And me. I've been teaching my six year old, who's interested, about maps and it dawned on me that at that age I could probably navigate across Europe. At the time I was fascinated about the Eastern bloc. Talking of which I do find it amusing that so many Americans consider Biden and co to be commies. Nowhere near.
I’ve always loved maps. I wanted to be a cartographer. I still enjoy staring at maps today and dreaming of where I can go. On a slow day at work I’ll pull up Google maps and travel the world.
Check out Forrest Haggerty's excellent UA-cam channel. He uses Google Earth along with occasional personal visits to illustrate where various events of historical importance occurred.
I love maps, too. I drove in and out of all 48 contiguous states during the fall of 2016 and I really got into maps, highways, speed limits, time zones, and geographic oddities. 11,000 miles roundtrip. I even wrote a book about it.
Growing up, I would religiously look at Road Atlas maps with my grandmother on the porch. I will always cherish those times and I give her all of the credit for my love of geography.
As a kid in the mid-80s and early 90s, I would lie in the back of my family’s Ford Fairmont station wagon on long road trips and examine the big Rand McNally road atlas for hours. So glad I found this channel - great work, keep it up!
Growing up in the 50s/60s, the answer most given to my questions was “Look it up” so I heavily depended on World Book Encyclopedia and Maps. This channel is 21st century info and every parent ought to have their young children tuned in then using each presentation as “Teachable Moments” for their family.
I knew it .. it's the Mississippi river that's making me obese !! All the other "experts" said it might be the cheese burgers, BBQ, beer and ice cream .. shows you what they know 🤣😂
When I was in grade school, in the L. A. school system, in the Fifties, the teacher called Mississippi the "dumbest state"-- where the most kids didn't go to school. [Shrug]
When I was a child I was your rival! Maps like these kept me wide-eyed for hours and still do. They are so hard to find and it's rare they stay up long enough to really study them in depth. Thanks for posting these. This is the most fascinating thing I've ever found on You Tube.
This is an awesome video Kyle! Sometimes when I examine maps I trace rivers back to their source. It’s interesting thinking about the tributaries that connect to them and the different landforms that they flow through. Keep up the good work!
I love geography, maps, etc. I always thought I was the only one, haha. I don't care if people think it's nerdy, I think it's interesting and fun. Glad I found your channel ✌😀
Same. I like that there are a lot of older and more conservative people in the geography interest community, it’s nice to interact with a wider type of people
The most remote point in Brazil from Brazil's northernmost point is further than the nearest point of any country in the Americas except for Greenland!
Best one of yours I've seen so far. I was a map lover and went to college with a guy who self published a small book about flags and flag design. Long live the arcane and esoteric.
Belgium here, yep I agree we're very crowded here. Lots or roads we have because of that reason, you won't believe the kind of road and transportation network we have.
My father gave me a map of Europe when I was in the third grade (about 1956), I remember spreading it out on the kitchen floor fascinated. That feeling never went away and graduated college with a degree in Geography
Besides map maker or teacher what can you do with a geography degree? Do you mind me asking what do you do or hope to do with that education? I like maps but would have trouble justifing tuition... or are you like Canadian and you didnt care as much cause it was free lol
I live in northern California near the Oregon border and about 4 hours from Reno. It is soooooo rural here. The county next to us, Trinity, is bigger than Rhode Island, just one county. There are so many trees that people get lost or die up here all the time. People are always amazed because when they think of California they think of LA or SF. But there's a whole other state that is not those places. Our biggest event is a 3-day rodeo and cowboys come from all over the place. There are a lot of ranchers and farmers. We grow mostly nuts and fruits and vegetables like apricots, guacamole and pecans and a lot of walnuts. People must really like walnuts.
Just discovered your channel, love it! Old joke from a friend: If the Texans ever get more uppity, we'll cut Alaska in two and make them the 3rd largest state!
Good luck getting that approved by congress. Texas, however, "has had the power to split up. When Texas was admitted into the union in 1845 there was a provision put in that allows the state to divide."
That's an awesome map! My hometown, Phoenix, has grown a lot over the last few decades. It is hard to believe Phoenix was the 20th largest city in the US in the early 1970s and now it is the 5th largest city in the US.
As a geography major, I really did enjoy this video. I also agree with your theory on the correlation between higher obesity rates and lower life expectancy. There's plenty of data to support this. The number one cause of death in the United States (and many core countries) is heart disease. Evidence shows that obesity can certainly lead to heart disease. Great video and very educational!
In several maps, San Diego County can be made out. The population is concentrated In the western third. The Central third is mountain while the Eastern is dessert.
9:30 For the record, one of the reasons why Cow pasture/range is such a large are of the U.S. is because it covers a lot of just wild areas. Massive amounts of natural grass lands are used as pasture for farm herds, so it's a little misleading.
