I had a registered nurse tell me humans do not have A/V Valves in their heart (aka tricuspid and mitral valves). 🙄 She then continued with she knows this as fact because she teaches heart anatomy. 😒 She worked in the cardio clinic.
@@mregister3945 What in Blue Blazes???!!! How's that even possible? That is scary as $#!T! ========================================================================================
@@nitromartini1422 I don't think so. I found out later that particular hospital was not the one to go to for anything heart-related. Prior to finally being seen, I had sat in the ER waiting room for 3 hours and 45 minutes with chest pains and my left arm going numb.
Actually, I don't blame him. It's the kind of question many forget after school, and at least people thought those things once. I'm sure there were worse answers than his.
I had a friend who got interviewed for one of these kind of shows, and he was really looking forward to seeing himself on TV because he got all the questions right. Guess what? They didn't include him. People in general really aren't this dumb, it's just that the editor cuts out anyone a bit smart so we can all laugh at how clever we are compared with the general public.
It's like those facebook things people forward around that says "9 out of 10 people get this wrong" and it is the easiest question ever and people proudly post it thinking they are smarter than 9 out of 10 people
Well done to your friend. It's a shame that, on some of these shows, there are people who can't point US on a world map 😫, never mind any other country in the world.
It's like some people are so stupid they don't understand how the world works. Or what makes interesting television, yet they STILL think they are bright. They (you) are wrong.
Not only that but it engages the system 2 thinking which gives out knee jerk reactions or snap judgements (heuristics) rather than stopping to think through the problems. Like when someone asks how many animals did Moses bring on the ark? Moses didn't bring any animals on the ark, that was Noah (never mind the fact that the story is highly dubious at best). Or if we ask if a baseball bat and a ball cost $1.10 in total. The bat costs $1.00 more than the ball. How much does the ball cost? Since this question engages system 2 thinking most people get the answer wrong as they resort to the first figure that pops into their head 10 cents. But if you stop to analytically look at the question and work it out rather than be pressured to give an answer then the answer is obvious, the ball cost 5 cents and the bat is $1:05. In other words, the people being questioned giving the wrong answers are often so blindsided that they cannot think through the problem to work it out and these types of interviews are hijacking this normal human response in order to say that said people are stupid in order to make the audience feel superior. This is a very unfortunate problem in entertainment.
I find these videos upsetting, because it's evidence of a serious threat to mankind, when stupidity reigns and lack of education is so evident, and nothing is being done about it....make America great again...start by educating a population of 90 % retards.....uphill battle to be sure mister trump.
@@Reavix1 Don't act like modern times are an age of widespread ignorance. We live in a time when more people are educated than ever. Although I do agree with you that this video is rather upsetting and worrying.
The thing is that almost everything can be changed into gas, plasma, solids, and liquids. It depends on how much energy you subject the particles to under what pressure. These are states of the same thing - atoms.
Whew, me too. I considered myself very average. I guess I'm a bit above. Sad though. Looking back, my mother taught me these things in our daily conversations. She only graduated high school. Mmmmm.
My grandson is in 8th grade in CA and he can't answer any of these questions. Well, when I was in 4th grade in NJ, I don't think I knew any of this stuff yet either.
@@michaeldybwad Isn't a kilopascal what a barometer could measure. It measures pressure but it has various units of measurement that mean that pressure. A ruler measures length, but it can measure it in inches, centimeters or both or other units. What would you say if someone said as an answer, "In Kilopascals." I'm thinking I kind of meant it as a joke. I guess it isn't the complete answer, air pressure is what they are looking for. Inches of Mercury is probably more accurate for California or the US than Kilopascals.
Jay was much better than Johnny,truly funnier and better liked. I met him a few times at the rock store up in Malibu during weekends on motorcycles in the 1980s. Truly down to earth guy, you could go talk cars or motorcycles with him. Very funny without the sarcasm.
Frankly, we do reward intelligence but most of us don't care. Keep in mind that while a lot of us are dumber than I'd like, this is the worst of the worst.
You have not spent time in an American public school social environment if you think the US rewards intelligence. If you are really smart, highly motivated and stubborn enough to say fuck you to much of the culture around you, then yes, you can be highly rewarded for intelligence later in life the US. But truly rewarding intelligence means it's RESPECTED by most. And in the US it's really not. The entire entertainment/news media apparatus has been engaged for decades in a massive effort to convince Americans that being smart is "uncool" in some way.
Lmaoooo what? Daamn homie she already should be, if not, she’s most likely cheating or you should just leave and divorce since she’s lost interest in you 😭😭😂😂😂🤣
I'm 71 years old and it just tells me that the next generation of leaders means we're in big trouble. I while back there was a Georgia Democrat Hank Johnson, that thought if you put 8000 Marines on the island of Guam, it would capsize. Here's your sign.
thesquash326 - That's a great idea, however Americans would not like to know that those they thought of as "inferior", actually knew more about the world, and it's make-up then they did. People in Brazil, or Peru, probably know more about North America then those who live there.
I'm from Virginia and I could answer all of those questions 100%. And when he was talking to the nurse, he actually asked what was the larges organ "IN" the human body, so that would be a trick question depending on how you count the dermal and epidermal tissue.
True, although it is a bit concerning that she said "the heart". I could understand someone not thinking of skin as an organ, but what about the liver or the brain? That said, apparently Lenno didn't know that the colon was an organ so he's not the most knowledgeable either
The question should have been...” What is the largest organ OF the human body”? Still, the “nurse”should have known that one! Maybe she meant she works in a “NURSE”ry!
@@TheRealQuickSilver True...heart? On both sides of the heart are the 5 lobes of the lungs, which are obviously bigger than the heart. The heart is really amazing though. What other muscle in the human body can flex at almost once a second, or more than once a second for those that do not have exceptionally great cardio? When I was in high school I played football, ran track and did martial arts, plus I was on the rescue squad. I was home on the couch one day and I fell asleep watching TV, and for some reason I checked my pulse immediately as I woke up and my pulse was down to 40 beats per minute while resting. Now I'm in my early 50's and if my heart rate dropped to 40 I'd probably pass out. Honestly though, excluding your skin, arms, legs and neck, most of the rest of your body is a conglomeration of nothing but organs, blood vessels and bone, and most of them are larger than the heart by weight and volume. Another interesting fact - people think the place you lose most of your body heat in the winter is from your head, which is incorrect. The surface area of your alveoli in the lungs is much greater than that of your skin, and with the blood vessels so close to the surface to aid in the transfer of oxygen and carbon dioxide, that is where you lose the most body heat. Richard Petty was one of the first if not the first to figure this out. Imagine driving a race car with no air conditioning in the middle of the summer on black asphalt and sitting behind a high performance engine and blazing hot exhaust pipes, on top of wearing a full body suit to protect you from fire if you get involved in a crash and the car catches on fire. It's extremely hot and taxing on the body to drive for a few hours like this, on top of fighting the steering wheel. Anyway, Richard Petty put a cooler of ice in the back of his race car and ran a tube that circulated air across the ice in the cooler and through his helmet so he was constantly breathing in cold air to help keep his body temperature down. If you get cold in the winter, cover your nose and mouth with your shirt and rebreathe some of the warm air and you'll warm up quickly. I do this at night with my covers. I run cold at night and like it a bit warmer, but my wife is the opposite and last night she had the window unit set at 63 degrees and had her legs hanging out from under the covers. Me, I was under my blanket and breathing warm air for a little heat boost before shutting down Minecraft and going to sleep. The human body is amazing...both in how tough it is and how fragile.
