As a builder of wacky independent structures my entire life and a student of child development as well as raised 3 creative kids, the urge to "get away" and "live somewhere else" is a natural developmental stage. Some adolescents are more creative at expressing this strong drive to be independent than others. It's a great thing to have space and support to do this exploration and learning that we all desire. Even a huge cardboard box or a blanket over a table can keep your kids quiet and absorbed in creativity for hours! Start doing that when they're small, before electronics. You'll be building them up for free. (yes, go under the table too sometimes :) and give 'em a sleeping bag
You missed a few points about David Hahn “The Radioactive Boy Scout”. Initially he’d been doing his experiments at his father’s house. After spilling some chemicals he was relegated to the basement, but after a small explosion he was then relegated to his mother’s house. Also, he was well aware of how dangerous the experimental breeder reactor could be (it wasn’t a breeder reactor, more like a pile of radioactive material emitting quite a bit of radiation. He just thought he could control it. Had he built an appropriate concrete shield and attached it all to a steam engine he definitely could have produced electricity safely. But the way, while his homemade neutron gun DID produce neutrons, the rest of the apparatus was emitting a variety of alpha, beta, and gamma radiation. Much more dangerous stuff. Frankly, him doing all of this was ingenious. A terrible idea, but ingenious. I want to know what idiot didn’t make sure he took physics with a chemistry minor. David could have been a great physicist or nuclear technician. He also joined the US Navy later in life. Kyle Hill and Plainly Difficult both have great videos about the story if anyone wants to learn more.
I like the one about the teen who built a wind turbine for generating electricity for his family and then built more wind turbines to generate electricity for others in his village. The ability to pump water would have been a life altering event for many in his village. That's a truly exceptional young man.
Great parents too. I wouldn't trust a lot of kids to have that much privacy. His parents don't seem the type to make sure he's not doing anything nefarious.
I can't believe the kid just made 1,5k in holiday to fund his project. Back home that's 1.5millions many families can't even make it in a year. Talking about high life 😢
Kid not only earned the money to make it, but gathered the materials, and knew to ask about how to build it properly. Kid is could become an architect with that level of skill.
I think Luke has a bright future ahead of himself! He has more room than I did in the bedsit I rented when I was 20! All the best to everyone who has such a positive attitude and outlook on life!
Wonderful to see positive creations by such wee youngsters. I Love Tiny Homes, so find it fantastic that he built his own there and learnt even more lifetime skills. Very sad about the lad who was building the radioactive reactor, he had such talent and tremendous capabilities but neither the parents nor his teachers recognised it to nurture it in the right direction. Incredibly sad that such a marvellous mind was lost at 39 when he could have been so fantastic. Love the young lad who created electricity for his family then others. It's such a vital resource that so many people take for granted. Fascinating and uplifting video, cheers Be Amazed 😊
When I was a kid, I made my own flying machines. My father worked in a materials factory and would bring home rolls of this tarp material. Made everything from parachutes to paragliders to hang gliders. When I look back I'm just grateful to have all my limbs intact.
@@Sad_cat_studio No blueprints but I went through the whole process of engineering development in chronological sequence. First I discovered why you need grommets (lol) because otherwise the string holding the tarp cloth to the frame just rips right through. 1st model consisted of a kite made of 1x2 lumber pieces but that was too heavy so I cut each of the pieces lengthwise the entire length. With a hand saw. When even that proved too heavy, I did it AGAIN. Then needed reinforcements, and so on. We had a big yard because although suburban, it was a property 6x what everyone else had. I would launch from the roof of the garage and end up in the tall grass about 30 feet (?) away. They worked more like a parachute than anything else because I'm pretty sure none of these gliders were big enough.
David's case of nuclear fun makes me more concerned that he was able to just call the regulatory commission and they told him exactly what he needed. I kinda wish someone had noticed the kid and helped him with better, safer supplies. Who knows what kind of genius would have spawned from that obviously very bright kid.
In 1980 I was fifteen. I built multiple transmitters and figured out how to create the side bands for stereo. My transmitter reached a ten mile radius on high end FM frequency band. I later created an automated DTMF controlled mobile phone patch that converted ordinary CB radios into mobile phones as I still have this unit today. I sure do miss Radio Shack..