Not surprised the life expectancy is really good in the PNW in Washington state because where I live there everyone is really into fitness. I always see people riding their bikes (we also have the most bikes per capita) and running all year round rain or shine
@@sterling7178 what the hell are you talking about? Are you really that ignorant to think that everybody in the northwest are vegans… first of all the Pacific Northwest is not just Seattle and Portland which by the way have a ton of great restaurants that are not vegan. Secondly the pacific northwest makes up the entire state of Washington all of Oregon and parts of western Montana and Idaho… A very mixed populous.
@@TJDawgs72 You sure are salty about it. Maybe if you guys had some decent food you wouldn't be so upset. Listen, its not your fault my overly tolerant friend. The South and Midwest have the best food for several reasons. Primarily because it is fresh. Also, the food in the South and Midwest is usually either grilled, fried, or smoked. In the Pacific Northwest it is usually baked. I've spent considerable time in the Northwest and the food does not come close to comparing. I enjoy doing business there because you people are so weak. Just push overs.
@@sterling7178 Jesus. You are calling this person salty and subsequently being patronizing and degrading yourself. Don't share whatever food you are eating. Food is supposed to feed your soul not spoil it.
Awesome video! I, too, was the kid that stared at maps on the wall in elementary school. Now people are amazed I know the capitol of Nepal off the top of my head.
Great. I love what you do! I even practice my english listening to you. Oh and I specially love that video where you talk about american sports franchises and demographics. I'm from Barcelona, Catalonia
Man, thanks for spending your time on the video. I thought I was the only one who loves staring at maps all day and exploring on google maps! Thank you for the video!
california state geobee qualifier here this channel is underrated...geography as a whole is underrated.... americans are often made fun of for how bad their geography is 3/4ths of surveyed voters don't know the 3 branches of government we need to fix this ASAP !!!
geez, where was this information in school??? but thank you my good sir, you done educated me not only on the map of the us, but comparing it to other counties, them being in the us (map comparison), crazy, crazy, crazy. 8 billion people living on earth, crazy how 340 mil of them live in the us , and 40 mil of those 300 mil reside in california. i forsure enjoyed this video, thank you again!! 🔥🔥💯
I love maps! Always have. I imagine what places are like and from the time I was about 8-9 until my mid thirties I drew maps of places I made up. Love the channel!
If you are on r/MapPorn or r/geography you may have seen a few of mine but to be honest the best looking maps are not the ones done by me. I have limited technical cartography skills.
And census taking. These are largely demographic in info.
3 роки тому+1
Love these maps! Thanks for sharing. They remind me that once upon a time as a kid in the early 60s I used to send 25 or 50 cents to the USGS and a few weeks later I'd get weather maps in the mail. I thought they were so amazing!
I just discovered your channel on my feed. It's terrific! I was spellbound watching this video and I'm also obsessed with maps to a degree. Keep up the obviously good work Kyle!
I, too, used to pour over our atlas when I was a kid. As a matter of fact, it's sitting right next to me as I type this! 😀 I'm a bit older than you are, and this atlas is a bit older than me, but it's in amazingly good shape considering it's age ( it does have Alaska and Hawaii, so it had to be published after 1950). What I really love about it is the well defined counties on each state map, which is not something you find on road atlas's or maps these days. Thank you so much for sharing all your information with us, and I look forward to more facts and fun definitions! I'm writing this on December 25, so have a very merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! 🎆🎄🎉
I am Dutch and trying to understand the US especially now with the elections. This is so illuminating. Thank you very much, it was also very entertaining
@Bill Bill Yeah, when dark-skinned people like me vote, that’s “voter fraud,” right Billy-boy? But don’t worry: most of us live in pretty heavily-populated areas, so most of us will probably die of COVID soon enough. Then you’ll have your country back! Yay!
@Bill Bill Let me turn the temperature down here. Believe it or not, I was a very conservative Republican once upon a time. And while I haven’t been either of those things for years, I’ve always had a lot of sympathy for folks who feel like people on the coasts look down on them (sadly, many of them do), or that the country doesn’t value them anymore, or is changing too fast. Frankly, I bet we’d get along in “real life”. But nobody stole the election. The Russians didn’t hack into voting machines in 2016, and Democrats didn’t commit voter fraud this year. In a democracy, sometimes the other side wins. It’s just how it goes. And by the way, when we take a minute to remember that the other side is also made up of human beings who love this country too, life starts to get better. Be well.
@Bill Bill Dude, Biden didn’t hold rallies, because there’s a pandemic going on. And most Democrats didn’t think Trump was going to get 10 million more votes or whatever than he did last time, but he did. Clearly, the two sides just do not understand each other, and don’t seem to want to, and it genuinely makes me sad. The left calls the right racist, the right says the left hates America, and as someone who has been on both sides, I know both sides are wrong. And by the way, elections in this country are remarkably secure, partly because they’re really decentralized, but mostly because there are some damned good people who make sure they run well. I was a Republican poll watcher for years, and I promise you, this country is really good at counting votes accurately. I wish people on the far left and the far right would stop crying fraud every time they lose an election. It’s not true, and it hurts the country. The truth is, you win some and you lose some.
