As a young white female who watched the moon landing it broke my heart to see the movie Hidden Figures. We were not raised prejudice and to hear the true story of the African American woman who were called "comptuers in skirts" finally got the recognition deserved. John Glenn only trusted Katherine Johnson's calculations before take off. Her calculations and brilliant mind also landed Neil Armstrong on the moon. How sad they didn't get the recognition deserved in the 60's! These brave men and amazing women know the truth! Watch the movie of their life and see the truth revealed!
Hate to have to break it to you but Hidden Figures is a LIE! At best it's an exaggeration of events. Katherine Johnson was one of hundreds of women (mostly white) who were recruited by NASA to verify mathematic calculations by their scientists to make sure their figures were correct. All they did was work through the formulas over and over again. John Glenn did NOT put all his faith in Katherine Johnson. He didn't even know who she was!
Like you, I watched the moon landing live. Amazing. Even more amazing is the work women did to ensure it and it’s safety…and their utter scrubbing from history.
No one should forget that while The US took some of its laws and organization from The UK, we also took a lot of lessons from The Iroquois who managed their population all over what would become the Eastern US.
My French ancestors were enemies of the Iroquois , my British relatives were allied with the Iroquois . When I told my sister the story about the Iroquois kidnapping him and cutting off his finger , she couldn’t believe it ! There’s a story about him capturing a tribe of Iroquois in Canada . He was a sawyer .
@@dawnyoung2294 my mom is japanese and my dad english/dutch. Lol. They fought over pearl harbor and the bombs. I think my mom won. The bombs were terrible. The Emperor only surrendered because he couldn't see any more of his children dying. The war was started by the prime minister but the Emperor paid the price.
I saw the launch to the moon July 17, 1969. walking on it July 20 1969 two days after my 10th birthday. We were 'glued" to our TV sets and that same night was a full moon. We Americans were very proud and happy to be an American. People have dumbed down to believe the USA would hoax such a thing. To what end?
The moon landing was part of our Cold War efforts against the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union NEVER Ever Once questioned that we had achieved that. There is no debate, you either believe 100% that man has landed on the moon or you are an idiot.
I still remember it! I was in kindergarten and they would show the rocket going and I would run outside to see if I could see it in the air. (From Central Illinois). 😊
I’m under one month older than you. I can’t remember it! It drives me crazy. I should remember it. I’m flummoxed as to why. Perhaps my parents were having their yearly we-are-getting-divorced moment.
We definitely landed on the moon. NASA sent a satellite to do hi-definition photography of the landing sites, then published them. It was amazing that lunar lander lower stages were right there along with the footprints and tracks from the lunar rovers.
Landed on the moon so successfully that NASA did it 6 times total, no one ever talks about the other missions that definitely happened and footage exists of.
I’ve heard it was cheaper and easier to go to the moon than to try to fake it. All that video footage they had could not have been possible to fake back in those days.
OMG, c'mon. Russia tracked our missions to the moon and if it had been faked, it would have been immediately known. The WHOLE world was literally watching.
Yeah not a terribly creative or entertaining theory. Hollow earth is my favorite, those guys come up with some really cool ideas. Historical human giants are also unlikely, but very cool speculations.
I learned about centrifugal force in school, they explained it by swinging a bucket of water in a circle and the water didn't spill because of centrifugal force.
The lack of trees in much of the West comes from the Great Plains that are a vast area of grassland, now much of it is farm fields, then very high and rough mountain areas, where trees don't grow, then areas of desert. There are still vast areas of forest in parts of the West, just other types of non-forest areas. As for the Moon Landing conspiracy theories, if you can find the episode of "Myth Busters" that dealt with that, they systematically showed how ridiculous it is to claim they didn't happen. Above all, that was the Cold War, and the Soviets were watching and they would have made sure to point to any evidence that it was fake. I always wonder if those people, the Flat Earth people, etc., really believe their nonsense, or if they are just trolling us.
