Very coincidental that the "bird on a wire" question was for this episode because just last night I was out for a walk with my dog and we saw a squirrel that got FRIED and my dog was VERY interested in this fried squirrel so I explained to her the concept behind how this squirrel met its demise. She didn't understand it though because she's a dog.
I disagree. I think he has a pretty good grasp on a lot of things, but definitely not everything and he's not an expert on any of it either. But you can tell that for a lot of the questions he will have a fairly basic understanding of the concept, but because of the lack of expertise he has trouble gathering and communicating all of his thoughts on such short notice. I bet that most people with a basic fundamental understanding of a concept would sound kind of dumb when put on the spot and then followed by an expert who has had time to gather their thoughts and prepare an explanation. I mean, the show is obviously set up that way on purpose. It's meant to be funny by having an average guy answer scientific questions on the spot and be followed by an expert while having Gus laugh and poke fun at him.
So, I really like having Chris on the show, because you can see him learn, and as he learns, he thinks of more questions! This is what science is all about! Good science makes you ask more questions!
I don't know about any where else but the power lines in Canada are insulated and the linesmen are supplied with class 4 gloves. I've never known a linesman to use a faraday cage i'm pretty sure that would make the job impossible.
They were talking about working around live wires. Not working on/fixing live wires. Still wouldn't be very likely that anyone would use one I wouldn't think.
So the first time I watched this Sally's explanations were very well thought out. The second time watching however, I find parts of her explanations that are wrong. Now I feel smarter than I previously thought.
I was hoping Sally would explain these "gravity spas". How exactly would those even work? It's like in science fiction media how they always have like "gravity generators" which is how people can walk around space ships like it's normal Earth gravity instead of just floating and swimming through the air. Yet the moment they walk outside the space ship it's weightless space.
Call me crazy but I think Chris was onto something there. If the effects are potentially catastrophic because at some point they will be coming back to earth then if they stay on Mars would it not be an issue? I could see potential issues with your heart becoming weaker but at 30% gravity would they not need to?
Journeyman John, Sally is wrong about the muscles and bones becoming weaker being a problem. The only things we would have to worry about are bodily functions that rely on gravity, like blood circulation
There is a series on Netflix called The Expanse, where people live on belt systems as miners, and they are taller and weaker than the people on Earth because of lower gravity. In one scene, a Belter (thats what they call them) is being "interrogated" on Earth and his body is basically being crushed by Earth's gravity and they just keep him hanging up on a wall as a form of torture.
I think "The Expanse" really took that whole scenario of living in low gravity and ran with it. Torture by gravity was one of the most creative ways of playing with that premise.
Jerry Reick They get paid. One first member isn't gonna keep a company with 200+ employees afloat. I would rather have a 30-50 second ad read then a company we all love becoming bankrupt
Dark They Were, and Golden-Eyed is like a sped up version of what they were talking about at the end. In the story there's something about Mars that changes organisms to the point where when more humans come to Mars, the humans who were there earlier are no longer humans, but martians. Realistically it'd happen over generations.
I'm a biomedical engineering student and one of my professors used to do research for NASA about bone density changes due to being in microgravity and treatments for bone density decreases. They would send mice into space and used them for research, so I wonder how that research translates to humans.
to complement with an example, birds big enough to touch two wires with open wings and tails burn, as expected. it's also why you fry if you touch cut a wire and the ground. the path through you is the easier path
It can affect your eyes and bones. The change in pressure can cause a man who left with 20/20 vision to come back legally blind. The bones weaken. But babies need a certain amount of gravity to develop in-utero properly.
Over time, and if you received proper nutrition, then yeah. Unless the gravity was strong enough to crush you before your body adapts. Then you just die.
Muscles maybe, but probably not bones: it would be akin to gaining a bunch of weight, and fat people are not known for their bone-strength. Kind of a moot point anyway, since the earth is the largest solid object in our solar system.
+Scorpio3002 You know when you always knew something, but someone says it in a way you never thought of? Our planet is the largest rocky planet in our solar system. I always knew the other rocky planets were smaller, but somehow it seems weird thinking of that the other way around.
