boss thought he was an actual cop, and was repeatedly told by the cops that he wasn't a cop and him claiming he's a cop was against the law.
@@HappyHellscapes i feel that, my current management tries to run our site like a para-military force, with uh less than half the funding and maybe a tenth of the communication if im being generous.
I had a Rainbow Vac salesman come to my house once. He says "Are you familiar with water as a filtration device?" I just look over at my bong on the counter.
They suck amazingly well. Theyre a pain in the ass to clean. The one we had also worked as a legitemate air filtration device if you selected the setting to do so
I got one. It truly does a fantastic job but yeah it is annoying to have to immediately clean the vacuum after using it. If you don't, it can cause the separator to get stuff stuck in it which can be annoying to clean, and the water gets nasty and builds bacteria.
On the subject of service calls, I'm an HVAC tech. A rather alarmingly common call I get is not unlike Mike and the full bag. Customer tells me the heat or air conditioning doesn't work. I show up and look at the furnace/AC and immediately check the air filter. Date says it hasn't been changed in almost 3 years. I see the evaporator coil is completely frozen over or the furnace is flashing the lockout code for an overheat, and then I ask the homeowner how long it's been since they changed the filter (or had one of the outfits come by). More often than not they hit me with "Oh I didn't know it had a filter." and at that point I am reassured that I'm never going to be out of a job. I still tell them how long their filters should last and what will happen if they don't change them, but it is ultimately a Sisyphean task
As a fellow HVAC technician I've dealt with the exact same thing I haven't even been a service tech for very long but plugged air filters that haven't been changed for a year happens way too often
As a rat owner, I too can confirm, rats are smart, friendly and they spend much of the time cleaning themselves, each other, sometimes you, and sleeping.
My grandfather had a plane, back in the day when a small town minister/ part time truck driver with 6 kids could afford a canvas body Piper 2-seater. My psychiatrist also has a plane, and he's described it as "more financially self destructive than a serious coke habit".
I really liked to hear some more from Mike's life. You guys are just a blast to listen to after a hard days work. Entertaining and I learn something new every time. Didn't know wallvacs were even a thing.
25:38 funny story about big houses with small numbers of people in them, my uncle and his wife bought a house when they got married, 6 bedrooms, 3.5 bath, game room downstairs with a wet bar, two fireplaces, an IC system, a built in 1 car garage, and a 4 car garage with a workshop out back. And it was 100k cheaper than the house they were originally looking at that had two bedrooms, 1.5 bath, and no garage because this mini mansion was in a shitty school district, so they now have the familial party house, all of our big family gatherings happen there because they have room to host out of town family members
I assume Zach was trying to remember Crisis Zone too, which was my favorite. Instead of a pistol, you got a machine gun and they really went all in on environmental destruction.
11:50 I completely agree with the rats as pets over gerbils or hamsters. My rat lived for 3 and 1/2 years. He was great. Loved being handled by everyone. Was very inquisitive, curious and playful. All the hamsters and gerbils I've ever met have always seemed to sit there in their cage doing nothing.
"Thank God you're here, Specialist Zach. Somebody. And we do not know how. Crammed a 40 MM grenade... We think it's probably not live ordinance, but we don't really know. Into the main gun of this Bradley. We need it operational in two hours. Can you do anything about it?"
Former Service Tech here. I used to work on lubrication systems, mainly oil, and 90% of our service calls to shops, dealerships, or government garages happened because someone decided they were going to mess with the air regulators on our pumps to try and "make it pump faster", only for them to burn up their pumps and destroy them. It never matters how many times you tell them NOT to set it higher than 30 PSI, they'll always do it.
29:33 as an IT technician, i can confirm old desktops pop up in random rooms like a fucking SCP- its always my job to figure out why this dusty Dell desktop that no ones touched since the Obama Administration isnt working in the room that the company forgets exists most of the time
@@Flagdread i found one running Vista once, they wondered why they couldnt have Slack function correctly on it i was all ....🤨 "i dunno, why DOES a brand new application not work on a nearly 20 year old OS?" best believe i SASS them mercilessly
Zach isn't used to that old school hospitality. Sometimes you just dont charge people (or you carge very little) in your community. Farmers, 1st responders a local church, the elderly, single parents etc.
Does this still happen much in smaller towns? I’ve lived in the city my whole life and it really seems like everybody is just living in their own little world more than ever nowadays. I would kill to live in a community where people help one another for the sake of being neighbourly.
Roombas do have actual vacuums in them, it's why you have to clean out/swap the little air filter once in a while. The beater bars are just to sweep debris out of the carpet so the vacuum can suck them up.
(Video starts) "Alright, but can I go on a tangent real quick?" - Zach. I love that this has been such a thing, please keep full sending the tangents, they make for some of the most entertaining stories.
The description of the water vac sounds like it wasn't meant to be used as a vacuum, but a CARPET CLEANER. We have a carpet cleaner that matches that description. It's primarily meant to be used for small-ish spots, like if somebody threw up on the floor.
A rainbow vacuum uses the water as the method of capturing the vacuumed stuff after it's vacuumed whereas a carpet cleaner shoots out water and cleaner and sucks it up immediately
It doesn't use the water to clean, but to capture sucked up dirt. Still they're better for regular vacuuming on carpet, with the cleaner only being used when needed.
Just imagine how much bigger a motor it can have compared to a handheld motor and compared to what was available, Kirby, Rainbowvac etc. they were quite powerful. Compared to a Dyson though yeah some older models wouldnt be as powerful.
@@johnyounoe6219Some central vac units have multiple motors. They can be pretty powerful, while not requiring you to lug around a massive piece of equipment or go deaf being next to it. That’s a major advantage of that kind of system.
The one house my parents that came with one installed was awesome. Imagine the portability of a stick vacuum, but with no battery issues, more suction, and way less emptying.
