@@emperortivurnis9161 You arent lazy you just wanted some kind of interaction with what you belive are real people. You craved the attention and there for asked a question EVERYONE in the world knew or should know if they are more than 2 days old.
Didn't watch the video yet but if you use western union to send a moneygram, you have to pay for that. So you do have western union dues. Why are they separate phrases?
You guys should play this IRL with Lewis presenting it and have funny punishments instead of going bankrupt or whatever. Could even make a series of it by recreating famous game shows with you three as the contestants.
What the Wild Card does is it allows you to use it during the game and guess another time on the money amount you landed on, so if you landed on $5000 and used the wild card it would be the same as landing on the $5000 again. However, if you keep it till the end of the game and you win, it gives you an extra letter in the bonus puzzle.
Oh God. They already forgot how the Before and After category works. It was "Western Union" & "Union Dues". It takes two things and combines them together.
Taste of Home is the name/title of a American subscription magazine that had been around like forever. It’s literally in like every grocery store checkout stand, doctors waiting room and grandmas house in the country. So most Americans would recognize it as a title.
Before and after category means that the phrase makes sense when combined with the middle word. So on "Western Union Dues" look at it as "Western Union" and "Union Dues"
Brits call union dues union fees, which we can also use yet dues is more popular to say. Dues is a very North American term and they wouldn't have gotten it unless they were acquainted with the term.
"Taste of Home" and "Western Union/Union Dues" was the most infuriating thing I've watched in 2022, lads. Keep up the great work, been watching for what feels like forever now!
On the Western Union Dues puzzle, it's not about the whole phrase. It's two phrases put together. Before and after. Western Union combined with Union Dues. Two phrases, one puzzle.
So before and after works like this. The middle line or word or phrase links two other unrelated phrases. The "before" refers to the phrase before the "linker" and the "after" to the phrase after the linker. Western Union (before) is a company. Union dues (after) are something you pay. Union is the linker. If you have one of the phrases (like Western Union) then you should at that point think "what common phrase begins with union?" or whatever the "linker" is. That is why it doesn't make sense, because it is not supposed to until you parse out the two phrases. Other examples could be "dog pile driver" (dog pile + pile driver) or "romance comedy central" (romance comedy + Comedy Central)
I was mashing my face against the desk wondering how they couldn't know that or get it for that long then I remembered not everyone works at a bed and breakfast and sees that title all the damn time lmao
@@georgehh2574 Yes! Very much so! At least it is among people who cook and/or bake frequently. It's a book and magazine subscription sort of thing and they have a lot of online stuff. Recipes mostly, lots of articles.
@@georgehh2574 Also it's been circulating since 1993 (and they still do print subscriptions) so it's not like a "new" sort of thing. It's right up there with "Better Homes and Gardens" or like, "Country Living" kinda stuff you'd see at your mom's or grandma's house a lot.
Before and after is two different phrases connected by a word, in this case, the connection word is union. Western Union, and Union Dues. Another Before and After example: "Cat in the Hat Films" = "Cat in the Hat" + "Hat Films"
"Taste of Home magazine is an American cooking publication, founded by Roy Reiman, publisher of Reiman Publications, and is currently owned by Trusted Media Brands, Inc." This is truly America's game. It's the title of a magazine.
As others have said - but on the hope that you'll catch *one* of these at least - Before and After is a pair of phrases that share a common word on opposite sides of the phrase. The example in this video, "Western Union Dues", is a combination of "Western Union", and "Union Dues"; there's no relationship between them, other than one has a word before "Union", and the other has a word after "Union". However, Western Union might have been part of the confusing bit - it's, as I recall, a US company? :P Typically, discovering the common word makes it much easier to solve either one.
As someone who is part of a union and part of my salary is removed to pay my union dues, I got that puzzle pretty quickly. "Nobody got that" turned out to be at least half this comment section getting it, I believe.
