It wasn’t that simple... a failed actress declining a lead role (or shooting it down) is a mistake on her part. Juliet is questioning whether that career move is “ironic,” or in Shakespearean meaning of that word, a joke, or intentional lie for comedic effect. Add your explanation to that, and it’s one of the sickest doubles in an ERB.
It was more like “keep your woman in check, before we shoot you.” So it was a little more rude and misogynistic with it, in addition to being a threat. I love the quote laid out by ganjamcninja, though.
@@Bobal27 ooookay? Just having a laugh at the fact Clyde told Romeo to hold Juliet back. It doesn't look good when you have to tell the other member of the team what you're gonna do to the member who roasted you.
Romeo underrated because of how hard Juliet hit imo. The best shot that got landed on him was Bonnie calling out Mercutio's death. Even that was her saving Clyde's ass after Romeo straight up punked him for telling Romeo to muzzle Juliet. They really had no answer for Romeo calling them all kinds of shit. He called Bonnie an incompetent blonde moron (the beetle-headed flaxen wench bit), hit Clyde with a "deez nuts", and of course the above mentioned challenge where he pulls Clyde's punk card and gets no real response. Plus the dildos line and finishing with a modified version of "bury me upside down so you can kiss my ass" them to lick his ass. Romeo on his own merits was more than holding his own against both Bonnie and Clyde. He just happened to be partnered up with Juliet, who dropped one of the top 5 all time ERB performances.
What I love about those Juliet lines is the way each builds on top of the premise of the previous line: "...than your boyfriend's in prison" "...you're just a conjugal visit" (like a prisoner might get) "...that's not even your real husband" (you're only a conjugal visit, but even that's fake). Brilliantly crafted.
Your reaction, “Not the butthole” made me laugh so hard. It reminded me of my first time watching this video. There is only one way Clyde can come back from that…he’s gotta sit down and protect his asset.
A little context. Outside of the bar referring to them. I could have sworn that in real life, there was a movie called Bonnie and Clyde or Romeo and Juliet, whereas the lead role in that movie was ACTUALLY shot/turned down by a failed actress. I thought it was a triple bar, her getting shot, the meaning between Juliet and Bonnie, and also the events that actually happened in real life. But it appears it’s all in my head 😂
it's only simple to understand, if you know Bonnie was a failed actress. most of us only know about her criminal life. but yes, it would be ironic for a failed actress to turn down the role of Juliette
The Dust Bowl was a period in American history in the 1930s during the Great Depression. Due to bad farming practices combined with a series of severe storms, the top soil of the vast prairies in the midwestern US and Canada became dry and depleted and was stripped away in the wind, causing massive dust storms and making farming extremely difficult. So basically Romeo was calling them bumpkins from the Midwest.
2:47 That particular vernacular they're using is called Elizabethan English. Shakespeare wrote most of his plays during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, hence its name.
So, there are three distinct versions of the English language: Old English, Middle English, and Modern English. Shakespearean English is actually considered modern English. Old English: Hwæt. We Gardena in geardagum, þeodcyninga, þrym gefrunon, hu ða æþelingas ellen fremedon. Middle English: Whan that Aprille with his shoures soote, The droghte of March hath perced to the roote, And bathed every veyne in swich licóur Of which vertú engendred is the flour. Modern English: Yet I, A dull and muddy-mettled rascal, peak, Like John-a-dreams, unpregnant of my cause, And can say nothing; no, not for a king, Upon whose property and most dear life a damn’d defeat was made. Am I a coward? Also Modern English: what it do homies
The linguistic evolution can be summed up like this: Old English: There's no French in this. Middle English: wait no too much French Modern English: okay so I think that's a good amount of French
Is it weird that I immediately knew the Middle English as part of the Foreward to the Canterbury Tales by Chaucer? I read it a lot when I was younger 😅
@@Neuromancer2112 I knew I recognized it from somewhere. I’m only upset that we didn’t get to the “hot poker”section. I remember reading that book, many times, but I don’t know if I ever finished it... (joke).
