Between Garnt completely outing himself as a fake Fate fan and the Bois who all majored in engineering almost failing the math questions, I am not sure which is the bigger betrayal.
It’s pretty weird thinking how smart these guys are. I think Garnt has one in electrical engineering, Connor has one in mechanical? And Joey was smart enough to study quantum physics
Connor is correct when he says that monarchs don't usually have the same name in each successive generation. But in this case, they did. Henry VII was in fact the father of Henry VIII.
@@Kelvin_Foo Owen Tudor did hail from the Tudors of Penmynydd of North Wales, but strictly speaking the political and financial power came from Catherine of Valois, so The House of Tudor is technically French
This episode shows the 3 most common kids from school classes. The smug smart kid, the degenerate at the back of the class cracking jokes the whole time, and the kid getting everything wrong saying “I knew it was that” or “I wrote that but changed my answer”
Yeah about that.... I'm heavily questioning that claim of his now.... As an engineer it is UNFATHOMABLE that someone claiming they graduated elementary school couldn't multiply, let alone someone that has a literally math degree. I guess US schools are just that much better than UK schools though.
@@Jeffrey_Tyler I think UK engineering degrees are fraud now, I'm an engineering student in India and I swear even the worst students can get those multiplication and divisions
@@Jeffrey_Tyler No, as a computational science major (math + cs) the types of mathematical problems that you cover never need long multiplication. And, if they do, you defn get a calculator instead. This isn't some united states means of glory. If anything, being force to go through it manually is sad.
My younger brother took part in the show back in the day. Fun fact, they gave out the answers and questions to the students the day before and had to simply memorise the answer. So yes, it was somewhat rigged!
@@lettuce1626 To be fair knowledge is really a memory game. Also they have to make it entertaining because let's be real no 5th grader is beating an actual adult in anything meaningful. But especially in these times I think it was mostly adults vs adults because the 5th graders ask their parents for the answer and they give it out, most likely not much internet coverage in that time.
@@mikeoath9541I wouldn't go that far. Plenty of 5th grader (and younger) kids who'd beat many an adult in chess. That's something "meaningful" in my book.
@@paulatreides3214 Let me ask you, how skewed is your perception of that is because you see 5th grader super genius chess kid beating IM? When parents play against their children in chess they are also playing it down a bit, you have to be realistic bud.
@@mikeoath9541 I'm just taking your original statement at face value. You said "no 5th grader is beating an actual adult in anything meaningful". Plenty of "actual adults" who are not IMs. In fact, it might sound crazy, but an overwhelming majority of adults aren't.
i like how Garnt always says something too easy to understand , like "we didnt schedule anythin" and then goes on for 10 mins trying to explain it more and more and more
i dislike how Garnt always says something too easy to understand , like "we didnt schedule anythin" and then goes on for 10 mins trying to explain it more and more and more
Garnt is the adults around me who immediately dropped whatever they learned once they had a job. My dad can’t even do basic arithmetic and he’ll clap back with “let’s see you do my taxes” I’ll probably be like this tbf The fact that Garnt is the only one who cares about credit scores is an example
My husband LOST his shit at "Hudson Bay" being one of the major inland seas. "It's attached to water! This is why 5th graders don't trust!" I think he was saltier about that then Connor and Garnt was about how long the earth takes to go around the sun, LOL.
@@antoniohugo289 the Black Sea isn't technically inland as it is naturally connected to the Sea of Marmara, which in turn is connected with the Mediterranean Sea which is connected to the Atlantic Ocean
@@serbanionita239 That's not the definition of "inland sea". If it was, Hudson Bay definitely wouldn't be one. It has some stupid bullshit definition. You can look it up pn Wikipedia.
It’s actually incredible how the protagonist manages to ALWAYS without fail surpass the villain in the last moments. How does Connor always do this, every time
There's more to an engineer that doing long mult and div, we have calculators for that, I only remember doing either before starting software engineering
@@joshuathomas512 that doesn't mean long multiplication and division are hard. Realistically it's the kind of think you will have used daily for around 3-5 years of your life depending on what your school did, it's not the kind of thing you should really forget so easily.
@@hunterdavis9941 It is not that crazy to think about. Garnt graduated 9 years ago and only worked from 2014-2016 as a technical project manager. And I doubt long division/multiplication is something he often used during university. If you put someone on the spot to do something they have not done (regularly) for well over 10 years, it is not that surprising they would have diffuculty with it.
