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A Scientist Huffed Gas In A Balloon. This Is What Happened To His Kidneys. 

Chubbyemu
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All references including the book are in this description, see below
Patient MB portrayed by Abram Cutshall, Toast Scientist by Jake Rattan
Special thanks Westminster Christian Academy
Production Assistant Jake Rattan
In-depth channel ‪@HemeReview‬
Secret channel ‪@BigEmus‬
This video has been dubbed using an artificial voice via aloud.area120.... to increase accessibility. You can change the audio track language in the Settings menu.
IG me: / chubbyemus
Tweet me: / chubbyemu
Music by ‪@Lifeformed_‬ ► lifeformed.ban...
Music by T4N3 ► / t4n3
Medicine ► • Medicine
These cases are patients who I, or my colleagues have seen. They are de-identified and many instances have been presented in more depth in an academic setting. These videos are not individual medical advice and are for general educational purposes only. I do not give medical advice over the internet.
References:
Poisoning by arseniuretted hydrogen of hydrogen arsenide, its properties, sources, relations to scientific and industrial operations, symptoms, post-mortem appearances, treatment, and prevention. John Glaister. 1908. archive.org/de...
Tox and Hound Fellow Friday- Metal Hydries I. toxandhound.co...
Sun HD, Ma L, Hu XC, Zhang TD. Treatment of acute promyelocytic leukemia by Ailing-1 therapy with use of syndrome differentiation of traditional Chinese medicine. Chin J Comb Trad Chin Med West Med 1992;12:170-171
Complete Remission after Treatment of Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia with Arsenic Trioxide. www.nejm.org/d...
Acute on Chronic Arsenic Poisoning www.nejm.org/d...
Mechanisms of arsenic: sites.dartmout...
Severe acute arsine poisoning treated by plasma exchange. www.tandfonlin...
Interaction of Arsine with Hemoglobin in Arsine-Induced Hemolysis. academic.oup.c...
Arsine toxicity: Chemical and mechanistic implications www.tandfonlin...
Arsenate replacing phosphate - alternative life chemistries and ion. www.ncbi.nlm.n...
Arsenic Binding to Proteins. www.ncbi.nlm.n...
A biography of arsenic and medicine www.hkmj.org/s...
Memorial Sloan Kettering Image by Kenneth C. Zirkel

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12 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 3 тыс.   
@chubbyemu
@chubbyemu 2 года назад
WOOOOO yeah baby that's what i've been waiting for that's what it's all about
@FizzyLake
@FizzyLake 2 года назад
?? is this a reupload?? why
@mxghty0
@mxghty0 2 года назад
WOOOOO
@Denny-77
@Denny-77 2 года назад
Woooooooooooooooooooooooooo i guess im 3rd
@Mcsqueegy
@Mcsqueegy 2 года назад
yes, wooo
@adoptdontshop3911
@adoptdontshop3911 2 года назад
WOOOOOO
@threebloodrubies2132
@threebloodrubies2132 2 года назад
My favorite thing about the Wikipedia article for arsenic poisoning is that it lists "Drinking water without arsenic" as prevention
@spiritmatter1553
@spiritmatter1553 2 года назад
Yay Wikipedia, coming in clutch!
@tkat6442
@tkat6442 2 года назад
"Which type of bottled water would you prefer? With or without arsenic?" "I'll have without, please!"
@bruh-pj3kq
@bruh-pj3kq 2 года назад
I mean… that’s factual
@lauriepenner350
@lauriepenner350 2 года назад
Citation needed
@Cairannx
@Cairannx 2 года назад
@@tkat6442 I read that in Leslie Nielsen's voice in Airplane!
@adoptdontshop3911
@adoptdontshop3911 2 года назад
A teacher huffing random gases he makes in front of students. Truly one of the moments of all time.
@Ebani
@Ebani 2 года назад
Well yeah, it cannot not be one of the moments of all time 🤔 🤦‍♂️ 😅
@contingenceBoston
@contingenceBoston 2 года назад
Undoubtedly one of the events in history
@OmegaLesPaul
@OmegaLesPaul 2 года назад
he did it for the banter
@magnifeck4669
@magnifeck4669 2 года назад
Truly a moment that happened in time.
@zyaphyr
@zyaphyr 2 года назад
Memento Mori fren
@africanfartingfrog
@africanfartingfrog 2 года назад
Unfortunately for this guy, dialysis was still 125 years away. Makes you appreciate modern medicine
@Yeah_Nahhh
@Yeah_Nahhh Год назад
2:20 “he struggled to call for 911” apparently there was phones and cars in the early 1800’s… 🙄 3:09 blood tests didn’t exist then & anemia wasn’t even known about nor did watches & I doubt they used a sundial
@DedRucktheDuck
@DedRucktheDuck Год назад
@@Yeah_Nahhh the story is dramatised but the case is from the 1800s look at 12:48
@codefreak8
@codefreak8 Год назад
@@Yeah_Nahhh It's a dramatization based on a real event, but adapted into a situation that modern viewers would know what to expect if it happened to them.
@exantiuse497
@exantiuse497 Год назад
@codefreak8 It has modern elements like calling 911 and blood tests, but then they just let him die as if modern treatments didn't exist. It's inconsistent; it should either have been written as it would've happened back in the day (e.g. instead of him calling 911 his assistant would've found him and taken him to the hospital on a horse carriage), or as it would happen today (he calls 911 and gets all the modern treatments and survives), not a weird mix of both
@BritishEngineer
@BritishEngineer Год назад
@@exantiuse497 Mm
@mumtrz
@mumtrz 2 года назад
Man you have to REALLY keep an eye on this guy, previously he rubbed a whole tub of pain relief cream on his crotch and now inhaling 3 litres of poisonous gas?
@Candicedickinsonllc
@Candicedickinsonllc 2 года назад
But he always comes back alive
@WooMaster777
@WooMaster777 2 года назад
Fans of this channel in the know. 😉🤣😂
@GeoNoob
@GeoNoob 2 года назад
He is immortal though
@danishbutter1847
@danishbutter1847 2 года назад
@@Candicedickinsonllc he's Kenny, in Southpark he can't be killed
@chocolate198
@chocolate198 2 года назад
@@danishbutter1847 lmao 💀
@Diana3229
@Diana3229 2 года назад
I just found this channel and I am so so glad that someone out there is making videos that alert of the dangers of poisoning. I had been breathing in a small gas leak in my apartment for five months and not only did doctors not know what was going on at the time, but they also don’t know how to treat my symptoms. And this is in 2021-2022. Thankfully I am alive and recovering. The risk of poisonings in general are too high for us not to have more widespread information about them and the actual dangers it accompanies. Thank you thank you thank you for doing what you do!!!
