@DoctorMike I send you a big hug for you also for dog bear and Roxy and when are you going to make a video again with bear, Roxy, your nephews and your sister You know I have you as my cell phone wallpaper and I tell you a secret you are my crush Secretly no oneknows And congratulations on your new puppy. ribbie dog. 🤓
Doctor Mike reacting to the Kraken as though it's some average squid or octopus makes me wanna see him react to the phoenix in Harry Potter bursting into flames like "hmm, parrots don't normally do that"
@@Kitsune16-r4hyes in this case i think but actually for a long time. It’s a creature from i think Norse mythology. So who knows how they really pictured it as these songs typically have not a lot of descriptions. Writers took the idea and used it again and again
Elizabeth’s corset is actually incorrectly laced, which makes the line “it’s the latest fashion in London” funny (whether intentional or not). Tight lacing wasn’t really possible before steel eyelets. That said, her maids worked their butts off to get it tight enough to fit the supposed fashion. 😂
She's not even wearing a corset (or at least she's not supposed to be). She's wearing a pair of stays that have absolutely no capability of being tightlaced.
@@zrc1514OMG THANK YOU!!!! I was gonna say the same thing! Stays should never be depicted as a cause of fainting in media because they don’t actually constrict anything. If anything, Elizabeth probably would have fainted due to a combination of panic and heat/humidity.
@@zrc1514 In 1777 a corset was described (in French) as “a little pair of stays usually made of quilted linen without bones that ladies fasten in front with strings or ribbon and that they wear in deshabille.”
Fun medical reaction! I’m just a bit surprised you didn’t have Jack and Will’s underwater, upside down boat walk on this list to talk about hypoxia. Especially when it turns out that Orlando Bloom needed oxygen so bad that he began speaking elvish, believing he was back on the Lord of the Rings set.
Bloom: Govannas vin gwennen le. Depp: If you going to drop acid while we're shooting a Disney film you gotta share, mate. Bloom: They're taking the hobbits to Isengard! Depp: To Isengard? Bloom: To Isengard!
My partner & I were shouting at the screen “It’s not an octopus Dr. Mike! It’s a kraken! A mythical creature! It’s not meant to be like an octopus aside from its tentacles! How have you never heard of a kraken before?!”
@@arrowverselover100 I knew about the Kraken loong before watching the movie, it's very popular and honestly it's hard and surprising to find people who have literally never heard of it, did y'all live under a rock or something lol
@@ThePinkerton1776 and let's familiar with Cthulhu but I have heard of it I believe that's some sort of demon that has something along the lines of an octopus as like the top of its body and then it's something else I've seen it on and I think it is South Park had something like that and the kitty, I follow online
Amusing bit of trivia; English sailors used to be known as “Limeys” because in order to ward off scurvy, they would regularly consume lime juice with meals.
The tight laced pair of stays on Elizabeth drive me crazy! Stays were used to lift the bust, not to restrict the waist. As a child, she would have worn stays to help her posture and keep her back upright. However, stays were never tight laced because the fabric and the lacing wouldn't be able to hold, and they would just rip apart. Corsets, which came after stays, were also a foundation garment, and very few women were tight lacing to the extreme. Empress Elisabeth of Austria was so obsessed with staying thin that her doctors were advising her not to tight lace as much, and her corsets had to be replaced often because they can only take so much strain.
@doctormike Hi! I just have one thing to clarify. So there is huge difference between freediving (the scene at 12:56 ) and scuba diving. During scuba diving, you are breathing a highly pressurized mix of oxygen with other gases, which increases the solubility of gas in water in your blood. During resurface you are changing the pressure and thus the limit of how much gas can be stored in liquid. Hence, too fast climb creates decompression illness. However, with freediving you are taking breath at normal pressure and this deep breath is not enough to trigger the decompression illness. Therefore, you can resurface as fast as you want without worrying about decompression illness.
No limit free divers descend and ascend even deeper and faster with full lungs. The divers are packing (special technique) their lungs at sea level so the lung would only expand back to that amount. So yes, totally agree: this scene was perfectly survivable without permanent damage. Maybe he would have passed out upon resurfacing (it happens sometimes, no one knows why exactly)
@@BlackStar2161true. I went to school in Devon, all our school houses were named after famous sailors who were local to Devon. The westcountry was a big place for sailing and piracy.
@averagenoah it's amazing how small things in pop culture can have big impacts. Stereotypical pirate talk came from Robert Newton. Calling people "Nimrod" as an insult came from Bugs Bunny.
Fun fact: while it's said that the 'arrr' comes from the actor and pirates never actually said it, considering how much pirating went on in the South West of England were the accents are thick and the 'arrr' sound is used in daily speech by the people of that region, it's more than likely that at least some pirates really did say 'arrrr' on a regular basis.
Which drives me crazy because tight lacing by and large didn't happen (overall), but before the invention of the metal grommet, it was literally impossible because it would just tear the holes
At first I was like “oh I guess since he’s from Russia maybe that’s not a big thing there” but like there’s no way he avoided it his entire childhood in the USA lol
2:55 I paint contact lenses for a living and yes, we can't make the pupils react to light when painting a prosthetic eye/lens (although that would be amazing) but we do try to blend the pupil into the Iris just a little bit so that it creates a slight elusion of dilation and contraction :)
@Alosuh28 I started as a receptionist and then I basically just volunteered. And the lady who trained me started the company. So I guess it's just circumstances.
I believe he was commenting on technology that would use LCD or LEDs to create a variable iris and pupil as well as tracking technology that follows the other eye so the artificial eye can move with it and appear natural. I don’t know how much of this, if any, exists or is widely available. Seems like a pretty niche market but still interesting.
That's not a corset. They're stays. There are many myths about corsets and stays. They were rarely worn so tight that they suppressed breathing. They were support garments - doing the same job that bras do today.
I can't believe how many medical conditions the characters in Pirates of the Caribbean have. I'm starting to think they should have a health insurance plan.
Thank you so much for talking about prosthetic eyes. I lost my eye and people don’t understand just how difficult it is. I struggle with my mental health and self esteem so much because of it, but people never understand how much it effects me, so thank you ❤️
I was searching for someone else to acknowledge this before i commented 😂 i started watching and was like "werent they all dead already anyway?! Its all moot!" ...but still fun to watch dr. Mike lol
I was like bro, at least watch the movie before you just make a "reaction video" you can't very well talk on the medical side of things when you don't know how a cursed immortal pirate crew actually works as far as the physics of their bodies amd such.
