@@johannebasa Right, so anyone who does chores or a majority of jobs is a hero. You wouldn't choose to deal with angry customers so customer service employees are "heroes".
Get more people like this in. May seem boring to some people but it’s amazing to see how the things we all take for granted like our bins being taken away.
@@Jmvars totally agree. As history keeps showing, the most “boring” jobs seem to have the most crazy stories and you actually learn useful stuff for every day life.
I don't care if you're a garbage man, astronaut, school teacher, or whatever; if you are an expert in your field and you have the level of charm this guy has....I'll watch the whole video.
I worked with Ed for several years in DSNY operations management before he became a 2-star, then 3-star, then 4-star, then commissioner. Fastest rise in DSNY history. He's an amazing person. He has a wit faster than any person you'll ever meet. People at the agency loved him. He can make anyone passionate about literally garbage. And was that the real MGK who asked a question?
It he’s leaving out the fact that so many tons of recyclables and trash is sent overseas. We pay other countries to take it. China is paid a lot of money to take trash. They have mountains of it.
@@CorbCorbin sadly, especially with plastics (such as grocery bags) were sold to china under the (false) premise that it was going to recycling centers that us based companies were too cheap to build but, instead, ended up in the Gobi.
This man is so wholesome. I could totally see him starring in a Disney Pixar film set in NYC featuring a young dump truck finding his way in the big city with the help of his sewer rat sidekick.
This guy is great! Where do you find these people? The mortician and the garbageman, just the most erudite, informative people on the internet. Love it.
This man is an absolutely incredible spokesperson for waste collection! Get this man as big an audience as possible to hear him talk. He will change people's attitude to waste and recycling. Great content!
Hands down one of the best series on TH-cam. You can NOT find a person with a profession that isn’t interesting to break down if they’re knowledgeable and passionate and you guys pick winners every time. Next guest can be a professional left handed underwater basket weaver and I’ll still listen to every word
i absolutely love how committed commissioner grayson is to the sanitation of nyc. i also really appreciate his appearance in this video to raise the common awareness about proper sanitation and the people who make it possible :)
Back when i was in junior high school, we were practicing marching band, and i asked my coach, whats role that important to keep a city safe? He said garbage truck and all the city cleaner, they have role that as much important as police, he said, can you imagine what happened if they're stop working, just for a day? Since that I've been thinking, they're waking up earlier way before others, going house to house to pick up something that even we sometime refuse to do it, they're dealing with things we throw, they're deserve more attention and appreciation. Thank you for all of you sanitary workers. Youre one heckin awesome people!
What's tragic with waste, is that the packaging choice is made by company based on how much profit they can make (by reducing the cost as much as possible) while the cost of waste management is for the community to take care of.
I learned a LOT about garbage that I never knew I needed to learn! I love Ed Grayson! He is so sweet and EXTREMELY knowledgeable! We need more interviews like this teaching us about our daily lives and how to live more wholesomely!
By the time he talked about how you can be "caught up and mesmerized by" the sweeper action in the garbage truck, it was obvious this dude 110% has a passion for what he does. Awesome.
When we went into lockdown March2020 my daughter held up a thank you poster she’d made for the bin men. We were indoors not sure what was ahead with covid situation and the grown men cried when they saw my daughters little face smiling & thanking them 😥 we felt they were risking their lives in a bizarre world at that time where bin men were front line workers needed just as much as medical staff and other emergency services.
That's incredibly sweet. My boyfriend is a garbage man and just seeing kids wave to them really brightens their day. They are always extremely appreciative of seeing things like that, they don't get positive recognition that often.
For the knife bit make a sheath for it out of cardboard with tape, this also works to store your knives in your cupboard too if you don't have a fancy plastic sheath
I'm still trying to figure out why anyone would throw away a knife. When it gets dull, you sharpen it. Sure, it gets a little smaller every time, but who doesn't need a small knife? Then eventually all you have is a handle, and you can throw that away if you want.
