Idk if this is right, but i heard the carrots are good for vision thing was started by the british during ww2 because they had made advancements in radar and didnt want anyone to know.
I was already bracing for the change of Hank's background for Tangents being different when I heard he had a new office.. and then two weeks later THAT concern was soundly blown out of the water by a much bigger one. My thoughts and sympathies for Hank and the SciShow Team.
Hank! Be well, and all the best wishes. We love you, love your work, and we love you. Did I say we love you, yet? Thanks to this entire team for keeping us entertained on a Tuesday!
I had to laugh at Hank's guess at cod fish being in stargazy pie. Cod are usually three to six feet long, so that would make a huge pie. Stargazy pie is traditionally made with pilchards and was first made in the Cornish village of Mousehole and is traditionally eaten during the festival of Tom Bawcock's Eve to celebrate his heroic catch during a very stormy winter.
Its funny how you were talking about accidentally stepping on cryptobiotic crust and it causing a big fuss. In the movie Broken Arrow Christian Slater does the same thing and it causes a big fuss. He then recieves an atomic bomb from a friend and has figure out what to do with it!
@@petergerdes1094 The crust of the Earth is thinnest at the bottom of the trench. A really large explosion in that area could start a really bad series of events. The pressure of the water above would 'tamp' the explosion and we could see a large mantle excursion.
@@trelligan42 Thats actually the place where the ocean crust is at its thickest. The crust there ranges from 6-12km while near the midocean ridge it can get down to 3km. Think about it this way, it starts thin and as it moves away from the ridge it accumulates more material. The trench is pulled down because the crust is diving down but it doesn't get thinner. Also, I think you are off here by several orders of magnitude. Underground nuclear tests don't even move the needle with respect to techtonic plates or access to the mantle and even when buried under dirt you need multiple nukes even to reach nuclear bunkers.
I knew the answer to the Sandman question right away thanks to a Tale Foundry episode. Fun thing, he was almost assuredly based on Morpheus the Greek god of dreams, who morphed into an ancient Germanic god whose name was lost with the rise of Christianity, reduced to an eyeball-snatching folklore, then a fable of a spirit whatnot gives dreams, and finally a comic book character named, ironically, Morpheus. It all comes full circle.
28:43 It’s cool to hear a reference to stargazy pie! Cornwall is the most south-westerly county of Britain but it’s also one of the Celtic nations (like Wales and the Isle of Man) and has its own native language and culture, so some Cornish people don’t consider it to be part of England. There’s a great children’s book featuring stargazy pie called the Mousehole cat.
I saw a post on Facebook recently of someone who keeps a baking sheet on the middle rack of their oven at all times, and they found a loaf of banana bread hiding under it that had been baked over and over for months. It was black all the way through. I would guess that the moisture redistributed itself over time so that it dried out completely enough to all blacken.
Poor ostrich babies... I feel their pain. I work in a nursery and have had a phytotoxic response to contact with that plant family, the carrot family (Apiaceae). Good job Sam, other ones are the citrus family (Rutaceae), the mulberry family (Moraceae), and the legume family (Fabaceae). Furanocoumarins is the active sensitizer chemical.
I know this isn't the thing on most people's minds right now but I would like to point out that most nuclear weapons closer to the size of a small car than a backpack and even the smallest are quite heavy, so it would not be something that could just be handed off to you in the grocery store so this scenario wouldn't really happen. It takes a lot of engineering and a lot of conventional explosives to make fissionable material do its fissioning. 0:45
I've got it. The Earth is a Fererro Rocher. Thin, uneven crust on the outside (chocolate and hazelnut crumbs). Gooey inside (Nutella). Hard center (whole hazelnut).
I've listened to every episode many multitudes of times over the last year or so since I've started listening, for a long time I listened to at least one episode every night until I'd listened to most episodes enough times to memorize them to a degree! That will absolutely not change no matter what changes are made during these turbulent times. Please, do what you need and take care of yourselves, we'll be here for you always!
Weirdly I actually know exactly the person I'd call if I suddenly got a nuke dropped in my lap: My grandpa, who was a colonel in the airforce and actually has experience handling (or at least being in charge of) nukes. I very much hope I've never got to call him with that particular concern, but, well, I've actually got a very solid idea of who to call. Though idk if he would still know who to call, since he's been retired for so long, but I'm sure he could figure it out much better than me, and unlike me, wouldn't be absolutely panicking/terrified of the thing I've now got in my living room lol
Can you imagine that the whale songs recorded were actually some whales secretly talking trash about other whales, and now scientists are repeating and repeating that convo to all whales going around?
