Context: Channel Super Fun went to his house without him knowing, as a prank. Linus's wife gave them permission to paint a wall, but they damaged the floor by dragging a bed across the room. Linus didn't ask them to do anything, he didn't even know they were there, nor did he greenlight such a video or anything.
Uh I didn't know. Not even following Linus. This comment should be much higher for people to see. I was under the assumption that it was Lin who asked them to do it SMH.
Linus is right, yelling is not constructive. It's childish and it just makes your employees/coworkers hate you. That said, a genuine apology for a mistake is a good idea in general.
Yea. I wont strike anyone that does it like once or twice on very rare occasions, especially when theres somehting really really stupid happening or its really really stressful.
Sometimes yelling is required as it can get a strong point across, but usuallu it is not useful or contrsuctive. But then again my line of work is a bit different than most peoples
I worked for a professional moving company and people would complain about how much we cost but we also were insured and took pride in what we did to make sure we don't damage your home.
They should do that as a bit, not the firing someone part but just hire an actor and substitute them in for a regular cast member for a couple of shoots and say nothing about it.
Pro CEO tip, don't try to save money by using "already paid for" employees to do something completely outside of their job duties, skill range, and /or capabilities. Just because you believe something, does not make it true. Not everybody knows their limits. Can-do attitudes are good, but can also lead to trouble. This is coming from personal experience. :p
Pretty much why I quit my job. This one guy put a job offer for a video editor, just a video editor, and I applied for it. Went their started working, and the next thing I know, the dude wants me to do illustrations, animations and photoshops for him. Like dude, I don't know how to do that. I mean that wasn't the worse part, the worse part was I was being paid below minimum wage, like half of minimum wage, and he also wanted professional level results. Not to mention he was toxic as fuck. So, it was an easy decision for me to quit.
This comment needs to be much higher on the list. Linus' size is getting to his head and it shows more and more in his videos. He doesn't seem like such a nice loveable guy now. Dude seems like most people are tiptoing around him now as boss. Respect is OK but seems like he's kind of throwing his weight around on a warpath with all this "argumentative" type videos
Agreed. If you're forcing your IT company employees to move your damn furniture then you get what you deserve. Be a better boss and a responsible person. Hire movers to move furniture, or accept the risks of having non-professionals do it. Linus is at fault here, not Dennis.
@@MAYHEMSCO I’ve been thinking the same thing tbh. Like Linus seems a lot more like a Karen now days than before. Like he just gives off a better than you, I get my way because I’m me vibes.
I’m a pest control supervisor and the only time I’ve ever yelled at an employee was when the mistakes of a few techs led to a 3 year old getting her hand caught on a rat snap trap on your birthday. I didn’t know who put the trap that got the girl but one tech supposedly removed all the traps and he left behind over 30. The next day I met up with the tech in a parking lot and preceded to yell at him for about 15 minutes. Every time he tried to make an excuse it only made me angrier. I was out of line and I should’ve had a colleague talk to the tech because I was pretty enraged by the situation. He ended up putting in his 2 weeks notice the next week.
Context: his stff basically broke into his home, setting up a bed in his attic and damaging a support beam, he had no idea and he didn't green light it. imagine your co-worker/classmate/freind breaking into your home with your kids.
That's what happens when you're remodeling, furnishing, and outfitting a giant house. It cost me the same amount as the purchase price of my house to do all that stuff, and it took a long time. Putting felt pads on us something that will get done. It's not like the average person moving into a new 1500 sqft house and buying a few pieces of furniture from IKEA. Outfitting houses this size takes about a dozen people months to complete, and hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars just to outfit and furnish, not including the remodel. It's a lot of work and a lot of stuff to do that most people can't imagine. I had to hire a person to fill time deal with JUST furniture. Not ANY of the other stuff to outfit the house like white goods, linens, electronics, art, motors, safes, etc.
Before moving something heavy, it seems obvious to assess any possible damage to floors/walls. It wouldn't take much effort to put something underneath to act as skids, carpet offcut, corrugated cardboard from boxes works well... I'm not in any way a professional mover, but I do have common sense, and had to be responsible for moving plenty of heavy items on my own over the years...
@@_Amilio_ The new partial board pressed flooring is the worst! Most will puff and flake the instant it gets wet it’s crazy. A floor is going to be walked on, dropped on, spilt on, it’s going to be used. Don’t use that crap. I replaced my parents flooring with vinyl that imitated wood and was next to indestructible. If you have the money, use real solid wood or the cheaper vinyl, not beaver 🦫 💩. Rant over… lol
yep, if it doesn't have wheels and it's not on carpet it needs some sort of padding if you aren't planning on you or anyone else moving it without having to lift it. Especially on hard wood or vinyl/laminate flooring and especially if it's something heavy like a bed + headboard
@@RealTaIk that's wrong. heavy things can put holes in the floor over time, especially something like a bed where you're getting in and out of it a lot, and pads spread that out. I had a bed that I never moved, and because it was so heavy, it put gashes in the floor. after I put on felt pads it never did it again.
I was a flooring contractor before I got into IT. Yes, it is a real pain in the ass to fix a scratched floor. Dye lots…Furniture… Matching… but it is such a common thing. I’m sure they felt bad enough as it is. Now that I’m older, I realize that even though these things seem like a big deal, they aren’t in the grand scheme of things.
By your logic, people dies and it's not a big deal in the grand scheme of things. Two people can look at the same thing and vomit 2 different thoughts. This is the same.
Linus, I am a contractor. Look up a local furniture repair guy. A good company can fix it to the point you can't see. a lot cheaper than replacement, sanding and refinishing the entire floor. These guys ultimately turn out to be artist to make it look like the real wood with the same finish.
Agreed. I'm an apprentice cabinet maker and patching wood is among the easiest things to do. Match the grain in the existing plank and it will be invisible to the naked eye (except if you specifically go looking for it or ask the contractor to point out the seam line, as they're the only ones who know exactly where it is and can spot it immediately).
@@charlesgrove6905 it's unrealistic that it's one board. No tree is that wide . My house has wooden floors and you replace the peace of wood if its damaged
Im a hardwood floor installer. I would do it if i wasn't in toronto. Get new contractors actual hardwood floorers. Not like an all around handy man. Take a skill saw set it to 3/4 depth if ur hardwood is 3/4. cut out damaged floor. New board brake off bottom part of the groove. Cut it to 100% correct length... And glue it down with pl premium in and weight it down for 24 hours literally its a 10 minute job... Make sure u have plenty of extra floor for future damage. Chanches of getting the same wood few years after is very slim. Ps there will be dust lots of saw dust.
Yeah his statement there doesn't make sense. It's new construction, phone the installer and get them to swap out the panel. There is 100% offcut available or replacement panels on the market. If this was somehow a "custom" floor with irreplaceable panels, there's no way he should have put furniture on it without sliders or protective pads.
@Boa-Noah The warranty doesn't have to say what they cover for them to cover it. That's just the minimum they want LMG to be legally accountable for. Like 99% of all other sellers of anything ever lol. Warranties are pointless, like he said numerous times.
@@NJ-wb1czI would actually like to know where you find Linus saying that, he'll say he thinks he's a pretty good boss but saying he thinks he is and he is a good boss or two very different sentences despite they're only being one word difference
@@the_undead Do you actually expect a random person to spend potentially hours personally on you scouring videos to defend a year old comment?... I've moved on from this narcissist a long time ago and don't plan on watching him ever again. I haven't found any downsides yet, only positives
@@NJ-wb1cz If you've moved on to him, why the hell are you responding to a comment under one of his videos? That sounds like the exact opposite of moving on
My aunt ended up with a diamond mine in Ontario Canada, her mansion is all wood, 60-80s. Never heard of pads in my life. Grandparents farm houses hand made floors, no pads. I really don't think it's the norm, it should be though don't get me wrong I agree with you absolutely.
THIS. When I was a kid, I explicitly remember my parents putting felt pads on the feet of chairs and tables in our living room, and even after they would tell us "please, even with these pads, try not to tilt stuff onto the floor, it's sensitive". Between "felt pads between items and hardwood floor" and "never let water/liquids soak into the hardwood floor", it was always beaten into us.
@@FeedMeSalt You don't need felt pads with properly made furniture. But finding properly made furniture that isn't prohibitively expensive because it is hand made bay an actual artisan in your country is... hard. Unless you like antiqueing. Even Metal isn't all that bad on wood if the surface is properly smooth, has no sharp corners or burrs and so forth. But just about all furniture that is mass produced is just garbage.
Let's be real: either Denis is a really good actor and only pretends to be clumsy and clueless all the time, or he has some really good blackmail on Linus. 😄
to be fair, if your bed even MIGHT have a chance of scratching a very expensive floor, you should have some sort of pads on the bottom to prevent that type of accident from occurring
Yeah, I put pads on all furniture feet that are on wooden floors for this exact reason. Eventually, somebody is going to even slightly push some furniture to reach something, clean, ect. and slowly scratch the floor like that.
Yeah but that would imply something was a rich person's fault. We all know all problems are the fault of the relatively poorer people who he orders around
If he didn't want to risk damage to his home he shouldn't use his home for work projects. Even pros who work in peoples homes are insured for that kind of thing because it does happen even when its your regular job.
Shouldn't need to sand down the whole floor for damage on a new install. That's a bit over reacting. Just replace the damaged board. And then put felt pads on your furniture like the flooring company probably recommended
It can't be replaced. The laminate flooring is setup in a way that, from my understanding, you can't replace an individual board since it is interlocked within the other neighboor boards. That's why you probably will have to replace the entire floor, and so forth
It depends on the floor. For hardwood floors, they're interlocked, nailed and glued down. Also they often aren't all the same size. Things like laminate or vinyl plank are easier to cut one out and glue a new one in, but hardwood isn't designed to be able to pull one out. Especially if it has a top finish
@@bernardobento5943 @Bernardo Bento you can. You'd pull up the boards from the wall over to the damage, replace the damaged board, then lay them back down. Annoying but doable. Or you can cut the tounge off and replace one board and glue it to the adjacent boards. I've installed floors before and it's not the end of the world. At most you pull up half a room and then put most of those boards back down
@Jamie Vatarga yeah if he has multi size boards, that would make it harder, but there are other boards the same size in the kit. There are only a certain number of different sizes. A floor installer would be able to replace it without remodeling the whole room like he said. If it's not a floating floor, it's even easier. Just cut the tounge off and glue a new one in. Floating floors can't be glued and you'd likely need to pull up several rows to get to it and then put them back down
@@TheZachary86 Lol trusting people you actually know and trust instead of strangers who are more likely to be fraudsters. How dumb(!). Not like we've wasted half our money (and yes only half thank frick, we didn't pay them the full amount) on people doing disability accessibility work (so not just something for shiggles, SOMETHING TO ACCOMMODATE LIFELONG DISABILITY and we're nowhere near even putting a stair lift in) on a house who just left us with no roof and took 3 months to just.... take the roof off and abandon the project. So yeah, I'd rather use employees/friends who have an idea what they're doing (or at least can look it up???) to do stuff like that. Thank frick it was over the summer so there was barely any rain too... Now we at least have it covered since we're in September ALL the rain has come in as usual.
@@Roadent1241 If you pay more rather than using your employees or friends, then you’d hire PROFESSIONALS and less fraudsters. Here’s a tip, don’t be cheap. Linus was being cheap and blamed his own employee/friends for the mishap. Thats the mark of a bad boss/friend. I’m not surprised you come to defend Linus considering you like the same shitty practices
@@dxioa Then Linus shouldn’t be complaining because they ruined his flooring. He got what he paid for. Maybe if he paid more, he would get professionals
My previous manager just yelled at us when we did anything wrong in his eyes when he first started. Didn't matter if we didn't know it was anything wrong. If he found it to be a problem, whether it was or not, we got yelled at. My boss promoted this guy and then was out of the office a whole lot so he never saw it and when I brought it up he didn't feel it was severe. The severity got less, but it never stopped. Then he just up and quit in November. It was one of the happiest days I've had at this job in awhile. After that is when my boss started to wake up to what was going on and the stupid changes the manager made.
