Magnesium supplement is a good thing to take, but you should only do it in a limited amount. Putting it into candy completely removes any control of dosage. It's also a ridiculous idea because you can just buy a pill to get the supplement. Putting it into candy is just an attempt to make an excuse for eating candy.
I think the idea was that they were reinforcing the candy with magnesium rather than giving a whole daily dosage of magnesium in a single candy, if that makes any sense? Like how cheerios have iron in them, it's not because they want you to eat a bowl of cheerios and have all of your iron intake for the day, just that it will provide a portion of your daily iron.
@@beemerwt4185 no,that was definitely not their intention. Their only intention is to label something with 90+% sugar as a healthy thing to sell it easier to people who actually either take care of not eating to much suggar or which is the more common case: to thouse who need an excuse for eating such amounts of suggar. companies do it 24/7 all the time. just google about how upseting it was to put a colloured -red-yellow-green- label on foodpackages in europe to reveal the unhelthyness of corporate made food. Its really that simple logic.
I was thinking similar thing. Candies should not contain any medical ingredients. Medical ingredients belong in pills. Candies should just be candies. There's a reason why medical boxes are usually locked and out of reach of children. Putting the actual medical stuff in candies is like the 100% opposite philosophy, and possibly dangerous. If someone snacks the entire candy bag you have an overdosis indeed.
@@DeathnoteBB they probably meant something like magnesium ascorbate, which is a form of vitamin C or something similar derivative of a organic acidic vitamin.
Makes you think about how loose regulations are on "health" supplements. Literally just doing whatever they feel like and assuming it worked without any real testing on how it's absorbed by the body
You obviously didn’t pay enough attention if it was elemental Magnesium it wouldn’t be edible and would react with oxygen immediately so it’s likely magnesium chloride or magnesium citrate, lactate or one of the other ones.
BEFORE YOU READ THIS I HAVE TO SAY. I am in middle school. I have NEVER taken a chemistry class. I know very little about this and just made a guess based on what the video said. Magnesium is also flammable. When I was younger, at a camp where they had a class on starting a fire they would scrape magnesium onto the wool or whatever we were using to start it to make it more flammable and easier to light.
@@Ilikeanime_2 just like iron means there's iron filings in your meal, and potassium means your meal will explode if you get it wet! There's no way there could be chemical compounds containing these elements that don't share the same properties as pure elemental iron, potassium, or magnesium.
@@goreandhoodies3626 if you seriously think a company was providing pure magnesium for human consumption (instead of a compound containing magnesium) then I fully encourage you to try it and let us know how it goes.
It's a different type of health. Candy can be a negative effect on things like your teeth and your weight sometimes but the amount of magnesium in the candy can help with different things including sleep which is what some people use to go to sleep. Obviously what they are trying to do is have enough magnesium in the candy so you just take maybe one or two. This can be very handy for some people like children and the elderly who might have a hard time taking their medication or might have a harder time remembering to take it. Does not negate the negative effects of eating candy, but again it's such a small amount that it wouldn't be a problem.
i can't imagine that candy tasted very good. i once had trouble swallowing my pills(sometimes my throat just randomly tenses up and won't let the pills pass with the water) and the magnesium tablet started dissolving on the back of my tongue. it was so disgusting i nearly threw up and couldn't take those magnesium pills again for at least a month, i just couldn't get my throat to relax enough to swallow. i now try to make sure i get the capsules, not the tablets cause they're easier to swallow so long as my throat isn't dry and if they do get stuck in my mouth they take longer to start tasting bad
@@Ari_C I wasn't trying to be accusatory, but it appears I came off as such, and I apologize. I genuinely want to know, especially since you mentioned your throat being dry. You didn't mention water at all in your comment, so I figured I'd mention it in case you hadn't tried it before. I thought that would be helpful. I assume by the implied tone of your response that you do use water. In case you're unaware, some people do not.
@@tautologyTwice except I did mention water? "sometimes my throat just randomly tenses up and won't let the pills pass with the water" taking them with water isn't enough when my throat is dry though, I have to sit there just sipping water for a couple minutes before taking the pills if I don't want them to stick in my throat.
@@Ari_C My bad. I personally can't take pills without water. As in, I have a pool of water in my mouth, and I drop the pills in and swallow before they hit anything in my mouth. I tried to OD & got hospitalized for it about eight years ago, and ever since then, I can't swallow if they touch my mouth. I pretty much have to aim for the back of my throat and not let my body register that they're there. It's a chore, but it's not like I can stop taking them. 5 in the morning, 2-3 at night. Been on meds since before my attempt. I tend to have to chug water immediately after because of the sensation of them in my throat making my body want to hurl.
