As many of you have made me aware, the brand I promoted in this video has been exposed to be a scam (or at best, very very misleading).This is obviously a massive failing by me and me alone for endorsing a dishonest product like this and I've removed the sponsored portion from this video. I’m sorry for promoting what is essentially grift and apologize to anyone that gave this brand money because they trusted my word.
I'm sorry but if all 10 of these animals are trying to make him past tense all at once I'm going to take a page from Jordan Peele's book on this with Nope to massive success I love Casual Geograohic, but he taught me that all 10 of these animals are not to be fucked with
Fun fact: Kea don't just do it for food, they do it for the sheer mayhem. Common practice when you go to ski resorts here is to take a book with you that you dont want anymore and to leave it on top of your car. Basically a sacrifice to them. The Kea will spend a long time having fun tearing apart the book and leaving it in pieces and, hopefully, be distracted enough to leave your car alone. Probably something you wont find in the books, but we all did it.
That's just how parrots are. Sauce: I have a pet cockatoo, everything I owned is shredded and I have a drawer full of spare universal remotes because any that gets accidentally left out gets DISASSEMBLED.
Funniest thing about magpies is the best defense against them is befriending them. If you get on good terms with one family of magpies they will protect you during swooping season and even hang out with you. Oh and it gets better because they pass that info down to the next gen so you can have an entire lineage of magpies be your friends.
Old, retired Zoology person here. Nothing but high praise!! You're getting the pronunciations right, the behaviors right, the details right. The largest Macropod is indeed convergent with deer and it's just so refreshing to see someone who knows that! Your humor is flawless...panda ponies...brings tears to my eyes because it's so funny but also because I'm so proud of you!!
The elder woman who got murked by the elephant was actually part of a poaching group and she was one of the other women in the group that was throwing rocks at the adult elephants to distract them so the others could try and grab one of the calves. An elephant never forgets.
The best part about that clip is the story behind it. I read that the octopus and the fish were hunting partners and the fish had been taking more than his fair share of the prey, so the octopus let the fish know to knock it tf off.
Describing orca as "humans of the sea" is crazy accurate. There is a part of their brain that humans don't have that is solely dedicated to emotional connections and language. Their encephalization quotient is astounding. They pass the "mirror" test as well. Meaning, they know they're looking at themselves and in turn are aware and cognizant of their unique self. It's amazing. They're my favorite animal.
Back in the days of whaling, Orcas used to help waling vessels find and isolate targeted species of whale because some of the meat and organs would be dumped back in the sea after the desired parts were harvested. So they'd just show humans who to target and then let humans do the meal prep.
i live in australia and have a few stories. whenever we moved, my mum would always make it a point to sit outside and throw bread on the ground for the magpies to befriend them. we were never swooped once, and the magpies would bring their babies down to get some bread as well. the babies would be almost a full adult but still scream their head off until their parent picked up the chunk of bread they were standing in front of and put it in their mouth for them. my older brothers had a friend who hated magpies and would throw rocks at them, and subsequently became one of their primary targets. he was coming over to visit one day and was being chased by a couple of them but as soon as he reached our house and was welcomed by mum, the magpies completely backed off and never bothered him again. we also had a pet kangaroo after a neighbour went hunting pigs and took down a roo with a joey still in its pouch. mum grew up with kangaroos as pets so she was eager for us to have the same experience, but insisted that we only adopt a female, as she had heard of lots of people raising male kangaroos only to get mauled once they grew up and got aggressive. we called ours tink, and she was quite docile for the most part. once she started getting bigger though, she did start trying to attack us and would kick us from behind without warning so we put a bell on her collar to warn us when she was approaching. she was easy to fend off, we kept her at arms length and her kicks couldn't touch us but if she had been any bigger or we had been any smaller - oh man. she did grow out of that behaviour though, i suspect it was the kangaroo version of the moody pubescent teenager phase. tink was also an omnivore. mum would leave leftovers out for our dogs, things that included meats like bone scraps and spoiled slow-cooked meals, but often tink would come along and help herself first. she was a huge fan of chicken, eggs, and meatwurst. it surprised us, until we heard stories from our neighbours that if larger kangaroos have the opportunity, they have no qualms about picking up birds and small dogs in their claws and snuffing their lights out - not even to eat, just to kill. made for an interesting childhood on the farm 😂
I would have never imagined, especially after watching this video, that people actually kept kangaroos as pets. Aussies really are as dangerous as the animals that live there.
I mean this in the nicest way possible--this sounds like something a kids show in america would air when representing a new aussie character. My inner kindergartner is screaming "I KNEW IT"
@@luck2626 it's not common, only people in rural areas do it as far as i'm aware. since kangaroos are native you probably also need a permit or something to have one as an official 'pet' but we never bothered, tink was always free to leave and run off into the bush whenever she pleased, which she would often do, but we looked after her so she always came back and stuck around for the most part. we also couldn't leave the doors open, or else she would jump up the stairs and come inside. her first stop would always be the kitchen to see if there was any food lying around (we would sometimes have garbage bags full of leftover bread from our friends at the local bakery that she LOVED), and failing that she would jump down the hall to my parent's room to take a nap on their bed. mum would always complain about how she left dirt and prickles all over the sheets XD also fun fact, kangaroos have a very small inner toe, and when tink curled up when we held her or when she laid down she would suck that toe like how a human baby sucks their thumb
I'm so happy that two Aussie animals made it. I remember my primary school put out a reminder/warning every swooping season because the magpies would nest at one end of the oval. The benefit to them remembering faces is that if you feed the local magpies they not only leave you alone they bring the next generation around to learn that you're a friend. They also learn your habits and help out with tasks like gardening or keeping other birds away from your fruit trees. My grandpa was only ever swooped during the mask mandates in his area because the maggies didn't recognise him and they've kept the cockatoos away from his fruit trees for years.
a young one came back to me a week after hanging with it for a bit and giving it some crumbs, less cautious around me to other people too so it remembered who i was
fun fact, in 9th grade my honors bio teacher told us a story about how he went on a trip to new zealand, and whilst climbing a mountain, he had to wait in place for his friend he was climbing with to start climbing, at which point a kia began trying to snipe him off the mountain by literally dropping rocks off the cliff above him, luckily for him the kia missed all it's shots and lost interest
I had a gigantic crow try and attack me while I still lived in japan, thankfully another very huge crow came by and smacked the attacking crow mid flight. It sounded like 2 football players tackling each other. After that the same crow that helped me would always stand by my side whenever he saw me in the morning....I miss Leanord.
There's actually stories of people feeding crows and ravens regularly and discovering that said crows will attack anyone they think is a threat to whoever's feeding them. I'm pretty sure that makes them the only animals on the planet other than dogs you can bribe to attack your enemies.
1. I was friends with a swan for years named Paulie. He was a noble, powerful creature who took no shit from Canada geese and would eat sunflower seeds from my (heavily gloved) hand. Thank you for giving swans their due in this video. 2. Thank you for educating me on what absolute terrors zebras are.
4:15 That kick was borderline majestic. Look at how high he jumped. Look at the buildup, the loud thump he made when he brought his legs upon the hood of that poor person's car. It's perfect.
For people who don't know at 8:12 the bird on the screen was a shrike, a bird that impales its prey on thorns to hold it in place white it it picks of chunks of it that it can swallow. Makes sense, maybe it's a family thing.
I feel like he missed out on willie wag tails though. No one knows about those tiny, insane, angry bastards that desperately want to kill everyone, but can't. I've never been swooped by a maggie, but we have willie wag tails where I live that attack me every year like clockwork, its very cute. Kind of like being hit on the back of the head by a pompom ball.
That bit where it said "If you know, you know" on the screen. That was a Shrike. I believe the Great Grey Shrike. a.k.a. The Butcher Bird. i.e. The bird that picks up small animals and impales them on thorn bushes so it can eat them like a kebab. Just knowing that Australian Magpies are close relatives of Shrikes explains a lot.
I’m in Berlin, where there’s lot’s of Corvus Corvus, the common crow. When there’s Snow covering all ground, I sometimes feed them. At first, this led to me being attacked when they wanted more, but I taught them quickly that any kind of unfriendly approach would lead to no more food that day. From me. They quickly got that, I have been attacked three times in total, and no more, for years now. Other people, who let themselves be bullied to give out more then they originally planned, have had to resort to wearing bike helmets and sturdy hats… the crows do recognise specific humans, even in different clothing, other hairstyles, and so forth. I, on the other hand, have not been able to distinguish between crows at all, in spite of trying.
@@gregorylagrange I don't think so. The Crows here are not just black, you see, but have gray markings, they do look quite different individually, but I can't remember which is which...
@@Weirdkauz Yes there are different kinds of crows that aren't all black. Pied crow for one example. However, birds can see in the ultraviolet end of the spectrum. So to birds, there might be other markings that they can see that we can't when we're looking at birds and thinking they all look the same.
Hey crows are amazing. There are videos where they solve riddles and Ive seen a few startups that are trying to use crows for cleaning the city. Like for a cigarette butt they get a treat. CrowdedCities was one Name. Btw also greetings from Berlin :D
Kangaroo fun fact: they have been observed to "flee" into water if pursued only to drown them if anyone dares to follow. And they are surprisingly good at drowning things.
Dogs especially. I've watched it happen. Not my dog, but I've seen domestic dogs get drowned in fairly shallow water when they wouldn't let up on a roo.
Joking mostly, but If one developed a murderous disdain of Kangaroos for taking their Pets Life, I honestly could not blame them. No amount of "Should of been more X" helps much with against some muscular roid rabbits that are cocky.
Another Aussie here. I have both magpie stories and willy wagtail stories. The willy wagtail is the only bird ferocious enough to piss a magpie off, and the fact that I have just learned that maggies are related to willie wagtails, has rocked my world!! Great footage and as always, great funny commentary. Love your work!
@@connorwehner1151 I stand corrected. The picture wasn't up for long, but it had the features of a willie wagtail. It being a member of the shrike family certainly makes more sense. Wagtails are still dodgy though..
@@TaureanTrish yeah sorry if I came off as rude, just thought I’d correct the identification. Based off your description of the Wagtail, I wouldn’t want to mess with them either! :)
Really, Lord Casual should have a television show. His animal humor is a million times better than anything SNL has put out in the last decade IMHO. Even the background music was great - it reminded me of a 1970s NFL film. Perfect.
