Often times this content style is cherry-picked to only include people who get answers wrong and edited to make them look worse. Or they just pay people to look dumb. This guy seems really down to earth tho, I hope to see more vids from him
@@joshcarr8918 Yeah, I my parents are from moroco but I was born in Spain and now I live in France, but being inculturized or not depends on the degree of education that are people in general getting, and trust me, it is not really much better here in France XDDDD Obviously the elite remains the elite but I feel that the " average" or the " mass " is going down over the time. ( principally because of social media )
@@anassmaarich6557 when I was growing up people were not this dumb. I’m now 30 and they lowered the numbers for grades, teachers getting caught giving good grades to kids who can’t do the most basic of math. In general people have become so lazy especially at their jobs. It’s almost everywhere our fast food is horrible anywhere you go and rude service. Life in general seems depleting to me
@@joshcarr8918 Yes you're right. But hopefully the elite is still there, the top ( or the good students ) students become more and more top, and the ones that actually decided to follow the good path are increasing in quality and in expectations, so at least, if the worst becomes worse, the best becomes better, that's my honest observation ( we see it reflected on the difficulty of the great universities exams and contests, and also in the increasing speed of research in science ). What I like about France is that everyone has an opportunity to follow any path according to their scolar level and job orientation through education instead of being complete dropouts. True, the interests may have become more futile, but at least society here doesn't completely crumble because as the number of dumb people increase, the number of people that do basic works and is actually useful to society increases too. I think this is another way to see things, I mean, I could continue writing till tomorrow, but I think it's time to sleep for me XDDD.
Not too fast. If you listen to what she said she just about to screw up the blonds for later on because she's going to go find a more acceptable man for her future take the money from the guy kind of action
It's a huge relief to hear a college student who has basic knowledge. So many don't know what year the war of 1812 was, or the capital of the United States, etc. She's a smart woman.
Respect?? For WHAT? Disrespect for the fella who gave her money for the wrong answer. The correct answer for the primary colors is RGB, red, green, blue (not yellow).
@@Destroyer_27 YOU might try to google it. RGB are additive (so for the light sources), CMY are subtractive (for paint). You clearly see that Yellow is NOT amongst the RGB, and RG are NOT with Yellow. As simple as that. It's just like you can't possibly be going to and from work at the same time. "Of course, the notion that all colors can be mixed from RYB primaries is not true, just as it is NOT true in any system of real primaries." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary_color
@@Adam_Adamsky it’s red blue and yellow, accept that you’re wrong. the fact that you can create green by mixing blue and yellow proves that yellow is primary and green is not. good luck next time buddy.
@@andrewd4139 no that might be what you learn in kindergarten put it´s incorrect. the subtractive primary colors are cyan, magenta and yellow. the additive primary colors are red, green and blue.
@@robertbolding4182 you’re both correct. This video is very helpful in explaining what primary colors really are: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Ob_ytLkqIuM.html There can be many different sets of primary colors depending on the gamut you’re working with. Artists have traditionally used RYB, printers use CMY and the visual sciences use RGB. You can even have more than 3 primary colors in a gamut (a given range of colors) but we generally use 3 because our eyes are built with 3 color cones. These color cones are actually completely relative, so they only differentiate differences between colors, not actual objective colors, so what you perceive as red might look like blue to me, but we perceive the same relative difference between all colors so it works out indistinguishably in the end.
That last question has 3 correct answers, although one of them is not used much any more since digital photography. Her answer is correct for pigment mixing. For transparencies (color slides, computers) it's red, blue and green. For negative filtration (color photography when they made pics from negatives) it's cyan, magenta and yellow. She's pretty smart. Nice to see that not everyone is an idiot nowadays.
Red, Blue and Yellow is not a correct answer for any form of the question "What are the primary colors?". It's either Red, Green and Blue or Magenta, Cyan and Yellow
@@greg2kdotcom Sounds like your knowledge came from photography, as did mine, or more likely computers, unless you're an old geezer like me. However, long before I picked up a camera, I learned in the 3rd or 4th grade that Red. Blue and Yellow are the primary colors. And the ARE, if you talking about mixing paint or other opaque pigments. If you disagree, tell me this: how would you would get yellow paint form mixing paints of those other colors you say are the primaries?