Idk, if it's a type of vitamin C like I saw one comment say, it's not really bad. It's just like Sunny D or something similar. Actually we had throat soothing lollipops for my nephew when he got sick as a baby/toddler. Also I'm pretty sure they didn't let anyone buy it without knowing what it was.
Magnesium isn't even medicine. It's a mineral. Yes, it's necessary for some biological functions, but it's not medicine. It's a great laxative, though. It's the active ingredient in Miralax. Don't eat too many magnesium candies. 👀
@@Starbuck32123I mean, we don’t know the dosage. Some vitamin infused supplements have such low doses that it has next to no real effect, much less enough to OD with. A good example is Pokimane’s candy, which has something like 3% daily recommendation per serving.
There are many forms of magnesium. The most commonly used is magnesium citrate and magnesium glycinate. Magnesium citrate is most helpful for people suffering from constipation, while the glycinate form is more useful for conditions like anxiety, insomnia, chronic stress, and inflammatory conditions.
not what the point is, but ok magnesium is a common supplement taken in pills. this could offer alternative solutions for people who have trouble swallowing pills, also it's healthy in a different way from what you're thinking
It's like those Flintstones candy/gummy vitamins, but specifically for magnesium. The candy part isn't the healthiest, but the amount you get in a daily dose isn't really going to impact your health. If someone has a hard time swallowing pills or forgets to take them often, putting them in a tasty treat can help.
Candy isn't inherently unhealthy (apart from the sugar making you overweight in extremely large dosages). The main bad thing that can be said about it is that it doesn't contain nutrients
Candy store near me in the 90s made a bunch of hard candy with caffeine powder in them. They came out well. Called them "Proton Energy Pills" and designed Roger Ramjet's face on them.
The metal magnesium is a very different type of magnesium than the kind you ingest for supplemental reasons. Magnesium citrate and magnesium glycinate are the most common of the supplemental kind, and neither are remotely flammable.
I am magnesium deficient all the time and honestly too much magnesium at once gives me heart palpitations. You’re not supposed to take over like 300mgs in a day to be on the safe side, but I thought I’d take a 500mgs pill with high absorption after taking only 250 of magnesium oxide which is probably the lowest absorption rate and my heart rate was literally close to 130bpm allllllll day after that. lol I’m definitely starting slow with a lower dosage first and never going over 300mgs from now on.
For me it just makes me feel weird like my ears popping from the low blood pressure or something. I even felt that way from Epsom salt so it must absorb through the skin somehow. You also want to take zinc for anxiety, especially if your mercury levels are high.
@@Steve-ev6vx I recently got up to 400mgs. lol The key is that you’re not supposed to take it all at once. You space it out through the day. Plus you need something with a high absorption rate. The one I’m using now after writing this original comment is a supplement that doesn’t use crappy magnesium oxide and it splits the 400mg dose into 3 pills. So you can take it at once or in 3 separate doses. Which do not trigger my IST like the 500mg pill. 😂
You shouldn't add vitamins into candy. ESPECIALLY just by sprinkling random amounts of powder on top. It will be a compleaty different amount of magnesium per piece, and too much magnesium can cause stomach upset.
It's not medicine, it's a supplement. You don't need to consult a medical professional before you make a spinach smoothie either; but you're still allowed to claim it contains a lot of magnesium because it does.
The most common forms of ingestible magnesium supplements are magnesium citrate (digestive health) and magnesium glycinate (regulates anxiety and depression, amongst other benefits), and neither of them are flammable in powder form.
they should have told yall the specific magnesium compound, not just so yall can vet they arent peddling alternative/half-baked (ha) medicine, but also because there might be information out there that wouldve helped yall out! theres a lot of "health" and "wellness" companies popping up that are just trying to capitalize on the uptick in wellness culture popularity for a quick buck but arent actually giving folks the right compounds they need in a safe dosage.
No actual medicine company will just walk up to a candy store and ask the workers to start putting magnesium of all things in their candy to make it "healthier". I am most especially sure of this because at no point in this story was there ever any mention of a laboratory equipped with safety gear to mix this stuff. The very best case scenario was that whoever approached you was a faker that wanted to troll a candy store. That's what I'd prefer, because I currently can only think of MUCH worse possibilities.