@@theobserver9131 yeh sounded strange to me to. Sounds like something a malicious psychopath would do, I mean who just throws a knife into the garbage bag 😂
When my niece was a little kid, we went for a walk in my neighborhood and a brand new shiny city garbage truck passed by. She was enamored with it. She said it was the prettiest truck she had ever seen and she wanted to drive one when she grew up. She's an adult now and ended up working with animals instead of driving a city sanitation truck, but I'll never forget how impressed she was by it.
This guy is one of the most entertaining TH-cam personalities I’ve ever seen and he’s not even a TH-camr. Not only did I learn a lot, but I had fun, too. (Man, that sounds cheesy but it’s still true). Thanks for having this guy on! 😀👍🏻
It's really nice to see a guy talk so passionately and positively about a not so glamorous topic. He has made me appreciate and respect people in this industry alot more
What a terrific civil servant. A fine example of how government workers make the world a profoundly better place. I'm thrilled to hear about the pilot program. The city needs to get its garbage off the curb.
Men and women like this gentleman are far, FAR more interesting and entertaining than any celebrity that's been featured here. Their passion and charisma are captivating, they aren't boring, and you learn something new.
As a former housekeeper and someone who is currently trying to make a career being a janitor, this is very great to see. The sanitation’s rector is one of the pillars of modern society
One of the better commentators. Has an understated sense of humor, good timing, and does not seem to take himself too seriously. I could imagine meeting him at a party, and he would have the best stories!
I have hoarding tendencies and am obsessive about waste, and have been since I was a kid. Part of it is wasting money when I throw something out, but another is feeling awful knowing these things are just going to sit in a landfill. He still encourages being mindful of our waste, but this gave me a little bit of peace of mind.
This is fantastic, being a relatively green garbage man my self. I wish this video was 2 hours long. There are soooo many more common questions asked on a daily basis that people need to understand.
I absolutely love this man. I appreciate all the sanitation workers out there!!! You are the glue to the world honestly, thank you for that you do!! ❤️ This guy is so lovable, please have him back 🥰
Loved watching this! Composting program in Astoria, Queens has been a godsend. so happy it's rolling out and hope to see it in more neighborhoods soon!
we got a guy who'll take knives to either refurbish or just recycle in whole. but he also stresses that we gotta wrap blades. Guy worked in sanitation for 40 years ans retired to be the most helpful, and sweetest ACE hardware employee ever.
Fun fact for bacon grease: Use it any time a recipe needs fat for cooking, especially in pan frying. In a fridge, bacon grease in a pickle jar will last for about three months. In a freezer, it basically lasts forever. So if you make a lot of bacon, pour off your grease into an old pickle jar, throw the lid back on, throw it in the fridge, repeat til it's full if you don't use it fast enough, and if you have to start another one, pop the first one in your freezer.
What an awesome guy, I love seeing people so happy and passionate about their profession and being able to talk about it eloquently to educate others. I wish to see a world where everyone can be as bright and ardent as Mr. Grayson
I enjoyed Commissioner Grayson's personality in answering these questions. I remember the incinerators in Iraq. The sorting. The smoke stacks. Or in other forms of military training, Chuck and Barry came in handy too.
This was amazing. He's very interesting to listen to and he seems genuinely interested in recycling and progress. I'm leaving this video feeling rather hopeful.
to help with a question, London has a much larger population over a much larger area, it doesn't have 1 single rubbish management organisation, each Borough does its own little bit.
Ed is great! Knowledgeable and hilarious! He used to always be on the NYC Sanitation Instagram all the time educating people in a fun and informative way!
This guy is so good at side stepping hard questions. This is not a criticism because he's trying to keep it simple and apolitical but I'm just impressed and how well he handles these answers. No wonder he was the former commissioner
I had a coworker that "drifted" a 40T front loader. He got about 2 donuts in when the whole thing flipped in a split second. Hes lucky to be alive... and employed.
This is really cool - I realise that there's a lot I don't know about where my trash ends up and what happens to it afterwards. I think if more of us understood the process we'd be much more conscientious about what we toss out. Great video, great info!