I had a boss that never yelled or raised her voice. She just stopped talking and answering my questions if I did something wrong, so I had to wonder how I screwed things up for a full day until I finally would get an explanation from her. When someone yells, you can always yell back, so though I don't appreciate it, I don't understand why people are so taken aback by it. In her case she just treated me like I stole her husband. I'd rather be yelled at.
Did he say it was recently renovated? Was this floor of his older than 50 years or was it fresh board. Wonder if he had any spare leftover cuts? Many installers will offer the homeowner some spare boards to keep after a new install for this exact reason.
@@dbagdi1998 Are you under the impression that is the only filming they do there? Because they do a lot at his home. He made his home into a production set so he can make more money. This is on the fault of the person who needs to make content with so many aspects of their life.
Yeah Dennis is kinda dumb sometimes but not all the blame should fall on him, Yvonne was the one who gave him the task so the blame is partially on her. Also who doesn’t put felt pads on their furniture lol that’s on Linus & Yvonne. Also as a former carpenter, those gashes can be repaired by a highly skilled carpenter, Linus just needs to find a good one that can fill and match the grain perfectly. Totally doable as long as the carpenter is skilled enough.
I'm a special education teacher, and I've been literally screamed at by an administrator. This was a principal who would go out of her way to not only bully staff and students, but pit staff and students against each other. At one point I was attacked and seriously injured by a student, and left with four hernias, the surgery for which left me disabled with permanent nerve damage. Even though there were multiple witnesses to the attack she took it upon herself to scream (literally scream) at me when I came back to work after my "recovery" from the surgery that she thought I was faking it. I had just gotten the many staples removed from my abdomen, and was still wearing a compression wrap that was clearly visible under my shirt, and *very* nearly pulled up my shirt to show her how real it was. Thankfully, she was replaced at the end of that year. So, yeah, I wholeheartedly agree with you. It's *not* helpful. Also, I'm a firm believer in the adage that says employees don't quit their jobs, they quit their bosses. The next principal we got wasn't any better, and I left teaching at the end of the next year, back in '19. I did a stint as a Headstart administrator, but my heart was still in the classroom, and I came back to teaching this school year, at a school with *much* better administration.
Someone having the audacity to yell at a person INJURED in an ATTACK is simply mentally unstable... maybe they need to join the classes instead of being a higher up staff member... jokes aside someone like that really shouldn't be in that job, or workforce in general.....
My father had a boss who would fire and rehire him, repeatedly. My father got a group of investors together to buy the company, a good deal (for his boss to retire). Just before signing, someone showed the boss the flow chart, which I created, which had my dad in charge. He ripped up the agreement and fired my father, again. The last time, my father quit. Company later dissolved. Sad because the company would have done alright, with the right person at the helm. Years later I went onto university, parents ok; all's well that ends well (or ok enough).
@@OrganicTrash It's frighteningly often tolerated that teachers are attacked and injured by pupils. School management just tends to get used to it and see it as a normal part of the jobs of their subordinates.
@@venkaramon Him turning his house renovation into a video series means it's a business expense. Not familiar with canadian tax code, but I'd be willing to bet there's additional tax benefits on his personal taxes for performing some of these upgrades. Linus isn't stupid, it's 100% a net gain.
Boo frickin hoo. How meaningful is that compared to his net worth? How would you feel if your employee caused you $50 in damages but in order to make you hundreds of dollars in return?
My mum used to french polish old furniture and then sell it on. You'd be surprised how much damage you can fix without taking off huge layers if you get in someone who really knows what they're doing.
I work at a company thats decent but it has meetings where directors would yell at each other and its just really sad to watch and I immediately feel like I've just lost 2 hours of my life attending said meeting.
Context: his stff basically broke into his home, setting up a bed in his attic and damaging a support beam, he had no idea and he didn't green light it. imagine your co-worker/classmate/freind breaking into your home with your kids.
I used to be a appliance delivery man and if I thought for one Minute that the damage I could cause moving something would out weigh the profit I would tell the home owner I couldn't move it any further without them signing a release from damage otherwise they'd have to move it themselves. Cause some people will buy things knowing that you couldn't move it without damage just so they could sue and get money or free repairs on things that were already damaged. It's always better to refuse the move than to risk doing damage
Haha you refuse and most of the time you get sued for breach of contract. You’d refund them any money the delivery cost and some. Good luck with that incompetent mindset.
@@ChahtaAnumpa Most contracts of this kind is at will, meaning either party can terminate the contract, especially prior to providing the service. Most you would get is a refund.
@@ChahtaAnumpaTell me you don’t know about Contract Law, without telling me you don’t know about Contract Law. The idea that you’d say this without finding *WHERE* it happened, and asking for a copy of the Contract, says everything anyone needs to know about your comment. You are at least two degrees off knowing if your assertion is correct.
Are you insane? Colton probably knows he's not got the skills and would say no chance. Dennis however would be " Yeah, we can make Linus happy!" Before making the damage even larger.
@@a.nobodys.nobody One of his employees made a mistake in downloading a PDF file from an email which looked like it was a future sponsor. The PDF resulted in a mass hack of the LTT group with Techquickie, LinusTechTips and another one of their channels (I forgot it's name) being hacked
POSSIBLE EASY(ish) REPAIR: Without having seen the actual damage and inferring the floor is made of strips of wood (typical long piece pattern), my first thought would be to have a good trim carpenter (or you if you have good woodworking skills) carefully cut out a layer of the damaged flooring using a router with appropriate bit & straight edges/jigs, trimming the edges with chisels and replace it with a layer of good wood from flooring scraps or extra pieces. If the floor is 3/4" thick tongue-and groove wood, I'd remove probably 3/8" to (a) avoid the edge nails typically used in installation, (b) retain 2/3 of the tongue-and groove configuration on the edges, and (c) give a thick-enough repair piece that will retain dimensions & not warp/twist. Fit up the replacement piece by resawing the spare flooring piece(s) on a bandsaw or rip on a tablesaw to an approximate thickness, then plane it to the exact thickness you need fit up flush & level with the rest of the floor. Finally, fit the replacement pieces in the routed-out sections. If the flooring is prefinished, that's all the better! Getting to this point would take about 2 hours depending on the extent of damage. Glue the replacement pieces in place with something like Titebond III (waterproof & longer working time), place weight on top to keep it all flat, & allow to dry overnight. If prefinished - you're done. If not, then stain & finish like the rest of the floor. Hope this helps!
For hardwood flooring, you can replace individual boards. Cut out the old one, put a new one in. For tongue-and-groove, you cut the groove so you can set it on top. This is common work.
You can jig out the damaged pieces if it is solid wood flooring If it is engineered wood (fancy plywood) you will have to lift a good chunk of the floor to get the damaged pieces out then re-lay the flooring. Depending on where in the room the damage occurred that could be a LOT of work. Engineered wood is great, but it is a pain in the ass to repair.
I have no idea if this is even remotely correct or appropriate for the situation, but this comment deserves to be pinned at least for the effort. Like this comment so someone can see it and pin it.
Yeah I think it's probably more fixable than he thinks. I would probably want to fix it if I were him, that would drive me nuts. DO YOU EVEN RESPECT WOOD, DENNIS?!
LINUS PLEASE READ: I have managed to make big improvements to wood floor damage like this by using a very hot clothes iron through a wet towel over the mark. The damage in the CSF video seems to be mostly COMPRESSION damage rather than actual torn out wood fiber. The idea is that you let a bit of hot water/steam soak into the wood grain which causes it to swell up and returns toward its original state (then stays there when dry). I am not saying this will make the marks invisible... but I had a similar mark from moving a bed on my (softwood) floor and hot iron through a wet towel took it from 'oh fuck that looks awful' to 'ok, it's an obvious mark but it's not THAT bad anymore'
I can back that up.... I've done it several times on remodel jobs.... soak dent, damp papertowel over it, and a normal iron. it will resurface enough to fool most..... Very good advise.
That’s called swelling the wood I’m a carpenter and for deep gouges it doesn’t work if the wood it’s dimpled then you have a chance, gouges mean wood was removed and you’re only going to swell the remaining wood still leaving a void where material was removed.
Managers think they have the privilege of losing their minds in fits of anger, when any frontline employee would be canned for the same emotional outburst. Those in a position of authority should hold themselves to a higher standard than base employees, especially in the maniac department. This applies from CEO to shift manager.
When they uploaded that video of whonnock server crapping out and all that data was on the line; that suspense felt real and not played up for camera. So hearing that the most infuriating moment due to losing an SD card as a result of carelessness is understandable.
I get Linus being angry at the floor, but at some level he would have had to approve them being in his house at some point. Yvonne clearly approved it if nothing else, and would have approved the challenges. At that point you have to stop and think to yourself if letting employees run around in your brand new, completely renovated house is a good idea. When you approve that kind of prank content, you wave all your rights at being angry at any damage people cause to your beautiful new house. In the old house, fair, I get it. But the new one? Hell no, that one is entirely on Linus and Yvonne for allowing it in the first place. Also, speaking of which. The various camera angles means that either the entire thing was fake and scripted to begin with, or Linus gave away a massive portion of the security camera positions in his house. One is just bad faith, the other is just plain stupid.
@@FlyingAce1016 I don't really get either why are you "calling this out", If you bought yourself a fancy new phone and gave it to a friend to inspect it and he would immediately drop it and smash the screen. Of course you'd be pissed and angry. That's completely normal. If he would have actually fired them or taken the cost repairs out of their salary then the point would have been fair. He could've hired a professional sure, but even they make mistakes, and not every single detail gets put into those videos, things are not as black and white people make it seem.
@@FlyingAce1016 What are you talking about? They weren’t moving furniture, they were shooting a video about sneaking into Linus’s house without him knowing as a prank. They wanted to move his furniture to mess with him, but accidentally damaged the floor. The original comment you responded to even mentioned the word “prank”.
@@The_Keeper Plus earn more money because it's a vid that will get ads for almost forever instead of something that'd be sold with a limited number or something lol.
My first job out of college was for a small family run company. There were 7 of us, 5 were family. Family was: Mom & Dad - owners, two sisters Vice Presidents, and the husband of one of the sisters was my manager. I was there for maybe 2 weeks and my manager got called in to the owners office (Dad who is his father in law). I listened as I heard the owner/dad screaming and berating him for a good 30 mins. He finally comes back into our area and was wiping tears out of his eyes. I said to him "What the fuck was that man? I'll tell you right now that I will never tolerate anyone yelling at me like that. I don't even let my own father talk/yell at me like that". Word must have spread because they never did no matter how bad I messed something up, but they did yell at each other and any other worker that worked there the many years I was there. They told one young lady they hired to work the front desk on her first day"You are not special. A monkey could do your job". She went to lunch and just didn't return. I'm so glad I don't work there anymore. Very toxic place.
i heard of a similar situation at my previous full time job regarding an business partnership - where the 3pl (company at the time ) was so hard to work with. they would send us a report every week for restocks and when we did not get to them on time he would call to complain and act like he was the best 3pl company ever and that we would lose sales etc. however whenever he was talking to my boss he was like an angel. our boss knew clearly about his two-faced behaviour. when the guy that was dealing w them left, the new person took over and they never gave her any respect. after about 6 months during the first covid lockdown, he called and complained to her about something and in the end made her cry. after that she convinced by boss to ditch them as a shipping partner and we did the dispatching ourselves and saved about 30k a year. at the time as well once a month our other manager would go visit them to check on the operations and he would also tell me that they were a family fun business and that the dad - their ceo was a madman basically just yelling at every one and running the place like a tyrant. becos of the dads toxic behaviour it also has been copied into his wife and his daughter. its scary knowing how some families think they can just run everything they way they want to and use people that way....