@@_Shay_ well TO BE FAIR, only 2-3 of them were smash or so. most of them were from other video game franchise, most being nintendo, with one being from runescape if i remember correctly
The thing about corvids in general is they have a kind of society in any given populated area, they communicate with each other about events and they are even capable of recognising different humans and describing them to other corvids! What this means is that corvids will act differently depending on how they interact with humans. In Australia(I'm aboriginal) there was a fad of collecting bird eggs especially among young boys for a long time, I believe that that was what resulted in such animosity from magpies against humans, my evidence is that magpies attacking people has always been peculiarly common is specific areas and that magpies attacks have dropped at lot in recent years. I believe that it was a combination of that fad and also that children(and adults) are generally much less likely to harrass animals these days. If anyone even reads this book........😂
I'm glad you mentioned crows in Japan. Those things are freaking huge, like almost twice the size of crows in North America. The common crow in North America typically has a ~36" wingspan and weighs a bit over 1 lb. The Large-Billed Crow common in Japanese cities has a wingspan of ~48 inches and weighs a bit over 2 lbs. In Japanese cities, in the areas where people leave out trash for pickup, they have plastic netting to put the trash under, or the crows will drag it all over the place trying to get into anything edible. The name is on-point, too; their beaks are the size of my thumb. They have zero fear of humans. I doubt their dangerous to humans, but they give zero F's. In cities, they're like pigeons on steroids and Bane serum.
@@skiffy8121 lol, not that I disagree, crows are a menace here in my area too. They actually appear to have driven the natural birds in the local area to extinction and crows are an invasive species in my place, as they are in most places, so I don't mind smacking a few of those jerks. They murdered all the baby birds, bother the chickens, yeah they need to git.
I've always liked how a Buffalo fights for their herd members, when I watched many documentaries I was always so use to the prey getting caught and the predator winning BUT then the Buffalo came along and left me shook on how they come back to rescue their herd member!
9:41 For those who don't know or didn't guess it, that's a shrike. Shrikes are also known as butcherbirds, because once they kill their prey they impale it on a tree branch, and they keep a pantry of these things around their nest. Side note, I was today years older when I found out they were related to Australian magpies
I love how each animal is an upgrade from the last Kangaroo: likes to fight but doesn't have a predator to worry about Water Buffalo: CAN fight predators and harm people, but only in self deffence Corvids: harms people for the fun of it, but only during 6 months when they are around And it just keeps getting worse
cool thing about corvids though is you can potentially befriend them with patience, consistency and food. piss them off though and they'll live up to the video
Orcas may also be able to speak english. This was discovered when a scuba diver cleaning an orca tank started hearing a booming, chest shaking, all surrounding voice saying *"GET. OUT"* He thought he was going crazy until they realized it was the orca who he was disturbing by going in there and cleaning. Reasearchers then validated this by training an orca to speak like a parrot does, though significantly more intelligent, and terrifying.
That would be so terrifying. Imagine being in the tank knowing there's absolutely no humans around and hearing that. I'd of thought it was God before it was an Orca. Knowing it was the orca is absolutely terrifying.
@Charizard S Cats are scared of geese. Source, one of my parents cats wasn't even hunting them, he just existed close enough for one to take offense. Luckily my dad scared the goose away before anything serious could happen to the cat.
This man's sense of humor is on point. The smoothness with which he includes banger joke after banger joke in this video's script is nothing short of amazing.
Writer or original creator, as somebody who enjoys stand Up comedy (yes, they too sometimes have ghost writers & steal content every now n then) it is all in the delivery of said jokes. Not promoting plagiarism by any means just stating opinion
My favorite part of Stoffel trivia is that they got him a girlfriend in the hopes of cutting back his escapades. All that did was give him an extra pair of paws and a partner in crime, i.e. someone to hold latches while he's shimming the other side into an open position, or a living ladder so he can get a claw into the edge of his enclosure
The elephant vs old lady incident happened in Odissa, India which is very near to my home. She used to stay near the forest and used to go there to collect woods. When this particular elephant once roaming around, she threw some stones which reportedly injured it badly. A few days later, the elephant came to the village, completely ransacked it and killed the woman. Next day it returned again during the funeral and ransacked the funeral place. This is a true story, the only part which is wrong is, her house or funeral place was right next to the forest and not 100 km away.
Another comment said she was in a group of poachers and with another woman threw stones to distrsct the elephant so the poachers could steal a child Can you validate that in anyform or is it just an urban myth
We've all heard those elephants have been constantly losing herd members to poachers in that area which is why they aren't having any nonsense from humans.
It's because the way God had made them they are very sensitive animals. They will remember you that is why that elephant did what it did. Pretty much the 🐘 went gangster and decided to take care of the situation and it did!
I once saw a conversation between someone from Canada and another person. The second person said “How are Canadians all so nice?” The Canadian replied “Every year we perform a ritual to place all of our aggression into the geese”
As an Aussie, I can confirm that maggies and roos have serious Black Air Force Energy. So much so that when a magpie flew into the garden section of my workplace, I tried to make friends with it. She bit me a few times when I tried to, but I didn’t care; I just wanted a Birb friend.
@@Weirdkauz Because she mostly fed off of any food scraps that customers have left behind, she was tolerating enough of us to not swoop or relentlessly attack. I was slow and cautious around her so that way she didn’t freak out too much. An update on this story, one of my colleagues took her home and she was chill around him during the drive home. The next morning when he went to feed her and other magpies in his yard, the magpie found a partner for herself and is now roaming free. Edit: Autocorrect was uncooperative. I can’t believe it took me a day to recognise the error!
I was in the car with my mum the other day, and we had just started driving home when a lady on a bike was crying with getting chased by a magpie, it was the funniest thing I have ever seen
@@extrathiccbeans That poor woman. I hope she’s okay and got home physically unscathed. I can’t say she remained mentally unscathed, coz magpie swoopage.
keas would get deleted in America REAL fast, especially if they mess with an ol boy's truck. People in the country just wouldn't put up with that shit.
There are three known deaths from a magpie attack: one caused by tetanus, a second when an elderly cyclist crashed his bicycle while attempting to avoid being dive-bombed, and most recently in August 2021 a third death when a baby died as a mother tried to protect her from a swooping magpie
Grew up watching Animal P, Nag🌎etc. You are by far my favorite narrator of animal videos. If Sir David Attenborough and Samuel L. Jackson had a child, you’d be their prodigy child!
Kangaroos actually did used to have a lot of predators to worry about. A lot of the most absurdly OP carnivores since the extinction of the non-avian dinosaurs made their home in Australia prior to going extinct.
To add, some of these predators were Megalania, a 15-23 foot long (no one's really sure) Komodo relative, Quinkana, a terrestrial crocodile of the same size, and possibly Thylacoleo, a "marsupial lion" who would ambush prey by jumping out of trees. Actually, all of them being gone might've made the roos more confident. Because we may have wiped out the other predators, but we are FAR easier to take out.
I just want to thank you for putting cartoon sound effects on animals getting gameovered and yeeted. I love your stuff and the sound effects make it 1000× easyer for me to watch and enjoy your knowledge. And laugh stupid hard at some of them. Watching dolphins get sent into obit with a Smash finisher sound effect nearly killed me.
Can I just say mad respect that this guy always reminds us not to give money if we don't have it? He just appreciates us watching the video to help with ad revenue and such and I love that.
It's reverse psychology. By telling you that you shouldn't feel bad about not being able to give money it plants a sense of guilt if you do have a solid economy but still haven't contributed. And all that without having to beg.
I watch a lot of your videos so when I went to the fair the other day I was shooketh to see a Zebra just roaming around inside a exhibit. Me and my daughter actually got to pet it cause it was being really friendly. What really shook me was the way it interacted with its owner. The Zebra grabbed his soda so he started smacking its nose lightly like it was a misbehaving puppy 😂 was shocked he didn’t get his lights kicked out
Oh screeeeew THAT. Zebras are so vicious, and they like to bite. I wouldn't go anywhere near even the friendliest zebra lol especially with my kid, I just don't trust that it won't take a heaping chunk out of my tricep
I like how the kangaroo had to think twice about the car. Bro was about to hop back the opposite way but decided he didn't have anything better to do and double stomped it 😭
I'm glad you pointed out that magpies are not corvids. They are a native species to Australia, but parallel evolution has resulted in similar behaviours to their namesakes in the northern hemisphere and to crows. Magpies definitely get a lot of negative press, but in Australia, people love them even though they might curse them. They are beautiful birds, and they are fiercely intelligent. Their warbling call has been voted multiple times as Australians' favourite bird call. But in terms of attacks, more often than not, if you are being swooped by magpies in your own neighbourhood, it's a juvenile who, like most teenagers, is a complete idiot; or you are in an area where you are not known by the families of magpies living there. When they know you, they usually don't see you as a threat ... unless you act threateningly. Then a magpie is able to identify you for potentially the majority of its natural life, such is their memory. And I've read that they can teach other magpies to identify you as well. So if you upset one, you may upset the entire family. But interestingly, if you have a dog, and they don't like your dog (which can be a common occurrence) they will swoop the dog but not you. They understand where dog finishes and you begin. Lol Finally, magpies might get the bad rap, but not far after them Is the highly territorial lapwing plover, and of course Australian "noisy miner" (not a mynah). This bird will often scuffle with crows and magpies for territory, and it will swoop you relentlessly when you come into its territory. It has also has a face that looks perpetually grumpy. Lol Funny story: A friend of mine who ran a cafe had to stop putting sugar packets outside on the tables because the noisy miners would pull them out of the containers poke holes in the packets and eat the sugar. Of course they would leave sugar all over the tables so that they were sticky and disgusting. But, the magpies started doing it too, because they saw the noisy miners doing it. Then you had both tribes not only causing havoc with the sugar but warring over it between each other.
The Noisy Miners are the most annoying Aussie birds IMO. I’ve seen them swooping so many birds and people. They’re absolute A-Holes. I’ve never seen a more territorial bird. Magpies will only swoop when they’re nesting, but Noisy Miners will swoop cause they like “this tree” better than “the other one”. White Cockatoos are probably more destructive, but they’re much more loveable IMO. They’re more similar to a mischievous kid. They’re very smart, very curious, and so beautiful, so they’re easy to love.