RRROOOOSSSSSSSS... Bounty was the stronger soaker upper. I know that no one will read this but I can't believe someone else remembers that jingle too. Thank you Ross, you're my favorite.
Clipping coupons is a thing in the UK but not to the extent of how other countries do it. I remember in Hong Kong people bring stacks of coupons for their weekly shopping. Or they'll line up early in the morning so they could use the coupons. It's crazy. All that trouble for 50cents off toilet paper.
8:01 Ok guys, I don't think you understand Before and After. The middle word is a hinge, so it's two unrelated phrases jammed together. "Western Union" is one thing, and "union dues" is another thing. They just have the one word in common.
Taste of home is a title because it’s the name of a magazine! Regardless of if you knew the magazine or not title can mean many different things, that’s the point of a “clue”
Before and after seems to mean the word in the middle works with the word before and the word after, Western Union -> Union Dues. The title maybe a title of a movie or book or anything really. The RSTLN E are not the most common letters they are just the ones preselected for the final puzzle.
Before and After is two phrases with a common word which comes Before one phrase, and After the other, the link between the phrases is the common word , and any other links are vague at best. Source: Am American, know Americas Game.
I did not get "Dues" so there! I did however get the rest but I do understand I get to sit back and think about it the whole time and not have to worry about playing the game.
Boiks... before and after are two phrases joined by a common word. "Western Union" and "Union Dues". Title does not reference an honorific... it's usually the title of a film or book.
tbf some of them are stupid if you aren't american. like i knew western union, but have never heard of the phrase union dues. taste of home i got but i'm not aware of anything with that name. the people round is dumb because it can literally be any adjective, any pronoun, any occupation etc. then the final one was stupid as clipping is a really dumb verb. you're cutting them out! you clip hair with some clippers, or you clip sheets of paper together with a paper clip... that said them not knowing how before and after works yet is them being stupid!
The Jonin Cactuar Taste of Home is the name/title of a American subscription magazine that had been around like forever. It’s literally in like every grocery store checkout stand, doctors waiting room and grandmas house in the country. So most Americans would recognize it as a title.
Western union dues was a combination of western union and union dues, two different phrases with one word in common. The before and after ones aren't supposed to make sense as one phrase, because it's a frankensteined pair of phrases.
apparently movie executives deciding to make "a movie for the whole family" as apposed to movies for adults only or movies for children only is not part of showbiz?
This is a game made by aliens who have studied humanity, but only at a distance.
Pretty much. They even fabricated the host. Rat sajak is just a skin suit full of rats.
Before and after read as: Western Union, Union Dues. The middle word goes with the beginning and end but are separate phrases.
Toni Saylor it’s weird because they already figured out the rules of Before and After in a previous video
@@emperortivurnis9161 The dues you pay when you're part of a union.
@@emperortivurnis9161 You arent lazy you just wanted some kind of interaction with what you belive are real people. You craved the attention and there for asked a question EVERYONE in the world knew or should know if they are more than 2 days old.
Didn't watch the video yet but if you use western union to send a moneygram, you have to pay for that. So you do have western union dues. Why are they separate phrases?
@@emperortivurnis9161 If you are in a union in your line of work, you pay dues. Like a membership fee.
"jazz this show up a bit. get rid of the amazing kit and add well I don't know a 'cream tasting ceremony"-smith of hat films (2019)
Not even just a 'cream tasting,' but a cream tasting CEREMONY. Like it's an important part of some culture... rofl
You guys should play this IRL with Lewis presenting it and have funny punishments instead of going bankrupt or whatever. Could even make a series of it by recreating famous game shows with you three as the contestants.
Great idea!
@SteelRodent that is a very good point and not something I'd considered. That's a shame, would have been funny to see.
- Who's that person over there?
- Charming Young Woman
@@sliver170 I mean, it didn't say it was a proper noun
hat films this month has averaged +36 subs a day at that rate they are 7.9 years from 1m subs! keep up the good work fellas.
hhahahahahahahaaaaa
you're looking pretty accurate right now...
instaBlaster...