I have the same personality. My biggest issues I have with my team is not when they fail, it's when they fail unnecessarily. I don't yell at people. In fact, when I get quiet, that's when you can tell I'm upset. But when something truly upsets me deeply, I can definitely get worked up and my team has learned that usually I just need to vent and just let me.
@@TheDeadlyTikka this 100 percent just own your mistakes and if you mess up don't continue to try and cover it up let someone know so the situation can be properly accessed before possibly making the situation worse.
Reminds me of my first job working at a Goodwill centre. This customer came in and bought this armoire for like $400 and it weighed like 500lbs or something like it. Manually, and woefully ill equipped, 3 employees, including myself, were tasked to move this thing by hand over a little ridge and onto a moving truck. I slipped and one of the corner dropped and caused some chips. The buyer was livid. If you want to a professional service, hire a professional. Between moving unreasonably heavy items with no equipment or sufficient staff, I was expected to sort through donations that were nasty, dusty and very likely, dangerous to my health. And they weren't even paying me. It was part of some government out reach program that was half volunteering for work experience with a bit of a stipend from the government. I don't believe it was even minimum wage since it was part of a program. But I digress.
As others have said; it wouldn't have been so bad, but eventually something was going to move that furniture if you didn't put proper padding on it. Im also curious why you need to take the entire floor down instead of replacing the damaged section.
because hes a big drama queen and wants people to feel sorry for him and instead of focusing on his unrealistic expectations and out of touch takes like screaming at his employees for making fairly innocent mistakes in pursuit of his companies goals, being stingy with money when it comes to anyone but himself has been his MO for many years. i know so many people like it its crazy, anyone makes a mistake and they rag and bitch and moan until it drives the person crazy. then they make an equally stupid mistake and expect everyone in the room to laugh with them and say oh well people make mistakes haaha but its because he holds their welfare in his hands.
The thing is, people who are usually quiet and collected when angry, once they boil over, once they really explode...oh boy it tends to be epic. I wish I was a fly on the wall when Linus went off in those stories.
The bed should've had something on the feet to where they don't scratch the floor, especially since it was going to be on top of wood. I feel bad for Linus and those that accidentally did damage to the house, but this could've been avoided (granted it may not come to mind until after it has already happened)
If you don't plan on moving the furniture, you're not going to put pads under the legs. They don't look good when they are sticking out from under the legs.
@@theboxofdemons sorry but no, you should always put pads on furniture that's going on wood floors. Even if you don't plan on moving it, the weight could cause damage. Not to mention just small movement that could happen unintentionally.
This story about Dennis reminds me of when I worked for a major computer corporation many many years ago and a programmer decided to put a disk in a drive by himself. When I say disk I mean the old 30 lb 10 platter 20 inch diameter disks. He put it in and and made a screech so loud I could hear it from outside. I raced in and asked what he done and he said "Oh the drive must be broken" he then took the disk and put it in another drive with an equal screech. He destroyed two $100K drives and the disk and 6 months worth of data because hadn't backed up the live data he was using first. And more recently a client called me after he discovered his computer wouldn't boot and rather than call me first decided that he needed to restore windows 10, thereby overwriting 12 months worth of work email he also hadn't backed up, on top of which he stopped the windows install because he thought it was taking to long , the data was unrecoverable. So long story short whether a tech genius or a common guy using a computer, there are moments when people just don't think.
@@Sergmanny46 Well he had damaged the heads of the drive by putting them in incorrectly. These weren't like todays hard disks. They were large platters that required removal of a cover and then careful placement on the spindle. He had just jammed them in at an angle which damaged the heads which then of course damaged the disk surface.
I run a business and can honestly say that every mistake is an opportunity to refine procedures. Following procedures with a checklist ultimately leads to few errors over time
@Jared Connell no one made them move the furniture. Linus didn't green light it, his wife did. They moved the furniture to set a prank for a different channel.
for me as manager only one time. basically told a employee he was upset with some outside stuff and to not to talk shit on camera about our GOOD paying easy laid back job. he kept complaining for months. eventually boss heard em and months later got caught throwing back beers at the job. boss didn't even want to let him go but it was the combo.
Years ago I sold cars. If I recall we were screwing around and a few customers walked in and out without anyone helping them and one even went into the managers office. Meeting was immediately called. He basically said that's bullshit and next thing we knew our 6' 350lb who's normally a really nice guy was launching a chair across the room.
I like the principle of "we're on the same team," as a justification for avoiding yelling; it's just like how you approach marriage. Companies tend to treat everyone as replaceable, so employees act replaceable. But if you approach conflict by recognizing that you're on the same team and emphasize solving problems constructively, you'll get the best out of everyone. They believe that they're wanted, chosen, and will work hard to make sure the wrongs are righted. Seems like the kind of workplace culture I'd want to work for.
BUT linus! there's these little stick-on foam circles that stick onto the feet of your furniture, including beds, fridges, stoves, chairs, tables... and they stick onto the little "feet" or "toes" of the furniture, and so whenever you want to move furniture, you it just slides easily across the floor. these things are literally a game-changer, especially when it comes time to move, paint, or rearrange your furniture, or even move appliances around or replace appliances. i have them on the bottom of literally EVERY SINGLE PIECE OF FURNITURE OR APPLIANCE in my house, and i also have packs of extras waiting for whenever i need them. you absolutely NEED THESE little foam pads. they're priceless.
The same guy who didn't get what the whole warranty debacle is about despite Luke staring at him so intensively that it would have burned through any normal person that isn't as dense as Linus is every time Linus missed the whole point.
@@malfaroangel3896 I think Luke has done that in multiple WAN show videos. Every time Linus starts spouting something idiotic about the warranty stuff Luke starts staring at Linus so hard you could give the stare subtitles saying "Shut up and stop digging yourself into a hole"
@@JamieVatarga I’m literally doing it as I’m typing this. We’re working rosewood and mahogany today. I disagree. It’s not hard and no more difficult than floating
@Boa-Noah Sorry mate but that's just plain ignorant. It's not that easy, He has mouths to feed, employees to pay and a business to grow. I'm sure he's very wealthy. But it's never as easy as "sell a couple backpacks" to make up for a couple thousand dollars in repairs, and even if he could pay for it easily, it's still a couple thousand that could have gone somewhere better.
@@carlangelo653 no, the only ignorant thing is acting as if Linus has a reason to whinge over a couple hundred to thousands of dollars of repair... repairs that are needed because he brought in idiots to 'help' him to make a video. Yes, if damage happens because of employees while making content for your business, the answer really is as simple as doing more business.
@@carlangelo653 dude gets handed high end computer equipment multiple times a month. Give me a break the dude probably has a massive storage of brand new stuff just sitting there. Sell one of the million graphics cards he has
I feel like, this is an example of damage that could easily have been avoided. Put some furniture sliders under the bed (or any heavy furniture for that matter) and not only is it easier to move, you won't damage the flooring.
linus is a millionaire. he should have hired PROFESSIONALS to do the work. for the love of god. I will not feel sorry for an angry privileged millionaire. It sounds like his company is not organized. That's HIS FAULT he's the CEO
@@Raging_Granny_Gamer it was all done behind his back for a prank video shoot how is he supposed to know what happened and how to avoid it. Please do proper research before commenting
For a big gash on a new floor, just ripping up the area with the gash (out to the wall if necessary, or notching the replacement pieces to fit without ripping it out to the wall) is a pretty simple fix since new material should still match just fine. Maybe turn it into an opportunity for a builder/home repair crossover?
This is correct floor boards in the Center of a room can be repaired by a knowledgeable floor installer. Basically you cut out the damaged boards. Then trim the bottom edge off the replacement boards only where necessary as you put in replacements. Depending on location you may want to glue the replacements to the substrate. If worried about future replacement, lightly glue low strength paper to the substrate, then lightly glue boards to paper.
Most if not all flooring I've seen anymore interlocks with each other and means you have to remove all from the wall to the damaged bit and if it's in the middle of the floor that's a lot of work.
@@MidnightMarrow For a patch like this, you can cut the damaged pieces out and lock the tongue of the replacement pieces into the groove of the existing floor, cutting the bottom edge off the receiving side of the new material's groove where it's going to overlap the tongue on existing pieces (on short edges and the full length of the final piece), then adhere and/or mechanically fasten to those areas to secure it into the remaining floorboards. Pretty common repair to make to old flooring, less commonly needed in new, but works the same either way (and blends in much more readily with new work, of course).
@@Malc180s Yeah, for someone who knows what they're doing at least. Sometimes I get customers who complain about paying $100 for 20 minutes of work. And I'm always like, well, besides the drive here and back, the truck, insurance, license etc. and the ability to get your exact material to match it, then you're paying for my experience to do it in 20 minutes instead of.... an hour or two. Not too common of a complaint though honestly.
For anyone that is putting in new wood floors I always recommend looking at the Janka Hardness Scale of the wood you choose. So many people buy wood floors only on looks rather than lifestyle. I have Strand woven bamboo floors (one of the highest hardness rating on the Janka scale) and they have no scratches from dog nails or furniture dragging and they look great.
Hard woods available in canada will easy scratch compare to a good quality laminate. Usually people use cherry wood, maple wood and sometimes oak. Less hard wood is pine, but should never be use for flooring. I got ash wood floor, less common and similar as maple and cherry wood for hardness, and it scratch like crazy with a 30lbs dog.But in basement it is good laminate floors and they look brand new. In Canada real wood floor gives more value to houses, but in my opinion I would replace everything with laminate if it wasnt a plain to redo all the trims doors height and steps.
@@DrLoveQc Unlike manufactured bamboo, laminate has a stigma of being cheap. It's also harder to find laminate floors that don't use cancer causing chemicals in their manufacturing. I do agree that good quality laminate floors (get the thickest available) will take a lot more abuse than most hard wood floors.
@@deanwilliams433 yeah VOC is an issue in so many products.I got at home in my basement a smart device that detect radon gas, voc, co2, humidity,pressure,temp. Made by Airthings. In Canada basement are very popular since we need to dig very deep under the frost line for the concrete forms, so adding a basement is a no brainer and a cheap way to get more space. But radon gas is an issue that nobody really look into. Since my master bedroom and desk for remote work are in basement, I wanted to be sure the levels are in the specs. Old way to test radon take forever with multiple samples to send by mail $$, tests needs to be done in 4 seasons to be more accurate... that device from Airthings pay for itself quickly.
I remember many years ago (maybe 2001 or 2002) yelling at some employees I was supervising. They were late, crazy crap was happening, I was getting it from my superior and it just rolled downhill. Really unprofessional on my part, but that was part of the work conditions/culture there that was set from the top down and it became a learned habit. Before the end of that shift I went to them and apologized for my behavior because it was 110% wrong. I ended up moving on from that place (best decision I ever made, it was a stupid, stupid job with more stress than it should have had for what it was) and made it a point *N_E_V_E_R* to yell at employees under me ever again. I'll talk to them, I'll explain in no uncertain terms something is unacceptable, and I'll even give the quiet angry 'stop f@@king around' treatment to people, but never yell.
You had a terrible flooring company if their only advice or option was to sand the whole floor. If it ever happens again you can cut individual boards out and replace them and spot sand and then coat the raw wood only twice, sanding just the boards that were raw, then scuff the whole floor and recoat the entire floor and it disappears.
I'm honestly trying to imagine any damage to a wood floor that would cost thousands of dollars to put right. I really need to see a picture, because at the moment, I'm imagining a hole through the floor, the ceiling below and an OLED TV. As Weston Ney below in the comments says, a good joiner would put it right.
He's very wealthy now and probably spent stupid money on a hardwood floor with a ton of joinery made of alternating expensive hard woods - total luxury item beyond any reasonable cost. For a deep gash he'll have to have the entire floor sanded down, re-stained, sealed and varnished before polishing it back up. Depending on the depth of the damage it could be a huge drop in floor height and may require underfloor reinforcing and skirting boards to be refitted/remade which then adds wall repainting and finishing costs etc. This is why fancy old manor houses are totally unrepairable - fixing one expensive thing means that countless other expensive things have also to be fixed.
