Thanks to everyone who asked about our Patreon. I'll put out a full video when I get the time, but for those who want to jump the gun and get on board from the start, here's the link: www.patreon.com/rareearth It means a huge deal that so many have asked us to start an account. I never thought anyone would watch these videos, let alone support them.
Yea, it was likely in an industrial scale wet Market. Most wet Markets in 3rd world countries are born out of necessity, and China's were initially no exception... initially. Over time, they became a front for exotic and endangered meats for a relative minority of affluent Chinese, and the conditions in said markets are *FAR* from any real sanitation standards. Cross contamination between cuts of meat is the tip of the iceberg; dead animals rotting in cages is not unheard of, animals in cramped spaces urinating and defecating on one another, happens quite a bit, and lets just say that the employees don't always have the needed protection.
Papa Nurgle not only that, but also the poor regulation of the meat. Disease that spreads through the consumption of any meat usually also happens from poor sanitation and poor regulation, and the wet markets of China had enough of those and had them in great enough numbers were it was going to happen eventually.
@@snosibsnob3930 Definitely. Any industry that deals with meat is disease prone. Even in the best of conditions, the risk remains. Wet Markets that sell exotic animals are especially risky, the wildcard element where disease is concerned is worrying. The REALLY freaky part about Covid 19 isn't the fact it happened; it's that it'll happen again... The markets are already re-opening.
@nymersic "just happened"? Could you not limit your conspiracy theories to flat Earth and who killed Kennedy? Virus prevention is vitally important and could save countless lives. But the more that you and the other lunatics ignore the ACTUAL FACTS, the harder it will be for us to demand China tackle the real problem of wet markets.
Aaaaaaand this series continues to be so damn good. Keep it up, I really love what you guys are doing, very well researched and well presented. It feels really well thought out, but also natural, which is tough to do.
I was already like, "Cool, I'm Laotion", born in Vientiane. Then you said you were Canadian and I was like, "YEAH! Even cooler, I'm Canadian also". lol Immigrated to Toronto in '78 at the age of 2 with my family. Sponsored, actually.
Oh..... My..... Gawdz!! I...... Um...... OH MY GATSBY!!! So I just watched the first vid in the playlist and, WOW!! Not trying to take anything away from you, Evan, i swear. You are an awesome talent and person in your own right. I just did not know your last name was Hadfield because I promise you that I would've put 2 and two together. lol I am quite certain that you get it often enough so if you can please just put up with one more it would be so appreciated. Here goes... Your father is one of the very few people I idolize. He is one of the reasons I love love LOVE being Canadian. lol I've been reading about him since highschool and was always intrigued that a NASA astronaut was from not just Canada but Ontario. So you can can imagine my admiration for him when he was appointed commander on the ISS. Okay enough gushing. I'm sorry if that was unbearable for you. lol I have a 5 yro and I'd be more than proud for him to discover you and the vids you make and present when he get's old enough to understand. You are a great educational presenter, Evan. I will tell him about you and your background and why learning from someone like you is fun and exciting. Thanks for all your hard work. If you have a crew or partner for these projects, I thank them too. See ya!
I've been watching this series ever since it was announced, and it just keeps getting better and better. Sincere thanks and kudos from a fellow Canadian! (Loved the horror outro at the end there btw, nice touch!) ;)
The Coelacanth Fish was though to have been extinct for 66 million years but one was rediscovered in 1938 off the coast of South Africa in, you guessed it, a Fish Market.
If this is too squeamish for someone, they just shouldn't eat meat. This is reality, and if you're one of us who eat meat, you have to just accept that.
Ok, some people would rather eat meat after it is nicely roasted and prepared than look at the red flesh of uncooked meat. Yeah, it is the reality. But it is a reality that I would rather not look at.
Then you are a huge hypocrite. You are slaughtering and eating an innocent and sentient being just because its tasty. And dont start me on "its culture" or "its neccesary for survival". You are using fucking internet, living on a jungle of concrete and surrounded by technology
I prefer proper handling of meat where it isn't contaminated but butchered where it is prepared or properly stored before cooking. But if it's your thing to roll around in the guts and grime, enjoy. 👍
They used to scare the crap out of me when I was a kid. I remember walking through the market and if I saw a tub with netting over the top I had to prepare myself for this black mass of slimy eel looking stuff that I didn't understand.
