Bro came in clutch with this video clip. Also, good on Dan for being ahead of the crowd and consistent with his views, never shying away from them no matter the pressure
You know, there were a myriad of things shifted my adolescence worldview from the idea that gay was something not spoken of in polite conversation to something I discuss and think about almost daily, but, genuinely, I think it was watching this episode of Nerdcubed's bully series that first began that shift. I didn't even know that 'Bi' was a thing when I watched this, and in only a few short years, my entire opinion and knowledge of the LGBT+ community had changed. More than that, Nerdcubed's content helped me in an unexpected way. I decided to participate in the nerdcubed community survey, and they asked one particular question that I nearly skipped. They asked if I was Straight, Gay, Bi, or Asexual, and gave definitions for each. I had never read the term Asexual before, but the definition was... incredibly familiar. I found out that I was Asexual from a survey question. As ridiculous as it sounds, I'm honestly glad that I found that piece of myself like that, without judgement or pity, just a question with a clear answer, once I understood what it was asking. I'm pretty sure that it was Mattophobia that wrote and ran that survey. I'm glad that he was thorough with his work.
@@gferrol118people love to show their bigotry because it has no consequences for them to openly voice their hatred. another 10-20 years and that may also have changed, hopefully.
finding something a percentage of people find really really annoying but no-one else has any issue with and then repeating it several times is one of the foundational concepts of comedy it's inherently exclusionary so I tend to not gravitate towards it, but in instances like this it feels more cathartic than funny
Bro came in clutch with this video clip. Also, good on Dan for being ahead of the crowd and consistent with his views, never shying away from them no matter the pressure
What I love even more is I'm pretty sure it was in the ending card of his videos for quite a while afterwards.
You know, there were a myriad of things shifted my adolescence worldview from the idea that gay was something not spoken of in polite conversation to something I discuss and think about almost daily, but, genuinely, I think it was watching this episode of Nerdcubed's bully series that first began that shift. I didn't even know that 'Bi' was a thing when I watched this, and in only a few short years, my entire opinion and knowledge of the LGBT+ community had changed.
More than that, Nerdcubed's content helped me in an unexpected way. I decided to participate in the nerdcubed community survey, and they asked one particular question that I nearly skipped. They asked if I was Straight, Gay, Bi, or Asexual, and gave definitions for each. I had never read the term Asexual before, but the definition was... incredibly familiar.
I found out that I was Asexual from a survey question. As ridiculous as it sounds, I'm honestly glad that I found that piece of myself like that, without judgement or pity, just a question with a clear answer, once I understood what it was asking.
I'm pretty sure that it was Mattophobia that wrote and ran that survey. I'm glad that he was thorough with his work.
This is why Dan has been one of my favorite youtubers forever ❤
Ah the golden age of nerdcubed
legendary.
Nearly 100 people complaining about a gay kiss is crazy to me, we've come very far in the past 10 years. Also it's almost bi awareness week!!
Eww
If it was now, it'd be way more. People love to show off how much of a bigot they are! Only reason it wasn't more back then is he had less subs
@@gferrol118people love to show their bigotry because it has no consequences for them to openly voice their hatred. another 10-20 years and that may also have changed, hopefully.
reddit fruitcake "humour"
Cry about it
cry more
natsoy tears
you really don't have anything better to do do you
finding something a percentage of people find really really annoying but no-one else has any issue with and then repeating it several times is one of the foundational concepts of comedy
it's inherently exclusionary so I tend to not gravitate towards it, but in instances like this it feels more cathartic than funny