First he isn't referencing an exact price for his viewers so he is probably speaking Canadian dollars Wich is less impressive than thousands USD. Then they didn't only damage the floor they damage the railing his stairs some camera equipment. And the floor if it's real tick hard wood floors (most likely his since he his rich) probably cost in the thousands to replace if he can't repair and like he said the groove is to depth for that.
@@_s_9920 Any hardwood floor would cost thousands to repair when you account for the fact that, like he said in the video, the walls would also have to be painted, etc. Hardwood isn't cheap. Labour isn't cheap. Painters aren't cheap.
You can see everything they did on the channel “Channel super fun” or something like that. Just look up “Dennis ruins Linus’s floor” and you should find it, I did. The video is called like staying in our bosses house for 24 hours or something like thag
The fix is really simple and certainly not 1000s of dollars. You can replace the board near the leg of the bed with an untouched board under the bed very quickly and easily.
I'm sure this has been mentioned somewhere in the comments, but just in case... The way you fix something like that is not to sand but to excise the area and patch it with as close a match as you can. (from a furniture maker)
Yeah, yelling/screaming at someone isn’t healthy. Although yelling/screaming while ranting with someone listening (but not the focus of the anger) can really help
@@malfaroangel3896 having been both the subject of being screamed at, as well as being in a room while someone scream-vents about something, I can confidently say that listening to someone scream-vent is not worse than having someone upset and screaming at you.
@ 6:30 went to a job interview where they told me the owners of the company would often act like asses and yell at me for "reasons". I walked away. Now working in a business with my family, individual/s in my family will often respond to "unfortunate" situations by finger pointing and blame gaming, and I have to stop them and refocus on fixing the problem, and prevent it from recurring. Management and leadership plays a huge role in these sort of environments. Everyone can break at some point, just be careful where you are aiming when you do.
As a leader, yelling is just immature and weird. However, sometimes emotions get the best of even leaders. And we need to learn how to handle things in business. This was good.
@@Dr.HooWho it's weird because it almost never useful, and people tend to yell over all sorts of mundane crap. it's very rare that someone yelling has a valid purpose for it, more often it's just so they feel better (at the expense of everyone else)
Yelling all the time is immature. Yelling for only the rarest of moments isn't. It is a sign that what is being done goes beyond the normal scolding punishments. Which is why Yelling all the time at a child soon loses it's meaning. Whereas if you have a stern calm mother who never raised her voice at you suddenly yell at you angrily, it means you truly messed up.
@@Ravenbones you and the other commenter are stripping out the primary context of my statement. “As a leader”, (in the context of this video) yelling at people is a waste of time and is immature.
@@Ravenbones yelling is useless as a punishment. It serves to scare children and make the person yelling feel better, that's all. The only benefit it serves really is helping communicate in critical times when there is background noise and you may not be heard.
That's why my dad didn't bother getting good furniture/ fully renovate the interior including floors till after the kids left. Don't have expensive stuff when you have kids or a Dennis.
@@kiyu3229 The date this was posted was when one of his employees made a mistake in downloading a PDF file from an email which looked like it was a future sponsor. The PDF resulted in a mass hack of the LTT group with Techquickie, LinusTechTips and another one of their channels (I forgot it's name) being hacked
I used to work as an IT Manager for an Automotive giant and we had just finished mounting all the very expensive hardware in our server safes(production servers, storages, core switches, etc). At one point I had to leave the server room for some emergency. At one point my phone started ringing and people were complaining that nothing works anymore. When I got to the server room, I found out that one of my subordinates decided to close the server safe doors without powering on the AC units. The result was that the heat reached the point where it triggered the overtemp protection and shut down the power to all the equipment inside the server safes. Unfortunately, I remember that a few ssd's broke(very expensive, enterprise grade, ssd's...) Luckily not too many were broken and we managed to repair the raid. That was the time I truly felt what rage is.
one thing i will note on this is yelling in general is a tool if you use it to often people will get used to it it will "Wear out" and loose all sense of severity the less you use it the more effective it will be when you do because such an event will be taken much more seriously in a "oh my god he never yells something must really be up i better pay close attention" and this is true in any relationship weather its work or not
Extra hardwood planks. Cut around scratched planks. Lift out. Glue or nail new boards in, setting nails below finished surface and touch up holes. Not sure why this required sanding everything down??
I wish someone would make a type of flooring that's modular AFTER you install it, where you can just pick the bad piece straight up and swap it will a new one. No idea how it would work, but yeah. You actually can "patch" hardwood/vinyl floor this way but cutting the interlocking pieces of the bad piece and replacement and just drop it in. And since the other pieces are locked together it won't move.
Yeah, that would be nice. But what would happen is you'd have that floor for 20 years, gash one piece, then go to buy a replacement only to see that it was discontinued 4 years ago and is out of stock everywhere
Context: Channel Super Fun went to his house without him knowing, as a prank. Linus's wife gave them permission to paint a wall, but they damaged the floor by dragging a bed across the room. Linus didn't ask them to do anything, he didn't even know they were there, nor did he greenlight such a video or anything.
Uh I didn't know. Not even following Linus. This comment should be much higher for people to see. I was under the assumption that it was Lin who asked them to do it SMH.
Thanks I was totally lost on this one.
why colton is there and only denis was fired ?
@@lbpdluis racism I think
@@lbpdluisDenis wasn’t fired
The only time I've screamed at someone at work was in the military when they backed a truck over my foot. I feel like that was justified, to be fair.
I think that if you had somehow managed to not scream, you would have entered the Avatar state
id say theres not much else TO do with a truck on your foot
Did it help with the pain at all?
I think having a few tones of weight on your foot is a pretty good reason to scream
why'd you put your foot where the truck was backing up?
Linus is right, yelling is not constructive. It's childish and it just makes your employees/coworkers hate you. That said, a genuine apology for a mistake is a good idea in general.
You are right, but then again, can you really blame him if he yelled at him?
@@ShihammeDarc no, I wouldn't blame him, but it would be generally pointless, or destructive to their relationshipm
@@ShihammeDarc Nah, I would understand, but it's not constructive.
Yea. I wont strike anyone that does it like once or twice on very rare occasions, especially when theres somehting really really stupid happening or its really really stressful.
Sometimes yelling is required as it can get a strong point across, but usuallu it is not useful or contrsuctive. But then again my line of work is a bit different than most peoples
I worked for a professional moving company and people would complain about how much we cost but we also were insured and took pride in what we did to make sure we don't damage your home.
congrats on taking pride in the bare minimum
@@JF-xj3cu whats ur problem?
@@JF-xj3cusadly isnt the bare minimum
@@JF-xj3cucan't imagine having a grudge
@@JF-xj3cuwhat’s wrong with taking pride in one’s own work?
The moral of the story is, don't use a bunch of nerds to do manual labor. You wouldn't hire a roofer to build your new PC.
Moral of the story is that bed frames with sharp pointy legs is the dumbest invention in the world.
The moral of the story is to plan for every inevitable problems, and then a backup plan for those problems to occur anyways.
This was for a channel super fun video linus was unaware of, not the moving.
This is about common sense. You don't need skilled labor to move a bed.
You wouldn't download a car
When the day comes that LMG has to fire a core employee, no one's gonna believe them
What about Colton ?
@@sohampramanik5790 who? wasnt he fired back at the langley house?
@@TempNameWhatever yeah it's been a paid actor ever since
They should do that as a bit, not the firing someone part but just hire an actor and substitute them in for a regular cast member for a couple of shoots and say nothing about it.
Ivan?
Pro CEO tip, don't try to save money by using "already paid for" employees to do something completely outside of their job duties, skill range, and /or capabilities. Just because you believe something, does not make it true. Not everybody knows their limits. Can-do attitudes are good, but can also lead to trouble.
This is coming from personal experience. :p
Pretty much why I quit my job. This one guy put a job offer for a video editor, just a video editor, and I applied for it. Went their started working, and the next thing I know, the dude wants me to do illustrations, animations and photoshops for him. Like dude, I don't know how to do that. I mean that wasn't the worse part, the worse part was I was being paid below minimum wage, like half of minimum wage, and he also wanted professional level results. Not to mention he was toxic as fuck. So, it was an easy decision for me to quit.
True
This comment needs to be much higher on the list. Linus' size is getting to his head and it shows more and more in his videos. He doesn't seem like such a nice loveable guy now. Dude seems like most people are tiptoing around him now as boss. Respect is OK but seems like he's kind of throwing his weight around on a warpath with all this "argumentative" type videos
Agreed. If you're forcing your IT company employees to move your damn furniture then you get what you deserve. Be a better boss and a responsible person. Hire movers to move furniture, or accept the risks of having non-professionals do it. Linus is at fault here, not Dennis.
@@MAYHEMSCO I’ve been thinking the same thing tbh. Like Linus seems a lot more like a Karen now days than before. Like he just gives off a better than you, I get my way because I’m me vibes.
I’m a pest control supervisor and the only time I’ve ever yelled at an employee was when the mistakes of a few techs led to a 3 year old getting her hand caught on a rat snap trap on your birthday. I didn’t know who put the trap that got the girl but one tech supposedly removed all the traps and he left behind over 30. The next day I met up with the tech in a parking lot and preceded to yell at him for about 15 minutes. Every time he tried to make an excuse it only made me angrier. I was out of line and I should’ve had a colleague talk to the tech because I was pretty enraged by the situation. He ended up putting in his 2 weeks notice the next week.
Context: his stff basically broke into his home, setting up a bed in his attic and damaging a support beam, he had no idea and he didn't green light it. imagine your co-worker/classmate/freind breaking into your home with your kids.
@@somethingrio They didn't break into his home - they had permission from his wife to be there.
Not out of line at all when a kid is involved that's just incompetence on his part.
@@corail53 even more betrayal for the fire
@@capricorncharger518 that's neither here nor there. He stated that broke in which is a lie so he should apologize for lying.
Felt caps on the furniture...... Welcome to wood floors. That said, I'd be upset too, dragging that should have been obviously bad.
That's what happens when you're remodeling, furnishing, and outfitting a giant house. It cost me the same amount as the purchase price of my house to do all that stuff, and it took a long time. Putting felt pads on us something that will get done. It's not like the average person moving into a new 1500 sqft house and buying a few pieces of furniture from IKEA. Outfitting houses this size takes about a dozen people months to complete, and hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars just to outfit and furnish, not including the remodel. It's a lot of work and a lot of stuff to do that most people can't imagine. I had to hire a person to fill time deal with JUST furniture. Not ANY of the other stuff to outfit the house like white goods, linens, electronics, art, motors, safes, etc.
Before moving something heavy, it seems obvious to assess any possible damage to floors/walls. It wouldn't take much effort to put something underneath to act as skids, carpet offcut, corrugated cardboard from boxes works well... I'm not in any way a professional mover, but I do have common sense, and had to be responsible for moving plenty of heavy items on my own over the years...
Or making the next kid would have done it.
Wooden floors are a nightmare
@@_Amilio_ The new partial board pressed flooring is the worst! Most will puff and flake the instant it gets wet it’s crazy. A floor is going to be walked on, dropped on, spilt on, it’s going to be used. Don’t use that crap. I replaced my parents flooring with vinyl that imitated wood and was next to indestructible. If you have the money, use real solid wood or the cheaper vinyl, not beaver 🦫 💩. Rant over… lol
You need to have furniture sliders. there's no way you weren't gonna gash the floor sooner or later without pads.
yep, if it doesn't have wheels and it's not on carpet it needs some sort of padding if you aren't planning on you or anyone else moving it without having to lift it. Especially on hard wood or vinyl/laminate flooring and especially if it's something heavy like a bed + headboard
You think he's really that good in bed to move it around that much?
