for those who want a bit more of an in depth explanation, he's just using the formula for volume of a rectangular prism but using a jellybean as the unit 😁
@@stevewindisch2882It shattered too perfectly. I’m no expert, but my guess is that the jar was made of sugar. They often so this in movies where windows shatter to be safer.
@@davidjennings2179Two australian brothers, who made a youtube channel. They make movie trailers for big youtubers with the goal of reaching 5 million subscribers, at which point they have a chance of making a movie for MrBeast. They are also a part of Mark's editing team in regards of short form content.
It would be more accurate if you weighed a random selection of more of them. Like even just 10 of them would help tremendously due to random fluctuations in weight.
I won a contest by using the same strat with unequally sized candy, I made allowance for the larger candy and knocked some off and actually scared the judges with how accurate my guess was! It was my first time winning something, haha.
@@user-kt3de9ww9i Math is not "rarely" applicable to real life at all, everything around you is only possible because of math. You might personally not use it regularly in your daily life, but everything you do is affected by it and by people who use it to make us not cave men.
One time I measures a jelly bean, then measures the jar, then did all the math to find the area of the jar and how many beans would fit in it, then I still lost
Came here to say the same thing: 🤯😐😑😡😤🤬😵💫🫥 Janitor looking at Mark like I look at my 2 y.o. chucking his dinner (that I just worked on for an hour) across the room.
For some reason growing up i was always amazinf at these things. I won them so much my parents stopped me from participating because it wasnt fair to the other kids. And it wasnt that i had any sort of procedure, i could just look at a jar full of stuff and get ridiculously close to the accurate amount from like 10-15s of looking at the size of the item, jar, and space between them.
Draw a line around the whole jar, count how many beans intersect that line, divide it by pi, divide that by 2, square it and multiply it by pi again, and then multiply it by how many jelly beans there are going up. You’re welcome.
For anyone wondering about circular jars: There are two alternative methods, which all, just like Marks, also work on M&Ms, balls, or whatever. 1. For his method he's just taking the length times width (jellybeans per layer) times height (jelly beans volume). That still works for a circle. Count the jelly beans going around the jar and you'll get the jelly beans circumference (2πr). The area is πr^2, so just take the number of jelly beans you counted divided by 2π (6, 6.2, or 6.28 is precise enough ;)), square that, and multiply it with π again (3, 3.1, or 3.14). That gives you the jelly bean area. Multiply that with the height again and you'll get the same kelly bean volume, aka number of beans. It takes more steps, because a circle is harder to calculate than a square, but its the same method. 2. If you are not allowed to touch the glass or can hardly count it, this method at least helps you make an educated guess. Perfect balls fill an infinite space with a max density of 73ish percent (because you have to leave room between the balls for air). Jelly beans are a little less than that, probably aorund 60-70 percent ish, I always highball it to 70. Thus by taking the estimated volume of the container, multiplying that by 0.7, and dividing that by the volume of the item inside it (about 3.5 cubic centimeters for a jelly bean), you at least get a rough estimate. Final note: if you repeat the process multiple times and take the average your result gets more precise. This is especially impactful, if the items inside the container are very different, as single layers may differ quite heavily. And that is one of these lovely real live applications of math :D
For any of those wondering for a circular jar it's this: Find the height (h) and circumference (c). Now do: (c / pi / 2)^2 × pi × h = jar of jelly beans (j) circumference is the number of the jelly beans to around in a straight line. pi is for the number 3.14..... (goes on forever) and ^ is for "to the power of..." for that small top number on a number. Hope this helped! 😊
Considering the inaccuracy of the measurement, for any normal size jar taking pi=3 should be fine and this lets us have a much nicer formula (using radius) 3r*r*h or using circumference c*c*h/12 (I'm hella tired so I might have made a misscalculation) I think the bigger the jar the worse this formula gets but I'm too lazy to check it for sure so "trust me bro" Also your formula can be simplified to c*c*h/4pi I hope everyone who reads it can square but I didn't use it just in case
@@peoplelikemeithink In Vietnam, we learn these lessons in 12th grade math, 5th grade math learn about calculating the area and perimeter of geometry and in the video we learn about calculating the volume of geometry.
