Compilation of some of my most popular TikTok videos. Make sure you like, comment, subscribe, drink water and hug your mother. Checkout this Zombie Survival Game⬇️⬇️ theplug.co/stateofsurvival/57...
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That video always confuses me, like, was it just a joke? Did he have brain damage? Because there's no way a person with a fully-functioning brain could have seen those wide-spaced posts and that little baby and seriously went "yeah, they'll never get through THAT!"
As a snake keeper and enthusiast, hearing people get venom and poison the right way round fills the pit in my soul being eaten away by people using the terms interchangeably
When I was a teenager, my teacher held a game naming as many animals by alphabetical. So I put Black Mamba for B, venomous snake native to Africa. The whole class laughed at me and the teacher clearly had no idea what I'm talking about. From that moment, I ain't telling shit about facts I learn from reading and watching documentaries.
@@chiaraj1003 well, apparently we were not well educated about snakes species because all we know were cobras,viper and python. These are the one common in my country🤷
@@garigari8937 That's weird. We don't really have dangerous snakes here, but I mean you often hear about Black Mambas for example from shows and books. Well, at least you were educated
Funny thing is they’re so smart that we’re the only thing they try to befriend because they know if they’re good they possibly get benefits and if they’re bad they just get killed
‘A mother python is so dedicated that she’ll go weeks without eating so she can protect her eggs.’ ‘Crocodiles will carry their children in their mouths to get them across water safely.’ I’m starting to see a pattern here. Seems like reptiles are the better mothers lol
I had a dingo one time (accidental thought she was a dog) and she was the biggest pain ever. She would basically destroy our house anytime she left due to anxiety. Poor thing, we tried our best to make her life happy though as long as she lived.
@@lastchanc3stars can you control their numbers? Do they follow commands? How is it a pet if it does neither of those things? Get that knife weilding furby away from me
Depending who you ask, a Dingo actually IS a dog, just one that's gone back to being wild after thousands of years without living with humans. They are not native to Australia, and were probably brought over by humans when they first reached Australia.
My corn snake loved TV. I'm so happy to hear this confirmed, I've been telling people about my TV watching snake for a long time and it didn't get a lot of belief. Snakelets gave me some serious "aww"s too.
Parrots are very opinionated little shits. But they love with their full heart. When I was going through a break up, my parrot noticed that I'd be crying when I held my phone because I would go through old text messages, so eventually he started biting my hands every time I was on the phone because he probably thought I was being hurt by my phone...He picked up on my bad habit before I did and also took initiative sooner than I did, so while they are very opinionated brats, I love my bird like nothing else, I'm actually really reaady to do this lifetime thing with him.
@@victoriasmith490 orcas are dolphins, but if you mean like the other ones then yeah they be bullying sharks roo, unless a shark catches one by itself and slacking, then its game over for that dolphin
Snakes get such a bad rep (sometimes for good reason) but I had a ball python for about 25 years and I absolutely loved that snake, she was very friendly and social. She never bit a single person or really even tried to bite anyone. Snakes seriously do love Tv's tho, mine would watch the tv for hours. I remember my Mom being TERRIFIED of snakes at first, but after like a year or so she fell in love with this one. On show and tell day at school my Mom would bring my snake in to class and everyone got to pet her, in fact she became kind of a staple of show and tell. Even some of the teachers would come into our class to check her out. Moral of the story, get a snake they're awesome.
Pythons in general are very friendly snakes {to humans at least}. even the biggest python, a Burmese python {average height is 27 feet}, are very friendly snakes!
@@Local_Omni cool, but the biggest python is actually the reticulated python, which is 29 ft long. Sorry to be that person, but the more you know I guess.
