The ending is such a smart, perfect thing. The video starts with "Hey! You're on a rock floating in space" and then he goes to all lengths to describe what that rock is, how it was created and what happened to it... and then at the end the last sentence is "btw where the hell are we?" like now we know even less and are even more confused.
Ummm... 1. the idea is you can loop it there. It makes a perfect loop as the first sentence is an answer to that question. 2. it's not us, the ones who have watched the video, asking that question, but the thing inventor inventor.
1:11 - the genius of this video is that that pause is exactly the right amount of time to make EVERYONE check if the video is still playing. It's some of the most impeccable timing i have ever seen.
My connection actually broke at that exact time on this video. Plus the buffering circle was perfectly camouflaged in the white background. I burst out laughing.
@@egodeathwish exactly. In fact,some of the inspiration of this might have been from one of his sad mad and bad glad dreams. I've learned to trust those.
I personally love how he used descriptive words and phrases while making the words blink on screen. The strategy creates a subconscious connection, helping cement concepts. Like his, "Some stars burn out wirh passion," and as he says passion it flashes supernova. Makes things easier to remember.
I love that you immediately knew that "The Sun is a Deadly Lazer" was a meme, because it immediately became one after this video went viral. Edit: Y'all, when I say "this video," I'm talking about the original video. You know. The one that 'went viral.' Not the 1000th reaction to it that's been posted on YT since then. Use your critical thinking skills a bit.
I wish Toby Fox didn't have wrist and hand pain slowing down his work so much, so he could have some free time to start some silly shit with Bill Wurtz and Louis Cole
In case nobody else pointed it out, the Ingermission when he mentions Japan is because dude has a whole video JUST on History of Japan. It isn't as science-y, but is a must watch.
I loved "History of the entire world, I guess". It also made me realize that the school system I went through never taught anything but American history. At a certain age most of what I knew about the rest of the world was from movies and historical romance novels. Some of those authors did a lot of research.
While Colombus was mistaken in thinking it was the indies, he actually knew there was land around where the americas are. He studied the flotsam that was arriving on the coasts of Morroco, and calculated that it was a far bigger quantity than if there was nothing there. His explanation was that the world was smaller than people thought, and since the size of the world is relatively easy to calculate he was taken for an idiot, but he wasn't heading into the ocean without any idea of what he was doing.
He also documented/discovered the "tradewinds" and the "westerlies" that made voyages back and forth to the Americas from Europe much more predictable and safe, and thus profitable.
What other European explorers do you speak of that went before Columbus? I guess the Portuguese could have made trips back and forth, but if so, they do not seem to have told anyone. The Norse did not use the tradewinds or westerlies, as far as I know...their voyages were much more against the prevailing currents and winds, which is probably a big reason why they did not make repeat voyages.
@@iKvetch558 not many repeat voyages may have been attempted but we tend to underestimate how well known those voyages were back then. There is some evidence that those stories were being spread in Italy around the time Columbus was alive. Regardless, substantiating any histoical claim from that long ago is difficult because for every scrap of evidence that survived there is likely much much more that didn't. But I'll admit my biases here. I despise our celebration of Columbus and how our history ignores what kind of person he was. He may have had some expertise but clearly his calculations of the earths size was wrong. He was a brutal dude and even his own family despised him for his cruelty.
@@blakec8549 I definitely will not fault your biases, or argue against your calling out his brutality. Of course, the biggest harm he did...the spreading of European diseases to those who had no defenses against them... he had no real idea about, but you are obviously not wrong about the evils he perpetrated intentionally.
I love the way Bill weaved through the broad strokes of history because it shows a ton of connections that you usually won't look at as much. Especially that line of dominoes that led from the 7-year war over the american revolution to the french revolution.
@@umi2751All wars are directly linked to all other wars, so that's not saying much. Either by interwar circumstances like the WW1 and WW2, or direct wartime actions like how Britain annoyed the US during the Napoleonic Wars, which led to the US declaring war.
@@umi2751 Big talks about common sense when your education system sucks so hard that black people don't know shit about slavery and blame white people for inventing it. I can assure you that 90% of Americans are completely oblivious about stuff that is teached in school everywhere else. You only learn that in school because it's supposed to invoke patriotism in children - which is basically everything the American education is there for - indoctrination.
21:42 - That sounds like a hell of a plot for an althistory novel. Subscribed. (There's a line of thought that if society completely falls now and we lose all of our recorded knowledge there isn't enough easily accessible energy to restart civilization on the same tack.)
It’s crazy that reactions to this video still consistently get over 1 million views. It really serves as a testament as to how great the original video actually was
I can't remember if Bill Wurtz himself did this, but there is a "safe for schools" edition to this video that cuts out all the occasional profanity. Really glad a video like this is being shown in schools because, as you touched upon, it's really good at simplifying some insanely complex ideas & theories.
watching this with like 13-15 year olds with the profanity would be fine. europe did rape africa, thats something that we should not sweep under the rug by making it more pallatable to talk about. if it is off putting that is the right way to handle it
I've watched a lot of professionals reactions to this video (because it is my favourite video of all time) and I must say I loved your reaction the most. Simply sitting there and watching you enjoy this masterpiece is so much fun and is exactly what I want to see because it feels like I am showing something I really love to a friend and watch them enjoy it as much as I do. Thank you for making this video it really made me smile!
7:30 I like that Bill Wurtz actually accurately marked where there were some tin deposits during his explanation of bronze. Tin is actually really uncommon compared to other metals, and in the Bronze Age there were only two major tin deposits big enough for the entire Bronze Age Civilization in the Near East: Britain, and Afghanistan. _Neither_ locations were a pleasant breeze to get to, mine tin, and come back, all while still alive.
@@jokitalinda10 Very well could've been, but if it would've been depleted so quickly after the ability to work with it was developed then it wasn't very big and therefore wouldn't have been significant enough to go down in history like the other two. For example, Cyprus was the main supplier of tin for the Bronze Age Civilizations around the Eastern Mediterranean. It had a lot, but at the height of the Bronze Age it simply didn't have enough, hence the demand for tin from places as far away as Britain and Afghanistan. There were some small-time tin mines in places like Spain, but most mining done there was for silver, because Spain is (was) positively silver rich. Silver was so concentrated in Spain that when Carthage lost to Rome in the First Punic War, the Barcid dynasty went to Spain to conquer all the silver mines to pay off both their mercenaries AND the war reparations owed to Rome, and _still_ had enough money to be so rich they basically privately-funded their own campaigns during the Second Punic War.
My absolute favorite part of this video, at least for me, is that due to its quick pace, even as a history lover, you may make connections between events that you previously thought bared no relevance to each other, if that makes sense. The simplified condensation of history allows you to see the through-line in the timeline you (or I should say I) previously never connected relevance between. As a history nerd, that is a level of geek out I’m embarrassed to admit. 😅 But as a lover of humor above even history/science/sociology/linguistics, I love this video for that alone. And your viewing reaction was perfect 🙂
@@RobinClaassenkinda late, but one realisation I made watching this video at least 30 times is that the Empire of China and the Roman Empire existed in the same time frame for some time and probably knew of each other thanks to the Silk Road. This made me search about it more in depth and discovered they even gave "nicknames" to each other (forgot what the were nicknames tho). Despite this, I don't think there was any "official" diplomats contact.
It's funny you mention the nuclear over coal or oil thing because that's actually pretty much the plotline for the Fallout games. Pre-war society was mostly based off nuclear energy, in Fallout, and it's depicted as an alternate timeline whose energy source deviated. You can find nuclear materials in everything from clocks to cars power cells in the games. The war was also a parallel of the Cold War, between China and the US in-game if I recall correctly.
