Your love some of the videos online talking about the USA military zombie apocalypse plan. And there are some fun videos on youtube. asking riddet'ers about what would you do in a Zombie apocalypse.
Mars= Roman god of war Uranus = greek God of the heavens and sky Jupiter= was the Roman god of the sky and of thunder Venus= roman is the goddess of love, beauty, s** fertility, and victory Mercury= Roman god of commerce, eloquence, travelers, communication, messengers, and trickery. Saturn = Roman god of time, generation, dissolution, abundance, wealth, agriculture, periodic renewal and liberation. Neptune = roman god of fresh water Pluto = (now classifed as a dwarf planet instead of a regular planet) was the roman god of dead, wealth, and agriculture * The name Earth is an English/German name which simply means the ground. It comes from the Old English words 'eor(th)e' and 'ertha'. In German it is 'erde'.
Roman - Greek names: Mercury - Hermes Venus - Aphrodite Mars - Ares Jupiter - Zeus Saturn - Kronos (technically not a god, but a titan) Uranus - Ouranos (Zues' cannible daddy. Also a titan) Neptune - Poseidon Pluto - Hades
@@gushers114Gaia is literally the translation for the word Earth. The goddess considered the personification of Earth they called Gaia wasn’t created until the Renaissance.
You will notice the similarity between Greek and Roman mythology and architecture. Rome was founded by the Etruscan's. But, the Etruscan's kept Greek slaves that would later overthrow and kill almost all of them. The Greek's, not knowing which tribes they were from anymore, took on the mantle of Etruscan. It would be these Etruscan's that would found Rome making the Roman empire a Greek empire.
While I'll admit I had no prior knowledge about that, I still argue my point regardless of when a name was conceived. I mean, technically speaking, even our own moon has no official name; Luna is just another word for "moon".@@AbruptandOffensive
Seriously! I've been staying away from news, politics, Church politics etc, just to keep stress low with my daughter in the hospital, so I've just been binging this and it's pretty nice.
@@L3WGReacts Also the part about how the American Military having a zombie plan. Is something that people in our military who go to the War College. They have a plan for pretty much anything that can effect them. The zombie apocalypse plan was used to figure out how to survive a real apocalypse not so much zombies. They also have a plan on how to invade every single country on planet earth, and how to defend against every plan of attack another country could do to us. The UK military has the same kind of plans that are thought up by y’all’s military colleges to. We even have plans on how to invade each other an our allies. The plans that we have against each other as in the UK vs America. We know there’s only a .0000001% chance of it happening. We still have to plan for it. It’s how both the UK and USA have orders that if for some reason either one of our nations fell during the Cold War our nuclear weapons like our Submarines are to place themselves under the command of of the others militarily. That’s for worse case scenario
@@L3WGReacts No, its that other dude Picaso we've all heard so much about. Totally common name. Just like all of those other dudes named Napoleon, Churchill, Carrottop and Bono.
@@artor9175 It’s so funny you posted this. Because I was literally just listening to that song about 10 minutes ago! From the Repo Man movie back in the early 1980’s it was a cover song by Burning Sensations who if memory serves me right was just a 1 hit wonder. I was 13-14 years old when it came out and my memory ain’t what it used to be
2:01 #23 George Bernard Dantzig was the child of two linguists and his father was also a mathematician. He wasn't considered an exceptional student growing up, he was however notorious for being late. The problems he solved were considered unsolvable, but because he was late that day he didn't hear that little bit of information. While other people heard that and so never tried to solve them, he did through shear ignorance. His story is a great lesson in the fact that sometimes what we consider impossible is only impossible because we believe it to be.
Thomas Fitzpatrick during an argument made a bet he could fly a plane from New Jersey to Manhattan in 15 minutes. He stole a plane in NJ and landed in Manhattan, but wasn't arrested after the plane's owner didn't press charges but he was fined $1,000. The second time he was in a bar again and got into an argument when the guy didn't believe he flew the plane the first time. Stole another plane, but he went to jail
Quite often the majority of these cute Myths/Factual accounts are riddled with inaccuracies and embellishments bordering on outright misinformation. Though cute they're not quite as true as they seem.
The super heated water problem happens when an extremely clean and blemish-free glass container is used to heat water in a microwave. Boiling bubbles usually happen at nucleation points in a container, like minor imperfections or particles on the container. If there are none of those, the water gets hot, but doesn't boil until you disturb it by picking it up, when it boils all at once.