@n646n
@n646n 8 месяцев назад
Same happened to us, we'd been breathing in a natural gas (methane) leak for years due to improper installation of pipes. Luckily it isn't dangerous but the inspector smelled it immediately, somehow, despite nobody else ever smelling it.
@evilferris
@evilferris 2 года назад
Chemist here. Never, ever, drink or eat something that has been in laboratory glassware. Even if you personally and thoroughly washed it, some chemicals in trace amounts will do terrible things to your insides. This stunt at 0:56 makes me physically recoil. Besides, you shouldn’t be consuming food or drink anywhere near the inside of a laboratory.
@radicalbarrel2729
@radicalbarrel2729 2 года назад
Thanks chemist
@spindleblood
@spindleblood 2 года назад
I hope they just opened those fresh out of the box and they'd never been used before. I keep telling myself that so I don't cringe like you did lol.
@TysonJensen
@TysonJensen 2 года назад
We know this thanks to the noble sacrifice of many, many nineteenth century chemists who did just about every stupid thing possible with various reagents. Don’t make their sacrifice in vain! Avoid inhaling random substances from your lab!
@kalidwapur
@kalidwapur 2 года назад
Yay and in biology our offices are often directly inside the lab...
@pluto8404
@pluto8404 2 года назад
Thank you for the insight. Found out my prescription meds were made in a lab, never taking those things again. Who knows how much damage those blood pressure meds made in lab equipment have done to me.
@ionymous6733
@ionymous6733 2 года назад
if I ever present to the emergency room with some weird symptoms like this, my last words will be "Please, just contact Chubby Emu!" They'll be like, "Add delirium to his list of symptoms."
@manictiger
@manictiger 2 года назад
Doc, you don't hear that music?
@poiuy2782
@poiuy2782 2 года назад
Hahhah
@JavaScrapper
@JavaScrapper 2 года назад
“EMIA MEANING PRESENTS IN BLO-“ *flatlines*
@gnarlynicholasreviews
@gnarlynicholasreviews 2 года назад
@@JavaScrapper “Did the patient just say -emia meaning presence in blood…?” LMAO
@_Muser23
@_Muser23 2 года назад
This brought me the first laugh of the day 😂
@Tommymad1
@Tommymad1 2 года назад
"MB was a 31 year old man. As he fell he struggled to call his horse, who took him where he is now, the apothecary"
@WooMaster777
@WooMaster777 2 года назад
🤣😂🤣😂
@valkyriav
@valkyriav 2 года назад
“The horse, when questioned about whether he knew what had happened to his rider, replied neigh.”
@TechneMakre
@TechneMakre 2 года назад
@Aluzky while the horse is conditioned in its stable, MB is certainly not in a stable condition
@lleonard8854
@lleonard8854 2 года назад
😂
@seraphale
@seraphale 2 года назад
Looool
@priscilam.9808
@priscilam.9808 2 года назад
My dad was born in 1945 in Brazil. He was treated for his severe asthma as a child with arsenic. He told the story that one day his stomach hurt so bad he was taken to the hospital and doctors figured he had arsenic poisoning. His family owned a chemical lab and he became a chemist later on. Another one of his treatments as a child for asthma was crushed up cockroaches made into a powder.
@bola5671
@bola5671 2 года назад
Well I'm curious if no one's asking. What were the crushed up roaches supposed to be a cure for?
@miscelaneasdealguem
@miscelaneasdealguem 2 года назад
Que louco...
@Ebani
@Ebani 2 года назад
They certainly weren't in it for the science
@screamingmimi90
@screamingmimi90 2 года назад
@@bola5671 I’d also like to know.
@OwlyFisher
@OwlyFisher 2 года назад
@@bola5671 for asthma. reread the comment
@WooShell
@WooShell 2 года назад
Revisiting a centuries old case is some really nice and highly interesting change to the channel. Would appreciate if you did something like that every now and then 🙂
@Feyser1970
@Feyser1970 Год назад
Cold cases
@Triadii
@Triadii Год назад
I did not quite get whether he died from watching once, but I guess he died
@CoasterTeaFox
@CoasterTeaFox 11 месяцев назад
Agreed
@MsGrilo12
@MsGrilo12 2 года назад
I'm a chemist and I did not see that coming. Also, that's an excelent rule of thumb. If you don't need to get it in your lungs then don't (or at least try not to). Specially if you don't know exactly what it is. Excellent content, love your videos, I'am wating for next month already.
@gustavedelior3683
@gustavedelior3683 2 года назад
These things remind me of other incidents, such as the incident with the demon core or the incident with the professor who would put liquid nitrogen in his mouth and blow it out but one time ...he accidentally swallowed it. It would seem bravado and showmanship can be a detriment to science and the minds behind it
@timothyb.4928
@timothyb.4928 2 года назад
That's why i use needles for my H. Stay safe out there
@TheDragonLake
@TheDragonLake 2 года назад
Also a chemist. I work with industrial hazmat. I just finished 2 weeks of computer safety training and spent 1 day in the lab so far. I dont remember the exact test but testing the hazmat fluid for cyanide, sulfates, or oxidizers involves mixing with sulfuric acid first. I've barely been in that lab but my ass whould be grass if anyone even thought about doing stuff like this. The dean at my undergrad school whould show us as freshmen the reaction of HCl + NaOH -> H2O + NaCl by drinking it. Really hope he stopped doing that by now for reasons like this. Reagents not made for consumption could be contaminated
@Mr.LaughingDuck
@Mr.LaughingDuck 2 года назад
To be fair, why do you think today's labs are so highly regulated? Because some braggart did something predictably stupid, and was killed/maimed in a very disturbing manner.
@johnr797
@johnr797 2 года назад
@@Mr.LaughingDuck it's a good rule of thumb, if you see an oddly specific warning label on something, you *know* why it's there
@darkfent
@darkfent 2 года назад
Finally...I thought it would never came back. Afraid we would lose an episode just like that but thankfully it made a full recovery
@glenngriffon8032
@glenngriffon8032 2 года назад
A youtube video went to processing. This is what happend to its audio.
@MiTaReX
@MiTaReX 2 года назад
Not just a full recovery, it is now better than before!