Matt is living proof of the kind of hard working, ingenious, resourceful, talented child a person can have with encouragement and supervision. Well done Matt and I remember your tent/camping idea that you accomplished.
Luke is an inspiration. David, however, is a object lesson in, "just because you can does not mean you should." Now, Andreas is another inspiration. Boys. They always seem to want to do the maddest things. It beats fighting, though. I'm glad Andreas was sensible about his cave.
The zombie apocalypse hole was a great project for those kids! It was a tough call to have to fill it in, but as a homeowner and mother, there's a lot of liability having something like that on your property. It is as tempting and potentially dangerous as a small swimming pool, but IMHO the hole is more fun and easier to have!
Very nice done. It is a good example what kids can do with the support from the parents to belief in him and give him the freedom to realize his project. Anyway,, this young fallow deserve all the respect and improves what kids are be able to do if the parents only belief in there kids. Greets from Holland
I once built an igloo and a snow tunnel. All in a day's work, we got that very rare snow that was like styrofoam. So I took a bread knife from the kitchen, and used a snow drift to cut out cubes of snow, hauled each and every one of them to the front yard, and built an igloo. Then after that was done, I recycled the drift, and dug a long tunnel that nearly spanned a quarter mile. I was in my early teens. Sadly, where I live, snow in that consistency and quantity is extremely rare, so I never had the opportunity to build another igloo and tunnel system. That was the day I learned that igloos are actually quite warm and comfortable. And snow is heavier than you think.
Is it still there ? I mean I know you said you don’t get that special snow but you did get it that one time and since you already told us you built the igloo and the 1/4 mile tunnel. I hope those neighborhood bullies didn’t destroy it , or the local homeless population took it over and destroyed it with their drug use and lack of resources to maintain it. The only thing I don’t understand is how you prevented it from melting when the winter ended . Either way if you figured a way to prevent the temperature from getting over. 32 degrees and the homeless population isn’t squatting inside the tunnel than it still might be there.
@@mrbig4532 I grew up in the middle of nowhere. And I never said anything about how long it lasted, so I don't know where you got that bit from. The tunnel was easy, since the property line had a fence that spanned it, the perfect place for snow to drift and collect. All I had to do was dig along the drift. It was only a little project I did because I was bored.
@@UncleThor I was just asking if it could still be there, you know I don’t what part of the world you are from , you could be from somewhere where it’s cold all year round like Antarctica . I mean 1/4 mile tunnel is a lot of work it took like 6 years to build the channel tunnel which is a little longer that your 1/4 mile ice tunnel but they used machines and thousands of labors you did it by yourself with a bread knife!
There's a similar story to William's that actually got a movie adaptation "The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind", the main difference involved poachers wanting to destroy a tree line near a river, the trees formed a protective bank that prevented dangerous flooding, but the river even though it was few miles from the village was the only dependable water source despite there being a well, the problem was the well was too deep and a pump was required to get the water. It's a really good movie and was on Netflix until a few years ago.
They are all amazing young minds. Too bad for David Hahn that no one saw his potential and leverage it in a meaningful way. He could have become a great physicist.
I would not mind a tiny house if it had a place to cook, eat, shower, a toilet and a place for my pc. I do not care for big houses they take longer to clean and I am lazy. Lukes house is mighty impressive though, I failed at a tree house and ended up giving up so that makes me even more impressed.
Luke is basically "Young Sheldon" then I assume! Getting Americium from smoke detectors and building a reactor was one of the last episodes of season 1 I think
Definitely do more of this content Be Amazed! Motivational. Inspirational. Creative. Problem solving. And for this to be done by youth who gained many life lessons...future entrepreneurs! Minus the reactor kid =p The right minds in the right place makes all the change to this world.