I guess I could see it being handy if you're old and/or disabled and live alone. You'd only have to carry a plug-in hose from room to room instead of the entire vacuum cleaner. It'd also be able to accept a *much* bigger receptacle for what you suck up, so you don't have to empty it as often (meaning that a family member or caretaker can empty it for you every once in a while, without you having to pay a cleaner for the entire time it takes to clean your home)
My parents have a central vacuum, and to my knowledge, it pipes out to 3 places. The old hose could reach each room pretty well, but after the handle got dropped a few times too many, we had to get a new hose as we couldn't get parts to fix the broken switch. New hose is even longer than the old one so now we could vacuum the stairs from either the first or second floor. Other than that we've got what I can only guess is a late 80s or maybe early 90s craftsman dry/wet shop vac. They don't make the dry filter anymore, and we have had no luck finding aftermarket filters, so what we've been having to do is each time we empty the vacuum, we also use the central vacuum to vacuum the craftsman filter so we can keep using it.
Watching this while walking to gym, hear dog bark real close, panic a bit look around, no dog, keep walking. Dog balls again, panic, look, no dog, keep walking. Third bark, oh, it's the video.
I have a Rainbow vac (just checked google and the specific model I have is the Rainbow D4C). As gross as it gets to clean, and how bad it is to carry around when it's filled (it's surprisingly heavy when filled with water), it is objectively the best vacuum cleaner I own, and it was a hand-me-down from my parents when they first owned it. It has lasted 35+ years (it is legitimately older than me), still going strong, and works better than any vacuum cleaner I have tried to purchase since to find as a suitable replacement. I personally have never had any issues when carrying it around when it was filled with water, but I also never tried to lug it up or down a whole flight of stairs without at least partially disassembling it. It separates onto 2 distinct parts, so it's super easy to disassemble and carry the top by holding the handle and bottom of the tub in one hand with the other hand used entirely on holding the tub. As for cleaning it, I just dump all the stuff into the toilet, refill the tub partially because a ton of gunk *always* gets snagged around the water level post in the middle, and then swirl it around and dump the rest out into the toilet.
26:21 there are just typing of the dead machines, theyre actually really cook because they have these really wierd arcade keyboards mounted where like a jpustick would normally be
i was a packer in a seatbelt factory, the rubber bands to tie the belts in the package would always tear my cuticles from my nails, so i had to wear gloves in 95 degree heat in the midwest not ideal for me, let me tell you 😅 besides the standing 8 hours on concrete straight, the poor pay and the locked HR office that you need a floor managers key to access, that was the worst part
In Finland we had wallvac equivalement system in our home when i was younger. Remember pretty much all possible problems you guys mentioned there. Not electrified but always clog somewhere because of lego, sock etc. But yeah most stupid system can have in house in this era and day when wacuum cleaners are so small and handy. And no need to play with that 10 meter snake around a house. Walls still have those pipes in them but sockets were covered and filled least 20 years ago.
Man you guys are awesome. The last two weeks I was thinking about your stories. Last night I was scrolling through your campfire story catalog to see if there was any I missed. And now there's a new one. thank you guys.
16:22 Always had that opportunity of someone saying "Thank god you're here" when I showed up. Except its fun to watch their face distort in horror when I tell them, "guess again! I'm hiding in the kitchen today to cook!" and then I just clock in and quickly go to the back while coworkers are dealing with lines of customers.😂 The joy of not having to deal with customers unless I choose to😂
Honestly how Mike felt about his Wallvac job is how I felt about the oilfield. I loved the work itself, it was simple and easy. I got paid for 15 hours a day, and only worked usually about an hour at a time with a 1-2 hour break period between. There were days where it sucked and I was busting my ass, but most of the time I just got paid to hang out with some cool people on my crew and play with explosives. When it sucked and the reason I got out was because the people on other crews were insufferable. Nobody on the other crews wanted to do maintenance so we had to do it all. Nobody wanted to set up locations properly so we had to move everything. When we tried to joke with them about anything they cried to management. I got so tired of dealing with them that I had to leave.
Zach, if you want a bunker search for Colin Furze here on youtube. The guy built a bunker under his garden, and is currently building a tunnel system under his house to his front yard where he plans to build a car rotisserie with scissorlift to have an underground garage for his delorean. It's absolutely insane. Also he never wears safety gear, does construction in a white dress shirt with rolled up sleeves and a tie, and plays a lot of ska. It's something alright.
Oh how I discovered this channel a few months ago and instantly became addicted to those stories. I mean I've watched the whole playlist several times now...
19:11 Zach must've gotten real lucky with his shock. IIRC 60mA (depending on the lenght of the shock) accros the heart is the threshold where you're at risk of ventricular fibrillation, which is fatal if it's not immediately treated.
4:01 my family had a 1980's model RainbowVac that we somehow inherited in the late 00's and when I tell you it is the most cumbersome thing I've ever been around I'm not exaggerating.
I had a job a little while back where I would deliver parts for boats and motorcycles to places. Usually it was one of the local Motorcycle garages, but day I get in and I'm told with no warning "Hey here's the company credit card, you need to travel a day and a half west deliver this part, and then come back." And I nod and clock in go. Fast forward to my arrival, and I see, for the first time in my life, a true blue McMansion. A basement, 3 story main building, a separate two story "pool house" and a 2 story garage with direct lake access. Then some dude in a small forklift comes to take my pallet of parts for boats and motorcycles as the owner come out in some fancy looking bathrobe. He gave me a bottle of mead as a thanks for the emergency delivery. Wildest shit I ever saw and I was outside the building
The way Mike and Zach talk about houses that got rich people, and then talk about hitman levels just makes me think of the lots I did pest control for that were hitman levels, armed guards included.
At least here in Czechia military sometimes sells unused small bunkers that are just one room and two ports for machine guns (built as part of border fortification and not ment to live in), occasionally even the bigger ones that have two floors and even bathroom!
11:55 If you feed them nothing but processed food, sure. My buddy’s rats lived for six years. Fancy rats at that. Nothing but vegetables, fruit, and bits of meat.
The Time Crisis games and the off-shoot Crisis Zone were so much fun. Played way too much Crisis Zone, with the riot shield, instead of the usual cover. Nothing like fighting a tank with your submachine gun.