Ohio at 2:46 is really cool, it's almost cut in half, and it reflects Ohio's interesting population distribution. Many states, like Michigan above it, have just one large population center, but Ohio has several "medium-sized" population centers in all corners of the state. Toledo, Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati. Ohio doesn't have a nice population focal point like most states do.
Being in this corner of UA-cam makes me happy. If you look at the Life Expectancy (county) map. I'm in the weird sauce pan shaped county in Missouri. Nice seeing it get something on a map.
Cow pasture is actually mostly open space. It is actually good at preserving undeveloped space. I went home to where I grew up and it was truly depressing to see where once crows idly grazed in open fields replaced by WalMarts; three-decker apartment bldgs; Bed-Bath&Beyonds; and McDonalds. And quite often shells of the same now abandoned. For me, I prefer the grazing land.
My family had a topographical relief map on the wall about 3’ x 2.5’ that showed the tri-county area. But the road surveys were from the 60s, so it showed certain stretches of rural interstate that were merely an undivided highway road that hadn’t been upgraded yet, and city limits highlighted in yellow were much less expansive; it also had a key which showed the population brackets for the various text sizes and boldness of city names; it was cool to see which cities and towns were within each population bracket at that time. My folks then started getting the various other maps that fit around it to form a giant tessellation of continuous topographical relief maps that spanned half the state and took up a whole wall in my bedroom! Not to mention I could run my fingers along the mountain ridges and valleys! Way. Too. Cool.
Loved maps as a kid, in the Boy Scouts i mastered the compass course, in the Marines i was the radio man who knew exactly where the hell we were. Love the channel!!
*This* is fantastic. I also first got interested in geography through maps as a small child. I like almost all the maps in here. The two obesity maps next to each other - fantastic! That land use map is everything! When I lived in Los Angeles county, I would tell my friends from other parts of the country that L.A. county is bigger than 40 States, but they just didn't believe me - I got some serious side eye. Maybe this map will help! Love your channel! Shocked it took me so long to find you. Thank you for your content!
I have watched several of your videos. As another Map Nerd who works for my National Mapping Agency, I say well done Sir. Thematic maps are so incredibly useful.
A flaw noticed in your comparison of China and US landmasses. The island off the eastern coast of China is called Taiwan. No need to include that in your comparison.
He doesn't seem too political to me (which is fine!) and so I believe it was probably inadvertent, but I believe, I as I think you do, that's your point is a very important one!
Learning to read and taking the time to study topographical charts (aka maps) will make one a quantifiable navigator and compass reader. Two skills that will prove to be invaluable. Map colors and hues are also an attraction.
I recently bought Microsoft Flight Simulator 2020, and I have learned more about geography in the past 5 or 6 weeks than the previous half century. In my public school education they taught us there was a place called 'America', and the rest of the planet is 'Not America'.
Love the channel... And I grew up looking through road atlases, and by the time I was 10 I was the family navigator for our road trips. I truly feel bad for those born into this era where nobody is truly learning to read maps. Being the oldest of 5, I'm the only one who can plan a trip without Google. And this is why I'm not allowing Google Maps on my family's roadtrips. All kids should experience reading a map and plotting a course for themselves.
Love this series. Like you, I grew up fascinated with maps. During long car rides I would study the various maps my dad had stuffed in the glove box. Maps have always piqued my interest.
I would study maps at home in my bathroom / library. That way my classmates would still think I was cool. This is Pete in Central New York again, Kyle. I was the one who was mesmerized by the Niagara Escarpment and the fact that areas 50 miles to the south of Lake Erie drain to the Gulf Of Mexico. Actually, the land drainage patterns in all the Great Lakes area is very fascinating to me. You just keep doing what you love, and I'll keep enjoying and commenting.
7:21 This is surprising. None of the largest egg producing states have a primary agriculture export in "Poultry / Eggs". (Iowa, Indiana, Ohio, & Pennsylvania)
Our beer is pretty good too. We also drink a lot of California's brandy, namely Korbel in our State drink the Brandy Old Fashioned. Come on out for fish fry. Love to have here!
@@caturdaynite7217 Yeah, but that's really Southeastern Wisconsin (Where I live roughly riot-free but still south of Milwaukee). Also, sadly, I'm not a big fan of fish. I'll eat it, just not my preference.
It's interesting that Las Vegas has a poorer life expectancy than some smaller rural towns. I suspect that many people coming to live here in Vegas are more than a little compulsive in their chosen lifestyles. Great maps, I've been fascinated by maps since a kid. I remember a book, whose title I have forgotten, that divided the country into cultural areas. The western intermountain area was called the Big Empty, I think. We had a lower than average death rate from heart disease, partly attributed to the alkaline water of the region. I don't know how well that has stood up but it was a fascinating read. I just heard on NPR that South Dakota is being regarded as the Grand Cayman or the Swiss Bank of the U.S. because of its unique financial laws.
