the coloration makes his hair look more full, including his eyebrows and eyelashes, even making it look like he has mascara or eyeliner on or something, and probably also making his complexion look more smooth so his skin just looks nicer. my best guess
@@nottherealsockthey mean when movies are "set in mexico" they just add a sepia or yellow/orange filter for some reason. As if everything is a different color there 😂
Twlight novel comment section was full. But dayum. I just had to like say. Twilight is mid. Vampire diaries is better Stephen is hot an Damen is lame. Thats all ty.
@dominickmoerike2 duckduckgo got useless since 2022 cuz its code allowed Microsoft to track you like other search engines. They said they fixed it, but since they didnt even know about it when microsoft started doing it, I wouldnt believe them tbh.. Use brave, it's the best you can have rn
Mosquitos are surprisingly important to the environment. The are necessary pollinators for several agricultural crops and keystone plant species. For instance without mosquitoes we don't have carrots, parsnips, celery, and dill to name a few. Hundreds of wild plants are solely reliant on mosquitos. Only femal mosquitoes drink blood and there are mosquitoes that drink blood from other mosquitoes. Mosquitoes are interesting because they are so important to the world but they are equally deadly, being one of the biggest disease transferring animal on the planet with the highest human kill count of any animal. Their are bad ones and good ones and im sensitive to their bites too.
Charborg is part of what can only be described as some sort of biomechanical pseudo-human. As a result of this, he does not experience traditional emotions like "fear." For him, emotions are merely a method of communication with the more animalistic lifeforms.
So, like I live in Las Vegas and I also work at a casino now at the casino I work at there is also automatic toilets. More importantly during one of the days I was working one of the toilets towards the end of the bathroom had been constantly flushing and I know this because I also tried to use that toilet. Now this could all be coincidental but I think Charborg went to the casino I was working at and I just completely missed him that day- it would be an awkward way to meet him though lol
You have easily peed more than 900 times. Let’s say at a minimum you pee an average of 2 times a day, that’s 730 a year. By the time you are 20 you have peed over 14,000 times. Kind of crazy to think about it.
The new Chuck E Cheese is voiced by the main singer of bowling for soup. Like this man vanished for years, left unknown, and then I found out that’s where he was around cameos in Phineas and Ferb. The worlds wild man.
I was eating and this part happened and I swear to god I entered in such a panic because I was choking so hard from laughing and trying to hold it in and not laugh, I almost choked to death 24:03
“Blud” is British slang for “blood” and is often used as a colloquial term for a friend or close acquaintance. The term is particularly associated with urban youth culture in the UK, especially in London. It is often used in greetings or to refer to someone with a sense of camaraderie. The backstory of the term doesn’t have any particular origin beyond its use as a slang word. It is thought to have evolved from the use of “blood” as a way of referring to someone closely, similar to how “brother” or “mate” might be used in other cultures. Over time, it became a common term of endearment or slang expression in certain urban communities, particularly within Black British and Caribbean communities in the UK. The use of the term has been popularized through music, particularly in genres such as grime and UK hip hop. It is now widely recognized as part of British urban slang, often used to express familiarity and solidarity.
Literally found this channel the other day and charborger is so funny, just the way his stream are set up *chefs kiss* so basic yet complicated its perfect
Raising two giant dogs while also enjoying gaming is a pee-based survival game. I cant relax for like an hour without the dogs threatening to pee inside
19:14 actually mosquitos can be almost usseless because low pollination and the animals that eat hims dont need them to survive so they pretty much usseless
bruh, the automatic sensor on the toilet is the worst thing. had one where i worked, and you had to sit like a board was nailed into your spine or the thing will just constantly keep flushing
Charborg doesn't know the definition of any words. He just repeats sounds that humans make in a pattern that is familiar to us. Kind of like how a parrot sometimes speaks, but doesn't really understand the words it is saying
Floors me what a weird premise that is. And like, it has such interesting monster designs, and the whole nasty fog and those weird blobs are compelling... if only they weren't attached to fuckin piss. Is it even like a fetish thing though? that's the initial assumption, but of like, wouldn't someone into pee WANT to be able to pee? Like they'd make it the cure for some of the weird shit or something. I'm thinking too hard about this.
It's pee because you know, you have to do that after you drink water and you need to drink water to stay alive. Imagine if the playable character operated on coal, they would have to keep "eating" coal to keep themselves fueled, but doing that would cause massive pollution on the environment around them so survival is both finding coal and making sure you're being careful about what happens as a result of you consuming it. I would rather play a survival game in a pee world than a poo one
@@potatoesstarch2376 There isn't anything else it could be that would invoke the same feeling. I suppose the developer could make the player character just emit deathfog™ and you have to find bottles and containers to deathfog™ into, but that sorta removes the thematic element of your survival as a biological entity being actively harmful to everything around you and you know, some of the relatability a player could have to the situation. I've never emitted deathfog™ in my life, but I have taken a pee.