So true! All who are work with flying objects please remind yourself to wear your PPE! Safety glasses are to protect you from possibly loosing an eye or your vision. Make them useful 🤓
1) if you make vitamins/minerals, don’t go to just whatever candy shop and trust them to just mess around with how much of a product is in a candy or how it’s added. Not that I distrust Logan’s, I just don’t think that’s smart from a liability standpoint 2) candy with a vitamin or mineral added is a terrible plan because you know what I want to do with candy? Eat a handful! You know what I shouldn’t do with vitamins? Eat a handful! Plus, see option 1 and consider that you now have no rightful idea what the dosage is per piece unless you then go back and do some probably cost-ineffective testing
@@UmuPadoruAntidepressants do not work in a lot of people and they usually have terrible side effects like most medicine. One step towards beating depression would be cutting out candy and other addictive substances.
not really as people need different mixes of brain chemicals to force happiness. Even then it's just an empty drug high happiness. Those people need to face the real problems at the root of their depression. This is coming from experience.
Magnesium oxide is so flammable and burns rly hot it either melts into things or melts things (add aluminum powder and your done for bc that makes thermite well a baby version)
Magnesium cannot be alone type of chemical, means it needs to binds with other chem to stay in certain form, and some magnesium compound is not very healthy for body, even choosing a magnesium vitamin is rarely a knowledge that the other compound that accompanied the magnesium plays big role in metabolism ,it could goes sour&south
@@nmoney6655I believe a lot of sugar free candies use sugar alcohols. Basically it has a very similar chemical structure to sugar so it behaves like sugar within candy and your tastebuds think it’s sugar when it’s not.
@@nmoney6655 No it doesn't. Sugar alcohols aren't very sweet and quite highly laxative. They don't need them for bulk in soda; they just use a small amount of a highly sweet artificial sweetener, usually aspartame and acesulfame, but sometimes sucralose or stevia.
I visited your store for the first time when my cat passed away, as the vet was down the street. Your candy definitely made a sad day better. The people working there also were incredibly helpful when it came to recommending stuff to try.
As a chemistry guy this is kind of terrifying. You guys have heard of a dust explosion, right? USCSB has some videos on it. You wouldn't want your candy shop to randomly explode from someone using the wrong light swich.
Magnesium metal burns into an ash made of magnesium oxide. Both of these would be called magnesium. But only one of these burns at flame temperature. The magnesium used for supplements is closer to magnesium oxide (a salt) as its usually magnesium citrate. So instead of oxygen bonded to magnesium it's citrate (the conjugate base of citric acid/ lemon juice acid). The reason for using magnesium citrate instead of magnesium oxide is that it dissolves better in water and is more available to be digested.
Magnesium citrate would also explain why it burned up: citric acid decomposes at about 175 degrees. Magnesium oxide shouldn't burn under any reasonable conditions, because it's already about as burnt as it's possible for it to get.
This is so cool I was wondering if this was Logan’s candy in Ontario! I love going to you guys around Christmas to watch you guys make the candy cane squares
Putting magnesium powder into candy doesn't make it healthier. It just adds magnesium to people's diets who are too stupid to get it in the normal way. You know, actual healthy foods.
Ever heard of maillard? Magnesium oxide (what they use in most case) will not burn even at the remote temperatures of candymaking. But magnesium oxide being a base and slight degradation catalyst just caused all the sugar burn/ caramelize. You should have just added citric acid or any other solid acid into the batch and the problem would have been solved. Either way basic sugar tastes ass, it tastes super soapy even if you manage to get it right.
This is the most American idea of how to make something healthy. Take candy. Put in trace amounts of magnesium. Have it produced in a completely impromptu way without any sort of supervision. HEALTHY!
Magnesium supplement is a good thing to take, but you should only do it in a limited amount. Putting it into candy completely removes any control of dosage. It's also a ridiculous idea because you can just buy a pill to get the supplement. Putting it into candy is just an attempt to make an excuse for eating candy.
I think the idea was that they were reinforcing the candy with magnesium rather than giving a whole daily dosage of magnesium in a single candy, if that makes any sense?
Like how cheerios have iron in them, it's not because they want you to eat a bowl of cheerios and have all of your iron intake for the day, just that it will provide a portion of your daily iron.
@@beemerwt4185 Bad example but it's a possibility
It would be ok for giving a small, regular portions to kids that don't like taking supplements but it's specific
@@beemerwt4185 no,that was definitely not their intention. Their only intention is to label something with 90+% sugar as a healthy thing to sell it easier to people who actually either take care of not eating to much suggar or which is the more common case: to thouse who need an excuse for eating such amounts of suggar. companies do it 24/7 all the time. just google about how upseting it was to put a colloured -red-yellow-green- label on foodpackages in europe to reveal the unhelthyness of corporate made food. Its really that simple logic.
