History of Japan but Every Time He Says "In" it Gets Copied to Another VHS
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- Опубліковано 7 лют 2025
- VHS generational loss
My first video where I actually have 2 VCRs to do this with! To find out what I previously used, look in this video's description • We Are Number One on V...
This was originally going to have the word japan copy the tape, but by the 20th generation my VCRs were crapping out and motly showing blue screens
Transcript and References of the captions can be found here (inform me if it's incorrect or incomplete) docs.google.co...
I used Sony VCRs in NTSC format with Japanese tapes! Does it get more Japanese than that?
Equipment used:
Sony SLV-N81 VCR (recording and playback)
Sony SLV-775HF VCR (playing for purposes of copying)
Sony T120 Premium Grade High Durability tape (even number generations)
TDK Premium Quality HS Tape (odd number generations)
Canopus ADVC110 (digital to analog transfer)
Dazzle DVC100 (HU3194, analog to digital transfer)
Virtualdub (analog to digital transfer)
Handbrake (digital file conversion)
Sony Movie Studio Platinum 14 Steam Edition (assembling and correcting video-audio sync)
The subtitles taught me more about the timeline of video formats than everything I've learned on the internet.
they used speed control
@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist4be quiet you bot I’m an atheist.
@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist4im christian, just Don't spam
@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist4 Satan is way better. Like bro, can you imagine being able to be tortured and talk to stalin at the same time? that would be so weird but cool.
@@JahmazeJahmaze Right now I am imagining going your entire life trying to commit enough atrocities to reach Stalin's circle of hell just to meet him as a masochist irreversibly addicted to pain. It'd be a match made in hell.
fucking love how the distortion gets so much worse when america shows up 4:52
“Knock knock, it’s the United States”
@p9vdc 2 productions "gunboats."
"open the country. stop having it be closed." - an american idk
that is genuinely so ominous
*analog horror scary part starts*
Knock knock, Its the united states. *evil laughter before it cuts to a japanese guys corpse, shutting of the laughter when showing the corpse, only sound is static.*
*knock knock. its the United States.*
As someone who loves Bill Wurtz and someone who has recently become obsessed with VHS generation loss, this was made for me lol
Same lol
Me 2!!
@@dnaroseandthewolves Me -488!
i dont know how but i searched vhs generation loss a while ago and i recently saw that search thinking it was one of those codes for like those really bad videos but then saw stuff about well, vhs generation loss
@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist4No thanks! Forcing your religion on people is not the way to get them to convert :)
i spent about half the entire video not knowing that the captions were specially designed around the topic of video formats
I had no idea VHS generation loss was a thing until now, and I find it very interesting and disturbing
I hightly recommend checking out the "Rewind This!" documentary if you are interested in the history of VCRs
Ye
Did you think VHS tapes and VCRs were able to losslessly play and record video? 😆
Or maybe just never thought about it.
@@galacticboy2009 not all people are as old as we are....
@@St0rmC4st3r plus not all people realize that data copy of any kind can lead to loss. I prefer these people to those that believe that a 1:1 copy of digital data can lead to loss of quality
With the vhs effect it looks like a 90s school presentation
@@doctordothraki4378 You can fix that by deinterlacing top-to-bottom instead of bottom-to-top or visa versa.
@@leistiits sorta like the videos that are transferred from vhs like the moon dance video that most people watched in science
Not an effect. The uploader used a actual tapes for this
Especially around 8:00
@@twentysixbit yeah, obviously, otherwise how would they have achieved the copying lmao
4:50 [stable video]
4:53 [becomes jittery and washed out]
its the united states
knock knock _it's the united states_
Knock knock.
*It's the United States.*
(Press shift to run)
with huuuge boats
with guns
(gunboats)
open the country
Amazing! I love VHS generation loss stuff, and the subtitles are good
Truee
real
Ha ha ha, speaking of generation loss.. have you ever heard of Ranboo?
@@PixelPringle24x yes we need more people to see it
@@sonataandsymphony great minds think alike
These captions are freaking awesome explaining the entire history of VHS, dude. Also I'm surprised the captions kept going even when the video quality went haywire.
I think the captions are separate from the video and are displayed over the video.
wow thanks for letting me know, these are great lol
captions are youtube
I gotta watch the whole damned video again because I didn't turn the captions on until about the last 2 minutes of it.😂🤣💀
8:28 This is actually very eerie
Yeah.
im the 100th like
@404TVfragreed
I am become death, the destroyer of worlds
Someone should reupload this as analogue horror and put some eerie images after that part.