In case you were curious about the intermission, it was because he did a "History of Japan" video earlier, so he's referencing that he already covered a lot of history there.
I havent communicated it directly with Bill Wurtz, no, but if I remember correctly it was explained to me in the comments of the original video. Just passing the information up the pipeline. :)
I genuinely love how chill your reaction video is, you don't try to correct the video on minor things they've gotten wrong and just sit there to appreciate the comedy. Good stuff
strange. I didn't like that about the video. I feel like he should have paused more and shared opinions on what he thought more. Make the content transformative rather than just showing it uninterrupted in it's entirety. It's almost at the point where he just aped someone else's content. I don't believe he's doing it maliciously, but it wasn't transformative imo.
@@ghastlypompano2 it is informative, that's what i think, but the video about earth isn't far off so why would he feel the need to "correct" something that doesn't need it? sure maybe someone like you is just looking for a more detailed explanation on how things work in that video he reacted to, but you're not gonna get that bro, at the end of the day he is "reacting" to the video, not explaining it in every detail on how everything works, and tbh he is informing but also reacting, this is a reaction video not a breakdown video. I mean you can easily search a breakdown of this video if there even is one.
7:45 Nah, really, the cradle of humanity in the middle east didn't have tin, they really did import it from traders that traveled all the way from Europe / British isles to make bronze. We know almost nothing about these people tho, but they quit trading tin to Egyptians when the 'Sea People' invaded from the west and caused the bronze age collapse (thanks Egyptians for writing down that war in a pyramid)
I love how history of the entire world I guess just eventually pops up on every single reaction channel and how literally all of them add more context to the greatest UA-cam video ever
Fun fact to expand on your piece on WWII not ending just because the US dropped the nukes. Japan and Russia never actually signed a formal peace treaty so technically WWII is still on 🙃 They did sign the Joint Declaration in 1956 where they both agreed to wave reparations and agreed to formalize peace talks in the future but those were never actually conducted.
@@gaminginsomniac4427 That's fair. One could make the argument that when the Soviet Union collapsed all their wars ended. A new government that occupies the same land area doesn't automatically inherit the wars of the past governments.
Yeah, it'd be dang near impossible because the materials and tools required to develop those power sources would require a more readily accessed power source to develop. Coal and oil are a lot easier to work with on industrial scales than wind or solar. You'd need to have already gone through an industrial revolution to even *get* nuclear power. That's basically how all technological development goes. We went with bronze before iron because bronze is easier to work with even though iron is more common.
@@brigidtheirish That's fair. But I think they're be real potential if you could prove environmental damage and show what green energy could look like. Instead of 200 years of dirty energy we could have done the bare minimum amount of coal and oil before immediately beginning the process of transitioning to a cleaner source of energy. Instead Big Coal and Oil got their hooks into society. Now we are struggling to transition even though we have the technology and the knowledge. Just telling the world during the industrial revolution could have changed the mindset of the world to view coal and oil as only temporary boosts rather than an indefinite power source.
@@brigidtheirish reminds me of a sci-fi book I read where a civilization that had a very advanced understanding of physics/technology, and was able to use this knowledge to help a primitive civilization "skip" some of those steps in natural technological development. The main plot point related to this is that they taught them to make radio communication devices without needing traditional electronics (instead using some quantum mechanical effect that's easy to take advantage of, even with primitive tools).
@@vibaj16 Interesting. Did the book go into the possible negative consequences of skipping steps? Because quite a few places on Earth are dealing with being yanked through technological development without the chance to make the accompanying social changes.
The sheer amount of research that the og video took is so impressive by itself, but then to condense it and simplify it to the degree Bill did is absolutely genius work. I wished more professionals recognised the greatness of these kind of videos where coplex topics are explained in a simpler, more engaging way.
This is the first time i see someone with a lot of studies and stuff and be this chill and not being picky about everything! You look like a really nice person to hangout with
Normally I get mad when someone reacting to a video constantly pauses, but this man did it to explain stuff and comment on stuff, so I'm actually fine with this. Keep up the good work man.
Talking is reacting. I actually like when people pause. A lot of people will try to say something over the video, and you see them miss stuff because of it. That's way more frustrating. If you're trying to watch the original video uninterrupted, a reaction video is the wrong place to do that.
But pausing and offering more context, content or opinions is what you're supposed to do. Otherwise you're just stealing content. Watch the original if you want to watch that video uninterrupted.
There are soooooooooooo many reactions to this video across a variety of personalities, filmed and not, but I love how one specific moment is consistent between every one: They always, _always_ check to see if the video's still running after "That's how every it gets." I did this also my first time.
What a way to engage school kids! This should be shown in every school around the world. It would stimulate the kids to talk about history and politics in a way that is not dry and boring. Absolute gold!
I think the best thing about this style is that it doesn't give you time to ask questions, which is usually a bad thing, but for a quick summarization it's absolutely perfect. You can explain the gaps later, but the purpose of this kind of presentation is to get the broad strokes across.
The pun with the Mongols invading the whole universe was actually really smart if you know what Genghis Khan's name means. It's a title that means ruler of the universe basically, and his real name was Temujin.
I will forever love the video cuz it’s virality truly proved how much ppl can enjoy educational media and learning! Bill Wurtz truly mastered how to capture people’s attention and making learning fun. Even some of my teachers, back in high school, liked this video and showed it to us.
I love how you enjoyed this video with the profession that you're in. I have seen a lot of reactions about this video and I always enjoy how different people react and emphasize on different things.
This video is basically Gen Z required watching mainly because of the deadly lazer meme It delivered to us a common brief overview of history and especially of post ironic humour I think there is a similarity of the fast paced, text on screen style from bill wurtz to the way a lot of current day content is made
Thank you SO MUCH for all of the likes, views, and comments on this video! This has been incredible! If you are interested in seeing my reaction to another one of Bill Wurtz's crazy videos, please check out my reaction to his History of Japan video: ua-cam.com/video/oBFcIf4Zbzk/v-deo.htmlsi=ZMDHHrSVCDTM5WTQ Yes, I was incorrect in saying the United States didn't have a 3rd nuclear bomb and it becoming the Demon Core - I greatly appreciate you all keeping my facts straight! If you are interested in my thoughts on the Demon Core, please check out my reaction to Kyle Hill's video on the subject: ua-cam.com/video/Komj07wzM5E/v-deo.html
The problem with taking info to the 1800's is you would need to use fossil fuel to even make proper equipment to make sustainable energy sources while at the same time trying not to shot with a musket for being a warlock
@@mrfreetime5177 Given the amount of boiler explosions and lack of safety at the start of the industrial revolution, the idea of starting with nuclear reactors, if we could make them, would've resulted in a LOT of damage to the environment through radiation leaks, or just pumping it straight into rivers and the atmosphere.
I mean, it’s true. Nuclear power is the cleanest form of energy we have. It really frustrates me when people say it isn’t. The only thing keeping nuclear energy from being entirely clean is the lack of technology for nuclear fusion. And even then, because of entropy it would take all the energy from fission to power the fusion. So it would be useless energy. Unless we got some crazy biproduct from it that created more energy.
As a high school teacher I can say this is something a lot of history teachers love to subtly and unofficially suggest before finals. Due to the language of course "no one" ever does. Maybe a students older sibling suggests it, or someone says out loud "I wish there was a youtube video that could help me study for my AP exam, while actually being funny."
