Boogan Im willing to bet also that soldier in ‘Nam also lost his life because of that. Imagine being his brother or sister or son or daughter or wife, and finding the helmet he was wearing while he took his final breath in a museum surrounded by medical artifacts and an overall disturbing atmosphere.
RedLegionnaire well, true. But I doubt that the family would’ve gotten the helmet. It’s technically theft of US property to take pieces of equipment that were issued to you as a soldier.
Wait. What if it was a Night At The Museum type deal and all you heard was the shrieks from chopped off heads in agony and with every turn you see rapidly deteriorating flesh and bones and fetuses. Lmao id watch that movie
You take out the femur, it completely takes away person's mobility. Made it easier to kill the person. As mentioned before from a previous comment, it was a strategy.
They say that to be shot during the Civil war was the worst. No morphine, no antibiotics, no doctors washing their hands and the worst part is the doctor would put his finger in the bullet hole. Can you imagine getting an arm or leg amputated? Those poor men. The agony they experienced is unimaginable. During the Civil war some genius created bullets that shattered when it hit bone. These guys on both sides didn't go through enough they needed this to add to the misery. I also read that during the CW they started embalming the dead so they would give the family some time to pick up their son or husband and he wouldn't be too decayed. God that war didn't end soon enough.
When I was in the 7th grade, 1959, I visited Washington DC on a school trip. We traveled by train from Atlanta Ga. to DC. I remember visiting a medical museum there that I remember as being was part of or near by the Smithsonian Institute. Don’t know if it was actually this same museum before it relocated. What I do remember is the same type of gross, interesting stuff on display there. Things I didn’t want to look at but somehow was curious to see. One display literally traumatized me and caused anxiety issues for years because of the fears it instilled in my mind that I couldn’t forget. I still suffer anxiety today. I’ve put that particular display behind me now, but I truly believe that visiting this museum was the beginning of a lifetime of anxiety issues for me.
7:00 is called FOP fibrodysplasia ossification progressiva. its when the muscles turn to bone with it being hit and eventually grows a second skeleton. I'm pre med and find all these disorders so fascinating!
Kenny S it happens when the person runs into something and they hit something like instead of forming a bruise they grow a extra skeleton or in really bad cases a simple touch can case a second skeleton to grow or it happens spontaneously it's all case by case and how bad they have FOP. But the most common is when they hit something. Sadly this illness is not diagnosed until the Individual is a child or up until teen years to yearly adulthood
@@heartofmusic9663 sooo... like some X-Men shit? I'm clumsy as hell so I'd have extra bone chunks sticking out every which way. Knee thingies sprouting outta my head, elbow thing poking from my shin, three or four ankles per foot...
Dear Mr. Carpetbagger, Thank you for sharing your travels and these great museums! I'm not able to travel anymore and I love history and exhibits. Thank you!!
does anyone else realize this probably one of the most deadliest places in America. they have preserved smallpox. if someone stole that or the glass cracked open countless people and animals could die
@@awesomecentar4233 there is only a small supply, because it was felt the disease had died out due to all the vaccinations that were given world wide. The problem is this...CDC has some small pox virus frozen is the scary bio hazard place in the lowest level of the CDC in Atlanta, more scary is, the Russians have it as well, and they played with it, really...they did, making it incurable...read The Demon in the freezer...it will blow your mind!
I’ve been there before and was absolutely fascinated. There have never been more medical learning achieved, during a shorter period of time, than during warfare. It’s a sad benefit if you want to call to that, but more medical advances have occurred as a result of combat than due to any other type of event. Fascinating having witnessed the place, and you really do leave with memories you’ll never get rid of.
Jesus and God ?? are Idiots oh man, an edgy Satanist. I don't know if I should cower in fear from your scawy rituals or laugh at your single digit IQ score
Looks like he was protected....mate that round has entered in the front and made a large exit in the back. Safe to say the person was killed instantly.
that was great. I love medical history. what rocked the most, was you. I love that you gave a warning. you were sensitive to the content. you really handled it well. there are only a handful of you tubers I would trust watching that content with, I am thrilled you are one of them.
Mad respect to the medical pioneers of the past. It’s because of them that we have the methods and technologies for health preservation and improvement that we have today.