Largest by what measure? Weight? Volume? Length? Surface area? Btw the nurse was onto something, the small intestine is about 7m, the height of a 2 floor building, and it's surface area the size of a tennis court.
I wonder how many people get wrong answers because they're star struck, and on the spot. I wonder if I'd even remember my first name if Jimmy Kimmel and a cameraman walked up to be and started asking me questions about science, geography and history (stuff I'm good at because it's always interested me).
David Yaconis Props to the free sex guy for the toilet bowl remark! Also, video editing. They probably don't show the know-it-alls who get the questions right. :P
Exactly. To give another example, the first few times I ask my students to recite the note names as they play a scale they inevitably, no matter how old, forget their ABCs. The brain just gets overwhelmed when its dealing with novel complex or stressful tasks. I didn't forget my birth date and my students didn't forget their ABCs, but we both failed to accurately reproduce that information.
+David Yaconis Yea that was probly their excuse as weel. If you we star struck then I assume you would want to impress them so I don't see it as an excuse. Also why be star struck or think others are better than yourself ?
Christian Buczko I would be worried if she examined any part of me come out of the doctors with an arm instead of a leg and my eye balls were my testicles used to be
I always enjoyed his sidewalk interviews where he asked common sense questions and most people didn't have a clue to the answers, even when he gave them subtle hints!
I'm 55 yo, and was a very average student. However, I knew all but one. Old school education was in much better shape back then than now. God help us!😥😣😣
I always wonder: a) how many of these questions could Jay answer before this bit was developed; and b) how many correct answers did they get before they had enough wrong answers to put the bit together.
At home I think these questions are incredibly easy. If I was there with a mic in my face I think I might just barely be able to correctly guess my own name.
+Jonathon Charlsen And she'd still have gotten that wrong. Lungs, for instance are right next to the heart and each is larger than the heart. The liver is the largest. Then there's the brain. Heart would be about the fifth.
lol. true story I got for ya. every year my hospital forces us to take the flu shot. So the two of us go to the room they setup to give the shots. My buddy gets the 90 yr nurses that shakes like a leaf and she stuck him in his frigging neck. bro I didn't know if to laugh or what.
+Pinta Dubbs To be fair nursing is more about patient care and making them comfortable and cheerful while in the hospital; whereas if a physician couldn't answer this they probably hadn't retaken their steps in a few decades.
Remember, being smart is not the same as knowledgably. I would hang out with that guy, He would make a good buddy. Anyone who does not take himself too seriously is ok in my book. Although I have to admit. bragging a little here. I had a drivers license when I was in 4th grade. Of course I was 16 at the time, but lets not talk about that. My therapist says to just keep it our secret.
Don't give him such a hard time though. A scientist may be asked questions but they don't know what a barometer is because they never had to use it or learned it a long time ago. Not being able to answer this question doesn't automatically make all these people dumb ;|
@@theoriginalcows1357 I have always found these abusive questions and tactics questionable. They ask these questions in fun have them sign a paper and give them a shirt or something and laugh it off. Then next think you know your a national laughing stop . That is my assessment.
My grandfather quit school when he was 16 to go to work to help his family survive. He wouldn't have been able to answer many questions out of that book, but he could rebuild the engine of a tractor, weld, butcher a whole steer or hog, run an excavator, etc, etc, etc.
Sadly, people don't appreciate these people properly. My grandfather was a fifth grade dropout from Oklahoma. He spent 32 years at a naval rework facility in Southern California, from '41 to '73. He retired as a 'Superintendent of Supervisors ' running an F4 rework/upgrade program. VIP status, Hawaiian vacations, the works. But he was always a down to earth, a country boy at heart, tons of common sense, and a handyman. We miss him.
My paternal grandpa got about three years of school. He taught himself quite a lot. He didn't have any difficulty reading the newspaper. He got promoted to foreman at the Savannah shipyard because he could read a rule, ( a six foot folding rule ). The man they hired as a foreman couldn't and someone up the chain of command just happened to come along as the "foreman" was telling my grandpa a measurement' He said a measurement in feet and however many little black marks the measurement was. That got him demoted. Grandpa was glad to have the extra money because he had eight kids.
The worst of it is that she initially mentioned the heart, then immediately corrected herself: ‘Oh no, it’s not an organ,it’s a muscle’ - and later she saw no objection in replying ‘the leg’ ! I hope this woman was lying about her profession, else beware!!
Well...actually, it originated as a blood vessel that bent in half, grew together and formed the chambers, valves and it's very own brain...all before 22 days gestation. You just wanted to know that, I bet. ;-)
It’s actually the gravitational pull of both the earth and the Sun interacting, albeit the component of the force generated by the mass of the earth is much smaller.
@@frankyounger231 they actually both rotate around a point that is at the center of neither (but in this case it’s pretty close to the center of the sun). In the case of Jupiter and the sun, they both orbit around a point that is between them (not within the sun itself).
I have always hoped that these episodes are edited to keep the most hilariously silly but judging from recent events I am certain now that it represents the majority of people here.
Oh, no question. I go to a public university and regularly see students get confused on basic concepts like forms of matter. You have to wonder what’s going on at the elementary level.
We don't need to know all info. Who cares whether skin is the largest organ? It is just another silly fact. Even if we know this, we would still be unqualified to treat a person with medical need, unless we are a doctor. Everyone should be good at their profession and daily chores and that all what is necessary.
@@fredbohm4728 Education is subjective and comes in many forms. Who would you rather be on a desert island with, a psychiatrist or a navy seal? Everyone knows gas, liquid, solid, just not in the context they presented
Gravitational constant is a fixed value, right? So the force that pulls two masses together (gravity?) is a function of two masses, not just one. So it's not really the Sun's gravity... it's the force generated by masses of both the Sun and the Earth. Yes, I guess I'm picky. But I hate when people make fun of other people using inaccurate "facts".