Honestly snakes can sense how big you are and most won't even try to attack unless some brat taunts it and then has the audacity to cry victim. The only time I'd be careful is shedding and feeding time. They're sensitive noodles
Speaking of dingos, when I was a kid my dad rescued a puppy from some place and he looked like a giant dingo on steroids as he grew. Apparently his dad was a mastiff cross with boxer, and his mother a german shepherd cross with akita, or the other way round. It seemed like he was specifically bred to be almost military like he was bred to get shit done. He was almost the size of a mastiff but 😐 strong, quick and agile af. I'm gunna gush about my late big brother Rocky for a sec alright! This dog couldn't be locked inside because he figured out how to open doors. He'd get his paw nubs and use them to turn the small knob, and when you get home he'd be chilln on the porch. Same with the back gate dad doubled the hight of it and just one is a little shorter than the walls, so to the roof. He took three steps back, and still just jumped it. There was a stage where he thought he could challenge my dad coming out of puppyhood and would take off cause he could, and this is where people would say "animal abuse" but as I said this dog was built different and knew it and he wasn't harmed but my dad had to chase him in the car, which he apparently got to 70kph following him... and he hit him with the car. He fell and got a cut which dad picked him up, took him home, stitched him up and Rocky thinking he could do whatever he wants wasn't a problem anymore :/ he also used to keep chewing holes out of the metal mesh in the front screen, just leaving little metal balls around. My dad told me he saw rocky kill a lot of sewer cats.. he said he wouldn't move until the cat was far enough away from the drain that he could get to it before it could get to the drain. There's a lot of stories, good and bad. He had loose skin so I couldn't ride him :( I love him and miss him every day, I was the only person he'd ever let put him in high heels and a tootoo and dance with my dad for me cuz he was taller than my dad XD I was almost 7 when he passed. Both the law and the criminals didn't like him there, no one could trick him, even trying to capture him off the property, trying to lure him with food, he picked up on it and would sit, right within the property border. He was a sassy mofo. Eventually a few people managed to break in and roll him up in a carpet and beat him. He got away after ripping out one of their calves but if he survived he would've come back, and if he had've come back, he would've been put down for biting. He was almost 4 and could almost say hello 🥺 RIP Rocky, you'll always be my big brother 💖 he was best known for his ridiculously large, tall and pointy radar dish ears
"Orcas kill sharks" "orcas kill seals" "Orcas are the killer of da sea" seals are going extinct soon they are only 1,000 left "Orcas are the best grand mothers in the sea"
@Damien Paz I understand if he was scared of the giant river otters in South America, but tiny river otters? I mean, sure, they are probably vicious as well, but he was scared of tiny ones specifically?
I love your channel. If schools used your approach to teach, there would be an excess of geniuses. There would be no intellectual based game shows because theyd be bankrupt. Schools would have to change their yearly format cuz kids would be in college by 14. Parents would have to kowtow to intellectual masterminds.
@@lordaurelius83 well you need to know what you're doing is bad for it to count as cruelty. We cant say spiders are cruel because they arent smart enough
not true at all, monitors and tegus have intelligence that surpasses that of most mammals and they are far from cruel hell they can even learn to love humans.
Dingos are technically feral not wild, and Polar Bears aren’t the only animals to actively hunt humans. Tigers, large crocodilians and lions will def hunt humans.
Tigers and lion would def attack humans if they are hungry but not the way polar bears will smell you from miles away and follow you so they can eat you.
@@ledestroyer2241 for the most part when a tiger seeks you out and hunts you , you've done something to earn the tigers wrath, a reckoning must be had by the tiger so dont piss them off. I actually respect that about tigers.
3:14 Fun fact;The reason the universal symbol for ambulances is a staff with two snakes is because most primitive medicines were made using snake venoms.
Technically, it's because the symbol, called a Caduceus, was linked to the Greek God Asclepius, God of medicine Edit: it is more famously linked to Hermes, and was a symbol of healing for the reason stated above by OP
Another fun fact: They chose the wrong staff, probably by accident or ignorance. Asclepius was THE god of medicine (even better than his father, Apollo) and his symbol is a staff with a single snake wrapped around it.
@@lostphoenix1911 It's not merely horse blood, it's an entire living horse's immune system. After injecting a horse with minor doses of venom, their immune response creates antibodies that neutralize that type of venom. These antibodies can be extracted via the horse's blood and then used on save other creatures from more lethal doses of venom.
You're channel is amazing! What kind of education do you have? Is it biology and animal studies or communication? Or are you just naturally amazing at what you do? Just curious...a fellow animal lover learning about nature all the time.