As someone who had to read Der Sandmann and analysed it for weeks in school I’m ashamed to admit that I can’t remember what Coppelius does with the eyes he collects 😬 granted, it‘s been 8 years and that part wasn’t even the most horrific thing in the story but still.
I'm a bit late on my campaign to make a post requesting a poetry book... It was a busy day for me y'all... But I for sure, think the guest poetry also must be included in the coffee table poetry book. Take care of yourself Hank, we love you!
Making fun of Hank for being old feels different now. I watched John’s weekly Tuesday video already so I know it’s okay to joke if done in a specific way, but idk how to do that yet, so I just have no idea how to feel about this connection I made
Well, if it makes you feel better, he's got a relatively tame and very treatable form of cancer so he has a very good chance of recovering from it with proper and timely treatment.
The very cheesy (but fun) action movie Broken Arrow features a reference to cryptobiotic crust and I always assumed that moment was mostly for laughs and wasn't actually real. That's great.
SF movies have a lot to answer for, with everyone thinking that they have to *do* something with a random a tomic b omb. I'd be worried that someone is having me on. A tomic b ombs are large-ish mechanisms and weigh a bunch. The most it's likely to be is a "dirty b omb," which could still get whoever has it in trouble. But the easiest thing to do is to call the authorities and tell them you found a thing and you *don't know* what it is. Especially if someone drove up in a semi carrying something draped in tarpaulin, jumped out and gave you the keys, that's when you call the cops. "Someone abandoned a semi carrying something that looks large and heavy and ran off after handing me a set of keys."
idk where Ceri grew up, but she apparently never did a lot of outdoor activities in areas with invasive wild parsnip or giant hogweed, or she would absolutely know that carrots can cause phytophotodermatitis.
About Latin endings, Sam's line of thought actually gets to something very interesting about language. Sam joked that Latin is inefficient. Of course, Sam obviously doesn't know about the grammar of Latin, how languages like Latin, Greek, or Russian make heavy use of case endings on their nouns. These case endings tell you the gender, number and case of the word, where case is whether something is a subject of a sentences, an object of a sentence, or other sorts of grammatical relationships. For example in the sentence, "Sam gave Hank a crusty crab," we have three cases, the nominative (subject) Sam, the accusative (direct object) a crusty crab, and a dative (indirect object) Hank. Modern English makes little use of case marking, has lost grammatical gender, and only marks plurals. Our pronouns show the remains of the old English case system, "I saw him," but "he saw me," while nouns don't change. In "the dog saw the cat," we understand who is the subject and who is the object only by the word order. Languages like Latin or Russian can put the parts of the sentences in any word order but you still know who is doing what to whom. For plurals, we have "crab" vs "crabs," while Latin would have "astacus" and "astaci," -us for singular, and -i for plural. English uses a lack of an ending to show singular, making the non-plural shorter. So a language like English makes use of very limit morphology (adding prefixes and suffixes), resulting in a lot of bare roots, while Latin uses more suffixes. You could say this makes Latin inefficient, more morphemes makes longer words and, in theory, more effort on the speaker. But languages and their evolutions are defined by two very important forces: ease of the speaker, and ease of the listener. English uses word order instead of morphology, so we can make shorter words, but Latin makes the grammatical case very explicit, so that even as word order changes completely, it is easy-peasy for a listener to know who is doing what. Gender does a very similar thing. English speakers often cannot fathom why many languages give these categories to all their nouns, creating this complex paradigms of noun endings, adjective endings, and/or article endings that you have to memorize. Such a system does great more cognitive work on the part of the speaker, but not so on the part of the listener! I was once watching a video of the great mathematician John Conway giving a talk, as as he introduced a concept in game theory, he used the example of two players going back and forth. He called these players a male name and a female name, not because (as he explained) of any political motivation, but because it "made the pronouns easier." He could continue talking about these two players as "he" and "she" or "him" and "her," while making it perfectly clear which he is talking about. Had he had two males in his theoretical situation, it could get confusing who "he" is. Now imagine a language where every noun can be either a "he" or a "she," or in Latin or German or Russian etc, an "it." You put in all this extra morphology to show which gender the word is, which is more effort on your part, but it all gives extra hints. I read once that there was a study looking at German speakers vs English speakers ability to hear their language in a noisy environment, and the Germans did much better. You can imagine if you can't quite hear a word, but because it started with "der" so it must be masculine, well you've ruled out about two thirds of the languages vocabulary which is maybe enough for your brain to click which word it must be. There are other aspects of language you could look at, like phonemic inventory, ie how many types of sounds you use. English can have a lot of short monosyllabic words because we have this complicated vowel inventory - heap hip hoop hope hop etc are all very different. This is efficient for the speaker, but creates more difficulty on the part of the listener to hear the fine differences. Many languages make use of much fewer vowels, but this might mean they need more syllables in their roots to create differentiable words. Fundamentally, all natural human languages can only continue to exist by appeasing these conflicting forces. Language, after all, is a tool of communication. As languages change, say words getting shorter because people tend to cut off their endings, other aspects naturally balance them out, such as how English became more rigid in its word order. No language is more complex or efficient or evolved or devolved than any other, they are all just amorphous, fluctuating, dynamic systems ever reverberating around an equilibrium. They are, in this way, very much like living things.
