The Ocean is Way Deeper Than You Think Reaction | Asia and BJ React

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  • Опубліковано 11 вер 2022
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    original video
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 140

  • @hockemeyer1
    @hockemeyer1 Рік тому +105

    I was in the Navy from 1967 through 1971. I made 2 deployments to the Mediterranean. It took 10 days back then to steam from Norfolk, VA to Naples, Italy. There is a place when you get several days out from Norfolk that the water is so deep that its color is a dark dark purple and the froth on top is lilac instead of white. Coming home from our first deployment in May 1968, the nuclear submarine escorting us from Naples, Italy back to Norfolk sank off the coast of the Azores with 99 sailors aboard. We stayed at sea for several weeks helping to find the U.S.S. Scorpion 598 but couldn't. Several months later, in October I believe, she was found at 9,800 ft .

  • @wendellgreenidge3362
    @wendellgreenidge3362 Рік тому +36

    When Asia called a squid a jellyfish, I laughed so hard. Lol

    • @SotonSam
      @SotonSam 9 місяців тому

      🤣🤣

  • @richardfeldkamp1707
    @richardfeldkamp1707 Рік тому +50

    I earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Marine Biology in 1976. What I had to know then is the equivalent of what a preschooler knows compared to a PhD. That is just a drop in the bucket of what there is still left to know about the oceans. We know more about the surface of Mars than our own oceans.

    • @thewiseoldherper7047
      @thewiseoldherper7047 Рік тому +5

      Yeah the unmanned submersibles are generations better now. I got to ask did you know Matt Hooper? 😏

    • @robertsmith4681
      @robertsmith4681 Рік тому +2

      @@thewiseoldherper7047 I grew up on Cousteau documentaries, kind of miss those really old school first generation mini subs.

    • @richardfeldkamp1707
      @richardfeldkamp1707 Рік тому +1

      @@thewiseoldherper7047 Sorry, I don't know Matt Hooper. All the technology is so much better now. I remember waiting 4 hours to get a GPS fix.

    • @thewiseoldherper7047
      @thewiseoldherper7047 Рік тому +2

      @@richardfeldkamp1707 it was my attempt at a joke. Matt Hooper is the guy from the Oceanographic Institute played by Richard Dreyfuss in Jaws. Of course you know that movie came out right before you graduated.

    • @bintheredonethat
      @bintheredonethat Рік тому +2

      @@robertsmith4681 Me too. I watched the Cousteau documentaries as well as Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom with Marlin Perkins.

  • @stevenmonte7397
    @stevenmonte7397 Рік тому +22

    I have never been so in awe than on a cruise. The middle of the ocean is scary looking! I couldn't help but stare in awe. This video is crazy!

  • @greggwilliamson
    @greggwilliamson Рік тому +16

    (9:14) The big submarine looking part was the floatation tank filled with gasoline (lighter than water but still incompressible). The little white ball underneath had the men in it.

  • @cathie9614
    @cathie9614 Рік тому +15

    look up the Mariana Trench ... that is the deepest part of our Oceans. Scary stuff down there, for sure. And people are correct, when they say we haven't touched on what's in our Oceans and we know more about what's out in space, than our own Planet.

    • @averagekettleenjoyer474
      @averagekettleenjoyer474 Рік тому +2

      But RealLifeLore has mentioned it. Challenger Deep is the name of the deepest part of the trench.

    • @benjaminbronnimann3966
      @benjaminbronnimann3966 Рік тому

      It depends how you look at it, proportionally speaking we know much more about the ocean, if you look at the total amount of information we have then we know more about space. In other words, we might know like 1% of our oceans but we only know like 0.000000000000000000001% of space/the universe.

  • @samanthaecotothermia7896
    @samanthaecotothermia7896 Рік тому +27

    I love these kinds of mind-blowing-facts-about-the-world videos!

  • @bonscotty67
    @bonscotty67 Рік тому +5

    "They NEED to be down there!"... Love. It. 😂

  • @philipocallaghan
    @philipocallaghan Рік тому +1

    Star Treks Picard is named after that voyager who went the deepest in 1960, fun fact. To boldly go where no man has gone before!

  • @greggwilliamson
    @greggwilliamson Рік тому +5

    The 214 m free dive was done with a weight on the rope, to get him down fast. BTW, 214 meters equals 702 feet...he had to start exhaling as soon as he headed up and he exhaled all 702 ft. Had he not, his lungs would've exploded.