The editing and the VHS combined make it look like it was actually an old tape in schools or TV.
I think they actually used real vhs tapes for this
@@circumplex9552i'm sure they used a real vhs recorder
Yeah, but the true magic and genius happens when you turn on the UA-cam cc. There's an alternate story going on about media recordings and tape in the captions... whoever did this must have had an IQ of around 140 at least, probably higher.
it is
VHS is a format by the e-waste filled with nostalgia and it’s A N A L O G!
In the year 1890, recordings might not have existed. In the year 1900 they did exist, and you could listen to them! And some people listened to them, then it got large, the cylinder flattened, it became marketable and now there’s lots of players because it’s marketable. So now there’s record on the market, they’re basically sort of hanging out in between the store shelves, selling for profit and using the latest technology, like needles and speed control. DING DONG! It’s the innovators, and they technology from the future, like wire recording and crazy record times. Now you can store a lot of sound, really really compactly. That means if you own the recorder, you own a lot of capacity, which is something that everybody needs to entertain, so that makes you dominant. Wire recordings and wire recorders spread across the market all the way to here. The most important formats were this, this, this, this, this, this and this, but this one was the most important, known as Webster-Chicago, or portable for short.
Knock Knock! Get the door, it’s tape! The new prince wants everyone to use this hot new storage medium called 8-track.
“Please, try this storage medium!” He said
“NO” said everybody
“Try it!” He said
“No…” said everyone again, quieter this time.
And so the standard was put into place, and all the players that came with it.
The the market was taken over by RCA tape cartridge. And they made some reforms, like making the audio less noisy and making the audio more like vinyl’s audio that’s less noisy.
“Hi vinyl”, they said
“Hi scrawny” said vinyl
“Can you call us something else other than scrawny?” Said cassette.
“Like what?” Said vinyl
“How about portable?”
And they stole vinyl’s market share and made a store. For themselves. And then they make a lot of audiobooks and music and another store for themselves. Then they stopped changing the format every time something new came out and kept it as one standard for a while. Audio cassette. And they conquered Europe, finally. Get that squared away.
A rich format named Quadraplex is bored with linear tape scan visits vinyl and learns a better scan which is more helical, then it comes back, invents home video tape and causes TV playback to be great for a long time. And the professional equipment turned into such a dream world of preservation that they really didn’t give a shit about the consumers. So if you work outside the studio, how are you supposed to protect your sanity from missed shows? PHILLIPS VCR. Everyone started using the Phillips VCR. Rich important people used Phillips VCR, poor people who could not afford to use Phillips VCR did not use Phillips VCR. VCR became organized and prolific, more prolific than Quadraplex. So they made their own compact cassette store here. They let Quadraplex stay in the studios, but VCR is actually in control. BREAKING NEWS, the CED has invaded the market.
“We’ve invaded the market” said CED “Please respect us, or else we might put you out of business”.
“Okay” said VCR.
So CED came over, ready to sell, and died in the competition. But they tried again and had a nice time fighting with VCR, and died in the competition. The V2000 overthrows VCR, then U-Matic overthrows him back and moved to Japan and males a new format. And V2000 can still use the VCR logo if he wants, that’s fine. Now there’s more content!
Like recording from TV, home video sales, personal memories, sexy times, tape rentals, camcorder plugin, multi-timers, time-shifting. It’s time for who’s going to be the next format. Usually it’s U-Matic’s kid, but U-Matic doesn’t have a kid, so he tries to get a new cassette to come out of prototypes and have more tape, called VHS. VHS says okay, but then U-Matic has a kid, called Beta. So now who’s gonna be? Vote now with your money. And everyone voted so hard that the discussion caught on fire and burned down. U-Matic actually didn’t care, he was off somewhere doing professional stuff, and so the whole market descended into a format war. Everyone is fighting with each other for local power, and it’s anybody’s game.
Knock knock, it’s competition.
No, they’re not here to decide the winner, they just wanna sell features, like tape speeds and descrambling, and HIGH-FIDELITY.