Definitely spent too much time trying to get a simple bar 😂. Edit: Outside of the bar referring to them. I could have sworn that in real life, there was a movie called Bonnie and Clyde or Romeo and Juliet, whereas the lead role in that movie was ACTUALLY shot/turned down by an actual failed actress. I thought it was a triple bar, her getting shot, the meaning between Juliet and Bonnie, and also the events that actually happened in real life. But it appears it’s all in my head 😂
You didn’t quite catch the double, but you picked a great one to think about... just didn’t get there. An actress may decline (or shoot down) a role she doesn’t want. Bonnie and Clyde were an actress and a mechanic, before they turned to crime. They clearly failed at those careers, if crime was a choice they made instead. Being chosen to play Juliet in a play or movie is winning a lead role. So she’s saying Bonnie (a failed actress) shot down Juliet (a lead role), and simultaneously phrasing it in a way that she’s questioning the career choice of a failed actress declining a lead role, when offered one. In Shakespearean days, irony meant saying the opposite of what you mean, so she’s basically calling the career move (and the literal shot) a joke.
John Lequizamo was an actor in one of the Romeo and Juliet movies. He is an actor who has played more roles but that role was the reference with that line. This battle had a lot of meta jokes about the people who portrayed them in various movies.
I've told you especially one character in this is savage af. Did I disappoint you? :D John Leguizamo played Tybalt in the 1996 movie with Leo DiCaprio as Romeo. Tybalt killed Romeos good friend Mercutio, so Romeo could not protect his friend from some John Leguizamo/Tybalt ^^
The ladies here are (Juliet) Grace Helbig, and (Bonnie) Hannah Hart!!! They're Best Friends and both major people in EARLY UA-cam history!!! Hannah's "my drunk kitchen" used to be in the top 20 subscriber list!
"The lead role shot down by a failed actress" Juliet is a fictional character from a play. Whoever plays her in the play is the lead role in the play. Bonnie (who was a real person) tried to become a movie star in her teens. She had glamor shots taken which she sent to some Hollywood producers but they weren't impressed and never contacted her. So she is a "failed actress". So when Bonnie shot Juliet in the video, it was a "failed actress" shooting down the "lead role".
"He will do upon thine dick what you have done upon thy toe" Clyde cut off two of his toes in an attempt to be transferred to a different prison, because the forced labor was very intense. He thought that if he couldn't wear the necessary shoes, they'd take heed. But it didn't work. And he was paroled about a week later anyway, unrelated to the mutilation.
That's Modern Standard English from Shakesphere's time. Old English doesn't really sound like what we know as English today. The lead role is referring to juilet being the one of 2 main characters in the romeo and juliet play and bonnie had a failed acting career
The wrench line refers to bending over while using it, which is fairly common. It also refers to other things but in general the Shakespeare couple keeps ragging on the fact that Clyde went to prison so I feel that the "bend over" aspect is the most pronounced
What I love about his battle is that Grace Helbig (Juliet) and Hanna Hart (Bonnie) are (or were, last I checked) good friends IRL. Which means they likely loved this.
Isn't parts of the US like central or Southern US called Dustbowl? Thus the dustbowl dildos insult. I'm not 100% sure. I've been out of school too long Also John Leguizamo is an actor he was in John wicke and also in the modernized Romeo and juliet starring Leo dicaprio
Well, yes and no. They're not called the dustbowl _now,_ but in the 1930s, there was a severe drought. Farmers had conducted extensive deep plowing of the virgin topsoil of the Great Plains during the 20s; this had displaced the native, deep-rooted grasses that normally trapped soil and moisture during periods of drought and high winds. The unanchored soil turned to dust, which the wind blew away in huge clouds that sometimes blackened the sky. These dust clouds stretched as far east as New York City, and were so thick that at times visibility was just 3 feet. One such storm dumped 12 million pounds (5500 tons) of dust on Chicago.
