This is my very favourite all-time Curiosity Show sketch. I must have made a dozen of these things over the years. My house had a beanbag, which was good to raid, and I found the best sort of box was a "Strepsils" throat lozenge box. Using a bendy straw set to 90 degrees made the whole process much faster :) Thanks so much for the upload!
And that would have earned you fewer comments than my tobacco tin in the isochronous curve segment, but i agree with you 100% on the value of making things out of everyday stuff - Rob
@@zalibecquerel3463 I just got notified you replied. Thank you so much! I value that information a lot, I would have NEVER know that if you didn't say it, awesome!. As a south American, this show on TH-cam is introducing me to Australia! I read Rob and Deane comments and others, and learn a lot about it. For example conversations about the goon bag, hills hoist, and of course every other video has australian places, or singaporean or from pacific, which I hardly see anywhere, it's like a new world.
You could easily poke the bendy straw from the bottom of the box for stability and cut off the tip if its too long. Easier than being a pseudo- plumber
@@happyhonker123 For that you would need to pad out the space between the box and the straw, to accomodate for the curvature of the bend. And you need a perfectly placed hole, as correcting the position is much harder once the hole is in place. This technique also allows to link more than one straw, or create branching connections. Last but not least, it is meant to be a show that teaches kids. What is better, learning how to buy something, or learning how to make ends meet with what you have, along with some deformative geometry and a basis for some real-life repair skills?
You are spot on. We always tried to use stuff that kids could find around the house and didn't have to buy - no fun if you live in a country town with few shops and someone tells you to buy something essential before you can get started. We would build our prototypes out of anything - balsa - electric flex- acetate sheet - dowels- and then see how we could convert them into stuff kids already had access to - foam meat trays - aluminium foil - shirt box lids- straws - there is a lot of pleasure in making something that works out of rubbish. - Rob
Before computers/internet and the abundance of luxury goods we have today people really had to be inventive to entertain themselves. 100 years ago I might have been playing Le Pendu instead of watching a video about it.
If a child made it, it worked and they wanted to know why THEN i would tell them about Bernoulli as they would be primed to want to know, and I would show them other things to make that used his principle as they would them be involved and motivated. First things first - Rob
@@cadetri9716 The ban of course leading to the word 'courbé' or 'bent' being used to describe dishonesty after certain members of the French aristocracy began selling contraband bendy straws illegally.
Such simple times where they didn't worry about plastic clogging our seas. Honestly you couldn't make this on TV now for all the ethical reasons. Being a kid in the 70s and 80s was just the best wasn't it?
Graknorke makes a good point, albeit in an annoyingly condescending tone. The 90s were my "simpler times", but I now believe the good old days were an illusion. The ocean was getting polluted decades ago, but we can only now start to see why that might be a serious problem before too long.
@@Graknorke Yeah, we ruined the environment by riding our bikes and skateboards and swimming in creeks. The following generations are so attached to their powered devices that they couldn't be surgically removed. The only straws I saw were the paper ones in milkshakes from the corner store.
@@turbofan67 If you think the biggest environmental problems are people using phones then you've got absolutely no sense of perspective. It is and has always been industrial. Deforestation, mining, producing goods, etc. And if you think the 70s were some naturalistic ideal then you must have been a child because it definitely wasn't. Leaded petrol, CFCs, increasing production of (generally unnecessary or wasteful) consumer goods as China liberalised, a huge amount of deforestation of tropical rainforests, and probably more things I can't think of off the top of by head. Just because you personally couldn't see it doesn't mean it wasn't happening, and you definitely shouldn't gloat about it having happened.
@@SomeOne-eo7rw hope you like being wrong. Plastic drinking straws are not the problem they're just a distraction so the people that are causing a real problems can make you look at the straws and ignore what the hell they're doing
@@davidmcguire6043 I like learning for sure. I'd agree it's an absurd - or at least ineffective - way to fight pollution, but the reason in itself is not absurd. The reason is pollution; the means is banning plastic straws. The means are not sufficient. A more exact sentence would have been "plastic straws are absurdly banned in my country since last year"
This is my very favourite all-time Curiosity Show sketch. I must have made a dozen of these things over the years.