Can confirm, Zebra are far more dangerous than they look. I've worked with one that was raised around people, even then as an experienced handler of domesticated equines, they're a bit like a hot potato. They absolutely will bite or kick if they decided they just don't like you in their space. I recon I was lucky since this one was pretty chill with me, but I'd equally seen him nearly scalp a person for walking past too close to his gate.
I believe it - friend of mine is a vet at a safari type of zoo that has a herd of them & he says he’d rather go a few rounds with the ‘gators than the zebras; says they’re pretty much completely psychotic and dangerous af!
@@gregorydemosthenes4434 TBH I was secretly hoping he did. That woman turned up complaining that a farm had dirt and it wasn't nicely paved for her stilletto's. That's one of my top peeves after the guys that turn up in surf shorts and flip flops expecting to ride and then getting angry when we tell them 'communal wellies or no ride'
@@mohammadnashitsiddiqui2168 LOL thankfully not. He was still only a 2 y o colt at the time. I mean some of the ponies were a bit wild, i don't think a zebra would end well. I certainly wouldn't have been the one to start it under saddle lol
"Literally no animal's safe from the violent tendencies of a Furious George." I had to replay that line. I am in awe. I have been subscribed for a year but consider this my official pledge of fealty, Lord Casual Geographic.
As an Australian who used to be deathly afraid of magpies because of the bad reputation they have, I've actually been spending the last few years trying to turn around that reputation. While magpies can be relentless while defending their territory, it's also a matter of defending themselves. Because of their territory-defending habits, humans came to see them in a bad enough light that the magpies often end up being victim to attacks and harassment who (wrongfully) believe that the birds are going to tear their eyes out just for existing - so, naturally, the birds fight back. However, they're also smart enough that they can be befriended. If you treat a magpie with respect, it'll respect you right back, and not only will it remember you, but it'll pass that information onto other magpies in the area, as well as their children. If you're nice enough to a magpie it'll let you feed it, play with it, and they can even be trained to mimic human speech. The amount of magpie cullings that have taken place around the country because of human stupidity and aggression is honestly devstating, because these birds have the capacity to be quite firnedly if they're simply treated well.
Its swooping behaviour is only on mainland Australia as well, Tasmanian magpies don’t attack people. It’s probably a learned behaviour as urban environment destroyed Magpie habitat breeding area’s.
My father was robbed, sexually assaulted, and murdered by 2 black Magpies...So say whatever you want about them being misunderstood, whatever makes you feel any better about yourself...I call bullshit on anything that you say in defense of those winged black devils...My father begged them to let him go, he told them that he had a family, he promised them that he wouldn't go to the authorities...They just circled him, and took bites out of him all while maniacally Squawking, and kept torturing my daddy til 4 hrs later he horrifically died from massive blood loss... Nobody witnessed this but those animals left their DNA all over, and inside of my father...It actually took over 15 yrs for us to get any justice for what was done... Detectives had no witnesses, leads, or any way to move forward with our case....That is til the F.B.I.'s Cold Cases Squad took over the case and were able to run new tests on the foreign D.N.A. found inside of daddy, which led to the identification of more victims, and the eventual arrest of the first ever in recorded history, A pair of Black Magpie Serial Killers, and Rapist...There day in court is yet to arrive, I'll keep yall posted... JUSTICE FOR PAPI...
All male Australian magpies don’t swoop, it’s estimated that only around 10% do it. Also, if you make friends with that magpie it will eat out of your hand and will never swoop you. They are the smartest birds I have encountered and I have observed them doing unbelievable things. As an example, most birds who see their reflection in a car mirror or similar will try to attack the intruder, and will do it dozens of times until they give up. I have a magpie family that lines up on the rail of my deck watching me inside waiting for food, at the same time they are actively keeping an eye on the reflection in a higher up window and instantly fly away from the reflection to deal with an enemy they have observed entering their territory. I would recommend you all watch the video of an Australian magpie playing with a dog, it is amazing.
The thing is kangaroos did live in a habitat that had large terrestrial predators that only became extinct relatively recently such as Thylacoleo (marsupial lion) and Megalania (think Komodo dragon but 7 metres long or 23 ft)
9:41 For those of you who don't know, that bird with psychopath tendencies is called a shrike and it's known to kill its prey and impale their corpses on sharp tree branches, which is why they call it the "Butcher Bird".
This vid sits in some sort of nostalgia that combines a high school project with so much more love than the teacher expected with an animal planet show that would air at like 10pm once the kids programs are finally over. Its a wonderful energy, I really like the new format
That joke about the elephant turning a rhino from a tight end to a wide out was quite possibly the most clever and funny thing I’ve heard in months. I almost had a legitimate spit take in the break room at work
Just like someone in these comments(Wicked Basket) trying to say animals have a soul and consciousness of "right and wrong". Insane and deserve to be taken off the census by all of these animals.
@@stupidmangoz I think cousciousness is more of an emergent property of life itself (much like life is an emergent property of entropy. ) even microbes would seek food and dodge predators, all without a brain. Actually, brains are quite recent thing on animal kingdom and the neocortex even more
Mosquitos are the absolute worst. I mean, they literally kill over a million people ever year, more so than sharks, snakes, spiders or just about any other animal that's been known to kill people.
I think mosquitoes generally attack other animals out of necessity / lack of nutrients, but wasps... wasps are just hangry toward every other living thing, including plants.
I gotta salute you young man. Your clever use of modern slang (most if not all is a complete mystery to me lol) and comedic tones are doing wonders with getting the next generation excited about wildlife. My generation was Steve Irwin and Jack Hannah... you may be this ones.
He could make his own documentary in this style, and I'd pay to watch it. He's entertaining and charismatic. Maybe he could somehow meet together with Coyote Peterson to go out on an adventure.
@@ShadeSlayer1911 yo that would actually be dope. I just want the kids coming up today to have a piece of what we had. They're so involved with themselves, their reputations and being liked... which I find weird. Would be cool for another figure head for the animals to pop up and bring back our childlike fascination for the world.
@@Southern13oi Yeah, I feel that. There's a few youtubers who cover nature stuff that I really hope become popular and make it fun and mainstream like how Steve Irwin did. I feel like a lot of people today do not appreciate the natural world, not even a little. This guy with his humor and charisma could help bring this appreciation to those people. Coyote does well too, but I'm not sure if he's still making content. I haven't seen him show up on his channel anymore. Oh boy, Coyote and Casual Geo could have such an interesting dynamic. I want to see that so badly.
Gotta appreciate the elephant casually redirecting the turtle and it moseying on like the redirect was totally its own idea. Elephants live to remember and make sure you don't forget. Turtles live to remember because they don't forget.
8:26 sticking zip ties on your helmet so it ends up looking like a porcupine helps. Also feeding one that lives near your house often takes you off their hit list.
I saw my first ever Kea a few years ago. It walked along a table to a beer bottle, kicked it off the table, and flew down to drink the spilled beer, after which it flew to the car and started yanking at the windscreen wipers.
I live in New Zealand and im so happy the Kia was mentioned, they are definitely intelligent birds. One at Auckland zoo tried to open up our picnic basket
I love animals. I love creative vocabulary. Your videos give me the most delightful brain fizzes. I would watch every feature length documentary you ever host/narrate.
I really wish there were classes taught like this. I'd hold information way more. Delivering information in a concise and digestible way is way more valuable than sounding intellectual and formal imo
@precious Nha, as a French guy this is easier to understand and remember than the classic way to teach. And all the best teachers I ever known had similar styles. Putting a twist and being more untertanig and less professional has in my experience always end whit better grades fun and and knowledge you actually remember, from the 3 best teacher I have heard of around me one do silly gage left and right, one do interesting story telling and all 3 use similar vulgarisations, anyway to make your lesson more untertanig is a good one…
@precious Not to scold ya, this isn't really a point. You're just repeating that it isn't an indicator for accessibility without backing it up as much as I think you thought you did. But educating people in a way that is more easily digestible is always the best way to teach. What "easier to digest" means for everyone is different, but taking big concepts and breaking it down into the contemporary vernacular is definitely one way to do it. I could tell you about how biomagnification works straight from a textbook. Or, I could take that information and break it down by describing living beings as sponges and the bigger the sponge, the more poison it absorbs and the faster it will die. It's also a pretty good indicator that whoever is giving you the information is very knowledgable about the topic and is passionate about it to try and explain something in various ways apart from the scientific source.
I started feeding a murder of crows that live near the crib cuz they fight hawks and we have chickens and they literally bring me presents now I’ve been doing it for one year they bring me cigarette butts, assorted nuts and seeds, and this one time my favorite crow(his name is Jerry) brought me a really cool pebble that was like blue and green
I almost never comment on videos but damn! You are so good. You're narrations are intelligent, hilarious, and just a ton of fun to watch. Thanks so much. I hope you have a long successful career. You deserve it.
A friend of mine lives in a neighborhood with a TON of crows. Swooping season is always a big problem, so when she moved in she did the logical thing: she started feeding the crows. She'll scatter high quality dried cat food for them whenever she walks, to the point that you'll see upwards of 25 of them following her down the street at any given moment. They'll bring their babies around to introduce them, and the cycle continues with the next generation. She hasn't been swooped in years. I always joke that if anyone tries to mug her, they'll probably die of heart attack thinking they were transported into a Hitchcock film. 😄
i accidentally stumbled upon this channel and have been really enjoying his videos. I'm dying laughing. His delivery is so on point! GIVE THIS MAN HIS OWN NATURE SHOW ASAP!!
YOU SHOULD SERIOUSLY GET AN ANIMAL PLANET SHOW. You are the most hilarious and still well informed animal wrangler I've ever seen. If they used your videos in schools... kids would actually learn about wild life for a change I'm country and as crazy as a honey badger so I learned about wild animals the hard way. Lol
my version of learning about Animals were playing with them and learning what not to play with. i really should have died as a kid, i did to much stupid shit and i should have not lived past 5 years old, for example i would play with deadly snakes like Water Moccasins, better known as Cottonmouths, yeah would play with them and put them back were i found them, i would feed Giant Bullfrogs, i would play with Alligator Snapping Turtles (the ones that can take your hand off with ease), i would even pet full grown Swamp Puppys or for the more mentally sane Crocodiles and Alligators, yes i would pet then like they were puppys, but to be fair i did know when to back off and let 'em be. living in Florida as a child was not great, but hay i got to do some cool shit that most couldnt do. i guess theres that.