@@drefk1973 how hard is it to not turn into a pedantic little shit at the sight of a simple misspelled word? Just for that I'm not going to change it. Have fun seething~
Hey at 11:09 a bit of a correction to you. Hinduism and Buddhism actually did spread kinda accidentally to SE Asia. Indian kingdoms went there for trade but ended up marrying into royal lineages which increased the influence. There was never an attempt to spread the culture, the peoplr sort of just adopted it out of their own will
My favorite is the 2nd Crusade, where they all went to Jerusalem, realized it was heavily defended, then all went home. End of the Crusade Episode 2: Attack of the Clones.
I would like to welcome and congratulate you for your arrival to this piece of internet history. It's always nice to see someone experiencing something cool for the first time. Also you seem like a pretty cool guy. 👍👍
On your point about starting off with nuclear, solar, and wind energy during the industrial revolution, the issue I see is that the energy yield possible from these sources at the time was significantly less than that available from fossil fuels. I mean we'd been using wind and water power for mills for a long time, but figuring out how to use it to generate electricity and power homes and land transportation was, I think, a bit beyond us back then.
Honestly, you have to blast past a whole lot like Bill Wurtz to teach World History in a reasonable amount of time. It is _very_ easy to complain about other countries (Middle East, Africa, & Asia) not being covered, but don't seem to understand the sheer difficulty of having to restrict so much of what matters into a school year. And at the college level, it becomes contained within semesters (and into specific topics if wanting to go in-depth). One reason I believe people have so much difficulty trying to understand that humans evolved from monkeys is the sheer span of time that is involved. For example: Harrison Ruffin Tyler (born November 9, 1928 and currently still alive) is the grandson of John Tyler (March 29, 1790 - January 18, 1862), who served as the tenth president of the United States. Harrison Tyler is currently 94 years old. *[Putting the life of Harrison Ruffin Tyler into perspective (November 9, 1928 to July 12, 2023)]* en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_20th_century#1928 And this is just one person living in America born in the same year as the invention of *_bubble gum._*
If you really wanted to do a true World History course that doesn't have a particular "-centric" label attached in an education system where history isn't the only course being taught (that's just being solely a history major), I can guarantee that covering World History is next to impossible.
Another part of the problem is people thinking that the theory of evolution by natural selection asserts humans evolved from monkeys. I think it's important to be clear that humans and monkeys evolved from a very distant common ancestor.
honestly now that youre looking at this and im actually thinking about it this is one of the most simplistic yet quite comprehensive world history videos in existence and suits anyone with really bad adhd
10:00 I think the thing with Alexander the Great was that he was dying and he was surrounded by the Generals that wanted power, and they said Alexander said the successor should be "Kratistoi" or "to the strongest" but its very likely Alexander actually said "Krateroi" or "to Krateros", who was one of his generals that wasnt there. The people present probably heard him correctly but just pretended to hear the wrong thing so they could have equal chances to become the new head honcho.
I'm a bit late, but I love your reaction to this video. Your attitude going in is infectious, and really motivated me to watch the video with you to hear your output. Keep up the good work!
Just last month I tried explaining, as an electrical engineer myself too, to a Japanese person how having MORE nuclear energy is better in the long run and on the larger, international world scale, even though having solar panels and wind turbines may make them personally feel better about themselves and their immediate surroundings. Her response was just to tell me that I need to take responsibility of my words. Heck yeah I would, but people keep being scared about even the word "nuclear" so it's quite damn difficult to do anything to take responsibility of in the first place! 😁
Yeah. The actual amount of nuclear waste generated is tiny, and if we wanted to we could continue to harvest energy from the spent fuel in various other ways (such as RTGs and such.) I'm happy to hear that here in Ontario were expanding our nuclear generation capability again.
The sad part is Japan isn't gifted for the natural disasters. They can have typhoons, earth quakes, and that is obviously strongly built inside their culture. It's understandable that given their nuclear history, they tend to avoid it.
@@leflo_ You mean the Fukashima "disaster" where only one person died from radiation while dozens died from the evacuations? That's right, more people died from the evacuations than the actual issue they were evacuating for.
Omae no kotoba wo chanto sekinin! I probably butchered that. You should tell her that more people die daily from coal mining than have _ever_ died from nuclear accidents.
21:00 ...Yeah, "what if oil / coal just wasn't a thing" is an interesting question and I think you nailed it. For industrialization to happen _quickly_ at least, you need oil and coal, probably unless you collaborate with other, already industrialized nations pretty carefully. Any nation hoping to "upgrade" looks at first world countries insisting they don't use either and think "but hey, you did, isn't that kinda unfair?"
Yeah discovering nuclear power before the industrial revolution would have likely been a nightmare. Everything from making the fuel to actually using it would cost a lot of lives to radiation poisoning without machines. Those machines also must be made by other machines, since even a 0,05% error in a lot of parts' dimensions, or material uniformity, could make the machine fail. Handmade machines would fail too often or be too simple to operate safely around the radiation
@@olafthebear2327 I do wonder how it would be if we avoided the nuclear teakettle approach, tho. Would LFTR be easier to get started from scratch, for example? Lower tolerances, perhaps? Sadly, I don't know enough about the actual design to say; perhaps there's more trouble buried a layer deeper, in handling the fluoride side of things. :-/
I think a good example to consider is Babbage's analytical engine. Entirely possible on paper, and way ahead of it's time(1837 versus commercial success of tabulating machines in 1924), but even with a massive budget. The tight machining tolerances required meant a lot of the work was rejected, and so the costs ballooned out of control. This impossible stopgap concept was actually something James Webb had to convince J.F.K. of. President Kennedy wanted to build a rocket to send men to the moon on what was basically a shoestring budget(by comparison to what ended up happening) with little to no oversight or trials. Plenty of people throughout history have tried to jump ahead of the curve, but there has to be the body of work to build off of, ex nihilo nihil fit. If someone tries to skip steps to reach a conclusion ahead of time they'll either find out someone else beat them to it, concurrent and forgotten discoveries are fairly common throughout history, or they might take the wrong approach and fall behind due to feasibility problems. There's another option too, they may be staunchly secretive and take their discovery to their grave like Leeuwenhoek and what should have been a hugely beneficial lens manufacturing technique. However he feared his work being considered derivative of Hooke's and chose secrecy instead of progress.
@@Leadvest Same problem with the Antikythera mechanism. It was wildly complex for it's time, like 14th century clockwork trying to track every major celestial body over decades in a single device. It definitely worked in theory... except the degre of uncertainty in it's calculations is estimated to be _massive_ because the gears were all made by hand.
@@Leadvest Ah, yes. The tools to make the tools to make the tools. The progression towards precision is a fascinating subject. I hadn't thought that much precision was necessary in the making of LFTR reactor, but perhaps in the turbine? I am not, obviously, an engineer. ;-]
about your point at around 21:00 about "what if the Industrial Revolution was nuclear power instead of coal/oil?" that's sorta what happens in Fallout except instead of the Industrial Revolution, it was post-WWII when the world (or at least the US) basically started to hard-focus all kinds of nuclear power in our tech tree leading to even *cars* running on nuclear, and the invention actual proper Nuclear Fusion
History of the entire world, I guess is my favorite video in existence. So much unbiased knowledge in a relatively small bite of time, and it is ALWAYS entertaining to watch people react to it. And the funny stuff in it never gets old
By the way, the end of the video asks: "By the way, where the hell are we?" If you restart the video then the Beginning answers that question with: "Hi, you're on a rock floating in space. Pretty cool huh?" Genius Level Ending
21:47 This is actually a very interesting thought experiment. I would hope that with all that extra time from the 1800’s to now nuclear energy would be cleaner and they’d have found more ways to make it safer, but I’d equally fear the possibility of people of the past seeing it as an opportunity to devastate their foes and end up burning the earth
#11:34 the opening line in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms goes something like this. The empire long united must divide, the empire long divided must unite, that is how it has always been
this is one of my favorite videos and a favorite to watch for reactions. I must say I really enjoyed your reaction, you had great insight for the scientific aspects and have an education to understand and appreciate all the rest. This is probably my favorite, thank you
I don’t think the Industrial Revolution could have happened without fossil fuels, mostly because of how dependent it was on the materials that come from it. As that old commercial said, "plastics make it possible."