Your right the BAR is a weapon it is called Browning Automatic Rifle B.A.R. is was shortened because it was a weapon used in WWII so B.A.R. was easier for the leaders to make orders for soldiers with that weapon
Shakespeare‘s English is called „Early Modern English“. Old English would be even further back, and is barely understandable to modern English speakers ;)
I pretty sure the failed actress line is a reference to Bonnie possibly trying to be an actress at one point and failing, I think you're thinking about that lied way way too hard. Also surprised that wasn't your first conclusion.
Uh... Bonnie was a failed actress. "What irony is this? The lead role shot down by a failed actress" is referring to the fact that Bonnie would have been shot down if she ever tried to be a lead role.
Romeo and Juliet just murdered them because if you know anything about shakespearean insults you can see how savage romeo’s lines are and Juliet still outdid him
That ass-ripping bar is in my personal top 5 of the coldest ERB bars. I mean it is number 5 but still it is number 5. Number 1 being Cleopatra's bar Number 2 the final bar of Bruce Lee vs Clint Easteood (this one is... one-sided but brutal) Number 3 Ash vs Darwin (a real bar fest too) "gotta catch'em all." There would be a Darwin bar in the top 5 too but I limit myself to one per battle xD) Number for Trump vs Biden "Your campaign is like your family" 5 "ass ripping like your BF in prison"
Also, you NEED to react to "History of the entire world I guess" and "History of Japan" by the same guy Bill Wurtz. Both are amazin videos to watch and react to.(Kinda a rite to passage xD)
Also, a failed actress declining (or shooting down) a lead role offered to her must be ironic (the Shakespearean meaning), because that’s a horrible career decision otherwise (like turning to crime, and literally shooting down someone in a lead role). Irony is saying what you don’t mean, or even the opposite of what you mean. Ironically, I didn’t know that even as I said it.
Juliet is a lead role in the play. The real Bonnie tried to be an actress and failed consequently when she shoots Juliet a failed actress has killed the lead role very simple. Did you not see she got shot!!!
My ERB reaction playlist!
ua-cam.com/play/PLG217Y9Pofu6dn2PNbn71uh36sa2Hmjf6.html
Bonnie wanted to be an actress but didn't make it. Julie was the lead role in the Play. Pretty simple 😊
Like super explanatory
It wasn’t that simple... a failed actress declining a lead role (or shooting it down) is a mistake on her part. Juliet is questioning whether that career move is “ironic,” or in Shakespearean meaning of that word, a joke, or intentional lie for comedic effect. Add your explanation to that, and it’s one of the sickest doubles in an ERB.
@@Bobal27 True
It really was simple, but it happens
@Double A Sully There are two lead roles when there’s a couple involved, typically the male lead and the female lead. So yes, she’s a lead role.
Clyde really did go and say, "Hey bro, your chick talking mad shit." As a response to Juliet's roasts.
"Yo, you're talking mad shit for someone in shooting range." - Clyde Barrow
It was more like “keep your woman in check, before we shoot you.” So it was a little more rude and misogynistic with it, in addition to being a threat. I love the quote laid out by ganjamcninja, though.
@@Bobal27 ooookay?
Just having a laugh at the fact Clyde told Romeo to hold Juliet back. It doesn't look good when you have to tell the other member of the team what you're gonna do to the member who roasted you.
@@ganjamcninja nice! I love the way ya put that!
@@Tsurf Same, I was just pointing out the dustbowl era disdain towards woman speaking “out of turn,” that Clyde implies with his line.
Juliet needs a chiropractor because of how much she carried romeo.
Romeo underrated because of how hard Juliet hit imo.
The best shot that got landed on him was Bonnie calling out Mercutio's death. Even that was her saving Clyde's ass after Romeo straight up punked him for telling Romeo to muzzle Juliet.
They really had no answer for Romeo calling them all kinds of shit. He called Bonnie an incompetent blonde moron (the beetle-headed flaxen wench bit), hit Clyde with a "deez nuts", and of course the above mentioned challenge where he pulls Clyde's punk card and gets no real response. Plus the dildos line and finishing with a modified version of "bury me upside down so you can kiss my ass" them to lick his ass.