"I can't swim" I agree with Jack's comment about a lot of help that man is in the navy. Corsets,Stays and Binders, when worn correctly, shouldn't impead your internal functions. You are meant to lace just tight enough that it helps with keeping you shaped and steady. You should only wear them for a set time period and rest between use. You need to make sure that just like a modern bra, there are certain objects that fit your frame better than others. So while someone might be able to use a corset, others need to use a binder or a gurtel.
ok- on corsets i wanna say issues breathing was only if someone tight laced their corset which was not common practice. corsets now are not tailored to the person but they used to be made specifically for someone so it would be comfortable. they were a support garment. if someone had issues breathng it either didnt fit them right or they laced it too tightly.
They show her maids lacing her way too tightly in the scene where she gets dressed. I always figured her dad bought her dress too tight, and they couldn’t get her into it without it being so tight. I’m not sure but that’s the way I read that scene. 🤷♀️ her dad got the dress to impress Norrington and maybe got the measurements wrong.
Hey Dr. Mike. Just wanted to say you keep me very optimistic and upbeat during work days where there are boring luls or even sometimes in life when I’m feeling down. I love your happy a positive vibes and I love learning about health through these videos. Thank you very much for uploading these. I appreciate it a lot.❤
Mike - have you never seen these movies??? She made the comment of how tight the corset was when she was putting on the dress previous to that clip. The "smoke" is actually fog that the pirates move w/because they're tied to the ship, The Black Pearl, which is cursed - they're dead but it doesn't show until they're hit w/the moonlight. Ya killin' me - these are some of my most favorite movies hahaha -
1:53 so this is set in the 1700’s when metal corset eyes hadn’t been invent yet. She wouldn’t have been tight laced like that. It would have destroyed the purely fabric holes in the stays (btw corsets weren’t a thing in the 1700’s it was still stays). Tight lacing became more of a thing only in the ULTRA fashionable set in the 1800’s when metal eyes for corsets became a thing and it was actually possible. When tight lacing, everything you’re saying about restriction is true. But MOST women didn’t do it. It was basically the Kim K’s of the world who did, not the regular folks or the sensible rich/members of the Ton. Remember that the existing ultra small court gowns were likely worn by 15-17 year olds who were first coming out to society. Those gowns were too small to wear as they aged and too small to remake into other gowns which is why so many exist. Just a little fashion history for ya, Doc.
Thank you, I wanted to comment that not being able to breath in a corset would mean women can’t breath in bras either since there have the same function!!! Stop thinking of corsets as torture devices 😅
@@marissamul391 and seeing as ALL women wore them (even those employed in service) if they couldn’t breathe how could they cart hot water up the stairs for their mistress to bathe?!?
As a seamstress/costumer in training, THANK YOU!! The Bernadette Banner-esque rant I was about to go on because of Hollywood's misinformation on corsets/stays- thank you for educating the masses in the comments 🙌🙌
@@Alice-ln8mg I love Bernadette and Abby! Their rants /videos were SO educational to me as a would be novelist who knew nothing about corsetry and took it upon herself to learn for a historical fantasy. And since learning all I could, I’ve become SO opinionated on media and the misinformation commonly perpetuated.
Hi Dr Mike! Remember in the Hunger Games video, where you said you didn't know why Finnick was doing mouth to mouth when Peeta had walked into a force field? Well, it's because Finnick is from a fishing district, so the CPR he learned would have been to help drowning victims. So it makes sense for him to give mouth to mouth, as he would've been taught
It is remarkably difficult to get the bends when freediving, only a few of the very best divers have ever had minor symptoms. The reason for this is you aren't breathing compressed gas so the gas can't build up. The reason the best freedivers in the world can get the bends is because they dive more frequently and when at depth the weight of the water above compresses the air in your lungs enough that when you metabolize it into your blood it basically counts as compressed air. But you have to be crazy deep for that to be an issue. Like 200 plus meters under water.
As a funeral director, I legit loled when he said "not compatible with life." I would lose my mind if that was ever put on a death certificate. It's up there with "failure to thrive." I fail to thrive every night around 10 pm. Please know I have much respect for the families I work with. But "not compatible with life" is golden.
That beautiful snake at 5:42 is a milk snake and its not dangerous. On the other side, the coral snake that it's "similar" to the color as milk snake, is the venomous one.
so the old saying " if red touches yell here's a dead fellow....." is no longer relevant, several subspecies of coral snake found in Central and South America since 2015, have done away with consistent color patters, a few have even done away with whole colors all together one species found was a solid color.
@@kiralana324Nooooooo "red touches yellow a dangerous fellow" was the single useful piece of snake trivia I'd retained from my childhood of watching Jeff Corwin on PBS and now it's no longer true 😭
@@firiel2366 I know!!, I learned that saying in elementary school all the way back in the 80's, I even remember singing it to 'pop goes the weasel' anytime I was exploring nature, watching the documentary when that was revealed made me question everything I learned in the boy-scouts as well
Coral snakes' venom is a neurotoxin. They also need to hold on to you in order to fully inject you, as opposed to vipers. Fun fact, coral snake antivenom is created by Pfizer, one of the COVID-19 vaccine companies.
4:22 If your wondering how they punch through glass without a scratch : They use a special glass in movie sets called “Sugar glass”. They dont hurt in anyway because they are hygroscopic and cool part is,THEY ARE EDIBLE.
About pirate eyepatches. They usually didnt wear them because they lost an eye, they were wearing them so their eye is accustomed to the dark, so when boarding they will be able to see while heading inside the ship
From my understanding it could be both. People with both eyes could use it that way, but then those who lost eyes or needed them to help recover an injury then had one handy.
Oh Dr. Mike, the giant octopus is the Kracken, the legendary giant, deep sea octopus. The glass used in films/tv shows is sugar glass, it doesn't cut. It creates a problem because many people hit glass thinking it won't be a problem, much to their dismay. We often got those people in the ER.
it drives me nuts when people who are NOT HISTORIANS talk about corsetry and historic undergarments based on modern ideas about them. at this point in history women were NOT tight-lacing and corsets are primarily a supportive garment. without a corset she would not be able to wear a dress with a skirt of that size. no one said they were comfortable but they are only dangerous when used incorrectly.
Its relevant for the movie, which is a fantasy movie. In the movie, it IS limiting her breathing. He can only speak of what he sees. And you need to get la*d if something so insignificant bothers you
Just wanted to let you know you are one of the greatest doctors i know. This is regarding a medical procedure for which i needed ur advice. I hope you will read this comment and I could get some advice
Elisabeth feints due to the tightness of the corset. It’s actually set up the moment she puts on the dress and is mentioned several times before the fall.