Last week I seen a “No Dumping - Fine $500” sign and literally right behind it was like 4 dirty mattresses. I took a picture of it cause I found it funny, it was like a self made meme 😂
Bahaha by far my favorite part was him not acknowledging that machine gun Kelly asked him a question!!! Whaaaat. Ed, you're a cool dude. Thanks for teaching us!
Oh you'd be surprised how often people lose prosthetic legs. We used to have a public bench just outside our house and there was a drunk who was there most nights, good guy, found his leg there many the next morning and would just take it to his door.
i freaking LOVE how he'll read a joke, joke back, but then take the subject (like bacon grease and no dumping zones) and actually start educating on that topic. he needs his own series
I think in the UK illegal dumping is called fly tipping which sounds bizarre 😆 but the idea is the same: people creating a tip (dump)... on the fly (they leave)
New York trash collection sounds amazing! Year round focus! I hope that means they have a good union and get paid well, they're what keeps the city clean and safe!
Oh no, you missed the best part about recycling. We don't recycle most of the crap we throw, we just got very pretty and elaborate machines to dispose of our trash and select whatever little things we can treat and/or recycle, but then everything else that isn't treatable is sent to third-world countries that we pay to take care of it (like old plastics or contaminated waste, which means MOST OF OUR CRAP LOL), but of course if we can't treat it with our machines that means they can't either, which leads to mountains of trash piling on top of older trash, changing landscapes and even creating a fcking new continent of pure trash floating around. That's called greenwashing, in case you never heard of it. One example amongst so many others.
@@GreyPunkWolf I just read last week that China is no longer accepting our waste. I think because it wasn't properly separated, and it was taking them too much labor to do what we hadn't.
@@GreyPunkWolf Absolutely true, unfortunately. Less than 10% of all plastic ever produced has been recycled, for example, the other >90% still exists as downcycled material, has been burned, or even worse, still lingers in the environment, deteriorating into microplastic. All of those options are bad. Most of the e-waste is sent to poor countries, where locals strip the valuable metals and burn the rest, or even just dump it, creating a toxic hellscape. Currently, the only truly fully recycled materials are paper, glass, and metal...
@@GreyPunkWolf And the industry actively lobbies to put the responsibility at the individual level, instead of working on reduction of consumption, and sustainable and fully recyclable packaging. Divide and conquer.
I had this idea years ago for a series of trap-door dumpsters, or basement access dumpsters, and then have the garbage be picked up by a subway train. Granted, the cost and the engineering would be insane, but it's an interesting thing to think about.
The little highly maneuverable garbage trucks that I saw in Tokyo (like the converted Isuzu Elf they use, or the Mitsubishi eCanter) always made me real happy for some reason.
I love all topics. But it is a fresh take to see a working class person on here. As a pose against all the university grads with careers that seem unobtainable to most. in opposed to the "norm" of blue collar america
If only university graduation meant getting a career, there wouldn't be that much bachelors or even doctors working at mcdonalds. Also, being middle class doesn't mean you're interesting and nice, nor is being educated a synonym of being elitist and cruel. Nice to see someone passionate about their job, though. Gotta agree on that. But it's kind of the whole purpose of this series, regardless of the person's education. But you can't expect young people to dream about being a garbage man as much as you see them daydreaming about being an influencer or music icon or astronaut or whatever the f young people are amazed by nowadays.
Ive been at least a part time janitor for well.over a decade, the only time(s) I've been hurt doing it is when folks just chuck used razor blades in the the trash. Yea, broken glass has gotten me a couple times, but used razors in the trash, like utility knife/box cutter blades just thrown in the trash has accounted for around 30 stitches in my hands and fingers. Just wrap the blades in tape please. Scotch tape, duct tape, painters tape. Mummify those.suckers. or chuck them in an empty bottle or can. Just because the blade isn't sharp enough to cut cardboard or sheet rock anymore, doesn't mean it's not sharp enough to cut down to the bones of the guy chucking out the trash after you throw the used blade in a garbage bag. Edit: 30 stitches might sound like a lot, but for a finger they really use a lot of stitches, a lot more than they might on an arm wound. I had ONE slash on my middle finger they used 18 stitches to close up. Only about 2 inch long cut, 18 stitches to zip it up.