That's because he had a fucking point they needed to pick how pedantic with the answers was they were going to be. Not that it fucking would of helped they got several wrong "they" being the ones behind the cameras. Black sea and Red are major inland seas they are also considered other things but they are also still inland seas, Antarctica is both an island and a continent. Basically this boiled down to in many of the question not "are you smarter then an 5th grader" but "did you write this test or take it and remember the answers it wanted". What's weird is I'm pretty sure this happened on the tv show as well a few time the person was right but it wasn't the answer they wanted so they declared them wrong when they weren't.
@@AlphaNinjaFTW1 exactly. Many people would rather rely on computer calculation than the engineers. They’re expected to know how to use these systems not to calculate it by hand.
@@ellusiv5121 bro it is literally long division/multiplication. The rules of it are so basic, you can use it every day for everyday things like shopping. And if you are an engineer shouldn’t you know this basic process to talk in estimates with ur colleagues before pulling out calculators to do the actual calculations?
@@eleonarcrimson858you don't do long multiplication for estimates. If you were asked how much is 456*124 you'd think 400*100 so at least 40k. estimations are meant to be rough
@@Chronos4088 Well, they're only halfway through the year - lots of things still to learn! And some of the questions were very topic focused - noone had the pony express question right, but we don't study American history in that kind of depth in our school. Gotta grit our teeth and keep on going!
I’m worried about the uk’s math department. Their engineers can’t do basic freaking math, but their carpenters and construction works can is a big issue. Because the money wasted teaching engineers math is the issue not that blue collar workers know it by the way.
@@jameslewis2635 i keep hearing about the American education system and, as a high school student from America, I don't see the problem. What is it about our education system that's so bad?
For those who are curious, the Irish flag is not just random. The green stands for the republic, the orange stands for The Orange Order and the white stands for the peace between them.
@@Jeseabell * Should be: in some cases being a walking encyclopedia earns you an A, i others being a teacher's pet does, but the point of going to school is becoming a person who understands the world(not really getting A's) (as the teacher interprets it, or as you do(depending on who is(should be) doing the interpretation)) (a nice point made by me(to my self, a long time ago), and also "Zoe Bee"(if i'm not butchering her name) on this platform) And also: a year is 365.2425 not 365 and 1/4, as defined by the calendar, the real answer is "how deep do you want to go down the rabbit whole" a solar year is different than a calendar year, by less than 0.009 but is still different, and has been calculated with precision of more than 0.00001 day, but at that point a solar year starts being different than a solar year in length due to the motions of the other planets in the solar system.
As an Ecuadorian, I’m not even mad that Garnt spelled my country name wrong, I’m actually glad we got some type of recognition 😂 It gave me a nice laugh.
Unironically, I think Ashley is the most relatable of the Trash Taste guys. -"Yeah I know who x is" "who is he then?" "uuhmm..." -"I haven't used that word in a long time" "a long time or ever?" "... ever" -"You know what a hill is, right?" xD
A lot of these questions were vague or incorrect. Some examples: "How much time does the Earth take to revolve around the sun" - The required level of precision was never specified in the original question nor was it established beforehand that the maximum level of precision a contestant can provide is expected for all science questions. Garnt and Connor should not be penalized for underspecification on the question giver's parts, especially given the fact that the expectations going in were that this is a quiz made for 5th graders. "Name an island that is considered both an island and continent" - There exists debate regarding whether Australia can be considered an island, given that it is already classified as a continent. Some may argue that if a continent can be an island, then Afro-Eurasia is the biggest island. However, if it can be considered that Australia is an island, then Antarctica should be accepted as an island as well and Garnt should have been awarded a point. "Which animal was the first animal was the first to go into space" - A dog was not the first animal in space. The first animals in space were fruit flies. If we are to only consider non-insect animals, then dog is still the incorrect answer as a rhesus monkey was the first animal in space. In that case, Connor is actually more correct. Laika the dog, however, was indeed the first animal sent into orbit, but that was not what the question specified. There is additional ambigiuity in this question when you consider the question of what exact demarcation one uses to be delineate space versus the atmosphere of Earth. The exact point of this demarcation is ultimately arbitrary. "Name the city that was built on seven hills" - While the city of seven hills typically refers to Rome, there are actually many cities that claim this same title. "Who is the world's first computer programmer" - Ada Lovelace is typically attributed this title, but Babbage's personal notes from the years 1836/1837 contain the first programs for the engine. In that case, Babbage himself should be considered the first computer programmer.