Frog Man would actually be a pretty cool superhero. superior climbing ability, night vision, being able to jump extremely high, breathing underwater, poison touch, etc.
As a 13 year old that watches your videos- they definitley help motivate me a lot. Seeing the way you educate people and help fight misinformation is definitley something I aspire to do along with making quality of life better for anyone
as a reptile enthusiasts I can say, in reality that one is not venomous it's a variable king snake or a scarlet snake BUT in the movie I think it's supposed to be the coral snake which is venomous yet not deadly from my understandings but they're also not common to see, all snakes are very shy and little ones like this one and who like the water they're even more rare to see. beautiful creatures.
I love that poison dart frog fact. I have held a poison dart frog before because of that! One of the few things I can say that I've done that most people have not.
Realistically the biggest threat imo at that time was scurvy. I am sure almost everyone had it. Never seen any fruit in the movies! Edit I guess Barbossa ate apples boy he died twice so you know scurvy might be least of his problems.
I dont think so, grog was very common at the time and you get grog by mixing strong rum with water, sugar and citrus fruits. Humans were always good at problem solving
7:08 Technically those are arms not tentacles, Octopus have eight arms with no tentacles. Squid (including Cuttle) have eight arms and two tentacles. Vampire squid-octopus (More related to to Octopus than Squid), have eight arms with two filaments. Tentacle (Squid) is an appendage that only have suckers at the end. Arm is an appendage full of suckers (octopus) or cirri (Vampire squid-octopus), cirri being soft spikes. Filament (Vampire squid-octopus), being a long thin strands filled with tiny hairs.
Just because the intention is not really to harm the actors. It's just meant to look like that and of course really dramatic, compared to what it would actually be. But that doesn't take away from the fact that in the making of movies throughout the ages, as long as movies have been made, there have also been various unfortunate accidents, some of which have resulted in the death of an actor and/or stuntman or other film crew member. And here's one that's happened in the last few years. And it's been in the papers. And all because the greedy idiot producers don't see the problem with this at all. They ask for near-impossibilities (okay the directors does this too, unfortunately) and then wash their hands of it if something unfortunate happens on set.
Hey, Dr. Mike 😃 Would you ever consider making a short on how to perform proper chest compressions? I know you've shown us a hundred times in videos. But at the moment of emergency, it would be nice to know I have a quick short saved in a playlist if I need a refresher. So I can confidently refresh someone's life 😅
I agree! We got taught it in my school, but it would be awesome for people who didn't get that, plus a nice refresher for those who did. We also never talked about when you did and didn't need rescue breaths in my school nor when I had to do training in the scouts. A previous Dr. Mike video taught me that one. I just learned that they weren't necessary, but that if your lifeguard training says to do it then you should (which I just interpreted as lifeguard trainings were outdated based on the way they talked about it). I feel like assuming there's always a trained lifeguard any time someone is drowning is a bit irresponsible, especially with how many pools are adult supervision based.
@@GogiRegion This is a great suggestion. I'm trained in CPR, and I'm amazed at how medical dramas always show the doc's doing CPR so bad! It would be great see a demonstration of the correct way. Also, an explanation of when to give rescue breaths would be great. My training never included drowning rescue, so I never knew that drowning victims received breaths, too.
I teach 8th grade and last week in the car rider line, a student of mine held up another student’s large water bottle and started yelling “I’ve got a jar of dirt, I’ve got a jar of dirt….” 💀it made my day.
sometimes what gives me most confidence in the veracity of dr mikes knowledge is not in the facts he does know and share, but in the popular culture facts he lacks, where was he that he did not watch these pirate movies? probably studying, because med school is long af, and we love to see it
13:20 I believe that the bends only apply if you are breathing in oxygen / oxygen mix on your way down and then need to decompress while resurfacing. If you are free diving / holding in one breath then you are not providing your blood with new oxygen and therefore don't need to decompress on the ascent. My understanding is that you just don't want to do this too frequently.
It is actually the compressed air not oxygen that creates the bends. Air is 78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen when you dive deep the nitrogen like all your other gasses gets compressed inside your tissues and because you inhale more compressed air by your scuba tanks you add more and more nitrogen in your body.If you stay deep it's not a problem because the air stays compressed due to pressure but when you asend fast the nitrogen expands quicker that the body can expell . When nitrogen forcefully expands it can create an embolism and other pathological issues but like you said it does not apply when you get one breath because you don't add more nitrogen than what you originally had on the surface
Everything you said about diving, is correct, for when you dive with pressurized air. when you freedive as the one with the anchor around their leg, you do not get the nitrogen bubbles and everything else.
Commercial diver here. Bends are a fickle thing. Barotraumas such as decompression sickness, or more specifically as you imaged, an Arterial Gas Embolism (AGE), can generally only occur if you’re breathing compressed air, such as from a scuba rig. The only danger with breath hold diving is going to be blacking out from hyperventilating before the dive.
13:06 Dr Mike, you’re thinking of a drysuit. Wetsuits work by trapping the water in between your body and your body keeps it warm, whereas dry suits don’t let any water in and keep you warm with air and clothing, which you need to add air into in order to prevent a drysuit squeeze
Plus her dress and positioning would have slowed her descent a decent amount, and from the distance and angle of the camera you can't actually tell if she's still flat out or more curled up when she hits the water.
5:44, the red on the snake is touching the black, so it's not venomous. Remember this rhyme: Red touch yellow, kill a fellow Red touch black, venom lack.
I think the Singapore line is a reference to an old method of torture/death that was practiced by many people across the globe. Basically you wrap somebody partially, or just around the throat, with leather. Then you soak it with water. Let them bake in the sun long enough and it shrinks so much it strangles the victim. Don't know if it'd be strong enough to break bones. It could also be referencing some form of torture or execution that relied on compression.
That snake is not venomous. It is mimicking red colours off venomous snakes to protect itself. Best way to remember is the colours. Red touches black, friend of Jack. Red touches yellow, you're a dead fellow ;) Red touched black on the pattern of that. Harmless (minus the sharp teeth bit).
Don't be fooled. Meddling with any creature colored red and black is more of a risk than you think. The South American coral snake may have stripes in a pattern where red touches black, but it remains venomous.