If I've ever had to throw out an old kitchen knife, I try to wrap the blade in used paper towels and then rubber band it in place, same as I would if I took it on a picnic!
Garbage people are literally untold heroes. If they all were gone one day, we would notice it really fast. I hope they are paid well.
It is a good solid union job that gives a middle class life in most places.
DSNY NY’s strongest. The city wouldn’t run without these guys.
Doesn't that logic imply that everyone is a hero and thus hero has no meaning?
@@djcgjhvicbimgvvn dealing with things people don't want to deal with makes you a hero.
@@johannebasa Right, so anyone who does chores or a majority of jobs is a hero. You wouldn't choose to deal with angry customers so customer service employees are "heroes".
"A ballet of sights and smells." Now THAT is a man passionate about his job. The world needs more people like you Ed!
They make over 110,00K a year
@@justayoutuber1906 and they deserve every penny
@@justayoutuber1906 That's not as much as it sounds like in NYC.
Just got to that part. I got chills.
@@SealofPerfection yes it is, I live there 🤣
Get more people like this in. May seem boring to some people but it’s amazing to see how the things we all take for granted like our bins being taken away.
All you ever hear about are the "interesting" jobs, it's refreshing to hear questions about the more "boring" jobs.
@@Jmvars totally agree. As history keeps showing, the most “boring” jobs seem to have the most crazy stories and you actually learn useful stuff for every day life.
couldn’t agree more!
Couldn’t agree more!
British detected
I don't care if you're a garbage man, astronaut, school teacher, or whatever; if you are an expert in your field and you have the level of charm this guy has....I'll watch the whole video.
I worked with Ed for several years in DSNY operations management before he became a 2-star, then 3-star, then 4-star, then commissioner. Fastest rise in DSNY history. He's an amazing person. He has a wit faster than any person you'll ever meet. People at the agency loved him. He can make anyone passionate about literally garbage. And was that the real MGK who asked a question?
It’s so cool that you really know Ed, and that he’s as cool as he seems in this video. And btw, I was wondering if that was the real MSG, too!
How hard is it to get started in trash?
@@te9591 depends on how dirty you're willing to get
@@dans4786 riding on the side of a trash truck and doing trash can tosses?
🦀
the way he has the mini trucks informs everything you need to know about his validity
This guy has an amazing talent for speaking and it's so obvious that he genuinely cares
It he’s leaving out the fact that so many tons of recyclables and trash is sent overseas. We pay other countries to take it. China is paid a lot of money to take trash. They have mountains of it.
@@CorbCorbin Is that still the case? I read last week that China is no longer taking our trash.
@@CorbCorbin sadly, especially with plastics (such as grocery bags) were sold to china under the (false) premise that it was going to recycling centers that us based companies were too cheap to build but, instead, ended up in the Gobi.
What a nice bloke. Seems very knowledgeable in his field and explains it in an easily accessible way without sounding patronising.
It seems to have a lot of public speaking practice. Probably even at elementary schools.
This man is so wholesome. I could totally see him starring in a Disney Pixar film set in NYC featuring a young dump truck finding his way in the big city with the help of his sewer rat sidekick.
I’d watch that
Ok but I need that.
😂
Dumpy the Stank Engine
This is so cute hahahah
There was a janitor at my elementary school who embedded in me how much respect you gotta have for these guys. I’ll always remember Mr. Guerra.
This guy is great! Where do you find these people? The mortician and the garbageman, just the most erudite, informative people on the internet. Love it.
I definitely agree with you
He's great but not just a "regular" garbage man, he was (he retired) the NYC sanitation commissioner
Down-to-Earth, no nonsense. Garbage collectors and morticians. Salute!
I like how he is so passionate about the topic.
This man is an absolutely incredible spokesperson for waste collection!