On a round greased pan, flatten out the pizza dough to desired thickness. Bake @ 425°F 10-15 minutes no toppings. Flip cooked crust and flatten, add toppings and pop back into the oven for another 10 minutes. Never go out for overpriced pizza again.
Taking off with an object that a stranger claims is a bomb would be a bad move. You tackle the person and sit on them. If you can, call your Congressional representative’s office and convince them to send the appropriate team to retrieve it. You may still end up spending the rest of your life in the black cells, but will probably have less to regret.
why is no one saying they'd call the The Nuclear Regulatory Commission and say "I think someone handed me a weapon of mass destruction please send help"?
Fun fact about the myth of carrots and better eyesight: the British in WW2 had developed radar to allow them to see German planes, but they needed a way to prevent this secret from leaking, so they pushed a propaganda campaign advocating for people to eat carrots to improve people's nighttime vision as a cover story!
I’d take it to the Bikini Atoll. That or realize that the stranger who gave it to me was someone in the same situation, after a long line of people who all were handed this thing and quickly passed it to a stranger. So I’d just turn and give it to the next guy. It’s my duty after all.
The hell am I gonna do with an atom bomb?? Not like I can actually use the bloody thing without causing significant ecologocal harm... I'd prolly either use it as a table or donate it to NASA. At least THEY could get some value from it. >shrugs
It kind of says something that nobody would trust their government enough to tell them about the nuclear bomb. Fear that the government would misuse it, or would violate your rights just because you were given this nuclear weapon, despite the fact that you handed it over instead of using it for your own purposes or selling it to the highest bidder.
You're worried about dropping an A-bomb in the ocean because of the fishes but no concern for all the much larger number of critters that could be killed if it went off in a desert. Shame. (The blast radius would be significantly smaller under water)
Comment for algorithms. Also first time coming across the yt version of the pod so crazy seeing sary and sam for the first time! Sorry for definitely misspelling you name sary. This isn't really just a comment for the algorithm now, idk if I needed to type it. Ima tired which y I meander also there be few comments so maybe a tangents producer will see my comment and... I was about to say that I would get the good dopamine from famous person seeing me, then I realized that we don't have a lot of language to describe I started rewatching jacksfilms YIAY series and its not as good as I remembered. Twas nostalgic tho so good good. Train of thought wam bam thank you (the u in yu is pronounced like a lowercase u not as a stand in for the word you. Yu sounds funny just so u know.) I like your voices. Very noice sounding. Aw nice dog part. Cute. I love you all. Isn't science fun. My EYES!!! They're closing! Ima gonna go to sleep!!!!! Crazy. Wow. Excilemt podcast gtgtbnt (gottogotobednowthough). Night 🌃🌉🌃🌉🌃🌉
Great ep as always 😎 whatever Tangents does or doesn't do in the coming months, I'll be here for it
same!
Hank derails the bread subject by suffering a massive anxiety crisis and Ceri opens a guest's wikifeet article.
10/10 episode
Timestamps or it didn't happen
No stopping the bread train: 38:04
Wikiheet: 40:26
@@ashleelarsen223352:00
Idk if this is right, but i heard the carrots are good for vision thing was started by the british during ww2 because they had made advancements in radar and didnt want anyone to know.