21:07 Nuclear would have been disastrous back then, and 'renewables' would have been a pipe dream. Totally on board for Nuclear now though, arguably the 'greenest' (no pun intended) power source available right now.
Nuclear power plants have been fine for over 50 years. We have also known how to recyle nuclear waste and reuse it for more power for over 30 years now. The only reason it never happened was due to politics .
Wind and solar is even greener. The even more important argument is that they are also both cheaper by now (all three power plant systems are subsidized in some countries and less or not at all in others. Factor this in when comparing.).
@@rekrn12345 "Fine"... except, ya know, Three Mile Island, Chenobyl, Fukushima. Not that I am against nuclear power, on the contrary. But let´s not act like it is totaly and absolutely safe. Precautions should be (and are) taken.
@@veronikamajerova4564 Other than fukushima where nothing actually happened the other two reactors were 40 years old. Modern reactors do not have those flaws. Chernobyl was a cheap russian reactor that didn't follow any design rules. Also lets point out you listed 3 incidents in the past 50 years with minor issues out of the literal thousands of reactors that exist in the world today.
I continue to enjoy watching people reacting to this video because I enjoy the original so much and because the reactions are so varied. It lets me enjoy it a little bit differently each time. Is there any media you like to do that with? Let me know in the comments.
14:09 From their perspective, it was though: Holy -> because the Pope crowned the Emperor Roman -> because they saw themself as the Roman Empire 2.0 Empire -> again because of the whole "Roman Empire 2.0"-thing. Also, their leader was an Emperor. Also, it's worth noteing that in Germany, it's called "Heiligies Roemisches Reich Deutscher Nation" with a "Reich" being an ambigious word that can refer to many different kind of realms including but not limited to dukedoms, kingdoms and, of course, empires. So it could also be translated as "Holy Roman Kingdom of the german nation".
It's a bit of a wild rabbit hole. The reasons for pyramids and ziggurats, the bahgdad battery, the ark of the covenant, apparently it's all aliens. Then evidence of cataclysm. Good luck keeping your brain inside your skull at that point.
That's the first time I've ever heard someone say "that's gotta be a meme" and be 100% correct about it being a widespread meme at one point
1.3K likes and 1 reply
Haven't seen that yet
1.4k likes and 2 replies after 3 weeks
Haven’t seen that before
1.5k likes and 3 unoriginal replies after 3 weeks
I've seen that before
Lmao
1.5K likes and I like men
The ending is such a smart, perfect thing. The video starts with "Hey! You're on a rock floating in space" and then he goes to all lengths to describe what that rock is, how it was created and what happened to it... and then at the end the last sentence is "btw where the hell are we?" like now we know even less and are even more confused.
Pretty sure the reason behind that last sentence is because we're working toward exploring more of space.
It's designed to perfectly loop.
@@Miralitycool.
I feel that this video was built in a standard essay format. It certainly resembles it a lot. Just oversimplified for time.
Ummm...
1. the idea is you can loop it there. It makes a perfect loop as the first sentence is an answer to that question.
2. it's not us, the ones who have watched the video, asking that question, but the thing inventor inventor.
1:11 - the genius of this video is that that pause is exactly the right amount of time to make EVERYONE check if the video is still playing. It's some of the most impeccable timing i have ever seen.
I love it, actually. It makes me laugh every time they check it. I've not seen one single person react to this who realized what it was doing.
My connection actually broke at that exact time on this video. Plus the buffering circle was perfectly camouflaged in the white background. I burst out laughing.
bill wurtz is an incredible drummer and musician generally, you can't trust anyone else to explain the beginning of time
I also thought it paused XD
@@egodeathwish exactly. In fact,some of the inspiration of this might have been from one of his sad mad and bad glad dreams. I've learned to trust those.
I personally love how he used descriptive words and phrases while making the words blink on screen. The strategy creates a subconscious connection, helping cement concepts. Like his, "Some stars burn out wirh passion," and as he says passion it flashes supernova. Makes things easier to remember.
"No, the sun is a deadly laser" has lived rent free in my head for as long as I can remember.
Same
"Not anymore, there's a blanket"
@@stavby01a ✨blaaanket✨
"I need to remember this presentation style at work"
Famous last words at work
👍
@@lpzmarkus564 Bro forgot how to use the like button
Nuh-uh, that's gonna give you 90% of the money in the entire office
Man just spoke the language of the king. You can't beat that comeback.
@@JaxDaBestbro doesn’t need to be toxic
I love that you immediately knew that "The Sun is a Deadly Lazer" was a meme, because it immediately became one after this video went viral.
Edit: Y'all, when I say "this video," I'm talking about the original video. You know. The one that 'went viral.' Not the 1000th reaction to it that's been posted on YT since then. Use your critical thinking skills a bit.
My classmates: don't go out side cuace he sun the a deadly laser, I watched the vid before they started but I didn't remember that line
The Sun is a dealy Lazer!
It screams meme potential
The Lazer is a Deadly Sun
It took some time before it became a meme. Not "immediately".
Bill Wutrz is a freakin' genius. I hope that wherever he is now, and whatever he's doing, that he's well and happy.
He is still regularly putting out extremely catchy songs and music videos in his distinctive style. It's all great.
@@TheAgr08 Good to know. Thanks.
I wish Toby Fox didn't have wrist and hand pain slowing down his work so much, so he could have some free time to start some silly shit with Bill Wurtz and Louis Cole
He does music now!
@@Denug0shut it killjoy
🤓🤓
In case nobody else pointed it out, the Ingermission when he mentions Japan is because dude has a whole video JUST on History of Japan. It isn't as science-y, but is a must watch.
I loved "History of the entire world, I guess". It also made me realize that the school system I went through never taught anything but American history. At a certain age most of what I knew about the rest of the world was from movies and historical romance novels. Some of those authors did a lot of research.
11:28
"China is whole again... Then it broke again"
"I think that sums up most of what I know about Chinese history"
I love this guy
Ryoiki Tenkai Mydoshuko
We can turn it into a tree religion got me cracking 😂
@@Souls_-lover_Cube-you aren’t in jjk bud!
dontworryaboutit
itdoesthatallthetime
I have watched this so many times I don't even have to open the link to the exact time
While Colombus was mistaken in thinking it was the indies, he actually knew there was land around where the americas are. He studied the flotsam that was arriving on the coasts of Morroco, and calculated that it was a far bigger quantity than if there was nothing there. His explanation was that the world was smaller than people thought, and since the size of the world is relatively easy to calculate he was taken for an idiot, but he wasn't heading into the ocean without any idea of what he was doing.
He also documented/discovered the "tradewinds" and the "westerlies" that made voyages back and forth to the Americas from Europe much more predictable and safe, and thus profitable.
Maybe he just studied the accounts and maps of the several other European explorers that went to North America over the previous half a millennium
What other European explorers do you speak of that went before Columbus? I guess the Portuguese could have made trips back and forth, but if so, they do not seem to have told anyone. The Norse did not use the tradewinds or westerlies, as far as I know...their voyages were much more against the prevailing currents and winds, which is probably a big reason why they did not make repeat voyages.