@@SovietOnion111 well hello Louisiana or Florida. The only 2 places that wild and crazy. Let me guess... in the woods alone by 6 yrs old. Lol I love snapping turtles. Lol
@@kokomo74149 Florida and yeah 6 years old fucking around in the swamp that was in front of our house, I would find so many animals I'd had never seen until then
@@SovietOnion111 the best way to learn about the circle of life. I was surrounded by thick woods until you got to the river a mile away. My friends parents both loved and hated me because I knew every inch of the woods so I'd take us on adventures everyday but they knew I was good in the woods. I always lead the way. I should mention I was a tiny girl. I started exploring about 5 years with 3 Dobermans who taught me everything I needed to know. Lol It's hilarious Bama and Mississippi have pretty much the same critters but it never fails to be Louisiana or Florida if you're wild and out in the woods as a kid. Lol
re: the magpies, they're actually pretty smart and can be partially tamed if you feed them outside of swooping season. u just give them bred and they become friends. they also have some kind of weird generational memory bs going on so the kids will remember if you're cool w/ them.
Oh yes, they remember. If you feed them and interact with them regularly not only will they leave you alone but also, like crows, show you their young AND defend your garden as theirs even if it's not where they nest.
As many of you have made me aware, the brand I promoted in this video has been exposed to be a scam (or at best, very very misleading).This is obviously a massive failing by me and me alone for endorsing a dishonest product like this and I've removed the sponsored portion from this video. I’m sorry for promoting what is essentially grift and apologize to anyone that gave this brand money because they trusted my word.
Appreciate you man
You more than made up for it 👍
They were zebras about it
Dude I’ve seen a lot of people promote this brand your the first one who apologised thx dude
What was the brand?
“It only makes sense that something with wings would be above the law.”
This man is a poet. Protect him at all costs.
A Lord Poet.
Now I’m looking for the suffix “lord” on government forms
Dude is an international cultural treasure.
I'm sorry but if all 10 of these animals are trying to make him past tense all at once I'm going to take a page from Jordan Peele's book on this with Nope to massive success
I love Casual Geograohic, but he taught me that all 10 of these animals are not to be fucked with
Why do folks say protect at all costs when in reality they wouldn't protect a damn thing?
Fun fact: Kea don't just do it for food, they do it for the sheer mayhem. Common practice when you go to ski resorts here is to take a book with you that you dont want anymore and to leave it on top of your car. Basically a sacrifice to them. The Kea will spend a long time having fun tearing apart the book and leaving it in pieces and, hopefully, be distracted enough to leave your car alone. Probably something you wont find in the books, but we all did it.
“Come brothers, let us offer up our tome of sacrifice, that the sky monkeys shall grant us safe passage…”
Is there any practical reason they cannot be exterminated?
@@RageCreati0n omg that made me cry laugh
@@RageCreati0n🤣🥇
That's just how parrots are. Sauce: I have a pet cockatoo, everything I owned is shredded and I have a drawer full of spare universal remotes because any that gets accidentally left out gets DISASSEMBLED.
Funniest thing about magpies is the best defense against them is befriending them. If you get on good terms with one family of magpies they will protect you during swooping season and even hang out with you. Oh and it gets better because they pass that info down to the next gen so you can have an entire lineage of magpies be your friends.
Thats what one crow did for me in japan, and after would always come hangout with me whenever he saw me.
I want friends
yeah the best way to defend yourself against the mafia is paying your share as well...
@@robotoguts3165 just bee yourself
yeah but they also initiate generational blood feuds if you make them mad
Old, retired Zoology person here. Nothing but high praise!! You're getting the pronunciations right, the behaviors right, the details right. The largest Macropod is indeed convergent with deer and it's just so refreshing to see someone who knows that! Your humor is flawless...panda ponies...brings tears to my eyes because it's so funny but also because I'm so proud of you!!
The elder woman who got murked by the elephant was actually part of a poaching group and she was one of the other women in the group that was throwing rocks at the adult elephants to distract them so the others could try and grab one of the calves. An elephant never forgets.
If that's the case, then good on that elephant. That woman got what she deserved!
Thank you for the explanation. Good job elephants!
Respect to the elephant.
And an elephant never forgives.
Reminds me of Mocha Dick the whale.
"When a Navy Seal joins the Air Force"
This man singlehandedly redefined wordplay.
Subscribed.
Hell yeah
That pun was elite
@@bertholdboye8293 Definitely would rate it Tier One
I had to find this in the comments because it was so smooth 🤣🤣🤣
Best comment in the video 😂😂😂
His use of modern jargon and video game terminology to describe the behavior of animals is just genius. I understand everything flawlessly
@Trent Hamsley Delete your comment. 🤡
@Thank me later normally, when you put things in parentheses, you don’t read it, so you’re calling the content you promoted bad. Checkmate, bot.
@Thank me later go hunt a water buffalo
@@markgallagher1790 that's probably one of the most convoluted ways I've ever heard used to tell someone to go die😭
@@antoniog56 I have more, would you like me to share my knowledge?
The octopus just casually punching a fish is the funniest thing I have ever seen
The best part about that clip is the story behind it. I read that the octopus and the fish were hunting partners and the fish had been taking more than his fair share of the prey, so the octopus let the fish know to knock it tf off.
No respect lol
An octopus wouldn't do that to a creature that could be strong enough to rip it apart
@@SmilingGreyhound-dl4qx Well sure octopi are actually really smart but I'm not really sure what point you are making.
Describing orca as "humans of the sea" is crazy accurate. There is a part of their brain that humans don't have that is solely dedicated to emotional connections and language. Their encephalization quotient is astounding. They pass the "mirror" test as well. Meaning, they know they're looking at themselves and in turn are aware and cognizant of their unique self. It's amazing. They're my favorite animal.
They're awesome and terrifying. They are far too intelligent emotionally and intellectually to be kept in captivity, it's cruel.
Back in the days of whaling, Orcas used to help waling vessels find and isolate targeted species of whale because some of the meat and organs would be dumped back in the sea after the desired parts were harvested. So they'd just show humans who to target and then let humans do the meal prep.
Ok.. Wu-Young Wu
Maybe sharks don't deserve to be called "predators." 😰
Wu favorite animal was a whale. Not orca, do disrespect wu like that.
i live in australia and have a few stories.
whenever we moved, my mum would always make it a point to sit outside and throw bread on the ground for the magpies to befriend them. we were never swooped once, and the magpies would bring their babies down to get some bread as well. the babies would be almost a full adult but still scream their head off until their parent picked up the chunk of bread they were standing in front of and put it in their mouth for them.
my older brothers had a friend who hated magpies and would throw rocks at them, and subsequently became one of their primary targets. he was coming over to visit one day and was being chased by a couple of them but as soon as he reached our house and was welcomed by mum, the magpies completely backed off and never bothered him again.
we also had a pet kangaroo after a neighbour went hunting pigs and took down a roo with a joey still in its pouch. mum grew up with kangaroos as pets so she was eager for us to have the same experience, but insisted that we only adopt a female, as she had heard of lots of people raising male kangaroos only to get mauled once they grew up and got aggressive. we called ours tink, and she was quite docile for the most part. once she started getting bigger though, she did start trying to attack us and would kick us from behind without warning so we put a bell on her collar to warn us when she was approaching. she was easy to fend off, we kept her at arms length and her kicks couldn't touch us but if she had been any bigger or we had been any smaller - oh man. she did grow out of that behaviour though, i suspect it was the kangaroo version of the moody pubescent teenager phase.
tink was also an omnivore. mum would leave leftovers out for our dogs, things that included meats like bone scraps and spoiled slow-cooked meals, but often tink would come along and help herself first. she was a huge fan of chicken, eggs, and meatwurst. it surprised us, until we heard stories from our neighbours that if larger kangaroos have the opportunity, they have no qualms about picking up birds and small dogs in their claws and snuffing their lights out - not even to eat, just to kill.
made for an interesting childhood on the farm 😂
I would have never imagined, especially after watching this video, that people actually kept kangaroos as pets. Aussies really are as dangerous as the animals that live there.
This is the most Aussie thing I've ever heard.
I mean this in the nicest way possible--this sounds like something a kids show in america would air when representing a new aussie character. My inner kindergartner is screaming "I KNEW IT"
@@luck2626 it's not common, only people in rural areas do it as far as i'm aware. since kangaroos are native you probably also need a permit or something to have one as an official 'pet' but we never bothered, tink was always free to leave and run off into the bush whenever she pleased, which she would often do, but we looked after her so she always came back and stuck around for the most part.
we also couldn't leave the doors open, or else she would jump up the stairs and come inside. her first stop would always be the kitchen to see if there was any food lying around (we would sometimes have garbage bags full of leftover bread from our friends at the local bakery that she LOVED), and failing that she would jump down the hall to my parent's room to take a nap on their bed. mum would always complain about how she left dirt and prickles all over the sheets XD
also fun fact, kangaroos have a very small inner toe, and when tink curled up when we held her or when she laid down she would suck that toe like how a human baby sucks their thumb
Since you are Australian, I want to ask, Do you live near Wombats, And if you do, Are they friendly?
I'm so happy that two Aussie animals made it. I remember my primary school put out a reminder/warning every swooping season because the magpies would nest at one end of the oval. The benefit to them remembering faces is that if you feed the local magpies they not only leave you alone they bring the next generation around to learn that you're a friend. They also learn your habits and help out with tasks like gardening or keeping other birds away from your fruit trees. My grandpa was only ever swooped during the mask mandates in his area because the maggies didn't recognise him and they've kept the cockatoos away from his fruit trees for years.
I'm remembering that, thank you😁
I was surprised us kiwi's got at least 1 animal in.
a young one came back to me a week after hanging with it for a bit and giving it some crumbs, less cautious around me to other people too so it remembered who i was
I suspect the mask mandates were rough for a lot of people during swooping season.