I was already bracing for the change of Hank's background for Tangents being different when I heard he had a new office.. and then two weeks later THAT concern was soundly blown out of the water by a much bigger one.
My thoughts and sympathies for Hank and the SciShow Team.
Hank! Be well, and all the best wishes. We love you, love your work, and we love you. Did I say we love you, yet?
Thanks to this entire team for keeping us entertained on a Tuesday!
Get well soon Hank! We love you!
So are we adding Spongebob to Hank's fluffy media list?
DONT LET HIM WATCH GARY COME HOME
There are a lot of heavy moments in Spongebob. He would need a curated list of the extra silly episodes
I have apparently shown my PBS kids origins with my incomplete viewing of Spongebob. 😬 So yes, maybe curated.
I had to laugh at Hank's guess at cod fish being in stargazy pie. Cod are usually three to six feet long, so that would make a huge pie.
Stargazy pie is traditionally made with pilchards and was first made in the Cornish village of Mousehole and is traditionally eaten during the festival of Tom Bawcock's Eve to celebrate his heroic catch during a very stormy winter.
Hank’s smile and sad little “what is it?” when he doesn’t get the spongebob reference 😆 12:01
Big respect to hank, finding out he has cancer and still managing to make content for us 😢❤ 👏
Its funny how you were talking about accidentally stepping on cryptobiotic crust and it causing a big fuss. In the movie Broken Arrow Christian Slater does the same thing and it causes a big fuss. He then recieves an atomic bomb from a friend and has figure out what to do with it!
Proposal for The Gauntlet: Winner gets +1 point and last place gets -1 point. Would balance its impact to be more in line with Truth or Fail.
Elephants DO cry hank should have gotten that point!
I'm just a simple everyman. i can't know all animals that cry! - sam
The Marianas Trench might be one of the worst places on Earth for an inadvertent nuclear explosion.
Why? At the bottom or top?
@@petergerdes1094 The crust of the Earth is thinnest at the bottom of the trench. A really large explosion in that area could start a really bad series of events. The pressure of the water above would 'tamp' the explosion and we could see a large mantle excursion.
@@trelligan42 Thats actually the place where the ocean crust is at its thickest. The crust there ranges from 6-12km while near the midocean ridge it can get down to 3km. Think about it this way, it starts thin and as it moves away from the ridge it accumulates more material. The trench is pulled down because the crust is diving down but it doesn't get thinner.
Also, I think you are off here by several orders of magnitude. Underground nuclear tests don't even move the needle with respect to techtonic plates or access to the mantle and even when buried under dirt you need multiple nukes even to reach nuclear bunkers.
Sam, contrary to popular belief we are happy that you've been Sam Schultz.
I knew the answer to the Sandman question right away thanks to a Tale Foundry episode. Fun thing, he was almost assuredly based on Morpheus the Greek god of dreams, who morphed into an ancient Germanic god whose name was lost with the rise of Christianity, reduced to an eyeball-snatching folklore, then a fable of a spirit whatnot gives dreams, and finally a comic book character named, ironically, Morpheus. It all comes full circle.
Hank, that warrant reference was a cool drink a water, such a sweet surprise!!
but also, watch more spongebob!!!! you said you were needing things to watch. go catch all the references you're missing out on
28:43 It’s cool to hear a reference to stargazy pie! Cornwall is the most south-westerly county of Britain but it’s also one of the Celtic nations (like Wales and the Isle of Man) and has its own native language and culture, so some Cornish people don’t consider it to be part of England. There’s a great children’s book featuring stargazy pie called the Mousehole cat.
🎶She’s my Cherry Pie🎶
I've been feeling old a lot lately, so watching Hank know *nothing* about SpongeBob has helped me feel a little younger 😃
I saw a post on Facebook recently of someone who keeps a baking sheet on the middle rack of their oven at all times, and they found a loaf of banana bread hiding under it that had been baked over and over for months. It was black all the way through. I would guess that the moisture redistributed itself over time so that it dried out completely enough to all blacken.
Hey is it better financially for you guys if we listen via UA-cam or through our podcast app?
I honestly don't think there's any way for us to actually figure that out, but I would guess they are about the same. YT is maybe slightly better
@@SciShowTangents time to rewatch every episode in UA-cam
i adore seeing Hank's pizza john water bottle, i have mine next to me while listening!