@@iKvetch558 not many repeat voyages may have been attempted but we tend to underestimate how well known those voyages were back then. There is some evidence that those stories were being spread in Italy around the time Columbus was alive. Regardless, substantiating any histoical claim from that long ago is difficult because for every scrap of evidence that survived there is likely much much more that didn't. But I'll admit my biases here. I despise our celebration of Columbus and how our history ignores what kind of person he was. He may have had some expertise but clearly his calculations of the earths size was wrong. He was a brutal dude and even his own family despised him for his cruelty.
@@blakec8549 I definitely will not fault your biases, or argue against your calling out his brutality. Of course, the biggest harm he did...the spreading of European diseases to those who had no defenses against them... he had no real idea about, but you are obviously not wrong about the evils he perpetrated intentionally.
I love the way Bill weaved through the broad strokes of history because it shows a ton of connections that you usually won't look at as much. Especially that line of dominoes that led from the 7-year war over the american revolution to the french revolution.
Or how the fall of Constantinople led to the Age of Discovery.
Portugal being jealous of indian spices
The american indenpendecy is directly linked to the french revolution, it's common sense. We learn that in school
@@umi2751All wars are directly linked to all other wars, so that's not saying much. Either by interwar circumstances like the WW1 and WW2, or direct wartime actions like how Britain annoyed the US during the Napoleonic Wars, which led to the US declaring war.
@@umi2751 Big talks about common sense when your education system sucks so hard that black people don't know shit about slavery and blame white people for inventing it. I can assure you that 90% of Americans are completely oblivious about stuff that is teached in school everywhere else. You only learn that in school because it's supposed to invoke patriotism in children - which is basically everything the American education is there for - indoctrination.
21:42 - That sounds like a hell of a plot for an althistory novel. Subscribed.
(There's a line of thought that if society completely falls now and we lose all of our recorded knowledge there isn't enough easily accessible energy to restart civilization on the same tack.)
Thanks! Welcome aboard!
It’s crazy that reactions to this video still consistently get over 1 million views. It really serves as a testament as to how great the original video actually was
Finally, a man of class and taste who appreciates "The sun is a deadly lazer (sic)" as much as I do.
"(sic)"
@@kualajdm sicced
@@ErisRising sicc my dicc
"it's not quite laser" so I think lazer is acceptable, so no sic needed :^)
@@aloysiuskurnia7643 🤓☝️ moment.
Fun fact, that intermission is where Bill takes a breath. He did this whole entire video with just two breaths
👍
Also he has a video about japan specifically, where he goes into a lot more detail about it so I see it as a hint to that
What the hell
Eminem been hella quiet since Bill's video
If you are smooth brained enough to actually believe that.... have I got a bridge to sell you
I can't remember if Bill Wurtz himself did this, but there is a "safe for schools" edition to this video that cuts out all the occasional profanity. Really glad a video like this is being shown in schools because, as you touched upon, it's really good at simplifying some insanely complex ideas & theories.
watching this with like 13-15 year olds with the profanity would be fine. europe did rape africa, thats something that we should not sweep under the rug by making it more pallatable to talk about. if it is off putting that is the right way to handle it
I feel like school aged kids can handle some swearing lol
@@roramoya oh, they absolutely can. Schools just have regulations.
@@esteemedcharacteractressma58 lol I watched the History of Japan one in my Japanese class
This sounded like Zefrank instead of Bill Wurtz, but i might also be wrong
4:45 "NO,why? *THE SUN IS A DEADLY LAZER 🗣🗣🗣*
Not any more there’s a blanket
I've watched a lot of professionals reactions to this video (because it is my favourite video of all time) and I must say I loved your reaction the most. Simply sitting there and watching you enjoy this masterpiece is so much fun and is exactly what I want to see because it feels like I am showing something I really love to a friend and watch them enjoy it as much as I do. Thank you for making this video it really made me smile!
7:30
I like that Bill Wurtz actually accurately marked where there were some tin deposits during his explanation of bronze. Tin is actually really uncommon compared to other metals, and in the Bronze Age there were only two major tin deposits big enough for the entire Bronze Age Civilization in the Near East: Britain, and Afghanistan.
_Neither_ locations were a pleasant breeze to get to, mine tin, and come back, all while still alive.
maybe there was another major tin deposit, but got depleted so quickly that it didn't leave a trace?
@@jokitalinda10 Very well could've been, but if it would've been depleted so quickly after the ability to work with it was developed then it wasn't very big and therefore wouldn't have been significant enough to go down in history like the other two.
For example, Cyprus was the main supplier of tin for the Bronze Age Civilizations around the Eastern Mediterranean. It had a lot, but at the height of the Bronze Age it simply didn't have enough, hence the demand for tin from places as far away as Britain and Afghanistan.
There were some small-time tin mines in places like Spain, but most mining done there was for silver, because Spain is (was) positively silver rich. Silver was so concentrated in Spain that when Carthage lost to Rome in the First Punic War, the Barcid dynasty went to Spain to conquer all the silver mines to pay off both their mercenaries AND the war reparations owed to Rome, and _still_ had enough money to be so rich they basically privately-funded their own campaigns during the Second Punic War.
i dont think it was intentional
It was obvly @@thegoddamnsun5657
yeah
My absolute favorite part of this video, at least for me, is that due to its quick pace, even as a history lover, you may make connections between events that you previously thought bared no relevance to each other, if that makes sense. The simplified condensation of history allows you to see the through-line in the timeline you (or I should say I) previously never connected relevance between. As a history nerd, that is a level of geek out I’m embarrassed to admit. 😅 But as a lover of humor above even history/science/sociology/linguistics, I love this video for that alone. And your viewing reaction was perfect 🙂
Thanks so much!
I'm curious, can you give an example of a connection you were able to make by watching this video that you hadn't made previously?
@@RobinClaassenthat the sun is a deadly laser
perfectly explained how I feel about this video
@@RobinClaassenkinda late, but one realisation I made watching this video at least 30 times is that the Empire of China and the Roman Empire existed in the same time frame for some time and probably knew of each other thanks to the Silk Road.
This made me search about it more in depth and discovered they even gave "nicknames" to each other (forgot what the were nicknames tho). Despite this, I don't think there was any "official" diplomats contact.
Bill Wurtz is a genius at coming up with earworms and incredibly educational videos delivered with a good side of humor.
He only did it twice- oh wait
What is Love?
@@ZphyZphyer His music videos slap pretty hard sometimes! He's done a bunch of those.
I still sing “I’m still a piece of garbage” on an almost daily basis
@@mayensarah i hope u get bullied
1:44 finished explanation,
:"Nice"
It's funny you mention the nuclear over coal or oil thing because that's actually pretty much the plotline for the Fallout games. Pre-war society was mostly based off nuclear energy, in Fallout, and it's depicted as an alternate timeline whose energy source deviated. You can find nuclear materials in everything from clocks to cars power cells in the games. The war was also a parallel of the Cold War, between China and the US in-game if I recall correctly.
4:40 THE SUN IS A DEADLY LASER
Edit:
After a year I am fixing my error. It is actually at 4:47 lol
Um its 4:45
~ *N o t a n y m o r e t h e r e ' s a b l a n k e t* ~
THE SUN IS A DEADLY LAZER
Yay them meme line
Classic
In case you were curious about the intermission, it was because he did a "History of Japan" video earlier, so he's referencing that he already covered a lot of history there.
Aha! :D I have literally just posted a comment where I wonder about that. Did you hear that from him?
I havent communicated it directly with Bill Wurtz, no, but if I remember correctly it was explained to me in the comments of the original video. Just passing the information up the pipeline. :)
I genuinely love how chill your reaction video is, you don't try to correct the video on minor things they've gotten wrong and just sit there to appreciate the comedy. Good stuff
Thank you!