Get this man as big an audience as possible to hear him talk. He will change people's attitude to waste and recycling.
Great content!
Hands down one of the best series on TH-cam. You can NOT find a person with a profession that isn’t interesting to break down if they’re knowledgeable and passionate and you guys pick winners every time. Next guest can be a professional left handed underwater basket weaver and I’ll still listen to every word
best guest speaker ever. man had me so intrigued , definitely going to start thinking more about how i dispose my trash. thank you wired !
i absolutely love how committed commissioner grayson is to the sanitation of nyc. i also really appreciate his appearance in this video to raise the common awareness about proper sanitation and the people who make it possible :)
This was... a lot funnier than I expected (and I didn't know what I expected). He's fun!
Back when i was in junior high school, we were practicing marching band, and i asked my coach, whats role that important to keep a city safe? He said garbage truck and all the city cleaner, they have role that as much important as police, he said, can you imagine what happened if they're stop working, just for a day?
Since that I've been thinking, they're waking up earlier way before others, going house to house to pick up something that even we sometime refuse to do it, they're dealing with things we throw, they're deserve more attention and appreciation.
Thank you for all of you sanitary workers. Youre one heckin awesome people!
He make me remember this tweet I read a while ago: "Can pickup artists and garbage men just please switch names?"
What's tragic with waste, is that the packaging choice is made by company based on how much profit they can make (by reducing the cost as much as possible) while the cost of waste management is for the community to take care of.
💯💯💯💯
I was always thinking that's wrong but how can we turn it around?
I learned a LOT about garbage that I never knew I needed to learn! I love Ed Grayson! He is so sweet and EXTREMELY knowledgeable! We need more interviews like this teaching us about our daily lives and how to live more wholesomely!
This is important. Talking to people who take care of infrastructure helps bring infrastructure into focus and not taken for granted
Tech Support is honestly my favorite series on TH-cam. You guys find really interesting and eloquent people, keep it up!
They do generally bring excellent speakers at Wired. Except for this one scary surgeon who made me glad she didn't do my appendectomy.
@AG-iu9lv what is this video? I kinda want to watch it now
By the time he talked about how you can be "caught up and mesmerized by" the sweeper action in the garbage truck, it was obvious this dude 110% has a passion for what he does. Awesome.
When we went into lockdown March2020 my daughter held up a thank you poster she’d made for the bin men. We were indoors not sure what was ahead with covid situation and the grown men cried when they saw my daughters little face smiling & thanking them 😥 we felt they were risking their lives in a bizarre world at that time where bin men were front line workers needed just as much as medical staff and other emergency services.
That's incredibly sweet. My boyfriend is a garbage man and just seeing kids wave to them really brightens their day. They are always extremely appreciative of seeing things like that, they don't get positive recognition that often.
I'm so sure that happened
@@TheNaturalGamer1 you need to be called cynical style as all your comments are regarding not believing others comments or sarcasm.
@@darnitthelma4247 that'd be a dope name thank you
@@TheNaturalGamer1 you’ve earned it
This guy is great. Find a vocation that makes you as excited to do the job as Ed is about dealing with everyone elses waste.
For the knife bit make a sheath for it out of cardboard with tape, this also works to store your knives in your cupboard too if you don't have a fancy plastic sheath
I'm still trying to figure out why anyone would throw away a knife. When it gets dull, you sharpen it. Sure, it gets a little smaller every time, but who doesn't need a small knife? Then eventually all you have is a handle, and you can throw that away if you want.
Wooden knife block is the way to go
I just leave it inside their spleen
@@Sb-er6bs wtf
@@theobserver9131 yeh sounded strange to me to. Sounds like something a malicious psychopath would do, I mean who just throws a knife into the garbage bag 😂
When my niece was a little kid, we went for a walk in my neighborhood and a brand new shiny city garbage truck passed by. She was enamored with it. She said it was the prettiest truck she had ever seen and she wanted to drive one when she grew up. She's an adult now and ended up working with animals instead of driving a city sanitation truck, but I'll never forget how impressed she was by it.
