Im severely dissapointed, ireland deserves her own geographical name, seperate from britain entirely, Fuairfaidh gach Éireann a saoirse. Tá brón orm, leabhraim gáeilge go dona
I once met a guy at the busstop. I pressume he was homeless and we started to have a conversation. After a while the bus to Scotland arrived and I could see him feeling in his pockets after what I pressumed was some change. I asked: "Can I help you with anything?". And he answered:"I need about tree fiddy". And thats when I realised I was speaking to a god damn pleasiosaur.
Why would anyone want to prove Bigfoot is real?? Can you imagine what would happen? The thing would be hunted to extinction. Dried Bigfoot penis is a cure for impotence. “Impotence” means your wiener doesn’t work for you people who are about to type it into your google search.
As a Scottish child I used to always go to the Loch Ness and swim in the middle of it while shouting “nessy where are you” my grandma (who thought the Loch Ness monster was real) would scream at me to get back out the water. Good old days
Trey you scared the shit out of me I was dosing of to your nice peaceful video when all of a sudden the ear piercing sound of static destroyed my ear but still can't wait for part 2
Me too! Not cool, Trey! What, you were doing an episode where the monster couldn't be attributed to barn owls so you just had to force a scare in there? Not cool, man!
We also now know that Loch Ness is *FULL of eels.* Like, an insane number of eels. & the first story about the blob monster kinda sounds like a bunch of seals flopping across the road in a close group.
I'm glad you brought up the strange reality of spotting animals in poor conditions. I was driving home, one night and saw what looked like an amorphous blob, undulating across the street. Once my headlights were upon the "creature," I saw it was a scampering group of groundhogs, all running towards some shrubs. the truth is stranger than fiction. ^^
At the end of The Lost World from 1925 you see the Brontosaurus leaving London and swimming back to his home. The imagery must've been the inspiration for the surgeon photo (which looks almost identical) even more so than the scene from King Kong (though that movie did more to popularize the idea of giant monsters).
Da, you fine dandies so proud, so cock-sure! Dancin' about with yer head full o' eyeballs! Come 'n get me I say. I'll be waitin' on ya with a whiff of the ol' brimstone! *I'm a grim bloody fable with an unhappy bloody end!*
I'm Croatian, me and my dad get pisset when ppl say the English isles instead of Scotland, Ireland and Wales, it's not that fucking hard to list them all out...
Yeah that annoyed me a tiny little bit (I'm half English, half Scottish), it's the freaking British Isles! First time I've never heard our islands be called the English Isles actually.
Oisín Smith Not really. Since the collection of islands are offically known as the British Isles. And British is a term which includes English, Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish (formerly also being used to refer to all people living in the British Empire), along with the citizens of Overseas Territories. Calling them the Scottish, Welsh or Irish Isles would be as stupid as calling them the English Isles.
15:48 Interestingly enough there is actually a plesiosaur in the original 1933 movie too. The snake like creature that comes out of the dark pools in Kong's lair and tries to choke Anne Darrow was a plesiosaur, it's a bit easy to mistake it for a snake since it is depicted to behave like a boa constrictor but it had a body and flippers that are visible when Kong fights it and pulls it out of the water. Pop culture of that time really did perceive plesiosaurs to be sea serpents that could stick their heads out of the water to attack.
I found out this week a guy i work with had never heard of the loc ness monster. I had to play him the beginning of your video. Now I'm rewatching yet again.
harry potter version of nessie is a shapeshifting magical animal that took a random appearance to scare off people away but then started liking the attention and chose to use the most popular form. i just thought its kinda neat
More like a cocaine transporter. I don't think Colombia is a big producer of cocaine, but they definitely won the geography lottery when it comes to transportation.
Nope, not something to be proud of, but Colombia is one of the big cocaine producers countries in the world. The main transporter is México since they are next to U.S.A, the principal cocaine and drug consumer in the world.
The Loch Ness Monster is a true legend! Definition of legend : a popular story handed down trough many generations and popularly accepted as real, but with no actual evidence to give it any authenticity , in other words a myth. The Loch Ness Monster in a nutshell.
There was a book I read on Nessie way back when I was like... 10. My memory is a little faulty, but I remember there was a story some kid claimed back in the 1700 - 1800's that on his way to school, he saw a long necked creature swimming closely to the shore. He gave the creature an apple, and it swam off sinking back under the water. No one ever talks about that "sighting."