Man, for as much as I love Trash Taste, I couldn't watch it through the end due to so many errors Another problem is the definition of inland sea and if it means it is completely landlocked or not.
Question 16 is wrong according to the way it was presented. Laika was the first animal to orbit the earth, but if we go by which animal was flown into the legal definition of space, then the first animals to be sent there were some fruit flies. So in essence, Garnt only had 1 point
@@adityasahu1686 There are 5 taxonomic kingdoms: animals, plants, fungi, bacteria, archaea. Insects are part of the animal kingdom, making flies an animal.
Fun fact: If you Google "Is Australia a continent?" Google will say yes If you Google "Is Oceania a continent?" Google will also say yes Somehow Australia is in 2 continents
@@bigbakaboon Nope. If you google ''is australia technically a continent'', it will say: '' Australia & Oceania. Australia is the largest landmass on the continent of Australia. Oceania is a region made up of thousands of islands throughout the Central and South Pacific Ocean. It includes Australia, the smallest continent in terms of total land area.'' Therefore, you are wrong.
For clarification, UPS =/= USPS. USPS does mean United States Postal Service and is part of the federal government. UPS stands for United Parcel Service and is a private service.
100% agreed with Grant on USPS It took them 2 weeks to get my package from us to uk and was held in customs 11 days, so they're clearly still using horses for transport and on top of that they charged me £90 ~ 110$
I've had them deliver a package 2500 miles away in like 2 days before without even choosing 2 day shipping so it seems like you just had a bad experience
I am absolutely livid about that sea question. The Baltic Sea literally leads straight into the Atlantic ocean and the Hudson Bay also leads straight into Atlantic ocean. Neither are landlocked. This is bullshit!
I think the strait between them and the ocean is what makes them "landlocked." Like how we use many geography concepts, there is a lot of subjectivity. Why do the straits at the opening of the Mediterranean and Black Seas not count.
their take on it makign no sense that acontinent and a coutnry have the same name is valid tho, under most of america(the contiennt) and europe its oceania, its anglos who like to say australia mostly , funny enought.
I like how the boys are making fun of how the heck would know Ada Lovelace was the first computer programmer and she was lord Byron's daughter, and I'm here awkwardly sweating
7:00 damn, Joey really did a "This is brilliant, but I like this" on camera. And I respect him all the more for it. If you have a chance to chase your passions, go for it.
Garnt: You guys were the good kids Connor: No, no. Cause I just wanted to not worry about it Yes, same thing all the good kids who did their homework always said.
Actually I don’t get why Nabi is losing it. Anyone who played FGO should remember Romulus Skill 3 named “the seven hills”. Swimsuit Nero had the skill “seven crown” which is a reference to “the Whore of Babylon”, who rides a monster with seven heads which represents seven hills. It’s really a common sense to actual fate fans. You can see lots of chats spamming “umu” because of it.
@@SharpLCDTV Sad. He is a very rare free servant that can give buster buff and ガッツ (survive when taken a fatal attack) together to other servant, so it is very useful when you are a f2p player and have to face some challenge quest. Besides, FGO players should remember swimsuit Nero’s ability because it is another proof (before arcade made it true) that Nero is actually “whore of Babylon”.
The two largest landlocked seas are the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea. The Hudson Bay connects to the Northwest Passage, the Mediterranean Sea connects to the Atlantic Ocean, and the Baltic Sea connects to the North Sea, and therefore aren't landlocked.
Joey was accidentally right about being one generation out on the War of the Roses question. Henry VIII was Henry VII's son. Garnt was one out in terms of kings as Richard III was the one Henry VII defeated!
My 5 year old has been pulling a Joey for some time. He is potty trained and only wears underwear, but he refuses to do a # 2 on the toilet. This is crazy to me because he will go to pee just fine. I've tried everything to get him to be regular and go to the toilet. I'm hoping he grows out of it like Joey did 😭. He has given me hope in the weirdest way 😂
He needs to shit. It got so bad for me that they had to inject some shit in my ass that disolved the shit. And i had to drink oil to help me poop + i had a schedule where i needed to shit three times.a day. Or at least try to. If you dont shit your muscles grow weak and as the shit hardens you can't poop anymore. If it gets any words than that they put you under and operate you to disolve the poop
@@sloesty idk why I have this information in my head, but I once read/heard that healthy poop i.e. a well formed/shaped poop from a healthy person with great digestion can be sold for that very purpose. Injecting poop in someone else's a$$ to help them poop. And if I remember correctly, it pays pretty well Edit: I just googled it and its called 'fecal transplant'
According to Merriam-Webster, Y is considered a vowel when: The word has no other vowel: gym, my. The letter is at the end of a word or syllable: candy, deny, bicycle, acrylic. The letter is in the middle of a syllable: system, borborygmus.