My house had a beanbag, which was good to raid, and I found the best sort of box was a "Strepsils" throat lozenge box.
Using a bendy straw set to 90 degrees made the whole process much faster :)
Thanks so much for the upload!
And that would have earned you fewer comments than my tobacco tin in the isochronous curve segment, but i agree with you 100% on the value of making things out of everyday stuff - Rob
"My house had a beanbag":
one of the beanbag definitions according to google: a large cushion filled with polystyrene beads and used as a seat.
@@peter_castle Found in every Australian living room in the 1970s and 1980s :)
@@zalibecquerel3463 I just got notified you replied. Thank you so much! I value that information a lot, I would have NEVER know that if you didn't say it, awesome!. As a south American, this show on TH-cam is introducing me to Australia! I read Rob and Deane comments and others, and learn a lot about it. For example conversations about the goon bag, hills hoist, and of course every other video has australian places, or singaporean or from pacific, which I hardly see anywhere, it's like a new world.
@@peter_castle Heh, every good Australian party ends up in the back yard with the goon bag pegged to the hills hoist :)
These guys are absolutely brilliant. Cheers.
Many more at th-cam.com/users/curiosityshow - please spread the word - Rob
CuriosityShow : Get a plastic straw they are pretty easy to come by.
2022: Yea right!
Rob said "blow him off"! 😁
lol how many tries did it take to get it that first time
Wish I'd found this channel before I retired from teaching!
This channel makes me WANT to become a teacher.
I misread that as 'acting', lol!
legend says that later was the gillotine game XD
That’s pretty clever actually
Yes, it is frustratingly hard to do - Rob
Wow.. a toy you can make, that hangs someone and its ok! awesome!
That looks fun! Thank you
No problem Lots more at th-cam.com/users/curiosityshow - subscribe if you haven't already - Rob
This would actually be a pretty good toy for kids that have breathing issues. It mimics pursed-lip breathing quite a lot.
A great idea - playing trumpet works for me - Rob
This was my most-favourite Curiousity Show project...
Excellent, thanks. Lots more at th-cam.com/users/curiosityshow - subscribe if you haven't already - Rob
Morbid game, but great!
Thanks for sharing with us and the show!
So they didn't have bendy straws back then?
The bendy straw wouldn't be stable enough, so you'd need extra stabilization. It also needs some extra space for the bend.
You could easily poke the bendy straw from the bottom of the box for stability and cut off the tip if its too long. Easier than being a pseudo- plumber
@@happyhonker123
For that you would need to pad out the space between the box and the straw, to accomodate for the curvature of the bend. And you need a perfectly placed hole, as correcting the position is much harder once the hole is in place. This technique also allows to link more than one straw, or create branching connections.
Last but not least, it is meant to be a show that teaches kids. What is better, learning how to buy something, or learning how to make ends meet with what you have, along with some deformative geometry and a basis for some real-life repair skills?
You are spot on. We always tried to use stuff that kids could find around the house and didn't have to buy - no fun if you live in a country town with few shops and someone tells you to buy something essential before you can get started. We would build our prototypes out of anything - balsa - electric flex- acetate sheet - dowels- and then see how we could convert them into stuff kids already had access to - foam meat trays - aluminium foil - shirt box lids- straws - there is a lot of pleasure in making something that works out of rubbish. - Rob
@@christophersavignon4191 The bendy straw was stable enough. I assure you.
Can anyone explain to me why they don't make shows like this anymore? Every kids show is manipulative garbage these days.
I hate how comments like this get no love
There are literally dozens of TV shows and TH-cam channels exactly like this. Just because you don't notice doesn't mean they don't exist.
@@BobLee-df4zh when you make a comment like that I would assume you'd have some examples. Don't you?
Forget the kids i gotta try this my self
My pleasure., Heaps more at th-cam.com/users/curiosityshow - why not subscribe if you haven't ?- Rob
Hands up if you're old enough to remember 1c pieces
Not many Aussie kids have even seen a 1c piece thesr day since they discontinued them back in the mid 90s.
