1:09 "You sound like an expert. What's your background?" *explains credentials and accomplishments" "No I meant what's your background, is that your living room" That was so unexpectedly amazing lol
@@jeff3482 In my office right now, I have a teddy bear behind me that would be in any Zoom call I make. Is that professional? Who cares! If a teddy bear isn't "professional," I'm content to remain an Olympic-level amateur.
@@ad-revenue-quintillionaire Nanobot? or nanoprobe? "Resistance is futile" If you thought Bill Gates' microchips were bad, wait untill you are the Borg.
@@MichaelaJiv i think thats why its a good question yknow, because these are the questions that scientists are actually trying to answer today. like the debate of if viruses are alive is a hot topic in science rn cuz they just dont know
@@onullojust pieces or rna. For scientists it's clear , for politics it's not. Some scientists speak to much truth and where forced into talking politics .
Probably editing. When they do burst out laughing, I bet she lets that run its course and gives them time to settle down, then they can answer with a straight face.
They are never on screen at they same time, or in the same frame. I suspect someone else does the interview asking serious, respectful questions and they edit in Cuck’s silliness. No matter, it is really funny in the end.
@@shootmcrunfast It is blatantly obvious to even the most ignorant single cell lifeform that the joke is squarely on the Philomena character and *NOT* the topic she is talking about.
Professor Dr Andrew Pollard is an exceptionally good sport. Either that or he is a superb actor because he kept a straight face through what must have been the most inane questions he's ever heard.
I am pretty sure by his answers, that he is well prepared of what is it to come. More along the line of producers telling him: She will ask insanely stupid questions, we don't tell in advance what, and your task is to remain calm and collected and answer like it wouldn't be an idiotic question. And don't do what any normal person in this situation do: Tell her Ok, goodbye and drop connection.
As a plumber, I've always wondered how they get all that water into such a small tap. I've installed plenty of them, but I never thought about how they're actually made at the factory.. That'll be a good episode!
They vacuum seal it as it goes through the pipes and then it just kind of breaks out of the plastic bag, which also disintegrates, as it comes out of the faucet.
It has a lot to do with the shape. You would think it could basically be a bent pipe, but they make a lot of them as sort of contorted trapezoids so that they're bigger on the inside.
@@meisteremm No, sills are a whole different question. Like do they show up at the bottom of a window after it gets built, or are they already there? Do they ever just go off to the side instead of staying at the bottom?
@Quokka There is a type of Beetle known as the Sill Beetle that lays eggs in wood. When this wood is used in the construction of houses and placed in proximity to glass, the eggs hatch and the larvae eat their way out, expelling wood waste that swells outward and becomes what we know as sills. It is all very scientificish.
I feel like she mentioned the stain to get him to turn around to throw something in her mouth? I'm blind though so I can't see the screen. That was absolutely genius.
As if she gives a ( ) what he thinks is a good question is (she is being patronizing, by pretending to care about the “pat on the back” from fraudulent “medical science”)
i like how all the experts took the $, kept quiet, as a nonvaxcine poison was distributed to the world and now people are enjoying the fruits of melted hearts. blocked plumbing and so many more desirable (to the elites) effects. The timing of this video shown to be by yt is hilarious.
I like that as ridiculous as her questions and comments are, I wouldn't say they are completely uninformative. I watched Cunk on Britain and did actually learn a bit about Britain's history.
That researcher missed a trick about miniaturisation of karate capable doctors to go hand to hand with viruses because he could have explained that it would need billions of them. The analogy gives an idea of how numerous they are. The question are they alive is actually very insightful.
You wouldn't need a doctor for every single virus molecule though, youd send one in with a vaccine gun of some sort and blast the bastards away apart from which you'd also have the white blood cells helping you unless they turned on you cos I guess they'd identify you as foreign and want to destroy you so I think you'd be back to square one, doing any of it would be utterly useless lol
@@jeff3482 ha ha, so we're both a lil crazy. Even with such a weapon there'd have to be a lot. Imagine mowing down even a few 1000s like a WW1 machine gunner. Yeah but you're right, the white cells and other immunity system cells would gang up on you. They wouldn't know that you're supposed to be helping. That's unless you have some kind of protein disguise. Crazy talk.
@@nickbarton3191 well that scenario has kind of been done in doctor who but yeh was a clear lack of immune system monitoring cos he didn't get attacked lol
God bless that doctor. To put up with such nonsense concerning a very serious issue is praise-worthly. He deserves a medal for exhibiting incredible forbearance.
Yeah.....we really really really need is this kind of humor! Loved it! :-D Favorite line: "Right now the coronavirus vaccine is on trial. But we'll have to wait a bit to discover if its guilty or not". Oh yeah....Hahahhahahhahah
She's got that rare Don Knotts skill of amazing facial expressions that come across as completely genuine... The subtle look of satisfaction she gives when he says "that's a really good question" is priceless..
She is an actor / comedian she can do this with straight face -ok, thats her talent and skill. But all those experts?! How can they deliver a dead serious, full blown, structured answer?!😂
Because the camera looks at the experts' and her face at different times. So she can be serious and ask a related question and get a response from the expert. Then they can record her asking a differently worded, yet still topic related question which is funnier, when the expert isn't there Then people edit them in together to make the final production seem that it all flows in real time to fool the viewer into thinking that the sequence was made in one take It's how media works by using editing
@@TheVicar more likely its like 'between two ferns'. A set up. Anyone who is having an interview can easily search her and see her past topics. Its a way for some serious topics to get out to those who wouldn't normally want to learn about them.
@@SteTVon Yes indeed I have no doubt that does happen but in some cases the expert has better things to do with their time than research who is actually asking the questions and will just take easy money from the BBC to answer anyone whose put in front of them
@@SteTVon She was interviewed a few times about this and said that in the early days nothing had yet been aired, so the cat hadn't got out of the bag. So some early episodes had "guests" who didn't have a clue what to expect. In later productions they were told it was for a comedy program anyway
I love you and am fascinated with your news reports; give me an entirely new perspective on life. I think it would be quite something to know you personally. Thank you for sharing your talent. These videos are wonderfully funny and awe inspiring at the same time.
I find it quite accurate the reaction of most scientist that are invited to this show, maybe it's because they have practice answering ridiculous questions to TV anchor.
I’m new to all of this and when I clicked on the video, I did so hoping to learn new things about vaccines, like their history, more about how they work, but I was not let down.