I'm sure they used a non-venomous snake for the safety of the actors and crew, but this children's rhyme is not foolproof at all. It's based on the normal coloration of coral snakes in southeast US, ignoring individual variations. And even within North America some coral snakes deviate from this as a species and globally it cannot be trusted at all. Your safest bet is always to keep your distance from brightly colored animals.
Nooo that snake isn't venomous! There's an ooooold saying that helps us remember: "Red on yellow will kill a fellow, red on black, you're okay, Jack!" There's a few different wordings of it, but the premise is the same.
Fun fact you only have to control your ascent if you are breathing in compressed air in scuba. If you’re a free diver or holding your breath you can come up as fast as you can no issues
Dr Mike! OMG, new sub here! How did I just now find you!!!! Best reaction video ever! This was like reviewing my pre-med human physiology and anatomy class only much more entertaining. Thank you so much for making it fun. If only our instructors would have used your method!❤❤
Thank you for watching! Sign up and upgrade to Grammarly Pro to level up your productivity: grammarly.com/drmike09.
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hey dr mike!
@DoctorMike I send you a big hug for you also for dog bear and Roxy and when are you going to make a video again with bear, Roxy, your nephews and your sister You know I have you as my cell phone wallpaper and I tell you a secret you are my crush Secretly no oneknows And congratulations on your new puppy. ribbie dog. 🤓
@@ZacBobisKing grammarly is great whenever im making a video or writing a essay its amazing you should use it
Haiiiii I love ur videos ❤
Doctor Mike reacting to the Kraken as though it's some average squid or octopus makes me wanna see him react to the phoenix in Harry Potter bursting into flames like "hmm, parrots don't normally do that"
Release . . . the Kraken!
Bird on fire? Not compatible with life.
To be fair isn’t the kraken based off the colossal squid?
Or Gojira.
First from an "It's a giant lizard" perspective, and second from "It's a literary monster, IE a metaphor for, a nuke" perspective.
@@Kitsune16-r4hyes in this case i think but actually for a long time. It’s a creature from i think Norse mythology. So who knows how they really pictured it as these songs typically have not a lot of descriptions. Writers took the idea and used it again and again
*someone literally gets hit with a cannon ball* "they must be experiencing social anxiety and might get a headache after battle" 😂😂
Thats as a primary care doctor, come on you gotta get your priorities straight
He was referring to the others in the room, not the guy getting hit by the cannon ball.
I thought it was just armour on display.
@earthwormandruw yeah ik, it's just funny to me that he would point that out instead of the injury that just happened on screen
I mean, he's not wrong since they were immortal at that time 😂
Elizabeth’s corset is actually incorrectly laced, which makes the line “it’s the latest fashion in London” funny (whether intentional or not). Tight lacing wasn’t really possible before steel eyelets. That said, her maids worked their butts off to get it tight enough to fit the supposed fashion. 😂
Usually laced in the back anywho right?
She's not even wearing a corset (or at least she's not supposed to be). She's wearing a pair of stays that have absolutely no capability of being tightlaced.
@@zrc1514OMG THANK YOU!!!! I was gonna say the same thing! Stays should never be depicted as a cause of fainting in media because they don’t actually constrict anything. If anything, Elizabeth probably would have fainted due to a combination of panic and heat/humidity.
@@zrc1514 In 1777 a corset was described (in French) as “a little pair of stays usually made of quilted linen without bones that ladies fasten in front with strings or ribbon and that they wear in deshabille.”
@@18stile Yeah?
9:00 Actually, the cannon was trying chest compressions.
0:39 she fainted because of the corset restricting blood flow if anyone was wondering
Yeah I know that but what happens in Singapore😢😢
The scene, yeah. Irl, no lol. She's in stays not a corset and stays aren't for tight lacing
Which is a load of BS
@@Rao30799 what happens in singapore ?????????????
"Do you think pirates say "Arrr!" because they constantly have achy joints?" Yeah, ARRRRthritis.
Good one!!!
This comment has not gotten the attention it deserves. Well done.
Lmao
You deserve pinning!
😂
Fun medical reaction! I’m just a bit surprised you didn’t have Jack and Will’s underwater, upside down boat walk on this list to talk about hypoxia. Especially when it turns out that Orlando Bloom needed oxygen so bad that he began speaking elvish, believing he was back on the Lord of the Rings set.
damn!!!
oh I had no idea that happened
Bloom: Govannas vin gwennen le.
Depp: If you going to drop acid while we're shooting a Disney film you gotta share, mate.
Bloom: They're taking the hobbits to Isengard!
Depp: To Isengard?
Bloom: To Isengard!
@@brentacomoose is this from actual footage??
@@saneerasmus I wish. I couldn't find actual footage of the event.
My partner & I were shouting at the screen “It’s not an octopus Dr. Mike! It’s a kraken! A mythical creature! It’s not meant to be like an octopus aside from its tentacles! How have you never heard of a kraken before?!”
I'm pretty sure a kracken is based on a colossal squid
@@arrowverselover100 I knew about the Kraken loong before watching the movie, it's very popular and honestly it's hard and surprising to find people who have literally never heard of it, did y'all live under a rock or something lol
C’thulu enters chat
@@ThePinkerton1776 and let's familiar with Cthulhu but I have heard of it I believe that's some sort of demon that has something along the lines of an octopus as like the top of its body and then it's something else I've seen it on and I think it is South Park had something like that and the kitty, I follow online
@@arrowverselover100 The kraken isn't a thing made up for movies. It's honestly weird that there's people who have never heard of the kraken
Amusing bit of trivia; English sailors used to be known as “Limeys” because in order to ward off scurvy, they would regularly consume lime juice with meals.
Great Fun Fact! ✔️➕️
The tight laced pair of stays on Elizabeth drive me crazy! Stays were used to lift the bust, not to restrict the waist. As a child, she would have worn stays to help her posture and keep her back upright. However, stays were never tight laced because the fabric and the lacing wouldn't be able to hold, and they would just rip apart. Corsets, which came after stays, were also a foundation garment, and very few women were tight lacing to the extreme. Empress Elisabeth of Austria was so obsessed with staying thin that her doctors were advising her not to tight lace as much, and her corsets had to be replaced often because they can only take so much strain.
Dr. Mike watching this movie for the first time over a decade after it came out is the most wholesome thing I've seen this week.
Actually over two decades now. Time moves way to fast
yep curse of the black pearl was 2003!!
@@foxeline7060that made me feel so old omg😭
Has he been living under a rock?
Did he watch the whole movie? It seems like it was just these clips.