Oh look!, it's three of my favourite people: Smith, Ross and the girl who's turns the tiles.
The charming young woman that turns the tiles*
What the Wild Card does is it allows you to use it during the game and guess another time on the money amount you landed on, so if you landed on $5000 and used the wild card it would be the same as landing on the $5000 again. However, if you keep it till the end of the game and you win, it gives you an extra letter in the bonus puzzle.
I like how they mention how vague the hints are but then go right back to trying to use it as close and literally as possible
Oh God. They already forgot how the Before and After category works. It was "Western Union" & "Union Dues". It takes two things and combines them together.
Oscar award winning film Austin Powers the spy who shagged me, stars Mike Myers and his spy partner Charming Young Woman
I love it when they fuck things up and then blame the game. The yogscast guarantee.
this one was rough
NO ONE would get THIS hard watching a hat films video!
Its too late for me...
Is that a challenge?
You have a special talent of making simple things look really hard.
Save the Wild Card for the bonus round.
Taste of Home is the name/title of a American subscription magazine that had been around like forever. It’s literally in like every grocery store checkout stand, doctors waiting room and grandmas house in the country. So most Americans would recognize it as a title.
Title of a book/movie/tv show. People can have titles but so can the above.
19:57 - fuck that caught me off guard, takin a sip I nearly spat all over the screen.
Before and after category means that the phrase makes sense when combined with the middle word. So on "Western Union Dues" look at it as "Western Union" and "Union Dues"
They would never guess union dues
UK isn't even in a Union sooooo :P@@minor_edit
@@robbie3726 It means union as in trade or commercial union, not like supranational goverments such as the European Union
I have no clue what either means
Brits call union dues union fees, which we can also use yet dues is more popular to say. Dues is a very North American term and they wouldn't have gotten it unless they were acquainted with the term.
"Taste of Home" and "Western Union/Union Dues" was the most infuriating thing I've watched in 2022, lads. Keep up the great work, been watching for what feels like forever now!
Smiffy: *realizes it's charming young woman* "It's not a person guys"
I love watching these guys play this but... There might be a reason this is "America's game".
I'm from the U.S., this game was not made for any America I'm familiar with
@@Cheezburgl3r you're young
On the Western Union Dues puzzle, it's not about the whole phrase. It's two phrases put together. Before and after. Western Union combined with Union Dues. Two phrases, one puzzle.
So before and after works like this. The middle line or word or phrase links two other unrelated phrases. The "before" refers to the phrase before the "linker" and the "after" to the phrase after the linker. Western Union (before) is a company. Union dues (after) are something you pay. Union is the linker. If you have one of the phrases (like Western Union) then you should at that point think "what common phrase begins with union?" or whatever the "linker" is. That is why it doesn't make sense, because it is not supposed to until you parse out the two phrases. Other examples could be "dog pile driver" (dog pile + pile driver) or "romance comedy central" (romance comedy + Comedy Central)
"A Movie for the Entire Family" Is a common show business marketing term for movie categorization and ad sales.
MPAA Ratings are a huge part of show biz! You can't sell adult movies to minors! Not directly anyways... tsk tsk.
Taste of Home is a magazine and website. So, it is actually a Title.
I was mashing my face against the desk wondering how they couldn't know that or get it for that long then I remembered not everyone works at a bed and breakfast and sees that title all the damn time lmao
@@starwinter6845 Is it well known in the US?
@@georgehh2574 Yes! Very much so! At least it is among people who cook and/or bake frequently. It's a book and magazine subscription sort of thing and they have a lot of online stuff. Recipes mostly, lots of articles.
@@georgehh2574 Also it's been circulating since 1993 (and they still do print subscriptions) so it's not like a "new" sort of thing. It's right up there with "Better Homes and Gardens" or like, "Country Living" kinda stuff you'd see at your mom's or grandma's house a lot.