@dosmastrify
@dosmastrify 2 года назад
It would never come back, he thought.
@JCSolis_Lit
@JCSolis_Lit 2 года назад
A full recovery, unlike the patient of this video. ☠️
@barneyrubble4293
@barneyrubble4293 2 года назад
Definitely one of those of the world.
@shawbros
@shawbros 2 года назад
When I was a kid, I accidentally inhaled some acid fumes. It burned my sinuses, and really screwed up my sense of smell. I was beginning to think my smell would never recover, but gradually over a couple/few days it returned to normal.
@goose5654
@goose5654 2 года назад
There is no way you paid the actor to mouth “WOOOO BABY! That’s what I’ve been waiting for, that’s what it’s all about!”
@gliple
@gliple 2 года назад
WOOO
@spiritmatter1553
@spiritmatter1553 2 года назад
My bet is that it’s Storyblocks.
@audiodood
@audiodood 2 года назад
@@gliple indeed
@xxprouxx
@xxprouxx 2 года назад
He also mouthed "I'm fast as fuck boiiiiii" lol
@BlueLightningHawk
@BlueLightningHawk 2 года назад
My boy drank too much purple drank son.
@FramerTerminater
@FramerTerminater 2 года назад
I work in a laboratory where we have large canisters of various pure gases such as hydrogen, argon, nitrogen, etc. In our safety training we received explicit warning not to use the gas to pitch our voices as there was a recent documented death of someone who passed out doing it, hit tiled floor face first, and died. Another victim of voice pitching...
@-grumpygold1155
@-grumpygold1155 2 года назад
Every time an intern walks in on their first day Intern: Oooh these gases seems fun 😏 Supervisor: *sighs* Here we go again… ok, as per the newly added standard protocol, DO NOT inhale any of the gas canisters
@yoyo762
@yoyo762 2 года назад
Such professionalism. Higher education at work. Kind of like the warnings chain saws have about not touching the blades while they are in motion. I guess we need some Yogi Barra's about how the obvious is hard to see apparently.
@BeckBeckGo
@BeckBeckGo 2 года назад
So when we were kids, my sister decided, on her birthday, to nonstop huff the helium tank my parents got for her balloons later that day while they were out getting her cake from the bakery. I did it too, once or twice, because who doesn’t want to sound like a cartoon? But she kept going. And going and going. And eventually she tried playing the fainting game with our friend and collapsed. And at first I though “ok, idiot daredevil is playing the fainting game” but she didn’t really get up. I was in lifeguard training at that time, so I checked her out, waited a few seconds, and then did CPR. She came around. I have no idea if she had just fainted or had suffered asphyxia from too much helium. (It’s an inert gas so it’s not toxic. But too much can suffocate you) Anyway, she was fine and my parents flipped their shit on both of us (unfair… but I wasn’t going to turn her in) Don’t do inhalants, kids.
@-grumpygold1155
@-grumpygold1155 2 года назад
@@BeckBeckGo its probably because she just had lesser o2 than its required to send to her brain, the helium takes up the o2 slot with each breath of the funny gas she took, good job on resuscitating her! she could had damaged her brain if no help came along immediately
@PrimericanIdol
@PrimericanIdol 2 года назад
@@yoyo762 Gun safety is perfectly acceptable, and highly encouraged. Why not safety advice for everything else?
@labrabellart1380
@labrabellart1380 Год назад
The fact that you explain why each thing is named the way it is, is so amazing. I'm autistic, and learning things the "normal" way by just taking in information and attributing names to it is really difficult for me. But learning the information behind those names helps me to understand it much better - not to mention the fact that I'll also be able to somewhat understand the meaning of OTHER names that use those same naming methods. It's extremely refreshing to see :D
@ilyouschka
@ilyouschka Год назад
thats why…. nvm 🤦‍♀️
@ravenID429
@ravenID429 10 месяцев назад
@@ilyouschka??
@DreamyyArt
@DreamyyArt 8 месяцев назад
helll yeah no wonder i loved these im an aspie and i go "wait whazzat" and the video literally tells me about it for me and i dont have to google it immediately after, helps me understand what in the fuck is goin on
@criidawg
@criidawg 5 месяцев назад
mfw i think im not autistic and then i see someone have the same struggles as me, and its because they are autstic: 😀 (POSITIVE IM JUST RELATING LOL
@labrabellart1380
@labrabellart1380 5 месяцев назад
@@criidawg Aah, that's relatable for sure! I spent a long time not really believing if I was autistic or not, but the sheer amount of times I came across autistic people who literally just described my habits as if they knew me, it kind of came clear. Kind of unsolicited advice here, sorry. But there's a test you can do online, did you know? It's called the Autism Quotient (AQ) test. If you're ever interested in finding out if you have more symptoms of autism, or even just ruling it out, that's a great place to start.
@neveragainlilhomie
@neveragainlilhomie Год назад
these actors are top tier
@egodeathwish
@egodeathwish 2 года назад
after five days in the hospital, MB was able to make a... contribution to science
@Findecommie
@Findecommie 2 года назад
Would love to see more historical cases adapted, people did some crazy shit before anyone really understood biochemistry
@asandax6
@asandax6 2 года назад
Like the Curies.
@dr.altoclef9255
@dr.altoclef9255 2 года назад
In my college physics course we covered nuclear physics and they showed us an old ‘Revigator’…where you would put water in to make radium water. Because “this is so cool so it probably does great stuff if you drink it”.
@tylern6420
@tylern6420 Год назад
@@dr.altoclef9255 bro really thought drinking radiation would turn you into luffy 💀
@dr.altoclef9255
@dr.altoclef9255 Год назад
@@tylern6420 Pretty much. Like “well we discovered this new thing so…it probably fixes all our problems and let’s try it. Don’t bother testing it first, it’s fine I’m sure.”
@tylern6420
@tylern6420 Год назад
@@dr.altoclef9255 tho tbh if it did actually turn me into rubber i would drink it
@oliverwilson11
@oliverwilson11 2 года назад
Respect to this hero teacher who died trying to make chemistry entertaining and interesting for his students
@Mernom
@Mernom 4 месяца назад
You mean the teacher that set his students the example of huffing random lab chemicals?
@JosieJOK
@JosieJOK 3 месяца назад
Ah, the age of scientific discovery, when scientists experimented on themselves! “Congratulations, you’ve discovered how to synthesize Arsine gas! Too bad you were your own lab rat!”
