I love the microwave intro. It reminds me of that one scene in Arrested Development where Barry puts a Ding Dong in the microwave with the foil still on.
I had my own microwave experience my first year in college. I went to an Arby's and purchased a couple of their roast beef sandwiches. I bought one too many and had one left over. Decided to reheat it in the microwave in the commuter dining area since I was a resident and had access to it after classes ended for the day. Long story short I didn't remove the aluminum foil the sandwich was wrapped in and naturally in slightly over as minute sparks started to flare up inside. I however was right there watching it heat up so I immediately shut it off. Once the foil stopped burning and fizzled out I got the sandwich and it was warmed up. However,both it and the inside of the microwave had a burnt odor. Fortunately it was late so nobody but I witnessed it. I got rid of what was left of the aluminum foil after eating the smokey tasting sandwich. As for what I like to cook it would have to be hot dogs. Technically they're already cooked so I'd just be reheating them in boiling water. If you mean cook as in from scratch with ingredients then it's macaroni and cheese. The instructions are simple to follow and you'd have to be as "smart" as the Internet Historian to muck that recipe up.
The whole "cook books with childhood stories" is mainly for copyright issue, I believe. Like you can't exactly copyright the recipe itself since the general idea of how to make, say a pizza, is too broad. But they *can* copyright the stories to sell the book.
There are/were some russian bears that get high off of helicopter fuel and they like huff on the empty barrels and iirc they like, sniff at helicopters and get quite close to them when they land
We let 'em cook and they've gone nuts with it, that's basically what the third segment is.
I love the microwave intro. It reminds me of that one scene in Arrested Development where Barry puts a Ding Dong in the microwave with the foil still on.
I had my own microwave experience my first year in college. I went to an Arby's and purchased a couple of their roast beef sandwiches. I bought one too many and had one left over. Decided to reheat it in the microwave in the commuter dining area since I was a resident and had access to it after classes ended for the day. Long story short I didn't remove the aluminum foil the sandwich was wrapped in and naturally in slightly over as minute sparks started to flare up inside. I however was right there watching it heat up so I immediately shut it off. Once the foil stopped burning and fizzled out I got the sandwich and it was warmed up. However,both it and the inside of the microwave had a burnt odor. Fortunately it was late so nobody but I witnessed it. I got rid of what was left of the aluminum foil after eating the smokey tasting sandwich.
As for what I like to cook it would have to be hot dogs. Technically they're already cooked so I'd just be reheating them in boiling water. If you mean cook as in from scratch with ingredients then it's macaroni and cheese. The instructions are simple to follow and you'd have to be as "smart" as the Internet Historian to muck that recipe up.
The whole "cook books with childhood stories" is mainly for copyright issue, I believe.
Like you can't exactly copyright the recipe itself since the general idea of how to make, say a pizza, is too broad. But they *can* copyright the stories to sell the book.
0:54 absolutely read him like a book
I've accidentally drank gasoline while siphoning it. It's truly awful and you can taste it for _HOURS_
9:42 reaction starts
Now I can't wait for the AI reaction!
Can't wait for y'all to do a reaction to his video on "totally serious business"
❤
In assuming either he didn't have the gas high enough or the water wasn't cold enough when he soaked it
There are/were some russian bears that get high off of helicopter fuel and they like huff on the empty barrels and iirc they like, sniff at helicopters and get quite close to them when they land