What about the eyes, Sally?! There's this effect where people start having worse vision if they stay in microgravity for too long. We're still not sure why, but I think that would become a bigger problem than demineralisation if we started colonizing mars. Btw, there's an entire society of space doctors that compiles information about the biological effects of space on the human body. Check out their journals if you want to learn more.
I am from the future where we have colonized Mars, though the adaptation process was about 800 years long and quite unpleasant, ultimately the descendants of the original colony changed drastically enough to survive on the semi terraformed martian surface with no issues, other than the inability to ever return to earth without exoskeleton support
Her answer for the first question isn't exactly right. The current carrying conductors are all insulated for voltages far greater than what they are carrying, the bare conductors are neutral, which in most cases just carry the unbalanced load between the current carrying conductors. The current would rather return through the neutral conductor than go to ground which is why its safe to keep it uninsulated. Touching more than one wire at a time would only be a problem if one or more of those wires was a current carrying conductor and neither was not properly insulated. She was also wrong about the post comment. Touching a live wire and the wooden post would not shock you in most cases. Wood is not a great conductor and the voltages are not high enough to treat the wood as a conductor unless there were other factors (small amount of wood, it was wet, etc)
+Aidan303, +Rooster Teeth - Firstly Aidan, your insulation comment may be true in some places, and I am not sure where you are from, but in the US, which is all I know, they do not insulate the overhead conductors on the grid, so voltages including 4kV, 15kV, 35kV, etc do not have insulation on the wires, typically. Some wires are 'tree wire' which have a small amount, but nowhere near the "safe" level you speak of. They aren't the kind of UL certified insulation on your cell phone charger. There are rare cases where aerial cable is used, and that is insulated, however at something like 5 times the cost, it is not common, only in heavily tree covered areas. Also, touching a wire (lightly insulated) and touching the pole, would typically result in shock, since it isn't the resistance of the pole keeping the wire 'isolated' from ground, it is the porcelain or glass insulator on the pole between the pole and wire keeping the wire isolated from ground. If you bridge that, depending on voltage, you will be electrocuted. you are correct, wood isn't a great conductor, but to say you wouldn't be electrocuted.. I think I can show you some squirrels and raccoons that bridged the gap that would beg to differ with you, as they are extra crispy now. the capacity to be electrocuted via shorting a pole to a wire through you only depends on the potential difference of the ground and wire and the resistance to ground. If the wire has low voltage,
Keratin is a good insulator. Birds make contact with two points at the sameish potential, thus little energy will flow, thus negligible affects happen to the bird. But you probably dont see any birds on 11kv (and up) lines, the strong electromagnetic effects probably tip them off that something is up..
voltage IS applyed threw the birds body however there is no resultant conductive flow. However the voltage difference is like 1000v left foot 999v right foot, a difference of one volt, so no real affect. If the birds feet were 100m apart, even on the same line, it would be a different story.
I bought something off of their website and now I want to cancel the order (I just ordered today), but I can't find a place to cancel the order? Can anyone help? They screwed up the billing address and I don't know what to do
So Mars gravity could probably would have bad effects on the human body but lets go hypothetical with this and say that there is zero repercussions, does Chris' hypothesis of baby would learn to walk faster play out or not?
One thing the video doesn't go into, is how we only have long term studies of gravity on humans at 0g and at 1g, but nothing in between. We know that 1g is good and 0g is bad, but we don't know how much gravity a human actually needs to survive. The 0.38g of Mars might be enough gravity for our bodies to adapt to and be fine with. Sure your muscles and bones may become weaker, but that will only be a problem if you go back to Earth.
Out of curiosity, are they both given prep time? Because i feel the specific examples Sally comes up with seem like she's had a bit of time to prep, but chris always looks like he's making it up as he goes along.