@fangbozhu7379
@fangbozhu7379 2 года назад
anyone ever notice the actors in the videos and just how well they're at presenting the state of mind of the kind of people who decide to literally snort up a balloon
@lharwest1571
@lharwest1571 2 года назад
Actors? I thought he poisoned someone to get most realistic results!
@KahruSuomiPerkele
@KahruSuomiPerkele 2 года назад
There is even the "yeah baby" of penguinz0/moist critical at 1:55 lel
@universalnetwork264
@universalnetwork264 2 года назад
Either helium, oxygen or nitrous oxide
@universalnetwork264
@universalnetwork264 2 года назад
Probably nitrous oxide if they actually got effects
@kosmicinclinations3333
@kosmicinclinations3333 2 года назад
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@maximvf
@maximvf 2 года назад
The first successful dialysis was performed in 1943. No chance for poor guy back in time.
@secretsauceskateboarding4337
ChubbyEmu: “If you don’t need to put it in your lungs, don’t put it in your lungs.” Vapers: 😮
@therabbithat
@therabbithat Год назад
Smokers: didn't react because they're already not alive
@The_Raven_1025
@The_Raven_1025 Год назад
You mean this methamphetamine I got for Christmas isn't healthy?!
@lukethelegend9705
@lukethelegend9705 Год назад
Smokers of tobacco, weed, crack, heroin, meth, etc: This sign won’t stop me because I can’t read
@LugaresYJuegosTM
@LugaresYJuegosTM Год назад
​​​@@lukethelegend9705 some vapers die from vaporized water overdose which is ridiculous I find vaping so gay 😂
@lukethelegend9705
@lukethelegend9705 Год назад
@@LugaresYJuegosTM no need to bring homophobia into this
@windCR
@windCR 2 года назад
This case made me even more grateful of medical treatments we have compared to even 30 years ago, thank you chubbyemu for bringing this up!
@ROGER2095
@ROGER2095 2 года назад
No better time to be alive than now.
@ousarlxsfjsbvbg8588
@ousarlxsfjsbvbg8588 2 года назад
@@ROGER2095 In comparison to the past, of course, but I’d rather have been born 10000 years in the future.
@LordCoeCoe
@LordCoeCoe 2 года назад
@@ousarlxsfjsbvbg8588 What if humanity has been enslaved by aliens in that time?
@ROGER2095
@ROGER2095 2 года назад
@@ousarlxsfjsbvbg8588 10,000 years - That's way beyond my imagination. I have an encyclopedia from the 50's that says by the 1980's, robots will be doing almost all the work, and humans will be living a life of leisure. Still waiting . . . .
@ShadeSlayer1911
@ShadeSlayer1911 2 года назад
@@ousarlxsfjsbvbg8588 but we have no idea if the future is good or not. I'm usually the optimist who believes that humanity will always find a way to kve forward In an overall positive way. But I can't pretend to know that 10k years in the future will definitely be a good time.
@ryanlee5593
@ryanlee5593 2 года назад
As a undergrad phosphorous chemist, we had a similar incident involving diphenylphosphene (the phosphorous depiction 6:37, but with two of the H's replaced with phenyl rings). This sample came in a broken ampule in our lab and unexpectedly blew up in a lab member's face (he's doing fine don't worry). There is a lone pair on the phosphorous that can easily be oxidized and releases a LOT of energy in doing so. In case anybody was wondering about the spontaneous body combustion that was described.
@akshinbarathi8914
@akshinbarathi8914 2 года назад
phosphot properties are used for weight loss supplements lol, like 2,4 dnp
@zath3153
@zath3153 2 года назад
Holy shit! I totally missed that the first time around. It can cause spontaneous human combustion when IN the body!? That's terrifying.
@pierrecurie
@pierrecurie 2 года назад
@@zath3153 That claim is highly sus, and I can't find a source for it. Phosphine is highly flammable, but causing spontaneous human combustion is very unlikely.
@AhmetOzdemir-om3bj
@AhmetOzdemir-om3bj 2 года назад
@@akshinbarathi8914 DNP does not have a phosphorus atom.
@akshinbarathi8914
@akshinbarathi8914 2 года назад
@@AhmetOzdemir-om3bj yeah my miatske
@OfficialFoshiznik
@OfficialFoshiznik Год назад
I’ve been 7 years in remission from APML having had 64 Arsenic Trioxide chemotherapy and ATRA treatment. Living proof that Arsenic isn’t all bad!
@DrJohnWatson8
@DrJohnWatson8 2 года назад
“If you don’t have to put it in your lungs, don’t put it in your lungs” Words of wisdom
@twixxtro
@twixxtro 2 года назад
I don't have to put air in my lungs only if i want to survive
@marks6663
@marks6663 Год назад
That applies equally well to anuses, too.
@AeriStxr
@AeriStxr Год назад
​@@marks6663 huh? xD
@FatalShotGG
@FatalShotGG Год назад
*reads this while smoking weed*
@momothebug
@momothebug 2 года назад
I really appreciate the information about arsenic's use in Chinese traditional medicine and how that lead to some modern cancer treatments. It was also cool to hear you use a couple of Chinese names, it's neat to hear it pronounced properly and to hear you use a little bit of Chinese, thanks as always Dr Bernard!
@Objectified
@Objectified Год назад
Arsenic use in the treatment of a variety of illnesses evolved independently in a number of areas. Arsenic derivations for blood illnesses and cancers were in use in the U.S. well before the advent of Arsenic trioxide for APL. Arsenic trioxide itself was in use for other purposes when the Chinese study on APL was released.
@momothebug
@momothebug Год назад
@@Objectified thank you for the information :) I like learning about these things because all I knew prior to this was "arsenic is a dangerous, poisonous substance" and didn't know it was used in medicine, traditional or western. Very interesting. I suppose there are a lot of "dangerous" things that are used in medicine, from opium and amphetamines to viper venom and mercury. Arsenic is just one I hadn't heard anything about before.
@vinslungur
@vinslungur Год назад
Chinese sounds so cool to me. Tones are so important to the meaning of chinese words
@Batmans_Pet_Goldfish
@Batmans_Pet_Goldfish 2 года назад
Loved that you could tell what he was shouting by reading his lips due to how expressive the actor is.
@AngelWish3
@AngelWish3 2 года назад
I hope that the real patient can look down from wherever he is and appreciate that his death helped educate us on how to treat this type of poisoning. His sacrifice may have not been on purpose, but such accidents are part of why we learned how to help people. I hope he can take pride in that fact, wherever he is.