I ran a transfer station for almost 3 years. I oversaw all our customers, employees, and ran the scale house. Seriously the best job I ever had.
That's a story I'd like to hear
This guy is one of the most entertaining TH-cam personalities I’ve ever seen and he’s not even a TH-camr. Not only did I learn a lot, but I had fun, too. (Man, that sounds cheesy but it’s still true). Thanks for having this guy on! 😀👍🏻
Ed Grayson speaks with such clarity. Nice one!
It's really nice to see a guy talk so passionately and positively about a not so glamorous topic. He has made me appreciate and respect people in this industry alot more
I can tell just by this video that this guy is great at his job
He was... 😥 they forced him to retire
Just retired, he is missed.
@@handle_deez733 I hope he runs for Mayor
@@handle_deez733 what the heck? What??? I was just telling someone about how awesome this guy was and I don’t even know him.
This guy is great. I see him all over tiktok and stuff. Whoever hired him did a great job
He was.... just got forced to retire
Really like this guy, super passionate about his job and I love how environmentally conscious he is!
I absolutely love listening to any expert in any field talk about what they do. This guy is fantastic.
What a terrific civil servant. A fine example of how government workers make the world a profoundly better place. I'm thrilled to hear about the pilot program. The city needs to get its garbage off the curb.
This video made me motivated to recycle and to go learn about what we can do with all the problems that come associated with garbage
He's one of the most interesting and energetic guests you ever had! A second part would be incredible. Thank you very much!
Men and women like this gentleman are far, FAR more interesting and entertaining than any celebrity that's been featured here. Their passion and charisma are captivating, they aren't boring, and you learn something new.
As a former housekeeper and someone who is currently trying to make a career being a janitor, this is very great to see. The sanitation’s rector is one of the pillars of modern society
This is a real human being who is doing something he knows is important, and doing it well. Thanks Ed
This is the most underrated job I’ve ever heard of. Thank y’all for your service. This has given me a new respect for public sanitation workers
One of the better commentators. Has an understated sense of humor, good timing, and does not seem to take himself too seriously. I could imagine meeting him at a party, and he would have the best stories!
This guy was amazing, he is so extremely passionate about his job and New York City
I could listen to this man talk about anything!
I have hoarding tendencies and am obsessive about waste, and have been since I was a kid. Part of it is wasting money when I throw something out, but another is feeling awful knowing these things are just going to sit in a landfill. He still encourages being mindful of our waste, but this gave me a little bit of peace of mind.
This is fantastic, being a relatively green garbage man my self. I wish this video was 2 hours long. There are soooo many more common questions asked on a daily basis that people need to understand.
This man works in a job he is clearly passionate about. Good for him
I absolutely love this man. I appreciate all the sanitation workers out there!!! You are the glue to the world honestly, thank you for that you do!! ❤️ This guy is so lovable, please have him back 🥰
Loved watching this! Composting program in Astoria, Queens has been a godsend. so happy it's rolling out and hope to see it in more neighborhoods soon!
What a communicator! 10/10 love this guy!
we got a guy who'll take knives to either refurbish or just recycle in whole. but he also stresses that we gotta wrap blades. Guy worked in sanitation for 40 years ans retired to be the most helpful, and sweetest ACE hardware employee ever.
I've watched a lot of answers videos on the Wired channel and this guy might be the BEST presenter you've had!! Well done!
Fun fact for bacon grease: Use it any time a recipe needs fat for cooking, especially in pan frying. In a fridge, bacon grease in a pickle jar will last for about three months. In a freezer, it basically lasts forever. So if you make a lot of bacon, pour off your grease into an old pickle jar, throw the lid back on, throw it in the fridge, repeat til it's full if you don't use it fast enough, and if you have to start another one, pop the first one in your freezer.
Love this guy. Passionate, knowledgeable, entertaining, funny. Super insightful!
Christian Bale really gets into his roles.