So that’s cool, but they’re both still fighting each other for control, now with Hi-Fi. And wouldn’t it be nice to control the distributors, which right now is puppets with no one dominant? Beta is ready to make a run for it, but first they have to trample this younger format (VHS) which is in the way. Surprise, VHS wins, and JVC steals the idea of invading distributors and invades the distributors, and it goes very well. He’s about halfway though conquering the market when LaserDisc kills them, and then S-VHS kills them, and S-VHS finishes conquering the market, and then he confiscated everybody’s Beta tapes, and made some standards. “And now I’m going to invade the sea, and then hopefully, space” he said, and failed, and also stagnated. But before he stagnated, he told these five companies to take care of the format until it’s advanced enough to rule the world. The five companies said “YEAH RIGHT… It’s not gonna be S-VHS, It’s gonna be normal VHS, because it’s ubiquitous”. And it’s probably going to be Sony, who happens to be way more rich and powerful than the others. Then people support him, but the content makers supported not supporting him. They have a fight and the people win! And starts a new video store right here: BLOCKBUSTER, and still lets V2000 use the VCR logo and flip tapes. But don’t get confused, this is the new format. And they’re very strict, so strict that they close the market. No format can come in and none may spin off, except for VHS-C if they want to record from camcorders, but they need to use and adapter. Now that the formats weren’t at war with themselves, adoption increased a lot. Businesses used them, schools used them, house used them, everybody learned to time-shift, movies were sold, there was action, horror, sexy times, low quality shows and linear edition. People started studying tape editing using techniques they learned from the cassette. We’re talking spicing, dubbing, scratching, generation loss, careful planning, and maybe even effects. Over time the quality and economic prosperity gradually began to slow down-
KNOCKKNOCK, IT’S CD VIDEO.
WITH SMALL DISCS, OF GOLD
GOLD DISKS
“open to new formats. stop being so closed” said CD Video
There’s nothing they can really do so they signed a contract that let’s. CD Video, Video CD and LaserDisc visit the market whenever they want. Sony and JVC hated this. “That sucks” they said “This sucks!”. And almost with very little outside help they overthrew the disks and somehow made VHS dominant again and moved it to the US market which they renamed “the best market”. They made new master copies, which was a lot more digital. They made distributions methods, which were also digital, and a high-fidelity system, that was also really digital, and do you know what else is digital? That’s right, CGI. So what can we distribute? Toy Story. So they distribute Toy Story on behalf of it’s previous owner, Disney and then go into camcorder formats. Then DV rushes in out of nowhere and says “Stop no you can’t take than we were going to make some compact camcorders of our own” And DV makes their camcorders, supervised by a shit-ton of VHS-Cs. And then once they build their camcorders they downgrade to a fuck-ton. Did I say downgrade? I meant upgrade. VHS says “can you maybe chill?”, then DV says “How about maybe you chill?”. VHS is kinda scared of DV. You’ll never guess who’s also scared of DV. Video8. So VHS and Video8 make an alliance together so they can be a little less scared of DV. Feeling confident, VHS goes to war against DV, just for a moment. And then they both get tired and stop. It’s time for Camcorder War 1. The world is about to have a war, because it’s the 1990S and recordings are getting crazy, and all these formats are excited to try each other on each other. Meanwhile VHS has been enjoying gaining movies and wants more, and the next thing on their list is the camcorder market and lots of good movies. All that stuff belongs to Digital8 with just had war declared on by Video8 because Video8 was friends with Hi8 which was being trespassed by Digital8 in order to get to HDV to kick HDV’s ass because HDV is friends with DV who was getting ready to kick MicroMV’s ass because MicroMV was getting ready to kick MiniDV’s ass because some MiniDV tape ate the tape out of a master MicroMV’s ass, or actually a cassette, and Video8 is currently friends with VHS, so you know what that means… Duh, VHS should take the camcorders which they wanted to do anyways, so they called Video8 on the internet to sort of let them know, and then they did it. And they also helped Video8 here and there with some transfers and stuff. Ding, now the war is over and congratulations, VHS! You technically fought int the wat which means you get to sit at the negotiating with the big dudes, where they decided who owns what. And yes, VHS gets to keep all that stuff they stole from Digital8. You also get to join the post-war standards alliance, the Implementers Forum, whose mission statement is to try not to make proprietary systems. The .com bubble is bad and VHS’s sales are now crappy, but the quality is doing just fine, then they put music on VHS and the forum says “No don’t do that if you’re in the forum you’re not supposed to make proprietary formats” and VHS said “How bout I do anyway?” And VHS makes more and more and more and more audio and was planning on invading the entire market.