Fucking love the WKUK. My fav skits are a Gallon of PCP and boiler maintenance. Also since Zach likes Horor I wonder if he saw Barbarian which was directed by a WKUK member
I worked for an equipment rental company, we had a little bit of everything from plumbing to landscaping, contrete and construction equipment. Some of the most annoying things to send out were floor scrubbers and vacuumes. We'd always tell people to sweep the floor BEFORE using the floor scrubbers because the vacuum isn't made to pick up more than like dirt, pebbles, flakes, small stuff. Constantly got calls about sucking issues and I'd find like mesh webbing, giant floor tile chunks and hardware stuck in the tube. Not to mention NO ONE ever cleans the tank out before they return it and I have to spend up to two hours physcially scraping and washing the solid mass out. And then with concrete vacs people seem to think it just magics the dust away and complain "This piece of junk don't suck for s#!% after like 5 hours!!!" and I have to tell them "YEAH BECAUSE IT'S FILLED TO THE LITERAL BRIM" I've had many cases of that and they just look at me and are like "Oh, lol, had no idea you had to empty these things ^w^" and then they wonder why there's a cleaning fee on their bill. Sorry for the long rant, you're a real one if you read all that!
Canadian here, I work maintenance in a hospital and this is the only place I have ever heard of or seen a wall vacuum. Here its a piece of equipment for the ORs to suck up human spaghetti during surgery.
13:23 or even better: the car is making a noise. What kind of noise ? Idk a noise. Then you get in the car and there's like 3 different kind of noises and you don't know which one is *the* noise
My dad put his own wall vac in his wood shop. It was just one room and aesthetics weren't an issue so he just screwed the pipes to the wall and hooked an ordinary shop vac to it. Worked great for what it was for.
I got the "Oh thank god, you're here" from a boss and 3 coworkers recently, for a department I'm transitioning out of. That was fun. It was for a day-long product run that took a solid hour just to prep for, and I had half that time. Kinda used to doing that and soloing the job itself while prepping- it's hell. I used to prep in advance when I could because of that. Plus side: 4 people came by to help this time, a couple of newbies watched to learn and ask questions, and the entire department now understands why I kept asking for an extra person to help prep. Later found out they tried doing one such run without me, started an hour late and had to redo a bunch of work because they got the wrong supplies. Love 'em, but goddamn.
The traditional definition of "decimation" was 10% of the forces being killed by the other 90%. It was a punishment for the Roman Legions iIrc. A less literal definition is that you took 10% losses. Now, it's used for any "high loss" event.
19:07-19:27 Those dog barks was the equivalent of hearing that knocking sound effect for me because I kept pausing and listening for the dogs to see if it was one roaming outside.
19:00 Bless you Zach. I feel that on a spiritual level. "I don't care as much as me bringing this up would seem but if I don't bring it up it'll bother me."
I may be 4 days late on watching it when dropped, but it’s always a good day when there’s a Campfire Story vid from Mike and Zach that I haven’t watched 👌🤌
There is no job worse than working under someone with an inferiority complex and a dead-end job. LSS: Assistant manager was running us all over because he thought if he had just good enough numbers, he would become manager when the current manager left for corporate. Cosmic justice said no after half the store quit. Literal non-sense he said to me once “Katey broke pallet of milk so your on thin ice, no mistakes today” ?!?!?!?!?!
Owning a plane is indeed expensive. The heavy regulation means it needs regular maintenance and inspections that can only be done by certified mechanics. They arent cheap either. Also depending on the type of plane, fuel is crazy expensive.
Yes but I would rather own a plane than a boat. You can fly (nearly) anywhere taking into account flight restrictions.In terms of money the US is the cheapest place to get your PPL (privates pilots license) but it is still 15k USD
I absolutely love y’all’s videos. I haven’t been able to watch many recently just cause it’s fallout 4 and London and I’m currently on a huge modded fallout 4 run and don’t want spoilers for it or London. Absolutely love the videos
I remember our rainbow vac. It actually cleaned well, but as you mentioned moving it around was a bloody ordeal, let alone cleaning the stupid thing out. The only real reason we had it was due to the house being 95% carpeted (even the foyer if I recall right), so we actually did need something like that for cleaning. Got rid of the thing after the house was converted to laminate and tile flooring. At that point, it was a big nuisance that was damaging the floors with its hard plastic wheels.
Friends car breaks down and I can tell it's a transmission issue. I tell them, they stare at me blankly "my car doesn't have a transmission it's an automatic" 😢
I live in a place where my street is fairly run down (still high rent, but welcome to the tyranny of landlords I guess), but less than five minutes West of me, is a sea front road that I call Tax Dodgers Row. It's right near a yacht club, the local private tennis club and a golf course. I work wherever there is work to do, and I've seen both the depths of squalour doing jobs for shitty landlords at their rental properties, AND at their actual houses. Once, it turned out that this guy I'd done a few jobs for needed some work done at his own place, so I go to this address, and its one of the Tax Dodger houses down this sea front road, and the whole time I am there working, on his high spec, architecturally advanced house, I'm remembering his tennants homes, the mold, the delapidated external rendering and brickwork, the fire hazard electrical problems, just the sheer squalour this dude has the temerity to charge people 90% of their income per month to live in... Ugh.
i was installing a chandelier for my mother a few years ago. my grandfather had done the wiring in the house, and because he taught me electrical work, i could decipher his work. i flipped the breaker that was labeled for the circuit i was going to be working on and went to work. next thing i know, my hand brushes a live wire while I'm on the ladder, my head smacks into the lath & plaster ceiling, and i wake up with my mother screaming. getting shocked SUCKS!
Still have a Wallvac in our house! Cool to learn how they work. I am also in Canada. Had to carry the big hose up 3 floors to vacuum, until we also got a portable vacuum.
As someone that had pet rats before, they’re AMAZING. They live 3-5 years, they’re insanely intelligent, and honest to god they have the same personality as a dog. They’re so loving and sweet and they LOVE cuddles and treats. I had 9 at one time when I was in middle school (I had rescued a female and was not told she was pregnant so it was a mom + 8 babies) and every time the door to my room opened, they’d all run to the bars of their massive enclosure and would climb up the bars to greet whoever walked in. They GENUINELY are way better pets than a hamster (do love hamsters, though) and honestly, every gerbil I’ve encountered is 5e devil reincarnate.