@chesthoIe
@chesthoIe 2 года назад
If you turn on subtitles, you get at 8:14 "It was used as a pesticide, and the Romans knew it as the King of Poisons, it was a poison of Kings because it was an untraceable way to get rid of someone. English sources say that the French at one point knew arsenic as the Powder of Inheritance, where it was used in untraceable deaths of the elderly. "I totally have no idea what happened to them, they just got sick from the food!" would be brought up to insurers, and wealth and an estate would be passed on."
@JFDSmit-rm6tw
@JFDSmit-rm6tw 2 года назад
@@MadeOfConfusion play it at the slowest setting.
@ATIbbettMedia
@ATIbbettMedia 2 года назад
I was treated for APML with arsenic trioxide, been in complete remission for 3 years! Great video Chubbyemu
@dshe8637
@dshe8637 2 года назад
That's so good x
@Fiverr7890
@Fiverr7890 2 года назад
I love the way he says "Take care of yourself, be well." It's euphoric honestly.
@drhandcraft
@drhandcraft 2 года назад
Chubby, this is so cool! I actually worked in the basic research lab right across Pier Paolo Pandolfi, which is referenced in the Sloan Kettering paper. This is soo cool! My research project actually entailed using ATO (Arsenic Trioxide, in conjunction with All Trans-retinoic Acid (vitamin A) to treat not only APL but also breast and pancreatic cancers. This is so neat! I learned a lot from this video!!
@noob19087
@noob19087 2 года назад
You seem like someone I could ask. Why isn't the arsenic trioxide toxic? Is it just a case of "the dose makes the poison"?
@coffeetoffee0x019
@coffeetoffee0x019 2 года назад
@@noob19087 could also similar to why sodium chloride doesn't explode or get insanely poisonous, like sodium and chlorine respectively
@krisreddish3066
@krisreddish3066 2 года назад
@@noob19087 I think you are right, or the selective dose kills the selective cancer cells more than it kills other cells in this case. Like how many chemotherapy class drug works.
@chrisnotyou
@chrisnotyou 2 года назад
Uh.. Spoilers. Gah!
@solarmoth4628
@solarmoth4628 2 года назад
It’s wild that the comment I saw right after was someone describing how they had been treated with this exact regiment. It must feel cool to see your research in action.
@kenossa666
@kenossa666 2 года назад
I think that you telling a story which is really easy to understand and entertaining, while even informative-the actors are such a superb idea to add to this! I'm really glad I found your channel ♥
@Shikujiru
@Shikujiru 2 года назад
Hah! Glad you got the audio fixed! Like I said last time: As always, informative and thought-provoking. Your manner of presenting these problems is enough to make me think fondly back on the chemistry and biology classes I took in high school and remember my love of science. These videos help me understand why I should and shouldn't worry about my health and move me toward making better, more-informed decisions when I do feel ill.
@brambl3014
@brambl3014 2 года назад
I did see when this video was uploaded the deleted quickly few days ago
@faithdorey5919
@faithdorey5919 2 года назад
@@brambl3014 yah! I thought that was because RU-vid didn't like it and it got demonitised or something
@thedeviouspanda
@thedeviouspanda 2 года назад
Yes, I tried to play it on my way home and I thought it was my Bluetooth acting up.
@maciejp7829
@maciejp7829 2 года назад
didnt notice any audio issues when I watched it few days ago. Probably because I watch at 1,5 speed.
@artwithsoli5450
@artwithsoli5450 2 года назад
@@brambl3014 I saw it for a split second and then when I came back it was gone hah, I thought I was hallucinating or something
@lisaschuster686
@lisaschuster686 2 года назад
Scientists had very short life spans when these compounds were being discovered. Chemists always recorded taste, for example. If you don’t need to put it on your tongue...
@BlurbFish
@BlurbFish 2 года назад
Chemists of old had some workplace practices that today seem insane. They would mouth-pipette, haphazardly use solvents such as benzene, chloroform, carbon tetrachloride and carbon disulfide, and they'd work in areas without adequate ventilation. Smoking in the lab wasn't entirely uncommon, either.
@laurapeterson559
@laurapeterson559 2 года назад
These are the highlight of my month! I always think that I'm going to save it for a rainy day when I need to pick me up, but I never hold out for long. Please keep them coming!
@DoctorAzmain
@DoctorAzmain 2 года назад
Pro tip from a doctor: PLEASE don't inhale random gases - nitrous, your own farts, ESPECIALLY not arsine. Like, just why would you? How would you explain it in the ER?
@Eibarwoman
@Eibarwoman 2 года назад
Don't be an arse, avoid arsine gas!
@DoctorAzmain
@DoctorAzmain 2 года назад
@@Eibarwoman haha this should be a tagline in chemistry labs across the world 😂
@MLG_Kitten
@MLG_Kitten 2 года назад
Well. In my city we have a lake full of arsenic, so some summers we have to boil our water. If you're curious, it's the Great Slave Lake (guess how many times I've been cancelled over that) I live in Yellowknife, somewhere north on the lake lol.
@mightbetoad6786
@mightbetoad6786 2 года назад
farts???
@Finkelfunk
@Finkelfunk 2 года назад
If you actually know half the shit an ER nurse has seen just this morning I doubt that even the most embarrassing explanation is gonna raise an eyebrow. ER nurses and doctors have seen it ALL.
@if860
@if860 2 года назад
Ah, the "good old days" where sulfuric acid was always contaminated with arsenic, mercury, lead, sometimes selenium, thallium, and tellurium, cause this elements frequently are present in pyrites and sulfide ores, and also in lead used for lining of the apparatuses for H2SO4 production. Even nowadays when we have reagents available that are so pure that contaminants are given in ppm you can still buy special grade of zinc described as "free of arsenic", meant to be used in demonstration of Marsh's test, since marsh test is so sensitive for As and Sb.
@evelynu3550
@evelynu3550 2 года назад
Ah, thallium. Nothing gets rid of unwanted (and wanted) hair better.
@chemistryofquestionablequa6252
@chemistryofquestionablequa6252 2 года назад
@@evelynu3550 gets rid of life too...
@if860
@if860 2 года назад
@@chemistryofquestionablequa6252 GETS RID OF UNWANTED PERSONS :D
@veikkoveljanen7475
@veikkoveljanen7475 Год назад
- Hey mb! MB - what? - You huffed all our balloon gasses again? MB - mb.