bro if i had the materials i could make a fusion reactor, but i will need a vacuum pump and a airtight seal, and an deuterium cell. and 60000 volts. but my parents say "ItS TOo DaNGErOus" while deuterium isnt even poisonous and the radioactivity will do nothing, maybe shorthen my life with a week, but thats just a small price to pay, plus there is already a boy aged 12 who built it and he has a guinness record , THAT MAKES ME SO FUCING MAD, CUZ HE ISNT SMART, HE JUST GOT HIS PARENTS TO BUY HIM MATERIALS, AND THE BAD THING IS, IM 13 NOW AAAARRGGG
My house doesn't qualify as "tiny" by thus definition, but people call it that often. I have less than 800 square feet for me and my 2 daughters. They each have their own room, and the back porch was boxed in to serve as my bedroom. The queen bed fits end-to-end across the back of the room, but was a tight fit and had to be convinced. I have a wardrobe cabinet and small plastic shelving unit that doubles as a nightstand, total of about 60 square feet for my room. And I like it.
You need to make a video about Homer Hickam Jr., Quentin Wilson, Jimmy O'Dell Carroll, Roy Lee Cooke, Billy Rose and Sherman Siers also known as “The Rocket Boys”
Story 2: Parents of the year right there. Kid's chemistry experiments cause problems? Ah, just make him do them in the outside shed, what could go wrong?
Here’s a story for you I’m a 11 year old with a dream of being a big time coder, one day I couldn’t find any new or good games and I already wanted to be a coder so I got to work and used trial and error to just keep on seeing what works WITHOUT TUTORIALS it’s crazy I learned a lot and all alone because I have no friends also I’m only currently 11 when I learned coding I was EIGHT yeah so if you have a dream and put ur time to it u probably will succeed! Have a great day!
It’s a shame the young man who created the nuclear reactor wasn’t taken under somebody’s wing, who was incredibly intelligent and helped him. He could’ve fixed the plastic problem or the solar problem. The other kids were really cool too.
What's impressive about the Radioactive boyscout- this was all before the internet, I've always been fascinated by this story. I've always wanted to try building my own reactor- of course I won't even if I could because duh, radiation.
So Matt Ryan is a licensed plumber, electrician,carpenter/framer,bought the land, tied into the utilities of the city, got all the permits, and fully furnished it for 8k?😂
The story about the windmill actually has a book with the full story book is called The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind . Its a very good book i read it earlier this year and immediately reconized every little detail of the story. Not begging but please pin.
I guess David missed the part where radioactive substances should be handled in a concrete-built bunker or a room and a zinc-plated PPE... There is actually a movie about William's Windmill; it is a great film...
I come from a very large family of 8 children. As a result of the size of our family we did not get the same sort of treats as other children. In no way was my.mother lax and inattentive though. We were brought up in a strict and disciplined environment. Due to the lack of toys and things other children take for granted we chose to make our own toys. This adventure and pastime my mother heartedly approved of but because she was so busy with household chores she could not always check up to see what we were doing. We made our own tree houses, dug tunnels built forts out of scrap and all sorts of things including making our own kites. In our country Zimbabwe we would never have been able to source the material for a nuclear reactor but when we complained to my mother that we were bored she told us to read. The only reading material in the house was a set of encyclopedia Britannica. So yes we did read up about nuclear bombs and there was even diagrams of what they looked like. Knowing that for us at that time it was impossible to get the right materials for the project was hugely disappointing however we did choose another older weapon to make. With a little charcoal from our braai stand, some flours of sulphur and some salt peter we mixed a batch of gun powder. Outside not inside we tried to make our own rockets using cardboard tubes from the waste but once again we were very disappointed when they did not take off. Unfortunately in my father's garage the glass jar we had the gunpowder in slipped out of the hands of my brother and a spark from the shattered glass set it alight and the garage had oil spilled on the floor which started a fire. However being resourceful children we quickly threw sand on the flames and the fire stopped. We got bored with this project and were a little afraid of the consequences should a much worse accident with this volatile mixture occur. So we stuck with less dangerous games. But there was a very positive result from all our so called naughty poor mucking around. All five of my brothers took up apprenticeships after school and after hours studied to become fully qualified engineers with high paying jobs. Although one of them tragically died young the rest have continued even into retirement to have productive hobbies where they still benefit from their engineering skills. My sisters and I have held jobs in nursing, computer graphic design and stock control. After retirement I am still doing a lot of research into history, archaeology and I often do a lot of home DIY using sound geometric patterns, techniques and principles. I am sorry that that.young man went astray but my family was blessed with a mother who kept us on a tight lead and her principles have enabled us to build a good character. I was brought up in a Christian family and only as a much older adult did I revert to Islam. But amazingly my mother also enrolled us in projects where we would learn teamwork with others and how to help others as a result we joined the Scouts and Girl Guides and we also attended classes at our local St John's Ambulance Brigade and every Sunday we went to Sunday school. My Mom was an incredible lady. Thanks Mom.