Well obviously the Earth is flat!!! How do you explain our cars not being curved like the end of a spoon??? Jokes aside. I don't understand how these people believe these insane conspiracy theories either. There are a couple that may have some backing to them but the Flat Earth and the Moon Landing crowd are a strange bunch
You also see signs in other languages to help people. You see signs in Chinese, Japanese, Spanish, French, Russian, German, and Arabic languages. You also have braille in case someone is blind or a sign language interpreter or captions on things. Everything has a disability equivalent making things easier for people. Even computers that have braille inputs or a tactile screen to feel braille words. Disney even has some rarer languages in print like Native American or African languages that are tough to understand. There is also the French offshoot of creole which we have in print mostly found in Louisiana which is different to standard French in many ways. Honestly everyone is able to communicate somehow.
Landing on the moon isn't up for debate. There are even mirrors left to calculate the distance between the moon and earth. Not to mention, the Rover and flag were left also.
I started watching lost in the pond about two years ago and I was pleasantly surprised when I started seeing other Brits react to the channel. It gets more people over there and more subscribers. Way to go Laurence.
Centrifugal Force - an apparent force that acts outward on a body moving around a center, arising from the body's inertia. You can see this when you stir something into your drink. The faster you stir, the farther out from the center. The force causes the liquid to sink in the center and rise on the sides of the cup. About our lack of trees west of the Mississippi River I believe it has more to do with the level of the bedrock. Some areas are within a couple of feet preventing trees to grow roots down into the ground.
Hi! It's great and hilarious to hear you talk about the south as where the cowboys live. You wouldn't necessarily be wrong. But when you think of cowboy movies a lot of those take place in places like Colorado and Montana. Wyoming. New Mexico. And most of that is far out west, but all the way towards Canada to all the way down by Mexico. Lots of which probably would have been Mexican territory until shortly before the story took place.
My grandpas uncles went west after the civil war from Illinois and Indiana and one of them died at the Alamo , It’s very cool when you do ancestry and you can see how and why they traveled . My French Canadian Acadian relatives came down my Protestant relatives went over and down . All because of religion and land . And families traveling together . It’s amazing . My family looks like the war of the roses in America .
All those country singers who wear cowboy-like outfits who get televised all over the world are usually from the South or known to perform in the South, like Nashville, Tennessee. Modern-day cowboys perform at rodeos throughout the U.S.
@@fermisparadox01 basically west of the mississippi; you can go to a place called Robbers Cave in OK and some fairly famous outlaws stayed there. Can have lunch in a natural rock stable they used.
The Old West for "cowboys" was basically everything west of the Interior highlands. Along the Mississippi was more agricultural similar to the rest of the Southeast. Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska are the states that come to mind when I think of the Old Frontier.
A few things I have noticed about life in the UK that surprised me as an American -- 1) You can order hot tea and it comes already brewed, with a nice little pitcher of milk. In the US, you get a teabag and a cup of lukewarm water. 2) Roundabouts are TERRIFYING if you aren’t sure about the rules. 3) If you have mobility issues, sometimes there are ramps / elevators, sometimes you either do the stairs or you can’t go there. 4) It can get really hot in the summer and there’s not a lot of A/C. I went to a play at a London theater and it must have been 90 degrees F (32C) in there. Why the actors didn’t collapse I have no idea. And entering some Tube stations felt like walking into an oven. 5) Walking around London, the other pedestrians don’t walk on the left OR on the right. Each person takes their own individual path, causing the foreigner (me) to constantly dodge to avoid collisions. 6) Cheese and pickle sandwiches are AWESOME and why don’t they have them in the US? 7) If you like to use a washcloth (AKA facecloth) you have to bring your own. The hotels evidently think it’s unsanitary to provide them.
What we call vacuum cleaner, British people call Hoover. I actually used to have a Hoover vacuum cleaner, but now I have a Dyson. It's the same concept as to why we call "fizzy drinks" by a brand name: Coke. Restaurants describe them as soft drinks (as opposed to the hard drinks, or alcohol).
I think it varies by region. Some states they don’t say that, we say Soda or Pop. Where I live nobody asks for Coke unless they mean Coca-Cola. Or Cocaine, depending on the establishment.
@@theoriginalburgandy550if “coke” just means “Soda” why would anyone ask a waiter for a “coke”? I would never ask a waiter for just “soda” or “pop”. It’s the same thing as can I have “juice” or “a drink.” What’s the point of being unspecific before being specific? 😂 just say sprite to begin with
@@EverybodyLovesSarah welcome to the South! That’s the only answer I have for you 😆 in all fairness *some* will just be specific from the beginning, but others will say things like “what kind of cokes do you have”. It’s like Kleenex or Band-Aid, the name brand now just means the general type of thing.