@doctormike Hi! I just have one thing to clarify. So there is huge difference between freediving (the scene at 12:56 ) and scuba diving. During scuba diving, you are breathing a highly pressurized mix of oxygen with other gases, which increases the solubility of gas in water in your blood. During resurface you are changing the pressure and thus the limit of how much gas can be stored in liquid. Hence, too fast climb creates decompression illness. However, with freediving you are taking breath at normal pressure and this deep breath is not enough to trigger the decompression illness. Therefore, you can resurface as fast as you want without worrying about decompression illness.
Ah thank you! I was really hoping someone else would point this out. That bugged me as much as not knowing what a Kraken was haha
+ nobody's pumping air into a wetsuit hahah
I also commented this because def an important distinction that confuses people
came here to say this, thank you!
No limit free divers descend and ascend even deeper and faster with full lungs. The divers are packing (special technique) their lungs at sea level so the lung would only expand back to that amount. So yes, totally agree: this scene was perfectly survivable without permanent damage. Maybe he would have passed out upon resurfacing (it happens sometimes, no one knows why exactly)
5:03 Fun fact: pirates never said arrr. It came from the actor in treasure island who made it up based on the way people spoke in southwest England.
Bristol was a major seaport back then, quite a few pirates probably were from there.
@@BlackStar2161true. I went to school in Devon, all our school houses were named after famous sailors who were local to Devon. The westcountry was a big place for sailing and piracy.
@averagenoah it's amazing how small things in pop culture can have big impacts. Stereotypical pirate talk came from Robert Newton. Calling people "Nimrod" as an insult came from Bugs Bunny.
To be fair, a pirate from the area the character was in definitely would have at least had that same accent.
Fun fact: while it's said that the 'arrr' comes from the actor and pirates never actually said it, considering how much pirating went on in the South West of England were the accents are thick and the 'arrr' sound is used in daily speech by the people of that region, it's more than likely that at least some pirates really did say 'arrrr' on a regular basis.
7:18 It's CAPTAIN Jack Sparrow.
😂😂
0:30 none of the options, just a corset too tight 😂
Which drives me crazy because tight lacing by and large didn't happen (overall), but before the invention of the metal grommet, it was literally impossible because it would just tear the holes
Dr. Mike not knowing what a Kraken is makes this so much better
At first I was like “oh I guess since he’s from Russia maybe that’s not a big thing there” but like there’s no way he avoided it his entire childhood in the USA lol
@@aaron_mannahe was very young when he moved to the US, he can't even speak Russian without an American accent.
Or worst, I was like... How do you don't know what a Kraken is?
2:55 I paint contact lenses for a living and yes, we can't make the pupils react to light when painting a prosthetic eye/lens (although that would be amazing) but we do try to blend the pupil into the Iris just a little bit so that it creates a slight elusion of dilation and contraction :)
Just put of curiosity... how did you land that job??
@Alosuh28 I started as a receptionist and then I basically just volunteered. And the lady who trained me started the company. So I guess it's just circumstances.
This is so interesting! I never knew this was a job!
@@lizevanjaarsveld3494 I see it's very intriguing
I believe he was commenting on technology that would use LCD or LEDs to create a variable iris and pupil as well as tracking technology that follows the other eye so the artificial eye can move with it and appear natural. I don’t know how much of this, if any, exists or is widely available. Seems like a pretty niche market but still interesting.
That's not a corset. They're stays. There are many myths about corsets and stays. They were rarely worn so tight that they suppressed breathing. They were support garments - doing the same job that bras do today.
I was looking for this before going on a tangent... thanks😂
Same tbh. I was bouta RANT.
Yes. Not a binder. Shapewear.
Love that I’m not the only one that knows the truth 💪🏼🫶🏼
As a seamstress/costumer in training, THANK YOU FOR SAYING THIS!! I was *just* about to pop off about this.
3:32 "Not compatible with life" is a pretty catchy mythbusting verdict ⚖
0:30 I love how he’s giving all these diagnosis, when her corset is just too tight 😂😂
I can't believe how many medical conditions the characters in Pirates of the Caribbean have. I'm starting to think they should have a health insurance plan.
Skull & Blue Cross-Bones
Wounds received in battle would be worth compensation and were paid out before the loot was divided up.
Unfortunately the only medic in network is the carpenter.
But would they be covered when sailing across the big blue yondARRR? 😜😂🤣
@@petoperceptum Well, they say Jesus was a Carpenter.... so..
Thank you so much for talking about prosthetic eyes. I lost my eye and people don’t understand just how difficult it is. I struggle with my mental health and self esteem so much because of it, but people never understand how much it effects me, so thank you ❤️
"Oh no, their tendons/joints" "oh no, they`re losing so much blood"
Doc... they`re immortal skeletons, they don`t have those.
So many times in this vid ;)
I was searching for someone else to acknowledge this before i commented 😂 i started watching and was like "werent they all dead already anyway?! Its all moot!" ...but still fun to watch dr. Mike lol
I was going to comment this, but I knew someone else would have
I was like bro, at least watch the movie before you just make a "reaction video" you can't very well talk on the medical side of things when you don't know how a cursed immortal pirate crew actually works as far as the physics of their bodies amd such.
@@RandianaJoness they aren't dead just cursed
LOL - that smoke/torches versus drummer thing. What a dork. Love your videos, keep 'em up.
Something about Pirates of the Caribbean? You've got me hooked!
Mike: What happened in Singapore?
Sam: Stays in Singapore
Yeah, thanks Sam!
Sam knows.. 😂
Doctor Mike is a fantastic straight man. 😂
It was hilarious. But, I really thought he did two puns there with the "Stays". We're using it as a noun.
😅🤣
So what is the answer? I'm wondering for a decade or more
"I can't swim"
I agree with Jack's comment about a lot of help that man is in the navy.
Corsets,Stays and Binders, when worn correctly, shouldn't impead your internal functions.
You are meant to lace just tight enough that it helps with keeping you shaped and steady. You should only wear them for a set time period and rest between use. You need to make sure that just like a modern bra, there are certain objects that fit your frame better than others. So while someone might be able to use a corset, others need to use a binder or a gurtel.
The British Navy would literally kidnap people and force them to join it so it makes sense that he couldn't swim. They took anybody.
If you watch the movie, however, that thing was cinched as tight as her dresser could make it,
Came here to talk about the corsets. Thank you for getting here first. :)
And usually proper corsets are actually TAILORED to the person wearing it!!