@@pickleballer1729 RGB are primary additive colors. Cyan, magenta, and yellow are secondary subtractive colors. Her answer is WRONG. She tried to go on to long. She’s blond. What did you expect?!
@@reemr9954 you are still thinking about rgb. It only applies to led emitted colors. The colors you find in the nature and are used in paints for example are called substractive colors. To understand it, we need to know how colors work in the nature. The pigment absorbs a given lenght of the light spectrum, and the rest it doesn't absorb is the color that is reflected back to our eyes. When we mix two different pigments, let's say blue and yellow, the resulting pigment will absorb light from both blue and yellow spectrums, and the resulting color that is reflected, that is the color that wasn't absorbed by the mixed pigments, will be a darker color, that is green. But in colors made by leds, light is not absorbed, it is emitted, so the classic color theory would not work. As mixing colors in nature will result in a darker color , as more light will be absorbed by the pigment, mixing light emitting sources will result in a brighter tone, as more light will be emitted as a result. That's why in rgb red + green is yellow. Red light range + green light range will result in a brighter light range that is yellow. If you mix red, green and blue, it will result in a ever brighter light range, that is white. In the other hand, mixing the three primary colors in nature you will get the darkest light range as the pigment will absorb most of the light spectrum, resulting in black.
@@oBergerr I agree with you, and I'll give it to you, you're right. But for the purposes of having a zero L record on the internet I will say I'm right. Xo have a good day
@@divergentthg7925 If that's all you. It's mere speculation. What I see Is a woman who see the opportunity to make more money but decides to risk just enough. If that doesn't make her reasonable in my eyes then I don't know what will. There's nothing wrong with a woman going to a bar, drinking a beer and having a good time.
Yup... he found one of those rare college kids who has an IQ larger than her shoe size. But now she's gonna take that prize money to a bar and kill off a bunch of those brain cells.
And i lost hope to citizen from the USA. How can you still belive that you are the continent AMERICA 🤣 the question was wrong the answer was wrong everything is wrong 🤣 the biggest state is probably nunavut from canada. But if you ask biggest state in the US then and only then its Alaska. 🤣
Your faith in humanity might need to be checked. These questions were all pretty irrelevant as far as needing to know. Unless somehow you managed to make it in life with the all powerful knowledge of the 3 primary colors.
Uh... Seriously? The bar is so fkn low? Knowing 2nd grade shit means you are not dumb? Also...the primary colors question sent me on a loop. It's red, green and blue. But they teach that it's red, blue and yellow. Apparently it's 2 schools of thought: additive and subtractive. One is about material colors, like actual paint. Mixing actual paint and colours to make others, they see yellow as one of the primary colors instead of green. However, when we talk about chemicals, light, physics, tech, it's green instead of yellow. Red, green and blue together make white, discovered by newton by fuking around with light and prisms. And they make more light when mixed. It's additive because each colour light makes it brighter, until it's pure white. And red and green make yellow.
@@uok6216 some people have received a much greater amount and literally carry on like it’s no big deal. This girl was grateful for the $25 even if it’s not too much money.
@@mnomadvfx the color question has at least 3 right answers (Red, Green, Blue or Cyan, Magenta, Yellow or Red, Green, Blue and Yellow). The temperature question has infinite right answers, the temperature at which water freezes depends on composition and pressure. Anyway the triple point of pure water at 0.6117 kPa - used to define the Kelvin scale - is 32.018°F or 0.01°C or 273.16K.
I was thinking the same thing. Lol. These questions were so incredibly easy. I learned the primary colors in 1st grade when we did finger painting. Although Alaska is the largest state by land area. But California is the largest state by population. So that question would have required a clarifying request.
This was decent to watch. She seemed chill and knew common knowledge facts and he wasn’t being an asshole or making snide remarks….Breath of fresh air from most of these vids.
@@nicarmendariz9079 TBH - I knew, but watching this video, I realized that I don't know why I should know it. Honestly, who gives a fuck about Tallahassee aside from people who live there.