Wow. Befriending the magpie mafia!
fun fact, in 9th grade my honors bio teacher told us a story about how he went on a trip to new zealand, and whilst climbing a mountain, he had to wait in place for his friend he was climbing with to start climbing, at which point a kia began trying to snipe him off the mountain by literally dropping rocks off the cliff above him, luckily for him the kia missed all it's shots and lost interest
Wow
That Kia got Stormtrooper aim.
Darvin Nunezcore
I had a gigantic crow try and attack me while I still lived in japan, thankfully another very huge crow came by and smacked the attacking crow mid flight. It sounded like 2 football players tackling each other. After that the same crow that helped me would always stand by my side whenever he saw me in the morning....I miss Leanord.
What a nice crow!
I love that you named him 🥺
There's actually stories of people feeding crows and ravens regularly and discovering that said crows will attack anyone they think is a threat to whoever's feeding them. I'm pretty sure that makes them the only animals on the planet other than dogs you can bribe to attack your enemies.
Leanord is such a cute name!
Ive heard similar stories of crows becoming friends with people
"Drink water, hug ur mom, don't hug a honey badger."
Words to live by.
Unless your Mom IS worse then a honey badger
And Hug Your Dad
“What geese think they are, swans always have been” such a badass line
1. I was friends with a swan for years named Paulie. He was a noble, powerful creature who took no shit from Canada geese and would eat sunflower seeds from my (heavily gloved) hand. Thank you for giving swans their due in this video.
2. Thank you for educating me on what absolute terrors zebras are.
Even without watching, everyone pretty much just knew that the Honey Badger gets the top spot. It exists to be a menace.
Bring back old pfp pls it’s more iconic
Every where I go I see you’re face.
@Thank me later be gone BOT
I expected humans to be in first place but it looks like hes an extrovert if he likes people enough to not put humans in first place.
Ever heard of Killing Bites? An anime I can probably take your clout it?
That kangaroo being like the sibling who pushed a little brother a teeny bit too hard
Definitely
yeah a lot of us would know
Lol. I think he was shocked when the other one disappeared as the fence gave way.
4:15
That kick was borderline majestic. Look at how high he jumped. Look at the buildup, the loud thump he made when he brought his legs upon the hood of that poor person's car. It's perfect.
I felt that kick
Bro saw the car and said “you done fucked up”
That was a street fighter move if I’ve ever seen one
@@typicallewbtw5727 Tokusatsu fans have another term for that too:
_RIIIDERRRR _*_KIIIICK!_*
😂
For people who don't know at 8:12 the bird on the screen was a shrike, a bird that impales its prey on thorns to hold it in place white it it picks of chunks of it that it can swallow. Makes sense, maybe it's a family thing.
... that might be the most metal thing I've ever heard
There is a reason why sci-fi author Dan Simmons named his most frightening creation The Shrike.
T
They also use the thorny bushes as a pantry/to attrached a mate
like how us humans like to consume kebabs, these birds also do the same
This man speaks in the most relatable and understandable way ever. Everything he teaches we learn, and that's not as common as people think
I’m impressed he speaks so quickly and yet clearly. I can understand every word. 😍
Imagine a kea breaking into a Kia
@@maragreentrees1405 😐
Being able to teach *well* is definitely a skill that not everyone can master.
"You can't be a narcissist if you're also helping to save the environment" 🤣🤣🤣🤣 man you're good
Well thought out
@Thank me later ok . You need to get out of here and go hunt a Kate buffalo
😂
@@Bake-kurijra Kate?
The sad thing is people actually believe that
As an Australian, I greatly appreciate you educating people outside Australia about magpies.
Well, I'm Dutch and we have Magpies too, just not that agressive 😅
I feel like he missed out on willie wag tails though. No one knows about those tiny, insane, angry bastards that desperately want to kill everyone, but can't. I've never been swooped by a maggie, but we have willie wag tails where I live that attack me every year like clockwork, its very cute. Kind of like being hit on the back of the head by a pompom ball.
We have magpies in England and they'd be mortified if they knew about their unruly Australian brethren.
I have actually had blood spurting out my head because of a magpie attack. Vicious little things!
That bit where it said "If you know, you know" on the screen. That was a Shrike. I believe the Great Grey Shrike. a.k.a. The Butcher Bird. i.e. The bird that picks up small animals and impales them on thorn bushes so it can eat them like a kebab. Just knowing that Australian Magpies are close relatives of Shrikes explains a lot.
I suffer from deep depression . This pass month has not been good. Today your video made me smile. Thank you
I’m in Berlin, where there’s lot’s of Corvus Corvus, the common crow. When there’s Snow covering all ground, I sometimes feed them. At first, this led to me being attacked when they wanted more, but I taught them quickly that any kind of unfriendly approach would lead to no more food that day. From me. They quickly got that, I have been attacked three times in total, and no more, for years now. Other people, who let themselves be bullied to give out more then they originally planned, have had to resort to wearing bike helmets and sturdy hats… the crows do recognise specific humans, even in different clothing, other hairstyles, and so forth. I, on the other hand, have not been able to distinguish between crows at all, in spite of trying.
If you could see in the ultraviolet side of the spectrum like birds can, you might be able to.
@@gregorylagrange I don't think so. The Crows here are not just black, you see, but have gray markings, they do look quite different individually, but I can't remember which is which...
@@Weirdkauz Yes there are different kinds of crows that aren't all black. Pied crow for one example. However, birds can see in the ultraviolet end of the spectrum. So to birds, there might be other markings that they can see that we can't when we're looking at birds and thinking they all look the same.
Hey crows are amazing. There are videos where they solve riddles and Ive seen a few startups that are trying to use crows for cleaning the city. Like for a cigarette butt they get a treat. CrowdedCities was one Name. Btw also greetings from Berlin :D
Rick was right...
This episode had real old-school Animal Planet "Most Extreme" energy. I'm here for it.
m.th-cam.com/video/pgqHrtl5qJs/w-d-xo.html
That show was fire!
@Thank me later The award for the most annoying things to set foot on this Earth goes to: Every bot in existence! Including you!
Nostalgia mode sctivated.
Yes, I loved that show!!!
Kangaroo fun fact: they have been observed to "flee" into water if pursued only to drown them if anyone dares to follow. And they are surprisingly good at drowning things.
Dogs especially. I've watched it happen. Not my dog, but I've seen domestic dogs get drowned in fairly shallow water when they wouldn't let up on a roo.
Yeah it's horrifying, they could be waiting there for hours
Joking mostly, but If one developed a murderous disdain of Kangaroos for taking their Pets Life, I honestly could not blame them.
No amount of "Should of been more X" helps much with against some muscular roid rabbits that are cocky.
It's like Kangaroo's turned murder into a sport, and anything that exists within smacking distance is their next, unwilling participant.
the Australian Kelpie
"Furious George". Best thing that's ever passed your lips, dude.
He is right, though. Don't want a nonconcenual vasectomy, so leave them the hell alone... or have a honey badger as an ally.
Another Aussie here. I have both magpie stories and willy wagtail stories. The willy wagtail is the only bird ferocious enough to piss a magpie off, and the fact that I have just learned that maggies are related to willie wagtails, has rocked my world!! Great footage and as always, great funny commentary. Love your work!
The willy wagtails at my old place would swoop and tease my cats all the time, cheeky little shits.
Got any roid-rabbit stories?
The bird shown in the video was a Loggerhead Shrike, not a Willie Wagtail though?
@@connorwehner1151 I stand corrected. The picture wasn't up for long, but it had the features of a willie wagtail. It being a member of the shrike family certainly makes more sense.
Wagtails are still dodgy though..
@@TaureanTrish yeah sorry if I came off as rude, just thought I’d correct the identification. Based off your description of the Wagtail, I wouldn’t want to mess with them either! :)
Really, Lord Casual should have a television show. His animal humor is a million times better than anything SNL has put out in the last decade IMHO. Even the background music was great - it reminded me of a 1970s NFL film. Perfect.
Most of it is Smash Bros music
@@_Shay_ well TO BE FAIR, only 2-3 of them were smash or so. most of them were from other video game franchise, most being nintendo, with one being from runescape if i remember correctly
“Science doesn’t account for an animal just being a dick.” This is why I watch Casual. Epic line. 🎃
The thing about corvids in general is they have a kind of society in any given populated area, they communicate with each other about events and they are even capable of recognising different humans and describing them to other corvids! What this means is that corvids will act differently depending on how they interact with humans. In Australia(I'm aboriginal) there was a fad of collecting bird eggs especially among young boys for a long time, I believe that that was what resulted in such animosity from magpies against humans, my evidence is that magpies attacking people has always been peculiarly common is specific areas and that magpies attacks have dropped at lot in recent years. I believe that it was a combination of that fad and also that children(and adults) are generally much less likely to harrass animals these days. If anyone even reads this book........😂
PS. I don't even know anyone under like 40 or 50 who has been swooped by a maggie
I did. Good job!
'Oppressed oreo horse'
that one got me
Walking barcode with anger issues
Overgrown yin yang guppy
@@alltoohalliwell prison donkey
"High-strung equality donkey"
Zebra:......
"KEEP MY WIFES NAME!"
I'm glad you mentioned crows in Japan. Those things are freaking huge, like almost twice the size of crows in North America. The common crow in North America typically has a ~36" wingspan and weighs a bit over 1 lb. The Large-Billed Crow common in Japanese cities has a wingspan of ~48 inches and weighs a bit over 2 lbs. In Japanese cities, in the areas where people leave out trash for pickup, they have plastic netting to put the trash under, or the crows will drag it all over the place trying to get into anything edible. The name is on-point, too; their beaks are the size of my thumb. They have zero fear of humans. I doubt their dangerous to humans, but they give zero F's. In cities, they're like pigeons on steroids and Bane serum.
thanks ill be sure to bring a shooing stick if i ever get to visit
@@skiffy8121 lol, not that I disagree, crows are a menace here in my area too. They actually appear to have driven the natural birds in the local area to extinction and crows are an invasive species in my place, as they are in most places, so I don't mind smacking a few of those jerks. They murdered all the baby birds, bother the chickens, yeah they need to git.
@@SgtHawk45 i heard i could teach them to swear at things accurately so they gotta be worth something
Same size as a North American raven and African crow. And still wickedly smart
@@skiffy8121 nah a shooing stick you gonna need a shooting stick
I've always liked how a Buffalo fights for their herd members, when I watched many documentaries I was always so use to the prey getting caught and the predator winning BUT then the Buffalo came along and left me shook on how they come back to rescue their herd member!