Jesus saves 💛
❤
strange. I didn't like that about the video. I feel like he should have paused more and shared opinions on what he thought more. Make the content transformative rather than just showing it uninterrupted in it's entirety. It's almost at the point where he just aped someone else's content. I don't believe he's doing it maliciously, but it wasn't transformative imo.
@@ghastlypompano2 it is informative, that's what i think, but the video about earth isn't far off so why would he feel the need to "correct" something that doesn't need it? sure maybe someone like you is just looking for a more detailed explanation on how things work in that video he reacted to, but you're not gonna get that bro, at the end of the day he is "reacting" to the video, not explaining it in every detail on how everything works, and tbh he is informing but also reacting, this is a reaction video not a breakdown video. I mean you can easily search a breakdown of this video if there even is one.
7:45 Nah, really, the cradle of humanity in the middle east didn't have tin, they really did import it from traders that traveled all the way from Europe / British isles to make bronze. We know almost nothing about these people tho, but they quit trading tin to Egyptians when the 'Sea People' invaded from the west and caused the bronze age collapse (thanks Egyptians for writing down that war in a pyramid)
I love how history of the entire world I guess just eventually pops up on every single reaction channel and how literally all of them add more context to the greatest UA-cam video ever
Fun fact to expand on your piece on WWII not ending just because the US dropped the nukes. Japan and Russia never actually signed a formal peace treaty so technically WWII is still on 🙃 They did sign the Joint Declaration in 1956 where they both agreed to wave reparations and agreed to formalize peace talks in the future but those were never actually conducted.
One could argue that Japan won by TKO when The Soviet Union collapsed.
@@gaminginsomniac4427 That's fair. One could make the argument that when the Soviet Union collapsed all their wars ended. A new government that occupies the same land area doesn't automatically inherit the wars of the past governments.
@@hamsterfromabove8905 A new government usually does inherit all treaties, including those of war and peace, of it's predecessor state.
@@olivenkranz with the soviet union being made up of multiple states, which one of those would than inherit the treaties?
Russia, just like the URSS had to 'inherit' WW1 from the Russian Empire
idk how it would work without time travel but the green industrial revolution sounds like a cool setting for an AU book
Yeah, it'd be dang near impossible because the materials and tools required to develop those power sources would require a more readily accessed power source to develop. Coal and oil are a lot easier to work with on industrial scales than wind or solar. You'd need to have already gone through an industrial revolution to even *get* nuclear power. That's basically how all technological development goes. We went with bronze before iron because bronze is easier to work with even though iron is more common.
Oh, definitely. Especially if coal had as much bad PR as nuclear does right now.
@@brigidtheirish That's fair. But I think they're be real potential if you could prove environmental damage and show what green energy could look like.
Instead of 200 years of dirty energy we could have done the bare minimum amount of coal and oil before immediately beginning the process of transitioning to a cleaner source of energy. Instead Big Coal and Oil got their hooks into society. Now we are struggling to transition even though we have the technology and the knowledge.
Just telling the world during the industrial revolution could have changed the mindset of the world to view coal and oil as only temporary boosts rather than an indefinite power source.
@@brigidtheirish reminds me of a sci-fi book I read where a civilization that had a very advanced understanding of physics/technology, and was able to use this knowledge to help a primitive civilization "skip" some of those steps in natural technological development. The main plot point related to this is that they taught them to make radio communication devices without needing traditional electronics (instead using some quantum mechanical effect that's easy to take advantage of, even with primitive tools).
@@vibaj16 Interesting. Did the book go into the possible negative consequences of skipping steps? Because quite a few places on Earth are dealing with being yanked through technological development without the chance to make the accompanying social changes.
The sheer amount of research that the og video took is so impressive by itself, but then to condense it and simplify it to the degree Bill did is absolutely genius work. I wished more professionals recognised the greatness of these kind of videos where coplex topics are explained in a simpler, more engaging way.
I mean, it mocks Religion
@@P3_Primeany cons?
@@P3_Primeok
@@P3_PrimeSo?
'So''@@patrickstrickin5123
love how you actually react and put your two cents into what you watch. youre now the only react channel im subbed to.
Thank you!
This is the first time i see someone with a lot of studies and stuff and be this chill and not being picky about everything! You look like a really nice person to hangout with
Normally I get mad when someone reacting to a video constantly pauses, but this man did it to explain stuff and comment on stuff, so I'm actually fine with this. Keep up the good work man.
Thanks, I appreciate that!
Talking is reacting. I actually like when people pause. A lot of people will try to say something over the video, and you see them miss stuff because of it. That's way more frustrating. If you're trying to watch the original video uninterrupted, a reaction video is the wrong place to do that.
why are u watching a reaction video then just watch the original gee
But pausing and offering more context, content or opinions is what you're supposed to do. Otherwise you're just stealing content. Watch the original if you want to watch that video uninterrupted.
@@taffles7498did you actually read the comment?
There are soooooooooooo many reactions to this video across a variety of personalities, filmed and not, but I love how one specific moment is consistent between every one:
They always, _always_ check to see if the video's still running after "That's how every it gets." I did this also my first time.
What a way to engage school kids!
This should be shown in every school around the world. It would stimulate the kids to talk about history and politics in a way that is not dry and boring.
Absolute gold!
Fun fact: someone made a clean version specifically for schools!
@@TheGrimReaper19I remember seeing that!
The history of Japan video he did was also absolutely brilliant and the precursor to this video
i remember watching this in school at one point. though i had seen the video before that. it was definitely an awesome discussion we had after.
1:04 this gets everyone 😭
Yup
*this gets every
I think the best thing about this style is that it doesn't give you time to ask questions, which is usually a bad thing, but for a quick summarization it's absolutely perfect. You can explain the gaps later, but the purpose of this kind of presentation is to get the broad strokes across.
The pun with the Mongols invading the whole universe was actually really smart if you know what Genghis Khan's name means. It's a title that means ruler of the universe basically, and his real name was Temujin.
Which means "iron" or refers to the smith who hammers it...
He was both, if one thinks about it..
13:26 "Hey, you want to get ENLIGHTENED in the middle of nowhere??" Best Buddhist pick-up line, if I've ever heard one. 😁😁😇
"Hey girl, you wanna get enlightened with me later?" 😎
I will forever love the video cuz it’s virality truly proved how much ppl can enjoy educational media and learning! Bill Wurtz truly mastered how to capture people’s attention and making learning fun. Even some of my teachers, back in high school, liked this video and showed it to us.
I know right, plus its stuck in my mind, so if I am bored I just remember it exists and watch it and I still laugh
4:20 taste the sun is the best lol also look haha funny timestamp
I love how you enjoyed this video with the profession that you're in. I have seen a lot of reactions about this video and I always enjoy how different people react and emphasize on different things.
This video is basically Gen Z required watching mainly because of the deadly lazer meme
It delivered to us a common brief overview of history and especially of post ironic humour
I think there is a similarity of the fast paced, text on screen style from bill wurtz to the way a lot of current day content is made
I absolutely need to see the video essay showing the actually influential effects Bill Wurtz has had on culture and music
Hey this guy made a video, and everybody loves it… now we’ve got ~TikTok~
Cringe.
watched before the meme
The day peeps with ADHD won.
Thank you SO MUCH for all of the likes, views, and comments on this video! This has been incredible!
If you are interested in seeing my reaction to another one of Bill Wurtz's crazy videos, please check out my reaction to his History of Japan video: ua-cam.com/video/oBFcIf4Zbzk/v-deo.htmlsi=ZMDHHrSVCDTM5WTQ
Yes, I was incorrect in saying the United States didn't have a 3rd nuclear bomb and it becoming the Demon Core - I greatly appreciate you all keeping my facts straight!