Actually, people who are highly educated like Sally, can talk quite intelligently, especially when sitting next to someone like Chris, about basic principles with the only "prep time" being their education and a lifetime of intellectual curiosity. I very much doubt she needs the questions in advance so she cram beforehand. I should add, that does include having examples, either learned from said education and curiosity. Or by simply applying such knowledge to create ad hoc examples. If I remember correctly, she has a doctorate, so very likely has experience teaching, so creating examples for layman would come naturally.
lordofentropy maybe you're right that she's just got a load of specific examples in her mind, that could be why she's on this program, but i have a master's in physics, i know a few people with phds, but most of us couldn't come up with a specific example for this many things not related to our topic, and certainly not willing to say it publicly, as an authority, without checking. also, should point out, in one of the earlier, pre-spot-of-science episodes she mentioned upon being asked a question, that she had thought that that question was a good one, implying hearing it before, that's specifically why i figured on prep time.
I meant "on the fly." Often when I'm explaining some concept to someone, I'm an engineer, I'll be like "well it's like when you run into X situation. Well X happens because of Y and Z. So what you're asking is sorta like that." Something along those lines. I imagine it's possible she has heard many of the questions before since as she also has her own UA-cam channel.
so there is an anime out there called Planetes and it actually has a part where humans have inhabited the moon. they go over a lot of what sally was talking about. there is even a girl who was born on the moon...
Can I just say they really need to change the way they present the sponsors, every time Gus says it it's really obvious it's just a script and I'm surprised the companies that sponsor them tolerate them doing it in that way. I don't know if it's just an American thing, but I wouldn't be surprised if Sally and Gavin think it's awkward to watch it be presented like this scene as it's seen as cringe-worthy to advertise like this in the UK.
Getting reeeeal tired of hearing the phrase "i get tons of compliments on my MOVEMENT WATCH". It's indescribable the amount of bullshit that goes into that sentence, and everyone being sponsored by them is forced to say that from here to Jacksfilms. Shove it.
Pretty sure they say it moreso because they're paid to, less-so because it's the truth. It may be complete bull, but if saying it is helping to keep the company afloat... oh well.
The moment he starts to read the ad, I just skip ahead. Watching the bar that appears is a good way to tell when it's over. Absolutely agree though, everything said in advertisement is completely meanless bullshit.
i have to disagree with sally on the gravity part. the bones would definitely deteriorate but not to an extent of harm because they are not returning to earth. their bodies would be changed FOR mars.
I have an idea for a new podcast ( not that this comment will be seen by anyone at RT) The RT clubhouse where the children of RT employees come together and make a podcast
gravity spa=super sayian training.
Vonday what if WE become super saiyans due to this
xXLiLJokerXx Saiyans are a species, we would just be super humans
Vonday i was thinking the same thing lol
that is what i heard too
First thing that came to my head when she mentioned it.
Very coincidental that the "bird on a wire" question was for this episode because just last night I was out for a walk with my dog and we saw a squirrel that got FRIED and my dog was VERY interested in this fried squirrel so I explained to her the concept behind how this squirrel met its demise.
She didn't understand it though
because she's a dog.
I doubt your dog understood what you were saying there
I'm questioning your sanity
jwb4291 if your dog can't understand it I don't have much hope for the RT community.
I love this show!! Can't believe they filmed so many in that session!
Well, after seeing this episode I can safely say Chris does not know much about electricity or gravity.
I think this series has shown that one can safely say Chris does not know much about anything.
I'd say he actually knows a fair bit, he just mixes fact with fiction a lot and doesn't present it very well.
I disagree. I think he has a pretty good grasp on a lot of things, but definitely not everything and he's not an expert on any of it either. But you can tell that for a lot of the questions he will have a fairly basic understanding of the concept, but because of the lack of expertise he has trouble gathering and communicating all of his thoughts on such short notice. I bet that most people with a basic fundamental understanding of a concept would sound kind of dumb when put on the spot and then followed by an expert who has had time to gather their thoughts and prepare an explanation.
I mean, the show is obviously set up that way on purpose. It's meant to be funny by having an average guy answer scientific questions on the spot and be followed by an expert while having Gus laugh and poke fun at him.