I used to be a land surveyor, often doing topographical studies for infrastructure development, and had a small collection of maps. My two prizes were a couple of books of historical societies. One book covered from prehistory to the Christian era in the Eastern Med, North Africa and Middle East. The other book was a history of world societies in the year 1000AD.
When I went to graduate school, all of the posters on my walls were maps of different regions of the world. As a meteorologist, I made many of my own maps. I really enjoy your presentations.
I have loved maps since I got my first road atlas in 1979. Your maps are interesting. I know about corn living in Indiana. I have also seen Alaska put over the continental United States. It is also interesting that so many countries can fit inside Rhode Island, our smallest state. I subscribed to your channel.
I was the weird kid in school who looked at maps too lol. It’s a good thing.
Me too.
And me. I've been teaching my six year old, who's interested, about maps and it dawned on me that at that age I could probably navigate across Europe. At the time I was fascinated about the Eastern bloc.
Talking of which I do find it amusing that so many Americans consider Biden and co to be commies. Nowhere near.
🤓
Same!!
SukkaPunch321 ikr me too I'm the "geography kid"
Q: What do you get if you cut Alaska in half?
A: Texas would be the third largest state.
No, it would actually be first
@@unbrysonabletga6017 Texas is 261,232 square miles, Alaska is 571,951.
571,951/2 = 28,5975
@Planetfall Sorry I didn’t know :/
@@unbrysonabletga6017 then why are you commenting you do know
I am from Brazil and i love geography, i always loved to see usa maps, i discovered your channel recently and i am loving it!
I’ve always loved maps. I wanted to be a cartographer. I still enjoy staring at maps today and dreaming of where I can go. On a slow day at work I’ll pull up Google maps and travel the world.
Sounds like we're traveling together. Hopefully I'll get to actually travel to these places I've loved studying my whole life.
Have u tried GeoGuesser? If not, do!
*Also, The Tim Traveller channel is very interesting for Geo nerds
Yep, I goon Google Maps a bit, and I draw some too!
Check out Forrest Haggerty's excellent UA-cam channel. He uses Google Earth along with occasional personal visits to illustrate where various events of historical importance occurred.
I love maps, too. I drove in and out of all 48 contiguous states during the fall of 2016 and I really got into maps, highways, speed limits, time zones, and geographic oddities. 11,000 miles roundtrip. I even wrote a book about it.
sounds fucking gay
Was it published?
Growing up, I would religiously look at Road Atlas maps with my grandmother on the porch. I will always cherish those times and I give her all of the credit for my love of geography.
As a kid in the mid-80s and early 90s, I would lie in the back of my family’s Ford Fairmont station wagon on long road trips and examine the big Rand McNally road atlas for hours. So glad I found this channel - great work, keep it up!
“And then there’s Oregon, hooking the whole country up.” 🤣🤣🤣
(I live in Oregon and can confirm this)
We can't wait for Idaho to Legalize so we can ship our stock east!
@@thavionhawkmkii4509 idaho wont legalize it i know i live here😔
@@nouseforaname4100 You should be thankful about the good gun laws Idaho has. who cares about drugs when you can have more fun with guns!
And McMinnville that hooks up Portland with Lincoln City!
Growing up in the 50s/60s, the answer most given to my questions was “Look it up” so I heavily depended on World Book Encyclopedia and Maps.
This channel is 21st century info and every parent ought to have their young children tuned in then using each presentation as “Teachable Moments” for their family.
Yes, I had an insatiable appetite for the 1963 version. I used to fall asleep drooling on them and have to be carried off to bed!
like how in the 50 states for even distribution, Tennessee is still Tennessee
Tennessee is interesting in that it has almost exactly both 2% of the US's total land area, and 2% of the US's population.
So is Maryland
Missouri is pretty close, although I'm not sure it's 100% the same due to the bump around St. Louis.
Missouri with 6.9 million
Look at Indiana. Same deal going on there.
This channel is one of those gems on youtube that you come across if you’re lucky. You deserve way more subs imo, keep up the content!👍
I knew it .. it's the Mississippi river that's making me obese !! All the other "experts" said it might be the cheese burgers, BBQ, beer and ice cream .. shows you what they know 🤣😂
Crawfish boils.
It’s a curse
“We’re in it for a good time not a long time”
When I was in grade school, in the L. A. school system, in the Fifties, the teacher called Mississippi the "dumbest state"-- where the most kids didn't go to school. [Shrug]
@@dougmontgomery1868 very unfortunate that this is what is remembered when thinking of Mississippi.
When I was a child I was your rival! Maps like these kept me wide-eyed for hours and still do. They are so hard to find and it's rare they stay up long enough to really study them in depth. Thanks for posting these. This is the most fascinating thing I've ever found on You Tube.
This channel is criminally underrated. You deserve more subscribers, Kyle.
Thank you!
Most people aren't interested in this kind of stuff. But it's great for those of us who are.
He actually has blown up in the last week or two...going from 15K to well over 40k
This is an awesome video Kyle! Sometimes when I examine maps I trace rivers back to their source. It’s interesting thinking about the tributaries that connect to them and the different landforms that they flow through.