Trott's energy in this episode is unmatched. I love it.
Before and after is two different phrases connected by a word, in this case, the connection word is union. Western Union, and Union Dues.
Another Before and After example: "Cat in the Hat Films" = "Cat in the Hat" + "Hat Films"
Great example! :))) (I was trying to think of an example, and couldn't come up with one...)
Taste of Home is the title of a cookbook series I believe
The absolute heartbreak when they jokingly say "Clipping?" and you realise it's clipping coupons then and there.
Sounded more like 'cliffing' to me.
I was yelling "CLIMBING CANYONS" for the last part, only to be disappointed, frustrated, and confused just like they were after each puzzle.
"Taste of Home magazine is an American cooking publication, founded by Roy Reiman, publisher of Reiman Publications, and is currently owned by Trusted Media Brands, Inc." This is truly America's game. It's the title of a magazine.
21:40 I havent laughed this hard in a long long time. Ross, your face! The trauma! The horror! The look of utter bewilderment! AH MY RIBS!!!
As others have said - but on the hope that you'll catch *one* of these at least - Before and After is a pair of phrases that share a common word on opposite sides of the phrase. The example in this video, "Western Union Dues", is a combination of "Western Union", and "Union Dues"; there's no relationship between them, other than one has a word before "Union", and the other has a word after "Union". However, Western Union might have been part of the confusing bit - it's, as I recall, a US company? :P
Typically, discovering the common word makes it much easier to solve either one.
As someone from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, this was a pleasant surprise.
I love how they have no idea what the Before & After category is or how it works haha. "Western Union" plus "Union Dues" makes "Western Union Dues"
Even AFTER the puzzle is solved, they don't get it. Wow.
The purpose of using the wild card is if you land on say 2500, you can guess two letters without spinning in between, so you can get more money
As someone who is part of a union and part of my salary is removed to pay my union dues, I got that puzzle pretty quickly. "Nobody got that" turned out to be at least half this comment section getting it, I believe.
The american half. We don't call it that
RRROOOOSSSSSSSS... Bounty was the stronger soaker upper. I know that no one will read this but I can't believe someone else remembers that jingle too. Thank you Ross, you're my favorite.
2:35 "What nationality would you say your avatar is?" - 'Merican most likely.
I'm screaming "TASTE OF HOME" at my computer screen. Thanks guys.
Western Union
Union Dues
Before and after, means that the middle word(s) are used to link two phrases. Of which those middle words are included in.
24:13 Ross looking for his phone
"A moble for the entire family"
"Theremin, the Doctor Who instrument" DOCTOR MUST BE REAL!
I tend to think of it as the Ed Wood instument.
ah yes. The otters are famous for their fresh dug dams
Taste of Home is a magazine here in the states
Clipping coupons is a thing in the UK but not to the extent of how other countries do it. I remember in Hong Kong people bring stacks of coupons for their weekly shopping. Or they'll line up early in the morning so they could use the coupons. It's crazy. All that trouble for 50cents off toilet paper.
I figured out the answer at 25:34. Almost immediately I knew they would be pissed as hell when they finally got it.
I was right.
everyone makes jokes about trotts eyes being red, I like to think its because he misses me so much he cries. we've never met.
8:01 Ok guys, I don't think you understand Before and After.
The middle word is a hinge, so it's two unrelated phrases jammed together. "Western Union" is one thing, and "union dues" is another thing. They just have the one word in common.
Taste of home is the title of a cooking magazine in America
Taste of home is a title because it’s the name of a magazine! Regardless of if you knew the magazine or not title can mean many different things, that’s the point of a “clue”
Watching foreigners play this is 1000x more entertaining than watching it on TV.
This game is pure madness. Never stop playing it.
Taste of Home is a housewares and homemaking magazine
I love how they still don’t understand the Before & After segment🤦🏾♀️
I'm so glad I'm not the only one who doesn't get ANY of these damn things.