    • @Bigarus
      @Bigarus Рік тому +1

      I assume that's because of the rope and his quick decent, right? iirc you only need to purge your breath when you are near the surface during free dives, because if you slowly decend and slowly ascend, then your lungs properly expand as you go back up due to water pressure.

  • @Ameslan1
    @Ameslan1 Рік тому +17

    What is amazing is that scientists know more about what is in outer space that what is in the deepest parts of the oceans on Earth!

    • @vegasviking86
      @vegasviking86 Рік тому +2

      I don't know if "amazing" would be the worst I would use. Scary is more like it.

    • @mmaattoouu
      @mmaattoouu Рік тому

      Ah, Yes. It's a widely known myth. Or a widely believed fact, if you will.

    • @robertsmith4681
      @robertsmith4681 Рік тому

      Nobody has found bigfoot either and that's not for lack of trying, and he's not even hiding in the oceans ...

    • @Ameslan1
      @Ameslan1 Рік тому

      @@vegasviking86 "Astonishing" would be a better choice of word than amazing. "Scary" i think is too strong of a word. I think "mysterious" perhaps.

    • @Ameslan1
      @Ameslan1 Рік тому

      @@mmaattoouu Sorry.. what is a widely known myth or fact that you are referring to? Can you please clarify?

  • @Dannyedelman4231
    @Dannyedelman4231 Рік тому +1

    As of 2023, the USS Samuel B Roberts is the deepest wreck discovered at 6,895 meters or 22,621 feet

  • @jessegreen6138
    @jessegreen6138 Рік тому +2

    The Marianas Trench is the deepest part of our Oceans it is where the Challenger Deep can be found. It's 35,876 feet. That is according to NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration). This is the same Agency that tracks Hurricanes for the USA.

  • @black4pienus
    @black4pienus Рік тому +3

    How religious people can feel in awe of their god, I feel in awe of things like the ocean or the universe. There's still so much to discover and it also humbles you in a way. We are tiny in all of this and there still so much to explore. Everything will go on without us. We are not the center of everything.

  • @broodhunter2
    @broodhunter2 Рік тому +1

    want to hear something nutty. The Coelacanth, a fish that they thought was extinct millions of years ago (the oldest fossil is 410 Million years old.) In 1938 fishermen caught one live. Since then, they have caught like almost 100, and these do not even live at very deep depths. Yet there are creatures that less than 100 years ago we thought we extinct, and they are still swimming around. Thats how little of the ocean we have explored.

  • @coryh8888
    @coryh8888 Рік тому +1

    i recently heard neil degrasse tyson talking about how the earth is basically flat. From the deepest parts of the ocean to the tallest mountain only around 11 miles in difference. So if you could hold the earth in your hand it would actually feel smoother than a billiards ball.

  • @jaakumitsukai8682
    @jaakumitsukai8682 Рік тому +2

    The Colossal Squid can get to be bigger than a bus.

  • @Stubby1085
    @Stubby1085 4 місяці тому

    The pressure you’re dealing with in the deep ocean is scary. Even the most minor structural failure on a craft at those depths could mean instant death. That’s why more people have walked on the moon than have descended down to the challenger deep.

  • @kingbrutusxxvi
    @kingbrutusxxvi Рік тому

    That other 95% of the ocean's floor that hasn't been mapped is covered in all of our missing socks. ;-)

  • @CalixYukon
    @CalixYukon Рік тому +11

    oooh I can't wait to watch this reaction, just wanted to comment that y'all gonna love The Abyss

  • @ronwilcox7716
    @ronwilcox7716 Рік тому +2

    “At 100 meters diving can become seriously fatal…” Wow! That’s the worst kind!

  • @tedtosterone2262
    @tedtosterone2262 Рік тому +10

    And perfect time to strongly suggest to watch and react to a great classic deep-sea sci-fi action movie called "The Abyss!" Make it happen!

  • @endoraismygma
    @endoraismygma Рік тому +2

    I watch documentaries, specifically nature docs a couple times per week. I really enjoyed going on this adventure with yall, it was a unique take. I recommend Tornado Alley docs, the Joplin Missouri tornado is heartbreaking but shows humanity at its finest.

  • @mikeyj7824
    @mikeyj7824 Рік тому +1

    It's probably all kinds of civilizations buried under the ocean floor

  • @toomasargel8503
    @toomasargel8503 Рік тому

    07:55 11,000 PSI / 728 bar is regular 120 meters / 393 feet long ferry enigne cyclinder working pressure.