Romeo on his own merits was more than holding his own against both Bonnie and Clyde. He just happened to be partnered up with Juliet, who dropped one of the top 5 all time ERB performances.
Juliet straight roasted Bonnie and Clyde..wtf happened.. o.o
Juliet was the best of the 4 but Romeo had a couple goods ones
BAR = Browning Automatic Rifle. Good catch. Not everyone does.
i know this from Call of Duty :)
@@theselfishangryguy1946 I do from Medal of Honor ^^
@@chrisjericho9632 that one too!
Yes, it was because I thought it was from the dynamite they used in their robberies.
@@midlifecrisis2988 I only know this from a PS2 game called Brother In Arms: Earned In Blood
John leguizamo played Tybalt in the modern version of Romeo and Juliet. His character kills Romeo's best friend Mercutio
Side note, I really enjoyed that version of romeo and juliet.
Yeah I saw it in school as well still remember it 20 years later. We are the very few who still remember that movie
Yeah we watched that in high school too, but never got to finish it. I'd like to check it out on full now
4:16 see how Romeo is biting his thumb and then popping it out of his mouth? Flipping the bird Elizabethan style.
Biting your thumb was, in fact, an insult frequently referenced in the play Romeo & Juliet.
“Come bite my thumb I hope you know the stakes”
This ERB can be added to some of the msot one sided rap battles I've ever seen, Juliet was taking no prisoners.
Juliet destroyed them both with her first round, you can't come back from those three bombs back to back
"O Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo?"
"I'm right here waiting love,
for thou to tear up the hide,
of this lame ass duo called Bonnie & Clyde."
What I love about those Juliet lines is the way each builds on top of the premise of the previous line:
"...than your boyfriend's in prison"
"...you're just a conjugal visit" (like a prisoner might get)
"...that's not even your real husband" (you're only a conjugal visit, but even that's fake).
Brilliantly crafted.
Your reaction, “Not the butthole” made me laugh so hard. It reminded me of my first time watching this video. There is only one way Clyde can come back from that…he’s gotta sit down and protect his asset.
Oh my god. Trying to work out what the failed actress line was painful. It couldn’t be any more clearer. It’s exactly what the line said 😂😂 classic
A little context.
Outside of the bar referring to them. I could have sworn that in real life, there was a movie called Bonnie and Clyde or Romeo and Juliet, whereas the lead role in that movie was ACTUALLY shot/turned down by a failed actress. I thought it was a triple bar, her getting shot, the meaning between Juliet and Bonnie, and also the events that actually happened in real life. But it appears it’s all in my head 😂
it's only simple to understand, if you know Bonnie was a failed actress. most of us only know about her criminal life. but yes, it would be ironic for a failed actress to turn down the role of Juliette
Dave's "oh no!!! Not the butt-hole" killed me. 🤣
The Dust Bowl was a period in American history in the 1930s during the Great Depression. Due to bad farming practices combined with a series of severe storms, the top soil of the vast prairies in the midwestern US and Canada became dry and depleted and was stripped away in the wind, causing massive dust storms and making farming extremely difficult.
So basically Romeo was calling them bumpkins from the Midwest.
Bonnie wanted to be an actress but never pursued it. Hence "failed actress".
2:47 That particular vernacular they're using is called Elizabethan English. Shakespeare wrote most of his plays during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, hence its name.
So, there are three distinct versions of the English language: Old English, Middle English, and Modern English. Shakespearean English is actually considered modern English.
Old English: Hwæt. We Gardena in geardagum, þeodcyninga, þrym gefrunon, hu ða æþelingas ellen fremedon.
Middle English: Whan that Aprille with his shoures soote, The droghte of March hath perced to the roote, And bathed every veyne in swich licóur Of which vertú engendred is the flour.