The book of chemistry experiments reminds me of a book in my high school library, I graduated in 1976 . The book I would be looking at had recipies for things like gunpowder, nitroglycerin and all kinds of bombs and ways to set them off. I didn't create any of these even though they had blueprints and step by step instructions. By the way a Catholic High School and now a retirement home.😂😅😂😅
It also showed how to build the nuclear reactor and triggering nuclear weapons. Just stating how insane and unsafe books in libraries are and they shoud be proof read before kids can learn and construct. I like having fingers and staying out of jail.
As a builder of wacky independent structures my entire life and a student of child development as well as raised 3 creative kids, the urge to "get away" and "live somewhere else" is a natural developmental stage. Some adolescents are more creative at expressing this strong drive to be independent than others. It's a great thing to have space and support to do this exploration and learning that we all desire. Even a huge cardboard box or a blanket over a table can keep your kids quiet and absorbed in creativity for hours! Start doing that when they're small, before electronics. You'll be building them up for free. (yes, go under the table too sometimes :) and give 'em a sleeping bag
You missed a few points about David Hahn “The Radioactive Boy Scout”. Initially he’d been doing his experiments at his father’s house. After spilling some chemicals he was relegated to the basement, but after a small explosion he was then relegated to his mother’s house.
Also, he was well aware of how dangerous the experimental breeder reactor could be (it wasn’t a breeder reactor, more like a pile of radioactive material emitting quite a bit of radiation. He just thought he could control it. Had he built an appropriate concrete shield and attached it all to a steam engine he definitely could have produced electricity safely. But the way, while his homemade neutron gun DID produce neutrons, the rest of the apparatus was emitting a variety of alpha, beta, and gamma radiation. Much more dangerous stuff.
Frankly, him doing all of this was ingenious. A terrible idea, but ingenious. I want to know what idiot didn’t make sure he took physics with a chemistry minor. David could have been a great physicist or nuclear technician. He also joined the
US Navy later in life.
Kyle Hill and Plainly Difficult both have great videos about the story if anyone wants to learn more.
He clearly kept up with the chemistry.
With a type of ice you smoke instead of cool drinks with
I like the one about the teen who built a wind turbine for generating electricity for his family and then built more wind turbines to generate electricity for others in his village. The ability to pump water would have been a life altering event for many in his village. That's a truly exceptional young man.
There is a book you can read that gives more details about him and how he mad wind power.
I think there's a movie about it
@@yuuveldr2613Yes, there is.
Name. The boy who harnessed the wind.
I wathced it in school and boy it was fantastic.
@@TunaBear64I read the book along with watching the movie
@@TunaBear64 Sounds like a good movie to check out.
Good job Luke you made your area basically your own room to live in
Great parents too.
I wouldn't trust a lot of kids to have that much privacy. His parents don't seem the type to make sure he's not doing anything nefarious.
That's the coolest mini house I've ever seen good job
Only 12 too, that's great!
I can't believe the kid just made 1,5k in holiday to fund his project. Back home that's 1.5millions many families can't even make it in a year. Talking about high life 😢
Impressive this guy not just build a cool house but also learning how to build it himself
Kid not only earned the money to make it, but gathered the materials, and knew to ask about how to build it properly. Kid is could become an architect with that level of skill.
It's great to know that many young people are so creative. I hope they inspire more great kids.
I think Luke has a bright future ahead of himself! He has more room than I did in the bedsit I rented when I was 20!
All the best to everyone who has such a positive attitude and outlook on life!
