1. Marc McCabe: drinks beer without using his hands 2. Phil Anderson: balances ten pencils on his face without using his mouth 3. Scott Vassil: stops a moving fan with his tongue
I watched this on tape-Betamax-before heading to high school for the day. I was stifling laughs all day; I swear everyone thought I smoked out before breakfast (and I was a boring-ass, straight-arrow kid).
The easy beats weren't exactly one hit wonders but I guess that's their biggest hit Stevie Wright went on to record a three part song called Evie if you haven't heard it do yourself a favour and go listen to it!
The Aussie band Paul Shaffer mentioned, "The Easybeats", were definitely not "one hit wonders"... During their six-year run, they scored 15 top 40 hits in Australia.
@@darkparker7500 No no no it's a British common wealth not a real country. Nothing about it being a continent. Australia was ''granted'' it's so called independence by the British government with several heavy duty conditions. England says jump they say how high? Just like Canada and New Zealand. Not real country's
When I saw the blades I knew the fan "trick" was not dangerous. It would be if he was on the other side but from this side, the sharp is in the back, so you just hit the fan with the long flat part if you just go in slow to touch the fan and you won't hit the rear (Aka the actual sharp part) but rather just slide against the whole of the fan blade. Not impressive at all.
That's why this is called a trick, as it appears as if he is risking his young being cut when in fact he isn't. Not much different then a "dangerous" magic trick like (Penn and Teller are known for) which isn't really dangerous, it's just designed to fool the audiences into thinking it is.