@@anubis6374 just because that's something YOU wouldn't do doesn't make it a stupid decision. Live your life the way you want too and let others live theirs and not based on your opinions on what they should or shouldn't do with THIER money.
@@TheOwensillarshe’s a young woman in college. She can easily get drinks for free and could probably use that $25 so she can have more than ramen that week 😂
I got nothing but positive thoughts and best wishes for this girl . She's a keeper . Try going to some of the local colleges and ask the same questions I bet they couldn't even get half right .
Rotorhead? Shd be rottenhead. She was an adult. And you thought 12 yr olds shd be as smart. Try this. Can a Sea, be a Lake? C'mon. All of your 98% stupid kids know it.
@@randomizer2050 Ima still give her the benefit of the doubt, because there's some girls out there, that don't know how to use a broom to sweep a floor.
@@mrequi1 Well then, I'm glad you've had experiences with decent people. Where I'm from, grown adults are lucky to be smarter then a 3rd grader. It's very sad. We need people that gives us hope.
It’s this comment 👆🏼 The parents who raised their child right, and this is what happens when they get it spot on, and then when she gets married and has kids they have a better chance at having a good upbringing like their grandparents did when they raised their mother, and that’s how easy it is 🤷🏻♂️ It only takes one generation of being a degenerate/democratic socialist to set it backwards and ruin a family name or lineage 😢 🧐Good parenting and family values are lost on most people 🤔
The fact it took that long to give the correct answer tells me Celsius is the better system. Water freezes at zero degrees and boils at 100 degrees. Easy.
No she’s pretty exceptional. These questions while basic on their own, also coupled with public pressure and being on the spot make them MUCH more difficult. It’s easy to sit back in your chair at home by yourself, it’s entirely different doing it in public. She’s exceptional.
@@ASGelly not really lol. Its not who wants to be a millionaire on national TV live in front of thousands of people, dude. Its some random dude asking super simple questions that anybody *should* know if they're over the age of 10. Pressure or not lol
@@ASGelly you just have *super* low standards of what "exceptional" is and your basing your own lack of being able to perform under any tiny amount of pressure, or possibly your inability to answer simple questions with a camera present, onto others
@@ASGelly I think it helped that the dude had a very calming energy to him, a lot of the time, people asking these questions are very excited and enthusiastic, which can definitely make people freeze up a bit more
@@alisonanderson4732 Green is a tertiary color. A combination of blue and yellow. I'm an artist and I learned that a very long time ago. If you're talking digital and internet fine. But in art, and painting it's Blue Yellow Red. Combine all three and you get black.
Unfortunately the broken western society of today teaches women to be like this, slowly turning them into men. America especially will all be a massive sausage fest with rough handed manly women
@@CitrusMenace The fact that you don’t understand says a lot. What they mean is, things that were asked here were common knowledge back 30 or 40 years ago. Now, most people collage age or even a bit older more than likely wouldn’t know these things. That’s what they mean by “80’s and 90’s. A little reading comprehension goes a long way. You just gotta try a bit.
a genuine woman? she dresses like a biological female, and can answer 4th grade questions. but still acts like a dude "your the man" very feminine of her. hah. maybe a genuine "gen-z female", where the females act more manly then the males. statistically the most homosexual generation to ever exist. ¼ identify as lgbt. 🤣
Three cheers for Amanda! We've seen SO many young people randomly questioned on the street who can't answer even the simplest questions. Good that she knows when to walk away while she's ahead. Smart girl!
Everyone should know/remember at least 3/5 of these basic questions though, I wouldn't call this "sharp". Don't take it the wrong way, not looking for a YT battle lol
@@jacob9673 you’re not wrong, but there are multiple types of primary colors - you’re talking about light mixing, she’s talking about dye mixing, and there are further nuances
@John Alpha She's actually correct (give me $5) as the theme was "Elementary Trivia" If he said do yo use the light, she would have probably said RGB 😁
She's lacking understanding of risk. Risking everything just to always get a payout of $5 is bad judgement. She's definitely wont be the one running my empire. A smartperson would negotiate better terms rather than play by the existing rules; and that's what separates the upper class from the middle class.