So, I really like having Chris on the show, because you can see him learn, and as he learns, he thinks of more questions! This is what science is all about! Good science makes you ask more questions!
Scott Kelly spent a year in space and the best part is he has an identical twin so they had someone to sort of compare to
You'd never have to worry about dropping your baby on Mars. In fact, you could pass the baby like a football if you needed to put them down
A RaptureRaven I'd bounce my baby off the ground like a basketball
I love Tuesdays because of this show!
I don't know about any where else but the power lines in Canada are insulated and the linesmen are supplied with class 4 gloves. I've never known a linesman to use a faraday cage i'm pretty sure that would make the job impossible.
They were talking about working around live wires. Not working on/fixing live wires.
Still wouldn't be very likely that anyone would use one I wouldn't think.
Anyone else feel good when they know the answers to these questions?
So the first time I watched this Sally's explanations were very well thought out. The second time watching however, I find parts of her explanations that are wrong. Now I feel smarter than I previously thought.
I was hoping Sally would explain these "gravity spas". How exactly would those even work? It's like in science fiction media how they always have like "gravity generators" which is how people can walk around space ships like it's normal Earth gravity instead of just floating and swimming through the air. Yet the moment they walk outside the space ship it's weightless space.
UltraPrimal You can simulate artificial gravity in space using basically a huge centrifuge, and use the centripetal force to create a downwards force
Nice Shirt Chris
Thanks for all the hard work you guys put into these videos for us:]
Call me crazy but I think Chris was onto something there. If the effects are potentially catastrophic because at some point they will be coming back to earth then if they stay on Mars would it not be an issue? I could see potential issues with your heart becoming weaker but at 30% gravity would they not need to?
Exactly what I was thinking
Journeyman John, Sally is wrong about the muscles and bones becoming weaker being a problem. The only things we would have to worry about are bodily functions that rely on gravity, like blood circulation
They covered this. You should listen better.
There is a series on Netflix called The Expanse, where people live on belt systems as miners, and they are taller and weaker than the people on Earth because of lower gravity. In one scene, a Belter (thats what they call them) is being "interrogated" on Earth and his body is basically being crushed by Earth's gravity and they just keep him hanging up on a wall as a form of torture.
But someone going to mars, at least with today's technology, isn't going to be coming back to earth
Where are the views?? I would have thought this show would be super popular! I
You guys need to try to get a Spot of Science with Sally and Chris Hadfield !
I feel like Chris and Sally inch closer and closer every episode.
I think "The Expanse" really took that whole scenario of living in low gravity and ran with it. Torture by gravity was one of the most creative ways of playing with that premise.
Chris would make a great Science Teacher.
i feel so smart after watching these
Am i the only one who's noticed the chill quite intro compared to other roosterteeth shows?
I love this show
I thought everyone knew the first one.
I don't think that's exactly something they teach in school...
Evan Baker i never knew that it also applied to people as well. It's not like I'd try it, but still.
I didn't know the specifics, I thought it was because the birds were not grounded
i thought it was because they wrapped their claws around the wire instead of digging them into it or something
I wouldn't call it common knowledge.
someone get Chris Modern Marvels
When you're a sponsor and UA-cam red subscriber but Gus still throws in a 50 sec ad for a watch I'll never buy cause cell phones exist
Jerry Reick Watches get you laid
Jerry Reick They get paid. One first member isn't gonna keep a company with 200+ employees afloat. I would rather have a 30-50 second ad read then a company we all love becoming bankrupt
Dylan Hale No, charisma does that.
Dark They Were, and Golden-Eyed is like a sped up version of what they were talking about at the end. In the story there's something about Mars that changes organisms to the point where when more humans come to Mars, the humans who were there earlier are no longer humans, but martians. Realistically it'd happen over generations.
I'm a biomedical engineering student and one of my professors used to do research for NASA about bone density changes due to being in microgravity and treatments for bone density decreases. They would send mice into space and used them for research, so I wonder how that research translates to humans.