No, not if you don't intend to move the furniture.
@@RealTaIk Well Yvonne wanted the wall painted so i say its on her ;) ;)
@@RealTaIk that's wrong. heavy things can put holes in the floor over time, especially something like a bed where you're getting in and out of it a lot, and pads spread that out.
I had a bed that I never moved, and because it was so heavy, it put gashes in the floor. after I put on felt pads it never did it again.
Now we know the reason behind Linus's obsession for data backup!
Plus the almost-failure of Whonnock server back in the day
@@vincentguttmann2231 multiple failures, literally setting a server on fire (I can't remember how bu IIRC it happened at least twice)
@@ojcubz Pretty sure one of those times was a prank.
@@ojcubz one is April Fools, but the other is their UPS blowing up because of improper installation.
I am obsessed with it too.
I was a flooring contractor before I got into IT. Yes, it is a real pain in the ass to fix a scratched floor. Dye lots…Furniture… Matching… but it is such a common thing. I’m sure they felt bad enough as it is. Now that I’m older, I realize that even though these things seem like a big deal, they aren’t in the grand scheme of things.
By your logic, people dies and it's not a big deal in the grand scheme of things. Two people can look at the same thing and vomit 2 different thoughts. This is the same.
@@Sergmanny46 wow your life is as precious as a wooden floor. mate?
@@thefalconflame Life is overrated.
@@Sergmanny46that's totally not what they're saying. Really missing the point of their comment.
These things definitely aren't a big deal at all.
Linus, I am a contractor. Look up a local furniture repair guy. A good company can fix it to the point you can't see. a lot cheaper than replacement, sanding and refinishing the entire floor. These guys ultimately turn out to be artist to make it look like the real wood with the same finish.
Epic
Definitely time for a cut out and patch.
Agreed. I'm an apprentice cabinet maker and patching wood is among the easiest things to do. Match the grain in the existing plank and it will be invisible to the naked eye (except if you specifically go looking for it or ask the contractor to point out the seam line, as they're the only ones who know exactly where it is and can spot it immediately).
I'm a sand and finish wood floor contractor. Unless its completely fucked a hot melt wax kit could be used for a repair
I wonder if he'd want that type of fix though
A skilled flooring installer can change a board in an installed floor. the fix is not sanding it down with a gouge this deep.
They fashioned the entire room's floor from a single board.
It depends if it's prefab or not
@@charlesgrove6905 it's unrealistic that it's one board. No tree is that wide . My house has wooden floors and you replace the peace of wood if its damaged
Im a hardwood floor installer. I would do it if i wasn't in toronto. Get new contractors actual hardwood floorers. Not like an all around handy man. Take a skill saw set it to 3/4 depth if ur hardwood is 3/4. cut out damaged floor. New board brake off bottom part of the groove. Cut it to 100% correct length... And glue it down with pl premium in and weight it down for 24 hours literally its a 10 minute job... Make sure u have plenty of extra floor for future damage.
Chanches of getting the same wood few years after is very slim.
Ps there will be dust lots of saw dust.
Yeah his statement there doesn't make sense. It's new construction, phone the installer and get them to swap out the panel. There is 100% offcut available or replacement panels on the market.
If this was somehow a "custom" floor with irreplaceable panels, there's no way he should have put furniture on it without sliders or protective pads.
It's ok...the floor is covered under the "trust me bro" warranty lol
absolute gold
hahahaha well said !
$5,000,000 worth of those $250 backpacks he's already sold. He's not crying about his floor.
@Boa-Noah The warranty doesn't have to say what they cover for them to cover it. That's just the minimum they want LMG to be legally accountable for. Like 99% of all other sellers of anything ever lol. Warranties are pointless, like he said numerous times.
@Boa-Noah You must have a hard time buying anything, considering its fiscal suicide for a business to do a full life time warranty.
He doesnt get angry and yell, he goes "passionately quiet" and tells them to stop tattle taling and calm their tits
"Linus is a great boss" - says Linus
Calm bosses are the worst because they're always two-faced snakes.
@@NJ-wb1czI would actually like to know where you find Linus saying that, he'll say he thinks he's a pretty good boss but saying he thinks he is and he is a good boss or two very different sentences despite they're only being one word difference
@@the_undead Do you actually expect a random person to spend potentially hours personally on you scouring videos to defend a year old comment?...
I've moved on from this narcissist a long time ago and don't plan on watching him ever again. I haven't found any downsides yet, only positives
@@NJ-wb1cz If you've moved on to him, why the hell are you responding to a comment under one of his videos? That sounds like the exact opposite of moving on
Imagine having wood floors and any furniture at all not having felt pads on the feet.
My aunt ended up with a diamond mine in Ontario Canada, her mansion is all wood, 60-80s.
Never heard of pads in my life.
Grandparents farm houses hand made floors, no pads.
I really don't think it's the norm, it should be though don't get me wrong I agree with you absolutely.
THIS.
When I was a kid, I explicitly remember my parents putting felt pads on the feet of chairs and tables in our living room, and even after they would tell us "please, even with these pads, try not to tilt stuff onto the floor, it's sensitive".
Between "felt pads between items and hardwood floor" and "never let water/liquids soak into the hardwood floor", it was always beaten into us.
yea this is the thing that gets me the most lmao.
Imagine being called Adam
@@FeedMeSalt You don't need felt pads with properly made furniture. But finding properly made furniture that isn't prohibitively expensive because it is hand made bay an actual artisan in your country is... hard. Unless you like antiqueing.
Even Metal isn't all that bad on wood if the surface is properly smooth, has no sharp corners or burrs and so forth. But just about all furniture that is mass produced is just garbage.
Let's be real: either Denis is a really good actor and only pretends to be clumsy and clueless all the time, or he has some really good blackmail on Linus. 😄
Or he's an otherwise perfectly fine employee with the occasional hiccup on his record
I think he promotes LTT a lot in china.
@@terriplays1726 He's not chinese tho
@@DarcMagikian but he speaks Chinese, I think for a while he was doing a lot of the work to get LTT videos onto some Chinese video streaming site
he is Yin Yang ;))
to be fair, if your bed even MIGHT have a chance of scratching a very expensive floor, you should have some sort of pads on the bottom to prevent that type of accident from occurring
Wouldnt have saved it from Dennis. alos dont scratch heavy beds over the floor! To be fair...
Yeah, I put pads on all furniture feet that are on wooden floors for this exact reason. Eventually, somebody is going to even slightly push some furniture to reach something, clean, ect. and slowly scratch the floor like that.
Yeah but that would imply something was a rich person's fault. We all know all problems are the fault of the relatively poorer people who he orders around
he should. of just hired movers
@@olddadagamer should have*
And thats not at all whats going on...
4:30 “we were being utterly careless with our data”
Foreshadowing
Surely Linus didn't employ these guys on their "moving the boss's furniture" skills, so he can't really complain too much.
My exact thoughts
100% agree
@@_pitaph_6392 I wouldn't trust most of those guys to move furniture. Most of those guys can barely lift themselves up.
If he didn't want to risk damage to his home he shouldn't use his home for work projects. Even pros who work in peoples homes are insured for that kind of thing because it does happen even when its your regular job.
@@davidmcguire6043 Indeed
Shouldn't need to sand down the whole floor for damage on a new install. That's a bit over reacting. Just replace the damaged board. And then put felt pads on your furniture like the flooring company probably recommended
And do it now, because the light probably hasn't changed the color of the wood yet. The contractor might even have left behind a few spare boards.
It can't be replaced. The laminate flooring is setup in a way that, from my understanding, you can't replace an individual board since it is interlocked within the other neighboor boards. That's why you probably will have to replace the entire floor, and so forth
It depends on the floor. For hardwood floors, they're interlocked, nailed and glued down. Also they often aren't all the same size.
Things like laminate or vinyl plank are easier to cut one out and glue a new one in, but hardwood isn't designed to be able to pull one out. Especially if it has a top finish
@@bernardobento5943 @Bernardo Bento you can. You'd pull up the boards from the wall over to the damage, replace the damaged board, then lay them back down. Annoying but doable. Or you can cut the tounge off and replace one board and glue it to the adjacent boards. I've installed floors before and it's not the end of the world. At most you pull up half a room and then put most of those boards back down
@Jamie Vatarga yeah if he has multi size boards, that would make it harder, but there are other boards the same size in the kit. There are only a certain number of different sizes. A floor installer would be able to replace it without remodeling the whole room like he said. If it's not a floating floor, it's even easier. Just cut the tounge off and glue a new one in. Floating floors can't be glued and you'd likely need to pull up several rows to get to it and then put them back down
linus: drops and breaks GPU's (is a tech guy)
linus employee: drops a bed (aren't a moving crew)
Lol using employees for his personal life
@@TheZachary86they most likely get paid for doing it lol, and they all make good money from him too so why complain ?
@@TheZachary86 Lol trusting people you actually know and trust instead of strangers who are more likely to be fraudsters. How dumb(!).
Not like we've wasted half our money (and yes only half thank frick, we didn't pay them the full amount) on people doing disability accessibility work (so not just something for shiggles, SOMETHING TO ACCOMMODATE LIFELONG DISABILITY and we're nowhere near even putting a stair lift in) on a house who just left us with no roof and took 3 months to just.... take the roof off and abandon the project.
So yeah, I'd rather use employees/friends who have an idea what they're doing (or at least can look it up???) to do stuff like that.
Thank frick it was over the summer so there was barely any rain too... Now we at least have it covered since we're in September ALL the rain has come in as usual.
@@Roadent1241
If you pay more rather than using your employees or friends, then you’d hire PROFESSIONALS and less fraudsters. Here’s a tip, don’t be cheap. Linus was being cheap and blamed his own employee/friends for the mishap. Thats the mark of a bad boss/friend. I’m not surprised you come to defend Linus considering you like the same shitty practices
@@dxioa
Then Linus shouldn’t be complaining because they ruined his flooring. He got what he paid for. Maybe if he paid more, he would get professionals
My previous manager just yelled at us when we did anything wrong in his eyes when he first started. Didn't matter if we didn't know it was anything wrong. If he found it to be a problem, whether it was or not, we got yelled at. My boss promoted this guy and then was out of the office a whole lot so he never saw it and when I brought it up he didn't feel it was severe. The severity got less, but it never stopped. Then he just up and quit in November. It was one of the happiest days I've had at this job in awhile. After that is when my boss started to wake up to what was going on and the stupid changes the manager made.
I had a boss that never yelled or raised her voice. She just stopped talking and answering my questions if I did something wrong, so I had to wonder how I screwed things up for a full day until I finally would get an explanation from her. When someone yells, you can always yell back, so though I don't appreciate it, I don't understand why people are so taken aback by it. In her case she just treated me like I stole her husband. I'd rather be yelled at.
I've seen worse damage repaired by professionals to the point where you basically can't see it. Certainly not worth sanding the floor away.
right? I've never seen non-repairable damage.. it's wood right? pretty much anything can be fixed by a professional.
What video was it
That is what I thought as well..
@@kyorising Yup you're correct. Filler, steamer, glue and wood chips/dust. It's an easy fix. Not $1000 and $1000 of dollars.
Did he say it was recently renovated? Was this floor of his older than 50 years or was it fresh board. Wonder if he had any spare leftover cuts? Many installers will offer the homeowner some spare boards to keep after a new install for this exact reason.
If you turn your house into a production set, things happen, expect it.
He didn’t turn it into a production set, they did. If he knew about the video it wouldn’t have worked
@@dbagdi1998 send the video
@@dbagdi1998 Obviously someone higher up had to greenlight the video in the first place.
Expect to get thousands of dollars in damage yes. That seems reasonable.
@@dbagdi1998 Are you under the impression that is the only filming they do there?
Because they do a lot at his home.
He made his home into a production set so he can make more money.