I was thinking similar thing. Candies should not contain any medical ingredients. Medical ingredients belong in pills. Candies should just be candies. There's a reason why medical boxes are usually locked and out of reach of children. Putting the actual medical stuff in candies is like the 100% opposite philosophy, and possibly dangerous. If someone snacks the entire candy bag you have an overdosis indeed.
I mean..at least his eyes are healthy now
Yeah
Yeah I am soo happy for his family
Lmao 😭
No potassium is bad for the eyes actually
Not everything is healthy
@@floofdoodle4349 I was joking dw dw they just said it was healthy that’s why I said that lol
As someone in food science, they absolutely need to work with a lab for product development. You don’t just go to a random candy shop. My god.
For real 😭
If they mean magnesium the element and metal they’re lucky nothing exploded
@@DeathnoteBB they probably meant something like magnesium ascorbate, which is a form of vitamin C or something similar derivative of a organic acidic vitamin.
And that's just a theory....
This is crazy!
Makes you think about how loose regulations are on "health" supplements. Literally just doing whatever they feel like and assuming it worked without any real testing on how it's absorbed by the body
As soon as you mentioned heat, the chem lesson experiments at school came flooding back
You obviously didn’t pay enough attention if it was elemental Magnesium it wouldn’t be edible and would react with oxygen immediately so it’s likely magnesium chloride or magnesium citrate, lactate or one of the other ones.
What are you yapping about? He didn't give any details about what your talking about
@@_sleepy-I’m assuming he was referring to burning magnesium to get a bright white light when talking about heat
WE GETTING AN FDA VIOLATION WITH THIS ONE 🗣️🔥🔥🔥
It’s not fda regulated that’s like saying salt is fda regulated
Salt… is fda regulated tho?
To my knowledge all foods (except supplements for some damn reason) that are packaged and sold like in a super market are fda regulated
@@Ghostslovecupcakes and the potassium iodine they put in it is poison.
Never trust the Jabby-Pushers.
Since when did the FDA cared?
Your dad not thinking about wearing goggles is such a dad thing to do 😂
Fr
He was thinking of bod pharma millions.
Lost ANY respect
His stupid daughter destroyed his PUBLIC reputation
@@HumanimalChannelwhat are you even talking about. Do you mean he lost respect from you cause he wanted money from “big pharma”
@@HumanimalChannel you guys always have an excuse to hate on women☠️
Give him a break. He probably had on his safety squints.
BEFORE YOU READ THIS I HAVE TO SAY. I am in middle school. I have NEVER taken a chemistry class. I know very little about this and just made a guess based on what the video said.
Magnesium is also flammable. When I was younger, at a camp where they had a class on starting a fire they would scrape magnesium onto the wool or whatever we were using to start it to make it more flammable and easier to light.
You really think it was just magnesium metal?
@@flybackrs they say it’s magnesium so I’m guessing it’s at least 60% magnesium.
@@flybackrsyou do realize that magnesium powder is powered magnesium metal
@@Ilikeanime_2 just like iron means there's iron filings in your meal, and potassium means your meal will explode if you get it wet! There's no way there could be chemical compounds containing these elements that don't share the same properties as pure elemental iron, potassium, or magnesium.
@@goreandhoodies3626 if you seriously think a company was providing pure magnesium for human consumption (instead of a compound containing magnesium) then I fully encourage you to try it and let us know how it goes.
How does adding magnesium make candy healthy??
It's a different type of health. Candy can be a negative effect on things like your teeth and your weight sometimes but the amount of magnesium in the candy can help with different things including sleep which is what some people use to go to sleep.
Obviously what they are trying to do is have enough magnesium in the candy so you just take maybe one or two.
This can be very handy for some people like children and the elderly who might have a hard time taking their medication or might have a harder time remembering to take it.
Does not negate the negative effects of eating candy, but again it's such a small amount that it wouldn't be a problem.
It doesn't make it healthy. Just turns it into a supplement.
@@blizzardwizard8318So that's why I feel sleepy at the right time when I take my magnesium. Usually I sleep around 3-5 in the morning.
I'm starting to take magnesium, hope it helps
It doesn’t-people are just desperate and will try anything.
i can't imagine that candy tasted very good. i once had trouble swallowing my pills(sometimes my throat just randomly tenses up and won't let the pills pass with the water) and the magnesium tablet started dissolving on the back of my tongue.
it was so disgusting i nearly threw up and couldn't take those magnesium pills again for at least a month, i just couldn't get my throat to relax enough to swallow. i now try to make sure i get the capsules, not the tablets cause they're easier to swallow so long as my throat isn't dry and if they do get stuck in my mouth they take longer to start tasting bad
Why don't you take them with water?