It’s almost always a vowel. It’s simpler to say when it’s not a vowel, which is basically only at the beginning of words, and really only when the following vowel is the “ee” sound like yeet. In this case the y involves slight friction of the tongue against the back of roof of the mouth (say it slowly, it’s like an h but further forward) to distinguish it from the following ee. This non-voiced sound is what qualifies it as a consonant in this case, because that’s what a consonant is, an unvoiced toneless sound. But in words like yet, yacht, young etc, where most people would agree it’s a “consonant”, the y is basically just a quick “ee” sound and it’s a sketchy technicality to call it a consonant in that case. Phonology is complicated AF and these dudes never stood a fuccin chance. Even M, N, and the American R function as vowels. Basically nobody is actually aware of how it works, much less them lol.
For those of you interested, no Turing is not just known for breaking the enigma machine, that is least of his accomplishments. All the credit for the modern notion of the computer and what it can do goes to him. He is SUPER important.
@@vt_hikaru mathematicians are usually very underrated contributers to konwledge and research. Math is usually a hated subject, even though one could argue it is the single most important area of resrach in history. A good start IMHO is to watch Veritasium's video titled "Math Has a Fatal Flaw". It is a bit click baity, but good quality nontheless. What I will showcase below is explained very well in the video in great detail, superb visuals and easy to understand explanations! I highly recommend it! TL;DR: Turing invented the modern notion of a programmable computer which can perform general algorithms. He did all that to solve an abstract problem in mathematics! Before that, computers were always designed for specific computational tasks. Here is a little something about Turing(sorry for the long comment. I'm very passionate about this if you couldn't tell haha. Hope someone reads this. Anyways, Veritasium's video is much much better, so go watch that): David HIlbert, one of the giants of mathematics, very comparable to Einstein in achievement in his own field, published 23 problems in 1900, of which he instroduced 10 at a Paris conference. These were some of the most legendary unsolved problems in mathematics. Hilbert had the vision that mathematics has to be "perfect". To him it is the only truly clean subject we have, the only piece of knowledge if you will, which we can be perfectly sure about and understand completely. Therefore he introduced three conjectures: 1. mathematics is complete: this means that everything in math that happens to be true can also be proven to be true in the same context! Seems very intuitive right? Kurt Godel shook the world with his proof that this is actually false! 2. mathematics is consistent: this means that the math(the formal system we are working with. This is usually the axiomatic system of ZFC, which is the foundation of modern set theory) doesn't have any inherent contradicitons. So two contradictory things cannot be true at the same time. Again, Godel proved something interesting here. Godel showed that if a formal system can prove its own consitency, then it is necessarily inconsistent! Don't worry if this breaks your brain. Watch the video. 3. mathematics is decidable. This roughly means that we always have an effective procedure to decide whether a sentence has a proof or does not. Basically do we have an algorithm that will determine if a given sentence or its negation can be proven or not. This is actually different from completeness, but requires some nuance and rigor to see why. Don't worry about it. Here comes Turing in. He was fascinated by this problem and wanted to solve it. Basically he was the person who figured out what "effective procedure" could formally mean. He came up with algorithms! But there was a problem. How do you remove the human perspective from all of this? How do you "encode" all of this in rigorous mathematics? Well he got the idea by observing the "computers". Computers of the time were people who would get the instrucitons what to do written on paper and then would do the computations that they were given. Turing got the idea that he could use the same "piece of paper" that is used for calculations to also prepare the instructions themselves! So he came up with this idea: take an infinate tape with 1s and 0s. Then have a little machine that can move left and right on the tape and that can read and write the 1s and 0s. Here was the key genius! Instead of the machine having its own mind and understanding, he figured, just like with human computers, the little machine could receive its instructions from the tape itself! So he developed what we now call Turing Machines, i.e. computers! The machine itself has the internal "logic" that is premade. The thing is, this internal logic is NOT some super complex thing, BUT follows a few very specific rules that are true for ALL Turing machines. Using these machines he was able to solve the problem! Mathematics is NOT decidable! However, this idea of turing machines is at the cornerstone of all computer sicence. If not for Turing, it is possible that computers today would be just these computational devices for only very specific tasks, but now a single computer can perform incredible general tasks. In fact, Turing Machines are the perfect computers, in the sense that anything we are currently able to do and make is at best a turing machine!(Yes we have more general theratical ideas, like supertasks and quantum computes are a wild thing, but in general this is the case). SIDE NOTE: There are also some other very important mathematicians who should be credited here. I should mention at least Alonzo Church, who greatly inspired Turing himself(they also worked together and publishd an important result. AFAIK one of them is that Church's framework is equivalent to Turing Machines), and of course the great Haskell Curry(yes the programming language Haskell is named after him). Turing was the father of procedural programming, while Alonzo was the father of funcitonal programming in a sense. Haskell Curry greatly advanced the field from the foundations of Turing and Church. His greatest work is the Curry-Howard correspondence(computer programs and mathematical proofs are in direct lgical correspondence!). Then there is also John von Neumann, who has great contributions everywhere in math. We roughly use his architecture of computers today(CPU, RAM and Input/Output).