This is on the fault of the person who needs to make content with so many aspects of their life.
Yeah Dennis is kinda dumb sometimes but not all the blame should fall on him, Yvonne was the one who gave him the task so the blame is partially on her. Also who doesn’t put felt pads on their furniture lol that’s on Linus & Yvonne.
Also as a former carpenter, those gashes can be repaired by a highly skilled carpenter, Linus just needs to find a good one that can fill and match the grain perfectly. Totally doable as long as the carpenter is skilled enough.
This is true - but also not cheap. And it depends on what the flooring material is.
@@jamievarni1530 it's ridiculous enough for guitars.. perfection would cost thousands.
Rough.
What does a carpenter need? A phd in carpentry for that task?
@@kikayei yes! 10's of years of experience to get to skill level, so maybe more then a phd.
@@coel85 people always think trade skills are low intelligence brawn over brains work. Glad someone else knows how long it takes to perfect a craft.
Colton yeeting Dennis under the bus to save himself is amazing
Colton has been fired too many times. It's Dennis' turn
I mean...it's clearly Dennis' fault
420 nice
I immediately thought of how pissed linus would be from the damage.
Tbh it was pretty funny tho
Which video is it?
Could you share which video please?
@@glennarens81 it's this video ua-cam.com/video/kyCJ17oq6kI/v-deo.html
@@glennarens81 watch the newest channel super fun video
@@delphipascal they tried to live in Linus house again and their other channel
🧦
Fax
Tax
We all know that Dennis is always going to be up there
If #warrantygate is anything to go by...
💯
I'm a special education teacher, and I've been literally screamed at by an administrator. This was a principal who would go out of her way to not only bully staff and students, but pit staff and students against each other. At one point I was attacked and seriously injured by a student, and left with four hernias, the surgery for which left me disabled with permanent nerve damage. Even though there were multiple witnesses to the attack she took it upon herself to scream (literally scream) at me when I came back to work after my "recovery" from the surgery that she thought I was faking it. I had just gotten the many staples removed from my abdomen, and was still wearing a compression wrap that was clearly visible under my shirt, and *very* nearly pulled up my shirt to show her how real it was. Thankfully, she was replaced at the end of that year.
So, yeah, I wholeheartedly agree with you. It's *not* helpful.
Also, I'm a firm believer in the adage that says employees don't quit their jobs, they quit their bosses. The next principal we got wasn't any better, and I left teaching at the end of the next year, back in '19. I did a stint as a Headstart administrator, but my heart was still in the classroom, and I came back to teaching this school year, at a school with *much* better administration.
Someone having the audacity to yell at a person INJURED in an ATTACK is simply mentally unstable... maybe they need to join the classes instead of being a higher up staff member... jokes aside someone like that really shouldn't be in that job, or workforce in general.....
How that administrator didn't end up losing their job, fined or in jail I'll never understand. World is really unfair.
My father had a boss who would fire and rehire him, repeatedly. My father got a group of investors together to buy the company, a good deal (for his boss to retire). Just before signing, someone showed the boss the flow chart, which I created, which had my dad in charge. He ripped up the agreement and fired my father, again. The last time, my father quit. Company later dissolved. Sad because the company would have done alright, with the right person at the helm. Years later I went onto university, parents ok; all's well that ends well (or ok enough).
@@OrganicTrash It's frighteningly often tolerated that teachers are attacked and injured by pupils. School management just tends to get used to it and see it as a normal part of the jobs of their subordinates.
To be fair thousands and dollars is a fair thing to be mad about.
i'm positive that the video pulled in a lot more than the damages cost...
@@junedolim you overestimate how much ad sense a smaller channel like super fun makes
@@venkaramon Him turning his house renovation into a video series means it's a business expense. Not familiar with canadian tax code, but I'd be willing to bet there's additional tax benefits on his personal taxes for performing some of these upgrades. Linus isn't stupid, it's 100% a net gain.
@@venkaramon with half a million views, my quick google suggests it's pulled in ~$10k. i think they're fine.
Boo frickin hoo. How meaningful is that compared to his net worth? How would you feel if your employee caused you $50 in damages but in order to make you hundreds of dollars in return?
I don't know you should fire Colton
Again?
this is gonna be top comment no doubt
How many times has Colton been fired?
@@pinking5555 More than he's been hired
@@pinking5555 yes
My mum used to french polish old furniture and then sell it on. You'd be surprised how much damage you can fix without taking off huge layers if you get in someone who really knows what they're doing.
I work at a company thats decent but it has meetings where directors would yell at each other and its just really sad to watch and I immediately feel like I've just lost 2 hours of my life attending said meeting.
Context: his stff basically broke into his home, setting up a bed in his attic and damaging a support beam, he had no idea and he didn't green light it. imagine your co-worker/classmate/freind breaking into your home with your kids.
I used to be a appliance delivery man and if I thought for one Minute that the damage I could cause moving something would out weigh the profit I would tell the home owner I couldn't move it any further without them signing a release from damage otherwise they'd have to move it themselves. Cause some people will buy things knowing that you couldn't move it without damage just so they could sue and get money or free repairs on things that were already damaged. It's always better to refuse the move than to risk doing damage
Haha you refuse and most of the time you get sued for breach of contract. You’d refund them any money the delivery cost and some. Good luck with that incompetent mindset.
@@ChahtaAnumpa Most contracts of this kind is at will, meaning either party can terminate the contract, especially prior to providing the service. Most you would get is a refund.
@@ChahtaAnumpa My thought? What's in a name...
@@ChahtaAnumpa The only one needing luck with his mindset is... well you.
@@ChahtaAnumpaTell me you don’t know about Contract Law, without telling me you don’t know about Contract Law.
The idea that you’d say this without finding *WHERE* it happened, and asking for a copy of the Contract, says everything anyone needs to know about your comment. You are at least two degrees off knowing if your assertion is correct.
Follow up video: Dennis and Colton repair the damage 😆
I don't think linus is going to let them near that floor again :D
Ramen noodle and superglue repair!
Are you insane?
Colton probably knows he's not got the skills and would say no chance. Dennis however would be " Yeah, we can make Linus happy!" Before making the damage even larger.
there is no way they wouldn't make it worse
Only if you want them to damage more than they fix.
if Colton has been fired before, he can't be fired again!
Colton can. He still has a couple lives left
@@toxiclovept Naw bro, double jeopardy.
Angriest he has ever been at an employee until today.
It's always sales or HR that get hacked.
fr LMFAO
What happened 'today',, 3 weeks ago?
@@a.nobodys.nobody His UA-cam got hacked.
@@a.nobodys.nobody One of his employees made a mistake in downloading a PDF file from an email which looked like it was a future sponsor. The PDF resulted in a mass hack of the LTT group with Techquickie, LinusTechTips and another one of their channels (I forgot it's name) being hacked
POSSIBLE EASY(ish) REPAIR: Without having seen the actual damage and inferring the floor is made of strips of wood (typical long piece pattern), my first thought would be to have a good trim carpenter (or you if you have good woodworking skills) carefully cut out a layer of the damaged flooring using a router with appropriate bit & straight edges/jigs, trimming the edges with chisels and replace it with a layer of good wood from flooring scraps or extra pieces. If the floor is 3/4" thick tongue-and groove wood, I'd remove probably 3/8" to (a) avoid the edge nails typically used in installation, (b) retain 2/3 of the tongue-and groove configuration on the edges, and (c) give a thick-enough repair piece that will retain dimensions & not warp/twist. Fit up the replacement piece by resawing the spare flooring piece(s) on a bandsaw or rip on a tablesaw to an approximate thickness, then plane it to the exact thickness you need fit up flush & level with the rest of the floor. Finally, fit the replacement pieces in the routed-out sections. If the flooring is prefinished, that's all the better! Getting to this point would take about 2 hours depending on the extent of damage. Glue the replacement pieces in place with something like Titebond III (waterproof & longer working time), place weight on top to keep it all flat, & allow to dry overnight. If prefinished - you're done. If not, then stain & finish like the rest of the floor. Hope this helps!
For hardwood flooring, you can replace individual boards. Cut out the old one, put a new one in. For tongue-and-groove, you cut the groove so you can set it on top. This is common work.
You can jig out the damaged pieces if it is solid wood flooring
If it is engineered wood (fancy plywood) you will have to lift a good chunk of the floor to get the damaged pieces out then re-lay the flooring. Depending on where in the room the damage occurred that could be a LOT of work. Engineered wood is great, but it is a pain in the ass to repair.
And you know it's engineered flooring in his house he's got heated floors lol
I have no idea if this is even remotely correct or appropriate for the situation, but this comment deserves to be pinned at least for the effort. Like this comment so someone can see it and pin it.
Yeah I think it's probably more fixable than he thinks. I would probably want to fix it if I were him, that would drive me nuts. DO YOU EVEN RESPECT WOOD, DENNIS?!
LINUS PLEASE READ: I have managed to make big improvements to wood floor damage like this by using a very hot clothes iron through a wet towel over the mark. The damage in the CSF video seems to be mostly COMPRESSION damage rather than actual torn out wood fiber. The idea is that you let a bit of hot water/steam soak into the wood grain which causes it to swell up and returns toward its original state (then stays there when dry). I am not saying this will make the marks invisible... but I had a similar mark from moving a bed on my (softwood) floor and hot iron through a wet towel took it from 'oh fuck that looks awful' to 'ok, it's an obvious mark but it's not THAT bad anymore'
Haven't tried it myself on a floor, but second this. Might work, at least somewhat
I can back that up.... I've done it several times on remodel jobs.... soak dent, damp papertowel over it, and a normal iron. it will resurface enough to fool most..... Very good advise.
Sound science to this one.
Very interesting. Will note this down for the new house, thank you!
That’s called swelling the wood I’m a carpenter and for deep gouges it doesn’t work if the wood it’s dimpled then you have a chance, gouges mean wood was removed and you’re only going to swell the remaining wood still leaving a void where material was removed.
What was Colton even doing there? Hasn’t he been fired many times? I think that’s trespassing!
Hes Barney from the Simpson's when Moe throws him out of the bar
it's a running joke to fire colton
I think he just got fired again...
Managers think they have the privilege of losing their minds in fits of anger, when any frontline employee would be canned for the same emotional outburst. Those in a position of authority should hold themselves to a higher standard than base employees, especially in the maniac department. This applies from CEO to shift manager.
When they uploaded that video of whonnock server crapping out and all that data was on the line; that suspense felt real and not played up for camera. So hearing that the most infuriating moment due to losing an SD card as a result of carelessness is understandable.
"NONE of it."
I get Linus being angry at the floor, but at some level he would have had to approve them being in his house at some point. Yvonne clearly approved it if nothing else, and would have approved the challenges. At that point you have to stop and think to yourself if letting employees run around in your brand new, completely renovated house is a good idea. When you approve that kind of prank content, you wave all your rights at being angry at any damage people cause to your beautiful new house. In the old house, fair, I get it. But the new one? Hell no, that one is entirely on Linus and Yvonne for allowing it in the first place.
Also, speaking of which. The various camera angles means that either the entire thing was fake and scripted to begin with, or Linus gave away a massive portion of the security camera positions in his house. One is just bad faith, the other is just plain stupid.
Link to the video referenced?
@@FlyingAce1016 those are his friends bruh
@@FlyingAce1016 having friends over to help you with stuff and expecting them to not destroy your floor is kinda the bare minimum
@@FlyingAce1016 I don't really get either why are you "calling this out", If you bought yourself a fancy new phone and gave it to a friend to inspect it and he would immediately drop it and smash the screen. Of course you'd be pissed and angry. That's completely normal.
If he would have actually fired them or taken the cost repairs out of their salary then the point would have been fair. He could've hired a professional sure, but even they make mistakes, and not every single detail gets put into those videos, things are not as black and white people make it seem.