I feel like the best term is to say that it's basically a meme of pop culture, a specific concept (a monster around the area) that changed and evolved as different people saw it as different things until it finally found a shape that worked best and cemented itself into the public consciousness, growing and thriving in that form as more and more people submitted themselves to the specific idea of it.
I have visited Loch Ness and while I didn't see any monsters I did see a lot of Scottish people earning money on tourists and selling Nessie merchandise. The area around Inverness were dirt poor back in 1933 and the influx of tourists have made their life far better and tourists get to visit a very beautiful landscape (no, I didn't visit it for the monster, me and some friends were hiking around Scotland) so as I see it everybody wins. The locals needed a tourist magnet and they invented one that was far cheaper then to build a huge amusement park. Scots are not stupid but the highland economy were totally screwed up after Culloden until 1933. And there is a lot to see in the area and great hiking trails, I recommend it but don't expect any monsters and bring something that keeps mosquitoes away. Today I think whiskey tourists are at least as common as people looking for Nessie though but that wasn't really a thing until the 80s.
Nessie was my grandma's nickname for me. I loved diving down to the bottom in the lake so much as a kid, bobbing up and down, likely scaring the shit out of grandma.
what about mokele mbembe? is it just a mistaken giraffe? because there was a documentary showing a group of tribespeople pointing to a brontosaurus instead of a giraffe when asked to point to the creature.
Dalibor Jovanovic As much as I wish that wasn't true, and that a sauropod had somehow survived into the present day, it's reality and I have to accept it.
On the other hand, it's a place that has been exploited for almost a century and has experienced war for another half a century. Any living sauropod then won't survive now.
A lifelong believer in Nessie, I lost my belief a few years ago after seeing a documentary which provided enough evidence that all the photos and films I knew were misinterpretations of natural and artificial phenomena. And of course the surgeons photo was identified as an outright hoax. I'm looking forward to viewing both this vid and the followup.
@@marik9897 oh sorry my bad i meant the song at 9:50 haha i knew In the Hall of the Mountain King, i’ve just been trying to figure out what that other song is 😂
Ah yes, the Poptropica loch ness monster. Have you ever seen The Water Horse? It's my favorite depiction of the monster. Wonderful film, albeit geared towards children.
Watching this again I'm reminded of the sketches that were made during the Son of Sam killings in New York. Many of the descriptions of the killer varied to the point people started to have serious doubts that the killer operated alone. Nevertheless, there was never serious evidence against anyone else involved other than the killer who was convicted of the crimes.
Maybe Nessie is an alien blob?....trying to adapt its form to suit its new environment?....What?...Hell, makes as much sense as all these other cryptids
Hey Trey, I was wondering if I could make a suggestion for a possible future video. Back in 2002, the Discovery Channel had this miniseries called "The Future is Wild", which theorized what life on Earth could be like millions of years after the disappearance of humanity. I thought it was pretty interesting back then, but looking back, I'm wondering exactly how scientifically plausible some of their proposed situations are. I was curious if you'd be interested in making a video about it? Of course, it's all up to you. I just thought I'd share an idea I had.
The static noise at the end nearly gave me a heart attack! I was just peacefully doodling while ever-so-innocently listening to you debunk the everliving heck out of Nessy! Why would you betray me like that?? I WAS WEARING HEADPHONES WITH THE VOLUME UP I'M PRACTICALLY DEAF NOW
00:18 What exactly are the English Isles, and why do leprechaun's come from there and not Ireland? Could it conceivably be that the most famous Scottish export (apart from being ginger and shit at sport) could in fact be....English?
I visited Loch Ness last year and it’s such a terrifying body of water. The water is so dark and deep. It looks treacherously cold. I took a moment to look for Nessie, you know, for fun. If any body of water was a candidate to house a giant sea monster, I could believe it was Loch Ness. Too bad it’s not real. It was fun to pretend though.
The moment you said 1933 I thought ' same year as King Kong I doubt he'll mention it, as how would it be relevant ' and then it turned out to be relevant after all. Saw Wallace before the video ended, so he strikes again!
I read some years back that the Spicers ran an inn that was along the shore of the Loch, which I've always assumed was why they claimed to see a mysterious creature. Tourism boosted rapidly during the Nessie craze.