@@tautologyTwice you can't be serious rn.
@@Ari_C I wasn't trying to be accusatory, but it appears I came off as such, and I apologize. I genuinely want to know, especially since you mentioned your throat being dry. You didn't mention water at all in your comment, so I figured I'd mention it in case you hadn't tried it before. I thought that would be helpful. I assume by the implied tone of your response that you do use water. In case you're unaware, some people do not.
@@tautologyTwice except I did mention water? "sometimes my throat just randomly tenses up and won't let the pills pass with the water"
taking them with water isn't enough when my throat is dry though, I have to sit there just sipping water for a couple minutes before taking the pills if I don't want them to stick in my throat.
@@Ari_C My bad.
I personally can't take pills without water. As in, I have a pool of water in my mouth, and I drop the pills in and swallow before they hit anything in my mouth. I tried to OD & got hospitalized for it about eight years ago, and ever since then, I can't swallow if they touch my mouth. I pretty much have to aim for the back of my throat and not let my body register that they're there.
It's a chore, but it's not like I can stop taking them. 5 in the morning, 2-3 at night. Been on meds since before my attempt. I tend to have to chug water immediately after because of the sensation of them in my throat making my body want to hurl.
Im surprised nobody talked about how satisfying this is especially when she just pulls it out and it breaks up immediately
I’m not sure why, but there’s something sketchy about the idea of a medicine company asking a candy company to put (medicine) into (candy)
Idk, if it's a type of vitamin C like I saw one comment say, it's not really bad. It's just like Sunny D or something similar. Actually we had throat soothing lollipops for my nephew when he got sick as a baby/toddler. Also I'm pretty sure they didn't let anyone buy it without knowing what it was.
You can already buy vitamins that are candy or gummies …
Dude... It's magnesium. Please look it up on Google. Candy is still shit for your body, though. Even with magnesium.
Magnesium isn't even medicine. It's a mineral. Yes, it's necessary for some biological functions, but it's not medicine. It's a great laxative, though. It's the active ingredient in Miralax. Don't eat too many magnesium candies. 👀
*resident evil theme*
I was half expecting thr magnesium candy to just light up in a flash 🤣
Would you expect salt added in candy to ignite in a flash sodium is much more reactive then magnesium
@@_sleepy- Except salt is sodium chloride dude, come on.
It's Magnesium Salts, it's Chemically Neutralized by being a Salt (metals neutralize Acids by forming Salts)
@@IndustrialParrot2816 Yeah thats fair
@@IndustrialParrot2816 that makes wayy more sense cause i was thinking pure powderd magnesium
So what result were they looking for? Magnesium candy laxatives???
Depends on the type of magnesium
no, electrolyte-rich candy.
Watching those little cubes break feels like mine craft
Ahh yes, pharmaceuticals in a candy shop. What could possibly go wrong?
It's just magnesium, it's not like they're tossing in some Adderall or a random antidepressant
@@mjb405 yeah there's absolutely no such thing as a magnesium overdose or allergy
@@Starbuck32123its the entire same thing for every normal part of sweets like sugar
@@Starbuck32123I mean, we don’t know the dosage. Some vitamin infused supplements have such low doses that it has next to no real effect, much less enough to OD with. A good example is Pokimane’s candy, which has something like 3% daily recommendation per serving.
Well this is not a pharmaceuticals company or product lol
Magnesium is a supplement. Different balls games mate
Gurl……magnesium is a laxative, I would know 😭✋. I don’t know why the company want the dosage high.
There are many forms of magnesium. The most commonly used is magnesium citrate and magnesium glycinate. Magnesium citrate is most helpful for people suffering from constipation, while the glycinate form is more useful for conditions like anxiety, insomnia, chronic stress, and inflammatory conditions.
Magnesium can also be used for some migraine conditions bc some of them are caused by a magnesium deficiency
@@ZomBeeQueeen magnesium carbonate in antacids are also a thing.
und toxic
This reminds me of those laxatives that come in like a chocolate bar form.
I thought those candies were dishwasher pods 💀
Right me too
Came here for this
I had to look wayyy deeper than I thought for this...
Same! I'm trying to look at the tiny thumbnail like "pls tell me that's not tide pod candies" lmao
The resemblance to dishwasher pods HAS to be an intentional gimmic, right?
OMG I WENT TO UR SHOP, YOU GUYS HAVE AMAZING CANDIES!!! I love you guys and your channel so much! You guys are so kind!🫰🏽
What state or country is it in?