@@FlyingAce1016 What are you talking about? They weren’t moving furniture, they were shooting a video about sneaking into Linus’s house without him knowing as a prank. They wanted to move his furniture to mess with him, but accidentally damaged the floor. The original comment you responded to even mentioned the word “prank”.
I guess this means that next week, LInus will be shilling for a floor company and demonstrating how they install floor.... in his home.
That *would* be the smart way to do it.
That way he can write off some of the cost as a business expense.
new satisfying video or something lol
Nothing wrong with that win win
@@The_Keeper Plus earn more money because it's a vid that will get ads for almost forever instead of something that'd be sold with a limited number or something lol.
they literally have that joke in the video description btw.
My first job out of college was for a small family run company. There were 7 of us, 5 were family. Family was: Mom & Dad - owners, two sisters Vice Presidents, and the husband of one of the sisters was my manager.
I was there for maybe 2 weeks and my manager got called in to the owners office (Dad who is his father in law). I listened as I heard the owner/dad screaming and berating him for a good 30 mins. He finally comes back into our area and was wiping tears out of his eyes.
I said to him "What the fuck was that man? I'll tell you right now that I will never tolerate anyone yelling at me like that. I don't even let my own father talk/yell at me like that". Word must have spread because they never did no matter how bad I messed something up, but they did yell at each other and any other worker that worked there the many years I was there. They told one young lady they hired to work the front desk on her first day"You are not special. A monkey could do your job". She went to lunch and just didn't return.
I'm so glad I don't work there anymore. Very toxic place.
i heard of a similar situation at my previous full time job regarding an business partnership - where the 3pl (company at the time ) was so hard to work with. they would send us a report every week for restocks and when we did not get to them on time he would call to complain and act like he was the best 3pl company ever and that we would lose sales etc. however whenever he was talking to my boss he was like an angel. our boss knew clearly about his two-faced behaviour. when the guy that was dealing w them left, the new person took over and they never gave her any respect. after about 6 months during the first covid lockdown, he called and complained to her about something and in the end made her cry. after that she convinced by boss to ditch them as a shipping partner and we did the dispatching ourselves and saved about 30k a year. at the time as well once a month our other manager would go visit them to check on the operations and he would also tell me that they were a family fun business and that the dad - their ceo was a madman basically just yelling at every one and running the place like a tyrant. becos of the dads toxic behaviour it also has been copied into his wife and his daughter. its scary knowing how some families think they can just run everything they way they want to and use people that way....
I have the same personality. My biggest issues I have with my team is not when they fail, it's when they fail unnecessarily. I don't yell at people. In fact, when I get quiet, that's when you can tell I'm upset. But when something truly upsets me deeply, I can definitely get worked up and my team has learned that usually I just need to vent and just let me.
I get angrier when people make bad excuses about their mistake. If you just own up and say you will do better is better than making up excuses
nice larp lmao
@@TheDeadlyTikka this 100 percent just own your mistakes and if you mess up don't continue to try and cover it up let someone know so the situation can be properly accessed before possibly making the situation worse.
Glad I don't work for you, damn
Your team lets you vent? How kind of them... They definitely wouldn't be afraid of retribution or anything, no sir
Reminds me of my first job working at a Goodwill centre. This customer came in and bought this armoire for like $400 and it weighed like 500lbs or something like it. Manually, and woefully ill equipped, 3 employees, including myself, were tasked to move this thing by hand over a little ridge and onto a moving truck. I slipped and one of the corner dropped and caused some chips. The buyer was livid.
If you want to a professional service, hire a professional. Between moving unreasonably heavy items with no equipment or sufficient staff, I was expected to sort through donations that were nasty, dusty and very likely, dangerous to my health. And they weren't even paying me. It was part of some government out reach program that was half volunteering for work experience with a bit of a stipend from the government. I don't believe it was even minimum wage since it was part of a program.
But I digress.
tbh tho, you should be able to lift 500lbs with 3 men.....
@@ishitrealbad3039 considering they were volunteering for work experience they were in high school
@@ishitrealbad3039 lift off the ground? Sure. Lift off the ground and awkwardly manouver up and down curbs and into a car? No.
@@rkidy with 3 adult men that's very doable.
@@ishitrealbad3039 they probably weren't adult men
As others have said; it wouldn't have been so bad, but eventually something was going to move that furniture if you didn't put proper padding on it. Im also curious why you need to take the entire floor down instead of replacing the damaged section.
because hes a big drama queen and wants people to feel sorry for him and instead of focusing on his unrealistic expectations and out of touch takes like screaming at his employees for making fairly innocent mistakes in pursuit of his companies goals, being stingy with money when it comes to anyone but himself has been his MO for many years.
i know so many people like it its crazy, anyone makes a mistake and they rag and bitch and moan until it drives the person crazy. then they make an equally stupid mistake and expect everyone in the room to laugh with them and say oh well people make mistakes haaha but its because he holds their welfare in his hands.
Because it would be too easy :D
The thing is, people who are usually quiet and collected when angry, once they boil over, once they really explode...oh boy it tends to be epic. I wish I was a fly on the wall when Linus went off in those stories.
I think I would be scared for the people he was yelling at. Those kinds of people yelling are terrifying.
Linus would pull out his loaded Glock for those rage episodes. It was intense.
Another certified LMG classic
The bed should've had something on the feet to where they don't scratch the floor, especially since it was going to be on top of wood. I feel bad for Linus and those that accidentally did damage to the house, but this could've been avoided (granted it may not come to mind until after it has already happened)
Yeah the best way to avoid it would be to not let Dennis in your house..Tiny felt pads wouldnt have saved it.
If you don't plan on moving the furniture, you're not going to put pads under the legs. They don't look good when they are sticking out from under the legs.
@@theboxofdemons sorry but no, you should always put pads on furniture that's going on wood floors. Even if you don't plan on moving it, the weight could cause damage. Not to mention just small movement that could happen unintentionally.
@@theboxofdemons it's also ready to get ones that aren't visible
@@theboxofdemons "Are you sexually active?" I'm married...
Well at least Linus has easily identified his home as a legitimate work write off for the business
Lmao he always finds a way to profit from everything 😂
Its more like reducing his loss
My diamond shoes are too tight...
This story about Dennis reminds me of when I worked for a major computer corporation many many years ago and a programmer decided to put a disk in a drive by himself. When I say disk I mean the old 30 lb 10 platter 20 inch diameter disks. He put it in and and made a screech so loud I could hear it from outside. I raced in and asked what he done and he said "Oh the drive must be broken" he then took the disk and put it in another drive with an equal screech. He destroyed two $100K drives and the disk and 6 months worth of data because hadn't backed up the live data he was using first. And more recently a client called me after he discovered his computer wouldn't boot and rather than call me first decided that he needed to restore windows 10, thereby overwriting 12 months worth of work email he also hadn't backed up, on top of which he stopped the windows install because he thought it was taking to long , the data was unrecoverable. So long story short whether a tech genius or a common guy using a computer, there are moments when people just don't think.
Wouldn't have this problem if Jesus was an employee, because he saves.
I'll just ask the obvious. Why did the drives get destroyed once he put a disk inside them? Aren't disks supposed to go into drives without issues?
@@Sergmanny46 Well he had damaged the heads of the drive by putting them in incorrectly. These weren't like todays hard disks. They were large platters that required removal of a cover and then careful placement on the spindle. He had just jammed them in at an angle which damaged the heads which then of course damaged the disk surface.
The most frustrated I've seen him is when the server died "NONE of it will be coming back" chills
How do you know Linus was Super mad. He forgot Luke was even in the room with him. Rage is the only thing that focus a person that much.
That's what you get to make your employees do shit on your personal property. Deserved.
My soul died when I heard the floor get wrecked in that CSF video.
can you send in link for that video?
This is a what happens when you turn your new house into a Reality TV show
Truuue
I run a business and can honestly say that every mistake is an opportunity to refine procedures. Following procedures with a checklist ultimately leads to few errors over time
Add dont make employees move the bosses furniture to the checklist and you'll be fine
@Jared Connell no one made them move the furniture. Linus didn't green light it, his wife did. They moved the furniture to set a prank for a different channel.
@@pure_zedis his wife not able to make that decision
for me as manager only one time. basically told a employee he was upset with some outside stuff and to not to talk shit on camera about our GOOD paying easy laid back job. he kept complaining for months. eventually boss heard em and months later got caught throwing back beers at the job. boss didn't even want to let him go but it was the combo.
This is the only company wherein someone who's already fired years ago still gets to interview applicants lol
Good one
Years ago I sold cars. If I recall we were screwing around and a few customers walked in and out without anyone helping them and one even went into the managers office. Meeting was immediately called. He basically said that's bullshit and next thing we knew our 6' 350lb who's normally a really nice guy was launching a chair across the room.
I like the principle of "we're on the same team," as a justification for avoiding yelling; it's just like how you approach marriage. Companies tend to treat everyone as replaceable, so employees act replaceable. But if you approach conflict by recognizing that you're on the same team and emphasize solving problems constructively, you'll get the best out of everyone. They believe that they're wanted, chosen, and will work hard to make sure the wrongs are righted. Seems like the kind of workplace culture I'd want to work for.
Protip as a manager; There's never a time you should yell at people.
Fire! Fire! Fire!
@@brodriguez11000no let them burn peacefully
BUT linus! there's these little stick-on foam circles that stick onto the feet of your furniture, including beds, fridges, stoves, chairs, tables... and they stick onto the little "feet" or "toes" of the furniture, and so whenever you want to move furniture, you it just slides easily across the floor. these things are literally a game-changer, especially when it comes time to move, paint, or rearrange your furniture, or even move appliances around or replace appliances. i have them on the bottom of literally EVERY SINGLE PIECE OF FURNITURE OR APPLIANCE in my house, and i also have packs of extras waiting for whenever i need them. you absolutely NEED THESE little foam pads. they're priceless.
What's the name of them?
He didn’t want the bed to be moved…
Who installs a hardwood floor and doesn't pad the legs of their gigantic bed that would definitely destroy the floor no matter how it's moved?
The same guy who didn't get what the whole warranty debacle is about despite Luke staring at him so intensively that it would have burned through any normal person that isn't as dense as Linus is every time Linus missed the whole point.
@@saasseli wait what? Lol what video is this
@@malfaroangel3896 I think Luke has done that in multiple WAN show videos. Every time Linus starts spouting something idiotic about the warranty stuff Luke starts staring at Linus so hard you could give the stare subtitles saying "Shut up and stop digging yourself into a hole"
Imagine believing you need to sand the entire floor of the room when you only need to replace the damaged boards
It's not that easy when it's hardwood. If it's a floating floor it's a different story and much easier for us to cut out and replace.
@@JamieVatarga I’m literally doing it as I’m typing this. We’re working rosewood and mahogany today.
I disagree. It’s not hard and no more difficult than floating
@Boa-Noah Sorry mate but that's just plain ignorant. It's not that easy, He has mouths to feed, employees to pay and a business to grow. I'm sure he's very wealthy. But it's never as easy as "sell a couple backpacks" to make up for a couple thousand dollars in repairs, and even if he could pay for it easily, it's still a couple thousand that could have gone somewhere better.
@@carlangelo653 no, the only ignorant thing is acting as if Linus has a reason to whinge over a couple hundred to thousands of dollars of repair... repairs that are needed because he brought in idiots to 'help' him to make a video.
Yes, if damage happens because of employees while making content for your business, the answer really is as simple as doing more business.
@@carlangelo653 dude gets handed high end computer equipment multiple times a month. Give me a break the dude probably has a massive storage of brand new stuff just sitting there. Sell one of the million graphics cards he has
I feel like, this is an example of damage that could easily have been avoided. Put some furniture sliders under the bed (or any heavy furniture for that matter) and not only is it easier to move, you won't damage the flooring.
it looks like with building a house there are always like a billion things you have to learn the hard way
linus is a millionaire. he should have hired PROFESSIONALS to do the work. for the love of god. I will not feel sorry for an angry privileged millionaire. It sounds like his company is not organized. That's HIS FAULT he's the CEO
@@Raging_Granny_Gamer it was all done behind his back for a prank video shoot how is he supposed to know what happened and how to avoid it. Please do proper research before commenting
@@Raging_Granny_Gamer yeah, you only hire professionals to prank you without your knowledge or consent.
how much are you moving your bed to warrant sliders
4:28-4:32 also describes the server room fiascos since the striped raid5 arrays.