  • @duffyt26
    @duffyt26 Рік тому

    I used to think Spermwhales were named as such due to their shape buuuut knowing how deep they dive you sort of start to realise them swimmers be goin' right where they need to in order to earn the name. Any deeper and a baby would surface, dagnabbit!

  • @patrickmcgavin2245
    @patrickmcgavin2245 Рік тому +1

    I don't recall the show. there were scientist and others who go around to try and discover things not seen before or seen since the dinosaurs roamed the earth. By using state of the art technology. And subs and robotics. Some of the life they found looked like they were from outter space. Or sci-fi movies. Some of the fish were glowing in the dark.

  • @sebyfiras5708
    @sebyfiras5708 9 місяців тому +1

    Great white shark looks like a pet to us compared to those animals down there hehe

  • @djjam9073
    @djjam9073 Рік тому

    Look at how much we've explored space. We can protect ourselves much better from LOW pressure than high pressure. I watched a documentary on the Mariana trench. The pressure at 7 miles deep is like having 8 tons pressing on every square inch of your body...or for that matter any type of protective shell you can build. The sphere they were in was 5 inch thick steel and double pain glass.

  • @elihartswick721
    @elihartswick721 29 днів тому +1

    7 miles down!

  • @longshanks90
    @longshanks90 Рік тому

    Another good fact is we know more about space than our ocean

  • @guitarman8462
    @guitarman8462 Рік тому

    There's a lake by Vegas called Lake Mead . And slowly the water is disappearing . Although the things that they found in this lake takes you back to the days of the mafia . They found cars with bullet holes , bones in the trunk and a skeleton in a barrel . Since the movie " Casino " is based on true events , I wouldn't be surprised if bodies were from that .

  • @lillianmaybriggs5358
    @lillianmaybriggs5358 Рік тому

    It amazes me that every one is obsessed with exploring space when we have yet to understand our own oceans.

  • @kevinstanton5998
    @kevinstanton5998 Рік тому +5

    One of the fish i think its scary is actually small. The cookiecutter shark takes circular bites out of whales. They sometimes mistake submarines for whales, and have taken bites out of the radar dish, which is just insane

  • @davidnoel2977
    @davidnoel2977 Рік тому

    They find ancient cities that are buried under the ocean where the water over took the land hundreds of years ago and even thousands of years ago and they find treasures on the ocean floor that they never knew existed including shipwrecks. There's a video about a Roman shipwreck that had a bunch of artifacts on it worth hundreds of millions of dollars and the video shows some awesome statues sculptures potteries jewelry and amazing amount of gold. I need to look up the name of the video to tell you guys but it will blow your mind on the stuff discovered there. I think they found a lot of the stuff strung about in a long string of where the ship went down and a good bit of it was right at the edge of a undersea Cliff that was about to drop off into the deepest part of that ocean. But it was right on the edge of being dropped off into nothing and never being discovered.

  • @QuikkNic
    @QuikkNic Рік тому +3

    You know I’m not woke or anything but I love how factual Asia is like yeah it’s 200 meters long and I and your husband are like “what the actual f…nah man!”

  • @jameshurley9551
    @jameshurley9551 Рік тому

    You guys should watch Blue Planet. Its a nature show about the ocean and there's a whole episode dedicated to the deep. It's amazing.

  • @akarbit3r111
    @akarbit3r111 Рік тому

    The ocean is basically like going to space without leaving the planet

  • @29_lets_go
    @29_lets_go Рік тому

    27 people have been to challenger deep and 24 people have been to the moon. It really snaps into perspective how difficult it is to reach all the areas of our own planet. I wonder what new things will be discovered and what new technologies will be made as brave/intelligent people keep exploring.

  • @danreed5171
    @danreed5171 Рік тому +1

    That was DEEP

  • @wesmartindale677
    @wesmartindale677 Рік тому

    That's where the treasure is

  • @lloyd67lp
    @lloyd67lp Рік тому

    That depth is over 36,000 feet deep.

  • @MikeTythonLLC
    @MikeTythonLLC Рік тому

    pretty sure colossal squid grow anywhere from 40ft-50ft long so a tiny bit bigger than a car....lol.

  • @Sundablakr
    @Sundablakr Рік тому

    It's wild when you realise that we know more about the surface of the moon than we know about the depths of our own oceans.