I can't say any of this bothers or disturbs me, but I do feel deep sadness thinking about how much pain many of these poor people must have been in. I also feel deeply grateful to the folks who donated their bodies for these exhibits so we can continue to learn, teach new generations of doctors and nurses, and advance medicine. May they all rest in the peace and comfort they were denied in life. Thanks for the video, Carpetbagger.
I originally saw this while it resided in the Walter Reed museum. To me it was fascinating and a tribute to the art of medicine as practiced throughout the years. Granted, many people did not live to view their bits and pieces on display. Lots of medical students are grateful that these phenomena are available for study. Seeing the effects of smallpox are available, considering we’ve eradicated this beast!
I wanna say I love your page I’m visually impaired so I don’t drive and I’m disabled if I could I would do nothing but go around to museums but I’m not able to this allows me to see all of my favorite stuff I normally would not be able to I really love it thank you
Thank you so much for exploring this museum. I love gross anatomy museums. I went to Loma Linda University’s Fetal Museum, and it was fascinating. I also attended the Body World exhibit in Anchorage. It was surreal! If I had to pick one specific display that was mind blowing, it would be the intact nervous system that they had. I have Fibromyalgia, and seeing this display really put my illness into perspective. With hundreds of thousands of tiny nerve bundles in the body, I u sera tans my pain better. If you ever have an opportunity to catch that exhibit (I know the Body World exhibit travels), I highly recommend it. Again, thank you for bringing all these museums to my living room, I gratefully appreciate it!
My grandfather fell into one of those punji pits in ‘Nam. He made a recovery, but not nearly a full one. Had a spike through his left foot, upper thigh, and pelvis, as well as one that just missed his lungs and vital organs. My great uncle who was in ‘Nam actually stepped onto an old French Landmine, and survived the blast, but as a result of all the pressure being released into his body, his organs in his abdomen were forced up into his rib cage, essentially. He died in 2005 after having a heart attack, and because of his “unusual anatomy” (hospitals words) they couldn’t do much for him... Thanks for taking us along with you on your adventures!
Jesus Tap-dancing Christ, both of them are are horrifyingly lucky. Never thought my irrational fear of stepping on a land mine could become worse after reading about your great uncle’s organs being ragdolled into his rib cage.
I find this very interesting and the more you know about your own body, you should be grateful of all that takes place to keep you alive. I love seeing museums with these types of display. It's good to learn from the past and education can only enlighten you.
I went to the Walter Reed medical museum when I was 15 and while I was there, they were setting up a new exhibit with human brains. the lady setting it up saw how interested I was with everything there that she straight up said "hey! wanna hold a human brain?" and I was like hell yeah!!! she plopped it in my hands and it was really rubbery (if I could make an example, it felt sort of like dolphin skin or a super ball), not gross and squishy like I imagine. it was one of the best moments of my life!
So the brain she handed you was likely formalin fixed and preserved, which does make it feel rubbery and stiff. A brain fresh from a cadaver, left to sit on an exam table will collapse under its own weight, as the brain is suspended in cerebrospinal fluid within the cranium, and isn't used to atmospheric pressure. If I had to compare a "fresh" brain it to something, it would be a dense Jello, but holding a brain in any condition is still a very surreal experience.
This is the first video of yours that I saw and I loved it! Now I'm in the process of working my way through all your other videos. Keep up the great work :D
I swear i Only blinked like 5 times throughout this whole thing! This was so inspiring for any1, like myself, who is trying to prevent future war, at least to the degree we see here
You should have went to The Mutter Museum when you were in Philadelphia, Jacob! Very similar but much bigger and older, it was meant to be a doctors study museum but ended up being a popular draw with the general public and the subject of more than a few TV shows.
Before moving to Walter Reed, that museum was located at (or very near) the National Mall in DC. We moved to DC when I was 11 and my dad took us to the Mall every weekend to see something new. Most were great, but then we found that museum. That poor old elephantiasis leg was in there along with most of the things you saw (I'm sure.) The one thing I remember clearly, to this day, was a photograph. A sailor on an aircraft carrier had tripped and fallen into the spinning vertical rotor on a helicopter. This full color image showed a pair of shoulders and a neck, topped with a few pounds of ground meat. I didn't fully grasp what I was seeing until I saw a perfect right earlobe on one side. Then I saw two teeth, hanging by the roots, in front. For the first time in my life, I fainted. I'm sorry to say that the image burned itself into my memory and I can still see it all these years later. Needless to say, I never went back.