It’s happened to me before. The way around this is to put a bamboo skewer in the water. Water will boil around the bamboo, saving the persons skin from a horrible burn.
Hearing that one about hospitals in July now has me wondering. My fiancée had a surgery the day before my birthday in late June. She was transferred to a rehab facility in early July. While there she developed an infection that the people there said was just part of the healing process. My fiancee has been a nursing student before her kidneys failed so she knew an infection when she saw one. After a couple of days she called an Uber and had herself taken to the hospital where they wound up doing emergency surgery on her because it was so bad. Try ad they did, they could not get it under control. I lost her on August 18, 2021. I held her hand as she died.
To convert cricket chirps to degrees Fahrenheit: Just count the number of chirps in 14 seconds, then add 40 to get the temperature. The number you get will be an approximation of the outside temperature.
I thought this was the case and it makes sense. In the northern hemisphere listen to the crickets in say, mid-July vs mid-October. If there hasn’t been a killing frost in October they chirp slow asf.
This is proof that the main cause to bigotry is ignorance. I love seeing this guy react (and appreciate) to our culture. it lets you realize that you can come together and make friends out of appreciation for our differences, rather than allow the differences to cause resentment.
Take celery, fill the hollow side with peanut butter, and stick a row of raisins to the peanut butter. American childhood delicacy called ants on a log. Many adults like it too, haha
@@lynettefrench2358It's great without the raisins. That was my favorite snack growing up, otherwise celery is just crunchy water that gets stuck in your teeth.
The one thing on this planet I can’t eat without gagging is raw celery. Even with peanut butter or ranch. But in a stew or as a seasoning it’s fine. Idk why but yeah I just can’t eat celery. (Yeah I know no one asked me but I said it)
@@GetDougDimmadomedyeah I’m not a big fan of celery in general but pairing it with peanut butter makes complete sense to me and seems Ii,e it’d be good if you liked celery. Adding raisins however? Just doesn’t sound like it’s be a good combo to me. Lol Because I like raisins and I like peanut butter but raisins + peanut better just doesn’t sound right lol
Planet Earth is colloquially known as Earth, but it does actually have a formal name...as does the Moon and Sun. Sun = Sol, Moon = Luna, Earth = Terra. All three are from the Roman pantheon, matching all the planets.
Ah yes, VERY good point sir! Terra Mater who's Greek counterpart would be Gaea/Gaia, wife and mother to Ouranos/Uranus and hence a Primordial as was Ouranos, and and interestingly she would be both mother and grandmother to Saturn/Kronos and grandmother and great grandmother to Zeus!
1:55 I've had water 'explode' in the microwave. It's a pretty simple physical phenomenon. Just like water in the air needs a surface to condense on to to form clouds and rain (usually that surface is dust), the surface tension of liquid water is high enough that it needs an "impurity" or irregularity to allow the water to evaporate to vapor and boil out. If your container is very clean, then there's a chance that the surface tension of the water will keep it all intact and parts of the water will heat higher than 212°F/100°C. Once the superheated water is disturbed enough to break that surface tension, all the superheated water will turn to steam _en masse_ and it will seem like it exploded (it didn't). It's not really that big of a deal, more annoying than anything.
25 myths about America and three fifths were not about America or even Americans. Plus they're not even myths. Many aren't even close to being a myth. Just an obscure fact.
@@Austin.Kilgore and the myths mentioned didn't even sound common. I mean I had heard a lot of them before, usually not presented as myths, but I'm nerdy so that doesn't make them "common myths".
That's true because the only 3/5 of anything was originally in the US Constitution when the South wasn't as populated as the North and they weren't going to win any congressional seats so rather than counting slaves as an individual they counted them as 3/5 of person. HOW AWFUL!!!!
@@Franimus yea obscure facts, not many are even common. At least one isn't even true. Water doesn't explode. It just boils rapidly and makes a mess, but it definitely isn't an explosion. Water can cause an explosion of sorts. If it's heated to a boil rapidly. In a sealed container. But that's not what occurs in a microwave
There's always more to the story: They didn't fine the beavers. They attempted to fine the land owner who defended himself by saying the unauthorized dam was built by beavers. What was left out was that a neighbor had killed the beavers and therefore the dam was abandoned. The land owner then took it upon himself to continue working on said dam. Eventually the issue was dropped.