YOU will never GUESS what THIS person is doing NOW - all ads online ever
Taste of Home is the name of a magazine.
I feel like this game makes you over think the answer, but it's just simple common words that you would never guess.
I fell asleep watching this, not because it was boring, I was just really tired
Before and after seems to mean the word in the middle works with the word before and the word after, Western Union -> Union Dues. The title maybe a title of a movie or book or anything really. The RSTLN E are not the most common letters they are just the ones preselected for the final puzzle.
Before and After is two phrases with a common word which comes Before one phrase, and After the other, the link between the phrases is the common word , and any other links are vague at best. Source: Am American, know Americas Game.
Before and after means it’s two phrases mashed together with a common word.
“Western union” and “union dues”
I did not get "Dues" so there! I did however get the rest but I do understand I get to sit back and think about it the whole time and not have to worry about playing the game.
Someone's never been forced to pay union dues when not in the union.
Hat films plz never change
Trott "Charming Young Woman" of Hat Films
I approve this comment!
he always plays woman in video game
Boiks... before and after are two phrases joined by a common word. "Western Union" and "Union Dues". Title does not reference an honorific... it's usually the title of a film or book.
I stand with Hat films, I didn't know it was dues, and I'm not ashamed.
Between this and The Railroad Hellscape of Monopoly, boys might want to get their blood pressure checked.
The ultimate trio of showbiz.
How do three people manage to share only two brain cells? It's such an interesting dynamic.
tbf some of them are stupid if you aren't american. like i knew western union, but have never heard of the phrase union dues. taste of home i got but i'm not aware of anything with that name. the people round is dumb because it can literally be any adjective, any pronoun, any occupation etc. then the final one was stupid as clipping is a really dumb verb. you're cutting them out! you clip hair with some clippers, or you clip sheets of paper together with a paper clip...
that said them not knowing how before and after works yet is them being stupid!
@@Relyx you cut your hair with scissors. we don't use the word clippers, and thus avoid the confusion.
The Jonin Cactuar Taste of Home is the name/title of a American subscription magazine that had been around like forever. It’s literally in like every grocery store checkout stand, doctors waiting room and grandmas house in the country. So most Americans would recognize it as a title.
Taste of Home is a magazine series.
i dont think anyone got ross saying "after the famous baby" it fucking got me
Press F for Smith's hairline
I thought the final one was climbing canyons lol then got so upset when i was wrong
Me too.
I'd love to see a modded version of this with horrifically offensive phrases.
Suit you sir, suit you
Well they weren't quite right about Egypt being the weird thing to look back on but those cruises....
Maybe it could be the letter, as you’ve discussed, is the most common letter in the god damn game
Western union dues was a combination of western union and union dues, two different phrases with one word in common. The before and after ones aren't supposed to make sense as one phrase, because it's a frankensteined pair of phrases.
That moment you were with hatfilms and then could just taste the answer and they weren't seeing it.
Taste of Home. It's a magazine.
i had a really shit day today and im very glad u bois uploaded... this gave me a hard needed chuckle
Taste of Home is a cookbook. It's the title of a cookbook.
Showbiz is all assosiated with entertainment, so its kinda right and vauge
I tell you what, Craig is getting good at editing these stream highlights. I hardly saw any transitions in this video.
What are the odds I’m watching this and the city I was born in shows up in the game? Baton Rouge
you right, i didn't know
Never screamed dues so loud in my life
wheel of fortune is one of those gameshows that doesn't pay out much
I knew it Ross I'm sorry but I was screaming at y'all that it was dues when trott started guessing.
apparently movie executives deciding to make "a movie for the whole family" as apposed to movies for adults only or movies for children only is not part of showbiz?
Some of the categories are dumb but most aren't too difficult if you understand how the category works or what it is asking you
I knew it was "dues".
My name is Charlene.