Tiger Cruising for a Tiger Bruising My Twitter ➤ / keyancarlile My Instagram ➤ / keyancarlile My Patreon ➤ / keyancarlile Subscribe ➤ / @keyancarlile 00:00 The Video
21:51 If the dagger is 23 years old, but this video was posted February 29th, 2024, then the dagger's birth was on February 28th, 2001 or earlier, which would be before 9/11. Of course, this is clearly a reference to Lab Rats: Elite Force, where Bree had the wrong age.
Thank God RU-vid added the context tab so I can know 9/11 did actually happen, and wasn't just made up for a Disney channel original movie. Edit: I choose to believe RU-vid took the context tab on this off video just to mess with my joke 😂
Tbf, if you're from the Midwest, it's more likely than you think. We're pretty sure my great great mammaw killed my great great pappaw by burning their house down. Nothing was proven but we're pretty sure.
One funny thing about Transformers is apparently the military was against the Decepticons having US military alt modes because they were the villains. They were convinced to allow it when they were told it was a compliment because the Decepticons want the most effective alt modes and they chose US military vehicles.
@@esulises3669 The US military has a standing policy of not cooperating (i.e. no on-location shots or military equipment rentals) on anything that's negative toward the US military. The DoD has the DoD Entertainment Media Unit which will vet the script and suggest alterations. They even purchased the film rights to Animal Farm to change the ending so that the animals overthrew the pigs. Which, you know, completely ruined the point of the book.
@@BelBelle468 The USS Maine was from the spanish-american war. There was a ship that was sank that contributed to the US joining WWI though, it was the RMS Lusitania which was a ship used mostly to ship small munitions from the US to the UK. It was carrying american passengers at the time it was sank though so there was pretty heavy outrage.
19:26 To be fair to the movie, the kids undoubtedly knew the World Trade Center and had associated them with the NYC skyline their entire life. They didn’t have the cynicism that people during the 70s had toward the Twins when they were initially built since they were such a radical departure from anything else in NYC and let alone the world. Even by the mid 80s and 90s, the Towers were widely embraced by New Yorkers as being just as iconic as the Empire State and Chrysler Building. Considering how often the Twin Towers were used in movies, TV, video games and commercials. Many New Yorkers post-9/11 even wanted them rebuilt.
Yes. I hear that from a lot of native New Yorkers. They never had a disdain for the towers and it was part of that iconic skyline. I can see when it was first built, everyone just thinks it's ruining the view, but times change. Even Europeans that have never been to America loved the towers because it was a symbolism of New York and the US that was always seen in movies and tv shows.
@@Rickyrab I mean if it's a bedroom i could kind of see it being normal but if it's something like a living room maybe try changing the couch or something, i wouldn't trust that couch afterwards.
If Keyan thinks this is a wild departure from Disney's usual tone, I need to see a video from him about The Colour of Friendship. A DCOM movie about a white girl from apartheid South Africa going to live with a black family in America for a student exchange program which includes slurs and discussions of the racism at play. Would definitely love to hear his thoughts on that one
i think it's a good movie, it's definitely way more serious than most other dcoms but at least it isn't 9/11 millitary propaganda lol and the message is pretty good and well portrayed
Sorry, but as a child whose dad was in the Army during Desert Storm/Shield and forced my family to constantly move, if my dad was leaving and coming home I would be happy. I wouldn't tell him to go back in and fight for 'Murica! That moment of her telling him to go back was such BS propaganda.
Your ending skit legit made my day. As someone in grade school during 9/11 I grew up being slapped in the face with propaganda and anyone asking questions about what was really happening in the Middle East was either ostracized or punished. Seeing someone so shamelessly parody post 9/11 patriotism like that was amazing. We really are deprogramming and tearing down the propaganda machine.
do you think the writers realized the unspoken message of this movie is "the most powerful military on the planet was unable to prevent 9/11, useless in helping out during the attack, and incapable of fixing the damage to america in the years since"
Oh they could have prevented it. But then they couldn't _make use of it for the next twenty years._ It's what they call "giving up a tactical objective to win a strategic goal".