Yeah, the Look Out for eachother and the calves, a group of hours or dears in the Other Hand could Not Care less
For those viewers who need timestamps, here you go:
0:00 -Intro & definition
0:54 -NZ kea
2:18 -Zebra
3:36 -Become a LORD! (Or not,because it's a scam & it's also edited out =/)
5:18 -Kangaroo
7:01 -African cape buffalo
8:42 -Crows & magpies
10:28 -Hippopotamus
12:17 -Elephant
14:02 -Dolphin & orca
15:47 -Chimpanzee
17:03 -(Dis)Honourable mentions
17:31 -Honeybadger
His videos are too entertaining to skip through!!!
@Chad 007 ?????
What the hell did you just link me!?
@@chee.rah.monurB it's a bot
@@ricegorm But what is it??
Not for this masterpiece
9:41 For those who don't know or didn't guess it, that's a shrike. Shrikes are also known as butcherbirds, because once they kill their prey they impale it on a tree branch, and they keep a pantry of these things around their nest. Side note, I was today years older when I found out they were related to Australian magpies
@Tsunzucchini TzatzikiSan Pretty much
They often don't even bother to kill their prey first. They're impaled alive.
@@ShadeSlayer1911 Like Vlad!
@@EC-dz4bq Yes, like him.
Their cruelty (to our sensibilities) has also inspired a sci fi monster in a novel series, called the Shrike.
@@ShadeSlayer1911 Lol, it will prob be a future movie too. Prob on Netflix
I love how each animal is an upgrade from the last
Kangaroo: likes to fight but doesn't have a predator to worry about
Water Buffalo: CAN fight predators and harm people, but only in self deffence
Corvids: harms people for the fun of it, but only during 6 months when they are around
And it just keeps getting worse
cool thing about corvids though is you can potentially befriend them with patience, consistency and food. piss them off though and they'll live up to the video
Dingos in Australia are one of Kangaroos predators. 😊
@@laurap6813, that's mostly with the joeys
And then it peaks out with the most disrespectful animal on the face of the planet
And don’t get us started on the chimpanzees.
Orcas may also be able to speak english. This was discovered when a scuba diver cleaning an orca tank started hearing a booming, chest shaking, all surrounding voice saying *"GET. OUT"*
He thought he was going crazy until they realized it was the orca who he was disturbing by going in there and cleaning.
Reasearchers then validated this by training an orca to speak like a parrot does, though significantly more intelligent, and terrifying.
That would be so terrifying. Imagine being in the tank knowing there's absolutely no humans around and hearing that. I'd of thought it was God before it was an Orca. Knowing it was the orca is absolutely terrifying.
@@KingfellaNate It would not be so weird ya know. They have an impressive volcal range and are fully able to imitate human speech
@@SwissCheese34 It’s not the weirdness. It’s the *terror* of knowing.
I read that that was a beluga
wasnt it a beluga? not like it makes that much of a difference but still
Canadian here. Thanks for that honorable mention. Our geese are terrifying.
@Charizard S they're ABSOLUTELY terrifying
And the moose ☠
@Charizard S Cats are scared of geese.
Source, one of my parents cats wasn't even hunting them, he just existed close enough for one to take offense. Luckily my dad scared the goose away before anything serious could happen to the cat.
They do go from happy chill to peace was never an option in 0 seconds
Aside from parents defending their nests, I've never had a problem with geese.
This man's sense of humor is on point. The smoothness with which he includes banger joke after banger joke in this video's script is nothing short of amazing.
most youtubers have writers
Misread banger as badger, somehow still works
Writer or original creator, as somebody who enjoys stand Up comedy (yes, they too sometimes have ghost writers & steal content every now n then) it is all in the delivery of said jokes. Not promoting plagiarism by any means just stating opinion
My favorite part of Stoffel trivia is that they got him a girlfriend in the hopes of cutting back his escapades.
All that did was give him an extra pair of paws and a partner in crime, i.e. someone to hold latches while he's shimming the other side into an open position, or a living ladder so he can get a claw into the edge of his enclosure
They didn't quite grasp that Stoffel's wife was a honey badger too
😅 what can I say
Bonny & Clyde with rage issues
Heck of a relationship goal right there
Just like Ken Allen the orangutan.
Brother I swear to God I can't stop watching those kangaroos at the beginning of the video this shit has me in tears
The elephant vs old lady incident happened in Odissa, India which is very near to my home. She used to stay near the forest and used to go there to collect woods. When this particular elephant once roaming around, she threw some stones which reportedly injured it badly. A few days later, the elephant came to the village, completely ransacked it and killed the woman. Next day it returned again during the funeral and ransacked the funeral place. This is a true story, the only part which is wrong is, her house or funeral place was right next to the forest and not 100 km away.
It looked like others could've been hurt 😕🙁☹️
Another comment said she was in a group of poachers and with another woman threw stones to distrsct the elephant so the poachers could steal a child
Can you validate that in anyform or is it just an urban myth
We've all heard those elephants have been constantly losing herd members to poachers in that area which is why they aren't having any nonsense from humans.
@@OlaDeen2018 collateral damage.
It's because the way God had made them they are very sensitive animals. They will remember you that is why that elephant did what it did.
Pretty much the 🐘 went gangster and decided to take care of the situation and it did!
I once saw a conversation between someone from Canada and another person. The second person said “How are Canadians all so nice?”
The Canadian replied “Every year we perform a ritual to place all of our aggression into the geese”
Best reply, tbh. lol It makes so much goddamn sense!
based
😂 But the geese are named after John Canada… must have been one real angry dude
Or the Germans, don't forget that several articles of the Geneva Convention were made because of the Canadians
That's not surprising.
As an Aussie, I can confirm that maggies and roos have serious Black Air Force Energy. So much so that when a magpie flew into the garden section of my workplace, I tried to make friends with it. She bit me a few times when I tried to, but I didn’t care; I just wanted a Birb friend.
O wow! Pray tell how this developed!
How did you close enough for her to bite you?!
@@Weirdkauz Because she mostly fed off of any food scraps that customers have left behind, she was tolerating enough of us to not swoop or relentlessly attack. I was slow and cautious around her so that way she didn’t freak out too much.
An update on this story, one of my colleagues took her home and she was chill around him during the drive home. The next morning when he went to feed her and other magpies in his yard, the magpie found a partner for herself and is now roaming free.
Edit: Autocorrect was uncooperative. I can’t believe it took me a day to recognise the error!
I was in the car with my mum the other day, and we had just started driving home when a lady on a bike was crying with getting chased by a magpie, it was the funniest thing I have ever seen
@@extrathiccbeans That poor woman. I hope she’s okay and got home physically unscathed. I can’t say she remained mentally unscathed, coz magpie swoopage.
They've been known to crack holes in people's skulls with their beaks too
Love the shoutout to the Butcher Bird at 8:11
They are the cutest little song birds that more than live up to their name
The “he’s fine , just sleeping” when explaining the hippos is just priceless
As a New Zealander myself, I can indeed say that keas are basically feathered crowbars
Kia Ora, fellow New Zealander, I am definitely going to be calling Keas that from now on lmao
Gordon Freeman found a favorite bird
@@char_lattesnk1352 Same, I can't believe I never thought of that!
Macgybird
keas would get deleted in America REAL fast, especially if they mess with an ol boy's truck. People in the country just wouldn't put up with that shit.
There are three known deaths from a magpie attack: one caused by tetanus, a second when an elderly cyclist crashed his bicycle while attempting to avoid being dive-bombed, and most recently in August 2021 a third death when a baby died as a mother tried to protect her from a swooping magpie
Hey reader, you see those two disrespectful bot replies between me and the original comment? Join me and we shall report them for spam.
@@tremendousyeet3467 yes.
and i get the link to the 3rd article
Holy sh* the 3rd one reminds me of the scene with the baby and the compy from the JP book
@@tremendousyeet3467 duality of bot kind
Grew up watching Animal P, Nag🌎etc. You are by far my favorite narrator of animal videos. If Sir David Attenborough and Samuel L. Jackson had a child, you’d be their prodigy child!
Kangaroos actually did used to have a lot of predators to worry about. A lot of the most absurdly OP carnivores since the extinction of the non-avian dinosaurs made their home in Australia prior to going extinct.
Yeah, Australian aborigines have stories about massive carnivores that went extinct way before colonisers arrived.
Than... kangaroos killed all of them?
@@samsunggalaxynote8984 Nah, that was humanity’s fault.
To add, some of these predators were Megalania, a 15-23 foot long (no one's really sure) Komodo relative, Quinkana, a terrestrial crocodile of the same size, and possibly Thylacoleo, a "marsupial lion" who would ambush prey by jumping out of trees.
Actually, all of them being gone might've made the roos more confident. Because we may have wiped out the other predators, but we are FAR easier to take out.
@@FlyingFocs Dang, I knew about Megalania, but I thought all the land crocs died out before the dinosaurs.
Lord Casual, the first video of a kangaroo getting chucked through a fence was a great introduction to the theme of this video. As always great work.
The fact that Revy and Escanor are included as examples of black airforce energy brings a smile to my face
Revy does have a lot of Black air force Energy.
Yujiro Hanna gets no love?
I was looking for this comment 😂
Z Broly
i mean its fax tho
I just want to thank you for putting cartoon sound effects on animals getting gameovered and yeeted.
I love your stuff and the sound effects make it 1000× easyer for me to watch and enjoy your knowledge.
And laugh stupid hard at some of them. Watching dolphins get sent into obit with a Smash finisher sound effect nearly killed me.
Can I just say mad respect that this guy always reminds us not to give money if we don't have it? He just appreciates us watching the video to help with ad revenue and such and I love that.
Not often someone just thanks you for watching their videos and doesn't hassle for money. 1 more reason I love this channel
1of the the you tubers I will let any add less than 2:00 run clear through
It's reverse psychology. By telling you that you shouldn't feel bad about not being able to give money it plants a sense of guilt if you do have a solid economy but still haven't contributed. And all that without having to beg.
@@blahorgaslisk7763 Silence!!!