I love these story time scenes so much. The idle animations make it look like they're actually conversing lol. Also, yeah, wealthy people are ridiculous when it comes to spending money
I had job working as Fry cook I had co workers who smoked weed in the freezer and management only did something about when they would get in trouble and would say you have to call in for your shift and find your own replacement so if you work a 5am you would have to find someone at 3am(who is gunna answer their phone a 3am. No one!) As well as have the cooks clean the bath room and afterwards get back to cooking afterwards.
Was not prepared remotely for the rant on wall vacuums; I moved into a house with one and it’s awful it barely sucks and it’s so loud in the garage that the whole house has some level of noise. It’s none of the convenience with all of the downsides, but it’s also in your walls!
I had a walvac growing up. All through the house and the floor ones against the walls too. Only in our kitchen had the floor ones - very great, just sweep it to the slot, kick it open and it's clean
I remember back when I was at school we had pigs in a yard with an electric fence and we had a triangular metal ladder thing that went over the fence and into the ground on wither side. Well one day as I was done feeding the pigs and stuff I went to climb back over and I hit my leg on the electric fence while I was holding onto the metal rails of the ladder and that shocked me very badly he heart was beating funny and I was almost passing out for the rest of the day. Almost threw up so many times and got a killer headache from it. The teachers didn't care or even believe me. Was a very shitty day. I thought I was having a heart attack and dying for a while but thankfully it eventually eased up a bit. Took me a few days to recover fully from.
When I was eight, my family had me crawl behind a console stereo to get something that fell down. This thing was old- so old that there was a bare patch of wire on power cord. That I stepped on. Getting a good shock is something you won't forget at any age.
You don't understand how happy I was when he mentioned Time crisis. The urge to buy one. You can get a Time crisis 3 cabinet for like 20 grand. I put more money and time into that arcade game series then most console games
It's okay, Zach! "I have such pipes to show you" was fucking hilarious for a horror nerd like me.
THIS JUST GOT UPLOADED WHAT
@@ErisblackstoneThey're probably a patron
@@Erisblackstonepatron
AGREED.
Pinhead plumbing, man would be amazing at his job with those chains as sentient pipe snakes
Same
Municipal building inspector here. One time I had a house built in my jurisdiction that had an astronomical observatory on it. An actual observatory. The full-on rotating dome, with hydraulics and everything.
I had to be like "hey uhhhhhh I have never once dealt with this sort of thing in my life, no one has ever provided me with a single second of training for this eventuality, so I'm just gonna have to blindly trust this letter your engineer handed me saying everyone did their jobs right".
Thank you, Mr. President, very cool.
"Disgustingly rich." Oh boy, this brings me back to a job I had years ago. I used to work for an exceptionally affluent family that lived in a generational commune. Hidden deep within a several hundred acre property was a line of multimillion dollar homes beside their own private lake. Picture the nicest house you've ever seen. These were homes straight out of a real estate magazine. The nicest house on the lot was three stories with an attached two story guest house. Each had a three car garage. They had their own custom in-ground pool with a built in waterfall and hot tub. Their basement had an in-door basketball court, full service gym and an additional hot tub. The interior had polished marble on every floor and the decor was exclusively items worth my entire annual salary or more, per item. They had multiple boats, luxury cars; anything they could have ever wanted. All of the homes on the lot were of similar caliber. These were not their only homes.
What's my point? They never used any of it. They never left their homes to enjoy their property. They never used their pools, their sports courts, their boats. They had an army of contractors and servants tending to them constantly. These people didn't have to do anything for themselves. I cannot comprehend how you can have such immense wealth, and yet you don't even indulge in the things you've invested in. Such a waste.
the mindsets of the disgustingly rich are hard to comprehend. mfers might as well be aliens.
Did you ever interact with the people in the house? I’m curious as to what they actually did in their spare time.
@@chrisb5005 in my head this is billionaire version of "I only play solitaire on my $2000 gaming PC"
My steam library has hundreds of games and yet I keep going back to Slay the Spire. I’m totally just like these multi-billionaires.
eat the rich.
Zach's "Ramen Help Line" joke destroyed my sides....
...and my hope in humanity, because I'm 100% sure it 's something that WOULD happen
buddy of mine worked the front counter for Mcy'ds. one night a dood walked in and my buddy said he looked high as a kite. He looked at the menu for like 5 minutes and then asked for a burger. My buddy asked if he wanted cheese and he said it looked like he blew the doods mind. So I would say yeah, with how humans work and (sigh) act it has happed at least 100K times already
@@demon-hunter1498 wait a minute.....nope that was a White Castle I went to at 3:15 am on a Thursday about a decade ago. A sack of 10, 20, 30+ is a pothead's friend when ordering.
@@Nomed38 I'm in a town near Vancouver but good too know this has happen more then once, thus proving my point about the odds
That's what working a IT help desk is like.
Customer service worker, it happens
I used to work for an armored car company as a guard. It was a great job, really good pay and the work was easy without being boring. The problem was every time we came back to the depot. Our manager had a habit of screaming at people like a drill sergeant about things that weren't their responsibility, only for the guy whose responsibility it was to turn up and the problem to be resolved instantly, because the manager never bothered to check with the people whose job it was to keep track of stuff when he needed to find said stuff
I worked security, my boss thought he was an actual cop, and was repeatedly told by the cops that he wasn't a cop and him claiming he's a cop was against the law.
@@HappyHellscapes He was Frank “essentially a cop”.
@@HappyHellscapes i feel that, my current management tries to run our site like a para-military force, with uh less than half the funding and maybe a tenth of the communication if im being generous.
@@jorikrouwenhorst7220 to be fair, he looked like a skinny Paul Blart.
It's the 1/10th communication factor that probably made that the hardest! @@steelixthelegend7266
I had a Rainbow Vac salesman come to my house once. He says "Are you familiar with water as a filtration device?" I just look over at my bong on the counter.
Oh my god it really is a bong vacuum.