In Texas we have Texas history as a class for an entire year. I work with a lot of people who are not from Texas and they are always fascinated with Texas history stories. My hometown in Texas dates back to the late 1500’s.
Two reasons why the moon landigs are true, The first astronauts brought back moon rocks which were distributed 16:52 all across the world. The Russians could never have let that happen, because we were able to pick up information on their people, and they ours. The Soviets would have known and radioed that all around the world. I liked your show.
11:58 yeah that's weird...but how does it work in the UK, like, at fast food places, the drink machine is behind the counter (thus forcing you to buy another cup)? Crazy 😲 In the USA, the drink machine is right there in the dining room, so you just walk up and refill the cup. 🙂 To be fair, this is only for non-alcoholic drinks. 🙂
In a medical example, a sample of blood is drawn, and that sealed sample is put in a centrifuge, the centrifuge spins the sample(s) very quickly and different parts of the blood are separated-- plasma separated from red blood cells-- for whatever purpose the donating purpose needs.
As to American history, the declaration of independence in 1776 was only 69 years after the acts of union which brought England and Scotland together to create the United Kingdom in 1707, and 95 years *before* the formation of a unified Germany in 1871. In fact, there are very few European countries which are older in their present form than the USA.
Centrifugal force is the tendency of an object moving in a circle to travel away from the center of the circle. Centrifugal force is what makes a propeller blade fly off if it breaks at the root.
The square streets are mostly in the newer, western cities. When I lived in Boston they told me the street layout was based on the paths the cows used to take to pasture. My dad once tried to walk around the block in West End, Boston and got completely lost.
Actually, in the South, we never said Coke for every soda. We actually use to say we wanted a “drink” when we wanted a soft drink. Not much now…now, we usually call out the name of the soda we want.
The British centrifugal. Is the silly silo, the astronauts training testing how many g's the body can take, the mixer, the spin and puke fair rides. The fast marry go rounds. Or that large circle with hand rails that you see in parks. Also called a diffuser or separater. Circle movement like geting stuck in the the large roundabouts and unable to exit the roundabout because you are in the innermost roundabout.
Hispanics and Latinos make up 20% of the US population. That includes all of the countries in Central and South America, Cuba and other Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries. Spanish is a handy language to learn over here, especially but not limited to South Texas, Southern Florida, Southern California, Arizona, and New Mexico. It is a well used language in those areas.
There was, maybe still is, a video on YT where a man who was supposed to be with NASA said that they reason they didn't go back to the moon in all this time is that "it was all on tape" and someone taped over it and no one knew how go to the moon again. I don't know what to think about all that. His explanation alone was enough to make me believe in a hoax. The same mountain range being in all the pictures, in spite of them landing in different places each time, made me wonder.
The reason carbonated beverages are called Coke in the south is because the Coke headquarters are located in Atlanta, Georgia and for a long time, Pepsi, and RC couldn't make any headway on sales in the south.
Lol. Lawrence said "for Spanish, press 2." He has worked at and called one too many phone numbers requiring that instruction. Which is pretty much every single one of them that is an indirect phone number
The west is drier usually and there are a lot of deserts. This is why they’re fewer trees compared to the east. The north west starting with northern California up to the Canadian border gets a lot of rain therefore they have more trees. Central and southern California and Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico are deserts I believe Texas as well so that explains why there were fewer trees. Trees need water and where there’s a little water there’s fewer trees but trees are planted in deserts if there is infrastructure and water.
Or in layman’s terms “ When you go the carnival and ride that spinning thing that slams you against the wall and keeps you from slipping down 😂” That’s the Force ( and May it be with you ) 😊
7:56 The western US is mostly dry. The western part of the Great Plains and the Great Basin of Nevada/Utah/Idaho get very little rain. In a lot of cases less than 10 inches of rain annually. Compare that to the eastern states that get 40-70 inches of rain in most places (some even more) which allows it to be more green. 15:00 And yes, there are a lot of Hispanics here. I'm part Hispanic and my town is about 30% Hispanic so it's pretty common to see in most of the South
There's more than 50 million Spanish speaking people in the US. Yes, Mexican heritage is the third largest population demographic in the US, but all nations that speak Spanish have people who immigrated here.