You’ve got mail! It’s from Digital8, the new speed of Digital8. He has a Coll video quality and is trying to take over the market and needs friends. This also got forwarded to DV. They all decided to become friends because they are all tape.
IT’S TIME FOR FORMAT WAR II
Digital8 Is invading the neighbored, then they invade new markets, and one of the new markets, which happened to be TiVo said “Holy shit”. And DVD helping TiVo because they are good friends, and they are not helping VHS because “their friends and our friends are not friends, plus they’re planning on invading the entire market!”. DVD is also working on a small very blue laser, more space than any other disk ever just in case. But they still haven’t joined the format war. War looks bad on TV and DVD is starting to care about its image, but then VHS spits on the in old houses and challenges them to war, and they say yes. And then Digital8, as a symbol of friendship, declares war on DVD also. So DVD goes to war in TV recording and they help the gang chase Digital8 back into camcorders and they also starting chasing VHS bacon into VCRs. They still haven’t used the blue laser yet and are curious to see if it works, so they drop Blu-Ray on VHS… and HD DVD too. DVD installed a new format inspired by the new blue lasers, with just the right ingredients for a post-war economic miracle, and then the market starts making Blu-Rays, SD cards, DVD mailing and camcorders as fast as they can, and also higher quality than VHS. They get popular and the sales go wildAnd then adoption stops growing, but everything is still pretty cool, I guess? Bye.
Your efforts deserve a heart!
@@doctordothraki4378 Thank you man!
@@nushnum lol
@@Yerofey_KhabarovsiocmpJKAShmri i honestly was dying to get some sleep when i wrote this, i didnt expect for it to "blow up" or for anyone to learn from it
Normalize vhs effects making videos funnier instead of scary. This amazingly hilarious.
Theis is real vhs too, the vibe of the video goes with vhs, he is always not on tune while singing, it feels like a 90s presentation and the vhs adds to it
4:53 is probably my most favorite scene from this video. I guess it just feels like analog horror in my opinion I guess idk.
united states analog horror 😱
@@anonymouspersonthefakemonument mythos moment
@@p0lydaedalusWhenever Freedom appears to turn you into a canyon crown it first says *“Knock knock. It’s the United States”*
Brain rot
Are you autistic?
Close to the end I can feel and hear the player trying it’s hardest to keep the image stable. But it just struggles, until it gives up and gives us a blue screen.
The way you explained it makes me feel bad for some reason.
I want the subtitles as an actual parody, like a "History of VHS...i guess"
I had to watch twice, second time with no sound so I could actually follow the captions. A remake with _even more dated aesthetics_ would be awesome
Somebody in the comments already wrote the script for that XDDDD
@@dylanfield7098that "script" is the subtitles
5:41 is pretty much how TV looked when I was a kid and we had three over air channels from a town an hour drive away. Core memory unlocked. And we loved it, we didn't care, it was TV!
PERFECT video for a meme like this.
Once you get about 7 minutes in the audio is so distorted that your brain hears the subtitles instead of the actual audio
8:55: The image goes out the moment he says "VCRs".
yeah, japan made VCRs
The vhs effect is way better then any analog horror
Absolutely
Probably because this is real
@@user-yw8sr3uj1w so what? It’s still better
Not a very high bar to clear
you mean....real vhs
bruh
One of the best contemporary history lessons I've ever witnessed - I'm already rewinding it with a Bic pen for a rewatch!
bill wurtz is already vhs-
*_E V E N M O R E_*
i think you mean "VHS BUT 720 P"
this looks like a obscure history video from 1982 and i love it
Note to self: use the master copy to record on other tapes with. Or you can go digital and transfer the video directly to DVD. So you can watch it over and over again and it wont degrade like this over time.
Dude, most sources in this day and age are digital. It doesn't degrade like this "over time," OP literally copied tapes to a tape on purpose to get this effect. This is like borrowing a friend's tape to copy it and your next 10 friends doing the same thing with each copy
@@wer123456 This is like Billy Mitchell's tape from the King of Kong doc
@@wer123456 Yes, but generally the more you play a tape, the more it degrades over time, especially when reminded to specific points. That’s what the commenter’s point was.
@@cloudirubez07 quote: "degrades 'like this' over time". Wear and tear present as horizontal moving lines, loss of VHS hifi tracking, or loss of signal altogether. Not like generational loss.