@joshuamlnarik5942
@joshuamlnarik5942 2 года назад
The quality of your content is easily putting you at the absolute forefront of a much much needed niche. And your pragmatic organization of the information and the way you relay it in concise language simple enough for any laypeople to understand. Somebody smelt an ingot into a chubby 24K golden emu award. You're doing a service to the world 🌟
@SubaruLove
@SubaruLove 2 года назад
I worked in a pharmacy cleanroom. I accidentally shattered a glass ampule of arsenic trioxide while preparing a dose. I immediately thought I was going to die, until I saw the patient was getting 10ml of it. Sharp glass and poisons are a scary combination.
@no.onecares
@no.onecares 2 года назад
I started watching these videos like 2 years ago with my bf and I still find myself enjoying every story. Best way to distract myself from everything else, and also very informational. Thank you chubbyemu :)
@localmenace3043
@localmenace3043 2 года назад
Man, I always hate it when the patient dies. The fact that this case happened almost 200 years ago - and that it can still happen today? Wild.
@00kidney
@00kidney 2 года назад
Thank you for another amazing video! Learning about how they treated patients back then makes me really grateful for all the incredible advancements medical science made and that can help us today.
@TheMessiahOfThe99Percent
@TheMessiahOfThe99Percent 2 года назад
WWII, Post-War and the Great Society a) Why did the American economy boom during WWII? b) How did government initiatives stabilise and support the economy in WWII? c) What populations economically benefited from the war? d) How did the GI Bill support the American Dream for WASP men? e) How did suburbs develop after the war? f) How is the Great Society an example of progressivism? g) What is the link between the Great Society and the Vietnam War? The Sickened Economy, Reaganomics and the Obama Era a) What is stagflation? b) Why did the USA enter a period of stagflation in the 1970s? c) What is OPEC? How did their embargo impact the American economy? d) How did Nixon, Ford and Carter attempt to address the economic issues? e) What is supply-side economics? f) What is a deficit? Why did Reaganomics create a high deficit? g) Where did Reagan focus federal spending during his administrations? h) What caused the economic crisis of 2007-08? i) How did the government respond? j) What is the Affordable Care Act? k) Why were Americans so divided over the Affordable Care Act? Following are some debate points to consider for ‘The Business of American Business’ as a whole These must be DEBATE points - questions where there are at least 2 potentially opposite perspectives. These are not ‘research questions’. Reflect on the key themes that have been introduced and revisited throughout this unit: The Growth of Capitalism The Establishment of Big Business Class division Personal wealth
@ryandoyle3413
@ryandoyle3413 Год назад
I recommend Sawbones, a podcast about just that! A doctor and her husband going over old times cures, modern wellness trends, and current events
@kellylynch975
@kellylynch975 Год назад
Do more historical cases, please & thank you! I loved when you touched on the evolution of surgery sanitation.
@marcelomagofke1743
@marcelomagofke1743 2 года назад
I love your sound design. The music you use for exposition during the symptoms before and during the hospital visit is fantastic at building tension! Your analysis and graphics used, combined with the real-life dramatizations really play together to create a professionally made video that deserves all the praise. Can't wait for the next Heme Review
@firesandflowers
@firesandflowers 2 года назад
I had APL & had to have arsenic trioxode (intravenously) & All-Trans Retinoic Acid (ATRA) in 2015. The arsenic trioxide actually wasn't so bad. But the ATRA pills (which technically is just a vitamin A derivative in very high doses) gave me *debilitating* headaches (like, vomiting from pain, back in the hospital kind of headaches). It was awful. Most people don't have that side effect though aparently, so I guess I was just unlucky.
@zaarkhananal7165
@zaarkhananal7165 3 месяца назад
Sounds like Mr. Teacher's brain latched onto that giddy feeling so as to mimick an addiction. That feeling was so amazingly strong that it didn't even make him question inhaling metal shavings, smh.
@hemaurr
@hemaurr 2 года назад
YES I WASN'T ABLE TO SEE IT THE FIRST TIME ITS FINALLY UP
@andyb1653
@andyb1653 2 года назад
"The biggest difference between poison and medicine, is dosage" -My Endocrinologist
@porkfatrules6025
@porkfatrules6025 2 года назад
“The dose makes the poison” indeed
@Idontknow-vm1iy
@Idontknow-vm1iy 2 года назад
Botulinum toxin be like
@adriatic.vineyards
@adriatic.vineyards Год назад
Also Paracelesus
@maryprantephd6736
@maryprantephd6736 2 года назад
I love your beautiful, rich color pallettes; you're not only artistically sophisticated, you're also technologically adept. Great episode. Thanks, Dr Bernard!🖼😊
@marukomu_7105
@marukomu_7105 2 года назад
1:50 the meme lord never fails to put Easter eggs in his videos
@TheyForgotMySalad
@TheyForgotMySalad 2 года назад
1:42 Scientist mouths the words!! Woooo baby! That's what I've been waiting for, that's what it's all about!!
@neonloneliness1
@neonloneliness1 2 года назад
chemistry major here. getting a whiff of something noxious is such a MoodTM. freshman year i remember sticking my face in an evaporating dish and getting a lungful of nitric acid fumes. it's interesting bc with other things like ammonia your lungs kind of spasm, your breath cuts off which stops you from inhaling more, but nitric acid just went right in. the lab instructor made me include EVERY SINGLE POSSIBLE THING that could happen to your body from nitric acid inhalation in my lab report. she kept sending me back bc she said the list wasn't complete. on maybe the fourth time i recited yet another horrible illness she smiled and said "there. i hope you'll follow health & safety now :)" the next few days i had the worst cough of my entire life but other than that i was fine
@heinrichschmehl611
@heinrichschmehl611 Год назад
For now
@neonloneliness1
@neonloneliness1 Год назад
@@heinrichschmehl611 yeah one of the long-term effects of inhaling nitric acid fumes is lung disease something like 15 years down the line, i'm still confused though like is that from chronic exposure or is one mild exposure enough??
@heinrichschmehl611
@heinrichschmehl611 Год назад
@lizakot5623 idk dude best of luck though
@cbmx1x1
@cbmx1x1 2 года назад
Seriously, I wonder how many kids have developed a love of science, chemistry, and medicine as a result of these videos. Excellent work!
@KomradZX1989
@KomradZX1989 2 года назад
The music you play when people take drugs or whatever is so off putting yet perfect. Every time I hear it play in your videos I think “oooh, things are gonna get good now!” I love it!