"OH FOR CRYING OUT LOUD!" _eats all of them_ "Zero!" "...okay, technically, that was correct, but you did not show your work!" "I will in about twenty minutes!"
This is the basic method. If you really wanna get advanced: measure all the dimensions and find the volume of the container. Then do the same for a single jellybean. Then divide the volume of the container by the volume of one jellybean. You’re not quite done, though. Multiply the number by 0.7 to account for the 30% air that’s typically in between the jellybeans, and that’ll be your number.
@@datboiischicken9635 The point here is being at-least a bit accurate and being fast; the method in the video shoes a rough estimation in around 30 seconds, depending on the size of the jar and the ability to process mental mathematical equations quickly etc, however, in this method the volume of each jelly bean does matter, imagine in a scenario where you picked the smallest jelly bean out of every jelly bean in the jar, this could lead to this method bring even more inaccurate than the first one, and it also depends on how tightly packed the jelly beans are, you can give an estimation to that by multiplying by 0.7 however this could vary from jar to jar, this could take 5-10 mins with a calculator and like hours mentally.
@@walruses223ui everything you just said applies to the first method, as well. Imagine if the jelly beans you counted were all small, or even more likely, they were all horizontally or all vertical. The number would be heavily inaccurate. The difference with the method I suggested is that you can eyeball the most average looking jellybean and use that. Also, you’re pretty far off with your assessment of the time it would take. With a calculator, both methods would take less than 5 minutes, and the videos method would not be that much faster since there’s hardly that many more calculations. Without a calculator, it would take most people a lot longer than 30 seconds to multiply three 2 digit numbers. Though I guess if there’s some weird time constraint on guessing and/or rule against calculators, the videos method is better, but I’m not sure why that would be the case.
2nd method:
1. Open jar
2. Dump them out
3. "There are 0 jelly beans"
Biuford estaría orgulloso
*Phineas y ferb*
@@gutierrez_el_pibe_sovietico Exactly what i was thinking
ahh yes the patented Buford technique
천재
🤣🤣
"how many jelly beans are here?"
"More than 1"
180 likes no comment let me fix that
340 like and 2 comment
No likes and 736 comments lemme fix that
Let's make it astronomy accurate.
More than 1, less than 1,000,000
Харош
Janitor: dude!
for those who want a bit more of an in depth explanation, he's just using the formula for volume of a rectangular prism but using a jellybean as the unit 😁
Was looking for this!
But it's the formula for a cuboid! 🌚
@shoam2103
That’s…. The same thing….
@@shoam2103same thing 🤣
"How many jellybeans are there?"
I'd say, at least ten.
Wow
Beetlejuice answer
Nah he would say "35" Lol@@volcano6512
Wrong
It's minus
Circular jars: Am I a joke to you?
Today is my birthday and I have no subscribers 😢
Pi: Finally, my time has come
Height/pi X (0.5 X circumference)^2
@@alfiehopkin5795That‘s wrong. By squaring the circumference you get an extra Pi term. It should be:
Height/pi * (1/2 * circumference)^2
You can use the formula for calculating the area of the cylinder using the same approach, can’t you?
EDIT: i meant volume
I want to see Mark accidentally trip over jelly beans after that.
now there's no jellybeans in the jar. But you unlocked ants. Grats
I cried when the Jelly Beans were scattered on the floor
ME to
That’s…. Very sad…
I unliked the video. It deserved a like up until that point
Sad 😢
i crode
-You're 21 off.
Eats 21.
-Now 42.
Exactly lol
Absolute value
this caught me so off guard 😂😂
37
Now it's at 1579 instead of 1621!