@@kennethmiller4950 force of gravity is real. Like your body weight, but earth isn’t pulling you down. Both you and earth are traveling through time, but your paths are slightly convergent (like two cars driving down the road that are slightly bearing into each other essentially pushing on one another). Both you and earth are trying to travel to the same spot so we are pushing on each other
The force of gravity is an attractive force, so yes the earth is pulling the sun and the sun is pulling the earth. However, because these forces are in opposite directions you would find the resultant and as the sun has a far greater pull than the earth, we can say that the sun's gravitational pull keeps the earth in orbit around the sun. However the earth's angular momentum also plays its part in keeping the earth in orbit around the sun because without that the earth would crash into the sun.
I did 6th grade in SoCal years ago. My classmates insisted that Hawaii was the 49th state and and Alaska was 50th. That was just one example. I’m from Minnesota.
I had an student in college that probably couldn't answer these questions but he is an amazing professional in what he does and make much more money than people that could answer some of these questions.
I miss Jay Leno. Him and Conan were my favorite. Jay Leno: Mr. Brain, Iron Jay. Conan: Walker Texas Ranger Lever. Apparently they are a tough act to follow.
I also reacted on that. Thought it was 4 but turns out that those are only the "classical" states and a lot more exists but the well-known 4 are the only ones observable under normal conditions. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_states_of_matter
to be fair, even though she was wrong.. he also asked the question wrong to her. For her he said IN the human body, on another person he said ON the human body.
@@Corathor Love it; ‘the question was wrong’. Look at it from the perspective of there being 6 layers of skin ‘inside’ and only 1 on the outside. I’m startling to feel like a lawyer twisting words to arrive at my answer now.
True, but most people are not familiar with degenerate matter, quantum spin liquid, fermionic condensates and others as well as the theoretical ones. I took my que from Jay, in that, he was asking questions most educated people should have the answers for, but apparently even educated Americans don't.
Watching Jay Leno's Garage, it would appear that he does know a shit-ton about engineering, actually, and I'm sure he understands the basic physics and chemistry underpinning it.
LOL, they rarely show anyone who gets the answers right. I was on a radio program's trivia contest one time when they were doing a live remote broadcast. I'm a trivia nut and was absolutely destroying everyone. They actually cut my mike so I couldn't answer any more questions to keep it "exciting".
The children in a town in Canada was given an IQ test before television was introduced to that area. A few years after TV was available the IQ tests showed a substantial decline.
These videos should be required viewing by every school board member across the country. If these questions are not covered in school, what do they teach in school? Oh, I know. CRT, sex education to four-year-olds and gender dysphoria. That's the new education system and if you complain about it, you are racist.
You have to take into account how much time has passed and new scientific discoveries. Science textbooks will always change, sometimes from one year to the next. Sometimes, it's one day to the next. If you went to school on Aug. 23, 2006, Pluto was the 9th planet. On Aug. 24, it wasn't a planet at all. For fun, I was reading a book Isaac Asimov published in 1950 about space travel. It was nonfiction and made some very good observations about space and how space travel might be conducted in the future (remember, Sputnik 1, the first artificial satellite didn't launch until 1957). A lot of it, however, was either wildly optimistic, or just plain wrong. It's understandable, given our knowledge of the universe at that time. Even the question Jay asked about how many oceans there are is now up for debate depending upon who you listen to. The scientific community in most countries now recognize a fifth ocean, the Southern Ocean, surrounding Antarctica. Science changes daily.
@ 3:35 Jay asked "What is the biggest organ ON the human body"?...(answer is skin).........then @ 3:50 Jay asks "What is the largest organ IN the human body"? BUT I believe Jay meant to say "ON".......but the answer is liver.
@4:05 "there are 3 states of matter, can you name them"? Old, outdated question. Gas, liquid, solid. Fourth, plasma. Fifth, man made Bose-Einstein condensates.
The gravity of both the sun and the Earth are what keeps the Earth orbiting the sun. It's not just the sun's gravity. The Earth also doesn't orbit the sun; both the Earth and sun orbit around the solar system's center of mass.
He is reading out of a fourth grade book from a few years ago and the book was probably not edited for facts like most school text books. Here a conspiracy factoid about school text books. The names of the writers may have no knowledge of the books their names are attached to because ghost writers slap names on the books to make them look legit.
Orbit the barycenter. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barycenter. The Earth-Sun barycenter is only 449 km from the center of the sun so the sun barely wobbles from Earth's influence.
There are five states of matter 1. Solid 2. Liquid 3. Gas 4. Plasma 5. Bose-Einstein condensate Maybe you don't have to expect people to know the more exotic states of matter, but given that 99% of the universe is plasma, people should know it. There's also a ginormous exploding example in the sky.
+Megan Williams Considering she thought the colon was the biggest organ… she’d probably give you a hypodermic injection if you asked her to take your temperature rectally.
+Jonathan Dyer I think the question she was thinking of is "What is the most important muscle in the body?". We often forget that the heart is a muscle.
Yup. I'm a substitute teacher. The regular teacher gave the class an on-line assignment which asked the class to name the four states of matter. Yet, the teacher herself had a poster on the wall, which the teacher made, naming "the three states of matter". I guess it doesn't matter, though. Most students in the class couldn't name two states of matter, even though three of them were named on the wall.
I was watching a game show years ago called 'Street Smarts'. The host asked a woman, "What planet is the Miss Universe pageant held on?" She answered with, "Venus." 🙄🙄
Not the squirrel I shot when I was like 8-10 years old. That fox squirrel had bigger balls than me. If I had a camera phone at the time(they didn't exist) I would send you a picture right now. He also had bigger nuts than I had when I got my scuba diving certification (it was the opening of dear season (aka cold as f). Peeing every 5 minutes didn't bother me it was the absolutely gorgeous woman who could see my profile through my wetsuit.
solid, liquid, gas, plasma - 4 states of matter Also a barometer does measure air pressure but specifically atmospheric air pressure which @ sea level is The standard atmosphere (symbol: atm): a unit of pressure defined as 101,325 Pa (1,013.25 hPa; 1,013.25 mbar), which is equivalent to 760 mm Hg, 29.9212 inches Hg, or 14.696 psi absolute.
"Name the 3 states of matter"
"Fire, earth and sky"
*Avatar the last airbender intensifies*
It always matters, Sometimes it matters, it never matters.