The amount of people commenting without any context information is the reason I avoid any social media.
For a big gash on a new floor, just ripping up the area with the gash (out to the wall if necessary, or notching the replacement pieces to fit without ripping it out to the wall) is a pretty simple fix since new material should still match just fine. Maybe turn it into an opportunity for a builder/home repair crossover?
This is correct floor boards in the Center of a room can be repaired by a knowledgeable floor installer. Basically you cut out the damaged boards. Then trim the bottom edge off the replacement boards only where necessary as you put in replacements. Depending on location you may want to glue the replacements to the substrate. If worried about future replacement, lightly glue low strength paper to the substrate, then lightly glue boards to paper.
Most if not all flooring I've seen anymore interlocks with each other and means you have to remove all from the wall to the damaged bit and if it's in the middle of the floor that's a lot of work.
@@MidnightMarrow For a patch like this, you can cut the damaged pieces out and lock the tongue of the replacement pieces into the groove of the existing floor, cutting the bottom edge off the receiving side of the new material's groove where it's going to overlap the tongue on existing pieces (on short edges and the full length of the final piece), then adhere and/or mechanically fasten to those areas to secure it into the remaining floorboards. Pretty common repair to make to old flooring, less commonly needed in new, but works the same either way (and blends in much more readily with new work, of course).
@@MidnightMarrow It's a few hours work.
@@Malc180s Yeah, for someone who knows what they're doing at least. Sometimes I get customers who complain about paying $100 for 20 minutes of work. And I'm always like, well, besides the drive here and back, the truck, insurance, license etc. and the ability to get your exact material to match it, then you're paying for my experience to do it in 20 minutes instead of.... an hour or two. Not too common of a complaint though honestly.
For anyone that is putting in new wood floors I always recommend looking at the Janka Hardness Scale of the wood you choose. So many people buy wood floors only on looks rather than lifestyle. I have Strand woven bamboo floors (one of the highest hardness rating on the Janka scale) and they have no scratches from dog nails or furniture dragging and they look great.
I will never put wood floors because i have no money. But i find this really useful
Maple is also a very hard and sturdy wood. It also looks really good.
Hard woods available in canada will easy scratch compare to a good quality laminate.
Usually people use cherry wood, maple wood and sometimes oak. Less hard wood is pine, but should never be use for flooring.
I got ash wood floor, less common and similar as maple and cherry wood for hardness, and it scratch like crazy with a 30lbs dog.But in basement it is good laminate floors and they look brand new. In Canada real wood floor gives more value to houses, but in my opinion I would replace everything with laminate if it wasnt a plain to redo all the trims doors height and steps.
@@DrLoveQc Unlike manufactured bamboo, laminate has a stigma of being cheap. It's also harder to find laminate floors that don't use cancer causing chemicals in their manufacturing.
I do agree that good quality laminate floors (get the thickest available) will take a lot more abuse than most hard wood floors.
@@deanwilliams433 yeah VOC is an issue in so many products.I got at home in my basement a smart device that detect radon gas, voc, co2, humidity,pressure,temp. Made by Airthings. In Canada basement are very popular since we need to dig very deep under the frost line for the concrete forms, so adding a basement is a no brainer and a cheap way to get more space. But radon gas is an issue that nobody really look into. Since my master bedroom and desk for remote work are in basement, I wanted to be sure the levels are in the specs. Old way to test radon take forever with multiple samples to send by mail $$, tests needs to be done in 4 seasons to be more accurate... that device from Airthings pay for itself quickly.
I remember many years ago (maybe 2001 or 2002) yelling at some employees I was supervising. They were late, crazy crap was happening, I was getting it from my superior and it just rolled downhill. Really unprofessional on my part, but that was part of the work conditions/culture there that was set from the top down and it became a learned habit. Before the end of that shift I went to them and apologized for my behavior because it was 110% wrong. I ended up moving on from that place (best decision I ever made, it was a stupid, stupid job with more stress than it should have had for what it was) and made it a point *N_E_V_E_R* to yell at employees under me ever again. I'll talk to them, I'll explain in no uncertain terms something is unacceptable, and I'll even give the quiet angry 'stop f@@king around' treatment to people, but never yell.
You're a good man, Richard.
New vinyl floors, sponsored by dbrand 😀
just use your "trust me bro" warranty to repair the floor
You had a terrible flooring company if their only advice or option was to sand the whole floor. If it ever happens again you can cut individual boards out and replace them and spot sand and then coat the raw wood only twice, sanding just the boards that were raw, then scuff the whole floor and recoat the entire floor and it disappears.
Exactly he should get someone in who actually knows what they’re doing.
I'm honestly trying to imagine any damage to a wood floor that would cost thousands of dollars to put right.
I really need to see a picture, because at the moment, I'm imagining a hole through the floor, the ceiling below and an OLED TV.
As Weston Ney below in the comments says, a good joiner would put it right.
He's very wealthy now and probably spent stupid money on a hardwood floor with a ton of joinery made of alternating expensive hard woods - total luxury item beyond any reasonable cost. For a deep gash he'll have to have the entire floor sanded down, re-stained, sealed and varnished before polishing it back up. Depending on the depth of the damage it could be a huge drop in floor height and may require underfloor reinforcing and skirting boards to be refitted/remade which then adds wall repainting and finishing costs etc.
This is why fancy old manor houses are totally unrepairable - fixing one expensive thing means that countless other expensive things have also to be fixed.
First he isn't referencing an exact price for his viewers so he is probably speaking Canadian dollars Wich is less impressive than thousands USD. Then they didn't only damage the floor they damage the railing his stairs some camera equipment. And the floor if it's real tick hard wood floors (most likely his since he his rich) probably cost in the thousands to replace if he can't repair and like he said the groove is to depth for that.
@@_s_9920 Any hardwood floor would cost thousands to repair when you account for the fact that, like he said in the video, the walls would also have to be painted, etc. Hardwood isn't cheap. Labour isn't cheap. Painters aren't cheap.
You can see everything they did on the channel “Channel super fun” or something like that. Just look up “Dennis ruins Linus’s floor” and you should find it, I did. The video is called like staying in our bosses house for 24 hours or something like thag
The fix is really simple and certainly not 1000s of dollars. You can replace the board near the leg of the bed with an untouched board under the bed very quickly and easily.
I'm sure this has been mentioned somewhere in the comments, but just in case... The way you fix something like that is not to sand but to excise the area and patch it with as close a match as you can. (from a furniture maker)
Toss down a rug. Fixed. Live life.
I no joke thought Dennis fell through your new homes ceiling. I was still surprised Colton wasn't fired yet.
I bet the house had more than a "We'll take care of you" warranty
According to lmg it shouldn’t be covered since it’s caused by the user since he gave the green light for the video?
They’ll mail you a patch kit.
Yeah, yelling/screaming at someone isn’t healthy. Although yelling/screaming while ranting with someone listening (but not the focus of the anger) can really help
Hmmm no, that’s even worse
@@malfaroangel3896 having been both the subject of being screamed at, as well as being in a room while someone scream-vents about something, I can confidently say that listening to someone scream-vent is not worse than having someone upset and screaming at you.
@ 6:30 went to a job interview where they told me the owners of the company would often act like asses and yell at me for "reasons". I walked away.
Now working in a business with my family, individual/s in my family will often respond to "unfortunate" situations by finger pointing and blame gaming, and I have to stop them and refocus on fixing the problem, and prevent it from recurring.
Management and leadership plays a huge role in these sort of environments.
Everyone can break at some point, just be careful where you are aiming when you do.
As a leader, yelling is just immature and weird. However, sometimes emotions get the best of even leaders. And we need to learn how to handle things in business. This was good.
I disagree it's not always immature and weird, and why would it be weird? Makes no sense that's such a normal thing
@@Dr.HooWho it's weird because it almost never useful, and people tend to yell over all sorts of mundane crap. it's very rare that someone yelling has a valid purpose for it, more often it's just so they feel better (at the expense of everyone else)
Yelling all the time is immature.
Yelling for only the rarest of moments isn't. It is a sign that what is being done goes beyond the normal scolding punishments.
Which is why Yelling all the time at a child soon loses it's meaning.
Whereas if you have a stern calm mother who never raised her voice at you suddenly yell at you angrily, it means you truly messed up.
@@Ravenbones you and the other commenter are stripping out the primary context of my statement. “As a leader”, (in the context of this video) yelling at people is a waste of time and is immature.
@@Ravenbones yelling is useless as a punishment. It serves to scare children and make the person yelling feel better, that's all. The only benefit it serves really is helping communicate in critical times when there is background noise and you may not be heard.
That's why my dad didn't bother getting good furniture/ fully renovate the interior including floors till after the kids left. Don't have expensive stuff when you have kids or a Dennis.
And billet labs?
Linus didn't know what true anger was until today.
💀
ong lmaooo
Huh ?
@@kiyu3229 The date this was posted was when one of his employees made a mistake in downloading a PDF file from an email which looked like it was a future sponsor. The PDF resulted in a mass hack of the LTT group with Techquickie, LinusTechTips and another one of their channels (I forgot it's name) being hacked
@@rayyr2205 oh yeah thanks
When the company is big enough, departments become the team.
So, no. You are not on the same team when you are yelling against the other department.
This aged well, and that is a great segue to today's sponsor, Billet Labs! 😂
like fine milk
Yup
I'm here for this 😂
I'm kind of out of the loop can someone explain lol
@@dingbat2461go see gamers Nexus he covers it well
I used to work as an IT Manager for an Automotive giant and we had just finished mounting all the very expensive hardware in our server safes(production servers, storages, core switches, etc). At one point I had to leave the server room for some emergency. At one point my phone started ringing and people were complaining that nothing works anymore. When I got to the server room, I found out that one of my subordinates decided to close the server safe doors without powering on the AC units. The result was that the heat reached the point where it triggered the overtemp protection and shut down the power to all the equipment inside the server safes. Unfortunately, I remember that a few ssd's broke(very expensive, enterprise grade, ssd's...) Luckily not too many were broken and we managed to repair the raid. That was the time I truly felt what rage is.
one thing i will note on this is yelling in general is a tool if you use it to often people will get used to it it will "Wear out" and loose all sense of severity the less you use it the more effective it will be when you do because such an event will be taken much more seriously in a "oh my god he never yells something must really be up i better pay close attention" and this is true in any relationship weather its work or not
Drill Instructors could hardly agree with you 😅
Imagine Linus yelling sounds hilarious 😂😂😂😂😂
Extra hardwood planks. Cut around scratched planks. Lift out. Glue or nail new boards in, setting nails below finished surface and touch up holes. Not sure why this required sanding everything down??
On one hand you broke denis's bed
On the other hand, yours is more expensive
It was Andy's bed. And Dennis already put a hole in the ceiling of Linus' previous house garage :D
It's normal when you bring work to home, it's part of business.
Luke looking at Colton at the very end making sure he's not about to say something he shouldn't 😂
I wish someone would make a type of flooring that's modular AFTER you install it, where you can just pick the bad piece straight up and swap it will a new one. No idea how it would work, but yeah. You actually can "patch" hardwood/vinyl floor this way but cutting the interlocking pieces of the bad piece and replacement and just drop it in. And since the other pieces are locked together it won't move.
Yeah, that would be nice. But what would happen is you'd have that floor for 20 years, gash one piece, then go to buy a replacement only to see that it was discontinued 4 years ago and is out of stock everywhere