SCIENS
Bro violated that jar of jelly beans 💀💀😭
Та самая круглая банка : 🗿
its time for pi to take place
That the most depressingly mesmerizing ending to a short I’ve ever seen. All those jelly beans lol
I only SLIGHTLY cried
I had to unlike the video lmao I was so upset
I thought this whole comment section would be veitnam or smth but luckily it’s not 😭😭😭
Y’all been successful rage-engagement baited
But like… how does he eat them no… they are full of broken glass
Him throwing the beans to the floor broke my heart
1621
И мне
😭😭
and he thinks it's cool.. 😤
aaaaaaaa
они должны быть одинакового размера и нужно учесть зазоры между дрожже, т.к. в другом ряду может влезть несколько лишних, либо наоборот
When you get given jellybeans in a mobius strip bag and asked how many 😂
IT'S LITERALLY JUST VOLUME, HOW HAVE I NOT THOUGHT OF THIS
I know 😭
Let me gues is that a non-srandard unit? And the formula is S²xh4
@@user-oo7xy2bk6q if by nonstandard measurement you mean jelly beans cubed then sure. im not sure what you mean by S^2*4h but the formula is l*w*h
ikr crazy
Bxwxh, how have i not thought of this
To think Baljeet, Phineas, and ferb couldn't figure this out😂
“You’re supposed to show your work”
@@Lucia-ni4oz "i will in 20 minutes"
Work smarter, not harder
666 likes
They go for exact number and not proximation
So he basically calculated its volume....
"How many jellybean?"
"Idk i'll gussing more then 1000"
Last scene was not at all necessary 😭
Exactly 😅. He literally broke the jar
Concordo
나도 그렇게 생각한다.
1621
Last scene for people hitting like button.
3rd method:
1 open jar
2 count all beans
3 say the number of beans
Its called guess for a reason
Open jar
*two girls and a jar*
Thats hella brute force
1621
@@jaysen2569PAUSE💀
I love seeing the sticks guys, theyre great
That jar drop at the end was so sigma
I felt pain when he dropped the jar and jelly beans scattered everywhere.
勿体無い🥲
Точно. Дизлайк за пренебрежение к еде😢
나도야 왜저러는거야. 자원을 쓰레기로 만들었네
Mixed with glass, no less
@@stevewindisch2882It shattered too perfectly. I’m no expert, but my guess is that the jar was made of sugar. They often so this in movies where windows shatter to be safer.
Buferd Method:
1. Open the cap
2. Eat all the Jelly Beans
3. Answer "ZERO"
"But you didn't show your work!"
@@LG-yd7iw I will in about 20 minutes
I love this.
"caseoh method"
It's spelled Buford just to let you know
No, Mark Jelly beans are being wasted!
저 젤리빈이 아깝다고 생각했거나 어떻게 치우냐고 생각했다면 당신은 한국인 ㅋㅋ
How many jelly beans are there?
me: more than one🤠
me: mais de um
me: more than one
O glitch mental KKKKKKKKK
Acontece nas melhores famílias
Me: more then your IQ
Ești român nu?
“That’s not my dad, it’s a cellphone”
“SO I THREW IT ON THE GROUND!”
1621
So glad to see a lonely island reference in 2024
@@Lunascaped yep heh
w song
The Japanese lost their smiles in the final scene.
this was a mr beast challege
Guessing jellybeanz:❌️
Wasting a jar of 1621 jellybeanz:✅️
(Alright guys i know he ate 2 its 1619)
Edit2: okay stop blowing up my nofications
1619 cuz he ate 2
True...
1619, he ate 2
And the jar
It could have been only 1579 (1577 after he ate 2)
I screamed at the end
"Not thE JELLY BEAAAANNSSS WHY WOULD YOU JSUT THROW EM😭😭😭"
Not funny at all
@@Blue_Is_awesome9 I think they were saying that Mark throwing out all that food wasn't funny.
At this point being marks cleaner means your Sisyphus him self 💀💀💀💀💀
Opps
1621
Smashed the jar, wow! Now no one can eat them
Bro just did a war crime by shattering that jar and wasting over 1600 jelly beans
I feel bad for the Cruch Labs janitor.
lollll i feel bad for the principals trying to raise money
Some one wins no matter what 💀
PROTOGEN!!!!!! 💜🧡💛💙❤️
@@glitchingliveloser
@@rwyn. ❤️💜💙💛🧡
Buford: "look what they need to mimic a fraction of my power"
*Eats them all*
Zero!
@@sniclops15”okay that is *technically* correct, but you did not show your work!”
@@dinodude8899 i'll show my work after 20 minutes
@@dinodude8899"I will in about 20 minutes."
In the end, he lost it all
Senku is prototype of mark
Love seeing Sticks as a cameo
Stiiiiiiiiiicks!!!!