  • @angelabordack
    @angelabordack Рік тому +1

    There is Challenger Deep and Mariana’s Trench. Straight up no! 😂

  • @snooks5607
    @snooks5607 Рік тому

    10:44 if the plane dropped instead of doing controlled decent it'd be in itty bitty pieces since planes go at such speeds that ocean surface is like hitting concrete

  • @elisefincher4478
    @elisefincher4478 Рік тому

    When you sit and think about it we've done more space exploration than we have our own oceans. Only 5 percent of the ocean has actually been mapped out and explored.

  • @PilloryClinton
    @PilloryClinton Рік тому

    5% of our oceans explored. While over 100 million marine animals die each year from plastics alone. Yay humanity!

  • @pietergreveling
    @pietergreveling Рік тому +1

    I guess now is the perfect time to watch The Abyss (1989)! 👌🏼🤞🏻✌🏼

  • @thesuperdak7224
    @thesuperdak7224 Рік тому

    Every island is a mountaintop.

  • @RCShadow
    @RCShadow Рік тому +1

    As Cathie mentioned in the comments, I thought for sure the Mariana Trench would be mentioned and it wasn't. I have always been under the impression that was the deepest.

    • @averagekettleenjoyer474
      @averagekettleenjoyer474 Рік тому

      Mariana Trench is the name of the entire area, while Challenger Deep is the name of the deepest point of it.

    • @RCShadow
      @RCShadow Рік тому

      @@averagekettleenjoyer474
      Ahh got it.
      God bless you.

  • @1719456
    @1719456 Рік тому

    214 meters is just over 702 feet on one breath! Damn!

  • @aland4092
    @aland4092 Рік тому

    It's 7 miles deep in Mariana trench. Next time your in your car. Pick out a starting point and watch your odometer. And keep in mind as you travel the 7miles that you could be in the ocean going down under water.

  • @robertsmith4681
    @robertsmith4681 Рік тому

    Nevermind that less than 5% of the has been mapped, think of the 99.99999% of the that nobody really knows much about what's in it, or what's going on down there and so on.

    • @TheMilkMan8008
      @TheMilkMan8008 Рік тому +1

      Yes. Only about 15%, not 5, of the floor has been mapped. Accurately anyways. Why? It's hard. To map the floor. Ships can only map whats under them with sonar and other mapping technologies. It takes a long time to map an entire planet. Most of the ocean is an empty void. No life, no structure, no nothing. We don't explore there because why would we? It's a waste of effort. That is a common myth I hate so much. Top 10 clickbait channels ruined peoples minds. I would encourage you to check out actual marine biologists such as AVNJ, SharkBytes and Sea&me. AVNJ specifically does videos watching and correcting those same top 10 and conspiracy videos of complete nonsense. You can see what the deep ocean looks like live by watching the EVNautilus live. They use ROVs to study and explore. They live stream this year round and a whole year of streaming comes to a 10-20 minute video of highlights where they see an interesting fish, coral or rock formation. A whole year all down to that.

  • @_PuckFutin_
    @_PuckFutin_ Рік тому

    We know more about the space, than about the oceans on our home Planet

  • @08wolfeyes
    @08wolfeyes Рік тому

    Hey guys!
    It's amazing just how little we have explored of the world's oceans and what we might discover.
    The difficulties are a serious risk.
    The thing today is that we tend to be more cautious than risk takers because of dangers involved.
    The problem seems to be a few things.
    One of course is the pressures at those depths which can crush you in no time at all.
    As you know, we have vehicles now that can reach such depths but if there are deeper places then better designs and materials will be needed to survive them.
    Another problem seems to be something of a circular one.
    You need information, maps if you will, to be able to explore with some kind of safety.
    You need to know where you're going in the darkness and what you need to avoid, which isn't easy in such darkness.
    However, to get that information you need devices in the water to scan the oceans.
    You can do it to an extent with satellites or from the surface but even then, the deeper the signal goes, the harder it is for it to travel through the water and give accurate readings.
    So, send people down there to explore right?
    Well, good idea but then it brings us back to the first problem in that at such depths and in such darkness, it becomes difficult to do and do so safely and without data and maps, not so east to do.
    Its fine when exploring another planet because we can send things there to map the surface and robots to explore to give us an understanding of what to expect but the oceans are a whole other ball game ( As you guys say there ), lol!

    • @robertsmith4681
      @robertsmith4681 Рік тому

      With modern tech if anybody wanted to do it they could have a fleet of unmanned underwater vehicles do the work in a few months without exposing any human to danger, good luck getting that past the "save the planet" peanut gallery though, they are often the ones holding up science.

  • @lowprofile513
    @lowprofile513 Рік тому +1

    Maybe we should find out what else is in our oceans before we try to find out what else is on Mars.