It’s fascinating that each and every human limb, brain, tissue, skeleton sample, had a life, a childhood, family, memories & that every brain sample holds so many glimpses of each persons experiences.
Come to Northern Nevada! Come see where mark Twain burned down half of Lake Tahoe's south end! Come see a gold plated Delorean so you can go back to the future in true style. Come see the old west mining town of Virginia City, beautifully preserved, and although rarely mentioned when talking about the gold rush, 80% of all the gold ever mined by humans on earth in history came from the Comstock Lode at Virginia City. I'll be happy to help you set up tours.
I couldn't help but laugh when you said, "...looks like a Christmas ham..." (the extended colon) - I will think of you every time I see a Christmas ham now. Whether I ever eat another one is a different story.
If you think that Museum was bad.. You should of went to the Mutter Museum when you were in Philadelphia..(and the museum has a very creepy vibe) Your next trip to Philly a must see..
I find this more interesting than gross. I feel so sad for the dude who’s bones fused though. How horrible! But that’s why we need places like this. So we can learn what happened
I hate people saying "This wasn't scary, It was cool." And all that stuff. As a nursing student, I agree and I would love to go out there and see all that stuff! But we are all different in what we like/can handle. It doesn't make you quirky nor is it a personality trait.
I thought this museum was incredible! It had lots of medical oddities. I only wish that they had Hitler's head in a jar. That would be so cool to look at! Thanks for sharing!
@@robdcollector2808 of course he does, my bad. And Bob Ross is playing Chess right now with Tupac, on a remote Island were Kurt Cobain, Elvis and Jim Morrison sing them Jingles while Harambe prepares the Banana Shakes.
That poor guy who was unable to move for 30 years was horrifying. It makes me feel so greatful for my life.
IKR like who would do that :( seems so sad and ya wonder why other ppl never said anything like never saw him etc ..
@TheOtherWhiteBread0 Hell no I'm having a pity party today.
you know what was his name or anything?
I feel like I should go run 3 miles just to honor that poor guy. His balls were probably close to as blue as the Pope’s.
grateful***
"Doesn't say if this guy survived or not"
Loll the size of the exit path in that helmet tells me the man did not survive.
Boogan I thought the same thing!!
Boogan Unless he wasn’t wearing the helmet when it got shot! 🤔
Boogan Im willing to bet also that soldier in ‘Nam also lost his life because of that. Imagine being his brother or sister or son or daughter or wife, and finding the helmet he was wearing while he took his final breath in a museum surrounded by medical artifacts and an overall disturbing atmosphere.
@@ILikeToLaughAtYou if they weren't the ones to donate it themselves.
RedLegionnaire well, true. But I doubt that the family would’ve gotten the helmet. It’s technically theft of US property to take pieces of equipment that were issued to you as a soldier.
Imagine being a security guard that HAS to patrol this place
SuperWaluigiRyan especially at night tho
Wait. What if it was a Night At The Museum type deal and all you heard was the shrieks from chopped off heads in agony and with every turn you see rapidly deteriorating flesh and bones and fetuses. Lmao id watch that movie
Sasuke Uchiha i-
Well the guards aren’t pussies so I’m sure it doesn’t bother them as much as you all.
@@gamernation1400 you say that wen u see a single eyeball turn at you and blink 😭😭
Nobody:
People during the civil war: *AIM FOR THE FEMUR*
Human Bean that was a strategy
Tbf if they hit the leg then they can't get away, and if they hit the right place in the leg it's a pretty quick death xx
Black people: STOP SHOOTING US!
Joe Biden: How about just the legs?
Cops: Don't Tell us what to do!
You take out the femur, it completely takes away person's mobility. Made it easier to kill the person. As mentioned before from a previous comment, it was a strategy.
Imagine being the dude shot by a bad shot.... cock and ball torture 😅😓😭
I like how he just casually said “alright we got somebody’s colon here” like if he was working at Home Depot
Lol😂
“If you are bothered by ANYTHING...”
me, at 3am: SURE I’LL WatCH iT ANywAY
that face is horrifying
You remind me of Big Al from Big Al's toy barn.