@moniquetroth not a problem, glad I was of service
ok- on corsets i wanna say issues breathing was only if someone tight laced their corset which was not common practice. corsets now are not tailored to the person but they used to be made specifically for someone so it would be comfortable. they were a support garment. if someone had issues breathng it either didnt fit them right or they laced it too tightly.
They show her maids lacing her way too tightly in the scene where she gets dressed. I always figured her dad bought her dress too tight, and they couldn’t get her into it without it being so tight.
I’m not sure but that’s the way I read that scene. 🤷♀️ her dad got the dress to impress Norrington and maybe got the measurements wrong.
@@jacquelinekenknight9280 Which is also kind of weird, since ready made dresses weren't a thing at that time.
If the costuming was historically accurate corsets wouldn’t have been invented during this movie 😂. But what can you expect from such blockbusters
Hey Dr. Mike. Just wanted to say you keep me very optimistic and upbeat during work days where there are boring luls or even sometimes in life when I’m feeling down. I love your happy a positive vibes and I love learning about health through these videos. Thank you very much for uploading these. I appreciate it a lot.❤
Mike - have you never seen these movies??? She made the comment of how tight the corset was when she was putting on the dress previous to that clip.
The "smoke" is actually fog that the pirates move w/because they're tied to the ship, The Black Pearl, which is cursed - they're dead but it doesn't show until they're hit w/the moonlight.
Ya killin' me - these are some of my most favorite movies hahaha -
1:53 so this is set in the 1700’s when metal corset eyes hadn’t been invent yet. She wouldn’t have been tight laced like that. It would have destroyed the purely fabric holes in the stays (btw corsets weren’t a thing in the 1700’s it was still stays).
Tight lacing became more of a thing only in the ULTRA fashionable set in the 1800’s when metal eyes for corsets became a thing and it was actually possible.
When tight lacing, everything you’re saying about restriction is true. But MOST women didn’t do it. It was basically the Kim K’s of the world who did, not the regular folks or the sensible rich/members of the Ton. Remember that the existing ultra small court gowns were likely worn by 15-17 year olds who were first coming out to society. Those gowns were too small to wear as they aged and too small to remake into other gowns which is why so many exist. Just a little fashion history for ya, Doc.
Thank you, I wanted to comment that not being able to breath in a corset would mean women can’t breath in bras either since there have the same function!!! Stop thinking of corsets as torture devices 😅
@@marissamul391 and seeing as ALL women wore them (even those employed in service) if they couldn’t breathe how could they cart hot water up the stairs for their mistress to bathe?!?
Abby Cox did an amazing video on tight lacing, if you haven't watched it
As a seamstress/costumer in training, THANK YOU!! The Bernadette Banner-esque rant I was about to go on because of Hollywood's misinformation on corsets/stays- thank you for educating the masses in the comments 🙌🙌
@@Alice-ln8mg I love Bernadette and Abby! Their rants /videos were SO educational to me as a would be novelist who knew nothing about corsetry and took it upon herself to learn for a historical fantasy. And since learning all I could, I’ve become SO opinionated on media and the misinformation commonly perpetuated.
Hi Dr Mike! Remember in the Hunger Games video, where you said you didn't know why Finnick was doing mouth to mouth when Peeta had walked into a force field?
Well, it's because Finnick is from a fishing district, so the CPR he learned would have been to help drowning victims. So it makes sense for him to give mouth to mouth, as he would've been taught
Mike: “What happens in Singapore?”
Sam: “Stays in Singapore.”
Mike: “OH.”
Most succinct summary of Sam and Mike’s working relationship ever.
what happened in singapore
@@zoeturner1451Stays in Singapore
It is remarkably difficult to get the bends when freediving, only a few of the very best divers have ever had minor symptoms. The reason for this is you aren't breathing compressed gas so the gas can't build up. The reason the best freedivers in the world can get the bends is because they dive more frequently and when at depth the weight of the water above compresses the air in your lungs enough that when you metabolize it into your blood it basically counts as compressed air. But you have to be crazy deep for that to be an issue. Like 200 plus meters under water.
dr mike: “you gotta be careful with snakes….IS THAT A POISONOUS ONE??”
also dr mike: “remember poison you ingest, venom you get bit.” 😂
"Loss of skin not compatible with life" I laughed wayyy too hard at that and not sure why 😅😂
As a funeral director, I legit loled when he said "not compatible with life." I would lose my mind if that was ever put on a death certificate. It's up there with "failure to thrive." I fail to thrive every night around 10 pm. Please know I have much respect for the families I work with. But "not compatible with life" is golden.
It's typical medical terminology
That beautiful snake at 5:42 is a milk snake and its not dangerous. On the other side, the coral snake that it's "similar" to the color as milk snake, is the venomous one.
so the old saying " if red touches yell here's a dead fellow....." is no longer relevant, several subspecies of coral snake found in Central and South America since 2015, have done away with consistent color patters, a few have even done away with whole colors all together one species found was a solid color.
@@kiralana324Nooooooo "red touches yellow a dangerous fellow" was the single useful piece of snake trivia I'd retained from my childhood of watching Jeff Corwin on PBS and now it's no longer true 😭
@@firiel2366 I know!!, I learned that saying in elementary school all the way back in the 80's, I even remember singing it to 'pop goes the weasel' anytime I was exploring nature, watching the documentary when that was revealed made me question everything I learned in the boy-scouts as well
Coral snakes' venom is a neurotoxin. They also need to hold on to you in order to fully inject you, as opposed to vipers.
Fun fact, coral snake antivenom is created by Pfizer, one of the COVID-19 vaccine companies.
Yeah dr mike is smart but really stupid with animals
I love this series of movies, one of my favorites of all time. What about Lord of ring now?
4:22 If your wondering how they punch through glass without a scratch : They use a special glass in movie sets called “Sugar glass”. They dont hurt in anyway because they are hygroscopic and cool part is,THEY ARE EDIBLE.
Actually it’s sugar glass
@ thats what I said
@@khaledziadeh7292 you said surgar glass, but it’s called sugar glass. There’s only one R
@ oh,that was a typo,my bad,imma fix it
@ nah, you’re chill
About pirate eyepatches. They usually didnt wear them because they lost an eye, they were wearing them so their eye is accustomed to the dark, so when boarding they will be able to see while heading inside the ship
From my understanding it could be both. People with both eyes could use it that way, but then those who lost eyes or needed them to help recover an injury then had one handy.