Keep up the good work!
I love geography, maps, etc. I always thought I was the only one, haha. I don't care if people think it's nerdy, I think it's interesting and fun. Glad I found your channel ✌😀
I'm glad you did too. There's always room for more geography nerds.
Same. I like that there are a lot of older and more conservative people in the geography interest community, it’s nice to interact with a wider type of people
Me too
What about Canada in the size comparisons? (I’m Canadian )
This channel is extremely underrated! Great vid Kyle!
Thank you!
I am from Brazil and i love geography, i always loved to see usa maps, i discovered your channel recently and i am loving it!
Thanks. The world definitely needs more geographers!
The most remote point in Brazil from Brazil's northernmost point is further than the nearest point of any country in the Americas except for Greenland!
Best one of yours I've seen so far. I was a map lover and went to college with a guy who self published a small book about flags and flag design. Long live the arcane and esoteric.
I have no idea why I was suggested your videos but I must say I've become entranced and strangely addicted. Bravo, good Sir
Thanks! I'm glad you found the channel.
Belgium here, yep I agree we're very crowded here. Lots or roads we have because of that reason, you won't believe the kind of road and transportation network we have.
My father gave me a map of Europe when I was in the third grade (about 1956), I remember spreading it out on the kitchen floor fascinated. That feeling never went away and graduated college with a degree in Geography
Besides map maker or teacher what can you do with a geography degree? Do you mind me asking what do you do or hope to do with that education? I like maps but would have trouble justifing tuition... or are you like Canadian and you didnt care as much cause it was free lol
@@fookyu1621 College teaches one to think and to manage time. That will do one well in many types of employment other than technical.
@@danielcarroll3358 got an 80k degree in a non employable skill and cant find a job that pays enough to repay the loans.. solid investment...
I live in northern California near the Oregon border and about 4 hours from Reno. It is soooooo rural here. The county next to us, Trinity, is bigger than Rhode Island, just one county. There are so many trees that people get lost or die up here all the time. People are always amazed because when they think of California they think of LA or SF. But there's a whole other state that is not those places. Our biggest event is a 3-day rodeo and cowboys come from all over the place. There are a lot of ranchers and farmers. We grow mostly nuts and fruits and vegetables like apricots, guacamole and pecans and a lot of walnuts. People must really like walnuts.
Just discovered your channel, love it! Old joke from a friend: If the Texans ever get more uppity, we'll cut Alaska in two and make them the 3rd largest state!
lol i heard the same joke only about New York City being split up making LA the third most populated city.
Good luck getting that approved by congress. Texas, however, "has had the power to split up. When Texas was admitted into the union in 1845 there was a provision put in that allows the state to divide."
@@rosechoix negated after they SECEDED and needed to be re-admitted, so no.
Yess!! I finally found my community after searching for like 15 plus years!! Maps are my fave!! Great, great series here!! :)
That's an awesome map! My hometown, Phoenix, has grown a lot over the last few decades. It is hard to believe Phoenix was the 20th largest city in the US in the early 1970s and now it is the 5th largest city in the US.
Wow, that's facinating. No wonder there are water shortages.
As a geography major, I really did enjoy this video. I also agree with your theory on the correlation between higher obesity rates and lower life expectancy. There's plenty of data to support this. The number one cause of death in the United States (and many core countries) is heart disease. Evidence shows that obesity can certainly lead to heart disease. Great video and very educational!
I liked this a lot. Hope there will be a part two.
I'll definitely do at least one more of these.
I’ve always loved maps -some of the old maps are artistically beautiful
Hey why didn't you include Monaco and Vatican City in the last map, I think you could have fit them in there 😊
We have a high life expectancy near the Mexican border of Texas because we still believe in eating lard in our tortillas. 🤣
@jo cell ?
Beans are very healthy, high in fiber and healthier than meat!
Lard and fats certainly need to be portion-controlled, but they’re not the real problem that lots processed sugars present
As someone with a few European friends, the European map was enlightening.
In several maps, San Diego County can be made out. The population is concentrated In the western third. The Central third is mountain while the Eastern is dessert.
Interesting maps, thanks for sharing.
9:30 For the record, one of the reasons why Cow pasture/range is such a large are of the U.S. is because it covers a lot of just wild areas. Massive amounts of natural grass lands are used as pasture for farm herds, so it's a little misleading.
You got all that grass land. Might as well put some cows there.
Not surprised the life expectancy is really good in the PNW in Washington state because where I live there everyone is really into fitness. I always see people riding their bikes (we also have the most bikes per capita) and running all year round rain or shine
That and your food sucks. Vegan...No thanks.
@@sterling7178 what the hell are you talking about? Are you really that ignorant to think that everybody in the northwest are vegans… first of all the Pacific Northwest is not just Seattle and Portland which by the way have a ton of great restaurants that are not vegan. Secondly the pacific northwest makes up the entire state of Washington all of Oregon and parts of western Montana and Idaho… A very mixed populous.