He reminded me of Sylvester from Sylvester and Tweedy Bird. I would like to hear him say "suffering suckatache"
That’s not very nice
Tyler Bridges Oh my god ya
@ITS YA BOI MIKE WAZOWSKI get a life
I was about to comment that but you were the first comments I saw
2:00 "God bless you, little guy."
That's so cute and wholesome lol
Bolsheviki shut up
It was.
😋
Aw
I completely loved that he said that. And he was totally sincere.
"I am way too classy to make some sort of zombie joke right now" lmfaoooo
Cam zombies would raid it haha lol
Yes said the guy how if he gets his arm lopped off I want a claw like that, lol
i am so grateful to be in perfect health after seeing all that
"seriously is this a museum or ed gein's basement" I SHOULDN'T HAVE LAUGHED AS HARD AS I DID
Civil war soldier: welp doc, looks like my leg is busted. Can ya fix it?
Doctor: Let's see... I got some staples and chewing gum, so we're good, yea
Hey my 3rd Gr-Grandfather was wounded in the Civil War. He survived and lived to be 94! People were a hell of alot tougher back then!
@@b3j8 94 is a hell of an age! Nothing but respect from me!
@@BeetleBuns I love history and the more you research into the how's and why's your ancestors did what they did, the more interesting it gets!
They say that to be shot during the Civil war was the worst. No morphine, no antibiotics, no doctors washing their hands and the worst part is the doctor would put his finger in the bullet hole. Can you imagine getting an arm or leg amputated? Those poor men. The agony they experienced is unimaginable. During the Civil war some genius created bullets that shattered when it hit bone. These guys on both sides didn't go through enough they needed this to add to the misery. I also read that during the CW they started embalming the dead so they would give the family some time to pick up their son or husband and he wouldn't be too decayed. God that war didn't end soon enough.
Plot twist:
He dies
I am offended by the fact that Reese's skeleton is not in his cute little space suit.
YAS I WISH
Me to if you fake real life then fake a real death
Just Me wym
@@Ducky_Lucky he's just a denier of people going to space
@@Mikhail_Malekov935 oh, course
his synopsis on everything is hilarious, but his voice seems so deadpan. that's the magic
3:58 Abraham Lincoln's DNA?
*Inhales *
CLOOOOONE HIIIIIIIIIIIIIGH!!!!
i thought the same
Star Wars: The Lincoln Wars.
DNA can't be well preserved in that condition
@Colin Chung BuT JoHn F kEnEdY WaS AsSaInAtEd.
haha the theme song was stuck in my head before i read this comment what a coincidence
You look like the manager from the show ‘Big Time Rush’
Nicole Alonso gustavo
I miss that show and Icarly and victorious. I was little while watching them
Nicole Alonso Gustavo
NO WAY THATS SO TRUE
The guy that goes all red-faced and has steam coming out from his ears when he’s mad?
Those skeletons of children were interesting. I never imagine babies having tiny little skeletons. Just wads of pudge.
Zachary Tait the shot of the infant and toddler skeletons just made me go “aww” i had never even thought of the concept before 😳
Wads of pudge? Wahahahaha!!!!
Fascinating, but you go too fast... and I wanted to see the malformed babies. Face on a torso? Yikes!
"...wads of pudge." This phrase had me laughing so hard I damned near dropped a pudge wad in my pants!
Babies are born with about 300 bones. That's about 30% more compared to adults who have 206 bones.
When I was in the 7th grade, 1959, I visited Washington DC on a school trip. We traveled by train from Atlanta Ga. to DC. I remember visiting a medical museum there that I remember as being was part of or near by the Smithsonian Institute. Don’t know if it was actually this same museum before it relocated. What I do remember is the same type of gross, interesting stuff on display there. Things I didn’t want to look at but somehow was curious to see. One display literally traumatized me and caused anxiety issues for years because of the fears it instilled in my mind that I couldn’t forget. I still suffer anxiety today. I’ve put that particular display behind me now, but I truly believe that visiting this museum was the beginning of a lifetime of anxiety issues for me.
I would love to go to that museum it wasn't scary I love it
You’re a disgusting human being.
I like that in a person
Same her! I find this really interesting not disgusting.
assassin wolf dog same I went into a mummy museum along time ago and I loved it
guys a porky pussy its scary WTFwimp
It wasn’t anything gross about it.
Belive it or not someone donated a half developed fetus to our school
That thing is 54 yrs old as of writing this comment
Wtf
Ralphj 2050 is that even legal?