Wonderful to see positive creations by such wee youngsters. I Love Tiny Homes, so find it fantastic that he built his own there and learnt even more lifetime skills. Very sad about the lad who was building the radioactive reactor, he had such talent and tremendous capabilities but neither the parents nor his teachers recognised it to nurture it in the right direction. Incredibly sad that such a marvellous mind was lost at 39 when he could have been so fantastic. Love the young lad who created electricity for his family then others. It's such a vital resource that so many people take for granted. Fascinating and uplifting video, cheers Be Amazed 😊
That’s so awesome Luke. Great job 👏🏻.
Bro, your voice is one of the actual reasons why BE AMAZED is one of my favorite channels.
This narrator? He is literally the worst. His stupid constant and ridiculous inflections. His terrible attempt at humor. He's terrible.
His voice sucks
True dat!!!
I love the one who made his own radio station. That's next level
no, its next level how he got the materials, i could build that
@@Sad_cat_studiocould or couldn't
When I was a kid, I made my own flying machines. My father worked in a materials factory and would bring home rolls of this tarp material. Made everything from parachutes to paragliders to hang gliders. When I look back I'm just grateful to have all my limbs intact.
you are funny but thats true you could've gotten hurt harharharhr
did they work, and if yes, would u send me some blueprints?
@@Sad_cat_studio No blueprints but I went through the whole process of engineering development in chronological sequence. First I discovered why you need grommets (lol) because otherwise the string holding the tarp cloth to the frame just rips right through. 1st model consisted of a kite made of 1x2 lumber pieces but that was too heavy so I cut each of the pieces lengthwise the entire length. With a hand saw. When even that proved too heavy, I did it AGAIN. Then needed reinforcements, and so on. We had a big yard because although suburban, it was a property 6x what everyone else had. I would launch from the roof of the garage and end up in the tall grass about 30 feet (?) away. They worked more like a parachute than anything else because I'm pretty sure none of these gliders were big enough.
You go, Luke!!
David's case of nuclear fun makes me more concerned that he was able to just call the regulatory commission and they told him exactly what he needed. I kinda wish someone had noticed the kid and helped him with better, safer supplies. Who knows what kind of genius would have spawned from that obviously very bright kid.
In 1980 I was fifteen. I built multiple transmitters and figured out how to create the side bands for stereo. My transmitter reached a ten mile radius on high end FM frequency band. I later created an automated DTMF controlled mobile phone patch that converted ordinary CB radios into mobile phones as I still have this unit today. I sure do miss Radio Shack..
Matt is living proof of the kind of hard working, ingenious, resourceful, talented child a person can have with encouragement and supervision. Well done Matt and I remember your tent/camping idea that you accomplished.
Congratulations William Kamkwamba, I am from Malawi too and your achievement means a lot
Luke built an amazing house! He's so talented!
My friend, at age 20, built a homemade igloo for his little sister and him to chill in. I thought it was sweet. 🥰
the kid who made his own windmill is impressive
That was made into a film. It's called the boy who harnessed the wind.
@@davidrogan1292 oh nice will have to watch that movie thanks!
Luke's tiny house is so impressive!🤩
I like your TH-cam videos
Luke is an inspiration. David, however, is a object lesson in, "just because you can does not mean you should." Now, Andreas is another inspiration. Boys. They always seem to want to do the maddest things. It beats fighting, though. I'm glad Andreas was sensible about his cave.
The zombie apocalypse hole was a great project for those kids! It was a tough call to have to fill it in, but as a homeowner and mother, there's a lot of liability having something like that on your property. It is as tempting and potentially dangerous as a small swimming pool, but IMHO the hole is more fun and easier to have!
Very nice done. It is a good example what kids can do with the support from the parents to belief in him and give him the freedom to realize his project. Anyway,, this young fallow deserve all the respect and improves what kids are be able to do if the parents only belief in there kids.
Greets from Holland
I once built an igloo and a snow tunnel. All in a day's work, we got that very rare snow that was like styrofoam. So I took a bread knife from the kitchen, and used a snow drift to cut out cubes of snow, hauled each and every one of them to the front yard, and built an igloo. Then after that was done, I recycled the drift, and dug a long tunnel that nearly spanned a quarter mile. I was in my early teens.