If you are interested in my thoughts on the Demon Core, please check out my reaction to Kyle Hill's video on the subject: ua-cam.com/video/Komj07wzM5E/v-deo.html
The problem with taking info to the 1800's is you would need to use fossil fuel to even make proper equipment to make sustainable energy sources while at the same time trying not to shot with a musket for being a warlock
Room for Moors? (Camera zooms in on Iberia
I sure love being recommended a video of a person that isnt a complete failure like me to just remind me of that fact
you asked us to let you know what we think so:
imagine denying the finnish-korean hyper war
laugh at this user
@@mrfreetime5177 Given the amount of boiler explosions and lack of safety at the start of the industrial revolution, the idea of starting with nuclear reactors, if we could make them, would've resulted in a LOT of damage to the environment through radiation leaks, or just pumping it straight into rivers and the atmosphere.
15:45 I've watched MANY reaction videos for this and you are the first one to know the Majapahit ahead of time. Too amazing!
Well, you’d have to get impressive grades to become a nuclear engineer.
Dude, i literally found your channel yesterday and im addicted to your content! never change, its so genuine and informative!
I mean, it’s true. Nuclear power is the cleanest form of energy we have. It really frustrates me when people say it isn’t.
The only thing keeping nuclear energy from being entirely clean is the lack of technology for nuclear fusion. And even then, because of entropy it would take all the energy from fission to power the fusion. So it would be useless energy. Unless we got some crazy biproduct from it that created more energy.
As a high school teacher I can say this is something a lot of history teachers love to subtly and unofficially suggest before finals. Due to the language of course "no one" ever does. Maybe a students older sibling suggests it, or someone says out loud "I wish there was a youtube video that could help me study for my AP exam, while actually being funny."
So much of the brilliance of this video is in the visuals, too. Like how "gravity" makes a cameo during the "society" sequence.
The "Intermission" bit after Japan was a node to Bills previous video in the same style focused on Japan.
came here to mention that, to the top!
A node? How hard is it to double check before posting?
@@drefk1973 how hard is it to not turn into a pedantic little shit at the sight of a simple misspelled word?
Just for that I'm not going to change it. Have fun seething~
@@drefk1973 it's youtube comments, my guy, no need to stress about it
can read and understand it = works fine
Hey at 11:09 a bit of a correction to you. Hinduism and Buddhism actually did spread kinda accidentally to SE Asia. Indian kingdoms went there for trade but ended up marrying into royal lineages which increased the influence. There was never an attempt to spread the culture, the peoplr sort of just adopted it out of their own will
Don't say this to him, say it to Bill Wurtz.
went from being in a not so good mood to now being in a great mood! thanks.
"They did many Crusades, some of which almost didn't fail..." is still one of the rawest burns I've heard in a long time.
My favorite is the 2nd Crusade, where they all went to Jerusalem, realized it was heavily defended, then all went home. End of the Crusade Episode 2: Attack of the Clones.
I would like to welcome and congratulate you for your arrival to this piece of internet history. It's always nice to see someone experiencing something cool for the first time.
Also you seem like a pretty cool guy. 👍👍
On your point about starting off with nuclear, solar, and wind energy during the industrial revolution, the issue I see is that the energy yield possible from these sources at the time was significantly less than that available from fossil fuels.
I mean we'd been using wind and water power for mills for a long time, but figuring out how to use it to generate electricity and power homes and land transportation was, I think, a bit beyond us back then.
Thank you very much!
Honestly, you have to blast past a whole lot like Bill Wurtz to teach World History in a reasonable amount of time. It is _very_ easy to complain about other countries (Middle East, Africa, & Asia) not being covered, but don't seem to understand the sheer difficulty of having to restrict so much of what matters into a school year. And at the college level, it becomes contained within semesters (and into specific topics if wanting to go in-depth).
One reason I believe people have so much difficulty trying to understand that humans evolved from monkeys is the sheer span of time that is involved.
For example: Harrison Ruffin Tyler (born November 9, 1928 and currently still alive) is the grandson of John Tyler (March 29, 1790 - January 18, 1862), who served as the tenth president of the United States. Harrison Tyler is currently 94 years old.
*[Putting the life of Harrison Ruffin Tyler into perspective (November 9, 1928 to July 12, 2023)]*
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_20th_century#1928
And this is just one person living in America born in the same year as the invention of *_bubble gum._*
If you really wanted to do a true World History course that doesn't have a particular "-centric" label attached in an education system where history isn't the only course being taught (that's just being solely a history major), I can guarantee that covering World History is next to impossible.
Another part of the problem is people thinking that the theory of evolution by natural selection asserts humans evolved from monkeys. I think it's important to be clear that humans and monkeys evolved from a very distant common ancestor.
0:36 "without buying a BOAT" * proceeds to show an airplane *
This video taught me more in 25 minutes than school did in a year lol
16:08 "thats bullshit. said portugal...spiceless" XD
honestly now that youre looking at this and im actually thinking about it this is one of the most simplistic yet quite comprehensive world history videos in existence and suits anyone with really bad adhd
10:00 I think the thing with Alexander the Great was that he was dying and he was surrounded by the Generals that wanted power, and they said Alexander said the successor should be "Kratistoi" or "to the strongest" but its very likely Alexander actually said "Krateroi" or "to Krateros", who was one of his generals that wasnt there.
The people present probably heard him correctly but just pretended to hear the wrong thing so they could have equal chances to become the new head honcho.
That's really interesting, where would one find his list of generals, including the one he probably mentioned but was "misinterpreted"
cringe pfp
"That's probably be a meme" Yup, yup it sure is. Well intuited! 💯
I'm a bit late, but I love your reaction to this video. Your attitude going in is infectious, and really motivated me to watch the video with you to hear your output. Keep up the good work!
Just last month I tried explaining, as an electrical engineer myself too, to a Japanese person how having MORE nuclear energy is better in the long run and on the larger, international world scale, even though having solar panels and wind turbines may make them personally feel better about themselves and their immediate surroundings.
Her response was just to tell me that I need to take responsibility of my words. Heck yeah I would, but people keep being scared about even the word "nuclear" so it's quite damn difficult to do anything to take responsibility of in the first place! 😁
Yeah. The actual amount of nuclear waste generated is tiny, and if we wanted to we could continue to harvest energy from the spent fuel in various other ways (such as RTGs and such.)
I'm happy to hear that here in Ontario were expanding our nuclear generation capability again.
The sad part is Japan isn't gifted for the natural disasters. They can have typhoons, earth quakes, and that is obviously strongly built inside their culture. It's understandable that given their nuclear history, they tend to avoid it.
@@leflo_ You mean the Fukashima "disaster" where only one person died from radiation while dozens died from the evacuations? That's right, more people died from the evacuations than the actual issue they were evacuating for.
@@Gustav_Kuriga Yeah, uh... might want to check your sources on that.
Omae no kotoba wo chanto sekinin!
I probably butchered that. You should tell her that more people die daily from coal mining than have _ever_ died from nuclear accidents.
19:00 Fun fact they did make a religion out of that, "The cult of the supreme being."
Dang
I did think there was a reason to make that joke
21:00
...Yeah, "what if oil / coal just wasn't a thing" is an interesting question and I think you nailed it. For industrialization to happen _quickly_ at least, you need oil and coal, probably unless you collaborate with other, already industrialized nations pretty carefully. Any nation hoping to "upgrade" looks at first world countries insisting they don't use either and think "but hey, you did, isn't that kinda unfair?"