@@TJDawgs72 You sure are salty about it. Maybe if you guys had some decent food you wouldn't be so upset. Listen, its not your fault my overly tolerant friend. The South and Midwest have the best food for several reasons. Primarily because it is fresh. Also, the food in the South and Midwest is usually either grilled, fried, or smoked. In the Pacific Northwest it is usually baked. I've spent considerable time in the Northwest and the food does not come close to comparing. I enjoy doing business there because you people are so weak. Just push overs.
@@sterling7178 Jesus. You are calling this person salty and subsequently being patronizing and degrading yourself. Don't share whatever food you are eating. Food is supposed to feed your soul not spoil it.
Awesome video! I, too, was the kid that stared at maps on the wall in elementary school. Now people are amazed I know the capitol of Nepal off the top of my head.
3:20 I love how Maryland is the one state in the contiguous US that remains a state in this hypothetical scenario.
Also Missouri
this channel is soooooo much underrated. definitely a must to subscribe as a geography nerd
Thank you!
Love this! Some of these were very surprising. Looking forward to your next video!
Great. I love what you do! I even practice my english listening to you. Oh and I specially love that video where you talk about american sports franchises and demographics.
I'm from Barcelona, Catalonia
Thank UA-cam for recommending this channel
Man, thanks for spending your time on the video. I thought I was the only one who loves staring at maps all day and exploring on google maps! Thank you for the video!
california state geobee qualifier here
this channel is underrated...geography as a whole is underrated....
americans are often made fun of for how bad their geography is
3/4ths of surveyed voters don't know the 3 branches of government
we need to fix this ASAP !!!
100% agree. The world needs more of us!
Umm, Geography knowledge and political science are not exactly the same.
@@robertmarten7222 ok robert mc farten
@@rubberbabybuggybumper2864 hes probably a party pooping republican
geez, where was this information in school??? but thank you my good sir, you done educated me not only on the map of the us, but comparing it to other counties, them being in the us (map comparison), crazy, crazy, crazy. 8 billion people living on earth, crazy how 340 mil of them live in the us , and 40 mil of those 300 mil reside in california. i forsure enjoyed this video, thank you again!! 🔥🔥💯
If I had a dollar every time he said “population in the US”...
You just created a nerdy drinking game.
You’d have11 dollars
You might be able to afford a value meal at Mc Ds. :)
Your channel is so underated. I could watch this all day long
I love maps! Always have. I imagine what places are like and from the time I was about 8-9 until my mid thirties I drew maps of places I made up. Love the channel!
The bits with superimposed maps showing comparisons was especially interesting. Thanks
I've actually seen many of these maps already............looks like we both really like maps! :)
If you are on r/MapPorn or r/geography you may have seen a few of mine but to be honest the best looking maps are not the ones done by me. I have limited technical cartography skills.
And census taking. These are largely demographic in info.
Love these maps! Thanks for sharing. They remind me that once upon a time as a kid in the early 60s I used to send 25 or 50 cents to the USGS and a few weeks later I'd get weather maps in the mail. I thought they were so amazing!
I love this. I am one of those guys that when when I see a story I have to open a map/satellite app.
I just discovered your channel on my feed. It's terrific! I was spellbound watching this video and I'm also obsessed with maps to a degree. Keep up the obviously good work Kyle!
Thank you very much! I'm glad you found the channel
I, too, used to pour over our atlas when I was a kid. As a matter of fact, it's sitting right next to me as I type this! 😀
I'm a bit older than you are, and this atlas is a bit older than me, but it's in amazingly good shape considering it's age ( it does have Alaska and Hawaii, so it had to be published after 1950).
What I really love about it is the well defined counties on each state map, which is not something you find on road atlas's or maps these days.
Thank you so much for sharing all your information with us, and I look forward to more facts and fun definitions!
I'm writing this on December 25, so have a very merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
🎆🎄🎉
I still have my dad's 1970s Rand McNally international atlas. It was what started me on the path I'm on now.
@@GeographyKing I still have my family's 1970's world atlas! I love atlases!
Understand, your maps here are very educational. They cut to the chase and summarize very important logistical facts about america. I subscribed.
I am Dutch and trying to understand the US especially now with the elections. This is so illuminating. Thank you very much, it was also very entertaining
That’s cool. Have you been here before?
sorry we were not able to save the world and re elect trump... At least we’ll be in the New World Order together...
@Bill Bill Yeah, when dark-skinned people like me vote, that’s “voter fraud,” right Billy-boy? But don’t worry: most of us live in pretty heavily-populated areas, so most of us will probably die of COVID soon enough. Then you’ll have your country back! Yay!