They suck amazingly well. Theyre a pain in the ass to clean. The one we had also worked as a legitemate air filtration device if you selected the setting to do so
@ProtoAzula part of why I let him in was I got the mini air filtration system for free.🤣🤣🤣
TIL how bongs work through a yt comment
I got one. It truly does a fantastic job but yeah it is annoying to have to immediately clean the vacuum after using it. If you don't, it can cause the separator to get stuff stuck in it which can be annoying to clean, and the water gets nasty and builds bacteria.
Oh god the "these vaccums suck" bit. i feel that so hard. Finnally, FINALLY got a halfway decent one and it feels goddamn transcendent
My mom's Orek from 2000 is still fantastic
Only 2nd place to Printers
On the subject of service calls,
I'm an HVAC tech. A rather alarmingly common call I get is not unlike Mike and the full bag. Customer tells me the heat or air conditioning doesn't work. I show up and look at the furnace/AC and immediately check the air filter. Date says it hasn't been changed in almost 3 years. I see the evaporator coil is completely frozen over or the furnace is flashing the lockout code for an overheat, and then I ask the homeowner how long it's been since they changed the filter (or had one of the outfits come by). More often than not they hit me with "Oh I didn't know it had a filter." and at that point I am reassured that I'm never going to be out of a job.
I still tell them how long their filters should last and what will happen if they don't change them, but it is ultimately a Sisyphean task
As a fellow HVAC technician I've dealt with the exact same thing I haven't even been a service tech for very long but plugged air filters that haven't been changed for a year happens way too often
As a rat owner, I too can confirm, rats are smart, friendly and they spend much of the time cleaning themselves, each other, sometimes you, and sleeping.
My grandfather had a plane, back in the day when a small town minister/ part time truck driver with 6 kids could afford a canvas body Piper 2-seater.
My psychiatrist also has a plane, and he's described it as "more financially self destructive than a serious coke habit".
Zach’s vacuum rants-the next biggest thing
Zach's Vacuum rants part 9!
I wonder if this boss was the same boss who sold his work van for a pig.
I always imagined him to be the cola plumbing job boss
Twelve days ago!?
@@Luiz96648 Patreon subscribers get videos a bit early.
@@Luiz96648UA-cam members get them early
@@Luiz96648 Patreon?
There's an arcade in Austin called Pinballz where they have a Japanese arcade cabinet of Typing of The Dead. It's absolutely awesome
Man, now I want to go there
You don’t understand I listen to all of campfire stories at work gets me through the night keep this going I can’t get enough of em
Me too, man. Night shift sucks.
I literally just commented that we need more of these
I really liked to hear some more from Mike's life. You guys are just a blast to listen to after a hard days work. Entertaining and I learn something new every time. Didn't know wallvacs were even a thing.
Watching this on my lunch break
@@thatoddball4792Same
Same did we all just become best friends
I'm a day late to the lunch break gang
25:38 funny story about big houses with small numbers of people in them, my uncle and his wife bought a house when they got married, 6 bedrooms, 3.5 bath, game room downstairs with a wet bar, two fireplaces, an IC system, a built in 1 car garage, and a 4 car garage with a workshop out back. And it was 100k cheaper than the house they were originally looking at that had two bedrooms, 1.5 bath, and no garage because this mini mansion was in a shitty school district, so they now have the familial party house, all of our big family gatherings happen there because they have room to host out of town family members
Fella!
I assume Zach was trying to remember Crisis Zone too, which was my favorite. Instead of a pistol, you got a machine gun and they really went all in on environmental destruction.
11:50 I completely agree with the rats as pets over gerbils or hamsters. My rat lived for 3 and 1/2 years. He was great. Loved being handled by everyone. Was very inquisitive, curious and playful. All the hamsters and gerbils I've ever met have always seemed to sit there in their cage doing nothing.
Hamster is actually night creature, so yeah, during daytime they're not much fun to watch and most people don't really know..
"Thank God you're here, Specialist Zach. Somebody. And we do not know how. Crammed a 40 MM grenade... We think it's probably not live ordinance, but we don't really know. Into the main gun of this Bradley. We need it operational in two hours. Can you do anything about it?"
Former Service Tech here. I used to work on lubrication systems, mainly oil, and 90% of our service calls to shops, dealerships, or government garages happened because someone decided they were going to mess with the air regulators on our pumps to try and "make it pump faster", only for them to burn up their pumps and destroy them. It never matters how many times you tell them NOT to set it higher than 30 PSI, they'll always do it.
29:33 as an IT technician, i can confirm old desktops pop up in random rooms like a fucking SCP-
its always my job to figure out why this dusty Dell desktop that no ones touched since the Obama Administration isnt working in the room that the company forgets exists most of the time
Nothing can compare to the dread I felt in military IT like the time I found a computer running XP in 2018!
@@FlagdreadWe still use XP at my work 😅
@@Flagdread i found one running Vista once, they wondered why they couldnt have Slack function correctly on it
i was all ....🤨 "i dunno, why DOES a brand new application not work on a nearly 20 year old OS?" best believe i SASS them mercilessly
@@jacksonwillis8675 oh dear 😅 das not good
@ Now try doing CAD on it 🙃
If you have enough money, you can literally buy old Cold War missile silos.
Zach isn't used to that old school hospitality. Sometimes you just dont charge people (or you carge very little) in your community. Farmers, 1st responders a local church, the elderly, single parents etc.
Tbf unless you're taught it, most people won't do stuff like that
It's called a Gift Economy, and it used to be how the vast majority of human communities operated, throughout history.
@@tbotalpha8133 Yeah, unspoken rule is the other side do some favors back to keep things good
Does this still happen much in smaller towns? I’ve lived in the city my whole life and it really seems like everybody is just living in their own little world more than ever nowadays. I would kill to live in a community where people help one another for the sake of being neighbourly.
@@adrian42069 Definitely smaller towns or ethnic neighborhoods. Like a few blocks of majorly black or a suburb of majorly Chinese.
20:13 that dog barking is the new realistic door knocking… for me at least. I was outside and looking around for whatever dog was barking at me. 😅
Roombas do have actual vacuums in them, it's why you have to clean out/swap the little air filter once in a while. The beater bars are just to sweep debris out of the carpet so the vacuum can suck them up.
(Video starts) "Alright, but can I go on a tangent real quick?" - Zach. I love that this has been such a thing, please keep full sending the tangents, they make for some of the most entertaining stories.