  • @JOKER6979
    @JOKER6979 Рік тому

    Marianas Trench is the deepest point on earth.

  • @rightwired
    @rightwired Рік тому +1

    This is crazy!
    I think NASA should explore the ocean with the same vigor as space.

  • @yellow_flash813
    @yellow_flash813 Рік тому

    I don't think people truly grasp how big 14 metres is 😬 I wouldn't run the 1s with a 4 metre squid let alone a 14 metre one 🙆‍♂️

  • @natecloe8535
    @natecloe8535 Рік тому

    The people who set the record for deepest dive on a single breath. They actually only have to do the work in one direction. The goal is to reach the target depth so it doesn't matter how quickly you get there as far as the record is concerned.
    They usually grab a weight and hold it as they swim down to the depth To speed the journey. And there is A cable that runs from the surface to the bottom. There is a device that is hooked on to this cable that contains Giant airbags that Rocket her back to the surface. They have to do it quick because the deeper you go the more quickly you develop the bends. So they have to get down and backup before the nitrogen levels in their blood get too high.

    • @LN-Lifer
      @LN-Lifer Рік тому

      I thought the bends came from surfacing too quickly?

  • @davidnoel2977
    @davidnoel2977 Рік тому

    Check out a video titled " treasures from the wreck of the unbelievable". It's cargo from an ancient Roman ship that has to be seen to be believed.

  • @jimmybobsap8729
    @jimmybobsap8729 Рік тому

    Space is still more trippy lol

  • @whitewolfthedeity1131
    @whitewolfthedeity1131 Рік тому +3

    I would like to see a reaction to the Mariana trench or the universe is way bigger than you think. But great video overall keep up the great content.

  • @scar445
    @scar445 Рік тому

    it is solid an indisputeable fact taht we know more about the void of space and the universe around us, than we do about our own oceans. That, in and off itself, is a deeply disturbing fact.

    • @TheMilkMan8008
      @TheMilkMan8008 Рік тому

      It is not indisputable, nor is it even a fact. We know practice everything about the ocean. Do actual research before you spew what you heard on a top 10 clickbait channel.

    • @scar445
      @scar445 Рік тому

      @@TheMilkMan8008 I could ask you the same thing. even with 24-3% of the ocean floor mapped, we still know next to nothing about our oceans, compared to what we know of space

  • @serfandterf
    @serfandterf Рік тому

    Haha, they need to be down there. Love you guys

  • @jeffcrawford8231
    @jeffcrawford8231 Рік тому

    Super cool reaction video. That puts perspective into perspective. The ocean 💙

  • @StevesFunhouse
    @StevesFunhouse Рік тому

    Asia, I think you heard the part about Sperm Whales and Colossal Squid wrong ... the battle was NOT between them and Jellyfish, it was between Sperm Whales and Colossal Squid. And BJ, you kept saying Giant Squid, but again, they were taking about a Colossal Squid. The Giant Squid is smaller in body size, but has longer tentacles. The reverse is true for the Colossal Squid, who has a bigger body but shorter tentacles. The Colossal Squid is the largest squid known to man ... or whales.
    Giant Squid can be as big as a bus (up to 43 feet), but the Colossal Squid is larger yet ... by a few feet (up to 46 feet). Both squid types are prey for Sperm Whales and make up a large portion of their diets.

  • @scottvanhille5688
    @scottvanhille5688 Рік тому

    We're mostly a water planet. Just like that film Waterworld. I've seen this video. It's really interesting. Quite scary to see those deep-sea creatures. I'd eat that colossal squid but never go near a live one. Black dragonfish? No thanks.

  • @T-rock40
    @T-rock40 Рік тому

    Giant squid are 50ft plus long.

  • @daveblueballz6659
    @daveblueballz6659 Рік тому

    that aint a damn jellyfish

  • @TheRootedWord
    @TheRootedWord Рік тому

    13:39 I'm surprised he didn't use some good old duct tape and keep going! Not a Montana boy!

  • @sidzilla9425
    @sidzilla9425 Рік тому

    dont mean to sound like a nerd, but the colossal squid, (the on that fights the sperm whale) is WAY bigger than a small car, practticly 43-45 feet long

  • @angelabordack
    @angelabordack Рік тому +1

    Watch a video on Mariana’s Trench. You will never leave dry land again!

    • @TheMilkMan8008
      @TheMilkMan8008 Рік тому

      There's nothing there but some worms and snailfish. Please do actual research before you spread common myths around.