Modern English: Yet I, A dull and muddy-mettled rascal, peak, Like John-a-dreams, unpregnant of my cause, And can say nothing; no, not for a king, Upon whose property and most dear life a damn’d defeat was made. Am I a coward?
Also Modern English: what it do homies
The linguistic evolution can be summed up like this:
Old English: There's no French in this.
Middle English: wait no too much French
Modern English: okay so I think that's a good amount of French
This is my “underrated comment of the day.” Thank you, What.
Is it weird that I immediately knew the Middle English as part of the Foreward to the Canterbury Tales by Chaucer? I read it a lot when I was younger 😅
@@Neuromancer2112 I knew I recognized it from somewhere. I’m only upset that we didn’t get to the “hot poker”section. I remember reading that book, many times, but I don’t know if I ever finished it... (joke).
This is one of my favorite comments ever.
~_~
Juliet was a SAVAGE.
Definitely spent too much time trying to get a simple bar 😂.
Edit:
Outside of the bar referring to them. I could have sworn that in real life, there was a movie called Bonnie and Clyde or Romeo and Juliet, whereas the lead role in that movie was ACTUALLY shot/turned down by an actual failed actress. I thought it was a triple bar, her getting shot, the meaning between Juliet and Bonnie, and also the events that actually happened in real life. But it appears it’s all in my head 😂
You didn’t quite catch the double, but you picked a great one to think about... just didn’t get there. An actress may decline (or shoot down) a role she doesn’t want. Bonnie and Clyde were an actress and a mechanic, before they turned to crime. They clearly failed at those careers, if crime was a choice they made instead. Being chosen to play Juliet in a play or movie is winning a lead role. So she’s saying Bonnie (a failed actress) shot down Juliet (a lead role), and simultaneously phrasing it in a way that she’s questioning the career choice of a failed actress declining a lead role, when offered one. In Shakespearean days, irony meant saying the opposite of what you mean, so she’s basically calling the career move (and the literal shot) a joke.
love your reaction man lol contagious laughter :)
John Lequizamo was an actor in one of the Romeo and Juliet movies. He is an actor who has played more roles but that role was the reference with that line.
This battle had a lot of meta jokes about the people who portrayed them in various movies.
"No, not the butthole." LMAO!!!
I've told you especially one character in this is savage af. Did I disappoint you? :D
John Leguizamo played Tybalt in the 1996 movie with Leo DiCaprio as Romeo. Tybalt killed Romeos good friend Mercutio, so Romeo could not protect his friend from some John Leguizamo/Tybalt ^^
If you haven’t yet I really think you should do Roosevelt vs Churchill
Normally a failed actress is shot down for the lead role, now the lead role is shot down BY the failed actress.
The sad part is that prison butthole joke was apparently true, Clyde wasn't as tough as he thought once he got locked up.
The wrench bar is because they caught bonnie and clyde when he offered to help one of his gang members fathers fix his car
No. It refers to Clyde Barrow beating a guy up with a wrench in prison. That guy was the one responsible for Clyde's ass-rippin'...
The ladies here are (Juliet) Grace Helbig, and (Bonnie) Hannah Hart!!!
They're Best Friends and both major people in EARLY UA-cam history!!!
Hannah's "my drunk kitchen" used to be in the top 20 subscriber list!
This is the battle between two star-crossed lovers who died tragically
"The lead role shot down by a failed actress"
Juliet is a fictional character from a play. Whoever plays her in the play is the lead role in the play.
Bonnie (who was a real person) tried to become a movie star in her teens. She had glamor shots taken which she sent to some Hollywood producers but they weren't impressed and never contacted her. So she is a "failed actress".
So when Bonnie shot Juliet in the video, it was a "failed actress" shooting down the "lead role".
ty
You: How do you come back from that?
Me: Wait for it
"Thus with a dis I die" is a play on "Thus with a kiss I die" Romeo's final line in the play
The fact he paused it before the final beat after the silence at the end is killing me.
Must. Go. Watch. Original.