My mom would use a rainbow vac to clean up the ladybugs that invaded our house every fall. That water was a chemical weapon.
The description of the water vac sounds like it wasn't meant to be used as a vacuum, but a CARPET CLEANER. We have a carpet cleaner that matches that description. It's primarily meant to be used for small-ish spots, like if somebody threw up on the floor.
A rainbow vacuum uses the water as the method of capturing the vacuumed stuff after it's vacuumed whereas a carpet cleaner shoots out water and cleaner and sucks it up immediately
It doesn't use the water to clean, but to capture sucked up dirt. Still they're better for regular vacuuming on carpet, with the cleaner only being used when needed.
A wall vac sounds incredibly inefficient in comparison to a regular Vacuum.
Just imagine how much bigger a motor it can have compared to a handheld motor and compared to what was available, Kirby, Rainbowvac etc. they were quite powerful.
Compared to a Dyson though yeah some older models wouldnt be as powerful.
@@johnyounoe6219Some central vac units have multiple motors. They can be pretty powerful, while not requiring you to lug around a massive piece of equipment or go deaf being next to it. That’s a major advantage of that kind of system.
The one house my parents that came with one installed was awesome. Imagine the portability of a stick vacuum, but with no battery issues, more suction, and way less emptying.
I guess I could see it being handy if you're old and/or disabled and live alone.
You'd only have to carry a plug-in hose from room to room instead of the entire vacuum cleaner. It'd also be able to accept a *much* bigger receptacle for what you suck up, so you don't have to empty it as often (meaning that a family member or caretaker can empty it for you every once in a while, without you having to pay a cleaner for the entire time it takes to clean your home)
My parents have a central vacuum, and to my knowledge, it pipes out to 3 places. The old hose could reach each room pretty well, but after the handle got dropped a few times too many, we had to get a new hose as we couldn't get parts to fix the broken switch. New hose is even longer than the old one so now we could vacuum the stairs from either the first or second floor.
Other than that we've got what I can only guess is a late 80s or maybe early 90s craftsman dry/wet shop vac. They don't make the dry filter anymore, and we have had no luck finding aftermarket filters, so what we've been having to do is each time we empty the vacuum, we also use the central vacuum to vacuum the craftsman filter so we can keep using it.
Watching this while walking to gym, hear dog bark real close, panic a bit look around, no dog, keep walking. Dog balls again, panic, look, no dog, keep walking. Third bark, oh, it's the video.
the plight of being a tech and having to deal with idiots, i feel you
I have a Rainbow vac (just checked google and the specific model I have is the Rainbow D4C). As gross as it gets to clean, and how bad it is to carry around when it's filled (it's surprisingly heavy when filled with water), it is objectively the best vacuum cleaner I own, and it was a hand-me-down from my parents when they first owned it. It has lasted 35+ years (it is legitimately older than me), still going strong, and works better than any vacuum cleaner I have tried to purchase since to find as a suitable replacement.
I personally have never had any issues when carrying it around when it was filled with water, but I also never tried to lug it up or down a whole flight of stairs without at least partially disassembling it. It separates onto 2 distinct parts, so it's super easy to disassemble and carry the top by holding the handle and bottom of the tub in one hand with the other hand used entirely on holding the tub. As for cleaning it, I just dump all the stuff into the toilet, refill the tub partially because a ton of gunk *always* gets snagged around the water level post in the middle, and then swirl it around and dump the rest out into the toilet.
26:21 there are just typing of the dead machines, theyre actually really cook because they have these really wierd arcade keyboards mounted where like a jpustick would normally be
Probably a mechanical keyboard that has some sort of liquid barrier or water resistant cover.
i am now realizing that the funny outlet i grew up with is a wallvac
i was a packer in a seatbelt factory, the rubber bands to tie the belts in the package would always tear my cuticles from my nails, so i had to wear gloves in 95 degree heat in the midwest
not ideal for me, let me tell you 😅 besides the standing 8 hours on concrete straight, the poor pay and the locked HR office that you need a floor managers key to access, that was the worst part
In Finland we had wallvac equivalement system in our home when i was younger.
Remember pretty much all possible problems you guys mentioned there.
Not electrified but always clog somewhere because of lego, sock etc.
But yeah most stupid system can have in house in this era and day when wacuum cleaners are so
small and handy. And no need to play with that 10 meter snake around a house.
Walls still have those pipes in them but sockets were covered and filled least 20 years ago.
Man you guys are awesome. The last two weeks I was thinking about your stories. Last night I was scrolling through your campfire story catalog to see if there was any I missed. And now there's a new one. thank you guys.
16:22 Always had that opportunity of someone saying "Thank god you're here" when I showed up. Except its fun to watch their face distort in horror when I tell them, "guess again! I'm hiding in the kitchen today to cook!" and then I just clock in and quickly go to the back while coworkers are dealing with lines of customers.😂 The joy of not having to deal with customers unless I choose to😂
Sounds like zach had a electrifying experience
Honestly how Mike felt about his Wallvac job is how I felt about the oilfield. I loved the work itself, it was simple and easy. I got paid for 15 hours a day, and only worked usually about an hour at a time with a 1-2 hour break period between. There were days where it sucked and I was busting my ass, but most of the time I just got paid to hang out with some cool people on my crew and play with explosives.
When it sucked and the reason I got out was because the people on other crews were insufferable. Nobody on the other crews wanted to do maintenance so we had to do it all. Nobody wanted to set up locations properly so we had to move everything. When we tried to joke with them about anything they cried to management. I got so tired of dealing with them that I had to leave.
As a canadian i have never seen a wallvac or seen it advertised
It's a thing here too. Seen and demo'd plenty of them in Alberta
Can confirm that we have them in Ontario,
South african, I've never seen one. I've wanted one for years but I've never seen one
I am from tx I have never seen or heard wallvac
am ontarioan and never even heard of a wallvac until now
Zach, if you want a bunker search for Colin Furze here on youtube. The guy built a bunker under his garden, and is currently building a tunnel system under his house to his front yard where he plans to build a car rotisserie with scissorlift to have an underground garage for his delorean. It's absolutely insane. Also he never wears safety gear, does construction in a white dress shirt with rolled up sleeves and a tie, and plays a lot of ska. It's something alright.