@@jsmariani4180
English is not my main language so I've probably wouldn't understood what he had asked me lol
Don't forget Bionicle.
Ah yes, s k y
Solid liquid gas
What's the largest organ on human body?
"Yours or mine?"
🤣
Big brains 100
lukewarm you’re just jealous that you’re not as smart as he is.
Hi-ohhhhhh!
Ignorance is obviously blissful !
@@kunalpradhan6166
You are right
Definitely not het brain !!
Haha
I think if Leno found an intelligent and well informed person, they would cut out that segment; no comedy there.
Honestly seems staged
@ freewill... well they do... I'm sure there were some people who gave correct answers but I bet they didn't have to look very far for the idiots
No they keep everyone but they could never find an intelligent and well informed person
that's how these things work. Anyone they found who got the answers right would have been cut out
Obviously
It's actually scary how clueless that nurse was.
I had a registered nurse tell me humans do not have A/V Valves in their heart (aka tricuspid and mitral valves). 🙄
She then continued with she knows this as fact because she teaches heart anatomy. 😒
She worked in the cardio clinic.
@@mregister3945 What in Blue Blazes???!!! How's that even possible? That is scary as $#!T!
========================================================================================
@@mregister3945: Was she a DEI hire?
@@nitromartini1422 I don't think so. I found out later that particular hospital was not the one to go to for anything heart-related.
Prior to finally being seen, I had sat in the ER waiting room for 3 hours and 45 minutes with chest pains and my left arm going numb.
Trump university student
Name 3 states of matter: fire, earth and sky.
What is this the middle ages?
LOL!
Actually, I don't blame him. It's the kind of question many forget after school, and at least people thought those things once. I'm sure there were worse answers than his.
How does plasma fit in here?
Is three bro or sis
Solid, liquid and gas
Matter is anything that has weight and occupy space
i fucking lost it from that answer could not stop laughing
I had a friend who got interviewed for one of these kind of shows, and he was really looking forward to seeing himself on TV because he got all the questions right.
Guess what? They didn't include him.
People in general really aren't this dumb, it's just that the editor cuts out anyone a bit smart so we can all laugh at how clever we are compared with the general public.
captain obvious, what do you expect? it's a show...
It's like those facebook things people forward around that says "9 out of 10 people get this wrong" and it is the easiest question ever and people proudly post it thinking they are smarter than 9 out of 10 people
Well done to your friend. It's a shame that, on some of these shows, there are people who can't point US on a world map 😫, never mind any other country in the world.
It's like some people are so stupid they don't understand how the world works. Or what makes interesting television, yet they STILL think they are bright.
They (you) are wrong.
Not only that but it engages the system 2 thinking which gives out knee jerk reactions or snap judgements (heuristics) rather than stopping to think through the problems. Like when someone asks how many animals did Moses bring on the ark? Moses didn't bring any animals on the ark, that was Noah (never mind the fact that the story is highly dubious at best). Or if we ask if a baseball bat and a ball cost $1.10 in total. The bat costs $1.00 more than the ball. How much does the ball cost? Since this question engages system 2 thinking most people get the answer wrong as they resort to the first figure that pops into their head 10 cents. But if you stop to analytically look at the question and work it out rather than be pressured to give an answer then the answer is obvious, the ball cost 5 cents and the bat is $1:05. In other words, the people being questioned giving the wrong answers are often so blindsided that they cannot think through the problem to work it out and these types of interviews are hijacking this normal human response in order to say that said people are stupid in order to make the audience feel superior. This is a very unfortunate problem in entertainment.
I find these videos very uplifting. these guys make me feel like I'm a member of the academy elite.
I find these videos upsetting, because it's evidence of a serious threat to mankind, when stupidity reigns and lack of education is so evident, and nothing is being done about it....make America great again...start by educating a population of 90 % retards.....uphill battle to be sure mister trump.
It means that they work on you, since they're fake.
I hope that was your sense of humor.... If not, then "academic" is the word you were looking fo.
Maybe that's the point
@@Reavix1 Don't act like modern times are an age of widespread ignorance. We live in a time when more people are educated than ever. Although I do agree with you that this video is rather upsetting and worrying.
Those answering the questions in this clip are geniuses compared to those graduating today.
They can't even name a country today lol.
Fire earth and sky that answer killed me
can't believe he forgot water ;(
The thing is that almost everything can be changed into gas, plasma, solids, and liquids. It depends on how much energy you subject the particles to under what pressure. These are states of the same thing - atoms.
Joel Harawa fire is not plasma
+Dark Zero
And wind.
A way out here they got a name for wind and rain and fire.
The fire is Joe, the rain is Tess and they call the wind Mariah.
hmm earth wind and fire i love them
- "Name the three states of matter".
- "Solid, Liquid,... Solidus?"
- "Close. it's Ocelot."
I know how to increase the scores . Eugenics works great. One cup of eugenics per generation would dramatically increase the IQ in the world.
Well there's at least a 4th state: Plasma
@@deforestgregg616 I don't Reich that.
Rock paper scissor.
+1 for your MGS reference
"When I examine myself, I worry; when I compare myself, I am assured."
Good one!
Who is the author of this quote?
Fuck you - and shave that stupid beard.
Yank ee Did someone hurt you?
Whew, me too. I considered myself very average. I guess I'm a bit above. Sad though. Looking back, my mother taught me these things in our daily conversations. She only graduated high school. Mmmmm.
Barometer measures how many bars you’ve been to over the course of a day!
Great idea. The Bar-O-Meter.
"It's not temperature..."
"It's not the speed of a car..."
I love that guy, just stating random things as he's thinking.
At least he didn't say it measures baro. 😏
My grandson is in 8th grade in CA and he can't answer any of these questions. Well, when I was in 4th grade in NJ, I don't think I knew any of this stuff yet either.
Kilopascals!!!
@@cyalknight No, air pressure!!! kPa, Pa, bar, psi, atm, EPa, TPa, dPa etc is not answere.. Like how long is....? Meter!
@@michaeldybwad Isn't a kilopascal what a barometer could measure. It measures pressure but it has various units of measurement that mean that pressure.
A ruler measures length, but it can measure it in inches, centimeters or both or other units.
What would you say if someone said as an answer, "In Kilopascals."
I'm thinking I kind of meant it as a joke. I guess it isn't the complete answer, air pressure is what they are looking for.
Inches of Mercury is probably more accurate for California or the US than Kilopascals.
Jay was my favorite of all talk show hosts. I loved his demeanor, his way with people.