"He will do upon thine dick what you have done upon thy toe" Clyde cut off two of his toes in an attempt to be transferred to a different prison, because the forced labor was very intense. He thought that if he couldn't wear the necessary shoes, they'd take heed. But it didn't work. And he was paroled about a week later anyway, unrelated to the mutilation.
"Noooo.. Not the butthole."
SUBSCRIBED!
Juliet dominated this one hands down 😎 well done Dave 😊
So fantastic
Hey Dave I forgot yesterday to recommend Shaka Zulu Vs. Julius Caesar for some more brutal bars if you haven't watched it yet.
good references in that too
That's Modern Standard English from Shakesphere's time. Old English doesn't really sound like what we know as English today. The lead role is referring to juilet being the one of 2 main characters in the romeo and juliet play and bonnie had a failed acting career
"No, not the butthole ..." 😂😂😂
Now those are two back to back haymakers coming from Juliet 💀
Damn man, I just love these reactions when the hard Bars hit :D
Told ya it was a must watch(no spoilers in my comment 😉) and it didn’t disappoint ! Juliet went savage on them.
The most underrated part of this is Romeo biting his thumb at Bonnie and Clyde which, back then, was a very obscene gesture.
The wrench line refers to bending over while using it, which is fairly common. It also refers to other things but in general the Shakespeare couple keeps ragging on the fact that Clyde went to prison so I feel that the "bend over" aspect is the most pronounced
He also was a mechanic like Dave said, so it's a double
What I love about his battle is that Grace Helbig (Juliet) and Hanna Hart (Bonnie) are (or were, last I checked) good friends IRL. Which means they likely loved this.
"Oh nooooo not the butthole" XDD im dead
You're overthinking the failed actress line.
Hey Dave, check out Adam vs Eve for some good laughs.
Being married makes it hit just a little bit harder.
BAR stands for browning automatic rifle, and it's what he's holding at 2:30
I believe it was a B.A.R. model A the one with a removable bipod which was preferred because of that feature
A romeo Catcher is a Spiked Ring on balconies and fences, designed to Snag the balls of young paramours.
I love how Romeo died face-down-ass-up so Bonnie and Clyde could kiss his ass after his death!
Watch the 1996 Romeo and Juliette. It’s set in modern times but still uses the language from the plays. John Leguizamo is in it.
BAR is the browning automatic rifle
Love your reactions dude LOL
Yea so CLyde had a hard time in prison but I hear he killed the guy who raped him
Isn't parts of the US like central or Southern US called Dustbowl? Thus the dustbowl dildos insult. I'm not 100% sure. I've been out of school too long
Also John Leguizamo is an actor he was in John wicke and also in the modernized Romeo and juliet starring Leo dicaprio
Well, yes and no. They're not called the dustbowl _now,_ but in the 1930s, there was a severe drought. Farmers had conducted extensive deep plowing of the virgin topsoil of the Great Plains during the 20s; this had displaced the native, deep-rooted grasses that normally trapped soil and moisture during periods of drought and high winds. The unanchored soil turned to dust, which the wind blew away in huge clouds that sometimes blackened the sky. These dust clouds stretched as far east as New York City, and were so thick that at times visibility was just 3 feet. One such storm dumped 12 million pounds (5500 tons) of dust on Chicago.
The failed actress punch is at the beginning: it’s ironic
Clyde fixed the get away car that they used himself
Huh.. apparently Clyde was punked out in prison. did not know that.
Am I the only that keeps watching these but is constantly infuriated by how he gets like 2% of the bars?...
Juliets verse was brutal. Bonnie got destroyed. Like Clyde was up there treading water and Bonnie just got sunk like a bag of rocks.
BAR = Browning Automatic Rifle, Clydes weapon of choice and the one he's holding at the start
You should react to ghostbusters vs mythbusters.. and bill and Ted vs Lewis and clark
I forgot about this one..lol sometimes the simplest things are hardest to grasp. And yes the BAR was a machine gun in ww2
They flow in wait till Juliet kills them single handedly
React to Michael Jackson vs Elvis Presley ERB next.