Oh how I discovered this channel a few months ago and instantly became addicted to those stories. I mean I've watched the whole playlist several times now...
19:11 Zach must've gotten real lucky with his shock. IIRC 60mA (depending on the lenght of the shock) accros the heart is the threshold where you're at risk of ventricular fibrillation, which is fatal if it's not immediately treated.
The fact that yall can talk about nothing but vacuums for over 5 mins and I'm entertained. Yall are doing something right 😂
4:01 my family had a 1980's model RainbowVac that we somehow inherited in the late 00's and when I tell you it is the most cumbersome thing I've ever been around I'm not exaggerating.
I have such pipes to show you wasn’t an *amazing* joke, but Zachkq had perfectly delivery on it and that’s what got me.
I had a job a little while back where I would deliver parts for boats and motorcycles to places. Usually it was one of the local Motorcycle garages, but day I get in and I'm told with no warning "Hey here's the company credit card, you need to travel a day and a half west deliver this part, and then come back." And I nod and clock in go. Fast forward to my arrival, and I see, for the first time in my life, a true blue McMansion. A basement, 3 story main building, a separate two story "pool house" and a 2 story garage with direct lake access.
Then some dude in a small forklift comes to take my pallet of parts for boats and motorcycles as the owner come out in some fancy looking bathrobe. He gave me a bottle of mead as a thanks for the emergency delivery.
Wildest shit I ever saw and I was outside the building
The way Mike and Zach talk about houses that got rich people, and then talk about hitman levels just makes me think of the lots I did pest control for that were hitman levels, armed guards included.
I love these campfire stories very much, always a hoot to listen too!
Glad you enjoyed it!
At least here in Czechia military sometimes sells unused small bunkers that are just one room and two ports for machine guns (built as part of border fortification and not ment to live in), occasionally even the bigger ones that have two floors and even bathroom!
11:55 If you feed them nothing but processed food, sure. My buddy’s rats lived for six years. Fancy rats at that. Nothing but vegetables, fruit, and bits of meat.
The Time Crisis games and the off-shoot Crisis Zone were so much fun.
Played way too much Crisis Zone, with the riot shield, instead of the usual cover. Nothing like fighting a tank with your submachine gun.
Fucking love the WKUK.
My fav skits are a Gallon of PCP and boiler maintenance.
Also since Zach likes Horor I wonder if he saw Barbarian which was directed by a WKUK member
Don’t forget nail gun
I worked for an equipment rental company, we had a little bit of everything from plumbing to landscaping, contrete and construction equipment. Some of the most annoying things to send out were floor scrubbers and vacuumes. We'd always tell people to sweep the floor BEFORE using the floor scrubbers because the vacuum isn't made to pick up more than like dirt, pebbles, flakes, small stuff. Constantly got calls about sucking issues and I'd find like mesh webbing, giant floor tile chunks and hardware stuck in the tube. Not to mention NO ONE ever cleans the tank out before they return it and I have to spend up to two hours physcially scraping and washing the solid mass out. And then with concrete vacs people seem to think it just magics the dust away and complain "This piece of junk don't suck for s#!% after like 5 hours!!!" and I have to tell them "YEAH BECAUSE IT'S FILLED TO THE LITERAL BRIM" I've had many cases of that and they just look at me and are like "Oh, lol, had no idea you had to empty these things ^w^" and then they wonder why there's a cleaning fee on their bill.
Sorry for the long rant, you're a real one if you read all that!
so was it a Pre-Cuban Missile Crisis thing or a Pre-Pre Cuban Missile Crisis thing?
27:28
everyone in oklahoma has a bunker.
welcome to tornado alley.
Canadian here, I work maintenance in a hospital and this is the only place I have ever heard of or seen a wall vacuum. Here its a piece of equipment for the ORs to suck up human spaghetti during surgery.
"Can like, Joe Schmo have a bunker"
*glances at colin furze*
Uh... yeah...
13:23 or even better: the car is making a noise. What kind of noise ? Idk a noise. Then you get in the car and there's like 3 different kind of noises and you don't know which one is *the* noise
My dad put his own wall vac in his wood shop. It was just one room and aesthetics weren't an issue so he just screwed the pipes to the wall and hooked an ordinary shop vac to it. Worked great for what it was for.
I got the "Oh thank god, you're here" from a boss and 3 coworkers recently, for a department I'm transitioning out of. That was fun. It was for a day-long product run that took a solid hour just to prep for, and I had half that time. Kinda used to doing that and soloing the job itself while prepping- it's hell. I used to prep in advance when I could because of that.
Plus side: 4 people came by to help this time, a couple of newbies watched to learn and ask questions, and the entire department now understands why I kept asking for an extra person to help prep.
Later found out they tried doing one such run without me, started an hour late and had to redo a bunch of work because they got the wrong supplies.
Love 'em, but goddamn.
Oh hey, I've still got one of those rainbow water vacuums. And we just dump it into the toilet which works fine
I have a rainbow and I love it lol. Cleans my little camper spotless in minutes.
"Same thing with me and 'decimated'" Well, now I need to know Mike.
The traditional definition of "decimation" was 10% of the forces being killed by the other 90%. It was a punishment for the Roman Legions iIrc. A less literal definition is that you took 10% losses. Now, it's used for any "high loss" event.
19:07-19:27 Those dog barks was the equivalent of hearing that knocking sound effect for me because I kept pausing and listening for the dogs to see if it was one roaming outside.
19:00
Bless you Zach.
I feel that on a spiritual level. "I don't care as much as me bringing this up would seem but if I don't bring it up it'll bother me."
I may be 4 days late on watching it when dropped, but it’s always a good day when there’s a Campfire Story vid from Mike and Zach that I haven’t watched 👌🤌
There is no job worse than working under someone with an inferiority complex and a dead-end job.
LSS: Assistant manager was running us all over because he thought if he had just good enough numbers, he would become manager when the current manager left for corporate. Cosmic justice said no after half the store quit. Literal non-sense he said to me once “Katey broke pallet of milk so your on thin ice, no mistakes today” ?!?!?!?!?!