It felt so flipping cartoonish. Like every villian when they capture someone in cartoon, “As you can see here I have contained Hero in this super secure cage with bars a full bodywidth apart, wait where did they go?”
I love these despite watching so many that I see repeats a lot. Despite that, repetition is how you learn, so in a fucked up way it actually helps cram facts that I might not have remembered.
You missed the best part about the hognose snake! They're so committed to playing dead, you can reach down and flip them back the right side up, and they will immediately and vigorously flip upside down again and continue pretending to be dead. Also, and I don't remember where I heard this, but they are venomous but their fangs are in the back of their throat, so they can't actually bite you with them. They just kinda use them to pull their still-living prey inside their throat and sedate them with the toxin while they digest them alive. And they're the only venomous snake that it's legal to keep as a pet, because they can't really get the venom into anything that they can't already swallow, and they're fricking tiny little buggers. Not sure if that's true though. We had one as a educational animal at the wildlife rehab center I used to volunteer at, and he liked to chill inside people's shirts, but that's a general hand-accustomed snake thing. They like the warms.
They can inject venom to you if they chew on you but it is not very potent. "They're the only venomous snake you can legally keep as pet" is not true. That highly depends where you live. And there are other mildly venomous snakes you can keep as pets in many places. You can also keep highly venomous snakes as pets depending where you live. Some places you can just keep cobras and vipers and so on without permits and other places require permits.
I think the best part is how to really sell it, the dedicated ones will pop a blood vessel in their mouth and poop all over themselves to be as unappetizing as possible
@@ithewho6603 Not entirely without benefit, as food is given, however, mammals and avians mostly can recognize a human as a part of a pack or a flock, because they are used to living in packs and flocks. Reptiles are mostly solitary and don't even recognize the human being. And if they do, they get nothing but stress from it.
When dingoes are raised along side dogs, they learn to bark. Really cute And a few Aussie breeds of dogs have partial dingo heritage. Kelpie, blue healers and red healers. And no, Australian shepherds aren't actually Australian 😅
@Damien Paz, dingos can be trained but they are still wild animals and it really pays to remember that. Healers are called that because they were bred to run the heels of cattle and sheep as herding dogs. There is a little dingo in the very early generations of healers, but the genes made the resulting half-breed basically useless for herding work; so had to be bred very carefully and constantly cross back to dog lines to try and minimise the potential damage. Contrary to popular belief, there is no dingo in kelpies because the dingo genes make the dogs absolutely useless/vie long and bloodthirsty; and kelpies had a spectacular reputation as working dogs from the beginning.
Always felt sorry for Lindy Chamberlin, the mother who was prisoned when her baby was killed by a dingo. Yes, dingoes do go after young children, it's well known now. There have been several incidences on Fraser Island off the coast of Queensland, where there are a lot of dingoes and people like to go camping there.
Spanish dancers also have a pretty feathery tuft on their back that is actually their digestive tract. If I remember correctly. It has been a while since I saw that nature show.
I wonder who the hell came up with “Otters show predators their babies to invoke compassion”? What was the thought process that led them to that conclusion?
Natives/aboriginals actually supported the dingo angle and one was even able to point out which dingo ate the baby, but most colonial descendants completely disregarded their testimony (unsurprising, given that they were _legally considered wildlife instead of people_ until around the 1970's)
@@splitsong7368 Look up Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton 1980. That should be plenty for you to find info about her being charged for the death of her own daughter Azaria.
Gotta say, you earn every red cent you may be earning from your videos. Kudos to you! Not sure what I like more, your morbid sense of humor or the random facts. Thank you.
Orca fact +1: When orcas eat pinguins, they dont bother with the packaging. They simply apply the toothpaste method to squeez the guts out and spit the carcass away. Thank you for coming to my TedTalk
The smaller dark colored creature you showed while resembling a spanish dancer is actually a species of marine flat worm. And there way of fighting over who has to carry the eggs is even worse were they just keep jabbing each other until one is too tired and injured to fight back.
The quokka's decision is very logical. If you give the predator a meal, the breeding adult has the ability to live and have more kids. And as marsupials a quokka can already have a bonus fetus in its multi part uterus. So it has even less loss, and alot of gain