Agreed. From what i know, Coelacanth (a type of fish) was considered extinct and their fossil was found until one day this fish caught on fisherman's net somewhere in africa. Not only that, the same fish also appeared in Manado, Indonesia. And they both got a different scientific name due to location. Surprisingly they both was not founded by scientists on an expedition but found caught by fisherman. And the one that was found in manado even has its own local name means that even this fish is extremely rare, it was founded several time before by locals. And i think this is one of the best discovery of the last century
I can't believe I went this long on youtube without seeing any of your content! You tell a really captivating story, and it's been nice to binge watch your videos lol. Thanks for making these!
*Dale:* "Are you Chinese or Japanese?" *Khan:* "I'm Laotian!!" *Dale:* "What Ocean?" *Khan:* "Ahhhhg!! ...I'm from the country Laos!! That make me Laotian!!" *Dale:* "Oh... So are you Chinese or Japanese?" --Classic 1st season *"KING OF THE HILL"* episode, from '97 when the first Asian family moved into the neighborhood, right next door to Hank and Peggy Hill; "Khan" & "Ming." I don't recall the daughter's name at the moment, but that was a great show. Mike Judge is the best! I know he was co-creator of the show, along with another person, the name of whom I am unable to recall at this time... Anyway, every time I hear about anything to do with Laos or the Laotian people, I always think of that bit from early *"KING OF THE HILL"!*
I'm loving the SEA series, especially because I lived in northern Laos for 2 years (and Cambodia for 3). Based on my experience, I'd like to suggest a slight edit/addition to your final question. You could have followed "Will it be you?" with a gesture to the young folks in the market and suggested "Or maybe a future scientist right here." Young Lao is a formidable demographic in the country, possessing an almost religious fervor for education, a hunger for global connection, and a profound respect for and knowledge about the remarkable natural world they've inherited. Spending time with these folks makes me really optimistic about Laos' future, even as the old guard tries to ring every kip they can from the country's ecological treasures. These kids are going to shake up this nation and teach us all a thing or two in the process.
That was a FANTASTIC episode and really makes you think about things! Sometimes what we "Know" in the Western World isn't true at all. It's great though that Scientists are able to find so many new species! I bet many people there would be open to collecting live specimens for them!
As a kid I bought into the "Born too late to explore the world, born too early to explore the universe" thing but the reality is just because you can know that a place exists, you personally still can go discover the gigantic, super diverse world for yourself. Who cares that you know all the continents or could learn all the countries, what are they like? Go discover that. You were born at the perfect time to for insanely cheap and unimaginably quickly get anywhere on the planet. You are never more than a few hundred, almost never any more than 2000, dollars and less than 48 hours away from pretty much anywhere else on the planet. Don't hold yourself back. You get one life, don't waste your time and money on just paying to continue existing in the same place. Get out there with our incredible technology and modern society full of convenience and discover what the rest of the world is like for YOU, because nobody else can ever discover that but YOU.
I like to imagine there's a story behind every one of Francesco's nicknames. The subject of this video is extremely interesting, an unthinkable concept for me before this video
Just watching you in one of those markets evokes past memories... And the strong smells that came with it lol. Go figure, those 2 things are very close knit.
Should anyone who works for the BBC be watching this, please tell those who can commission programmes about this channel. These stories - and of course all of those who work on it! - are exactly the sort of thing which would fit into a number of programmes on the news: Reporters, the Travel Show and others. Or give him a full-scale series which could give us the sort of travelogue/history/science stories in a depth often missed. It would be a hit!
This is my first video I have watched by you. I usually watch travel food type of people. Food Ranger / Mark Weins type. This is interesting how much dialog you have. I feel like this video was more about the back story and facts. I am very much loving the lore you have in the different foods we eat. Thank you for this video! Also. I am enjoying the lisp you have. I have been shy about my lisp. I am happy to know there are other people out there that try to hide theirs as well. Please keep up the great work!
Not saying you are wrong, but what you are ignoring, or at least not verbalizing, is that these bushmeat markets aren't only a treasure trove for science, but also a graveyard for species. For every species discovered there, there's probably half a dozen that go unnoticed, only to vanish in the stomach of some hungry person without even leaving the memory of them ever having existed.
I apologize that I seem to have overheard that. I noticed that it clearly was in the subtext, but it was something I felt needed to be said explicitly ... well, I should have listened more closely. :)
This feels like a backdrop to a discussion about Imperialism's effect on science. It's such an obvious way to discover new species too but it seems..."foreign".