Neat! Will definitely have to do this with my nephews
Before computers/internet and the abundance of luxury goods we have today people really had to be inventive to entertain themselves. 100 years ago I might have been playing Le Pendu instead of watching a video about it.
+1 for morbid children’s toys
lol. but a mention of Bernouli’s Principle would have been nice.
If a child made it, it worked and they wanted to know why THEN i would tell them about Bernoulli as they would be primed to want to know, and I would show them other things to make that used his principle as they would them be involved and motivated. First things first - Rob
CuriosityShow Thanks for replying, love your show.
Were bendy straws hard to come by then and there?
Physics+artistic ingenuity to make a phenomena very heartwarming!
As I am watching this video in 2014 . We longer have plastic straws in Australia 😢
What materials did they use originally?
The materials were quite different before the French bendy straw ban of 1441
@@cadetri9716 The ban of course leading to the word 'courbé' or 'bent' being used to describe dishonesty after certain members of the French aristocracy began selling contraband bendy straws illegally.
Hard to say. Whatever came to hand or could be made from wood and thin metal sheet, I expect - Rob
bird bones, clay, and reeds
File the polystyrene-foam ball outside.
The bliss before we understood the danger of microplastic pollution.
Very cool!
Lots more at th-cam.com/users/curiosityshow and if you haven't subscribed, we'd be happy to have you along - Rob
@@CuriosityShow No worries - I'm already a subscriber!
1:28 get a plastic straw...
fy greta!
Better than Playstation.
Wooow supper cool
1 cent piece? Aargh!
1:18 Not lately...
This was back to a time before bendy straws were invented. Such simpler times...
But today's childs busy with thier video game or mobile phone
Says a channel called Techs Science. lol
Or TH-cam
You millennials get off my lawn!!!
@@CuriosityShow Moist children? I gather you mean "most" children? hahaha!
Far Out
Finally an anti-gravitation device that works!
Computers took all the charm away. Kids are nerding in coding or playing minecraft. Their future looks boring. Not necessarily bad tho
Such simple times where they didn't worry about plastic clogging our seas. Honestly you couldn't make this on TV now for all the ethical reasons. Being a kid in the 70s and 80s was just the best wasn't it?
Yep, just making our own fun.
Wow yes so great to carelessly ruin the environment for future generations. Very cool gen X.
Graknorke makes a good point, albeit in an annoyingly condescending tone. The 90s were my "simpler times", but I now believe the good old days were an illusion. The ocean was getting polluted decades ago, but we can only now start to see why that might be a serious problem before too long.
@@Graknorke Yeah, we ruined the environment by riding our bikes and skateboards and swimming in creeks.
The following generations are so attached to their powered devices that they couldn't be surgically removed.
The only straws I saw were the paper ones in milkshakes from the corner store.
@@turbofan67
If you think the biggest environmental problems are people using phones then you've got absolutely no sense of perspective. It is and has always been industrial. Deforestation, mining, producing goods, etc. And if you think the 70s were some naturalistic ideal then you must have been a child because it definitely wasn't. Leaded petrol, CFCs, increasing production of (generally unnecessary or wasteful) consumer goods as China liberalised, a huge amount of deforestation of tropical rainforests, and probably more things I can't think of off the top of by head. Just because you personally couldn't see it doesn't mean it wasn't happening, and you definitely shouldn't gloat about it having happened.
Time changes everything: Plastic straws are banned in my country for absurd reason since last year. We can't do this anymore ;)
Going that way here, too, but paper straws will work or even straws you make yourself our of rolled paper and glue - Rob
If the reason is ecology I don't think it is really absurd.
@@SomeOne-eo7rw hope you like being wrong. Plastic drinking straws are not the problem they're just a distraction so the people that are causing a real problems can make you look at the straws and ignore what the hell they're doing
@@davidmcguire6043 I like learning for sure. I'd agree it's an absurd - or at least ineffective - way to fight pollution, but the reason in itself is not absurd.
The reason is pollution; the means is banning plastic straws. The means are not sufficient.
A more exact sentence would have been "plastic straws are absurdly banned in my country since last year"
ah yes the 80s...when plastic straws were "easy to come by"...rip plastic straws rip
Rip I'm in commiefornia