Poor ostrich babies... I feel their pain. I work in a nursery and have had a phytotoxic response to contact with that plant family, the carrot family (Apiaceae). Good job Sam, other ones are the citrus family (Rutaceae), the mulberry family (Moraceae), and the legume family (Fabaceae). Furanocoumarins is the active sensitizer chemical.
I love hearing them again!!!!
I know this isn't the thing on most people's minds right now but I would like to point out that most nuclear weapons closer to the size of a small car than a backpack and even the smallest are quite heavy, so it would not be something that could just be handed off to you in the grocery store so this scenario wouldn't really happen. It takes a lot of engineering and a lot of conventional explosives to make fissionable material do its fissioning. 0:45
but maybe someday. and if that day comes, i'll be prepared
I've got it. The Earth is a Fererro Rocher. Thin, uneven crust on the outside (chocolate and hazelnut crumbs). Gooey inside (Nutella). Hard center (whole hazelnut).
I've listened to every episode many multitudes of times over the last year or so since I've started listening, for a long time I listened to at least one episode every night until I'd listened to most episodes enough times to memorize them to a degree! That will absolutely not change no matter what changes are made during these turbulent times. Please, do what you need and take care of yourselves, we'll be here for you always!
Weirdly I actually know exactly the person I'd call if I suddenly got a nuke dropped in my lap:
My grandpa, who was a colonel in the airforce and actually has experience handling (or at least being in charge of) nukes. I very much hope I've never got to call him with that particular concern, but, well, I've actually got a very solid idea of who to call. Though idk if he would still know who to call, since he's been retired for so long, but I'm sure he could figure it out much better than me, and unlike me, wouldn't be absolutely panicking/terrified of the thing I've now got in my living room lol
Can you imagine that the whale songs recorded were actually some whales secretly talking trash about other whales, and now scientists are repeating and repeating that convo to all whales going around?
As someone who had to read Der Sandmann and analysed it for weeks in school I’m ashamed to admit that I can’t remember what Coppelius does with the eyes he collects 😬 granted, it‘s been 8 years and that part wasn’t even the most horrific thing in the story but still.
I'm a bit late on my campaign to make a post requesting a poetry book... It was a busy day for me y'all...
But I for sure, think the guest poetry also must be included in the coffee table poetry book.
Take care of yourself Hank, we love you!
My sister reacts to the sun more severely if she's out picking parsnips - touching the foliage. And parsnips are related to carrots I do believe
Hey Hank, nice office!! Also, you're doing great.
I can attest chickens will eat anything. Mine will even take out snakes, I'll find just the head in the coop
Making fun of Hank for being old feels different now. I watched John’s weekly Tuesday video already so I know it’s okay to joke if done in a specific way, but idk how to do that yet, so I just have no idea how to feel about this connection I made
Well, if it makes you feel better, he's got a relatively tame and very treatable form of cancer so he has a very good chance of recovering from it with proper and timely treatment.
@@peggedyourdad9560 the show just wouldn’t be the same without him. He’s strong though, I know he’ll make it through!
Fish bones resolve in the canning process so you just eat them.
woah!
Desolve
Sam is just so funny as always!
Pretty sure I've seen a cat cry too. Their eyes well up with tears in situations where if they were people they would cry
The very cheesy (but fun) action movie Broken Arrow features a reference to cryptobiotic crust and I always assumed that moment was mostly for laughs and wasn't actually real. That's great.
Lumpy crunchy crust, soft gooey layer, hard center. Sounds like Ferraro Rocher to me. 😋
That stock footage you used is actually cilantro
Seth's in BIG trouble!
@@SciShowTangents Don't worry, happens all the time
SF movies have a lot to answer for, with everyone thinking that they have to *do* something with a random a tomic b omb.
I'd be worried that someone is having me on. A tomic b ombs are large-ish mechanisms and weigh a bunch. The most it's likely to be is a "dirty b omb," which could still get whoever has it in trouble. But the easiest thing to do is to call the authorities and tell them you found a thing and you *don't know* what it is. Especially if someone drove up in a semi carrying something draped in tarpaulin, jumped out and gave you the keys, that's when you call the cops. "Someone abandoned a semi carrying something that looks large and heavy and ran off after handing me a set of keys."