Are you hopped up?
Cali
@R0ses7228 it’s California
@@Dinosaur_jsjs thank you.
THOSE CANDIES LOOK SO PRETTYYYY
ive always loved how realistic the horses are as compared to the backyardigans
😂😂😂 I think your comment ended up on the wrong video lol
@@RoseyRosiesnah nah they might be onto smth
Just adding magnesium won't make something healthy?
That's like saying c0caine is healthy as long as you eat spinach beforehand...
not what the point is, but ok
magnesium is a common supplement taken in pills. this could offer alternative solutions for people who have trouble swallowing pills, also it's healthy in a different way from what you're thinking
It's like those Flintstones candy/gummy vitamins, but specifically for magnesium.
The candy part isn't the healthiest, but the amount you get in a daily dose isn't really going to impact your health. If someone has a hard time swallowing pills or forgets to take them often, putting them in a tasty treat can help.
Go back to school
You lack comprehension
wait it isn't?! so my dealer has been lying to me all this time??
Candy isn't inherently unhealthy (apart from the sugar making you overweight in extremely large dosages). The main bad thing that can be said about it is that it doesn't contain nutrients
Candy store near me in the 90s made a bunch of hard candy with caffeine powder in them. They came out well. Called them "Proton Energy Pills" and designed Roger Ramjet's face on them.
The little line break magic at the end ITCHING MY BRAIN rn
Burning magnesium is pretty fun. Emits a very bright light :)
Most metals don't have a flame. But magnesium does; that's part of why its so bright.
THINK FAST CHUCKLE NUTS! *throws flashbang*
The metal magnesium is a very different type of magnesium than the kind you ingest for supplemental reasons. Magnesium citrate and magnesium glycinate are the most common of the supplemental kind, and neither are remotely flammable.
Favourite one of your vlogs so far 😂,keep the amazing videos up I love them
adding magnesium into candy doesn't make it healthy. that's like adding iron to fried chicken
To be fair, most fried chicken breading DOES contain added iron.
they could use omega 3 to fry the chicken to be unironically healthier
Mmmm iron fried chicken.
@@josepheridu3322except
Most omega 3’s come from fish, AND different oils have different burn temps.. so yummy burned fish oil chicken
🤣🤣🤣
I am magnesium deficient all the time and honestly too much magnesium at once gives me heart palpitations. You’re not supposed to take over like 300mgs in a day to be on the safe side, but I thought I’d take a 500mgs pill with high absorption after taking only 250 of magnesium oxide which is probably the lowest absorption rate and my heart rate was literally close to 130bpm allllllll day after that. lol I’m definitely starting slow with a lower dosage first and never going over 300mgs from now on.
I have IST, and... those are rookie numbers. lol.
For me it just makes me feel weird like my ears popping from the low blood pressure or something. I even felt that way from Epsom salt so it must absorb through the skin somehow. You also want to take zinc for anxiety, especially if your mercury levels are high.
When I take a high dose of any Magnesiumsalt other than oxide, the only muscle moving is the bowel.
You are only suppose to take 400 mgs of elemental magnesium, but a lot of magnesium supplements has very little elemental magnesium.
@@Steve-ev6vx I recently got up to 400mgs. lol The key is that you’re not supposed to take it all at once. You space it out through the day. Plus you need something with a high absorption rate. The one I’m using now after writing this original comment is a supplement that doesn’t use crappy magnesium oxide and it splits the 400mg dose into 3 pills. So you can take it at once or in 3 separate doses. Which do not trigger my IST like the 500mg pill. 😂
Watching it break at the end wasvery satisfying.
These "Candy cane pillows" are just the unforbidden version of tide pods
You shouldn't add vitamins into candy. ESPECIALLY just by sprinkling random amounts of powder on top. It will be a compleaty different amount of magnesium per piece, and too much magnesium can cause stomach upset.
They look like tie pods from far away
Idk man, but a VITAMIN company reaching out to a CANDY shop to put MEDICINE into candy sounds a bit unsafe
It's not medicine, it's a supplement. You don't need to consult a medical professional before you make a spinach smoothie either; but you're still allowed to claim it contains a lot of magnesium because it does.
Flying magnesium powder + a room that works with hot surfaces… •intense sweating•
Please delete your comment in shame
The most common forms of ingestible magnesium supplements are magnesium citrate (digestive health) and magnesium glycinate (regulates anxiety and depression, amongst other benefits), and neither of them are flammable in powder form.
hey Idk if it’s a good Idea or if you guys already do stuff with the dust and crumbs but you could spin it into cotton candy that’d be kinda cool
they should have told yall the specific magnesium compound, not just so yall can vet they arent peddling alternative/half-baked (ha) medicine, but also because there might be information out there that wouldve helped yall out! theres a lot of "health" and "wellness" companies popping up that are just trying to capitalize on the uptick in wellness culture popularity for a quick buck but arent actually giving folks the right compounds they need in a safe dosage.