As someone who streams games that involve a lot of math, I did question 2 in my head while listening and was horrified to learn they forgot how to multiply
For instance, multiplying by 124 is easy for me because I have multiplied 24 a lot. Since it's a highly composite number it occurs naturally quite often. You multiply by 25 then subtract the number, like how for 9 you multiply by 10 and subtract the number. I simply multiply by 25, subtract the number, then multiply by 100 and add them together.
The Baltic Sea and Hutson Bay are not really inland seas, they are naturally connected to the rest of the oceans and just happen to have entrances that freeze over in the winter, but during the summer they are not inland by any means, somewhat similar to the Black, Red or Mediterranean seas which are also connected to the rest of the rest of the Ocean. The only body of water i'd say is truly deserving of the title "major inland sea" would be the Caspian Sea, with the Aral sea, some of the American Great Lakes and some of the African Great Lakes being potencial contenders for that title.
Holy fck, I was afraid I was the only one who lost his mind over that question. Like I can get why Baltic (even tho it's totally incorrect, I live by the Baltic Sea, I know it is fucking connected to the North Sea by staits), but going by that logic Red, Dead, (not Redemption) Black and Mediterranean Seas would also count. And Hudson Bay, as the name says, is not even a goddamn sea, it's a BAY. And if they call Dead Sea a lake then I honestly see no way to call any of the Great Lakes inland seas (also, they all have natural connection to the rest of the oceans, definitely Victoria and American Great Lakes have, thanks to the Nile and St. Lawrence Rivers respectively). But yea, Caspian and Aral Seas (until it disappears completely) are the only legit.
The Hudson Bay and Baltic Sea ARE inland seas. The definition of inland sea they were given was incorrect. An inland sea is not completely enclosed by land. If it were, it would be a lake (like the Dead Sea or Caspian Sea).
I got confused by Hudson's Bay as well, turns out it is seasonably inland as during the coldest months, its connection to the ocean is severed by frozen ice.
@@precisa_ Here's the definition of an inland sea: "a shallow sea that covers central areas of continents during periods of high sea level that result in marine transgressions. In modern times, continents stand high, eustatic sea levels are low, and there are few inland seas, the largest being Hudson Bay." So basically the Mediterranean is too deep to be considered an inland sea.
connor got the space question right. the first animal in space that wasnt a bug was a monkey. Laika was the first to orbit but not the first animal in space.
Oh man... I'm in the middle of my master's thesis now and I feel like I'm losing more brain cells trying to do proper citations than studying for any exams back at school. It's SO stressful! This convo about uni really hits home way too much! 😂🙈
Just started the quiz, and all I can think is that if Garnt was going to ask "what unit of measurement are we using?" then maybe he should have asked, "how specific do we need to be?"
"Alan Turing was around that time right?" late 1800s? You literally JUST talked about how he cracked the enigma machine used by the Nazi's in WWII. You know, the war that took place from 1939 to 1945. The enigma machine wasn't invented in 1919. Turing wasn't born until 1912. Somehow EVERYTHING before this point wasn't dumb enough to set me off but THIS broke me.
I mean they were pretty dang close and being from the late 1800s wouldn't change that he could have done that during ww2 like the last person alive from the 1800s died less than a decade ago
I absolutely love trivia questions and knowing random stuff that no one else would, but even I think ten year olds shouldn't be learning about this stuff.