@@blahorgaslisk7763🤫
I watch a lot of your videos so when I went to the fair the other day I was shooketh to see a Zebra just roaming around inside a exhibit. Me and my daughter actually got to pet it cause it was being really friendly. What really shook me was the way it interacted with its owner. The Zebra grabbed his soda so he started smacking its nose lightly like it was a misbehaving puppy 😂 was shocked he didn’t get his lights kicked out
@Thank me later ip grabber
My guess is that it must have been handraised.
@@saiyasha848 mine would have been a horse that was painted to look like a zebra but idk if that’s a dumb theory or not
It was most likely trained to be like that
Oh screeeeew THAT. Zebras are so vicious, and they like to bite. I wouldn't go anywhere near even the friendliest zebra lol especially with my kid, I just don't trust that it won't take a heaping chunk out of my tricep
I like how the kangaroo had to think twice about the car. Bro was about to hop back the opposite way but decided he didn't have anything better to do and double stomped it 😭
"Will I choose violence today? Hmm. Yes. Yes of course I choose violence. STOMP TIME!"
If a kangaroo jumped on my car I’d 180 and we’d play chicken.
Just like any other Australian.
I'm glad you pointed out that magpies are not corvids. They are a native species to Australia, but parallel evolution has resulted in similar behaviours to their namesakes in the northern hemisphere and to crows.
Magpies definitely get a lot of negative press, but in Australia, people love them even though they might curse them. They are beautiful birds, and they are fiercely intelligent. Their warbling call has been voted multiple times as Australians' favourite bird call.
But in terms of attacks, more often than not, if you are being swooped by magpies in your own neighbourhood, it's a juvenile who, like most teenagers, is a complete idiot; or you are in an area where you are not known by the families of magpies living there.
When they know you, they usually don't see you as a threat ... unless you act threateningly. Then a magpie is able to identify you for potentially the majority of its natural life, such is their memory. And I've read that they can teach other magpies to identify you as well. So if you upset one, you may upset the entire family.
But interestingly, if you have a dog, and they don't like your dog (which can be a common occurrence) they will swoop the dog but not you. They understand where dog finishes and you begin. Lol
Finally, magpies might get the bad rap, but not far after them Is the highly territorial lapwing plover, and of course Australian "noisy miner" (not a mynah). This bird will often scuffle with crows and magpies for territory, and it will swoop you relentlessly when you come into its territory. It has also has a face that looks perpetually grumpy. Lol
Funny story: A friend of mine who ran a cafe had to stop putting sugar packets outside on the tables because the noisy miners would pull them out of the containers poke holes in the packets and eat the sugar. Of course they would leave sugar all over the tables so that they were sticky and disgusting. But, the magpies started doing it too, because they saw the noisy miners doing it. Then you had both tribes not only causing havoc with the sugar but warring over it between each other.
The Noisy Miners are the most annoying Aussie birds IMO. I’ve seen them swooping so many birds and people. They’re absolute A-Holes. I’ve never seen a more territorial bird. Magpies will only swoop when they’re nesting, but Noisy Miners will swoop cause they like “this tree” better than “the other one”. White Cockatoos are probably more destructive, but they’re much more loveable IMO. They’re more similar to a mischievous kid. They’re very smart, very curious, and so beautiful, so they’re easy to love.
When you didn't cheat on the test but got almost the same answer as someone else
Can confirm, Zebra are far more dangerous than they look.
I've worked with one that was raised around people, even then as an experienced handler of domesticated equines, they're a bit like a hot potato. They absolutely will bite or kick if they decided they just don't like you in their space. I recon I was lucky since this one was pretty chill with me, but I'd equally seen him nearly scalp a person for walking past too close to his gate.
I believe it - friend of mine is a vet at a safari type of zoo that has a herd of them & he says he’d rather go a few rounds with the ‘gators than the zebras; says they’re pretty much completely psychotic and dangerous af!
Lmao, zebra scalping a person freaking hilarious
@@gregorydemosthenes4434 TBH I was secretly hoping he did.
That woman turned up complaining that a farm had dirt and it wasn't nicely paved for her stilletto's.
That's one of my top peeves after the guys that turn up in surf shorts and flip flops expecting to ride and then getting angry when we tell them 'communal wellies or no ride'
@@misschieflolz1301 wait, you allow zebra riding? That is quite the gamble 😂
@@mohammadnashitsiddiqui2168 LOL thankfully not. He was still only a 2 y o colt at the time. I mean some of the ponies were a bit wild, i don't think a zebra would end well. I certainly wouldn't have been the one to start it under saddle lol
"Literally no animal's safe from the violent tendencies of a Furious George."
I had to replay that line. I am in awe. I have been subscribed for a year but consider this my official pledge of fealty, Lord Casual Geographic.
When does he say that?
16:19
As an Australian who used to be deathly afraid of magpies because of the bad reputation they have, I've actually been spending the last few years trying to turn around that reputation. While magpies can be relentless while defending their territory, it's also a matter of defending themselves. Because of their territory-defending habits, humans came to see them in a bad enough light that the magpies often end up being victim to attacks and harassment who (wrongfully) believe that the birds are going to tear their eyes out just for existing - so, naturally, the birds fight back. However, they're also smart enough that they can be befriended. If you treat a magpie with respect, it'll respect you right back, and not only will it remember you, but it'll pass that information onto other magpies in the area, as well as their children. If you're nice enough to a magpie it'll let you feed it, play with it, and they can even be trained to mimic human speech. The amount of magpie cullings that have taken place around the country because of human stupidity and aggression is honestly devstating, because these birds have the capacity to be quite firnedly if they're simply treated well.
I had no idea! That's amazing. Thank you for sharing 😊
Its swooping behaviour is only on mainland Australia as well, Tasmanian magpies don’t attack people. It’s probably a learned behaviour as urban environment destroyed Magpie habitat breeding area’s.
My father was robbed, sexually assaulted, and murdered by 2 black Magpies...So say whatever you want about them being misunderstood, whatever makes you feel any better about yourself...I call bullshit on anything that you say in defense of those winged black devils...My father begged them to let him go, he told them that he had a family, he promised them that he wouldn't go to the authorities...They just circled him, and took bites out of him all while maniacally Squawking, and kept torturing my daddy til 4 hrs later he horrifically died from massive blood loss... Nobody witnessed this but those animals left their DNA all over, and inside of my father...It actually took over 15 yrs for us to get any justice for what was done... Detectives had no witnesses, leads, or any way to move forward with our case....That is til the F.B.I.'s Cold Cases Squad took over the case and were able to run new tests on the foreign D.N.A. found inside of daddy, which led to the identification of more victims, and the eventual arrest of the first ever in recorded history, A pair of Black Magpie Serial Killers, and Rapist...There day in court is yet to arrive, I'll keep yall posted... JUSTICE FOR PAPI...
All male Australian magpies don’t swoop, it’s estimated that only around
10% do it. Also, if you make friends with that magpie it will eat out of
your hand and will never swoop you. They are the smartest birds I have
encountered and I have observed them doing unbelievable things.
As an example, most birds who see their reflection in a car mirror or
similar will try to attack the intruder, and will do it dozens of times until
they give up. I have a magpie family that lines up on the rail of my deck
watching me inside waiting for food, at the same time they are actively
keeping an eye on the reflection in a higher up window and instantly
fly away from the reflection to deal with an enemy they have observed
entering their territory. I would recommend you all watch the video of
an Australian magpie playing with a dog, it is amazing.
legend ^^
This is the hardest I've laughed at an extended video for like, a year
The thing is kangaroos did live in a habitat that had large terrestrial predators that only became extinct relatively recently such as Thylacoleo (marsupial lion) and Megalania (think Komodo dragon but 7 metres long or 23 ft)
There were also carnivorous kangaroos.
@@ckl9390 you tellin me Australia nerfed itself to keep the rest of the world sane ?!
@@ckl9390 That's a terrifying concept.
So Australia is a souls game
Quinkana
9:41 For those of you who don't know, that bird with psychopath tendencies is called a shrike and it's known to kill its prey and impale their corpses on sharp tree branches, which is why they call it the "Butcher Bird".
thank you
There's a reason it wears the mask of a cartoon robber.
@@ramieliocc Makes sense.
Thanks!
Can confirm
This vid sits in some sort of nostalgia that combines a high school project with so much more love than the teacher expected with an animal planet show that would air at like 10pm once the kids programs are finally over. Its a wonderful energy, I really like the new format
Your commentary and delivery, is what makes this worth subscribing!!....
Keep it up, I thoroughly enjoy it.
Gotta love how Casual just..... casually blends his sponsorships into the video
What a Chad
@Thank me later ✨Nobody gives a shit✨
Jealous much?
@@rajjelan_fos Even worse: someone identified that link as an IP grabber. Report him.
@@WanOlDan I'm going through the comments and reporting all of the replies with the bot's username.
@@WanOlDan what’s an ip grabber ?
That joke about the elephant turning a rhino from a tight end to a wide out was quite possibly the most clever and funny thing I’ve heard in months. I almost had a legitimate spit take in the break room at work
Rhino just took it... rip
I probably woke my parents up from laughing so hard 🤣
The legendary stoffel. Apparently he died but had a son. The legend lives on. Thanks for the upload.
RIP Stoffel. You absolute king.
@@audreydimmel6674 Stompy is the Stoffel 2.0!
@MomPickMeUpImScared-st4wi it's too late. He's rocking it!
Stoffel didn't die, he just went to another planet to make himself their problem
I think even death was scared of him.@@nerdyfoxes8000
Ngl this put me in the mind of the old animal planet show "the most extreme". I 100% would love to see more top tens
After picking a fight, he went back for more right after leaving the hospital… against a pride of lions… that is insane on a whole different level. 😮
Just like someone in these comments(Wicked Basket) trying to say animals have a soul and consciousness of "right and wrong". Insane and deserve to be taken off the census by all of these animals.
@@stupidmangoz I think cousciousness is more of an emergent property of life itself (much like life is an emergent property of entropy. ) even microbes would seek food and dodge predators, all without a brain. Actually, brains are quite recent thing on animal kingdom and the neocortex even more
I did not hear no bell
Wat I learned: any animal resembling an Oreo is to be avoided, either with wings, fins or paws.