Hotdog is a taco😊
idk where Ceri grew up, but she apparently never did a lot of outdoor activities in areas with invasive wild parsnip or giant hogweed, or she would absolutely know that carrots can cause phytophotodermatitis.
And that pizza paper was obviously fundamentally flawed - they should have gone to Naples! :D :D
We love you Hank ❤
About Latin endings, Sam's line of thought actually gets to something very interesting about language.
Sam joked that Latin is inefficient. Of course, Sam obviously doesn't know about the grammar of Latin, how languages like Latin, Greek, or Russian make heavy use of case endings on their nouns. These case endings tell you the gender, number and case of the word, where case is whether something is a subject of a sentences, an object of a sentence, or other sorts of grammatical relationships. For example in the sentence, "Sam gave Hank a crusty crab," we have three cases, the nominative (subject) Sam, the accusative (direct object) a crusty crab, and a dative (indirect object) Hank.
Modern English makes little use of case marking, has lost grammatical gender, and only marks plurals. Our pronouns show the remains of the old English case system, "I saw him," but "he saw me," while nouns don't change. In "the dog saw the cat," we understand who is the subject and who is the object only by the word order. Languages like Latin or Russian can put the parts of the sentences in any word order but you still know who is doing what to whom. For plurals, we have "crab" vs "crabs," while Latin would have "astacus" and "astaci," -us for singular, and -i for plural. English uses a lack of an ending to show singular, making the non-plural shorter.
So a language like English makes use of very limit morphology (adding prefixes and suffixes), resulting in a lot of bare roots, while Latin uses more suffixes. You could say this makes Latin inefficient, more morphemes makes longer words and, in theory, more effort on the speaker.
But languages and their evolutions are defined by two very important forces: ease of the speaker, and ease of the listener. English uses word order instead of morphology, so we can make shorter words, but Latin makes the grammatical case very explicit, so that even as word order changes completely, it is easy-peasy for a listener to know who is doing what.
Gender does a very similar thing. English speakers often cannot fathom why many languages give these categories to all their nouns, creating this complex paradigms of noun endings, adjective endings, and/or article endings that you have to memorize. Such a system does great more cognitive work on the part of the speaker, but not so on the part of the listener!
I was once watching a video of the great mathematician John Conway giving a talk, as as he introduced a concept in game theory, he used the example of two players going back and forth. He called these players a male name and a female name, not because (as he explained) of any political motivation, but because it "made the pronouns easier." He could continue talking about these two players as "he" and "she" or "him" and "her," while making it perfectly clear which he is talking about. Had he had two males in his theoretical situation, it could get confusing who "he" is.
Now imagine a language where every noun can be either a "he" or a "she," or in Latin or German or Russian etc, an "it." You put in all this extra morphology to show which gender the word is, which is more effort on your part, but it all gives extra hints. I read once that there was a study looking at German speakers vs English speakers ability to hear their language in a noisy environment, and the Germans did much better. You can imagine if you can't quite hear a word, but because it started with "der" so it must be masculine, well you've ruled out about two thirds of the languages vocabulary which is maybe enough for your brain to click which word it must be.
There are other aspects of language you could look at, like phonemic inventory, ie how many types of sounds you use. English can have a lot of short monosyllabic words because we have this complicated vowel inventory - heap hip hoop hope hop etc are all very different. This is efficient for the speaker, but creates more difficulty on the part of the listener to hear the fine differences. Many languages make use of much fewer vowels, but this might mean they need more syllables in their roots to create differentiable words.
Fundamentally, all natural human languages can only continue to exist by appeasing these conflicting forces. Language, after all, is a tool of communication. As languages change, say words getting shorter because people tend to cut off their endings, other aspects naturally balance them out, such as how English became more rigid in its word order. No language is more complex or efficient or evolved or devolved than any other, they are all just amorphous, fluctuating, dynamic systems ever reverberating around an equilibrium. They are, in this way, very much like living things.
On a round greased pan, flatten out the pizza dough to desired thickness. Bake @ 425°F 10-15 minutes no toppings. Flip cooked crust and flatten, add toppings and pop back into the oven for another 10 minutes. Never go out for overpriced pizza again.
I never expected The Magnus Archives to help me beat hank
We call eye crusties goose poop here in the Midwest 😂
As a midwesterner, I have never heard of this and I’m kind of disturbed with this information.