From candy shop to Chemistry lab lol
No chemistry occurred
70% Sugar + 30% Magnesium = Healthy 💀
Well it would be healthy if you had low blood sugar and were magnesium deficient I guess
@@_sleepy-it’s infinitely more healthy to get those nutrients from whole food sources such as fruits or certain vegetables
@@jaceboigamez2220 yeah probably
No actual medicine company will just walk up to a candy store and ask the workers to start putting magnesium of all things in their candy to make it "healthier". I am most especially sure of this because at no point in this story was there ever any mention of a laboratory equipped with safety gear to mix this stuff.
The very best case scenario was that whoever approached you was a faker that wanted to troll a candy store. That's what I'd prefer, because I currently can only think of MUCH worse possibilities.
Good thing it's a supplement and not a medicine then.
Welp. At least you can get a level 100 Charizard
So true! All who are work with flying objects please remind yourself to wear your PPE! Safety glasses are to protect you from possibly loosing an eye or your vision. Make them useful 🤓
1) if you make vitamins/minerals, don’t go to just whatever candy shop and trust them to just mess around with how much of a product is in a candy or how it’s added. Not that I distrust Logan’s, I just don’t think that’s smart from a liability standpoint
2) candy with a vitamin or mineral added is a terrible plan because you know what I want to do with candy? Eat a handful! You know what I shouldn’t do with vitamins? Eat a handful! Plus, see option 1 and consider that you now have no rightful idea what the dosage is per piece unless you then go back and do some probably cost-ineffective testing
I be eating those gummy vitamins by the fist full and don’t get me started on cough drops
If you binge eat that candy you will pool endlessly for days
Sugarfree gummy bear flashbacks
Antidepressant candy - smart idea.
That would help so many people
Magnesium isn’t just an anti depressant. And really what do you think is so bad about putting anti depressants into candy?
@@strav8337 Maybe think a while on that and try answering yourself 😂
@@UmuPadoruAntidepressants do not work in a lot of people and they usually have terrible side effects like most medicine. One step towards beating depression would be cutting out candy and other addictive substances.
not really as people need different mixes of brain chemicals to force happiness. Even then it's just an empty drug high happiness. Those people need to face the real problems at the root of their depression.
This is coming from experience.
I want to eat the candy on the screen, looks so appetizing
Sounds like that company might have been an MLM. Sounds like something those types would do.
or at least one of many shady 'health' companies looking for a quick buck selling supplements with no regard for peoples actual health...
Yeah that sounds about right
Magnesium oxide is so flammable and burns rly hot it either melts into things or melts things (add aluminum powder and your done for bc that makes thermite well a baby version)
Magnesium oxide is so non fammable that they use it for crucible linings and fire bricks.
Youre prolly thinking of magnesium metap
@@alexwang982 I am talking about the magnesium oxide strip tho
@@zopurew3681 you are thinking of magnesium metal
BB
@@zopurew3681there are no magnesium oxide strips. Magnesium oxide is a salt. The "rust" of magnesium.
The FDA would have a field day with this one..
No they wouldn’t care
Sounds tasty lol😂
everyone who watches NileRed screaming right now
No
I'm so glad I spent time listening to the story it was crazy up and down left and right so cool content these days!
Magnesium cannot be alone type of chemical, means it needs to binds with other chem to stay in certain form, and some magnesium compound is not very healthy for body, even choosing a magnesium vitamin is rarely a knowledge that the other compound that accompanied the magnesium plays big role in metabolism ,it could goes sour&south
As a diabetic I feel it would be smarter to just make a sugar free candy instead because way more people would buy it
@@leetjohnson it’s not fake sugar dum-dum it’s actually a sugar substitute that tastes just like sugar but way more healthier
@@nmoney6655I believe a lot of sugar free candies use sugar alcohols. Basically it has a very similar chemical structure to sugar so it behaves like sugar within candy and your tastebuds think it’s sugar when it’s not.
@@GogiRegion so Diet Soda uses this too
@@nmoney6655 No it doesn't. Sugar alcohols aren't very sweet and quite highly laxative. They don't need them for bulk in soda; they just use a small amount of a highly sweet artificial sweetener, usually aspartame and acesulfame, but sometimes sucralose or stevia.