Wtf
Person should be shot
@@avocadobabes2347 yes they can be donated for education purposes or medical research.
“Looks like he was protected.”
*has entry hole and exit hole on both sides of helmet
7:28
alot of people gave this museum...
_...a piece of their mind_
Steampunk Goat see yourself out
Steampunk Goat Oh....a good one. 😁 They'd give you a hand but most of them are behind cases.✌
ba doom pssshhhh
Well thats a no brainer....
*stand up comedy music plays*
7:00 is called FOP fibrodysplasia ossification progressiva. its when the muscles turn to bone with it being hit and eventually grows a second skeleton. I'm pre med and find all these disorders so fascinating!
Kenny S it happens when the person runs into something and they hit something like instead of forming a bruise they grow a extra skeleton or in really bad cases a simple touch can case a second skeleton to grow or it happens spontaneously it's all case by case and how bad they have FOP. But the most common is when they hit something. Sadly this illness is not diagnosed until the Individual is a child or up until teen years to yearly adulthood
R
Yhea I watched this on discovery
@@heartofmusic9663 sooo... like some X-Men shit?
I'm clumsy as hell so I'd have extra bone chunks sticking out every which way. Knee thingies sprouting outta my head, elbow thing poking from my shin, three or four ankles per foot...
As a surgical nurse, this makes me happy, damn I love this shit
Me to! It's nothing but interesting. I'd love to work there.
Thank you for all of the vital work you do, you’re a hero!
🤮
Heart. Lungs. Liver. Kidneys. I love an organ recital.
eggerhaus Good one! Too funny!
Thank you! Did you hear that a skeleton walked into a bar and said, "Gimme a beer and a mop!"
Might I suggest bloated colon on figured bass?
The words of Wilford Brimley in the classic horror movie 'The Thing' as they were dissecting that specimen.
Haggis!
Dear Mr. Carpetbagger,
Thank you for sharing your travels and these great museums! I'm not able to travel anymore and I love history and exhibits.
Thank you!!
As someone who loves the medical field, this is the most interesting museum you’ve done wdym
does anyone else realize this probably one of the most deadliest places in America. they have preserved smallpox. if someone stole that or the glass cracked open countless people and animals could die
The virus is pickled in formaldehyde with the rest of the exhibit so now inert.
Be more afraid of what is in the CDC's lowest level basement. The small pox virus seen here is inert.
David Oster There is a smallpox vaccine
@@awesomecentar4233 there is only a small supply, because it was felt the disease had died out due to all the vaccinations that were given world wide. The problem is this...CDC has some small pox virus frozen is the scary bio hazard place in the lowest level of the CDC in Atlanta, more scary is, the Russians have it as well, and they played with it, really...they did, making it incurable...read The Demon in the freezer...it will blow your mind!
David Oster ....i think this was how the Walking Dead got started from a mutter museum
It's amazing how entertaining one man could be
I’ve been there before and was absolutely fascinated. There have never been more medical learning achieved, during a shorter period of time, than during warfare. It’s a sad benefit if you want to call to that, but more medical advances have occurred as a result of combat than due to any other type of event. Fascinating having witnessed the place, and you really do leave with memories you’ll never get rid of.
I once went to one of these body museums and it scarred me for life. Several existential crisis were had.
Zombie zombie 😂
Zombie zombie I want to hug you all of a sudden for being so relatable
I went before too, my mind kind of distanced itself and it all seemed fake. I had to keep reminding myself that they were real.
Monokuma - why tho.
I would have nightmares.
So interesting, I don't see any horror in it. Some people had terrible things happen to them.
Cathi Scholl I think it’s kinda neat to learn about.
Ovahlls Agreed.
Cathi Scholl So interesting to you to see a fake pussy? Nigguh wtf!
Cathi Scholl same it looks cool to me i wish my dad could take me to more museums, i recently went to the holocaust museum
Agreed, its called life and science.
*Civil war exist*
Femur: so anyway i started breaking
8:35 never eating Christmas ham again
I'll eat more😏😏😏
@SUTTON, That was funny thank you, I needed that!!
Ham is nasty anyway
R.I.P xD
🤢🤮
If you break a bone, just whack some chewing gum on, you will be good to go haha😂😂
Haha true! I was thinking the same. I am sure it was plaster of Paris though.