I mean they might have but I feel like it's at least partially on accident. We all know that when it comes to Disney and the US military, you really really REALLY have to hide the veggies in the mash potatoes, so to speak.
This video is pure art, the movie, your costume, your Father's uncanny resemblance to the Marine in the movie, everything is perfect. I think this may be your magnum opus Keyan. Genuinely hilarious.
I hope to god an archive of the film's original airing is posted online. The world needs to know what it was like watching this and That's So Raven back to back.
Most people hated the Twin Towers upon their opening in the 1970s, they remained vacant through the Fiscal Crisis. But as time went on and they filled with office tenants in the later 1980s and 1990s. By 2001 the towers began to gain a sort of presence in the skyline, being that you could see them from just about everywhere in Manhattan or anywhere in a 50 mile radius for that matter. The North and South tower stood in a way which allowed people to use them as a kind of gigantic compass in relation to their location wherever they were in the city. People appreciated them for their size, their uniform shapes, two indestructible towers (or so they thought). They sat at the tip of Manhattan, as beacons of American business, ingenuity, and engineering prowess. The entire World Trade Center complex as a whole was an engineering marvel, a product of its time. If it stood today they would’ve joined even the likes of the Empire State Building and the Chrysler Building as icons in the New York skyline.
It’s also important to remember that that line is from a 10 year old kid who wasn’t alive in the 70s when the Towers were built. To him, the Towers are something that had just always been there, which is a different perspective compared to the people who actually remember the time before they were built.
@@livyykitty at first, they weren’t. It wasn’t until the late 1980s and early 1990s that they took on that iconic status to people that lived in NYC. No other city in the world had ever had anything quite like the original WTC’s Twin Towers. Or such a massive, sprawling yet integrated complex.
They were built when I was very little and I can't remember a time when they weren't there. And they were impractical and ugly as sin, but in my mind nyc still has twin towers. I don't recognize the new skyline. Also, your wife is going to f another guy while youre deployed is the most realistic depiction of military service out there.
also I have no memory of "sound echoing off of them." it was windy at the base and cold because they cast a large shadow. Any NY or NJ resident though would tell you you could orient yourself from them. they were basically a giant compass before we had smart phones. you could always look and see them and know where downtown Manhattan was. and we had No idea what was going on.
So I’m actually a Navy vet and there’s just….so much going on: -Tiger Cruises are a thing but the civilians absolutely would not have free access do the things these kids were getting into. Admittedly, my career consisted of one destroyer (one that is now a history lesson on week 5 firefighting, I might add) and one amphibious ship (Christened in honor of Flight 93, coincidentally) but the carrier doing full flight ops with civilians onboard seems pretty unlikely -We didn’t even get live TV piped to us underway in 2010, there’s no way in heck they had that in 2001 -Absolutely no one takes the piss out of supply department, and especially not the cooks. Good cooks make for good morale and even better deployments, especially for Marines who do fuck all else while at sea with us :p And frankly, hardly anyone who goes to work for government after service gets into anything close to their job in the military. Most important things is an honorable discharge and a secret clearance. -Probably don’t need to tell anyone this but a CO doesn’t just quit that day he wants to get out. Commissioned officer have a formal resignation process to leave at the end of a tour or assignment (as opposed to contracted enlistment) but it’s not as easy as doing a Doug Walker stunt to quit haha Probably add more after I finish this vid but wow, the propaganda is off the charts EDIT: LOL IM BACK 24:47 yeah, I don’t know if any ships were doing tiger cruises that day, but I can assure you from every person who I served with who was in the Navy that there were no ships pierside anywhere in the world within three hours of the 2nd plane hitting the WTC. I’ve had more than enough experience with emergency underways what with being forward deployed in Japan (layman’s term: basically on call to play World Police versus a set 6 to 10 month deployment like ships in San Diego or Virginia got) but one guy told me his was one of the last to leave Virginia and the crew on shore was cutting the mooring lines to get boats out faster. Another guy I knew was in Australia and everyone got calls at midnight from their hotels to hustle back to the ship. They managed to get out within two hours. The communication blackout seems correct though.