Who is sticks?
@@davidjennings2179Two australian brothers, who made a youtube channel. They make movie trailers for big youtubers with the goal of reaching 5 million subscribers, at which point they have a chance of making a movie for MrBeast. They are also a part of Mark's editing team in regards of short form content.
Yess
YESSSS
4th method
1.- open the jair
2.- dump them out
3.- Measure how much it weighs and then weigh just one.
4.-Divide the total by one's weight
Or just say there are 0 jellybeans 🗿
It would be more accurate if you weighed a random selection of more of them. Like even just 10 of them would help tremendously due to random fluctuations in weight.
Just don’t know the weight of the jar alone, so your calculation would be over sizing.
@@JRNimmoExactly. The more you weigh, the more accurate the calculation will be.
@@itslorenzo6626Just dump out all the jelly beans at the end and get the weight of the jar itself
I think the glass vanished, if it did, it looked cool.
Thank you mark, my school has a monthly challenge where it is Basically this but with other candies as well. I will win all the candy now!
The problem is when the candy inside doesn't all have the same size…
That's why they have 1 average size, comprende?
Exactly
I won a contest by using the same strat with unequally sized candy, I made allowance for the larger candy and knocked some off and actually scared the judges with how accurate my guess was! It was my first time winning something, haha.
@@raine1319 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Hey Sticks!
The amount that youtubers are doing tiny cool collabs is amazing, like the crossover between ryan trahen, sticks, and mark rober is insane.
Trahan?
Sticks actually work for Mark Rober but also are Content Creators.
Even with AJR!
@@killslayer1526wait they do? I forgot-
@@ThymeLeaves_ Yeah, if you have been watching their "Creating a Movie Trailer" series, they mention it during their Mark Rober video.
Thanks, Mark you just made me win 72 candies
I feel bad for the intern that had to count it while filling up the jar 😭
The janitor: 👁️👄👁️
Also me sitting at home wishing I had some jelly beans.
Basic volume calculations. Finally something that math can be applicable for irl lol
Edit: YALL CHILL IT WAS A JOKE
fym "finally" you gonna get your mind blown when you graduate school lmao
@@dylanboyd6147what u yapping about. they're just saying that math can be applicable to real life.
@@azrienstewartenasen1508 yeah very rarely lol
@@user-kt3de9ww9i Math is not "rarely" applicable to real life at all, everything around you is only possible because of math. You might personally not use it regularly in your daily life, but everything you do is affected by it and by people who use it to make us not cave men.
@@TheZenistarcool, i dont need to know how it works though, almost noone needs to
"How many jellybeans are there?"
Greater than 1
One time I measures a jelly bean, then measures the jar, then did all the math to find the area of the jar and how many beans would fit in it, then I still lost
Rip Mark's Janitor💀
1621
😊😊😊
Xhh
Came here to say the same thing:
🤯😐😑😡😤🤬😵💫🫥
Janitor looking at Mark like I look at my 2 y.o. chucking his dinner (that I just worked on for an hour) across the room.
when the one who does not value the jelly beans wins, we all lose.
words of wisdom
Bro just taught us simple maths about volume 💀
For some reason growing up i was always amazinf at these things. I won them so much my parents stopped me from participating because it wasnt fair to the other kids. And it wasnt that i had any sort of procedure, i could just look at a jar full of stuff and get ridiculously close to the accurate amount from like 10-15s of looking at the size of the item, jar, and space between them.
“How many jellybeans are there?”
“A lot”
Instructions unclear : my jar was cylindrical
Draw a line around the whole jar, count how many beans intersect that line, divide it by pi, divide that by 2, square it and multiply it by pi again, and then multiply it by how many jelly beans there are going up.
You’re welcome.
@@shadowpheonix1751 Would it be close enough to use 3 instead of pi? I don't exactly have a calculator in my head.
@@Grushdeva48 probably.
@@Grushdeva48but you have it in your phone, you're not forbidden to use it.
@@shadowpheonix1751you can rewrite this as S=L²/4π, and then ×height
I was in third grade back in 95 and calculated for a round tin of candy harts. the school announced that I was part of a three way tie.