I remember this from Mythbusters. 😂
8:32 end of ad
Thank you for doing gods work 😂
Thanks dawg
Thx bro😊
Guy gets blasted through a wall by a cannonball
Doctor Mike: Look at all of this social anxiety!
Not me screaming "IT'S A KRAKEN!!!" every time he says octopus. 😂😂😂😂
Never thought I'd watch one of my childhood movies with Doctor Mike lol.
Oh Dr. Mike, the giant octopus is the Kracken, the legendary giant, deep sea octopus. The glass used in films/tv shows is sugar glass, it doesn't cut. It creates a problem because many people hit glass thinking it won't be a problem, much to their dismay. We often got those people in the ER.
Who else was just blown away by the prosthetic eye technology?!🤯🤯🤯💗💗
it drives me nuts when people who are NOT HISTORIANS talk about corsetry and historic undergarments based on modern ideas about them. at this point in history women were NOT tight-lacing and corsets are primarily a supportive garment. without a corset she would not be able to wear a dress with a skirt of that size. no one said they were comfortable but they are only dangerous when used incorrectly.
I was looking for this comment. Thank you!
First, the context was that of trying to swim after an injurious fall into water, second, the movie is fiction and historical context is iffy at best.
Its relevant for the movie, which is a fantasy movie. In the movie, it IS limiting her breathing. He can only speak of what he sees. And you need to get la*d if something so insignificant bothers you
And people don't actually get cursed to be half dead and half alive crazy things can happen in movies
@@thepandaqueen420 PREACH PANDA
Just wanted to let you know you are one of the greatest doctors i know. This is regarding a medical procedure for which i needed ur advice. I hope you will read this comment and I could get some advice
On ships they used Sauerkraut for vitamin C! Mainly because it has a very long storage life.
Elisabeth feints due to the tightness of the corset. It’s actually set up the moment she puts on the dress and is mentioned several times before the fall.
True, but clearly Dr. Mike has never seen any of these movies.
He was saying the zombie ghost man's joints must ache from the fall, I don't think he's seen the movies.
@@TenebraeLux They can feel pain.
Frog Man would actually be a pretty cool superhero. superior climbing ability, night vision, being able to jump extremely high, breathing underwater, poison touch, etc.
There’s a villain froggy man in an X-men movie.
As a 13 year old that watches your videos- they definitley help motivate me a lot. Seeing the way you educate people and help fight misinformation is definitley something I aspire to do along with making quality of life better for anyone
Dr. Mike, why haven't you watched Pirates of the Caribbean yet? Lol
as a reptile enthusiasts I can say, in reality that one is not venomous it's a variable king snake or a scarlet snake BUT in the movie I think it's supposed to be the coral snake which is venomous yet not deadly from my understandings but they're also not common to see, all snakes are very shy and little ones like this one and who like the water they're even more rare to see. beautiful creatures.
I love that poison dart frog fact. I have held a poison dart frog before because of that! One of the few things I can say that I've done that most people have not.
Realistically the biggest threat imo at that time was scurvy. I am sure almost everyone had it. Never seen any fruit in the movies!
Edit I guess Barbossa ate apples boy he died twice so you know scurvy might be least of his problems.
green apple scene where Barbossa was revived by the witch lady. Also there are some fight scenes where fruit goes flying
the fruit grows on the ships, trust
I dont think so, grog was very common at the time and you get grog by mixing strong rum with water, sugar and citrus fruits. Humans were always good at problem solving
@@michasokoowski6651yeah that's a great preservative right there throw the citrus in it and you can store a lot of grog for later use
Captain Jack Sparrow ate a strawberry in the fourth movie.
6:30 that is a kraken
It's so funny to me when you calmly say,"That's not compatible with life." 😂
0:18
He truly is a doctor...
7:08 Technically those are arms not tentacles, Octopus have eight arms with no tentacles. Squid (including Cuttle) have eight arms and two tentacles. Vampire squid-octopus (More related to to Octopus than Squid), have eight arms with two filaments. Tentacle (Squid) is an appendage that only have suckers at the end. Arm is an appendage full of suckers (octopus) or cirri (Vampire squid-octopus), cirri being soft spikes. Filament (Vampire squid-octopus), being a long thin strands filled with tiny hairs.
5:08 how can they be lacking of vitamin c when they are surrounded by the sea? I’ll see myself out
9:53 Frog man cracked me up 🤣🤣
Each time I finish a series I love you post a video reacting to the injuries. Thank you!
Fun fact: actors use a special type of ‘glass’ made for movies that is super easy to break and will not leave any damage
Just because the intention is not really to harm the actors. It's just meant to look like that and of course really dramatic, compared to what it would actually be.
But that doesn't take away from the fact that in the making of movies throughout the ages, as long as movies have been made, there have also been various unfortunate accidents, some of which have resulted in the death of an actor and/or stuntman or other film crew member. And here's one that's happened in the last few years. And it's been in the papers. And all because the greedy idiot producers don't see the problem with this at all. They ask for near-impossibilities (okay the directors does this too, unfortunately) and then wash their hands of it if something unfortunate happens on set.
For the snake, probs not venomous: red next to yellow kills a fellow, red next to black, venom lack
Yep. Red touches yellow, kill a fellow. Red touches black, you're a friend of Jack.😊
That's only true for North American coral snakes.
It's a milksnake absolutely not venomous.
@@cixelsyd40 Is Barbados too far south for that to apply?
I learned it like "red next to yellow you're a dead fellow, red next to black, you're okay Jack"
Hey, Dr. Mike 😃 Would you ever consider making a short on how to perform proper chest compressions? I know you've shown us a hundred times in videos. But at the moment of emergency, it would be nice to know I have a quick short saved in a playlist if I need a refresher. So I can confidently refresh someone's life 😅
I agree! We got taught it in my school, but it would be awesome for people who didn't get that, plus a nice refresher for those who did. We also never talked about when you did and didn't need rescue breaths in my school nor when I had to do training in the scouts. A previous Dr. Mike video taught me that one. I just learned that they weren't necessary, but that if your lifeguard training says to do it then you should (which I just interpreted as lifeguard trainings were outdated based on the way they talked about it). I feel like assuming there's always a trained lifeguard any time someone is drowning is a bit irresponsible, especially with how many pools are adult supervision based.
@@GogiRegion This is a great suggestion. I'm trained in CPR, and I'm amazed at how medical dramas always show the doc's doing CPR so bad! It would be great see a demonstration of the correct way. Also, an explanation of when to give rescue breaths would be great. My training never included drowning rescue, so I never knew that drowning victims received breaths, too.