Where I live in AZ and also in New Mexico, probably also in TX, there are Mexican - Americans whose ancestors lived here since before any of the original English colonies were founded. Just outside of my city, Tucson, ia the second oldest church in the US, a Native American Catholic church originally founded by Mexican missionaries. Okay, it's not as impressive or old as a British or European Cathedral but it is awesome to visit. They have recoverd the original fresco type altar and wall paints which are pretty cool. Made of adobe, since this is the Southwestern Sonoran Desert. I think the oldest church in the US is in FL (possibly the city of St Augustine). Florida, which was, of course, first explored and settled by Spaniards although Native Americans had lived there for thousands of years. If you come to Tucson, you can stay with us while visiting and we'll take you around. AZ was the last part of the Old West, so we have lots of cowboy things, too.
Fun fact. Here in New Orleans, we are north, south, west and east of the Mississippi River . It goes straight up from the gulf, but then turns west and then north again. We have east and West Bank of the river in New Orleans
Cowboys, in the sense of long distance cattle drives, were only in the period 1868 to 1890 or so. The railroads were extended to the southwest by then, and the open range had been enclosed.
My British ancestors did have castles ,e.g., William I, Henry I, Henry II, John, various Pictish and early Scotts kings and many Welsh Kings. We moved to the colonies over 400 years ago
Centrifugal or outward force is the presure you feel while spinning. It's what makes your hands come up if you're spinning fast enough with your arms relaxed.
When I was a kid growing up in Texas I used the word coke for all sodas, but only at home. If I was at a restaurant or something I’d ask for the specific name of whatever I wanted, but asking my mom if I could “have a coke” was common, and she’d hand me whatever we have, let me choose, or ask what kind. Then I might answer coke, Dr Pepper, sprite… or whatever I wanted.
Influence of the Spanish empire is stamped on America not just because Mexico is next door but because their Influence is part of much of South and Central America.
I just did my genealogy in the past few years . I thought all of my relatives were from Uk and germany . Wrong ! A quarter of my relatives were from The Netherlands and France . But none of it shows up as France , rather by England and northwestern Europe . My family has been here so long some of them since the 1500s. They set up a French trading post at Cahokia mounds . I just went there last year . The weirdest thing was , when I lived in the Uk I went to Warwick castle . Turns out I’m related , it was my like 15 th grandmothers house ! She married the kingmaker ! All I could think about was that dungeon ! Everyone should do their ancestry , find out the real history .
Centrifugal force is the force applied to an object that is spinning - the force that wants to push the object away from the center of rotation. Think merry go round (roundabout for British peeps) in the parks. As it spins, the centrifugal force applied to the bodies of the children result in their tiny bodies being tossed mercilessly into the surrounding countryside. yeah, I know, that sound a little extreme, but kids are resilient. They will heal.
I equate Britain with some absolutely great music! A lot of the best bands ever, came out of the UK. Here in NYC, we used to get a lot of your TV programming: sitcoms as well as drama series. We watched them like crazy and the ones we followed were top notch. I work, have worked, with a few Britishers and they were all good people - fun to be around, too. One day, I'd like to visit the UK, not necessarily a big city, either. More towards somewhere in the countryside, and we'd have a car to scoot around everywhere. But, that's in the future.
You can’t compare British bands to American. British bands will always win. I also love British tv shows. I used to babysit for a couple from Britain, and the husband would leave me episodes of Fawlty Towers. I was already into Monty Python, and I find that I relate to the British sense of humor more than American. It does make me a bit sad when he says his home country isn’t beautiful. I’ve always wanted to visit, especially Scotland because I’m half Scottish. As for home prices, he should watch Cash Jordan. A studio for $3000 a month, or come out to Orange County, California if you want jaw dropping home prices. My childhood home, of which my dad still lives, is a single story, 3 bd, 2ba, 1600 square ft, and it’s very close to one million. I do love his channel, fastest channel I’ve ever subscribed to. He is very appealing, and seems like the nicest guy.