@8:25 .... Some studies have shown that rats prefer sugar over cocaine... so take take that into your consideration on whether it's addictive or not...
Yes, celery with peanut butter filling the runnel is a relatively common snack in America. Some people press raisins into the peanut butter as well which gives you another well known snack "Ants on a Log".
Congrats on the 100K! 1. Your addicted to the caffeine or the sugar in your coke not the coke itself. Try drinking a bottle of water in-between each coke or help flush out your kidneys. 2. This happens at campgronds and vacant homes, places that aren't used multiple times a day, everyday. In Florida snakes can be in toilets and spiders or scorpions can come up the drains. 3. I can't stand celery. I don't care if you put peanut butter or cream cheese, it's going in the trash can. 4. I'm not surprised the pentagon has a emergency plan for zombies. I want to know about the University of Florida having one! 5. Attach a spray bottle to a bottle of rubbing alcohol and it's a great way to sanitize your phone and keyboard. 6. At Disney there is a door that says 66 but it blends in to the area with all the other doors!
Not really surprised about the zombie plan for the university of Florida. Seeing how bath salts were a really bad thing like a decade ago and meth has been a problem for the state for a while it doesn’t surprise me but at the same time it’s a little odd
I'm pretty sure most 1st world countries have a zombie plans def the uk and France. I'm almost positive japan and china do too or atleast they use to. Before the 50s their govt were very superstitious. I mean look at the Vietnam war wen the us used their ghost stories as a way 2 attack then mentally
Mentioned this the other day, if you put a chopstick or long toothpick into the mug of water, it gives the water something to hold on to to make bubbles as it boils. If the mug is slick enough inside, the water can boil without producing bubbles, so you don't know it's boiling until you jostle it and boom - scalded. But a simple wooden chopstick will prevent that. Can happen the other way, too. Super cooled water looks cold, not freezing, and liquid until you smack the bottle down and it turns into ice. I'm still microwaving my water for my morning coffee.
They tested humans by blindfolded them and letting them hear the sound of very hot water vs very cold water pouring. In every case the person could distinguish the difference, yet even to the most sophisticated technology they sound identical. Humans have built-in survival senses not yet fully realized.
Love your work. Others have made similar comments, but you should re-title this video because: 1) celery is not particularly "American", 2) Pablo Picasso was Spanish, 3) dogs are eaten in China, NOT AMERICA, 3) dirty phones are world-wide, 4) twins born apart can happen anywhere, 5) snakes will do that in other countries. ( It happened to my brother in Miami, though. He was never the same, LOL.) , 6) illegal organ harvesting happens in other countries, 7) water heaters exist in other countries, 8) otters exist in other countries and probably hold paws there also, 9) Einstein was German.
Years ago I saw this bumper sticker that said "The more I know about people the more I love my dog" When I was in high school back in the mid 1980s, there was a faculty member who was 3 months older than their twin. Our health teacher told us.
In some area of america, we have a kids snack called "ants on a log" which is celery with peanut butter on top. You sprinkle raisins on the peanut butter. The raisins look like ants on the peanut butter covered celery "log". :D
He seems like a genuinely friendly guy. Reminds me of when the internet was young and I would huddle around the desk top pc with my cousins and watch random videos.
@@The_Crucible714 LOL trust me, I completely agree. I just couldn't think of a Brit equivalent to describe him with. Based solely on appearance and personality, were he American born, I think the original description would kind of work. lol
CONPLAN 8888 is the pentagon's "game plan" for zombies. It was a training assignment that started out as a joke among trainees, but didn't stay that way for long. The trainees tasked with writing it began to take it very seriously lol. That's what would probably be used at first if zombies ever did show up lmao.
For the zombie apocalypse plan, I believe it was used as an exercise to practice making battle plans or war games, as most or all real-world scenarios had already had plans made, so they went for something fictitious but helpful in understanding concepts.
also some municipalities used people in zombie costumes and make up as an alternitive to mass casualty and disaster trainig for hospitals and first responders. if they didn't sometimes there were panics caused by civilians overhearing the participants talking about things like anthrax or a massive pile-up that did not exist
1:58 yes, on purpose though what happens is because it's not "heat" but molecules being agitated the surface tension can be retained on the water and when it breaks kaboom! Caffeine in coca cola is addictive and there is more than enough to get you hooked in soda.
What happens is Spanish people often take on the last name of those who have preceded meaning names just pile up with no end. They literally have so many names yet they are known by one name because of how long those names are. They only ever use their entire names in very formal settings and to show power if they need to.