Sadly, where I live, snow in that consistency and quantity is extremely rare, so I never had the opportunity to build another igloo and tunnel system. That was the day I learned that igloos are actually quite warm and comfortable. And snow is heavier than you think.
Is it still there ? I mean I know you said you don’t get that special snow but you did get it that one time and since you already told us you built the igloo and the 1/4 mile tunnel. I hope those neighborhood bullies didn’t destroy it , or the local homeless population took it over and destroyed it with their drug use and lack of resources to maintain it. The only thing I don’t understand is how you prevented it from melting when the winter ended . Either way if you figured a way to prevent the temperature from getting over. 32 degrees and the homeless population isn’t squatting inside the tunnel than it still might be there.
@@mrbig4532 I grew up in the middle of nowhere. And I never said anything about how long it lasted, so I don't know where you got that bit from. The tunnel was easy, since the property line had a fence that spanned it, the perfect place for snow to drift and collect. All I had to do was dig along the drift.
It was only a little project I did because I was bored.
@@UncleThor I was just asking if it could still be there, you know I don’t what part of the world you are from , you could be from somewhere where it’s cold all year round like Antarctica . I mean 1/4 mile tunnel is a lot of work it took like 6 years to build the channel tunnel which is a little longer that your 1/4 mile ice tunnel but they used machines and thousands of labors you did it by yourself with a bread knife!
There's a similar story to William's that actually got a movie adaptation "The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind", the main difference involved poachers wanting to destroy a tree line near a river, the trees formed a protective bank that prevented dangerous flooding, but the river even though it was few miles from the village was the only dependable water source despite there being a well, the problem was the well was too deep and a pump was required to get the water. It's a really good movie and was on Netflix until a few years ago.
that realy sucks that it's on netflix anymore ):
Don't judge a house by its exterior, kids. 🏡
Tell that to a zoning board
Man the house sure looks amazing to be in
Dont sweat the petty things, and dont pet the sweaty things…
They are all amazing young minds. Too bad for David Hahn that no one saw his potential and leverage it in a meaningful way. He could have become a great physicist.
David just found the anarchist handbook and went nuts
nukes + David + reactor = cancer cancer + cancer = death death + death = )#&*-)&($(#,2’kdd..!ei
@@We_Have_Spokenautocorrect is a B
@@We_Have_Spoken Cook book food for dinner 🥣🍝🥗 drinks 🍷 the chocolate factory is messenger and then we can go out Friday night
I would not mind a tiny house if it had a place to cook, eat, shower, a toilet and a place for my pc. I do not care for big houses they take longer to clean and I am lazy. Lukes house is mighty impressive though, I failed at a tree house and ended up giving up so that makes me even more impressed.
These are actually insane
As a Pokémon fan while playing alpha sapphire I love the secret bases and Luke made his own and definitely earned my respect and Extra exp
LOL @ the shade at the orange menace!
The way the locals taught to wire and carpet just gave him a way to make more money through his life with teaching trade skills, too smart.
Luke is basically "Young Sheldon" then I assume! Getting Americium from smoke detectors and building a reactor was one of the last episodes of season 1 I think
Definitely do more of this content Be Amazed! Motivational. Inspirational. Creative. Problem solving. And for this to be done by youth who gained many life lessons...future entrepreneurs! Minus the reactor kid =p The right minds in the right place makes all the change to this world.
This is why the Creativity of Children should be Embraced!
He is remembered as the radioactive boy scout
His scout leaders gave him glowing praise. He just glowed!