When I saw the notification for this video: “I GOT JAR OF DIRT, I GOT A JAR OF DIRT, AND YOU’LL NEVER GUESS WHAT’S IN IT”
I teach 8th grade and last week in the car rider line, a student of mine held up another student’s large water bottle and started yelling “I’ve got a jar of dirt, I’ve got a jar of dirt….”
💀it made my day.
sometimes what gives me most confidence in the veracity of dr mikes knowledge is not in the facts he does know and share, but in the popular culture facts he lacks, where was he that he did not watch these pirate movies? probably studying, because med school is long af, and we love to see it
Man this is still one of the best of the best movie series that's ever been made
13:20 I believe that the bends only apply if you are breathing in oxygen / oxygen mix on your way down and then need to decompress while resurfacing. If you are free diving / holding in one breath then you are not providing your blood with new oxygen and therefore don't need to decompress on the ascent. My understanding is that you just don't want to do this too frequently.
You are right, took me a while to find this comment 😀
It is actually the compressed air not oxygen that creates the bends. Air is 78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen when you dive deep the nitrogen like all your other gasses gets compressed inside your tissues and because you inhale more compressed air by your scuba tanks you add more and more nitrogen in your body.If you stay deep it's not a problem because the air stays compressed due to pressure but when you asend fast the nitrogen expands quicker that the body can expell . When nitrogen forcefully expands it can create an embolism and other pathological issues but like you said it does not apply when you get one breath because you don't add more nitrogen than what you originally had on the surface
0:19 wow I never would've guessed dr mike 😂
6:20
Mike not knowing what a Kraken is triggers me 🤣
was just about to comment this haha was yelling at my screen "that's the KRAKEN!!!"
Also that he's apparently NEVER WATCHED POTC 😭😭😭
@I.no.ah.guy57 I've never watched it as well but i've seen enough youtube to know the most important details of each movie
Everything you said about diving, is correct, for when you dive with pressurized air. when you freedive as the one with the anchor around their leg, you do not get the nitrogen bubbles and everything else.
Now Dr. Mike needs to react to Outlander!!! Super weird Medieval medical stuff with a genius doctor!!!
3:50 it was at this point that i realized, he has never watched this movie before hahaha
It was pretty evident from the moment he started listing potential reasons for Elizabeth passing out.
@@Conorator that's fair lol
I thought the same 🤣
After this Doctor Mike should review Master and Commander, fantastic film and lots of injuries and a couple surgery's.
Commercial diver here.
Bends are a fickle thing. Barotraumas such as decompression sickness, or more specifically as you imaged, an Arterial Gas Embolism (AGE), can generally only occur if you’re breathing compressed air, such as from a scuba rig. The only danger with breath hold diving is going to be blacking out from hyperventilating before the dive.
this is the best video ive seen from you, Mike. I love the slowmos. Continue the work bud!
13:06 Dr Mike, you’re thinking of a drysuit.
Wetsuits work by trapping the water in between your body and your body keeps it warm, whereas dry suits don’t let any water in and keep you warm with air and clothing, which you need to add air into in order to prevent a drysuit squeeze
As a wise man once said. “Wait… what?”
😂😂❤
Mythbusters tested falling into water from very high isn't as bad as concrete, but it's enough to break some bones
Plus her dress and positioning would have slowed her descent a decent amount, and from the distance and angle of the camera you can't actually tell if she's still flat out or more curled up when she hits the water.
@@FenrirAldebrand unless you drop down like a pencil from that height, you're gonna be breaking and bruising some things
5:44, the red on the snake is touching the black, so it's not venomous.
Remember this rhyme:
Red touch yellow, kill a fellow
Red touch black, venom lack.
You should do a reaction to parkour injuries, might I suggest Storror
I can’t believe Doctor Mike has never seen Pirates of the Caribbean, I feel like that should be a crime
3:29 HELLO CHUM 🔥🔥🗣️🔥🗣️🗣️
I thought it was “ello chap”
@@pengiunanimatorguysounds like “hello chum”
13:01 your ear drums won't pop if you keep your Eustachian tubes open! I can do that! HAH!
Hii
You here ? 😳
I think the Singapore line is a reference to an old method of torture/death that was practiced by many people across the globe. Basically you wrap somebody partially, or just around the throat, with leather. Then you soak it with water. Let them bake in the sun long enough and it shrinks so much it strangles the victim. Don't know if it'd be strong enough to break bones. It could also be referencing some form of torture or execution that relied on compression.
*whispers* "the water remembers his evilness and cleanses his soul" 😂🤣⚰️💀
the amount of sound effects mike makes in these video is killing me
That snake is not venomous. It is mimicking red colours off venomous snakes to protect itself.
Best way to remember is the colours.
Red touches black, friend of Jack.
Red touches yellow, you're a dead fellow ;)
Red touched black on the pattern of that. Harmless (minus the sharp teeth bit).
Don't be fooled. Meddling with any creature colored red and black is more of a risk than you think. The South American coral snake may have stripes in a pattern where red touches black, but it remains venomous.
I'm sure they used a non-venomous snake for the safety of the actors and crew, but this children's rhyme is not foolproof at all. It's based on the normal coloration of coral snakes in southeast US, ignoring individual variations. And even within North America some coral snakes deviate from this as a species and globally it cannot be trusted at all. Your safest bet is always to keep your distance from brightly colored animals.
Nooo that snake isn't venomous! There's an ooooold saying that helps us remember: "Red on yellow will kill a fellow, red on black, you're okay, Jack!" There's a few different wordings of it, but the premise is the same.
The timing couldn't be more nice than this,i just finished the whole series and i get to see more about it
Fun fact you only have to control your ascent if you are breathing in compressed air in scuba. If you’re a free diver or holding your breath you can come up as fast as you can no issues
14:07 I'm pretty sure that "Donkey Kong" snapped that guy's neck
Actually giant octopus is a kraken 6:46
Not to be nerdy sorry
5:50 Red touches black = All good here
They’re usually mistaken for coral snakes where red touches yellow = venomous
Red touches black, friend of Jack. Red touches yellow, kill a fellow (common saying to help remember)
Bro you need to watch these movies, they are brilliant!
Dr Mike! OMG, new sub here! How did I just now find you!!!! Best reaction video ever! This was like reviewing my pre-med human physiology and anatomy class only much more entertaining. Thank you so much for making it fun. If only our instructors would have used your method!❤❤