Second only to Johnny Carson
Johnny
Jay was much better than Johnny,truly funnier and better liked. I met him a few times at the rock store up in Malibu during weekends on motorcycles in the 1980s. Truly down to earth guy, you could go talk cars or motorcycles with him. Very funny without the sarcasm.
Say what????
Funniest - and clean - comic ever! Saw him live and Jay was great! Reminds me of Brian Regan.
-What keeps Earth orbiting around the sun?
-Gravity
-Who's gravity?
-Your momma's
shujinkoMK Whose*
shujinkoMK That would have been a great answer.
Who's gravity?
Deez Nuts!
well and tesla?
no gravity, electromagnetism
THAT escalated quickly
I always enjoyed Jay's street walk questions. 😂
Yes!!
Well when you live in a society that doesn't reward intelligence this is what happens.
+WHATS FOR BREAKFAST DAD, speaking of intelligence, you do realize, do you not, that your screen name is misspelled and mispunctuated?
Frankly, we do reward intelligence but most of us don't care. Keep in mind that while a lot of us are dumber than I'd like, this is the worst of the worst.
You are genuinely daft if you think US society does not reward intelligence.
To be fair, he could very well have come across fifty people who knew all the answers before he found these losers.
You have not spent time in an American public school social environment if you think the US rewards intelligence. If you are really smart, highly motivated and stubborn enough to say fuck you to much of the culture around you, then yes, you can be highly rewarded for intelligence later in life the US. But truly rewarding intelligence means it's RESPECTED by most. And in the US it's really not. The entire entertainment/news media apparatus has been engaged for decades in a massive effort to convince Americans that being smart is "uncool" in some way.
Jay is leaning in so close that those interviewed are backing up feeling uncomfortable
I was thinking just that - back off Jay
They were feeling the pressure
Ladies don't need to have a high IQ
@Sammy He wasn't. Those ppl should really wear masks.
@Sammy I feel sorry for you. r/woosh
I wish my wife gets this close to me as the interviewer gets to these people.
Lmaoooo what? Daamn homie she already should be, if not, she’s most likely cheating or you should just leave and divorce since she’s lost interest in you 😭😭😂😂😂🤣
@@ElGuapo408_ I’m pretty sure he’s kidding 😂😂
You should see his Car collection
Try taking a bath?
“The interviewer” like we don’t know who Jay Leno is smh
I'm 71 years old and it just tells me that the next generation of leaders means we're in big trouble. I while back there was a Georgia Democrat Hank Johnson, that thought if you put 8000 Marines on the island of Guam, it would capsize. Here's your sign.
America is already in a mess and these people are now in government..
😂😂😂😂😂😂
I remember that! 😂😮
The leaders will be smart. These people were engineered to be the slaves.
It’s shocking that the nurse didn’t know what was the biggest organ
Whose biggest organ?
And she wasn't even close.
@Matej Juhás Yeah, they do.
@@alukuhito Nah, they don't.
@@facecrafter1328 In your circles.
Ask these kind of questions in developing countries, you won't regret
Ask them 1 + 1 = ?
thesquash326 - That's a great idea, however Americans would not like to know that those they thought of as "inferior", actually knew more about the world, and it's make-up then they did.
People in Brazil, or Peru, probably know more about North America then those who live there.
You are indian??
Developing nations don’t have as much of an ability to educate its populace and I still bet that they know more than an American.
You instead might regret 😂
He is such a good comedian that he simply makes asking questions very funny.
I'm from Virginia and I could answer all of those questions 100%. And when he was talking to the nurse, he actually asked what was the larges organ "IN" the human body, so that would be a trick question depending on how you count the dermal and epidermal tissue.
True, although it is a bit concerning that she said "the heart". I could understand someone not thinking of skin as an organ, but what about the liver or the brain? That said, apparently Lenno didn't know that the colon was an organ so he's not the most knowledgeable either
6 on the inside and 1 on the outside.
The question should have been...” What is the largest organ OF the human body”? Still, the “nurse”should have known that one! Maybe she meant she works in a “NURSE”ry!
@@TheRealQuickSilver True...heart? On both sides of the heart are the 5 lobes of the lungs, which are obviously bigger than the heart. The heart is really amazing though. What other muscle in the human body can flex at almost once a second, or more than once a second for those that do not have exceptionally great cardio? When I was in high school I played football, ran track and did martial arts, plus I was on the rescue squad. I was home on the couch one day and I fell asleep watching TV, and for some reason I checked my pulse immediately as I woke up and my pulse was down to 40 beats per minute while resting. Now I'm in my early 50's and if my heart rate dropped to 40 I'd probably pass out. Honestly though, excluding your skin, arms, legs and neck, most of the rest of your body is a conglomeration of nothing but organs, blood vessels and bone, and most of them are larger than the heart by weight and volume. Another interesting fact - people think the place you lose most of your body heat in the winter is from your head, which is incorrect. The surface area of your alveoli in the lungs is much greater than that of your skin, and with the blood vessels so close to the surface to aid in the transfer of oxygen and carbon dioxide, that is where you lose the most body heat. Richard Petty was one of the first if not the first to figure this out. Imagine driving a race car with no air conditioning in the middle of the summer on black asphalt and sitting behind a high performance engine and blazing hot exhaust pipes, on top of wearing a full body suit to protect you from fire if you get involved in a crash and the car catches on fire. It's extremely hot and taxing on the body to drive for a few hours like this, on top of fighting the steering wheel. Anyway, Richard Petty put a cooler of ice in the back of his race car and ran a tube that circulated air across the ice in the cooler and through his helmet so he was constantly breathing in cold air to help keep his body temperature down. If you get cold in the winter, cover your nose and mouth with your shirt and rebreathe some of the warm air and you'll warm up quickly. I do this at night with my covers. I run cold at night and like it a bit warmer, but my wife is the opposite and last night she had the window unit set at 63 degrees and had her legs hanging out from under the covers. Me, I was under my blanket and breathing warm air for a little heat boost before shutting down Minecraft and going to sleep. The human body is amazing...both in how tough it is and how fragile.
Largest by what measure? Weight? Volume? Length? Surface area? Btw the nurse was onto something, the small intestine is about 7m, the height of a 2 floor building, and it's surface area the size of a tennis court.
barometers measure atmospheric pressure specifically not air pressure.
In fairness, the atmosphere, at least on earth, is made up of air.
Right. A tire gauge is not a barometer.
OK. I gotta question for you. What device measures atmosheric pressure in space?
@@rigelmoon9030 outer space has no atmosphere.
@@rigelmoon9030 The Moon! It varies in size like a balloon (full moon, new moon, crescent moon.), so it measures the space pressure.