  • @Cinnamonrollseveryday
    @Cinnamonrollseveryday Рік тому

    Let this sink in 35209 feet 11.686 inches equals the 10,732 meters deep 😮

  • @fuzzylogics139
    @fuzzylogics139 Рік тому

    Cool, had seen the space one, but not this one. There could easily be mermaids and all kinds of mythological beings down there.. EASILY.

  • @mranime97
    @mranime97 Рік тому

    Megalodon : 👀

  • @warriorpitbull1170
    @warriorpitbull1170 Рік тому

    Y'all need some 'In Regards To..' merch. LOL

  • @joycereichardt1723
    @joycereichardt1723 Рік тому

    Thanks for sharing this video! I learned a lot.

  • @barbarae-b507
    @barbarae-b507 Рік тому

    You should look at the video that shows the depth of the ocean and where the various shipwrecks and other things. It shows it much better. By Metal Balls Studio. It is called something like “depth of ocean compared. (animated 3d)

  • @lloyderc
    @lloyderc Рік тому

    I would like the truth why nasa stoped exploring the ocean bottom. We need to know more about our oceans

  • @TheMitchZone
    @TheMitchZone Рік тому

    5:36 Wait, didn't he already just mention the Giant Squid tho? What's the difference between that and a "Colossal Squid?" Is there even a difference? I thought Colossal and Giant meant the same thing, and that they both were the same creature?? 😱🦑

    • @scwyd6769
      @scwyd6769 Рік тому

      Two different animals. colossal squid are super rare to see though.

  • @bintheredonethat
    @bintheredonethat Рік тому

    I saw a fangtooth at Walmart once and almost confronted her for not wearing a mask.
    Call me silly but I also believe in Mermaids, like Big Foot, we just haven't captured one yet.

  • @cmurr1174
    @cmurr1174 Рік тому

    You guy should watch stuff on giant squid. They r amazing. Some say they can reach 40-60ft

  • @Itachi17839
    @Itachi17839 Рік тому

    If you guys liked this react to Top5 sounds of the deep ocean

  • @timbuktu8069
    @timbuktu8069 Рік тому

    Whatever you do, DO NOT look at all the stuff that LIVES in the ocean.

  • @D4rkn355Inf3rno
    @D4rkn355Inf3rno Рік тому

    How'd you get 'Jellyfish' from 'Collosal Squid' ? Lol

  • @Hilariumosis
    @Hilariumosis Рік тому

    Crazy the record is still from the 60's. With less technology, research and understanding they went further than been done today, even further than anything unmanned on a different level in term of structual integrity, pressure resistance, reliability etc. Kinda embarrassing.

  • @LN-Lifer
    @LN-Lifer Рік тому

    Lol a lot deeper.

  • @LordVader66
    @LordVader66 Рік тому

    95% of teh Ocean is unexplored or undiscovered, yet were out here trying to colonize Space.....our priorities are way off

  • @1WildFlower93
    @1WildFlower93 Рік тому

    I say screw space travel, explore the oceans

  • @lorrainelopez2393
    @lorrainelopez2393 Рік тому

    Watch the movie The Abyss, if you haven't already.

  • @gustonzimasheen
    @gustonzimasheen Рік тому

    Have a listen to Crash Test Dummies song "Swimming In Your Ocean" to go with this reaction.

  • @wichitadisciple9874
    @wichitadisciple9874 Рік тому

    I hate the ocean… it terrifies me.
    There’s stuff in there that’s beyond our imagination. Wait until we come across the Leviathan!! Megalodon has nothing on that thing..

    • @77niko09
      @77niko09 Рік тому

      So you wouldn´t come with me to take a swim at mariana trenches gps coordinates??? i have read that is custom in US navy to stop on those coordinates let crew who ever wants, to take a swim. Don´t know is it true or false story. Truth to be told, i would grap and hold from ships structures like i was welded there.

  • @segsuc6399
    @segsuc6399 Рік тому

    jellyfish???????

  • @ericbanks9286
    @ericbanks9286 Рік тому

    These videos be super interesting lls

  • @johnnyjohnny8636
    @johnnyjohnny8636 Рік тому

    Kind of annoys me the titles of these education videos. "The ocean is way deeper than you think". No, that's pretty much how deep I thought it was.

  • @SotonSam
    @SotonSam 9 місяців тому

    One thing I take away from these reaction videos is how oblivious people are to life. I didnt know people were so uneducated. No offence. Its weird. Usually its The US.