Yeah, I used to eat stuff like this up as a kid. I thought people would like me because I was "smart," but I was one naive online/home schooler. Finally went to school in person for a year and no one liked me for being smart unless it meant that they could profit from it (having me on group projects and other teams). Also, with random facts like this, I feel it has more to do with memorization than intelligence itself. These guys definitely have some sort of high social/emotional intelligence to garner such an audience and I love them for it, even if their book smarts are rusty (they still have the same capacity to understand material). Anyhow, I guess my main point is that a lot of this is stuff a kid will never use practically and shouldn't waste time on (or be expected to remember as an adult), which I take as your point as well. That being said, if someone feels happy learning these things just for the sake of knowing them, good on them. Then it's not wasted time. I personally have a huge crush on a coworker of mine because of how passionate he is about learning and sharing random facts, probably because I still have an innate love for this sort of thing despite having to dedicate time to more practical matters.
@@vrinkee That's great that you still have a passion for it. Personally I've been trying to build a career as a writer, so even when I say that an average 8 yr old shouldn't probably know everything, I'll be lying to say it hasn't helped my career in some aspect. Being able to reference obscure facts on the fly helps a lot especially when I don't want to really double check the facts I'm writing down and continue being in the "zone". But I have a very niche job so it's not like everyone should be like me. Maybe people like us can be the exception though.
I'm currently in my last uni semester and the zoom lectures were better, at least for me. Watching some programming lectures while you are in your joggers and eating breakfast is way better than waking up early, taking a train to uni, sit in a room with 100 other students.
It gained popularly as part of some recent activisms. Before that, it was just a cool factoid. It's not really relevant because her work and Babbage's "Analytical Engine" led to nothing. They were not the only people who created those concepts, just the only ones who happen to get the funding to be published.
A lot of those question are so vague or have incorrect answers. Laika dog was not the first animal in space. It was a monkey. Laika was the first animal sent into the orbit. This quiz is truly something smh
I mean if they classify Baltic Sea as an Inland Sea, then they should give all of them a full point. Not even talking about Hudson Bay, cause that's just pure bullshit.
Got 9 and I'm still studying most of these subjects while also being at the top of my high school. Who are supposedly these 5th graders and where did they study? What kind of abuse did they go through to know this stuff?
huh i dont know which country ur from , but since the education system is hell in india we pretty were taught this in 3rd 4th and 5th grade :( and some in 6th too
The fact that I never learned long division in school (they just didn't teach it) but did watching Trash Taste says something about my education that I'm too afraid to consider.
The seas question has me scratching my head. What about the mediterranean? The black sea? The red sea? The baltic and hudson seas are hardly more landlocked than those.
I’m sitting here stressing every day about going to uni, hearing these guys go “best party uni lol” is so funny and equally terrifying as to how much more serious education has become
Currently listening while having 20 tabs of references open, a pile of chemistry note to my left and a pile of calculus homework to my right. Doesn't get better than this. #unilife
I love how angry they are about the Dead Sea being a lake when it doesn't even matter anyway because it's fucking tiny and wouldn't be a 'major' sea anyway.
I was getting really salty at the inland sea question. Because inland seas aren't necessarily landlocked, they're just large, shallow bodies of water that cover central areas of continents during high sea level periods. And the Hudson Bay and the Baltic Sea isn't entirely landlocked either. If we go by the definition of landlocked, large bodies of water (which are lakes), than it's the Caspian Sea, and the Dead Sea. And now that I proved I'm still good at my profession (lol 😂), back to the video. 😀
If the question writers wanted to be clear, which they didn't, should they have said epeiric sea instead of inland sea? I'm trying to figure this out, but the Wikipedia page isn't written very well.
Suggestion: Instead of whiteboards you could use tablets with screen sharing so we can see what you are writing and so that it is always clearly visible
@@5at5una They can have the whiteboards with them as backup in case there are technical difficulties. I'm pretty sure that if they ask on Reddit how to make it work reliably that someone will provide them with a detailed guide on how to set it up 😉
I am just a history nerd so I just felt like "How can you guys not remember one of the first things you learn in most history courses?" Because in most world history books some of the first things are about Mesopotamia being the cradle of civilization and that the Sumerians were the first people we know of to have invented a writing system in the form of Cuneiform, I more annoyed that Connor said Greek, because Greek comes way later and is derived from the Phoenician Alphabet, which overtook Linear A and Linear B in the region after the Bronze Age Collapse
most likely they can. those questions are definitely from 5th grade text books. Adults to don't retain that shit unless we use it in everyday life. which we mostly dont
I realized the reason the sea question was confusing is because Ashley said it was land locked seas, but the question says inland (which doesn't mean landlocked)