My gen-Z humour had me absolutely dying with “Y O U ‘ V E G O T M A I L” amidst the static
7:32 is the timestamp for anyone who needs it
It is nice to know that Japan had a major part in vhs history
This feels like a fever dream of a educational video from the 1990s
i find it amazing how i can still kinda see what's going on by the end because of how many times i've watched history of japan
Beginning to realize that the reason a lot of the videos I watched in grade school during "movie days" were so low quality is likely because they were several generation deep copies made by a school district in big debt.
I wish I could thumb up this more. The way you linked format history and wars with the OG Bill Wurtz video is nothing short of spectacular. Bravo, you can be proud of yourself!
imagine sending this and only this back in time and having people decode the future of japan for them
'' I used Sony VCRs in NTSC format with Japanese tapes! Does it get more Japanese than that? ''
Yes it does ! , the tape's plastic casings must be in funky colors ! :p
@@doctordothraki4378 Japanese enough :p
*Alternative Title*
History of Japan But It’s On VHS And Every Time He Says "In" It Suffers From Generation Loss
I want a VHS version of History of Japan. Seems like the medium it was meant to be on
I uploaded that, where it's just generation 1 on VHS. Two versions in fact (anamorphic and letterbox). I did it for History of the World, too
@@doctordothraki4378 Link?
@@doctordothraki4378 do it on gen 8 the entire time
This is a meme in the making because this video is PERFECT just for that!
Educational, informative, funny, and geeky. Now i understand the Format Wars. I love it.
love it that as soon the video mentions VCR's the VHS just give up
I like how when he says "VCR" it turns blue. It's almost like the video knows.
For some reason I think gen 8 fits it perfectly
the way "now there's more art" absolutely murders the video at 2:44 is hilarious
We came for the Video but stayed for the subtitles
This feels as though i'm watching an old recording in a shoddy bunker of a Country's history, and that it's becoming worse and worse over time due to some kind of effect of a superweapon of the war that has almost completely obliterated the tape, and there are barely any comprehendable fragments left of it
Timestamps (for captions):
0:09 what the hell is a vhs
0:13 1900 to 1940-ish (the cylinder era I think)
0:32 1948 to 1963 (wire recorder era)
0:59 1964 (8 track)
1:15 1964 (rca tape cartridge)
1:46 late 1960s (quadraplex)
2:05 1970s (P H I L I P S V C R)
2:22 1981-1986 (ced)
2:38 1986 (v2000 and u matic)
2:52 1986 (who’s going to be the next format)
3:10 1986-1987 (vhs’s rise)
3:41 1987 (laserdisc and s-vhs)
4:50 1987 (holy crap)
5:05 1987-1993 (actually nvm)
5:22 1993-1995 (goin digital)
5:33 1995-2000-ish (cgi and dv)
6:10 2000 (Format War 1)
7:15 2000-2002 (.com bubble)
7:42 2002-2006 (Format War 2)
8:26 2006-now (blu ray and hd dvd)
9:04 bye
Ive never seen subtitles with more effort than this. You must really like Bill Wurtz
I love the history lesson in the subtitles, super creative!
This is an incredible video. First for the concept and the execution, second for the story told in the captions
(yes I know I'm 4 years late to the party, but) It's interesting to see that the audio quality, although mostly unchanged, just keeps on getting LOUDER! The reason why VHS generation loss happens is because the bandwidth of the tape is not enough to carry the full NTSC/PAL signal, so it's like a repeated low-pass filtration, but the audio track of the tape is effectively a mono Compact Cassette tape, which has more than enough bandwidth for good quality audio, so the generational loss happens at frequencies we can't hear. I suspect the getting louder is an issue with the recording, where one VCR records the audio slightly too "hot", and really shouldn't happen.
This is my first time seeing one of these videos and I don't know what any of that means but I think it's pretty cool. I thought generation loss was a fandom thing but I've been proven to be a dummy. I might start getting more into this, old technology is pretty interesting
4:53 so well timed
Now this is painting with less colors!
I’ve never seen history of Japan before this but I assume this is the definitive viewing experience.
I was more interested in how you wrote the captions than the actual video, even though I already knew(some) of it. Good job XD
I took what I knew about video formats and wrote it as a parody of History of Japan, though I had to shoehorn a few things to get it in, such as making up the implementer's forum
6:26 was laughing so hard at the captions for no reason, my humor is beyond degraded
The captions were creatively built upon the original script, props to you.
mmmm love me some high quality generation loss in 60fps
Its very unsettling when it gets more corrupted as it gets in to WW2 especially when the mention "those guys"
it got crazy at the end.
i got hooked so hard on the captions wtf
I love how even at the very end you can still make out whats happening about half of the time (If you've watched the video before)
I love how sexy times remains unchanged.
the widescreen and vhs makes this look like some old cassette your history teacher pulled out for the class to watch
8:31 “they actually drop 2”
Casually nukes Nagasaki
Thanks fam this video answered a lot of questions I had about VHS tapes as a kid.