Soo....fun fact I was a little kid when 9/11 happened. And it was within a couple days of my birthday And my parents didnt tell me about it because you dont want to ruin the little preschoolers birthday, right? And so i didnt know about it for a couple years.... Until i watched This Movie
I was on the west coast when it happened and i didnt watch the news as a middle schooler, it was boring. The teachers showed video and pictures of the incident, me not knowing what was going on asked "What movie is this?" Only to be harassed, yelled at, and cussed at by my classmates about it, so i didn't care, i thought that my school just became obssessed with this weird ass movie all of a sudden. So needless to say, i didnt realize what actually happened until two years later in 9th grade when i moved, and my school mates asked me how my family felt about 9/11 when i told them i was born in New York.
dude the avgn esque skit at the end of the video killed me, absolute perfection, we even got payoff to the pride duct tape coming in handy, great video
I'm six minutes and i'm losing my god damn mind. why is there such weird green screening, why is there so much whiplash why did they make this only for it to immediately disappear, WHAT DO YOU MEAN YOUR GRANDPA PROBABLY KILLED YOUR GRANDMA???
The emotions of the kids were spot on though. I remember being sent home early on 9/11. I was in 5th grade and home alone crying being worried things were going to escalate on our own soil.
It was sucking my thumb when the towers came down. In other words I was a baby when that happened but I did remember stories from parents from that day and mainly my mother was concerned about her father since she didn’t know that his building was in was a target or not. It was a fog of war situation is best I can describe it.
11:40 actual story: the DOD asked Michael Bay's team why all the Decepticons were US military vehicles. Their answer was "because they're the best and most intimidating ones." The film got its funding.
The boy obsessed with ice cream is played by Hayden Panettiere’s real life brother, Jansen. He sadly passed away in 2023 from heart complications when he was only 28 years old. Rest in Peace.
I was 9 when 9/11 happened, old enough to process, but not really fully understand what was going on, and I will say that there is merit to a children's media outlet creating material that can help children process such a traumatic event. That being said, the DoD very clearly warped this into a weird, exploitative recruitment vehicle for children, and it's unsettling. It's like watching one of those satire clips from Starship Troopers. EDIT: It's worth mentioning that there's an episode of Arthur that was made in response to 9/11 called 'April 9th' that handles the topic WAY better. It's worth looking into because it's an example of a children's show that handles a difficult topic in a way children can understand without pandering to them.
I was 6 and I thought this looked goddamn lame - but yeah, a lot of media around that time was really Starship Troopers-esque and now it’s gotten worse.
I was the same age. I had no idea what the world trade center was prior to the event but I remember how serious the adults were and all the patriotism that followed, including unironically petitioning to change our national anthem to "Proud to be an American."
@@KSan357 it is. It conveys that message the same way Verhoeven's other films convey their messages: By taking the antithesis to its logical extreme and blowing it up to absurdity. In the case of _Starship Troopers,_ Verhoeven did this by presenting the whole film as a Watsonian government propaganda piece styled like a '90s version of a Leni Riefenstahl picture. It's like what Stephen Colbert used to do before he sold out to the corporate propaganda networks he used to make fun of.