Taking off with an object that a stranger claims is a bomb would be a bad move.
You tackle the person and sit on them. If you can, call your Congressional representative’s office and convince them to send the appropriate team to retrieve it. You may still end up spending the rest of your life in the black cells, but will probably have less to regret.
why is no one saying they'd call the The Nuclear Regulatory Commission and say "I think someone handed me a weapon of mass destruction please send help"?
So like; what would happen to a nuclear bomb as (every ten meters) the pressure increases (by 1 atmosphere)?
Fun fact about the myth of carrots and better eyesight: the British in WW2 had developed radar to allow them to see German planes, but they needed a way to prevent this secret from leaking, so they pushed a propaganda campaign advocating for people to eat carrots to improve people's nighttime vision as a cover story!
Earth is just a really big gusher candy.
I may be weird for this, but I kinda really love the heet pic 😄
👀
Sam is super funny and I am glad that he won! Though the Elizabeth I question was unanswerable.
perhaps an historian would have known the answer - sam
My 3-year-old loves sardines and brie on bread and kippers on toast. 💚
he's hip!
Oh my god I know something Ceri doesn’t, wild carrot plants exude a sap that causes phytophotodermatitis, the name of margarita sunburns
I'm sure this will inspire a whole new UA-cam series, "Will it chicken?" ;) :D :D
What!? I cook my pizzas for 14 minutes at 500°F!!!
you know, i usually have to cook my pizzas for a long time like that, too...
Nice one guys ! Bat poop ! Yep ! Lol
Hank! You wanted show suggestions, there you go! SpongeBob!
Seriously, read the wiki. the show is great en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpongeBob_SquarePants
I guess the earth is a bit like a ferrero rocher
Isn't bat guano something else
The earth is a Ferrero Rocher
The Earth is flat.. because it’s pie
To not bust the crust, you gotta tiptoe on the crypto 😁
Earth is a scotch egg
I’d take it to the Bikini Atoll. That or realize that the stranger who gave it to me was someone in the same situation, after a long line of people who all were handed this thing and quickly passed it to a stranger. So I’d just turn and give it to the next guy. It’s my duty after all.
Nice Majora's Mask, Ashley.
Could I take the nuke to the great pacific plastic crust?
ashley heet photos will always be horrible and i love it
Yay!!
The hell am I gonna do with an atom bomb?? Not like I can actually use the bloody thing without causing significant ecologocal harm... I'd prolly either use it as a table or donate it to NASA. At least THEY could get some value from it. >shrugs
These are QI scores
Great episode, no Inky but Ashley is almost as good. /s
Are barnacles whale crust?
Abracadabra is an African god. So call him as you did as a kid.
Sardine is a species?
Call FBI is the answer.
Science crust or crust science ?
It kind of says something that nobody would trust their government enough to tell them about the nuclear bomb. Fear that the government would misuse it, or would violate your rights just because you were given this nuclear weapon, despite the fact that you handed it over instead of using it for your own purposes or selling it to the highest bidder.
This is not the crossover i expected AT ALL
Cows of what species?
You're worried about dropping an A-bomb in the ocean because of the fishes but no concern for all the much larger number of critters that could be killed if it went off in a desert. Shame. (The blast radius would be significantly smaller under water)
no thought for all the lizards, snakes, and scorpions smh
@@SciShowTangents 😉
Comment for algorithms. Also first time coming across the yt version of the pod so crazy seeing sary and sam for the first time! Sorry for definitely misspelling you name sary. This isn't really just a comment for the algorithm now, idk if I needed to type it. Ima tired which y I meander also there be few comments so maybe a tangents producer will see my comment and... I was about to say that I would get the good dopamine from famous person seeing me, then I realized that we don't have a lot of language to describe I started rewatching jacksfilms YIAY series and its not as good as I remembered. Twas nostalgic tho so good good. Train of thought wam bam thank you (the u in yu is pronounced like a lowercase u not as a stand in for the word you. Yu sounds funny just so u know.) I like your voices. Very noice sounding. Aw nice dog part. Cute. I love you all. Isn't science fun. My EYES!!! They're closing! Ima gonna go to sleep!!!!! Crazy. Wow. Excilemt podcast gtgtbnt (gottogotobednowthough). Night 🌃🌉🌃🌉🌃🌉
There's already a nuke in the ocean