Buford casually eats them all and says 0
Sticks guys became Mark Rober's Team mates?
They edit his shorts I believe
Yeah I saw that too lol. They do actually work for Mark now (they shared that when they made Mark's move)
Thay are the ones who come up with the shorts ideas like the popcorn dump short
Let’s go sticks!!❤ there films are amazing!
@@legosonicloverNope they dont
"OH FOR CRYING OUT LOUD"
*eats the entire jar in one go.*
"THERE! ZERO!"
Pinius an furb reference!
"Okay, technically you are correct. BUT YOU DIDNT SHOW YOUR WORK"
@@williamlux"i will in about 20 minutes"
phineas and ferb
RIP jelly beans
👇
Mark after: "I gotta clean this up."
For anyone wondering about circular jars:
There are two alternative methods, which all, just like Marks, also work on M&Ms, balls, or whatever.
1. For his method he's just taking the length times width (jellybeans per layer) times height (jelly beans volume). That still works for a circle. Count the jelly beans going around the jar and you'll get the jelly beans circumference (2πr). The area is πr^2, so just take the number of jelly beans you counted divided by 2π (6, 6.2, or 6.28 is precise enough ;)), square that, and multiply it with π again (3, 3.1, or 3.14). That gives you the jelly bean area. Multiply that with the height again and you'll get the same kelly bean volume, aka number of beans. It takes more steps, because a circle is harder to calculate than a square, but its the same method.
2. If you are not allowed to touch the glass or can hardly count it, this method at least helps you make an educated guess. Perfect balls fill an infinite space with a max density of 73ish percent (because you have to leave room between the balls for air). Jelly beans are a little less than that, probably aorund 60-70 percent ish, I always highball it to 70. Thus by taking the estimated volume of the container, multiplying that by 0.7, and dividing that by the volume of the item inside it (about 3.5 cubic centimeters for a jelly bean), you at least get a rough estimate.
Final note: if you repeat the process multiple times and take the average your result gets more precise. This is especially impactful, if the items inside the container are very different, as single layers may differ quite heavily.
And that is one of these lovely real live applications of math :D
i am NOT reading all that
Thanks! A whole math lecture in one comment
Wonderful comment!!
Dam
If you want to go really wild, you can submerge the jar in a pool of water and apply the 70% to the volume of water displaced 😂
-how many jelly beans here?
-0
-theres 1621
-lemme fix that (eats 1621 jelly beans)
There 0 jelly beans!
Hahahaha (not funny)
Bro is not caseoh💀
My heart shattered with the jar
You’re not allowed to count. Marks just the guy who spoils the fun
NOT THE JELLY BEANS ON THE FLOOR 😭
(edit):MOM IM FAMOUS
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
very bad
rip janitor
Did you hit your head
@@Matt-ui3ugel único aquí que se golpeó la cabeza eres tú, desperdiciar comida es lo peor
"here's how to win jellybean guessing contest every time"
*guesses wrong*
*smashes the jar in anger instead*
They are always just based off of who gets the closest so he likely would have won in a real contest.
*uses simple geometry*
It the closest to the correct number. I have won my work 5 years in a row using this technique.
Plants VS zombies music
The dog:😃
For any of those wondering for a circular jar it's this:
Find the height (h) and circumference (c).
Now do:
(c / pi / 2)^2 × pi × h = jar of jelly beans (j)
circumference is the number of the jelly beans to around in a straight line.
pi is for the number 3.14..... (goes on forever)
and ^ is for "to the power of..." for that small top number on a number.
Hope this helped! 😊
Considering the inaccuracy of the measurement, for any normal size jar taking pi=3 should be fine and this lets us have a much nicer formula (using radius) 3r*r*h or using circumference c*c*h/12
(I'm hella tired so I might have made a misscalculation)
I think the bigger the jar the worse this formula gets but I'm too lazy to check it for sure so "trust me bro"
Also your formula can be simplified to
c*c*h/4pi
I hope everyone who reads it can square but I didn't use it just in case
I'm not doing allat for some jellybeans
@@commander12345 I mean for 1,600 tho
@@kammci5175 I can’t brain that in all honesty
🤓 but helpful
those jellybeans were edible until you smashed them and mixed them with tiny glass fragments
yeah.. wasting food has kinda been Mark Rober's thing for quite some time. I'm glad people are catching on
Just wait until someone brings out a round jar then your done
Arthur Morgan: NO! That was my jelly beans!!!!