4:53 *K nO C K k N OC k*
as someone who loves the history of video formats, the captions are hilarious and real asf
i love rhis video!!
I like the color just randomly decided to come back at 5:13
That “BYE” at the end was something
Generation 9 is when it starts looking like analog horror.
Something about the early vhs recordings makes it feel like a video that got dragged into class on the tv cart. it was so warm and enjoyable
Bill wurtz got into a time machine, went back to 1997 and made this video
I love how the video turns more and more into quality of school papers
Nothing screams analog horror like “Knock, knock. It’s the United States.”
woah i expected like a simple vhs filter but the amount of work this video chose is really cool man
it's generational loss.
can't do that with a filter obviously
Wish there was a version of the subtitles that showed what he actually said with the generation number.
By the end the quality turned into the documents the teacher would hand out.
For those wondering whether analog or digital is better, the 18th generation copy of a DVD will look and sound just as good as the first, as long as you use a high-quality format.
For those who don't know why this happens: VHS is an analog format of media. Analog media works by using oscillating voltage as an "analog" for the information to be reconstructed. This means that even the slightest amount of electrical resistance (which is guaranteed to be finite and positive due to the second law of thermodynamics) will cause some signal loss. Digital formats do not have this issue because they work based on an "is the signal on or off" way of reconstructing information. tl;dr we switched to digital because it's thermodynamically favorable.
digital formats still have this issue.
lossy file formats exist.
@ph03beuwu That is true but it is purely due to prioritizing compression ratio over recoverability in compression algorithms. Just use formats like mkv, png and flac instead of mp4, jpg and mp3.
@@melsbacksfriend yes you're right haha.
What I'd like to see is a standalone video of the master tape from start to end. No gen loss - just a recording of the master tape.
@@doctordothraki4378 Oh, dude. Letterbox all the way. And show it to Bill!
@@doctordothraki4378 Go right ahead! And while you're at it, why not make an 80s-style label and slap it on the tape?
@@doctordothraki4378 Ah, interesting.
@@doctordothraki4378 I missed the reply, holy smokes!
random teacher who cant get over using VHS: finally i can show this to my class
7:24
Better than the original
HOw BoUt I dO, aNyWaY
what if you make it where every single WORD makes it go one generation
4:50
The quality and economic prosperity gradually began to slow d- *gets nuked*
This was AWESOME!!!
the captions are actually p accurate ngl
Okay those captions were REALLY good!
Like an old School VHS.
the fact that even at generation 17 you can actually sometimes see where hes at is crazy
we need a version of the original video but with the captions for the script
holy shit the subtitles were amazing. good stuff bravo wow
holy shit wow, this is some impressive effort for just this one thing. did you use a fresh tape for every generation, or did you use a higher-quality tape with minimal artifacting between recordings? I'm vaguely familiar with the idea of more "reusable" tapes that won't immediately shit the bed when re-recorded to, but I never really had much experience with them since my family always opted for the cheapest, most mediocre tapes to get the job done at all.
I kept bouncing it between the same two tapes (Sony and JVC, good brands)
I love how the captions are the format wars, literally
knock knock
get the door
it’s tape (1:00 subtitles)
6:55 _AAAAAAAA_
Freakin turned a comedic video into an arg
Who knew I would be scared of the history of Japan appearing at my doorstep
4:54 this is actually scary
Knock knock. It's the United States.
@@tophatmatt9903 with huge boats. with guns.
@@jrurbbehdidiwdnndjduw85eos73 Gun boats.
@@tophatmatt9903 *Open, the country. Stop, having it be closed*
Said the United States.
I didnt notice the captions until i was like a minute in and was immediately amazed lol
I should do if baldi slaps it suffers generation loss
This video slowly gets creepier as you go on until one point we're it gets static
For some reason this remember me of Regular Show
history of VHS, I guess
Yea these subtitles taught me more about analog video formats than anything else in the internet ever
It even deserves its own history of video, I guess
I always thought a Jack Stauber/bill wurtz collab would be cool... but not THIS cool