To superheat water, you have to heat it to a boil, let it sit a moment for the air to leave, then put it back in the microwave... or have it covered. This also takes a while. The funny part about the theorem thing is that he handed it to his Professor "late", his professor thought he was making a joke (since he hadn't assigned homework, and left it on his desk). A few weeks later, he started skimming it, and figured out what was going on. Of course it took a bit to verify through several people. BTW, it was a Millennium Prize Problem, so he got a million for solving it. Celery filled with peanut butter and raisins on top is a kid's snack known as ants on a log. Just remember, American peanut butter is generally sweetened. Coke (the medicine syrup version) originally used Ecgonine (a cocaine derivative) but there was very little. The interesting thing, was when mixed with alcohol it metabolizes into Cocaethylene which is an extremely potent drug. Your withdrawals on the modern stuff is just caffeine withdrawals. Earth is named after a goddess (Terra). Mercury - god of speed and messages Venus - Goddess of Beauty/love Mars - God of War Jupiter - Head of the Roman Pantheon Saturn - god of time, harvest and agriculture Uranus - God of the heavens and sky (Husband of Terra) Neptune - God of the seas Pluto - pluto god of the underworld They don't always steal organs. People in debt are known to sell organs.
I've been in Club 33 a few times. It's not all that secret. The door says 33 and is next to the Pirates of the Caribbean. You will go up stairs or the elevator to above the Blue Bayou restaurant.
@@The_Crucible714 The $50,000 price tag to get in, if you can get past the waiting list. And the one in the Magic Kingdom is the only place you can get alcohol in that park. (the other parks have booze). It's basically a VERY exclusive lounge, restaurant and bar where rich people can escape the hubub of the park. They also have exclusive merch. My daughter works at the Magic Kingdom one.
You can see a sign in Disneyland's New Orleans Square, between Pirates of the Caribbean and Blue Bayou Restaurant, with a simple "33." That's where special guests gets in. Back in the 90s, I went to Disneyland monthly because my sister worked there and got us in for free. Once, we were waiting in line for Blue Bayou and saw a group come up to the Club 33 and buzz in. My sister pointed it out and told me how rare it was to actually see that. Then again, on another trip I ended up in line behind Neil Patrick Harris.
Mars is named after the god of War. when I took latin in high school our teacher made us take names after various gods from the roman panteon. I ended up being mars; which was ironic since I am a bit of a pacifist.
I use a kettle to heat watter like a normal person. Blows my mind when people tell me they use a microwave. And the withdrawals your feeling is probably sugar withdrawals. Sugar is an addictive substance.
I just so happen to have a kettle because of how often I make tea, but I’ve used the microwave, and boiling it over the stove. People don’t want to have to spend like $20 on something that can be done easily with other methods
I will try to clarify a few of these: 24. Water boils because it needs particulates to bounce around/off of. That's why purified water can be heated up above the boiling point without showing signs of being hot. If you added a couple grains of salt then the water molecules will bounce off of them and cause instant boiling or exploding water. 22. Celery requires more calories to chew than it actually gives. Hence the negative calorie. People have been trying to find more "super foods" that match this discovery. 21. A lot of bets are placed between people while drinking. A man bet another man that he would get a professional book job. Won the bet then decided to keep them. 20. There are medical mishaps quite often (people having the wrong appendage amputated or the wrong hip/knee being replaced). This happens regardless of experience. 19. There are a lot of ways to tell how the seasons are going to be. Squirrels for example. If the are skinny in late autumn then it will be a mild winter. If they are chubby or fat, it's going to be long and cold. 18. Yes, THAT Picasso. The artist. 16. Ricky Gervais has a charity that he has started to try to save as many dogs from the Chinese festival. Recommend looking it up. It is heart breaking... 10. Mars was the god of war since it's red color looked like blood. 7. Majority of organs are actually bought from poor people. They make it illegal because the donors aren't usually cared for in a safe or clean environment. Most people assume they come from a drifter hitchhiking down the road and such, but because of the various blood types and other genetic markers they have to be tested for compatability. Most people see this as raking advantage of the poorer communities or that it just gives people the idea that they can make money selling their offspring to harvesters. 6. Yes. About 10, q5 years ago or so the Zombie fad was so great that people firmly believed it was possible. Government decided to put a plan to paper not because they were actually worried about it, but because they didn't want to be accused of not caring about the people if such a day happened. Basically just go with a Doomsday Prepper plan. 4. They actually thought it was a last name of a family. The usual lack of communication. Hope that helps to clarify a couple things for you or others.