@Bill Bill Let me turn the temperature down here. Believe it or not, I was a very conservative Republican once upon a time. And while I haven’t been either of those things for years, I’ve always had a lot of sympathy for folks who feel like people on the coasts look down on them (sadly, many of them do), or that the country doesn’t value them anymore, or is changing too fast. Frankly, I bet we’d get along in “real life”. But nobody stole the election. The Russians didn’t hack into voting machines in 2016, and Democrats didn’t commit voter fraud this year. In a democracy, sometimes the other side wins. It’s just how it goes. And by the way, when we take a minute to remember that the other side is also made up of human beings who love this country too, life starts to get better. Be well.
@Bill Bill Dude, Biden didn’t hold rallies, because there’s a pandemic going on. And most Democrats didn’t think Trump was going to get 10 million more votes or whatever than he did last time, but he did. Clearly, the two sides just do not understand each other, and don’t seem to want to, and it genuinely makes me sad. The left calls the right racist, the right says the left hates America, and as someone who has been on both sides, I know both sides are wrong. And by the way, elections in this country are remarkably secure, partly because they’re really decentralized, but mostly because there are some damned good people who make sure they run well. I was a Republican poll watcher for years, and I promise you, this country is really good at counting votes accurately. I wish people on the far left and the far right would stop crying fraud every time they lose an election. It’s not true, and it hurts the country. The truth is, you win some and you lose some.
You had me at, "Howdy"
Definitely subbed. Great videos man
Here in Chicago, we don’t make it to the life expectancies of 80 . . .
Thanks a lot, South Side . . . 😂
Ohio at 2:46 is really cool, it's almost cut in half, and it reflects Ohio's interesting population distribution. Many states, like Michigan above it, have just one large population center, but Ohio has several "medium-sized" population centers in all corners of the state. Toledo, Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati. Ohio doesn't have a nice population focal point like most states do.
I'm a lifelong map nerd who now knows he's not alone. Great video.
Being in this corner of UA-cam makes me happy. If you look at the Life Expectancy (county) map. I'm in the weird sauce pan shaped county in Missouri. Nice seeing it get something on a map.
I kept rewinding and pausing and rewinding again, this is fascinating and I really enjoyed the entire video! LOL to Oregon!
I just found your channel today. I love this kind of stuff. I’m looking forward to diving into the rest of your channel.
Welcome to the channel!
Love the channel my guy, keep it up.
Thanks!
I’ve watched this video several times and get something new from them each time. Ty again Kyle
Cow pasture is actually mostly open space. It is actually good at preserving undeveloped space. I went home to where I grew up and it was truly depressing to see where once crows idly grazed in open fields replaced by WalMarts; three-decker apartment bldgs; Bed-Bath&Beyonds; and McDonalds. And quite often shells of the same now abandoned.
For me, I prefer the grazing land.
Amen 🙌
My family had a topographical relief map on the wall about 3’ x 2.5’ that showed the tri-county area. But the road surveys were from the 60s, so it showed certain stretches of rural interstate that were merely an undivided highway road that hadn’t been upgraded yet, and city limits highlighted in yellow were much less expansive; it also had a key which showed the population brackets for the various text sizes and boldness of city names; it was cool to see which cities and towns were within each population bracket at that time.
My folks then started getting the various other maps that fit around it to form a giant tessellation of continuous topographical relief maps that spanned half the state and took up a whole wall in my bedroom! Not to mention I could run my fingers along the mountain ridges and valleys! Way. Too. Cool.
I just subbed to you after binge watching alot of your videos! Keep up the great content :)
Thanks! I'm glad you found the channel and enjoy the videos. I'll try to keep it up
Loved maps as a kid, in the Boy Scouts i mastered the compass course, in the Marines i was the radio man who knew exactly where the hell we were. Love the channel!!
Yo I would love to see a video of you ranking all 50 states from worst to first in your opinion
he’s ranked the flags 50-1, but I think his #1 overall state he likes is New Mexico
*This* is fantastic. I also first got interested in geography through maps as a small child.
I like almost all the maps in here. The two obesity maps next to each other - fantastic! That land use map is everything!
When I lived in Los Angeles county, I would tell my friends from other parts of the country that L.A. county is bigger than 40 States, but they just didn't believe me - I got some serious side eye. Maybe this map will help!
Love your channel! Shocked it took me so long to find you. Thank you for your content!
I'm glad you found the channel and like the videos! Welcome aboard!
I am as interested in maps as you.
When I was younger I would bury myself in atlases, too. I still collect road and topography maps along my travels.
There needs to be more of us!
@@GeographyKing
Do you keep the National Geographic maps? It's weird looking at the 1980's and seeing the U.S.S.R.
@@andypetrovich2155 I keep some National Geographic maps.
Love your videos Kyle. Loved "and then there's Oregon, hooking the whole country up."
0:53 that looks like 9 states to me
The first map is the first lesson in ArcGIS. I think it's missing Michigan.
Yep nine states, good point though
New subscriber!
Like video
So interesting
Going to look at your older videos !
I have watched several of your videos. As another Map Nerd who works for my National Mapping Agency, I say well done Sir. Thematic maps are so incredibly useful.
digging your channel Kyle. Thanks for all the interesting content
A flaw noticed in your comparison of China and US landmasses. The island off the eastern coast of China is called Taiwan. No need to include that in your comparison.