Magnesium sulphate also can be laxative in high doses, so it could be funny candies.
Pretty much all magnesium compounds that are editable are laxatives at high dosages
Oof wait so you actually chuck away all that candy aweee 😢
I wish we learned this in school, never been so interested in our history until this video. Super engaging, thanks bud!
Wowww
Vitamins + candy sounds like a ChubbyEmu vid waiting to happen
Add one of the many vitamins to a candy… it’ll definitely make it a HEALTHY option!!
It won’t make it healthy and it would unfortunately not be biologically available
I visited your store for the first time when my cat passed away, as the vet was down the street. Your candy definitely made a sad day better. The people working there also were incredibly helpful when it came to recommending stuff to try.
"all right just put it up to heat"
*5 mins later*
"ima check up on the swee-"
*gets flashbanged*
As a chemistry guy this is kind of terrifying. You guys have heard of a dust explosion, right? USCSB has some videos on it. You wouldn't want your candy shop to randomly explode from someone using the wrong light swich.
that break at the end was just perfect
whatever vitamin company reached out to you for this was crazy. this needed proper FDA testing
Omg this is so cool, what fun!! And yay to the mag being added!!! ❤
Omg I want to know how to get your candy 😋 I’m so hungry rn!
Magnesium metal burns into an ash made of magnesium oxide. Both of these would be called magnesium. But only one of these burns at flame temperature. The magnesium used for supplements is closer to magnesium oxide (a salt) as its usually magnesium citrate. So instead of oxygen bonded to magnesium it's citrate (the conjugate base of citric acid/ lemon juice acid). The reason for using magnesium citrate instead of magnesium oxide is that it dissolves better in water and is more available to be digested.
Magnesium citrate would also explain why it burned up: citric acid decomposes at about 175 degrees. Magnesium oxide shouldn't burn under any reasonable conditions, because it's already about as burnt as it's possible for it to get.
The unsatisafction as they go into the trash can 😭✋
listening to the story ✖️
watching the candy✔️
I thought those were Tide pods for a second
That was a really satisfying break
Oh boy. Magnesium powder inside of candy??? Magnesium is a potent laxative!
Healthy Candy?😂
The last bit was satisfying!
Like 45 minutes to an hour after eating those things, you’ll be spending the same amount of time enjoying the free colon cleanse included with them!😅😭
Everyone listening to the story while me just drooling over the candy
This looks like such fun to make
Omg it’s the tide pod factory
candies that look like tide pods?
mr burns: excellent.
This is so cool I was wondering if this was Logan’s candy in Ontario! I love going to you guys around Christmas to watch you guys make the candy cane squares
Me hearing magnesium powder: * quietly * “don’t “
tell me why i thought these were those delicious ✨tide pods✨
"Healthy" thats hilarious
Ok, so when it said "Healthy Candy Gone Wrong", and with that thumbnail, i legitimately thought it was a jab at people eating Tide Pods. 🤣
Thats awesome your dad didn't given up on it. Thats such a good idea.
'Healthy' candy.
That's right.
She really said that. ☠️
Your dad’s eyes def got some stories to tell 💀
"hey can you add this to you sugar? it'll be healthy"
Healthy candy sounds like a meme and is completely contradictory
Healthy candy? That's like sugar free tic tacs
Each of those "healthy" candies will have a completely random dose of magnesium lol
MICHAEL JACKSON CAMEO TEAAAA!!! FISHY 🐠🐠🐠
Gotta love it when your daughter throws you under the bus for the world to understand.
Just call it char grilled candy with magnesium extracts
"Uh and he definitely should have had goggles on..." 😄... 😐👀
Putting magnesium powder into candy doesn't make it healthier. It just adds magnesium to people's diets who are too stupid to get it in the normal way. You know, actual healthy foods.
Ever heard of maillard? Magnesium oxide (what they use in most case) will not burn even at the remote temperatures of candymaking. But magnesium oxide being a base and slight degradation catalyst just caused all the sugar burn/ caramelize. You should have just added citric acid or any other solid acid into the batch and the problem would have been solved. Either way basic sugar tastes ass, it tastes super soapy even if you manage to get it right.
i honestly thought it was going to explode when cooking once i heard "magnesium"
They should've warned him about how easily the powder goes airborne, tho.
Can Logan candies be purchased anywhere or only locally? I am loving your videos.
Is magnesium powder healthy?
This is the most American idea of how to make something healthy.
Take candy.
Put in trace amounts of magnesium.
Have it produced in a completely impromptu way without any sort of supervision.
HEALTHY!