Mandy wouldn’t it like bulge out of ur leg or arm
@@176gumi probably not, due to the muscle and thick layers of skin would most likely compress the chewing gum down
Joe Gower oh
Is chewing gum really that sticky?
Another episode of “why is this in my suggested videos, and why am I watching this”.
Got a Lincoln car ad before this video XD
I didn't because... Add Blocker Plus :)
Wow! If I turn it off, he can get laid!! That's awesome!
Abraham Lincoln is good
Yes
Jesus and God ?? are Idiots oh man, an edgy Satanist. I don't know if I should cower in fear from your scawy rituals or laugh at your single digit IQ score
Jesus and God ?? are Idiots hey watch what you're saying or *gulag* for you
Looks like he was protected....mate that round has entered in the front and made a large exit in the back. Safe to say the person was killed instantly.
jssmitty96 better to die fast then in pain and disfigured
He died the next day.
That was truly fascinating. The skeletons of the little babies broke my heart 😢
that was great. I love medical history. what rocked the most, was you. I love that you gave a warning. you were sensitive to the content. you really handled it well. there are only a handful of you tubers I would trust watching that content with, I am thrilled you are one of them.
“So there’s a slice of some one’s shoulder here...”
*Why?*
not a slice of a shoulder but a horizontal slice of the trunk
😂 a "slice"
to show an injury or damage from a disease
Mad respect to the medical pioneers of the past. It’s because of them that we have the methods and technologies for health preservation and improvement that we have today.
You look like the Animal Exterminater from Over the Hedge.
i shouldn't have laughed that hard
r/ murderedbywords
Amphibians..
I WAS WONDERING WHY HE LOOKED FAMILIAR
I love your videos. You’re very funny and classy and respectful to the places you visit.
This is exactly why I got into medicine and surgery , absolutely love it
You always find the coolest things to show us thanks!!!!
Just Me Sherry ya I know
You are right! I am not going to watch this although I am a sure I would find the subject matter interesting, But you are terrible!!!
hey, wheres john dillingers dick?
@@booboo2963 Up Jimmy Hoffa's ass.
Where's Jimmmy Hoffa's ass?
Exactly.
"I am too classy to make a zombie joke right now" I laughed out loud and scared my cat 😂
I can't say any of this bothers or disturbs me, but I do feel deep sadness thinking about how much pain many of these poor people must have been in. I also feel deeply grateful to the folks who donated their bodies for these exhibits so we can continue to learn, teach new generations of doctors and nurses, and advance medicine. May they all rest in the peace and comfort they were denied in life. Thanks for the video, Carpetbagger.
I'm a Nurse so this is all very interesting to me. Thank you for sharing.
“Staples and chewing gum”😂😂😂
Yeah, its crazy. Ouch!
I originally saw this while it resided in the Walter Reed museum. To me it was fascinating and a tribute to the art of medicine as practiced throughout the years. Granted, many people did not live to view their bits and pieces on display. Lots of medical students are grateful that these phenomena are available for study. Seeing the effects of smallpox are available, considering we’ve eradicated this beast!
It's called empathy Jacob, That's why it disturbs you. Thanks for the video.
I wanna say I love your page I’m visually impaired so I don’t drive and I’m disabled if I could I would do nothing but go around to museums but I’m not able to this allows me to see all of my favorite stuff I normally would not be able to I really love it thank you
Thank you so much for exploring this museum. I love gross anatomy museums. I went to Loma Linda University’s Fetal Museum, and it was fascinating. I also attended the Body World exhibit in Anchorage. It was surreal! If I had to pick one specific display that was mind blowing, it would be the intact nervous system that they had. I have Fibromyalgia, and seeing this display really put my illness into perspective. With hundreds of thousands of tiny nerve bundles in the body, I u sera tans my pain better. If you ever have an opportunity to catch that exhibit (I know the Body World exhibit travels), I highly recommend it. Again, thank you for bringing all these museums to my living room, I gratefully appreciate it!
That's actually quite fascinating. It basically shows the evolution of modern medicine as we know it today
I think some of the best parts of your videos is your commentary. Keep up the good work!
After watching this just makes you feel like doctors nurses and medicine are true blessings from god
This place has to be Haunted AS SHIT.
Jon Miller I believe in ghosts. Lez gooooooo
Jon Miller the aroma of my shit haunts everyone.