It's been almost two decades since I've been in those markets, I can still remember the smell. It was an interesting experience for sure as Lao American. I feel a need to go back now.
I thought I would stop watching your videos after the japanese ones because I really didnt find other parts of asia as interesting, but boy, I was wrong. Keep up the good work!!!
The Coelacanth is a lobed fish related to lungfish (near the evolutionary track for walking legs and breathing air) last seen in the Triassic. Until it was seen in a fish market in South Africa being sold as salmon.
Marvelous. If I set up residence in the malaria infested region of Laos I could discover new species from the convenience of the meat market as they're hunted to extinction. It might not contribute a whole lot to science but it would allow me to name a soon to be extinct species, which is a privilege few people get. And I'm sure the ladies go wild for that kinda thing.
My parents were Scandinavian, I fell terrible because, in Scandinavia we have the best living conditions. At the same time I fell lucky, but I fell embarrassed that not everyone, have the same level of life as me.
Thanks to everyone who asked about our Patreon. I'll put out a full video when I get the time, but for those who want to jump the gun and get on board from the start, here's the link: www.patreon.com/rareearth
It means a huge deal that so many have asked us to start an account. I never thought anyone would watch these videos, let alone support them.
Great news!!! You educate me so much with your videos.
Maby you will be next to discover a new or extinct animals
Canada is still better than these shithole countries
Canadian travellers are respected all over. You make travelling more realistic, and achievable. If only we had similar vacation days....
I love mom's recipe for endangered meatloaf.
Eyy we discovered the coronavirus somewhere like that
Yep
Yea, it was likely in an industrial scale wet Market.
Most wet Markets in 3rd world countries are born out of necessity, and China's were initially no exception... initially.
Over time, they became a front for exotic and endangered meats for a relative minority of affluent Chinese, and the conditions in said markets are *FAR* from any real sanitation standards. Cross contamination between cuts of meat is the tip of the iceberg; dead animals rotting in cages is not unheard of, animals in cramped spaces urinating and defecating on one another, happens quite a bit, and lets just say that the employees don't always have the needed protection.
Papa Nurgle not only that, but also the poor regulation of the meat. Disease that spreads through the consumption of any meat usually also happens from poor sanitation and poor regulation, and the wet markets of China had enough of those and had them in great enough numbers were it was going to happen eventually.
@@snosibsnob3930 Definitely. Any industry that deals with meat is disease prone. Even in the best of conditions, the risk remains.
Wet Markets that sell exotic animals are especially risky, the wildcard element where disease is concerned is worrying.
The REALLY freaky part about Covid 19 isn't the fact it happened; it's that it'll happen again...
The markets are already re-opening.
@nymersic "just happened"? Could you not limit your conspiracy theories to flat Earth and who killed Kennedy?
Virus prevention is vitally important and could save countless lives. But the more that you and the other lunatics ignore the ACTUAL FACTS, the harder it will be for us to demand China tackle the real problem of wet markets.
3:34 That's a smart way of keeping away flies
Its pretty common in Asian countries with open food markets
Toilet paper dementors
@@mythrin true
@DunklerJägerZach but in "Amperas" (padang restaurants) have them
@@patrickm5217 Pwahahaha! That's a good one!
u gon eat those noodles boi?
Some say he is still talking over the noodles
Knowing recent history, I sure as fuck wouldn't
Aaaaaaand this series continues to be so damn good. Keep it up, I really love what you guys are doing, very well researched and well presented. It feels really well thought out, but also natural, which is tough to do.
Ryan Ohlson yea
I was already like, "Cool, I'm Laotion", born in Vientiane. Then you said you were Canadian and I was like, "YEAH! Even cooler, I'm Canadian also". lol Immigrated to Toronto in '78 at the age of 2 with my family. Sponsored, actually.
CommentCop Badge#666 Glad to have you.
Oh..... My..... Gawdz!! I...... Um...... OH MY GATSBY!!!
So I just watched the first vid in the playlist and, WOW!!
Not trying to take anything away from you, Evan, i swear. You are an awesome talent and person in your own right. I just did not know your last name was Hadfield because I promise you that I would've put 2 and two together. lol
I am quite certain that you get it often enough so if you can please just put up with one more it would be so appreciated. Here goes...
Your father is one of the very few people I idolize. He is one of the reasons I love love LOVE being Canadian. lol I've been reading about him since highschool and was always intrigued that a NASA astronaut was from not just Canada but Ontario. So you can can imagine my admiration for him when he was appointed commander on the ISS.