So, Ricky Gervais is trying to save people's food *in China* from becoming their food, because in a different culture, in a different *country,* those same animals aren't raised as food, but instead are bred and sold as pets? 🤦🏾♀️ That would be like if someone who practices Hinduism in India tried to come to the U S. and stop Americans from eating beef.
True fact about July in a teaching hospital. My 2 year old daughter had Cancer and her doctor told me that when she was in one in July. She passed away on July 8th, 34 years ago. She did not die from the Cancer but from negligence. After her surgery to take out her kidney one of the residents told me when I asked for tylenol for her that children don't feel pain.
Hey Lewis, Mike is right and wrong about water exploding in a microwave. Water on it's own in a coffee-mug or open container will just boil. However, boiling water in a microwave, whilst in a sealed vessel/container will definitely explode. Also since eggs are mostly water and they come in their own sealed-vessel (shell), they will easily explode.
Beavers are amazing engineers. If you're familiar with a specific waterway & it changes its flow pattern but there has been no change in rainfall or snowmelt, it's very easy to learn if the change is due to beavers...just backtrack along the waterway. Beaver dams are very noticeable, so are the tree stumps left from beavers' harvesting. It's really cool watching a beaver at work.
07: My late wife was a nurse and was working with a company to raise transplant awareness (potential donors). They even provided some swag, including polo shirts. I made the joke to check it for zippers around the small of the back in case the company was performing clandestine donor surgeries.
Beavers are easy to find. 1. They build damns (I have participated in tearing one down, many many years ago as a child). 2. They make large dens partly above the water line. They weren't happy but the damn was flooding one little lake and drying up the other.
Regarding the superheating of water in the microwave oven- You would need extremely pure water to do this, like distilled or deionized water, which normally isn't preferable for drinking. Particles and dissolved solids in the water, as are usually in any water that is for drinking, whether from the tap or filtered, provide things like nucleation points for gases to form onto and then the bubbling starts. When these things aren't there in the water, as in deionized water, there aren't any nucleation points for those bubbles to form on and the water can reach a temperature where it would normally transition to a gas phase. Afterwards, if you put an object into the water, all the water coming into contact with the object can suddenly flash to steam, which can be pretty dangerous and violent if you're not wearing protective equipment. Planets- Mercury - messenger god, Greek version was Hermes Venus - goddess of beauty, Greek version was Aphrodite Mars - god of war, Greek version was Ares Jupiter - king of the gods, Greek version was Zeus Saturn - god of time and a whole lot more, titan, father of the major gods and goddesses, Greek version was Kronos Uranus - god of the sky, father of Kronos and the other titans, this was the Greek god Pluto - god of the underworld, Greek version was Hades Earth would have been Terra in Latin and Gaia in Greek. Mother of Uranus, Mother of the Titans (yes, this means her son is also her consort with whom she produced the next generation of deities. Greek mythology has some pretty strange stories, look into what Zeus did to Kronos)
I learned number 16 early in my life. I ended up doing a report on it for school, as you had to choose a country and I was obsessed with Mulan at the time. They're stuffed in 10x10 cages, hundreds to each cage. Then the immigrate to America, so be sure that your chicken, pork and beef is actually chicken, pork and beef. and not man's best friend. Many, many restaurants have been caught doing this. Three in my town alone. People have been banned from my animal shelter because they went ingredient shopping there. A family of three that ran a local restaurant are currently serving a 20 year prison sentence for animal abuse. Also, I'm Japanese so there's the 2000 year feud as well.
I have enjoyed the Disneyland “Club 33”, on a few occasions. (BTW… It is THE PERFECT SPOT from where to watch their night time, river show, “Fantasmic!”!) The service is absolutely impeccable, & there are framed, original Disneyland concept art pieces, displayed on the walls! A great place to dine, & avoid the crowds! 😁
The "exploding water" is when the water is above boiling temperature but doesn't boil until you jiggle it taking it out of the microwave. Always break the surface of the drink with a spoon or something. If it's going to go off it will just release steam inside the microwave.
I have microwaved a mug of water before to make instant coffee… it reached a point where all of the water left the mug and drenched the microwave floor. Those times that I do need to microwave water (for coffee or tea, say) I’ll put sugar in first. (Always add the instant coffee or tea bag after you take it out of the microwave.)