He doesn't seem too political to me (which is fine!) and so I believe it was probably inadvertent, but I believe, I as I think you do, that's your point is a very important one!
You do a great job presenting without the need for glitzy eye candy. Thank You!
10:55 Why is Taiwan in with a map of China i don't think Taiwanese viewers like that.
He did say he got them off of Reddit
Dude....shut up
Learning to read and taking the time to study topographical charts (aka maps) will make one a quantifiable navigator and compass reader. Two skills that will prove to be invaluable. Map colors and hues are also an attraction.
I recently bought Microsoft Flight Simulator 2020, and I have learned more about geography in the past 5 or 6 weeks than the previous half century. In my public school education they taught us there was a place called 'America', and the rest of the planet is 'Not America'.
Imagine being so picky that you dared to call NORTH AMERICA, AMERICA. Blasphemy.
Love the channel... And I grew up looking through road atlases, and by the time I was 10 I was the family navigator for our road trips.
I truly feel bad for those born into this era where nobody is truly learning to read maps. Being the oldest of 5, I'm the only one who can plan a trip without Google.
And this is why I'm not allowing Google Maps on my family's roadtrips. All kids should experience reading a map and plotting a course for themselves.
Always been a geography nerd love these maps. Subscribing!
Thanks and Welcome!
Love this series. Like you, I grew up fascinated with maps. During long car rides I would study the various maps my dad had stuffed in the glove box. Maps have always piqued my interest.
Love the video man! Keep it up!
Thanks!
Awesome channel! Do you have a travel blog or maps/photography of all your trips online anywhere?
Crazy with CA being fruit considering the state is covered in almond trees
Fruits & Nuts. 😉
California grows a lot fruits most notable being grapes and oranges.
I would study maps at home in my bathroom / library. That way my classmates would still think I was cool. This is Pete in Central New York again, Kyle. I was the one who was mesmerized by the Niagara Escarpment and the fact that areas 50 miles to the south of Lake Erie drain to the Gulf Of Mexico. Actually, the land drainage patterns in all the Great Lakes area is very fascinating to me. You just keep doing what you love, and I'll keep enjoying and commenting.
great video king!
Thanks!
7:21 This is surprising. None of the largest egg producing states have a primary agriculture export in "Poultry / Eggs".
(Iowa, Indiana, Ohio, & Pennsylvania)
Wisconsin is labelled as dairy, but is worlds biggest cranberry producer. We produce 60% of the US supply for crying out loud.
@W Zee Pretty much. Though I eat jellied cranberry sauce as often as I can.
A skateboarding guy listening to Fleetwood Mac thanks you.
Our beer is pretty good too. We also drink a lot of California's brandy, namely Korbel in our State drink the Brandy Old Fashioned. Come on out for fish fry. Love to have here!
@@caturdaynite7217 Yeah, but that's really Southeastern Wisconsin (Where I live roughly riot-free but still south of Milwaukee). Also, sadly, I'm not a big fan of fish. I'll eat it, just not my preference.
@W Zee nah cranberry juice is everywhere everyday especially after that one guy
It's interesting that Las Vegas has a poorer life expectancy than some smaller rural towns. I suspect that many people coming to live here in Vegas are more than a little compulsive in their chosen lifestyles.
Great maps, I've been fascinated by maps since a kid. I remember a book, whose title I have forgotten, that divided the country into cultural areas. The western intermountain area was called the Big Empty, I think. We had a lower than average death rate from heart disease, partly attributed to the alkaline water of the region. I don't know how well that has stood up but it was a fascinating read.
I just heard on NPR that South Dakota is being regarded as the Grand Cayman or the Swiss Bank of the U.S. because of its unique financial laws.
lol @ oregon’s biggest agriculture sector being marijuana. that is awesome
No, only the most valuable.
Is there any correlation with how good the weed is and how insane people are?...because Portland is a bonkers bizarro world dump.
@@drizzle452 have you ever been there
I used to be a land surveyor, often doing topographical studies for infrastructure development, and had a small collection of maps.
My two prizes were a couple of books of historical societies. One book covered from prehistory to the Christian era in the Eastern Med, North Africa and Middle East. The other book was a history of world societies in the year 1000AD.
Watching your videos has been a very nice respite from the election.
I'm glad you found the channel. I'll try to keep it up.
@@GeographyKing Thanks.
When I went to graduate school, all of the posters on my walls were maps of different regions of the world. As a meteorologist, I made many of my own maps. I really enjoy your presentations.
7:30 good ol Oregon
It's not only the maps and info this guy gives that I dig. It's also the groovy clothes! ;)
Why did your overlaid map of China include Taiwan? 🤔
I have loved maps since I got my first road atlas in 1979. Your maps are interesting. I know about corn living in Indiana. I have also seen Alaska put over the continental United States. It is also interesting that so many countries can fit inside Rhode Island, our smallest state. I subscribed to your channel.