What an awesome guy, I love seeing people so happy and passionate about their profession and being able to talk about it eloquently to educate others. I wish to see a world where everyone can be as bright and ardent as Mr. Grayson
I enjoyed Commissioner Grayson's personality in answering these questions. I remember the incinerators in Iraq. The sorting. The smoke stacks. Or in other forms of military training, Chuck and Barry came in handy too.
Drove a garbage truck for two years in a college town. One of the most fun jobs I've ever had. Good pay, too.
Would like to see someone who purifies water get here. Wanna know where the shower water goes and what happens to it
This was amazing. He's very interesting to listen to and he seems genuinely interested in recycling and progress. I'm leaving this video feeling rather hopeful.
to help with a question, London has a much larger population over a much larger area, it doesn't have 1 single rubbish management organisation, each Borough does its own little bit.
Ever since I watched the Arthur episode with Francine's father...I have always respected Sanitation Engineers. Thank you for all you do!
Ed is great! Knowledgeable and hilarious! He used to always be on the NYC Sanitation Instagram all the time educating people in a fun and informative way!
This guy is so good at side stepping hard questions. This is not a criticism because he's trying to keep it simple and apolitical but I'm just impressed and how well he handles these answers. No wonder he was the former commissioner
This guy seems really passionate about his job and that makes this really interesting.
This may be the best single video in the series. I love him!
I had a coworker that "drifted" a 40T front loader. He got about 2 donuts in when the whole thing flipped in a split second.
Hes lucky to be alive... and employed.
Dude, no, that's just reckless! A year ago, I nearly flipped a skid skeet loader and my heart nearly left my body 🥺
The only man in a badge id respect.
Sanitation is one of the most dangerous and hazardous jobs in america. Big respect for these heros
This is really cool - I realise that there's a lot I don't know about where my trash ends up and what happens to it afterwards. I think if more of us understood the process we'd be much more conscientious about what we toss out. Great video, great info!
I love how they just glaze over that MGK asks a question and then give a short and rather boring answer to a big and interesting question.
I'm in the waste management business. Everybody immediately assumes you're mobbed up. It's a stereotype. And it's offensive.- Tony Soprano
This guy is crazy good on camera. Very well spoken and charming!
Last week I seen a “No Dumping - Fine $500” sign and literally right behind it was like 4 dirty mattresses.
I took a picture of it cause I found it funny, it was like a self made meme 😂
I wonder if the sign was put up as a result of the mattresses, or someone dumped them there despite the sign.
Bahaha by far my favorite part was him not acknowledging that machine gun Kelly asked him a question!!! Whaaaat. Ed, you're a cool dude. Thanks for teaching us!
"A ballet of sights and smells." I love this guy.
I love this man. His passion for what he does had me entranced by the video.
we definitely need a part two!
The world needs more people like him
Oh you'd be surprised how often people lose prosthetic legs. We used to have a public bench just outside our house and there was a drunk who was there most nights, good guy, found his leg there many the next morning and would just take it to his door.
i freaking LOVE how he'll read a joke, joke back, but then take the subject (like bacon grease and no dumping zones) and actually start educating on that topic. he needs his own series
I think in the UK illegal dumping is called fly tipping which sounds bizarre 😆 but the idea is the same: people creating a tip (dump)... on the fly (they leave)
One of the best episode so far, that guy is a legend!!!
The amount of people that don't recycle because they don't care or don't think it actually works is astounding.
New York trash collection sounds amazing! Year round focus! I hope that means they have a good union and get paid well, they're what keeps the city clean and safe!
I never knew that landfills were so high tech and environmentally friendly/aware. Always thought it was just a pile of garbage rotting in the ground.
Oh no, you missed the best part about recycling.
We don't recycle most of the crap we throw, we just got very pretty and elaborate machines to dispose of our trash and select whatever little things we can treat and/or recycle, but then everything else that isn't treatable is sent to third-world countries that we pay to take care of it (like old plastics or contaminated waste, which means MOST OF OUR CRAP LOL), but of course if we can't treat it with our machines that means they can't either, which leads to mountains of trash piling on top of older trash, changing landscapes and even creating a fcking new continent of pure trash floating around.