I dunno why the grocery people would expect you to give the groceries back in the first place. Grocery stores will throw away food that people put in their cart and didn't buy if it's not in like a box or can. I doubt they would trust the groceries would be in good enough condition for their standards if they were at the wrong house for a while
I have many similar stories to the repeatedly flushing toilet. I wear a high vis vest at work and for some reason, the guy who designed the bathrooms decided that EVERYTHING had to have an ir sensor on it, so when I walk through the bathroom to do my thing, all the urinals flush and all the sinks run until my vest is out of range.
A chocolate brownie, or simply a brownie, is a chocolate baked confection. Brownies come in a variety of forms and may be either fudgy or cakey, depending on their density. Brownies often, but not always, have a glossy "skin" on their upper crust. They may also include nuts, frosting, chocolate chips, or other ingredients. A variation made with brown sugar and vanilla rather than chocolate in the batter is called a blond brownie or blondie. The brownie was developed in the United States at the end of the 19th century and popularized there during the first half of the 20th century. Chocolate brownie A homemade chocolate brownie Type Square or bar Place of origin United States Region or state Worldwide Main ingredients Flour, butter, eggs, chocolate and/or cocoa powder, sugar Variations Blondie Cookbook: Chocolate brownie Media: Chocolate brownie A stack of chocolate brownies Store-bought brownies Brownies are typically eaten by hand, and may be accompanied by a glass of milk, served warm with ice cream (à la mode), topped with whipped cream, or sprinkled with powdered sugar. In North America, they are common homemade treats and they are also popular in restaurants, ice cream parlors, and coffeehouses. Contents History edit One legend about the creation of brownies is that of Bertha Palmer, a prominent Chicago socialite whose husband owned the Palmer House Hotel.[1] In 1893, Palmer asked a pastry chef for a dessert suitable for ladies attending the Chicago World's Columbian Exposition. She requested a dessert that would be smaller than a piece of cake, and easily eaten from boxed lunches. [2] The result was the Palmer House Brownie, made of chocolate with walnuts and an apricot glaze. The Palmer House in Chicago still serves this dessert to patrons made from the same recipe.[3] The name was given to the dessert some time after 1893, but was not used by cook books or journals at the time.[2] Mixing melted butter with chocolate to make a chocolate brownie The first-known printed use of the word "brownie" to describe a dessert appeared in the 1896 version of the Boston Cooking-School Cook Book by Fannie Farmer, in reference to molasses cakes baked individually in tin molds.[4] However, Farmer's brownies did not contain chocolate.[5] In 1899, the first-known recipe was published in Machias Cookbook. They were called "Brownie's Food". The recipe appears on page 23 in the cake section of the book. Marie Kelley from Whitewater, Wisconsin, created the recipe. The earliest-known published recipes for a modern-style chocolate brownie appeared in Home Cookery (1904, Laconia, NH), the Service Club Cook Book (1904, Chicago, IL), The Boston Globe (April 2, 1905 p. 34),[2] and the 1906 edition of Fannie Farmer's cookbook. These recipes produced a relatively mild and cake-like brownie. By 1907, the brownie was well established in a recognizable form, appearing in Lowney's Cook Book by Maria Willet Howard (published by Walter M. Lowney Company, Boston) as an adaptation of the Boston Cooking School recipe for a "Bangor Brownie". It added an extra egg and an additional square of chocolate, creating a richer, fudgier dessert. The name "Bangor Brownie" appears to have been derived from the town of Bangor, Maine, which an apocryphal story states was the hometown of a housewife who created the original brownie recipe.[4] Maine food educator and columnist Mildred Brown Schrumpf was the main proponent of the theory that brownies were invented in Bangor.[a] While The Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink (2007) refuted Schrumpf's premise that "Bangor housewives" had created the brownie, citing the publication of a brownie recipe in a 1905 Fannie Farmer cookbook,[10] in its second edition, The Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America (2013) said it had discovered evidence to support Schrumpf's claim, in the form of several 1904 cookbooks that included a recipe for "Bangor Brownies".[11] In 2021, the food science journalist and home cookery RU-vidr Adam Ragusea conducted a series of experiments to discover why modern brownies tend to form a desirably glossy "skin" on their upper crust. In a video reporting his findings, Ragusea asserted that the "skin" was the result of making a batter of high viscosity, with low levels of moisture and sugar well-dissolved into the mixture.[12]
Mickey Mouse is the Target of animated mice. Stewart Little is the Walmart of animated mice. Gerald Jinx "Jerry" Mouse is the Big Lots of animated mice. Speedy Gonzales is the Bravo Supermarkets of animated mice.