It's the caffeine in Coca Cola that you are addicted to. I used to drink Coca Cola at work, but not on the weekends. I got headaches every Sunday. Eventually I figured out that I was withdrawing from caffeine every weekend. I could either drink coke on the weekends and I would not get headaches, or stop drinking Coca Cola altogether to stop the headaches.
In college I came home to find a 5 ft long snake in my bathroom curled behind our toilet. Scared the shit out of me. Found out later someone lost their pet python in our building and he likely came into our apartment through the toilet.
I just recently heard that my brother-in-law opened the silverware drawer in their kitchen to find a black snake curled up in the drawer! They think it probably followed some mice into the house (they live in the country). He picked it up and took it outside. I would have run from the house and not ever return!
I have been there and in fact bought some items. We were invited by a club member and food prices are so expensive and food are amazing. The membership fees are also ridiculously expensive.
About the zombie thing... I think that the defense paper i saw actually classified somewhere around 8 methods of zombification including supernatural, extraterrestrial, fungal, and bacterial, and how to combat each. Of course, most of the defense responses involved incineration of one kind or another.
The learning hospital thing is absolutely false. In order for the hospital to be accredited, they have to have licensed physicians on staff to treat the number of beds available. Students doing their internships are not licensed and have to be supervised by a physician who is qualified to treat the patient. I was hit by a semi in July of 2019 and the learning hospital I was sent to had some the best neurosurgeons and physicians on staff with the interns following them to see me because my case was unique.
It's not that the people don't have the education - it's that they aren't yet fixed on processes and procedures. So things take longer than they should, or you might end up being sent the wrong way, etc. And this is learning hospitals, such as the UMC at Princeton Plainsboro, NJ. This isn't your run-of-the-mill hospital.
@jeffreymontgomery7516 the "learning hospital" my daughter and I were sent to, was OU Medical, so it is attached to Oklahoma University. My daughter's spine was fractured, but she could still walk and move. They have one of the top 5 best Pediatric Neurosurgeons in the country whose specialty is installing and removing hardware from the spine in the back and neck. She is there to practice in the hospital, do her clinic, and also teach and guide the interns. You are right. It's not your run of the mill hospital. It's better and more advanced. The other "learning hospital" I had experience with was Vanderbilt in Nashville where they woke up a pediatric plastic surgeon in the middle of the night to come in and sew my daughters face after she was bit by a dog. You can hardly see the scar, and she's not disfigured at all. The interns there watched the whole procedure, and he gave them guidance as well. I love my local hospital because they have great care, but if you need advanced care, then a "learning hospital" has more resources and more specialists available.
@rebekahbowser8060 she's doing really good. She's walking and in the band. She is already getting arthritis in the spine at 15, but it could have been so much worse. She does still have some restrictions like no football or basketball, really anything where there might be contact like that. She's okay with it because she loves band, though. Thank you for asking.
@@GetDougDimmadomedima 19 yo skinny ass white boy with a high metabolism… I’ve been drinking 6-8 cans of soda, every day for 7-9 years straight… I’m perfectly healthy… fuckin miracle. Lol. 🤷🏻
@@thecrapinmytoilet6892lmao, kid I’m 46 and I used to feel and say the exact same thing….until the kidney stones started and I had one almost kill me. The last one was over a 1/2” and got stuck. It caused my kidney to start shutting down and it caused a blood infection. Don’t play with your health man, it’s definitely not worth it.
My Daughter works at Club 33 in Magic Kingdom in Orlando. They're not allowed to take any photos of the inside, and when she goes outside in the park (to eat lunch or leave work) she has to wear a jacket over her costume or remove her nametag. They are REALLY serious about keeping the location - and even the existence of it - a mystery! You can't even find any official information about it because the main landing page for it is a "log in" only page. That's it.
There is an office in the Pentagon with the specific job of making and updating war plans for ANY scenario. This includes invasion plans of every square foot of the planet, and defending against alien invasion, and every conceivable monster in folklore.
I've wen't to "Club 33" in Disneyland years ago. I worked for AT&T & they had a Corporate membership. (Club 33 was created to give corporations something special. I believe they donated something or another to the Park.) I can't remember what I had to do to prove I was an employee of AT&T, but I remember I had to in order to gain entrance. There's a door right around the exit of "Pirates of the Caribbean" that just have the numbers "33" on it. Not even a door knob. You have to knock and prove you are allowed to gain entrance. Pretty much, when I went, it was a more upscale eatery. It was fun to be able to go to something you knew most people didn't even know about.