@@nick6varhe radiated satisfaction, absolutely beaming with pride
I think I had read about him in a past Readers Digest edition.
but isn’t that a young sheldon episode?
bro if i had the materials i could make a fusion reactor, but i will need a vacuum pump and a airtight seal, and an deuterium cell. and 60000 volts. but my parents say "ItS TOo DaNGErOus" while deuterium isnt even poisonous and the radioactivity will do nothing, maybe shorthen my life with a week, but thats just a small price to pay, plus there is already a boy aged 12 who built it and he has a guinness record , THAT MAKES ME SO FUCING MAD, CUZ HE ISNT SMART, HE JUST GOT HIS PARENTS TO BUY HIM MATERIALS, AND THE BAD THING IS, IM 13 NOW AAAARRGGG
Eggbert needs his own spin off channel. 🥰
Tbh luke is an amazing kid being only a young age you go luke❤❤❤❤
The second one- Jacob. What an odd and dangerous way to spoil your kid!
We learned about William Kamkwamba in school because he has his own book, it is so good i really recommend you to read it.
The second kid is definetly Senku Ishigami IRL 😂
Luke can also make his tiny house an AirBNB if he wants to and have all the money for toys and videogames he wants.
Funny how he calls an aerogenerator a "wind generator"
Dude, it doesn't generate wind... That's called a fan...
I love your vids you make me smart😊
Some of them guys that built their own houses are dope I might be the next one on Be Amazed haha
keep us posted 👀
😂 😂🤣❤ love the " other orange face"
Luke proves that size doesn’t matter
Hey man. Where can we send our inputs to your stories/ series? Thanks for you daily contents
There's a link in the video Description above to send stories and ideas in 😊
I just love be amezed!!!❤🎉 Specialy the bad jockes 😅 they are so good!
The grandfather's pickaxe got me 😂😂😂 15:11
Great work Luke.
Thank you! You gave me an idea! I want to build something again.
Luke is growing to be a real handy man. Awesome!
EXCELLENT!
Luke you are awesome 😊 beautiful mini House
Already Luke has my mind blown. I can't believe he built that beautiful house almost himself!
My house doesn't qualify as "tiny" by thus definition, but people call it that often.
I have less than 800 square feet for me and my 2 daughters. They each have their own room, and the back porch was boxed in to serve as my bedroom. The queen bed fits end-to-end across the back of the room, but was a tight fit and had to be convinced. I have a wardrobe cabinet and small plastic shelving unit that doubles as a nightstand, total of about 60 square feet for my room.
And I like it.
Better than brightside
Your right
That's crazy 😂😂😂
Luke is a beast. To hell with a club house. Dude made a mini pad.
You need to make a video about Homer Hickam Jr., Quentin Wilson, Jimmy O'Dell Carroll, Roy Lee Cooke, Billy Rose and Sherman Siers also known as “The Rocket Boys”
15:15 The ultimate "It's not a phase mom!"
Yeah, I am impressed by Luke's house,
I didn't expect that.
Love your video Be Amazed and keep up the great work you are awesome
Story 2: Parents of the year right there. Kid's chemistry experiments cause problems? Ah, just make him do them in the outside shed, what could go wrong?
so many innovative kids i wish others were like these kids cause its not easy to make something like this
11:16 bro is this kid sheldon or somethin??
I have to admit i got excited when when I figured the then 14 year old William Kamkwamba from my country was mentioned. ☺
Here’s a story for you I’m a 11 year old with a dream of being a big time coder, one day I couldn’t find any new or good games and I already wanted to be a coder so I got to work and used trial and error to just keep on seeing what works WITHOUT TUTORIALS it’s crazy I learned a lot and all alone because I have no friends also I’m only currently 11 when I learned coding I was EIGHT yeah so if you have a dream and put ur time to it u probably will succeed! Have a great day!
Real life Phineas... or maybe Ferb
Blame the children is not the answer.
I like the Luke thrill house 😍😍
Edit: I liked all of those creations
Now he a true minecraft player
I loved this video! I don't even have such talent
It’s a shame the young man who created the nuclear reactor wasn’t taken under somebody’s wing, who was incredibly intelligent and helped him. He could’ve fixed the plastic problem or the solar problem. The other kids were really cool too.
Bravo, William!
Bro I cant even build a cube out of wood that's crazy kids can build small houses
i am amazed!
I made a 2 meter x 1 meter hole on a beach with a small plastic shovel
The nuclear reactor is 😳 Holy cow, that's wild!
Wow, imagine the man cave Luke will have someday!