Jon Miller ghost aren’t real
@@rebelson5796 You don't know that. Are you the almighty creator of everything? No you aren't.
When it was housed in the historic Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Maybe? That looks like a relatively new building
Looks like my kind of museum! I need to go there!
RhettyforFun as one of the presentations?
"I'm waaaay too classy to make a zombie joke right now"
mood
"Is this a museum or Ed Gein's basement"
Good one
fug lmaoo
I wish haha!
It's ed's basement obviously
"Seriously, is this a museum or Ed Geins' basement?"
7:23 look like the little skeletons you can get at halloween stores, kinda cute.
They're baby skeletons!
Ok, we know that
I guess they are baby bones 😆
kinda cute😭
I'm watching this while eating breakfast 😂😂😂
Lol! :)
Briana Schino THERE WAS A #VIGINIA WTF
Briana Schino: I am too!
Apple fritter for me
Xavierr Thompson
I didn't see a Virginia there, but they did have a vagina.
My grandfather fell into one of those punji pits in ‘Nam. He made a recovery, but not nearly a full one. Had a spike through his left foot, upper thigh, and pelvis, as well as one that just missed his lungs and vital organs.
My great uncle who was in ‘Nam actually stepped onto an old French Landmine, and survived the blast, but as a result of all the pressure being released into his body, his organs in his abdomen were forced up into his rib cage, essentially. He died in 2005 after having a heart attack, and because of his “unusual anatomy” (hospitals words) they couldn’t do much for him...
Thanks for taking us along with you on your adventures!
Jesus Tap-dancing Christ, both of them are are horrifyingly lucky. Never thought my irrational fear of stepping on a land mine could become worse after reading about your great uncle’s organs being ragdolled into his rib cage.
Intense!!......patients from stroke and WW1 vet examples that were used as respectfully as possible. RESPECT ♥️
You should go to The College of Physicians of Philadelphia. (Also known as the Mutter Museum) Do a video there.
Oh yeah the mutter museum is probably considered worse than this one.
The Mutter museum makes this place look like Disney World!
Connie Doan I was thinking the same thing!
@@pauladixon9003 ...
👍👍👍👍👍
"Those hands. Why are there three hands?!" XD
I find this very interesting and the more you know about your own body, you should be grateful of all that takes place to keep you alive. I love seeing museums with these types of display. It's good to learn from the past and education can only enlighten you.
I would love to visit this place. Seems very interesting
I went to the Walter Reed medical museum when I was 15 and while I was there, they were setting up a new exhibit with human brains. the lady setting it up saw how interested I was with everything there that she straight up said "hey! wanna hold a human brain?" and I was like hell yeah!!! she plopped it in my hands and it was really rubbery (if I could make an example, it felt sort of like dolphin skin or a super ball), not gross and squishy like I imagine. it was one of the best moments of my life!
+JAZ G&W that's odd to hand a kid a brain
it was very odd but i love odd! she was super awesome and I could tell she loved her job!
So the brain she handed you was likely formalin fixed and preserved, which does make it feel rubbery and stiff. A brain fresh from a cadaver, left to sit on an exam table will collapse under its own weight, as the brain is suspended in cerebrospinal fluid within the cranium, and isn't used to atmospheric pressure. If I had to compare a "fresh" brain it to something, it would be a dense Jello, but holding a brain in any condition is still a very surreal experience.
Wow that’s awesome! I’m jealous! 😜💖
Beans thank you so much for the information!!! I didn’t know some of the things you talked about! And I’m always happy to learn!!!💖💖💖
I remember watching this video 2 phones ago.
Well, I think that's just about enough youtube for today. Thanks!
8:28 lol didn't see that comeing XD
JAJAJAJA
This is the first video of yours that I saw and I loved it! Now I'm in the process of working my way through all your other videos. Keep up the great work :D
This is right up my alley I love the weird and the macabre. Thank you for sharing this cool museum with us Jacob. 😁
Ah 3:17, it’s the radio dude from saving private Ryan. Always wondered what became of him after that scene
Wait was he really ?
Pâtes Au Saumon yep I’m afraid so. Didn’t you watch the movie?
I swear i Only blinked like 5 times throughout this whole thing! This was so inspiring for any1, like myself, who is trying to prevent future war, at least to the degree we see here
8:03 I think I should stop watching.......