Okay enough gushing. I'm sorry if that was unbearable for you. lol
I have a 5 yro and I'd be more than proud for him to discover you and the vids you make and present when he get's old enough to understand. You are a great educational presenter, Evan. I will tell him about you and your background and why learning from someone like you is fun and exciting.
Thanks for all your hard work. If you have a crew or partner for these projects, I thank them too.
See ya!
When the pokemon you released start popping up in real life
I've been watching this series ever since it was announced, and it just keeps getting better and better. Sincere thanks and kudos from a fellow Canadian! (Loved the horror outro at the end there btw, nice touch!) ;)
I cant express how much I love your series . Undoubtedly the best info-travel show online . Keep up the good work .
+
i still don't know why its called chris hadfields rare earth when this guy just hosts it.
Arjen Hartink that is because Chris pays for it.
The Coelacanth Fish was though to have been extinct for 66 million years but one was rediscovered in 1938 off the coast of South Africa in, you guessed it, a Fish Market.
This is an awesome channel, I can't express how much I appreciate your content, thank you so much for everything you do.
That's incredibly nice of you to say. Thanks! I really appreciate it.
I wholeheartedly agree. If I somehow only could watch one channel on UA-cam, I'd choose rare earth in a heartbeat!
If this is too squeamish for someone, they just shouldn't eat meat. This is reality, and if you're one of us who eat meat, you have to just accept that.
I agree, don't commit actions if you can't deal with the entirety of it's impact. I was salivating through the entire video though so i'm out ):
Ok, some people would rather eat meat after it is nicely roasted and prepared than look at the red flesh of uncooked meat. Yeah, it is the reality. But it is a reality that I would rather not look at.
Then you are a huge hypocrite. You are slaughtering and eating an innocent and sentient being just because its tasty. And dont start me on "its culture" or "its neccesary for survival". You are using fucking internet, living on a jungle of concrete and surrounded by technology
ander azkuna Oh, fuck off.
I prefer proper handling of meat where it isn't contaminated but butchered where it is prepared or properly stored before cooking.
But if it's your thing to roll around in the guts and grime, enjoy. 👍
0:50-1:29 A very eloquent speech a lot of close minded people need to hear and understand. This is my favourite Rare Earth episode so far.
No lie I could listen to you talk all day
Jason Genova sickening
Ear rape warning after credits*
Eye rape warning after credits*
Damn it. Read this too late.
waht even is that ending, it scared the shit out of me lol
They used to scare the crap out of me when I was a kid. I remember walking through the market and if I saw a tub with netting over the top I had to prepare myself for this black mass of slimy eel looking stuff that I didn't understand.
Lol I think OP meant the music? I had headphones in and it gave me a good jump.
This is probably my favorite series on youtube. Thanks for putting things in perspective.
Agreed. From what i know, Coelacanth (a type of fish) was considered extinct and their fossil was found until one day this fish caught on fisherman's net somewhere in africa. Not only that, the same fish also appeared in Manado, Indonesia. And they both got a different scientific name due to location. Surprisingly they both was not founded by scientists on an expedition but found caught by fisherman. And the one that was found in manado even has its own local name means that even this fish is extremely rare, it was founded several time before by locals. And i think this is one of the best discovery of the last century
This was excellent.
great video, and very insightful, as always! this series is among the best content I´ve seen on youtube, or any media, for that matter.
Ah! My home country 😊 I didn't know these animals were so 'rare' I just thought they were normal .
I can't believe I went this long on youtube without seeing any of your content! You tell a really captivating story, and it's been nice to binge watch your videos lol. Thanks for making these!
Evan, your presentation is exceptional in this video. Natural. Intense yet comfortable. Nice job!
This channel deserves millions of subscribers! Excellent content
This channel shouldn't be rare earth. It's some of the best shit on UA-cam.
Great video that encourages all biologists throughout the world to study the local animal species that are native to laos
*Dale:* "Are you Chinese or Japanese?"
*Khan:* "I'm Laotian!!"
*Dale:* "What Ocean?"
*Khan:* "Ahhhhg!! ...I'm from the country Laos!! That make me Laotian!!"
*Dale:* "Oh... So are you Chinese or Japanese?"