@@Tanyalakergurl Yeah, I'm also a gigantic fan of the Pythons and Fawlty Towers ... Black Adder etc. Sure, I tune into Cash Jordan, every so once in a while. I'd sure like to own some property in Manhattan, but I'd also never want to live there. My house is about the same as your Dad's place, but smaller land wise. It runs about 750K as it says on my tax bill. Several have sold for near that. But, the value also goes up each year. A single story place with an acre or so of land is what we're now looking for. Never find anything like that here in the City, but nearby - yes and a whole lot cheaper.
You know I'm American but totally into British history. Britain history is more interesting than any other country including Italy. I can't rave enough about it. Western Civilization can trace it's beginning in England. The guy L3WG want to stay in America and I want to live in England and go to every single place to see it's history and it's museums, I love to read British history, it is endlessly interesting. And English literature is, in my mind, the only literature there is. My ancestry can be traced to Dogerland by a genetic flow only seen by people that came from Dogerland which is the land the connected Britain and Europe before the melting of the ice that covers the northern hemisphere 6 thousand years ago. It land was all of the English channel, as well as exposed land clear up to Denmark and Norway. It was covered in water when the Ice Age ice melted and cover all the land.
Centrifugal is the term that refers to the gravitational force generated by a rapidly rotating object. A centrifuge is a key piece of equipment used to smelt metal/make jewelry. Essentially you put a chunk of gold, silver or whatever metal into a reservoir. Once you've sufficiently melted it, you kick on the centrifuge and at the supremely high velocity it spins at....gravity instantly yanks all the molten metal to it's mold, which is usually on the outer arm of the centrifuge for maximum centrifugal force. Simply put, it's like a.merry go round. The faster it's going the harder it is to.hold.on because the centrifugal force creates a type of gravity that pulls you from the center towards the outside.
@@MegaMagicdog considering the cameramen would've been the astronauts themselves, yes. and also, I'm glad you pointed out you don't understand how radios work.
@@mcarrowtime7095 Then explain why we haven't been back in 50+ years since that landing? We should have lunar colonies by now. Seen any of that recent footage of astronauts on the space station? The green screen?
@@MegaMagicdog we haven't been back because its expensive as fuck with almost zero gain. people in the 60's thought we'd have had flying cars 20 years ago now, what makes you think you'd be any more right about the development of human technology? the math is simple, the engineering and resource collection and building and supplying and transporting is not. no, I don't pay particularly large amounts of attention to the ISS, but idk why you're doubting the existence of what is essentially a giant satellite when the only way you're on the internet is satellites.
Again, the Spanish founded St. Augustine Florida in the 1500s and I live in Arizona where we have a mission church that was founded in the 1500s that is still used as a parish church for the Tohono O'Odham people and is open to the public. Mission San Xavier (pronounced like Javier for some reason) is amazing. The Spanish were in the Southwest, New Mexico, Arizona and California long before there were English settlers on the East coast. You should learn some of that history. It's pretty horrible in some instances but wonderful in others. Fr. Kino was the one who created several of the missions that still exist.
I grew up ordering "Coke" and then asked what kind. Centrifugal (However you pronounce it) is a force that pushes you out from the center when spinning. Take a hard right turn at a fast clip, and the centrifugal force will force you to the left. Ever use a centrifuge in chemistry? A gizmo that spins and forces the contents of a test tube to the bottom.
My grandfather ( 8 generations back ) who fought against the British in the Revolution was already a 6th generation American at the time , so I am 14th generation American ,but if you go to the Cherokee branch of the family ,we go back maybe 20,000 years here .
Look up Bat Creek Stone..prepare yourself that native Indians are extremely likely of the real 12 tribes of Isreal. Oldest Hebrew ever found was on that stone that grew on earth can read today. Look up map of pyramids in usa then on American continent as a whole.. someone's been lying to us about everything! We are the old world is exactly what I believe.
A lot of people forget that when America added Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, and California, the residents became Americans... and most of them spoke Spanish because the Spanish were there first. A lot of Americans just assume that if your family speaks Spanish that your ancestors came from south of the border.... when that is not necessarily true. That being said, we've always had a lot of immigrants, too.
I would be interested in seeing your reaction to the March on Washington and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr's "I have a dream" speech during the Civil Rights movement of the 60s.
Floridian here lol ST Pete hahah also I lived from here to Michigan and I got tired of saying soda, pop and such so I combined them and I say Soda Pop lol.
The UK doesn't talk much about the US history because they were the colonizers that took the lands from the natives. Yes, the colonies revolted and became America but they were the same people from Britain.