"Three states of matter"
"Fire, earth and sky"
Noo...."Iron, metal and rock"
Def sounds correct
its, of course, Metal Rock & Punk.
I was impressed, he didn´t answer
Washington DC
Alaska
Hawaii
I thought these were the states of matter...
Actually there are four states of matter including plasma ... plus a possible fifth one physicists are now investigating.
@@blackbull7717 You made me laugh man
Leno should have looked at camera and gone along with it and said... Yes, you are correct. see how many letters he gets.. or not lol
The largest organ on Jay’s body is his Chin!
made me laugh !!
true dat is.............................
LMAAAOOO
should donate some to leafy
Get in line with the thickies.
Jay Leno was the best night time talk show host ever. Well, next to Johnny Carson... The good old days when a talk show host was funny.
I wonder how many people get wrong answers because they're star struck, and on the spot. I wonder if I'd even remember my first name if Jimmy Kimmel and a cameraman walked up to be and started asking me questions about science, geography and history (stuff I'm good at because it's always interested me).
David Yaconis Props to the free sex guy for the toilet bowl remark!
Also, video editing. They probably don't show the know-it-alls who get the questions right.
:P
David Yaconis I once got mugged. When the officer asked my date of birth, I gave the wrong answer and had to correct myself. It happens.
+Harry Stoddard Wait... what? How did you forget your own date of birth?
Exactly. To give another example, the first few times I ask my students to recite the note names as they play a scale they inevitably, no matter how old, forget their ABCs. The brain just gets overwhelmed when its dealing with novel complex or stressful tasks.
I didn't forget my birth date and my students didn't forget their ABCs, but we both failed to accurately reproduce that information.
+David Yaconis Yea that was probly their excuse as weel. If you we star struck then I assume you would want to impress them so I don't see it as an excuse. Also why be star struck or think others are better than yourself ?
Anybody else scared by that so called nurse???
No she is a dangerous nurse ,,
Christian Buczko I would be worried if she examined any part of me come out of the doctors with an arm instead of a leg and my eye balls were my testicles used to be
"the heart is not an organ, it's a muscle". kill me
No, it's one nurse of millions. Settle down.
I am.
I always enjoyed his sidewalk interviews where he asked common sense questions and most people didn't have a clue to the answers, even when he gave them subtle hints!
You realize this is fake, right? sure these people answered wrong, but they cut out most all the people who got answers right.
I'm hella proud of these kids for getting all these answers correct!
I'm 55 yo, and was a very average student. However, I knew all but one. Old school education was in much better shape back then than now. God help us!😥😣😣
I didn’t know the pasteurization question, but I guess it was somebody named Pasteur
I’m curious which question you didn’t know.
And yes, Louis Pasteur. He also created the rabies vaccine.
@@unclecreepy4185 Yes, Lou Pasteur ;)
The sad part... this is from like the late 90's? Education and academics in general are so much worse now. Idiocracy in full swing.
@Phil Brown Still better than *no* schools *at all* and an illiterate population. The libertarian wet dream.
America in full swing.
Electrolytes. It’s what plants crave!
I loved these segments when Jay was on the air: never got tired
I always wonder: a) how many of these questions could Jay answer before this bit was developed; and b) how many correct answers did they get before they had enough wrong answers to put the bit together.
I always assume that these 10 people were the most entertaining out of 100s asked.
At home I think these questions are incredibly easy. If I was there with a mic in my face I think I might just barely be able to correctly guess my own name.
- Where would you find chlorophyll?
- Uh, probably in your toilet
did you see the shirt the clown was wearing...his answer should come as no suprise
Maybe he eats a lot of salad.
It's true if you throw leaves into the toilet.
Maybe he uses leaves instead toilet paper!
That’s not such a bad answer considering a lot of products tout having chlorophyll in them for freshness.
Not a huge Leno fan but his quizzes of people have always been a hoot.....Makes me sad for today's society sometimes though...
He asked the nurse improperly. He said, "What is the largest organ 'IN' the human body" not 'ON" as he did when asking the other people.
Question should be 'what's the largest human organ'.
@@damionkeeling3103 I don't consider the skin to an organ anyway. Question should be why do they consider the skin to be an organ in the first place?
That nurse tho..i would not want her to give me a flu-shot. she would probably stick it in my eye.
+Pinta Dubbs to be fair, he did say IN the human body, not ON as the question is supposed to be phrased.
+Jonathon Charlsen And she'd still have gotten that wrong. Lungs, for instance are right next to the heart and each is larger than the heart. The liver is the largest. Then there's the brain.
Heart would be about the fifth.
+Pinta Dubbs I know, it's like how did she even graduate!?
lol. true story I got for ya. every year my hospital forces us to take the flu shot. So the two of us go to the room they setup to give the shots. My buddy gets the 90 yr nurses that shakes like a leaf and she stuck him in his frigging neck. bro I didn't know if to laugh or what.
+Pinta Dubbs To be fair nursing is more about patient care and making them comfortable and cheerful while in the hospital; whereas if a physician couldn't answer this they probably hadn't retaken their steps in a few decades.
The man who apologized to Ohio for letting it down is really standing tall. Despite having not so big a brain, his heart seems enormous. 👏🏼
NO, his skin's enormous.
--so SOON we forget . . ,
Remember, being smart is not the same as knowledgably. I would hang out with that guy, He would make a good buddy. Anyone who does not take himself too seriously is ok in my book. Although I have to admit. bragging a little here. I had a drivers license when I was in 4th grade. Of course I was 16 at the time, but lets not talk about that. My therapist says to just keep it our secret.
Don't give him such a hard time though. A scientist may be asked questions but they don't know what a barometer is because they never had to use it or learned it a long time ago. Not being able to answer this question doesn't automatically make all these people dumb ;|
@@theoriginalcows1357 I have always found these abusive questions and tactics questionable. They ask these questions in fun have them sign a paper and give them a shirt or something and laugh it off. Then next think you know your a national laughing stop . That is my assessment.
Heart doesnt mean shit. Its brains that matter.
If the nurse's boss ever saw this clip they probably would've fired her immediately.
My grandfather quit school when he was 16 to go to work to help his family survive. He wouldn't have been able to answer many questions out of that book, but he could rebuild the engine of a tractor, weld, butcher a whole steer or hog, run an excavator, etc, etc, etc.
Do you think any of these interviewees could do any of those tasks? _That's_ the real difference!
Sadly, people don't appreciate these people properly. My grandfather was a fifth grade dropout from Oklahoma. He spent 32 years at a naval rework facility in Southern California, from '41 to '73. He retired as a 'Superintendent of Supervisors ' running an F4 rework/upgrade program. VIP status, Hawaiian vacations, the works. But he was always a down to earth, a country boy at heart, tons of common sense, and a handyman. We miss him.