Chris, the hell was that sound at 1:08?? Lmao
I want to see sally in more rooster teeth productions. like an immersion scientist.
to complement with an example, birds big enough to touch two wires with open wings and tails burn, as expected.
it's also why you fry if you touch cut a wire and the ground. the path through you is the easier path
you guys should make gavin or google a weekly series like all your other great content!
I love you Sally.
It can affect your eyes and bones. The change in pressure can cause a man who left with 20/20 vision to come back legally blind. The bones weaken. But babies need a certain amount of gravity to develop in-utero properly.
So the REAL questions is, in high gravity would our bones and muscles get super strong?
Over time, and if you received proper nutrition, then yeah. Unless the gravity was strong enough to crush you before your body adapts. Then you just die.
Muscles maybe, but probably not bones: it would be akin to gaining a bunch of weight, and fat people are not known for their bone-strength. Kind of a moot point anyway, since the earth is the largest solid object in our solar system.
+Scorpio3002 You know when you always knew something, but someone says it in a way you never thought of? Our planet is the largest rocky planet in our solar system. I always knew the other rocky planets were smaller, but somehow it seems weird thinking of that the other way around.
I know what you mean; that's basically what "shower thoughts" are, right?
You can train like a super saiyan.
you guys MUST do one on the probability of flipping heads on a coin 3 times.
There won't be any electricity because the small birds don't even have talons but the first dead ones deserve a wax museum .
What about the eyes, Sally?!
There's this effect where people start having worse vision if they stay in microgravity for too long. We're still not sure why, but I think that would become a bigger problem than demineralisation if we started colonizing mars.
Btw, there's an entire society of space doctors that compiles information about the biological effects of space on the human body. Check out their journals if you want to learn more.
the evolutionary divergence between Mars and earth humans is basically the plot of the expanse lol.
Sally the best!!
Sally using the word "Electrocuted" incorrectly, the word shes looking for is is electric shock
I am from the future where we have colonized Mars, though the adaptation process was about 800 years long and quite unpleasant, ultimately the descendants of the original colony changed drastically enough to survive on the semi terraformed martian surface with no issues, other than the inability to ever return to earth without exoskeleton support
Her answer for the first question isn't exactly right. The current carrying conductors are all insulated for voltages far greater than what they are carrying, the bare conductors are neutral, which in most cases just carry the unbalanced load between the current carrying conductors. The current would rather return through the neutral conductor than go to ground which is why its safe to keep it uninsulated. Touching more than one wire at a time would only be a problem if one or more of those wires was a current carrying conductor and neither was not properly insulated. She was also wrong about the post comment. Touching a live wire and the wooden post would not shock you in most cases. Wood is not a great conductor and the voltages are not high enough to treat the wood as a conductor unless there were other factors (small amount of wood, it was wet, etc)
+Aidan303, +Rooster Teeth - Firstly Aidan, your insulation comment may be true in some places, and I am not sure where you are from, but in the US, which is all I know, they do not insulate the overhead conductors on the grid, so voltages including 4kV, 15kV, 35kV, etc do not have insulation on the wires, typically. Some wires are 'tree wire' which have a small amount, but nowhere near the "safe" level you speak of. They aren't the kind of UL certified insulation on your cell phone charger. There are rare cases where aerial cable is used, and that is insulated, however at something like 5 times the cost, it is not common, only in heavily tree covered areas. Also, touching a wire (lightly insulated) and touching the pole, would typically result in shock, since it isn't the resistance of the pole keeping the wire 'isolated' from ground, it is the porcelain or glass insulator on the pole between the pole and wire keeping the wire isolated from ground. If you bridge that, depending on voltage, you will be electrocuted. you are correct, wood isn't a great conductor, but to say you wouldn't be electrocuted.. I think I can show you some squirrels and raccoons that bridged the gap that would beg to differ with you, as they are extra crispy now. the capacity to be electrocuted via shorting a pole to a wire through you only depends on the potential difference of the ground and wire and the resistance to ground. If the wire has low voltage,
Why do I always watch UA-cam at 2 am? Real wonder if the world
What I'm gathering from the first question is that Mac in Always Sunny was right about electricity
Aggressively tries not to fall in love with Sally
Peyton Pearson too late, how tall is she? as a 5'4 man it's hard to find a women like her lmao
What's her last name
Le Page!