Owning a plane is indeed expensive. The heavy regulation means it needs regular maintenance and inspections that can only be done by certified mechanics. They arent cheap either. Also depending on the type of plane, fuel is crazy expensive.
Yes but I would rather own a plane than a boat. You can fly (nearly) anywhere taking into account flight restrictions.In terms of money the US is the cheapest place to get your PPL (privates pilots license) but it is still 15k USD
I absolutely love y’all’s videos. I haven’t been able to watch many recently just cause it’s fallout 4 and London and I’m currently on a huge modded fallout 4 run and don’t want spoilers for it or London. Absolutely love the videos
I love this channel 😭😭
I remember our rainbow vac. It actually cleaned well, but as you mentioned moving it around was a bloody ordeal, let alone cleaning the stupid thing out.
The only real reason we had it was due to the house being 95% carpeted (even the foyer if I recall right), so we actually did need something like that for cleaning.
Got rid of the thing after the house was converted to laminate and tile flooring. At that point, it was a big nuisance that was damaging the floors with its hard plastic wheels.
Roombas have had suction for years, Hazard
"We'll tear your FLOOR apart!"
- PVCHead, from the famous horror movie Hellvaccer
I mean he sounded like a decent or reasonable person for a boss.
Friends car breaks down and I can tell it's a transmission issue. I tell them, they stare at me blankly "my car doesn't have a transmission it's an automatic" 😢
26:31 Lucky for you Zach, Typing of the Dead actually exists!
I live in a place where my street is fairly run down (still high rent, but welcome to the tyranny of landlords I guess), but less than five minutes West of me, is a sea front road that I call Tax Dodgers Row. It's right near a yacht club, the local private tennis club and a golf course. I work wherever there is work to do, and I've seen both the depths of squalour doing jobs for shitty landlords at their rental properties, AND at their actual houses. Once, it turned out that this guy I'd done a few jobs for needed some work done at his own place, so I go to this address, and its one of the Tax Dodger houses down this sea front road, and the whole time I am there working, on his high spec, architecturally advanced house, I'm remembering his tennants homes, the mold, the delapidated external rendering and brickwork, the fire hazard electrical problems, just the sheer squalour this dude has the temerity to charge people 90% of their income per month to live in... Ugh.
I actually did not know wallvacs were a thing until I saw this video. You guys actually taught me something new.
i was installing a chandelier for my mother a few years ago. my grandfather had done the wiring in the house, and because he taught me electrical work, i could decipher his work. i flipped the breaker that was labeled for the circuit i was going to be working on and went to work. next thing i know, my hand brushes a live wire while I'm on the ladder, my head smacks into the lath & plaster ceiling, and i wake up with my mother screaming. getting shocked SUCKS!
Still have a Wallvac in our house! Cool to learn how they work. I am also in Canada. Had to carry the big hose up 3 floors to vacuum, until we also got a portable vacuum.
Love these videos used to watch them a lot the gun range and military story's are pretty entertaining 🔥🔥
Hey Zach. The pipes joke was phenomenal. Choked on my food man
“The joy of flying through the sky”
Can confirm, was listening while flying a Piper Cherokee across the province lmao
As someone that had pet rats before, they’re AMAZING. They live 3-5 years, they’re insanely intelligent, and honest to god they have the same personality as a dog. They’re so loving and sweet and they LOVE cuddles and treats. I had 9 at one time when I was in middle school (I had rescued a female and was not told she was pregnant so it was a mom + 8 babies) and every time the door to my room opened, they’d all run to the bars of their massive enclosure and would climb up the bars to greet whoever walked in. They GENUINELY are way better pets than a hamster (do love hamsters, though) and honestly, every gerbil I’ve encountered is 5e devil reincarnate.
I love these story time scenes so much. The idle animations make it look like they're actually conversing lol. Also, yeah, wealthy people are ridiculous when it comes to spending money
Today I learned that walvacs are apparently a thing. Never even heard of anything close to that concept.
I had job working as Fry cook I had co workers who smoked weed in the freezer and management only did something about when they would get in trouble and would say you have to call in for your shift and find your own replacement so if you work a 5am you would have to find someone at 3am(who is gunna answer their phone a 3am. No one!) As well as have the cooks clean the bath room and afterwards get back to cooking afterwards.
Was not prepared remotely for the rant on wall vacuums; I moved into a house with one and it’s awful it barely sucks and it’s so loud in the garage that the whole house has some level of noise. It’s none of the convenience with all of the downsides, but it’s also in your walls!
I had a walvac growing up. All through the house and the floor ones against the walls too. Only in our kitchen had the floor ones - very great, just sweep it to the slot, kick it open and it's clean
I have such pipes to show you, and the pvc Pinhead picture were comedy gold
I remember back when I was at school we had pigs in a yard with an electric fence and we had a triangular metal ladder thing that went over the fence and into the ground on wither side.
Well one day as I was done feeding the pigs and stuff I went to climb back over and I hit my leg on the electric fence while I was holding onto the metal rails of the ladder and that shocked me very badly he heart was beating funny and I was almost passing out for the rest of the day. Almost threw up so many times and got a killer headache from it.
The teachers didn't care or even believe me. Was a very shitty day. I thought I was having a heart attack and dying for a while but thankfully it eventually eased up a bit. Took me a few days to recover fully from.
Okay knowing that Zach loves Time Crisis, my respect for him has gone through the ceiling cap that I already had 🤣
19:00 man I didn't know that...
When I was eight, my family had me crawl behind a console stereo to get something that fell down. This thing was old- so old that there was a bare patch of wire on power cord. That I stepped on. Getting a good shock is something you won't forget at any age.
Dad was construction, so we always had access to a shopvac.
*those things are great*
They can vacuum anything, even light flooding.
You don't understand how happy I was when he mentioned Time crisis. The urge to buy one. You can get a Time crisis 3 cabinet for like 20 grand. I put more money and time into that arcade game series then most console games
"All Time Crisis consoles"
Ahh, a man of culture!
I have feeling Mike would enjoy watching Scuffed Realtor with his experiences working in all sorts of houses