--Classic 1st season *"KING OF THE HILL"* episode, from '97 when the first Asian family moved into the neighborhood, right next door to Hank and Peggy Hill; "Khan" & "Ming." I don't recall the daughter's name at the moment, but that was a great show. Mike Judge is the best! I know he was co-creator of the show, along with another person, the name of whom I am unable to recall at this time... Anyway, every time I hear about anything to do with Laos or the Laotian people, I always think of that bit from early *"KING OF THE HILL"!*
Your series is truly inspirational.
these just keep getting better! Thank-you Evan and et al.
I'm loving the SEA series, especially because I lived in northern Laos for 2 years (and Cambodia for 3). Based on my experience, I'd like to suggest a slight edit/addition to your final question. You could have followed "Will it be you?" with a gesture to the young folks in the market and suggested "Or maybe a future scientist right here."
Young Lao is a formidable demographic in the country, possessing an almost religious fervor for education, a hunger for global connection, and a profound respect for and knowledge about the remarkable natural world they've inherited. Spending time with these folks makes me really optimistic about Laos' future, even as the old guard tries to ring every kip they can from the country's ecological treasures. These kids are going to shake up this nation and teach us all a thing or two in the process.
That was a FANTASTIC episode and really makes you think about things! Sometimes what we "Know" in the Western World isn't true at all. It's great though that Scientists are able to find so many new species! I bet many people there would be open to collecting live specimens for them!
Thank you for the Trigger Warning. This is the only docushort I haven't watched so far. Your kindness is truly appreciated.
Loving this youtube series.
Just discovered this channel, Jesus why is this so good
Quickly becoming my favourite subscription.
make the series longer,i love ur stuff.
I love this series! Keep up the good work and thanks.
Really like how you apprehend uncommon reality for us canucks (and more), travelling in a fruitful way! kudos
Thank you very much for the warning at the start. Gave me time to pause and prepare myself for the cruelty. Very interesting video as well!!
I god damn love this channel
As a kid I bought into the "Born too late to explore the world, born too early to explore the universe" thing but the reality is just because you can know that a place exists, you personally still can go discover the gigantic, super diverse world for yourself. Who cares that you know all the continents or could learn all the countries, what are they like? Go discover that. You were born at the perfect time to for insanely cheap and unimaginably quickly get anywhere on the planet. You are never more than a few hundred, almost never any more than 2000, dollars and less than 48 hours away from pretty much anywhere else on the planet.
Don't hold yourself back. You get one life, don't waste your time and money on just paying to continue existing in the same place.
Get out there with our incredible technology and modern society full of convenience and discover what the rest of the world is like for YOU, because nobody else can ever discover that but YOU.
Thank you for taking us with you on this walk.
Great channel. Just found it. Thank you for the great visuals and top notch commentary.
Man, what a style!
I like this guy
Brilliant as always.
I like to imagine there's a story behind every one of Francesco's nicknames. The subject of this video is extremely interesting, an unthinkable concept for me before this video
Great episode guys. Wish I could travel rare earth like the Hadfield's. Even space would be awesome!
Just watching you in one of those markets evokes past memories... And the strong smells that came with it lol. Go figure, those 2 things are very close knit.
I like the way you speak direct to the point! no bullshit.
Should anyone who works for the BBC be watching this, please tell those who can commission programmes about this channel. These stories - and of course all of those who work on it! - are exactly the sort of thing which would fit into a number of programmes on the news: Reporters, the Travel Show and others. Or give him a full-scale series which could give us the sort of travelogue/history/science stories in a depth often missed. It would be a hit!
The whole time i was like "eat your noodle before it gets cold dammit"
I'm eagerly awaiting for you to come to Thailand, to perhaps tell me what I didn't know about my birth place.
Apiwat Chantawibul I dunno if that's a good idea. He may commit suicide by jumping from his hotel window..... Thailand....
Apiwat Chantawibul You’re waiting to prey upon some white giaa?
Really fascinating - also that bag footage at 3:38 is pretty spectacular (all the footage is really)
Truly an amazing video. Subscribed mate, keep up the good work
This is my first video I have watched by you. I usually watch travel food type of people. Food Ranger / Mark Weins type. This is interesting how much dialog you have. I feel like this video was more about the back story and facts. I am very much loving the lore you have in the different foods we eat. Thank you for this video! Also. I am enjoying the lisp you have. I have been shy about my lisp. I am happy to know there are other people out there that try to hide theirs as well. Please keep up the great work!
...I...I don't have a lisp?