Requisite 9/11 anecdote. I was 14 years old. Second week of high school. I learned about it while I was browsing a forum for EverQuest and people suddenly started posting about planes hitting the WTC. Then when I went to class, we spent the period watching the coverage live. Being that age when it happened offered a unique perspective of powerlessness. We weren't elementary school kids who couldn't fully grasp what was happening. We were teenagers. We knew this was some BIG shit. The school even immediately offered counseling to anyone who asked for it. And there was nothing we could do. We were too far away to go and help, we had no money to donate...and in the years to come we were also unable to make our voices heard. When Bush ran for re-election after sinking our entire country into two quagmire wars we only RECENTLY pulled out from (with disastrous results) we were too young to vote. So yeah...the class of '05 (and by extension 06-08) was basically just along for the ride for the next several years. If you've ever wondered why people of that age are so jaded and seeing doom around every corner.....that's why.
Jennette is definitely more long term relevant, with the recent success of her memoir and all that, but in terms of peak popularity Hayden was probably a bigger star right? Heroes was crazy huge for a minute there before everyone realized they hated it.
The shot of your dad talking about his military service while you're sitting nonchalantly with an eagle costume is one of the most funny things i've ever seen
21:25 as a dude who is from middle east, I was born 2007 after the 9/11 and I never hear the September 11 incident until when I was 9 years ago I watch the top 5 most disturbing 911 call. The last 911 call was from a man and his family on the world trade center but sadly the towers got collapse and nobody survive and that video was remove by RU-vid.
I was in eighth grade when it happened and Disney channeled suspended regular programming for like a week. EVERY channel including Nickelodeon and Disney showed news of 9/11. I remember being so upset as a kid
I don’t think that’s true. Disney Channel premiered their original movie “The Poof Point” literally 3 days after 9/11. Everything seems to indicate that Disney Channel kept its main programming on to act as an alternative.
Your point about not celebrating 9/11 anymore is kind of true, at least with my experiences. I had a virtual high-school history class on September 11, 2020, and afterwards it hit me that we didn't mention 9/11 at all. Every history class I've had before always had a moment for that day, but not here. Even when we came back in person, my Civics class didn't mention it either. Both times, it wasn't that we didn't want to talk about it. We just forgot. I remember looking it up after my 2020 class and learning about Tania Head, who faked being a survivor
In my US history class this year we only brought it up on 9/11 and we learned about the boy with the red bandana or whatever he was called. Really sad story. My history teacher also told us about what he was doing during 9/11
I was in 2nd grade and home sick that day so saw it on TV. I think that's why the slogan is "never forget" but it should really be "never forget and never stop questioning why/which org actually did it".
When Disneys original films had nothing but daggers for your feelings, I don't remember watching this one but it did remind me of "The Color of Friendship" (2000) and bro that was a trip for a Disney kids movie?? I remember that one being blasted at least once a week for a year after it aired
@@johnnyknadler1157 Are you implying that the rest of the world learned about this event through the book "I Survived the Attacks of September 11, 2001" by Lauren Tarshis, and not through the sheer amount of international media that covered it as it unfolded?
This is the first video I've seen on your channel. Definitely will subscribe. Also, big ups to your dad. Seems like a solid dude and a supportive parent. Make sure to give him a hug.
When I was in elementary school in 2009, I distinctly remember that on days where we had 11 on the calendar, people would draw a smiley face under it because it looked like eyes. And I was like, into it, and I had told myself that I was gonna do it first one day (a lot of kids beat me cuz I wasnt super fast). So on September 11, no one had done it yet, and I was like "om yes this is my chance" so I drew a smiley face under the 11. Cue, a few minutes later, 5 of my classmates asking me if I hate America. I was so confused. And one of the nicer ones actually bothered to explain to me what the deal was. I had forgotten about 9/11, drew a smiley face on a board, and got a bunch of people mad at me asking me intense questions. We were in elementary school. It was fucking insane. And I erased the smiley, and then everything went back to normal like nothing every happened. Holy shit.
I was probs as old as you at the time, I didn't even click it in my brain it happened (cos I was a toddler in 2001) but I remember people looked at me like a freak for posting on 9/11 joke in 2015, and I was like, "bruh, yeah it was sad...but we aren't gonna talk about what our military did after"?
I never forget Tiger Cruise. I think about that movie on the regular. I DON"T KNOW WHY! but thankful for covering it so other people can know it exist.