If anything is black & white, RUN
*goes home and cuddles my black & white cat*
Looks at my black and white cat next to me. “Accurate, little monster”
Me turns and looks at my black and white dog. accurate, very accurate
Checks out for skunks.
*looks at my black and white cat* "yeah checks out"
As a New Zealander, I can safely say that Kea don't necessarily terrorise us, but they're very mischievous and naughty birds.
They could if they wanted to though. I love our birds.
@@littlebear274I as a non New Zealander also love your birds
*looks at my cockatiel, which is native to Australia*
@@BiggestPhangirl *looks at weka online, which is native to new zealand*
Can you please give us some examples... thanks
10:58 that elephant was mad she didn't say hello; correcting bad manners.
This definitely needs a part two, because we know the mosquito, seagulls and penguins
Yeah penguins are kinda 💀 but they get clapped by either another penguin or a seal sooo they aren't the worst thing out there 😂
Mosquitos are the absolute worst. I mean, they literally kill over a million people ever year, more so than sharks, snakes, spiders or just about any other animal that's been known to kill people.
I think mosquitoes generally attack other animals out of necessity / lack of nutrients, but wasps... wasps are just hangry toward every other living thing, including plants.
Forget mosquitos for a second. Bedbugs are the nastiest bloodsuckers in existence.
@@lucienfortner841mosquitoes still win, simply because bed bugs don't spread disease.
I gotta salute you young man. Your clever use of modern slang (most if not all is a complete mystery to me lol) and comedic tones are doing wonders with getting the next generation excited about wildlife. My generation was Steve Irwin and Jack Hannah... you may be this ones.
Same! 😃
So true
He could make his own documentary in this style, and I'd pay to watch it. He's entertaining and charismatic.
Maybe he could somehow meet together with Coyote Peterson to go out on an adventure.
@@ShadeSlayer1911 yo that would actually be dope. I just want the kids coming up today to have a piece of what we had. They're so involved with themselves, their reputations and being liked... which I find weird. Would be cool for another figure head for the animals to pop up and bring back our childlike fascination for the world.
@@Southern13oi Yeah, I feel that. There's a few youtubers who cover nature stuff that I really hope become popular and make it fun and mainstream like how Steve Irwin did. I feel like a lot of people today do not appreciate the natural world, not even a little.
This guy with his humor and charisma could help bring this appreciation to those people. Coyote does well too, but I'm not sure if he's still making content. I haven't seen him show up on his channel anymore.
Oh boy, Coyote and Casual Geo could have such an interesting dynamic. I want to see that so badly.
Gotta appreciate the elephant casually redirecting the turtle and it moseying on like the redirect was totally its own idea. Elephants live to remember and make sure you don't forget. Turtles live to remember because they don't forget.
Tortoise, actually, but yes to the rest.
😂😂😂 that part!
8:26 sticking zip ties on your helmet so it ends up looking like a porcupine helps. Also feeding one that lives near your house often takes you off their hit list.
I saw my first ever Kea a few years ago. It walked along a table to a beer bottle, kicked it off the table, and flew down to drink the spilled beer, after which it flew to the car and started yanking at the windscreen wipers.
That's mental 🤣 woke up and chose violence that day
I'm curious do insurance companies give any compensation if your car is attacked by a Kea?
@@LukeA_55 you couldn’t make it up. I think they actually don’t, it ate part of the window seal but the company didn’t pick it up thankfully
Sounds like my late uncle 🤣
😂
Monstrous amounts of talent, this guy deserves his own show on The Animal Planet!!!!!
Agreed
Nah, I hope not. Being on TV would severely restrict his creative control. He’d basically have to do whatever the company tells him to do/say.
@Senna Taylor agreed. Animal planet doesn't have enough talent to have him.
Like legit if he is on there I'd subscribe to Animal Planet in a heartbeat
I live in New Zealand and im so happy the Kia was mentioned, they are definitely intelligent birds. One at Auckland zoo tried to open up our picnic basket
I love animals. I love creative vocabulary. Your videos give me the most delightful brain fizzes. I would watch every feature length documentary you ever host/narrate.
I love how creative he is with his analogies and metaphors it's not confusing in fact it really helps you understand the facts easier
"If you unsubscribed right now, I wouldn't blame you"
Bro, stuff like this is the *REASON* I subbed! Keep em coming, Casual!
Imagine if NatGeo actually contacted CasGeo to work with them but it’s actually on site 10 feet from the animals
They could call it The Naturally Casual Show.
He'll never have to research about animal attacks again. You know, having experience
Would be really interesting, not gonna lie.
@@vehicular-manslaughter He has had experience with a Chimp before because of dumb people.
@@xbabu142x
Genius
Love the delivery of all your videos. It makes me feel like when a friend starts talking about in depth things but it's in our own crude dialect.
I really wish there were classes taught like this. I'd hold information way more.
Delivering information in a concise and digestible way is way more valuable than sounding intellectual and formal imo
@precious Nha, as a French guy this is easier to understand and remember than the classic way to teach. And all the best teachers I ever known had similar styles. Putting a twist and being more untertanig and less professional has in my experience always end whit better grades fun and and knowledge you actually remember, from the 3 best teacher I have heard of around me one do silly gage left and right, one do interesting story telling and all 3 use similar vulgarisations, anyway to make your lesson more untertanig is a good one…
@precious 🤓
@precious6155 you're not as smart as you're making yourself look. In fact, you're coming off as kind of arrogant.
@precious Not to scold ya, this isn't really a point. You're just repeating that it isn't an indicator for accessibility without backing it up as much as I think you thought you did.
But educating people in a way that is more easily digestible is always the best way to teach. What "easier to digest" means for everyone is different, but taking big concepts and breaking it down into the contemporary vernacular is definitely one way to do it. I could tell you about how biomagnification works straight from a textbook. Or, I could take that information and break it down by describing living beings as sponges and the bigger the sponge, the more poison it absorbs and the faster it will die.
It's also a pretty good indicator that whoever is giving you the information is very knowledgable about the topic and is passionate about it to try and explain something in various ways apart from the scientific source.
Hood talk is the intellectual talk of the future
Your transitions in and out of sponsors/ads are actually cool, smooth, and very entertaining 👏👏👏
Fr
I started feeding a murder of crows that live near the crib cuz they fight hawks and we have chickens and they literally bring me presents now I’ve been doing it for one year they bring me cigarette butts, assorted nuts and seeds, and this one time my favorite crow(his name is Jerry) brought me a really cool pebble that was like blue and green
W Jerry
Give Jerry love.
I almost never comment on videos but damn! You are so good. You're narrations are intelligent, hilarious, and just a ton of fun to watch. Thanks so much. I hope you have a long successful career. You deserve it.
A friend of mine lives in a neighborhood with a TON of crows. Swooping season is always a big problem, so when she moved in she did the logical thing: she started feeding the crows. She'll scatter high quality dried cat food for them whenever she walks, to the point that you'll see upwards of 25 of them following her down the street at any given moment. They'll bring their babies around to introduce them, and the cycle continues with the next generation. She hasn't been swooped in years. I always joke that if anyone tries to mug her, they'll probably die of heart attack thinking they were transported into a Hitchcock film. 😄
🤣🤣
Can’t you shoot them?
Smart friend!
Lol
I'll have to try this!
i accidentally stumbled upon this channel and have been really enjoying his videos. I'm dying laughing. His delivery is so on point! GIVE THIS MAN HIS OWN NATURE SHOW ASAP!!
Same and he's scary when he wants to be lol
I mean you're watching it lol
Stoffel the honey badger once broke into the house of his keepers when he escaped his enclosure and raided their fridge.
Thank you for teaching me. I am learnding!
YOU SHOULD SERIOUSLY GET AN ANIMAL PLANET SHOW. You are the most hilarious and still well informed animal wrangler I've ever seen.
If they used your videos in schools... kids would actually learn about wild life for a change
I'm country and as crazy as a honey badger so I learned about wild animals the hard way. Lol
I lost it when he said "to give Mufasa a roommate."
my version of learning about Animals were playing with them and learning what not to play with. i really should have died as a kid, i did to much stupid shit and i should have not lived past 5 years old, for example i would play with deadly snakes like Water Moccasins, better known as Cottonmouths, yeah would play with them and put them back were i found them, i would feed Giant Bullfrogs, i would play with Alligator Snapping Turtles (the ones that can take your hand off with ease), i would even pet full grown Swamp Puppys or for the more mentally sane Crocodiles and Alligators, yes i would pet then like they were puppys, but to be fair i did know when to back off and let 'em be. living in Florida as a child was not great, but hay i got to do some cool shit that most couldnt do. i guess theres that.
@@SovietOnion111 well hello Louisiana or Florida. The only 2 places that wild and crazy. Let me guess... in the woods alone by 6 yrs old. Lol
I love snapping turtles. Lol
@@kokomo74149 Florida and yeah 6 years old fucking around in the swamp that was in front of our house, I would find so many animals I'd had never seen until then
@@SovietOnion111 the best way to learn about the circle of life. I was surrounded by thick woods until you got to the river a mile away. My friends parents both loved and hated me because I knew every inch of the woods so I'd take us on adventures everyday but they knew I was good in the woods. I always lead the way. I should mention I was a tiny girl. I started exploring about 5 years with 3 Dobermans who taught me everything I needed to know. Lol
It's hilarious Bama and Mississippi have pretty much the same critters but it never fails to be Louisiana or Florida if you're wild and out in the woods as a kid. Lol
Love how the elephant gently but fastly pushed the tortoise so it wouldn't crush it
Yeah, it was just like "scuse me, I'm coming through". A strange mix of rude (it could have gone around) and polite.
@@dbseamz Black Air Force animals don’t ask for respect, they demand it.
@@crackededge9351 except honey badgers and dolphins, they just hate everyone and don’t care about respect.
re: the magpies, they're actually pretty smart and can be partially tamed if you feed them outside of swooping season. u just give them bred and they become friends. they also have some kind of weird generational memory bs going on so the kids will remember if you're cool w/ them.
magpies are much, much more than "pretty smart". They are _dangerously_ smart.
Oh yes, they remember. If you feed them and interact with them regularly not only will they leave you alone but also, like crows, show you their young AND defend your garden as theirs even if it's not where they nest.
I've rewatched this at least 4 times..... Still fun lol