@BestRedditorClips
@BestRedditorClips 2 года назад
1:02 "I'm fast as fuck boyyy!"
@verukasault9065
@verukasault9065 2 года назад
Fascinating case! Thank you, Dr. Bernard. I like the mix of discussing a historical case and today's technology. RIP to MB.
@AmoghA
@AmoghA 2 года назад
I thought the possible gas could be phosphine or sulfur trioxide. Was not expecting arsine. Nowadays arsenic, lead, bromates and mercury is heavily monitored in water and air. Some industries might cheat but arsenic poisoning will kill you and it's a terrible way to go.
@Idontknow-vm1iy
@Idontknow-vm1iy 2 года назад
Yes indeed, luckily the testing is a lot more streamlined than it used to be.
@davidh9844
@davidh9844 2 года назад
Fantastic report! I've wondered about inhaling hydrogen, but fear of explosion has kept me on a helium standard. After this, I don't think I will ever inhale anything except room air, and oxygen in an emergency. Very well done. Dr H, M.D. Int Medicine.
@FirstnameLastname-jd4uq
@FirstnameLastname-jd4uq 3 месяца назад
Hydrogen isn’t going to randomly explode but it’s still not great
@FallenAngelHiroko
@FallenAngelHiroko 2 года назад
Thank you for these videos. It makes things that are complicated and otherwise boring things entertaining and memorable for regular folks like me.
@ginnyjollykidd
@ginnyjollykidd 2 года назад
I think the interesting part is when Dr. Bernard tells of how the condition plays out in the person. We don't get case studies in high school.
@milanobus
@milanobus 2 года назад
I'm not a doctor or a scientist, but I still look forward to your video every month. You present in such an informative way that I can understand easily.
@lugisky385
@lugisky385 2 года назад
Same
@yesnutches
@yesnutches Год назад
1:33 cue the "getting high" music
@brandonrhys21
@brandonrhys21 2 года назад
Thanks for bringing us great, medical-scientific content monthly.
@audreyp8958
@audreyp8958 2 года назад
Hi Dr. Bernard! Thanks for another fantastic video, I look forward to these every month! I work as a nurse in a hospital and have come across a couple of very interesting cases in my clinical setting, perhaps they would be sources of inspiration for future videos? About a year ago a gentleman came in with hypoxia, he was part of a mennonite community and didn't ever go to see traditional doctors unless it was absolutely necessary, in this case it was necessary. Apparently this gentleman had a diesel engine in his living room, which he would run overnight to power his wife's cpap machine for sleep apnea. He had been self-treating for his hypoxia with methylene blue, a dye. His urine was green and skin was blue tinted. We came to find he likely had carbon monoxide poisoning from the engine in addition to toxicity from methylene blue overdosing. Another interesting case we had recently was a woman who, sadly, has permanent brain damage from drinking methanol instead of regular recreational alcohol, ethanol. She suffered an anoxic brain injury and is now believed to be blind from the ingestion in addition to having new cognitive deficits. Very sad stuff but incredibly interesting! Hope this message finds you well and provides some inspiration for future videos!
@timothykirby4406
@timothykirby4406 Год назад
God help that poor woman.
@Jackson_Zheng
@Jackson_Zheng 6 месяцев назад
0:33 Did they even have emergency rooms and admitting nurses back then?😂
@82dorrin
@82dorrin 2 года назад
" ...he struggled to call 911." Well, yeah. Telephones weren't invented yet. Neither was 911.
@Kyanzes
@Kyanzes 2 года назад
Yeah, sounded out of place.
@dr.altoclef9255
@dr.altoclef9255 Год назад
He probably called for a servant to get his horse or something.
@barretprivateer8768
@barretprivateer8768 2 года назад
That was like a speedrun to kill your kidneys, the reaction was almost instant after he inhaled it. Someone let Tomatoanus know.
@boughtbythecross
@boughtbythecross Год назад
I was just recently diagnosed with chronic t cell large granular lymphocytic leukemia. When going through the testing I had already decided come what may I would not go through treatments. Thankfully this is not one that requires chemo. I cannot imagine purposely putting things into your body to heal you that would normally kill you! That's crazy how that works...
@Cloudsurfer69
@Cloudsurfer69 2 года назад
i absolutely love this dude - truly brilliant content, some of the best on the website
@garyshields8851
@garyshields8851 Год назад
im trying to get Bernard to make more content want to help
@Xclub40X
@Xclub40X 2 года назад
0:49 MB WAS a scientist. *now he is no more* *For what he thought was H2O* *was H2SO4*
@wallhagens2001
@wallhagens2001 4 месяца назад
Noice!😂
@AlkisGD
@AlkisGD 2 года назад
“People would suffer illness and be found not alive days later, just like M.B.” What a way to deliver the devastating news! 😭
@pegasBaO23
@pegasBaO23 2 года назад
I would say the chemist was dumb for inhaling whatever he made, but in the 1800s chemists would taste, smell and even inhale their chemical discoveries so they can record it in their journal
@paramchaudhary3583
@paramchaudhary3583 2 года назад
4:00 I love that Charlie screaming WOOOOOO YEA BABY is still a meme
@Styrac
@Styrac 2 года назад
He also does it at 1:50, lmao
@minakimiz
@minakimiz 2 года назад
hi chubby, i love that you speak and pronounce chinese correctly and refer to its medical history and practice. it feels so good to see eastern asian history represented in videos !
@drivers99
@drivers99 2 года назад
“This video is ready to be uploaded. I won’t have to fix and re-upload it,” he thought.
@tkat6442
@tkat6442 2 года назад
But he made a "FULL RECOVERY"!!
@bloodrhain9756
@bloodrhain9756 2 года назад
As a pharmacist, I love watching your contents. I binge watch it at some point and all caught up. It additional learning and very informative. I don't practice now but still work with drugs data 😁
@CanOfMapleSyrup
@CanOfMapleSyrup Год назад
1:49 i love that you used Charlie's iconic wooo from the pooping unicorn vid 🤣
@fluxie31_old
@fluxie31_old 2 года назад
Thank you for disclaiming at the beginning that the story you're telling is adapted from a real case for the modern era. It's awesome content
@Matt_Barnes
@Matt_Barnes 2 года назад
If I ever have a sudden medical emergency on an airplane at 38,000ft, Dr. Bernard is the person I'd want to be on board lol. He seems like he would be a diagnostic gigachad.