“The prequels raped my childhood” walked so “The sequels are Star Wars 9/11” could run (I shit you not, people actually used to say this with a straight face)
9:00 TThe "No hats in the lunchroom" rule is a food fight prevention measure, so that when someone starts a food fight, the security cameras will know who it is (:
I miss scenes with inspirational music over the most mundane things ever, Disney used to do it all the time, but like hearing a whole orchestra as you walk into any building makes it feel so much more important
Felt kind of embarrassed when I started crying during the beginning of the 9/11 attacks portion and then it cut to Keyan and his dad where his dad was also sitting there with red watery eyes looking like he was trying not to cry as he was reliving when he first witnessed this. We need to see more healthy ex military men like him comfortable with expressing emotions other than anger, especially on topics like this.
In regards to the world war thing, they didnt call WW1 "the first world war" when it happened before there was a second. It was "the great war" or "the war to end all wars" due to the fact that it was the first time a war had raged across the entire planet. But then the second world war occurred it was similar to the first in the fact that combat was taking place across the globe and to a larger scale than the first. So "the great war" didnt have the same meaning anymore and they shifted to calling them the first and second world wars. If another terrorist attack occurred on September 11th i would think that we would also change what we call the original event to reflect that. I know it was just kind of a throwaway line but it just sparked my thinking so I wanted to address it.
The first use of the phrase "first world war" to describe the conflict that boiled over in July 1914 actually comes from a German magazine published not even three months after the official outbreak. The scientists and historians who published the article in question were saying that the nature of Europe's overseas colonial economies would inevitably give rise to a new age of global conflict, and the only way to achieve lasting peace would be to fundamentally rewrite very basic aspects of human culture all over the world. Unfortunately, their predictions were more prescient than even they could have realised.
The First World War gained its current name posthumously, like all those wars that got named for their (alleged) length. I wonder what they called the Hundred Years' War when they were fighting it. "The war"? "The French atrocities"? Something else?
We've started using the date format for other events in recent years. January 6th (2021), and now October 7th (2023). For some reason though, way more people say "9/11" than September 11th but I rarely hear "1/6" or "10/7" used instead of the full dates.
Omg the ad at 19:52. I remember seeing that as a kid and for some reason the information of the front of the boat is called a bow in the back of the boat is called a Stern was ingrained in my brain. It was just a peice of trivia i remembered very well for whatever reason. I remember the questions, but I had barely any rememberance of where it came from, just that it was a commercial of sorts. I never thought I would actually see that peice of media again because i wasn't sure where it came from. It is a really strange feeling. Definitely was not expecting to run into it in this video. 😅lol so thanks for sharing.
Realistically, a person who’s eager to join the military is likely to become more eager to join after 9/11, since in real life, tons of people signed up for the military because they wanted to so something. Even people who didn’t serve still changed their career paths due to the attacks out of a sense of patriotic obligation.
I can't get over his dad talking seriously about being in the service and him sitting there as a bald eagle with a flag cape. The "and that's why we grew up poor" was so disrespectful, I'm cracking up.
I just stumbled upon your channel bc I watch other YT movie reviewers/deep dives like yourself. I totally dig your dry humor and the delivery is super on point. You’ve got my sub, looking forward to checking out more of your work!
20:30 damn, your history class got past the 70s? mine stopped at the cold war and acted like the world has been exactly as it has always been since 1970, not even mentioning the collapse of the soviet union.
I like how American schools just repeatedly do American history over and over again every year, and then do the entirety of world history in one. Cus relearning the same thing with increasing detail is more important than doing it comprehensively the first time, and learning about things outside the country.