Noooo
Watch the
sci-Fi show the Expanse. They handle this issue very well.
Keratin is a good insulator. Birds make contact with two points at the sameish potential, thus little energy will flow, thus negligible affects happen to the bird. But you probably dont see any birds on 11kv (and up) lines, the strong electromagnetic effects probably tip them off that something is up..
oh you can also survive high voltage potential if you manage to stand with you feet together. But as it is invisible...... Forget I said anything.
voltage IS applyed threw the birds body however there is no resultant conductive flow. However the voltage difference is like 1000v left foot 999v right foot, a difference of one volt, so no real affect. If the birds feet were 100m apart, even on the same line, it would be a different story.
You can put up a live wire. You must be highly insulated... And it does happen ALOT.
Micro Gravity. Not no gravity.
Gravity chamber from Dragon Ball Z 8:00
Thanks for the smarts
RT *need* to make a "Metal is a better conductor than Humans" t-shirt :)
I bought something off of their website and now I want to cancel the order (I just ordered today), but I can't find a place to cancel the order? Can anyone help? They screwed up the billing address and I don't know what to do
So Mars gravity could probably would have bad effects on the human body but lets go hypothetical with this and say that there is zero repercussions, does Chris' hypothesis of baby would learn to walk faster play out or not?
are these videos recorded whenever Sally le Page is in the U.S? or does she just want to do these videos for fun like a permanent thing?
Idk how Sally could sit there sometime just think " Wow this is a human person"
So the definition of "human" is directly linked to a certain degree of intelligence and education?
BoarhideGaming humans have denounced other humans as lesser beings based on intelligence, so depending on who you ask, that might be.
***** True, and social Darwinism is generally and rightfully regarded as barbaric and unethical.
BoarhideGaming oh, I'm not arguing the morality of it, just that depending on who you ask, that is the case.
There's one answer to all the whinging: Sally. What a delight!
Can't believe I have been grounded this whole time
Isnt the Mars thing like the main plot of Infinite Warfare, where the people born and raised on mars go to war with people on earth
Damn I would love to be on this show cx I'd be somewhere in between Sally in Chris mentally x3
One thing the video doesn't go into, is how we only have long term studies of gravity on humans at 0g and at 1g, but nothing in between. We know that 1g is good and 0g is bad, but we don't know how much gravity a human actually needs to survive. The 0.38g of Mars might be enough gravity for our bodies to adapt to and be fine with. Sure your muscles and bones may become weaker, but that will only be a problem if you go back to Earth.
How meny of thes things do you record in one siting
Anyone else just feel so smart whilst watching this lmao 😂😂
How do I send a question?
we can work the wires hot with rubber gloves rated for thousands of volts out grid is 4.8kvolts
Out of curiosity, are they both given prep time? Because i feel the specific examples Sally comes up with seem like she's had a bit of time to prep, but chris always looks like he's making it up as he goes along.
Thats sort of the point. Layman and person with preperation
Actually, people who are highly educated like Sally, can talk quite intelligently, especially when sitting next to someone like Chris, about basic principles with the only "prep time" being their education and a lifetime of intellectual curiosity. I very much doubt she needs the questions in advance so she cram beforehand.
I should add, that does include having examples, either learned from said education and curiosity. Or by simply applying such knowledge to create ad hoc examples. If I remember correctly, she has a doctorate, so very likely has experience teaching, so creating examples for layman would come naturally.
lordofentropy maybe you're right that she's just got a load of specific examples in her mind, that could be why she's on this program, but i have a master's in physics, i know a few people with phds, but most of us couldn't come up with a specific example for this many things not related to our topic, and certainly not willing to say it publicly, as an authority, without checking. also, should point out, in one of the earlier, pre-spot-of-science episodes she mentioned upon being asked a question, that she had thought that that question was a good one, implying hearing it before, that's specifically why i figured on prep time.
lordofentropy also, maybe i don't understand what you're meaning but ad hoc examples sounds a lot like making stuff up.