That's called greenwashing, in case you never heard of it. One example amongst so many others.
@@GreyPunkWolf I just read last week that China is no longer accepting our waste. I think because it wasn't properly separated, and it was taking them too much labor to do what we hadn't.
@@GreyPunkWolf Absolutely true, unfortunately. Less than 10% of all plastic ever produced has been recycled, for example, the other >90% still exists as downcycled material, has been burned, or even worse, still lingers in the environment, deteriorating into microplastic. All of those options are bad.
Most of the e-waste is sent to poor countries, where locals strip the valuable metals and burn the rest, or even just dump it, creating a toxic hellscape.
Currently, the only truly fully recycled materials are paper, glass, and metal...
@@hititwithit Yup. But do we talk to the general public about these things? Noooo. We just spend millions to make it look like we actually care.
@@GreyPunkWolf And the industry actively lobbies to put the responsibility at the individual level, instead of working on reduction of consumption, and sustainable and fully recyclable packaging. Divide and conquer.
This guy is like the Chef John of municipal sanitation.
he is, after all, the damon dash of new york city trash
I had this idea years ago for a series of trap-door dumpsters, or basement access dumpsters, and then have the garbage be picked up by a subway train. Granted, the cost and the engineering would be insane, but it's an interesting thing to think about.
This guy is so awesome! He is truly inspiring and passionate about what he does
I was so surprised to see Mr. Lovenstein get a question in 😂
The little highly maneuverable garbage trucks that I saw in Tokyo (like the converted Isuzu Elf they use, or the Mitsubishi eCanter) always made me real happy for some reason.
I love all topics. But it is a fresh take to see a working class person on here. As a pose against all the university grads with careers that seem unobtainable to most. in opposed to the "norm" of blue collar america
I'm sure Ed holds a degree as well, he's probably a sanitation engineer
If only university graduation meant getting a career, there wouldn't be that much bachelors or even doctors working at mcdonalds.
Also, being middle class doesn't mean you're interesting and nice, nor is being educated a synonym of being elitist and cruel.
Nice to see someone passionate about their job, though. Gotta agree on that. But it's kind of the whole purpose of this series, regardless of the person's education.
But you can't expect young people to dream about being a garbage man as much as you see them daydreaming about being an influencer or music icon or astronaut or whatever the f young people are amazed by nowadays.
*as opposed. Go back to school
@@da3musceteers no. I meant they are "posing" for us all to see on tv. Learn to read.
@@bobbyblazini sure bobo
I am so glad NYC is working on composting on a large scale. Compost = Life.
I always figured I'd worry about finding human bodies or body parts if I worked garbage or landfill or whatever.
My favorite one is: a Peterbilt 320 w/ a McNeilus ZR 31
Ive been at least a part time janitor for well.over a decade, the only time(s) I've been hurt doing it is when folks just chuck used razor blades in the the trash.
Yea, broken glass has gotten me a couple times, but used razors in the trash, like utility knife/box cutter blades just thrown in the trash has accounted for around 30 stitches in my hands and fingers.
Just wrap the blades in tape please. Scotch tape, duct tape, painters tape. Mummify those.suckers. or chuck them in an empty bottle or can. Just because the blade isn't sharp enough to cut cardboard or sheet rock anymore, doesn't mean it's not sharp enough to cut down to the bones of the guy chucking out the trash after you throw the used blade in a garbage bag.
Edit: 30 stitches might sound like a lot, but for a finger they really use a lot of stitches, a lot more than they might on an arm wound. I had ONE slash on my middle finger they used 18 stitches to close up. Only about 2 inch long cut, 18 stitches to zip it up.
This guy got me absolutely focused on the subject!
If I've ever had to throw out an old kitchen knife, I try to wrap the blade in used paper towels and then rubber band it in place, same as I would if I took it on a picnic!
This dude brought the fire! I enjoyed his knowledge and passion, thanks so much for having him on.