@@BelBelle468 my history classes at least did some world history, most of it was pre-1700 though, once the USA exists, then the rest of the world doesn't matter anymore, and they gotta make sure to repeat the first 200ish years of US history as many times as possible
@@Minty1337 We had World History / World Cultures in 9th grade and my teacher for the first half of the school year stood stuck on the ancient world, and the second half we stood stuck on slavery and we never made it past that. In 11th grade we had U.S. History II but not U.S. History I. Our principal told us about a week before we were going to graduate that apparently who ever was in charge of the curriculum planning forgot to give us U.S. History I back in 10th grade! We had a form of history class in 10th grade but it also was related to our English class too. So, it was American History-English and plain old American history which again we never made it past the slavery of the 1800's. We had the same teacher from World History class. The principal was in our classroom that day because he was showing each person in my class including me our diploma to make sure that our names were spelled correctly. At least we all knew we were getting one! LOL! Anyway, I have no idea why they did that to us in 10th grade. So, yea we took U.S. History II in 11th grade and our first history teacher started off at the late 1890's which was nothing new as back in middle school in Social Studies we made it to the 1890's to the 1920's and then stopped there. Then our teacher retired on us during the Christmas break despite not looking old enough for retirement. He was in good shape for a guy his age! Our new teacher who was pretty cool picked up where our last teacher stopped at and we started at the 1930's and actually made it up to present days which at the point was 2004 and little bit of 2005 seeing I was a Junior during the 04-05 school year. We had actually made it to the 9/11 portion. Our history book had some stuff about 9/11 but not a whole lot about the Bush administration and the current wars at that time but still at least we had made it to present day. A few years later, my brother was taking this same class in his own high school and to my displeasure was using the SAME history book that was now outdated by several years as it stopped at 9/11 and kept referring to the "current" president as Bush! The back of the book had a timeline of presidents and that's when I realized he was using the same textbook I had used back in high school but was now outdated as it stopped at Bush as president! I had noticed the cover first and was like "oh, they're using the same book." Of course, I thought it was a different edition of the book with the same cover being used but nope! Same textbook that I used. This was back during his Junior year too during the 2010-2011 school year, I dread to think what history books U.S. high school students todays are learning from or NOT learning from!
@BelBelle468 I have taken American History 5 times. I think the best part about it though is you always start in Colonial times than kinda learn about stuff past the Industrial Revolution, but never far beyond it
Ya know, it's always wild when I hear from Americans that goddamn military recruiters came INTO their school. Like, I know it's a bald-eagle-blooded American thing that I just don't have enough bald eagles in my blood for to understand but that's just so wild to me. Like imagine someone coming into your class and advertising dying in the middle east to you. Over here in Germany we got carpenters or line chefs or bankers coming in explaining their work to recruit kids, not military recruiters, man.
Difference between the US and Germany is that Germany doesn't pay for a sizable chunk of the rest of the world's national defense and maintain a global Empire
don't know about other schools, but at mine the recruiters wouldn't talk in the classroom. they'd have a table at college fairs. which seems worse to me somehow? like "yeah kid you won't be able to afford college, why not join the military?"
To be fair Germany didn’t need to do that because Germany had the draft until 2010, and if things keep going this way, they’re gonna reintroduce it soon.
You see this is strange because I just learned now from this video and comment that other countries don’t have military recruiters come into the school. The more you know. The US is an interesting country.
I have never heard of this movie and this is the first time I've seen your channel, but this was really entertaining. Especially with that skit at the end. lol
I remember that! I also remember reading the Wikipedia article and seeing how apparently there were a lot of differences from the source material, including the main character being a different (reincarnation? I forgor) in both versions.
Protagonist (normal), white, girl weirdo, white, boy try hard, white, girl rebel/punk, person of color, boy that's it, we covered all the archetypes, no stone left unturned
Fun fact: When I was in Elementary school we were taught that when the plane hit, nobody was in the wing cause of some reconstruction happening there ..... turns out over 100 ppl were killed ... i was honestly chilled to bone when i read it after all these years.
omg i remember watching this movie the night it premiered and all the behind the scenes stuff disney would air. i forgot this movie was a thing until just now. can’t wait to finish the video lol