Caffeine is in basically all sodas including Coca-Cola (unless the UK has it removed for some reason compared to the US version) lack of caffeine after being used to getting a certain amount per day can cause headaches called Caffeine Headaches. As someone who drinks monster energy drinks like water, I occasionally end up dealing with these Caffeine headaches a lot.
@@deanbrunner261 here in Arizona you can buy Coke bottled in Mexico and they claim to use real cane sugar. I can’t say whether that is a fact or not but it does taste better to me. And it’s in the glass bottles too which I like.
Superheating water in the microwave can happen. I boil 1 cup water plus 1 cup vinegar in my microwave to help steam clean it. (Easiest way to clean it, IMO. No scrubbing and it takes 5 minutes to wipe clean.) I put it in the microwave for 5 minutes in a bowl, and didn’t watch it. A key sign of super heated water is it doesn’t boil once it reaches the boiling point until the liquid is disturbed. When I went to remove the bowl of water-vinegar, it then boiled over. It was a good thing I was using silicone potholders because I would have been scalded otherwise. I now only run the microwave 1 minute at a time when I steam clean it, just in case.
It used to be "a Disney question"... Which of the following can be bought in Disneyland? A) Gum; B) Cigarettes; C) Alcohol The answer was C) Alcohol because they server alcohol at Club 33. BTW - The number "33" isn't just there for Club 33. There are numbered addresses all over New Orleans Square. 33 just happens to be the one at the club. The club is upstairs right next to Walt's suite (which is now the Disney Gallery above Pirates). One fun thing was they used to monogram the napkins, matchbooks, etc, with the initials of the person making the reservation.
Bruh, congrats on the 100k subs! You totally deserve it! Your videos are sooo entertaining and funny and your attitude is just charming and lovely! Keep it up! Can't wait for you to come to the States!!
I forget the exact amount but you can count the chirps from crickets in a minute to get a proper temperature reading. Much like counting seconds after thunder to get an approximate distance to the storm.
9:10 sugar is highly addictive! John Oliver did a really good segment on how the industry uses sugar to keep people hooked and buying more. Definitely check that out if you can!
I've been to the secret club at Disneyland. It didn't even look like a door and we had a wonderful food bar for lunch. Apparently it once had microphones up in the ceiling during the days when some Americans were thought to be working for the Russians. This way the conversations were recorded. It was amazing how hidden the whole restaurant was.
The entrance for Club 33 at Disneyland is no longer a secret location. It used to be down an alley, but now it is right on Royal Avenue, near Bat en Rouge. There is a speaker and button on the left hand side of the door (also not hidden) and you have to give a code word to the person who answers. If you don’t, they just tell you to have a nice day. Lots of people push the button, LOL.
He might not like celery, but lots of us do. Peanut butter goes well on lots of things. One of my favorite snacks is sliced apples with peanut butter and sour cream dip
Re. exploding water: I've never exploded water in a microwave, but I did when reheating a mug of coffee. Everything SEEMED fine, but as soon as I grabbed the handle of the mug, it geysered.
Peanut Butter in the groove of the celery stalk and peanut butter on apples is yummy!! 😋 You're addicted to the caffeine in Coke and most people get headaches when they stop drinking soda because of caffeine withdrawals.
The water heater is in general a good source for potable drinking water in a disaster scenario however, it's more guaranteed to remain so if you shut off the supply in cases where the water supply may have become contaminated. It's a DIS-aster after all... So, your supply could possibly be limited solely to the contents of your water heater.
Yes you can super heat the water in the microwave, it sucks when it explodes on your hand. A slight jarring or a tea bag will making it go off. I just reduced time by 10 secs and have had zero issues now. I do have a kettle, but the minimal water is too much. Microwave is just so convenient.
Coca-Cola was originally marketed as a migraine remedy and was sold in pharmacies. It did contain cocaine. When cocaine was outlawed, the makers kept the name, but changed the recipe and marketed it as a soft drink.
When I was quite young (the 60s) you could buy over the counter small bottles of Coca Cola syrup at the pharmacy. It was used for upset tummies in our house. It actually worked. Just a small amount over ice did the trick for me. Pesto Bismal just made me more sick.