Oh! My mistake! I am sorry. It really does sound like it. Well I am embarrassed. Lol Please keep up the great work!
in halftime your videos are amazing
Great as always
Rare Journalism....meets Rare Earth. Mainstream Media is a necessary chore but this Channel is titillating and very informative.
I've been a vegetarian for 8 years and lets just say I'm certainly not having any second thoughts.
A very interesting video, none the less.
are you still a vegetarian?
@@ShihammeDarc Yes!! it's been 12 years now!
@@oceanmew that's long
Why are you a vegetarian? Those poor cows and chickens and pigs and sheep still get killed for you
I just found this channel, what an awesome find! Excellent video too!
PS forgot to say, bloody fascinating story as ever! Thanks so much for all your hard work guys.
Very passionate and truthful experience thx friend
lol I remember my first epiphany, this guys passion is for real
I so happy to stumbled upon this channel. Great editing content.
Cheers!
Not saying you are wrong, but what you are ignoring, or at least not verbalizing, is that these bushmeat markets aren't only a treasure trove for science, but also a graveyard for species. For every species discovered there, there's probably half a dozen that go unnoticed, only to vanish in the stomach of some hungry person without even leaving the memory of them ever having existed.
roaxeskhadil That's mentioned in the same sentence I say they're a blessing to science. It wasn't overlooked, I assure you.
I apologize that I seem to have overheard that. I noticed that it clearly was in the subtext, but it was something I felt needed to be said explicitly ... well, I should have listened more closely. :)
This feels like a backdrop to a discussion about Imperialism's effect on science. It's such an obvious way to discover new species too but it seems..."foreign".
Awesome as always, keep to good work
It's been almost two decades since I've been in those markets, I can still remember the smell. It was an interesting experience for sure as Lao American. I feel a need to go back now.
your work is exceptional.
glad i found your channel, such interesting point of view, much wow!
I thought I would stop watching your videos after the japanese ones because I really didnt find other parts of asia as interesting, but boy, I was wrong. Keep up the good work!!!
Why does Japan even ancient Japan manage to make everything look clean compared to everybody else?
satellite964 N A N K I N G
repetition and water
What the hell are you talking about?
@@mescalinipomoea953 I don't know man, those filleted babies look pretty clean to me.
Those overhead shots were really pretty.
Loved the presentation!
Wow..I watched several of your videos and liked them.
Am I suscribed? No.
Wait....😊 now I am.
"As horrible as it is for our biodiversity, it's a blessing for science"
One of the curses of too much science
Will you be going back to Cambodia or are you doing Laos videos now?
Give this man a tv show
I've been to Thakhek! I kinda wish I knew of this market but kinda glad I didn't. They can be so fascinating and yet so nauseating. Also delicious.
The Coelacanth is a lobed fish related to lungfish (near the evolutionary track for walking legs and breathing air) last seen in the Triassic. Until it was seen in a fish market in South Africa being sold as salmon.
That’s why you have to travel the world to truly understand that your “normal” is not the only way people do things.
Wow....Am going to pay more attention next time i'm at the market 👍
have you done any videos on Singapore? I would love to one day visit this country.
Marvelous. If I set up residence in the malaria infested region of Laos I could discover new species from the convenience of the meat market as they're hunted to extinction. It might not contribute a whole lot to science but it would allow me to name a soon to be extinct species, which is a privilege few people get. And I'm sure the ladies go wild for that kinda thing.
imo
OUTSTANDING!
imo
I have advanced delusionary schizophrenia with involuntary narcissistic rage, and you are telling me I'm no less normal than you?
Awwww thank you!
I knew so fish and bugs were "discovered", but that people are still rediscovering pigs and land animals that big is pretty insane.
I love the credit at the end... Everybody should read it. (I know this is not Chris Hadfield's fault) :-D
Came from the forehead fables story. Was not disappointed.
My parents were Scandinavian, I fell terrible because, in Scandinavia we have the best living conditions. At the same time I fell lucky, but I fell embarrassed that not everyone, have the same level of life as me.
That was an amazing introduction
Not sure whose quote it is but it's something like "The main reason behind a school education is to kill curiosity"-imperialistic science is the same.
Nice way to discover animal. 🙏
You are like Michael from Vsauce, but with history and story telling.
"There's a place for every single one of God's creature in this world.......right next to the mashed potatoes"
-my uncle's t-shirt
I pause to read the final credit title.. it's oftentimes funny
This is rare earth!
you are good creater
love. dis. channel.