My paternal grandpa got about three years of school. He taught himself quite a lot. He didn't have any difficulty reading the newspaper. He got promoted to foreman at the Savannah shipyard because he could read a rule, ( a six foot folding rule ). The man they hired as a foreman couldn't and someone up the chain of command just happened to come along as the "foreman" was telling my grandpa a measurement' He said a measurement in feet and however many little black marks the measurement was. That got him demoted. Grandpa was glad to have the extra money because he had eight kids.
Oh my god! They should warn the hospital that nurse works at! :o If I ever see her I will run in the opposite direction even if my leg is broken.
+stiras1 I doubt you would run very far with a broken leg.
The nurse or doctor doesnt need to know that skin is the largest organ to save you.
*stiras 1* And don't forget the leg is the largest organ of the body!
Certainly! Extreme fear might produce instantaneous bone regeneration.
The worst of it is that she initially mentioned the heart, then immediately corrected herself: ‘Oh no, it’s not an organ,it’s a muscle’ - and later she saw no objection in replying ‘the leg’ ! I hope this woman was lying about her profession, else beware!!
These don't make me feel better about myself - they just horrify me
The nurse didn't know the answer to that question and said: "Heart is not an organ".
I am flat lining.
Well...actually, it originated as a blood vessel that bent in half, grew together and formed the chambers, valves and it's very own brain...all before 22 days gestation.
You just wanted to know that, I bet.
;-)
@@pamilawilson8944 My brain didn't follow all of that but my heart understood.
leno's too stoopid to realise that question was PURE B/S
The biggest organ ist the interstitium, not the skin
It’s actually the gravitational pull of both the earth and the Sun interacting, albeit the component of the force generated by the mass of the earth is much smaller.
I was thinking the same thing lmao
@@wasabi7117 The people in this vid are actually pretty smart.
man it`s good the sun rotates around the earth ! right ; }
@@frankyounger231 they actually both rotate around a point that is at the center of neither (but in this case it’s pretty close to the center of the sun).
In the case of Jupiter and the sun, they both orbit around a point that is between them (not within the sun itself).
I came to say the same thing. There is also at least 4 states of matter, but I’m pretty sure a 5th was fairly recently discovered.
Jay: What is the largest organ in your body?
Woman: Yours or mine?
yeah LOL. No iit's a sixth grade question.
(Seinfeld theme starts playing)
Rondaive point
If people watched The James Bond movie Goldfinger , they would know, that when the girl was painted gold, it suffocated her.
Valid question. If his, it would be the chin.
I have always hoped that these episodes are edited to keep the most hilariously silly but judging from recent events I am certain now that it represents the majority of people here.
Oh, no question. I go to a public university and regularly see students get confused on basic concepts like forms of matter. You have to wonder what’s going on at the elementary level.
We don't need to know all info. Who cares whether skin is the largest organ? It is just another silly fact. Even if we know this, we would still be unqualified to treat a person with medical need, unless we are a doctor. Everyone should
be good at their profession and daily chores and that all what is necessary.
@@planet2 You will be the first to be replaced by a robot.
@@planet2 Yes, education is for losers.
@@fredbohm4728 Education is subjective and comes in many forms. Who would you rather be on a desert island with, a psychiatrist or a navy seal? Everyone knows gas, liquid, solid, just not in the context they presented
Jay Leno: Name the 3 states of matter.
Bunker boy: person, woman, man, camera, tv.
When these shows were put to air who'da thunk that one day they'd end up immortalised on TH-cam...
Gravitational constant is a fixed value, right? So the force that pulls two masses together (gravity?) is a function of two masses, not just one. So it's not really the Sun's gravity... it's the force generated by masses of both the Sun and the Earth. Yes, I guess I'm picky. But I hate when people make fun of other people using inaccurate "facts".
Gravity is not a force.
@@legendarynoob6732 Its a law. Not just a good idea
@@legendarynoob6732 Expand please.....Newton said it was a force
@@kennethmiller4950 force of gravity is real. Like your body weight, but earth isn’t pulling you down. Both you and earth are traveling through time, but your paths are slightly convergent (like two cars driving down the road that are slightly bearing into each other essentially pushing on one another). Both you and earth are trying to travel to the same spot so we are pushing on each other
The force of gravity is an attractive force, so yes the earth is pulling the sun and the sun is pulling the earth. However, because these forces are in opposite directions you would find the resultant and as the sun has a far greater pull than the earth, we can say that the sun's gravitational pull keeps the earth in orbit around the sun. However the earth's angular momentum also plays its part in keeping the earth in orbit around the sun because without that the earth would crash into the sun.
On behalf of all Ohioans we do not claim them as ours, so instead we will pass them on to Michigan, our rivals. 🙏
LOL, some I know escapade Ohio to go to Michigan.
3:32 ...yours or mine ? ...that was great ! hahaha
I hope the nurse was tripped up by the word 'in'.
everybody knows rainbows are caused by unicorns farting.
+William Young - but primarily, only if the unicorns are lactose-intolerant.
Wrong, its nyan cat
Rainbows are created by light refracting through my Strawberry Smiggles cereal.
A rainbow is formed when light reflects of water.
The water acts like a prism turning white light into coloured light
Erin' go Braugh! me laddy. Rainbows are made by Leprechauns 'cause at the end of every Rainbow is a pot-o-gold.
I did 6th grade in SoCal years ago. My classmates insisted that Hawaii was the 49th state and and Alaska was 50th. That was just one example. I’m from Minnesota.
I had an student in college that probably couldn't answer these questions but he is an amazing professional in what he does and make much more money than people that could answer some of these questions.
Boy, I say boy , Ima throwin but you ain’t a catchin.
You built too low to the ground, everything I says goes right over your head …. Foghorn Leghorn
You've got to ACC-ENT-UATE the positive, ELIM-I-NATE the negative, latch on the the affirmative, don't mess with mister in-between
Ask these people questions about celebrities and i bet they would fucking ace it.
+Treefrog Johnson I know, that's the truly depressing thing.
I couldn't breath when he said fire earth sky LMAO
I miss Jay Leno. Him and Conan were my favorite. Jay Leno: Mr. Brain, Iron Jay. Conan: Walker Texas Ranger Lever. Apparently they are a tough act to follow.
I didn't care for Iron Jay. But Headlines were hilarious (except for Wedding names which I thought were stupid).