I meant "on the fly." Often when I'm explaining some concept to someone, I'm an engineer, I'll be like "well it's like when you run into X situation. Well X happens because of Y and Z. So what you're asking is sorta like that." Something along those lines. I imagine it's possible she has heard many of the questions before since as she also has her own UA-cam channel.
so there is an anime out there called Planetes and it actually has a part where humans have inhabited the moon. they go over a lot of what sally was talking about. there is even a girl who was born on the moon...
Can air be so humid that you can satisfy your thirst just by breathing?
Does electricity actually strike from the ground up.
In space in the movie the Martian, hermes the transportation between mars and earth. Would the spining parts will reverse effects of low gravity
So anyone else notice how Chris wears the same shirt every week?
What if we had higher gravity spas here, hang out in there for a long ass time and bam, you're super human.
Can I just say they really need to change the way they present the sponsors, every time Gus says it it's really obvious it's just a script and I'm surprised the companies that sponsor them tolerate them doing it in that way. I don't know if it's just an American thing, but I wouldn't be surprised if Sally and Gavin think it's awkward to watch it be presented like this scene as it's seen as cringe-worthy to advertise like this in the UK.
The longest time a person lived in space was about a year but there body got messed up and they couldn't walk.
I'm 2 for 2. Come on, those were easy lol.
When Chris said that babies come out of the stomach...
Didn't like everyone learn the first one in like 5th grade😂
They should do a medical episode with Ken Jeong.
Is it just me or did i just think of DBZ when they talked about gravity
I want a high gravity gym
What if people slept in centrifuges to reduce bone loss while not taking up hours a day?
Does that mean that if I jumped and touched an electric wire, I wouldn't get shocked??? XD I mean I'd be no longer grounded.
What I learned: The movie "The Martian" is full of **** since it's fundamental element is flawed
OH MY GOD SHE FINALLY SAID GROUNDED AFTER LIKE 5 MINUTES
DON'T LIE TO ME GUS! You don't get compliments, because you don't leave your house
Why is food never as good as the first time you eat it?
I just thought the wires were insulated so the birds never really touch the wires
Basically, what happen to the Martians in _The Expanse._
Getting reeeeal tired of hearing the phrase "i get tons of compliments on my MOVEMENT WATCH". It's indescribable the amount of bullshit that goes into that sentence, and everyone being sponsored by them is forced to say that from here to Jacksfilms.
Shove it.
I agree. I heard it once and thought it was Gus's own plug, but after hearing it from other people every time, it ruins it for me.
Pretty sure they say it moreso because they're paid to, less-so because it's the truth.
It may be complete bull, but if saying it is helping to keep the company afloat... oh well.
The moment he starts to read the ad, I just skip ahead. Watching the bar that appears is a good way to tell when it's over. Absolutely agree though, everything said in advertisement is completely meanless bullshit.
I agree, but they have to please their sponsors. If they don't, the sponsor leaves and there is less revenue for them.
Not to mention they're completely copying the ad line for MVMT watches.
"...our circulation system..." lol.
i have to disagree with sally on the gravity part. the bones would definitely deteriorate but not to an extent of harm because they are not returning to earth. their bodies would be changed FOR mars.
Forever? Forever-ever?
I learned the answer to the first question in sixth grade
0:43 is when ad read ends
Ad ends at 0:48.
Sorry, but as soon as Sally said "osteoporosis" my mind flashed to idubbbz
But Gus do you actually get a lot of compliments on your watch?
Second point: OPA unite!
So pretty much, if we live on Mars, we all have to train like vegeta? IM down when can i go. PLEASE?
I have an idea for a new podcast ( not that this comment will be seen by anyone at RT) The RT clubhouse where the children of RT employees come together and make a podcast
Hey
Hello. It is weird to scroll down and only see one comment