Yeah discovering nuclear power before the industrial revolution would have likely been a nightmare. Everything from making the fuel to actually using it would cost a lot of lives to radiation poisoning without machines. Those machines also must be made by other machines, since even a 0,05% error in a lot of parts' dimensions, or material uniformity, could make the machine fail. Handmade machines would fail too often or be too simple to operate safely around the radiation
@@olafthebear2327 I do wonder how it would be if we avoided the nuclear teakettle approach, tho. Would LFTR be easier to get started from scratch, for example? Lower tolerances, perhaps? Sadly, I don't know enough about the actual design to say; perhaps there's more trouble buried a layer deeper, in handling the fluoride side of things. :-/
I think a good example to consider is Babbage's analytical engine. Entirely possible on paper, and way ahead of it's time(1837 versus commercial success of tabulating machines in 1924), but even with a massive budget. The tight machining tolerances required meant a lot of the work was rejected, and so the costs ballooned out of control.
This impossible stopgap concept was actually something James Webb had to convince J.F.K. of. President Kennedy wanted to build a rocket to send men to the moon on what was basically a shoestring budget(by comparison to what ended up happening) with little to no oversight or trials.
Plenty of people throughout history have tried to jump ahead of the curve, but there has to be the body of work to build off of, ex nihilo nihil fit. If someone tries to skip steps to reach a conclusion ahead of time they'll either find out someone else beat them to it, concurrent and forgotten discoveries are fairly common throughout history, or they might take the wrong approach and fall behind due to feasibility problems.
There's another option too, they may be staunchly secretive and take their discovery to their grave like Leeuwenhoek and what should have been a hugely beneficial lens manufacturing technique. However he feared his work being considered derivative of Hooke's and chose secrecy instead of progress.
@@Leadvest Same problem with the Antikythera mechanism. It was wildly complex for it's time, like 14th century clockwork trying to track every major celestial body over decades in a single device. It definitely worked in theory... except the degre of uncertainty in it's calculations is estimated to be _massive_ because the gears were all made by hand.
@@Leadvest Ah, yes. The tools to make the tools to make the tools. The progression towards precision is a fascinating subject. I hadn't thought that much precision was necessary in the making of LFTR reactor, but perhaps in the turbine? I am not, obviously, an engineer. ;-]
It's cool to see people still watching this video so many years later
this style of explaining stuff can put my adhd brain to rest
5:42 he just had to say that before the "oh fuck everything is dead"💀💀
Love your reactions! This is one of my favorite video essays!
Thank You!
4:54 oh, my scientific friend, it very much is 😂
indeed
Brutha, I have the exact same PFP on my other accounts.
“The sun is a deadly laser”
about your point at around 21:00 about "what if the Industrial Revolution was nuclear power instead of coal/oil?"
that's sorta what happens in Fallout
except instead of the Industrial Revolution, it was post-WWII when the world (or at least the US) basically started to hard-focus all kinds of nuclear power in our tech tree
leading to even *cars* running on nuclear, and the invention actual proper Nuclear Fusion
Fun fact there is was a third atomic bomb core ready but it never got used in Ww2 and became known as the demon core as it claimed 2 lives
History of the entire world, I guess is my favorite video in existence. So much unbiased knowledge in a relatively small bite of time, and it is ALWAYS entertaining to watch people react to it. And the funny stuff in it never gets old
if i had worked at a business job and someone had made a presentation like this i would have endless respect for them
16:38 I love Isabella in that painting. She is really annoyed.
Thanks for the cool video man I loved watching your commentary with it.
By the way, the end of the video asks:
"By the way, where the hell are we?"
If you restart the video then the Beginning answers that question with:
"Hi, you're on a rock floating in space. Pretty cool huh?"
Genius Level Ending
12:45 The intermission is to watch “The history of Japan”
9:25 “Let’s think about those things together!”
This is one of my favorite videos ever! Fun reaction! Love how much you jived with Bill’s style.
Thanks so much!!
21:47 This is actually a very interesting thought experiment. I would hope that with all that extra time from the 1800’s to now nuclear energy would be cleaner and they’d have found more ways to make it safer, but I’d equally fear the possibility of people of the past seeing it as an opportunity to devastate their foes and end up burning the earth
Bill Wurtz's "history of the entire world, i guess" is the most timeless video to ever exist.
#11:34 the opening line in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms goes something like this.
The empire long united must divide, the empire long divided must unite, that is how it has always been
this is one of my favorite videos and a favorite to watch for reactions. I must say I really enjoyed your reaction, you had great insight for the scientific aspects and have an education to understand and appreciate all the rest. This is probably my favorite, thank you
17:42 just Tyler trying not to laugh at suleimans onion hat
My favourite thing about the video, is how it loops on itself. The ending question loops into the starting answer, it's so good.
I don’t think the Industrial Revolution could have happened without fossil fuels, mostly because of how dependent it was on the materials that come from it. As that old commercial said, "plastics make it possible."
21:07 Nuclear would have been disastrous back then, and 'renewables' would have been a pipe dream. Totally on board for Nuclear now though, arguably the 'greenest' (no pun intended) power source available right now.
Nuclear power plants have been fine for over 50 years. We have also known how to recyle nuclear waste and reuse it for more power for over 30 years now. The only reason it never happened was due to politics .
Wind and solar is even greener. The even more important argument is that they are also both cheaper by now (all three power plant systems are subsidized in some countries and less or not at all in others. Factor this in when comparing.).
@@rekrn12345 "Fine"... except, ya know, Three Mile Island, Chenobyl, Fukushima. Not that I am against nuclear power, on the contrary. But let´s not act like it is totaly and absolutely safe. Precautions should be (and are) taken.
@@veronikamajerova4564 Other than fukushima where nothing actually happened the other two reactors were 40 years old. Modern reactors do not have those flaws. Chernobyl was a cheap russian reactor that didn't follow any design rules.
Also lets point out you listed 3 incidents in the past 50 years with minor issues out of the literal thousands of reactors that exist in the world today.
I continue to enjoy watching people reacting to this video because I enjoy the original so much and because the reactions are so varied. It lets me enjoy it a little bit differently each time. Is there any media you like to do that with? Let me know in the comments.
14:09
From their perspective, it was though:
Holy -> because the Pope crowned the Emperor
Roman -> because they saw themself as the Roman Empire 2.0
Empire -> again because of the whole "Roman Empire 2.0"-thing. Also, their leader was an Emperor.
Also, it's worth noteing that in Germany, it's called "Heiligies Roemisches Reich Deutscher Nation" with a "Reich" being an ambigious word that can refer to many different kind of realms including but not limited to dukedoms, kingdoms and, of course, empires. So it could also be translated as "Holy Roman Kingdom of the german nation".
14:30 It's weird to see the "old style" telephone being used way back then by the pope.
I loved this video the first time I saw it, and I love it more with you're reactions!! Thanks, Tyler!
18:29 I like to think they fought the war so that the person who loses keeps Ohio.
i love it when full blown adults with degrees get thrown into the wild world of youtube it's so lovely and wholesome
Thank you very much!
8:54 im sorry
The WHAT?
It's a bit of a wild rabbit hole. The reasons for pyramids and ziggurats, the bahgdad battery, the ark of the covenant, apparently it's all aliens. Then evidence of cataclysm. Good luck keeping your brain inside your skull at that point.
Alien
Sponsors
Apparently
ancient aliens was a wild show lol dw about it
Alien sponsors
Thanks for introducing me to this video!
I think Bill Wurtz exists in a state of extreme synesthesia, and if you or I experienced reality the way he does, we would go permanently catatonic.