Juliet had the best bar by far but everyone flowed in this one.
Your right the BAR is a weapon it is called Browning Automatic Rifle B.A.R. is was shortened because it was a weapon used in WWII so B.A.R. was easier for the leaders to make orders for soldiers with that weapon
Juliet had the most savage line in ERB history. Especially considering that Clyde got raped in prison .
Shakespeare‘s English is called „Early Modern English“. Old English would be even further back, and is barely understandable to modern English speakers ;)
Supposed to be Elizabethan...but again it's humour..love from Canada...always love your reactions
I pretty sure the failed actress line is a reference to Bonnie possibly trying to be an actress at one point and failing, I think you're thinking about that lied way way too hard. Also surprised that wasn't your first conclusion.
Have you looked into any of the other female ones? Like Cinderella vs. Bell, snow white vs. Elsa, ect. Or Santa vs. Mary Poppins?
Uh... Bonnie was a failed actress. "What irony is this? The lead role shot down by a failed actress" is referring to the fact that Bonnie would have been shot down if she ever tried to be a lead role.
Bonnie's boyfriend was in prison while she was with Clyde.
Clyde actually did get raped in prison, he later beat his rapist to death with a wrench.
"Super Kami Guru".... Props.
Romeo and Juliet just murdered them because if you know anything about shakespearean insults you can see how savage romeo’s lines are and Juliet still outdid him
Yeaaaaa lmao this one is fire
I think anyone who ever watched this was in agreement Juliet won the battle
Bonnie was a failed actress
you have to check out Thanos vs Oppenheimer and Joker vs Pennywise
Lead role shot down by a failed actress refers to juliet being the lead role in their play and Bonnie tried to be an actress but flopped
Send you missed the star crossed lovers line
Juliet didn't even need Romeo it could have been Romeo Bonnie & Clyde vs Juliet alone
4:28
Savagery start
Yeah juliets mom is bethany her dad is kyle her last name is macallister but juliet grew up in the south bronx 🤣😂cause damn shit
Yeah Juliet went hard as fuck in this.
That ass-ripping bar is in my personal top 5 of the coldest ERB bars. I mean it is number 5 but still it is number 5.
Number 1 being Cleopatra's bar
Number 2 the final bar of Bruce Lee vs Clint Easteood (this one is... one-sided but brutal)
Number 3 Ash vs Darwin (a real bar fest too) "gotta catch'em all." There would be a Darwin bar in the top 5 too but I limit myself to one per battle xD)
Number for Trump vs Biden "Your campaign is like your family"
5 "ass ripping like your BF in prison"
The language spoken back then was middle English
Juliet slaughtered Bonnie and Clyde worse than Frank Hamer did
How have you not done joker vs pennywise?
I have. But it got lost when my first channel was hacked.
@@whatitdodave noooooooooooooo
BAR, Browning Automatic Rifle.
Also, you NEED to react to "History of the entire world I guess" and "History of Japan" by the same guy Bill Wurtz. Both are amazin videos to watch and react to.(Kinda a rite to passage xD)
Already done homie. Both of them.
@@whatitdodave Ah, off to watch then!
@What It Do Dave,
Be it a movie or play, anyone playing Juliet will be the lead role. Bonnie is a failed actress.
Also, a failed actress declining (or shooting down) a lead role offered to her must be ironic (the Shakespearean meaning), because that’s a horrible career decision otherwise (like turning to crime, and literally shooting down someone in a lead role). Irony is saying what you don’t mean, or even the opposite of what you mean. Ironically, I didn’t know that even as I said it.
Juliet is a lead role in the play. The real Bonnie tried to be an actress and failed consequently when she shoots Juliet a failed actress has killed the lead role very simple. Did you not see she got shot!!!
Juliet is fire!!!!
even julliet last bar destroyed her again, with the failed actress bar,julliet was too much for both of them to handle.
They’re speaking in Middle English. Old English is closer to German
Good
4:42 lmao
It should have been called Bonnie and Clyde get clapped by Juliet