Bro just taught us volume calculation formula as if we didn’t have primary school
食べ物を無駄にしないでください
1621😊
Encontre un hater porfin
I pity your companions who have not tasted the jelly beans
For this type of contest (for adults), they usually don't let you touch or get super close to the jar to prevent this exact hack. 😅
The janitor:You know what?I'M QUITTING MY JOB!
2nd method:
"How many jellybeans inside this jar?"
"More than 1 :)"
You just copied a comment🤬u r not FUNNY
@@lisaaddleman6066 They basically combined the top two comments.
This has never worked for me... but awesome video!
Mark's janitors after every video: 👁️👄👁️
Mark is now teaching grade 5 mathematics
what? grade 5??? where???
@@HauNguyen-gs6mkyou didn't learn this in like 5th?
@@peoplelikemeithink In Vietnam, we learn these lessons in 12th grade math, 5th grade math learn about calculating the area and perimeter of geometry and in the video we learn about calculating the volume of geometry.
Can't believe Mark did those jellybean dirty like that
What about when the jar is circular 😅
My brother used this trick once. I used the measurements on the side of the water bottle the jelly beans were in. I won.
Nice Math hack. But both the mum and sugar addict in me couldn’t help but shout out “NO!” at the jar smash. 😢
"Wanna know how many beans are in a jar? Do this method and maybe you’ll get close" 🤣
That's not even funny
Har har har!
😮😮😮😮😊
This is a basic Vietnamese high school math problem that I often solve every day !!
Mark looks like Ronaldo!
That smash was personal 😂
Today is my birthday and I have no subscribers 😢😢
@@user-je7nq6rz2ja Womp womp lil bro
@@user-je7nq6rz2ja bro has birthday everyday
"I got some jellybeans. You like jelly beans?"
Reference Arthur Morgan 🤠
"OH FOR CRYING OUT LOUD!"
_eats all of them_
"Zero!"
"...okay, technically, that was correct, but you did not show your work!"
"I will in about twenty minutes!"
but to counter 'counters', the contest creator just needs to put something like a tennis ball or plastic easter eggs inside the jar as well...
I was just about to like when you smashed that jar of jelly beans
😢
This is the basic method. If you really wanna get advanced: measure all the dimensions and find the volume of the container. Then do the same for a single jellybean. Then divide the volume of the container by the volume of one jellybean. You’re not quite done, though. Multiply the number by 0.7 to account for the 30% air that’s typically in between the jellybeans, and that’ll be your number.
Ok now make a TH-cam short about your method
Yes but not all jelly beans have the same volume
@@walruses223ui that’s not relevant. And also the exact same issue can be found with the method in this video so…
@@datboiischicken9635 The point here is being at-least a bit accurate and being fast; the method in the video shoes a rough estimation in around 30 seconds, depending on the size of the jar and the ability to process mental mathematical equations quickly etc, however, in this method the volume of each jelly bean does matter, imagine in a scenario where you picked the smallest jelly bean out of every jelly bean in the jar, this could lead to this method bring even more inaccurate than the first one, and it also depends on how tightly packed the jelly beans are, you can give an estimation to that by multiplying by 0.7 however this could vary from jar to jar, this could take 5-10 mins with a calculator and like hours mentally.
@@walruses223ui everything you just said applies to the first method, as well. Imagine if the jelly beans you counted were all small, or even more likely, they were all horizontally or all vertical. The number would be heavily inaccurate. The difference with the method I suggested is that you can eyeball the most average looking jellybean and use that. Also, you’re pretty far off with your assessment of the time it would take. With a calculator, both methods would take less than 5 minutes, and the videos method would not be that much faster since there’s hardly that many more calculations. Without a calculator, it would take most people a lot longer than 30 seconds to multiply three 2 digit numbers. Though I guess if there’s some weird time constraint on guessing and/or rule against calculators, the videos method is better, but I’m not sure why that would be the case.
What if the jar is round?? Hmm...
I just did this at a baby shower and won! Thanks