today i'm watching a guy build a secret hidden underground temple house omg!!! watch another video: • I Spent 7 Days in the ... my main channel: • World's Smallest Phone!
0:35 first shot with carma on top of a tree 1:11 reference 1:14 menacing 1:59 angle 2:16 ...... 2:31 stairs 3:10 my face 3:14 ladder out of nowhere 3:23 he made a temple in minutes 3:37 hardcore 4:05 makes a bed 4:19 sleeps 4:42 bamboo from nowhere 5:10 free toes 5:29 a chair which is useless 5:57 drinks water but where where does he get it 6:10 FIRE 6:21 bow??? 6:32 goes away 6:58 goes hunting for fish 7:30 back at home(I am tired) 7:47 he back at it 8:43 he distorys aaaa....something 9:20 one day more but got delayed 9:39 don't call me Sherlock 10:00 painting 10:40 200 iq be like (making pipe) 11:43 watching him play
From what I know (depending on the channel) these are pretty much 100% real. I saw a guy explain how they do it in his video description. They have a group of guys (idk, like 5 or 6) that use these types of tools to actually make these. The lone guy that gets filmed also works on it but it's not just him alone. It's in a place in California which has really loose dirt which makes it much easier to do by hand. These take around a month to fully make but are done by hand. The video is more a presentation than the actual process but it's done for real as far as I know.
Yeah, I agree that it's real as well, but they definitely have more people working on it. Sometimes they show 2 guys in the videos. I don't think the dirt is loose though, it seems pretty well compacted; it just has a high clay content that make it easier to dig and sculpt. I currently work as a subcontractor building fences, and the clay definitely makes it easier to dig. Oh, and it's Cambodia, not California. But I do think they are doing it by hand.
@@user-ke6fo3hd8l lmao. No. No you can't. I mean, you can pack it down, but it won't make structurally secure steps. Are you actually arguing that loose sand is a stable building material???
who cares if he used machines. its like when someone builds something amazing in minecraft on creative mode. its easier but still beautiful and impressive
Ive watched these guys many times, so much footage of them actually doing it themselves. They are amazing, this was the worse example to use, usually they show the entire process sped up and you see them do literally everything.
There are many camera cuts so he might be receiving help behind the scenes, but i think it's still possible for him top build it on his own, it would just take a lot longer. Also, the location is obviously been used multiple times based on how pure the soil is, i didn't saw a single boulder or even a stone, and he knows that there would be none, that's why he didn't bother bringing a pickaxe.
These things are 100% confirmed to be fake. There are a lot of these videos where you can seven see excavator tracks and in some even the excavators themselves. There are a few primitive technology channels that are legit but the vast majority are fake and done with a whole team and heavy equipment.
i love how in each of these videos the places they build their stuff looks like a video game plot of land, like each time it's the same round flat surface made of some sort of sand. i also love how these videos are so coded that in each there is recurring moments like the famous "detruction of indigenous fauna" moment where they destroy bug nests to make mud cement or something (sometimes they eat berries on the way) or the "bamboo pipeline engineering" moment wich is there almost each time there is a pool (almost because i haven't seen all of their videos but it is there in each i watched), etc.
In the first "temple" building there are multiple camereas set up around the work sites. He takes clips from each camera when editing to give the video the effect of being shot from different angles. It is sped up. The reason why he is able to carve into the soil with such perfection is because the soil has a high content of sand, and clay mixed with the dirt. We all know how to make sand castles right?
9:00 From what I’ve seen about the REAL primitive building videos, they grab termite nests, break it down, and mix it with water. I think there’s something about termite nests that make the mud-like material seal-proof, water-proof, and overall just acts as a big adhesive.
It doesn’t it’s fake termite mounds are not waterproof although the outer layer is quite strong and almost considered waterproof it only helps stop erosion
These videos usually use heavy machine the guy who does the digging usually does 30% of the work but the heavy mechine does the rest hope this helps love your vids ryan
"He's Rockin' with a Rock" "I get tired standing up and walking...to places" "Next thing u know, we have a bow and arrow on deck,just in case the camerman starts acting up" I Had to pause to JUST LAUGH
Unless he has an excavator, I'm not sure how he's hauling all the dirt he's digging out of the hole. I mean that's a really deep hole, I have a hard time believing he's hauling it all out with that basket.
well the pile does not look what a pile from an excavator would look like. This is clay if an excavator dug that and put it in a pile it would be excavator bucket shaped clumps. not a shredded pile of clay that looks like it came off the sand excavator. Context my grandpa owned a gravel pit and I was there a lot so don't say "how are you Qualified to make this claim". Also It would be hard to cover up excavator tracks and unless you got a toothless bucket there's no way the sidewall is that defined and with all those little bumps. Also If you get the excavator next to that hole the sidewall might collapse under the weight and its not like it would help with the 2 second crown molding.
Nope, because he’s getting money from it. Everyone thinks he spent 105 days doing it by hand, so they watch their vids and subscribe. Building that thing with machines isn’t impressive. Other people are building SKYSCRAPERS and 1000 sq feet MANSIONS with similar machines.
@@aidxn4898 Based on the time it takes to build skyscrapers and mansions, these builds (even if they use machinery) are still extremely impressive judging by the fact that they upload once every week or so to maintain their audience.
He’s not using a stick, it’s a special tool that is made for digging, since the end 8s flat and smooth he is able to flat it. You can even see the tool in some clips
I watched these things they are so cool I even saw one where someone built a secret waterslide that was in the ground that led the the pool in the house they built
i feel like he has assistance and between the jumpcuts he used a normal shovel or someone comes in with a straight up excavator but regardless if its fake or not it looks so beautiful, absolutely admirable, praiseworthy, marvelous, im running out of adjectives
I have seen some that have longer clips with no cuts and you can see them making the furniture and cutting and detailing it. The part it doesn't show is them making most of the structure, but you can see the marks of the tools they are using on the walls.
The terrain change is completely real, I live in Texas to and a place about 2 hours from me looks completely desert, but then a 20 minute hike away is a literal waterfall with a jungle feel, it’s breathtaking.
6:32 that waterfall does not exist. I found this dudes building site, they abandoned a backhoe in the mud and there is no waterfall within 200 kilometers
I never really cared about how real they are that much, but I do find it strange that the clearing in the first scene is far to tiny to fit that monster of a building inside. They would have to have done some massive land clearing to be able to do that. If they had uprooted all those trees, you can bet that the soil would have been very much disturbed, making it hart to have a nice packed edge like he did. Also you can see the clearing is huge in later scenes. It's pretty clear at least that the starting footage and the later footage are of two very different places. Additional things that make me question it, is that the fire is almost exactly the same, before and after he left it to go shooting fish, (with the questionable camera scene cutting that was mentioned in the video). If he had really done that, I would think that it would have taken far longer than just like 5 minutes. Also if there was that much water available nearby this, at a much higher altitude, you would think that there would at least be some ground water, or rain to flood his creation mid construction.