Cloe Wolflover8 imagine if it blinked 😩
I wold freack out when he blink
You should have went to The Mutter Museum when you were in Philadelphia, Jacob! Very similar but much bigger and older, it was meant to be a doctors study museum but ended up being a popular draw with the general public and the subject of more than a few TV shows.
Gary Wilson I have been there before. Such a crazy museum.
Gary Wilson, he did
Gary Wilson ...i went to the Mutter Museum years ago and they had John Wilkes Booth thorax or spine i think on display.
Love that place
Gary Wilson dw
Before moving to Walter Reed, that museum was located at (or very near) the National Mall in DC. We moved to DC when I was 11 and my dad took us to the Mall every weekend to see something new. Most were great, but then we found that museum. That poor old elephantiasis leg was in there along with most of the things you saw (I'm sure.) The one thing I remember clearly, to this day, was a photograph. A sailor on an aircraft carrier had tripped and fallen into the spinning vertical rotor on a helicopter. This full color image showed a pair of shoulders and a neck, topped with a few pounds of ground meat. I didn't fully grasp what I was seeing until I saw a perfect right earlobe on one side. Then I saw two teeth, hanging by the roots, in front. For the first time in my life, I fainted. I'm sorry to say that the image burned itself into my memory and I can still see it all these years later. Needless to say, I never went back.
Thanks, TH-cam recommendations for taking me to the land of
WAT THE FUK
They had to make the test dummy look like a skinny 5 year old Kim Jung Un.
It’s fascinating that each and every human limb, brain, tissue, skeleton sample, had a life, a childhood, family, memories & that every brain sample holds so many glimpses of each persons experiences.
Wow they really do have some cool items there
I would tour the hell outta that museum!! Love that stuff!
m3trooper me too being in medical field before byou see alot of odd things
I found it all fascinating.
What you call horrifying I call fascinating
quirky
@@lydia7177 gaming
@Pareidolia agreed. Most humans have a morbid curiosity
Come to Northern Nevada! Come see where mark Twain burned down half of Lake Tahoe's south end! Come see a gold plated Delorean so you can go back to the future in true style. Come see the old west mining town of Virginia City, beautifully preserved, and although rarely mentioned when talking about the gold rush, 80% of all the gold ever mined by humans on earth in history came from the Comstock Lode at Virginia City. I'll be happy to help you set up tours.
I couldn't help but laugh when you said, "...looks like a Christmas ham..." (the extended colon) - I will think of you every time I see a Christmas ham now. Whether I ever eat another one is a different story.
If you think that Museum was bad.. You should of went to the Mutter Museum when you were in Philadelphia..(and the museum has a very creepy vibe) Your next trip to Philly a must see..
Clarence Parker w
i was going to suggest the mutter musame
*should have gone to...
You can’t record inside the mutter museum
I find this more interesting than gross. I feel so sad for the dude who’s bones fused though. How horrible! But that’s why we need places like this. So we can learn what happened
Why am I totally unfazed like I’m used to this
I’m weak he said xenomorph 😂😂
XD i was like "heck , what did you-"
The babies scared the shit out of me, PS You find the best places to show us!!
I hate people saying "This wasn't scary, It was cool." And all that stuff. As a nursing student, I agree and I would love to go out there and see all that stuff! But we are all different in what we like/can handle. It doesn't make you quirky nor is it a personality trait.
Mr Carpetbagger you have an Awesome & Interesting mind...Don't Change. .👍🏽😉
When you bring your grandpa in museum and he says that is my friends brain
I love this adventure, you are so right that it wasn't boring at all!! Being of nursing back ground, it was so interesting!
I thought this museum was incredible! It had lots of medical oddities. I only wish that they had Hitler's head in a jar. That would be so cool to look at! Thanks for sharing!
Hitler's head?! Whhaat
@@latergator4154 you know the soviets destroyed his corpse, right ? The only thing left of him are jaw fragments that were identified by his Dentist.
Marlon James ....he lived in argentina after the war with a great pension plan...as its been told
Robd collector true
@@robdcollector2808 of course he does, my bad. And Bob Ross is playing Chess right now with Tupac, on a remote Island were Kurt Cobain, Elvis and Jim Morrison sing them Jingles while Harambe prepares the Banana Shakes.