What's impressive about the Radioactive boyscout- this was all before the internet, I've always been fascinated by this story. I've always wanted to try building my own reactor- of course I won't even if I could because duh, radiation.
PART 2 PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
you should rename this video to “Kids that made Crazy projects”
I liked Matt's tiny house.
At least the nuclear reactor didn’t explode. *not sure if it even could*
So Matt Ryan is a licensed plumber, electrician,carpenter/framer,bought the land, tied into the utilities of the city, got all the permits, and fully furnished it for 8k?😂
The story about the windmill actually has a book with the full story book is called The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind . Its a very good book i read it earlier this year and immediately reconized every little detail of the story. Not begging but please pin.
Day 1 of asking to bring back the animation shouting "Amazing" at the intro plz? I Liked it
I would prolly live in all these mini homes
*"Ferb, i know what we are going to do today"* ahh stories 💀💀💀💀
I guess David missed the part where radioactive substances should be handled in a concrete-built bunker or a room and a zinc-plated PPE... There is actually a movie about William's Windmill; it is a great film...
thank you for getting rid of the screaming at the outset of your videos
I ❤ Your videos
9:44 Bro tried to RECREATE Chernobyl for a Badge. 💀
Nice stuff
I come from a very large family of 8 children. As a result of the size of our family we did not get the same sort of treats as other children. In no way was my.mother lax and inattentive though. We were brought up in a strict and disciplined environment.
Due to the lack of toys and things other children take for granted we chose to make our own toys. This adventure and pastime my mother heartedly approved of but because she was so busy with household chores she could not always check up to see what we were doing. We made our own tree houses, dug tunnels built forts out of scrap and all sorts of things including making our own kites.
In our country Zimbabwe we would never have been able to source the material for a nuclear reactor but when we complained to my mother that we were bored she told us to read.
The only reading material in the house was a set of encyclopedia Britannica. So yes we did read up about nuclear bombs and there was even diagrams of what they looked like. Knowing that for us at that time it was impossible to get the right materials for the project was hugely disappointing however we did choose another older weapon to make. With a little charcoal from our braai stand, some flours of sulphur and some salt peter we mixed a batch of gun powder. Outside not inside we tried to make our own rockets using cardboard tubes from the waste but once again we were very disappointed when they did not take off. Unfortunately in my father's garage the glass jar we had the gunpowder in slipped out of the hands of my brother and a spark from the shattered glass set it alight and the garage had oil spilled on the floor which started a fire. However being resourceful children we quickly threw sand on the flames and the fire stopped. We got bored with this project and were a little afraid of the consequences should a much worse accident with this volatile mixture occur. So we stuck with less dangerous games.
But there was a very positive result from all our so called naughty poor mucking around. All five of my brothers took up apprenticeships after school and after hours studied to become fully qualified engineers with high paying jobs. Although one of them tragically died young the rest have continued even into retirement to have productive hobbies where they still benefit from their engineering skills. My sisters and I have held jobs in nursing, computer graphic design and stock control. After retirement I am still doing a lot of research into history, archaeology and I often do a lot of home DIY using sound geometric patterns, techniques and principles.
I am sorry that that.young man went astray but my family was blessed with a mother who kept us on a tight lead and her principles have enabled us to build a good character. I was brought up in a Christian family and only as a much older adult did I revert to Islam. But amazingly my mother also enrolled us in projects where we would learn teamwork with others and how to help others as a result we joined the Scouts and Girl Guides and we also attended classes at our local St John's Ambulance Brigade and every Sunday we went to Sunday school. My Mom was an incredible lady. Thanks Mom.
The book of chemistry experiments reminds me of a book in my high school library, I graduated in 1976 . The book I would be looking at had recipies for things like gunpowder, nitroglycerin and all kinds of bombs and ways to set them off. I didn't create any of these even though they had blueprints and step by step instructions. By the way a Catholic High School and now a retirement home.😂😅😂😅
It also showed how to build the nuclear reactor and triggering nuclear weapons. Just stating how insane and unsafe books in libraries are and they shoud be proof read before kids can learn and construct. I like having fingers and staying out of jail.