@ZelenoJabko
@ZelenoJabko Год назад
Good, you would die then. He is just reading medical reports and making pretty videos, but otherwise incompetent
@mnirwin5112
@mnirwin5112 4 месяца назад
The actor here is hilarious. He looked pretty demented even BEFORE he inhaled that balloon full of gas. 😆
@argoth83
@argoth83 2 года назад
These videos never cease to be incredibly interesting. Easily one of the best channels on RU-vid, and important.
@edmundyangxk3188
@edmundyangxk3188 2 года назад
Another great Chubbyemu video yayyy! And Kudos to the Mandarin pronunciation you did in the video! I can already foresee the kind of reaction your fans on Bilibili would make when this vid is uploaded on Bilibili. Keep up the good work!
@tkat6442
@tkat6442 2 года назад
I don't know any Mandarin at all, and yet I had a feeling he was nailing the pronunciation!
@edmundyangxk3188
@edmundyangxk3188 2 года назад
@@tkat6442 He actually did posted a few special thank-you videos in Mandarin on Bilibili for 1 mil subs there. I’m genuinely impressed by his dedication on both channels haha.
@maker0824
@maker0824 Год назад
"Dang, this guy was dumb-" "This case happened in 1841." "Ah. Well never mind then."
@Pine_Barrens_NJ
@Pine_Barrens_NJ 2 года назад
As always, quality work…I love hearing “ Dr. Bernard “ as I remember you posting as an intern….keep up the great work and THX for the information
@DaveFromColorado
@DaveFromColorado 2 года назад
I love watching your videos, and the information that I learned from them. I have multiple sclerosis, and recently I was in the hospital. I was able to understand the doctors more clearly because of the information I have learned directly from this channel. Thank you for sharing, I just wish you posted more often :-)
@DelfinaKS
@DelfinaKS 5 месяцев назад
Modern medicine is wonderful but it has evolved to a great extent due to the meticulous documents kept over centuries. It is amazing that back then this case was recorded in such detail. You are doing a wonderful job to document current understanding in video format but with proper references in the description. It is people like you who help make progress in medicine. Keep up the good work!
@Mr.BobsDog
@Mr.BobsDog 2 года назад
Thanks dude. Good to know 👌 Humans react the same to chemicals today as they did back then --Chubby Emu
@annehaight9963
@annehaight9963 2 года назад
I love listening to Mandarin being spoken by someone who doesn't have a trace of an accent. The shift is fascinating.
@rohitchaoji
@rohitchaoji 2 года назад
These actors are great, they give a nice and hilarious performance for subjects so serious
@indoor_vaping
@indoor_vaping 2 года назад
This might be my favorite one, it touches on so many things I find interesting that aren’t really discussed a lot on this channel, like bench chemistry, workplace safety and the application of Chinese medicine in a modern context. Good work!
@greenmario3011
@greenmario3011 2 года назад
Inhaling gasses to make funny voices is a vital part of chemistry. The real lesson is to actually check what your reagents are and also probably be more careful with strong sulfuric acid, most noxious of the strong acids. There are easier ways to make hydrogen.
@vylbird8014
@vylbird8014 2 года назад
One chemistry lesson I remember ended with a whole lot of nothing happening. Two lessons were learned: 1. Don't buy reagents on eBay. 2. Hydrogen peroxide has an expiration date. Amateurs still have to buy off of eBay though. No reputable chemical supplier will sell to a residential address, so the only option is to resort to disreputable ones.
@KonradTheWizzard
@KonradTheWizzard 2 года назад
@@vylbird8014 man, I love living in Europe: I can simply go to the pharmacy to get chemicals. They will ask questions and they will make me sign the receipt, but I can get a lot of stuff.
@vylbird8014
@vylbird8014 2 года назад
@@KonradTheWizzard I'm in the UK, and the only chemicals the pharmacy will sell here are drugs. If you want something as simple as copper sulfate, you'll probably have to go somewhere a little dodgy to get it. The most exotic I've had to get was tetrahydrofuran, which I wanted to test as a solvent for vapor smoothing of PLA 3D prints. It didn't work. Not many solvents work on PLA.
@KonradTheWizzard
@KonradTheWizzard 2 года назад
@@vylbird8014 For context: I'm in Germany. We still call it "Apotheke" for the simple reason that they have all the chemicals and expertise there to mix compound pharmaceuticals on demand if you need them. As far as I'm aware most countries around us are similar. I cannot get absolutely everything there and I can certainly get some stuff cheaper on the internet, but it is always a good starting point. BTW: acetone (nail polish remover) might work a bit on PLA. Some people recommend a 10% solution of NaOH, but I would be extremely cautious around this stuff (hint: 1% solution is enough to kill almost all bacteria, viruses and damage your skin; I use 2-5% to strip photo laquer from circuit boards and it dissolves the cheap brushes I use to agitate the solvent bath). Very fine sand paper might be a better and safer way to smoothen PLA prints.
@vylbird8014
@vylbird8014 2 года назад
@@KonradTheWizzard Tried acetone. Nothing. Even pure, it does nothing on PLA. Not does toluene or xylene. The only solvent I've found that is any good on PLA is dichloromethane.
@angrypastabrewing
@angrypastabrewing Год назад
As a Chemist, he should at least test the metal shavings first for contaminants if he still insist on inhaling hydrogen gas
@Veldrusara
@Veldrusara 2 года назад
Thank you Dr. Emu! You make my day every time! 💙
@Seeker7257
@Seeker7257 2 года назад
This video shows us the importance of our lungs and the vulnerability of the same. We take a lot of our existence for granted, which we shouldn't.
@madezra64
@madezra64 2 года назад
My 10th grade biology teacher was an absolute boss! I had got some balloons filled with helium and was fucking around during study hall with it. He noticed me with another balloon and non-chalantly asked me to come to his desk, me thinking he was gonna do some as well and have a good laugh. As soon as I got next to him he pulled a pin from out of nowhere like a ninja and popped the balloon. I was absolutely shocked! I was like WTF?! dude! He just smiled and said I couldn't just let you inhale a balloon full of gas like that, and I know you wouldn't have listened if I had asked you not too. He then gave me the same explanation at the end of this video, if you don't need to inhale it, don't inhale it. So I almost have never inhaled helium again, and honestly kind of glad after watching this. Honestly one of my most favorite teachers. Real awesome dude.
@minacapella8319
@minacapella8319 2 года назад
I'm glad you're giving this actor more work. He's so ridiculous.
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