I'm a Floridian and when I was a kid it was very common to say Coke for any type of soda. Ex. Someone asks you what you want to drink ? you answer a Coke And they would ask you, "what flavor Coke do you want? We've got stawberry Coke, grape Coke or Coke Coke." 😊 It hasn't been that way for a long time though now in my neck of the woods (South Florida) and I am one of those 50 million Hispanics. Cheers! 👍
l3wg, the castle I want to visit, well one of the main ones, is in Scotland, Eilean Donan Castle. It was used as the castle of Duncan (and Connor) MacCleod's Clan in Highlander the Series and the movie. 🙂 Connor and Duncan were each mortally wounded in the Castle (in different times), and when they rose from the dead, they were banned from the clan, but had become Immortal. Such a great series, movies and TV. 🙂 I hear they are going to have yet another iteration of Highlander, this time with Henry Cavill playing MacCleod. 🙂
I’m from Texas and I’ve seen hundreds of black widows, but only a few brown recluse spiders. To be fair…. I do pest control professionally so it’s my job to find these. 99% of my customers who say they have brown recluse are wrong, it’s usually just a simple harmless wolf spider. But black and brown widows are extremely common. That being said, it’s been like 20 years since anyone in America died from either spider. They aren’t super deadly, and in areas where black widows are common hospitals can easily treat them. Brown recluse bites are worse, but again easily treatable in the modern age. Same goes for rattle snakes, of which I’ve encountered a few…. Though they are far more deadly than spiders, if you get bit, go to the hospital and you’ll probably be fine.
Here's one thing that's American to the core, Louisville Kentucky, the National Street Rod Association is having it's National convention here right now and the city is chocked full of all kinds of wild Street Machines by the Thousands.
Centrifugal - Centrifugal force - the g-forces created from spinning. It's the pull you feel when being spun on a merry-go-round, and is the force they use to separate blood and plasma. The machine is called a Centrifuge. As for the south calling all soda "Coke", it's because the Coca-Cola factory is based in Atlanta, so they basically have a stranglehold on the local area for providing soft drinks, and Pepsi has to work pretty hard to get served at any restaurants.
I think the general view Americans have of British people is that they are kind but reserved, self deprecating, and kind of elitist (sorry). I don't want to speak for all Americans, but I think there's also a general feeling that the majority of British people have a very narrow stereotypical view of Americans, and are increasingly becoming very anti-american in general. That's why seeing channels like yours is refreshing
I was alive when our astronauts landed on the moon and we were able to watch it on t.v. I didn't realize there were people who didn't believe that men had actually landed on the moon. WE DID.
The reason the south east part of the country refers to "fizzy drinks" as Coke is because that is the part of the country where Cocoa Cola was invented. Cocoa Cola was invented in Atlanta, Georgia.
I think part of why soda was all called Coke is because it's bottled here. It isn't as common here in Nashville as it was when I was a kid, but Nashville has grown a lot with a lot of people moving here.
i wouldn't consider New York State a flat state, it has two mountain ranges, the Catskills and the Adirondacks. Most of the other areas in the state are rolling hills, though part of Long Island has the Hempstead Plain, the only Plains east of the Mississippi.
Centrifugal force is like taking a pail of water and swinging it around and not spill a drop even though you’re swinging it side ways. The pull is so strong it stills in the pail . ATB Gail from Worcester Massachusetts 🇺🇸❤🇺🇸❤🇺🇸❤🇺🇸❤🇺🇸❤🇺🇸❤🇺🇸❤🇺🇸
Note where the great lakes are surrounding Michigan.... this is where the glaciers came down through what would eventually be Canada, carved huge holes that become the largest collection of fresh water in the world, and (like shoving your blankets to the end of the bed) made the Appalachian mountain range which (for better or worse) slices the east coast and midwest apart like the Alps separates Italy and France. The great plains are flatter farm land out to the west where the Grand Canyon, Great Salt Lake, and other geography separates that land from southern deserts and northern mountains and forest. Then California is where all of that geography is patchworked together. Napa Valley in California, Southwest Lower Michigan, and France have similar lattitudes, soil, and water-sources-from-the-west making them among the best wine producing areas in the Northern hemisphere. ☮❤🎶