@@leecowell8165 yeah I liked headlines too wasn't that Monday
4:01 BUZZER on Jay Leno (actually the book) There are 4 STATES OF MATTER!!!! Solid, Liquid, Gas, Plasma
I also reacted on that. Thought it was 4 but turns out that those are only the "classical" states and a lot more exists but the well-known 4 are the only ones observable under normal conditions.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_states_of_matter
Keep in mind this is from a 4th grade textbook.
There are five. You forgot bose-einstein
hor jeremy We're talking about the platonic
Nvr mind
"It must be the leg" killed me. I'm typing this from heaven because I died laughing on Earth. 😂
That was funny. Jay should have retorted "which leg?"
Then why don't I see other comments from dead people? Are they all in hell and you're the only one that made it to heaven then?
to be fair, even though she was wrong.. he also asked the question wrong to her. For her he said IN the human body, on another person he said ON the human body.
@@Corathor Love it; ‘the question was wrong’. Look at it from the perspective of there being 6 layers of skin ‘inside’ and only 1 on the outside. I’m startling to feel like a lawyer twisting words to arrive at my answer now.
I'm typing this from heaven.........
WAIT, MR. SJW DESTROYER,
DESTROYER NEVER GOES TO THE HEAVEN.🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
If it wasn't so sad it would be funny.
"Not temperature." Yes, well done! 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
There are not 3 states of matter, there are 4. Liquid, solid, gas and plasma.
There are also other states of matter but only liquid, solid, gas and plasma are observable in every day life.
True, but most people are not familiar with degenerate matter, quantum spin liquid, fermionic condensates and others as well as the theoretical ones. I took my que from Jay, in that, he was asking questions most educated people should have the answers for, but apparently even educated Americans don't.
well shit someone knows his matter (applauds)
4th grade questions.
Im Zebra 4th grade questions
That nurse not knowing the organs--scary.
Maryland, after all.
probably know crab anatomy better
someone should do this to Jay, just for the hell of it. Just stop him in the street And ask him random questions,about science
Looks like somebody didn't know the answers to these questions until he saw this vid...STFU you dumbass
about cars
Booooo.
Watching Jay Leno's Garage, it would appear that he does know a shit-ton about engineering, actually, and I'm sure he understands the basic physics and chemistry underpinning it.
I like the ones where he asks a little kid all the same questions at the end and he or she knows all the answers!
LOL, they rarely show anyone who gets the answers right.
I was on a radio program's trivia contest one time when they were doing a live remote broadcast. I'm a trivia nut and was absolutely destroying everyone. They actually cut my mike so I couldn't answer any more questions to keep it "exciting".
obviously a barometer measures baroms
it measures something measurable
Not the temperature though. . .
LOL, that's what *I* was thinking silently... baros!
barak o' baroms?
but it's not the temperature? are you sure?
Outlaw cell phones in class and see what answers you get 10-12 years from now.
It's funny to read dumb people coming up with stupid explanations.
The children in a town in Canada was given an IQ test before television was introduced to that area. A few years after TV was available the IQ tests showed a substantial decline.
Cell phones didn't exist when many of these folks went to school.
These videos should be required viewing by every school board member across the country.
If these questions are not covered in school, what do they teach in school? Oh, I know. CRT, sex education to four-year-olds and gender dysphoria. That's the new education system and if you complain about it, you are racist.
What’s really funny is I used to read through my high school science books to find mistakes and I will always find at least three in every single book
You have to take into account how much time has passed and new scientific discoveries. Science textbooks will always change, sometimes from one year to the next. Sometimes, it's one day to the next. If you went to school on Aug. 23, 2006, Pluto was the 9th planet. On Aug. 24, it wasn't a planet at all. For fun, I was reading a book Isaac Asimov published in 1950 about space travel. It was nonfiction and made some very good observations about space and how space travel might be conducted in the future (remember, Sputnik 1, the first artificial satellite didn't launch until 1957). A lot of it, however, was either wildly optimistic, or just plain wrong. It's understandable, given our knowledge of the universe at that time. Even the question Jay asked about how many oceans there are is now up for debate depending upon who you listen to. The scientific community in most countries now recognize a fifth ocean, the Southern Ocean, surrounding Antarctica. Science changes daily.
"Three states of matter"
"Fire, earth and sky"
*You have mastered the intelligence element*
Wait, yes we all learned all those questions in fourth grade. But we were told after we passed that grade we could forget them.
@Hello there, how are you doing this blessed day?
Jay Leno needs to come back to late night comedy
@ 3:35 Jay asked "What is the biggest organ ON the human body"?...(answer is skin).........then @ 3:50 Jay asks "What is the largest organ IN the human body"? BUT I believe Jay meant to say "ON".......but the answer is liver.
Even though it's before COVID, he seems so closer like he's about to kiss them
@4:05 "there are 3 states of matter, can you name them"? Old, outdated question. Gas, liquid, solid. Fourth, plasma. Fifth, man made Bose-Einstein condensates.
Plus quark gluon plasma and neutron degenerated matter
Time crystals
I don't think 4th graders are learning about the other 2.
There are over 20 states of matter. Yes, this question is very outdated.
Some people would argue that there are only two states of matter.
State 1:. I do!
State 2:. You don't!
LMAO 😆
I love Jay, he so eloquently makes an ass out of you!
The gravity of both the sun and the Earth are what keeps the Earth orbiting the sun. It's not just the sun's gravity. The Earth also doesn't orbit the sun; both the Earth and sun orbit around the solar system's center of mass.
He is reading out of a fourth grade book from a few years ago and the book was probably not edited for facts like most school text books. Here a conspiracy factoid about school text books. The names of the writers may have no knowledge of the books their names are attached to because ghost writers slap names on the books to make them look legit.
Orbit the barycenter. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barycenter. The Earth-Sun barycenter is only 449 km from the center of the sun so the sun barely wobbles from Earth's influence.
No, actually its only the suns gravity that keeps the earth orbiting the sun.
There are five states of matter
1. Solid
2. Liquid
3. Gas
4. Plasma
5. Bose-Einstein condensate
Maybe you don't have to expect people to know the more exotic states of matter, but given that 99% of the universe is plasma, people should know it. There's also a ginormous exploding example in the sky.
How the fuck doesnt a nurse know what the largest organ is wtf "the heart" ......
+Jonathan Dyer I wouldn't let her take my temperature rectally....Lord only knows where the thermometer mine end up.
+Megan Williams
Considering she thought the colon was the biggest organ… she’d probably give you a hypodermic injection if you asked her to take your temperature rectally.
+kokoshneta She might get prescribed Preparation H and complain later that for all the good it did her she could have stuck it up her ass.
+Jonathan Dyer I think the question she was thinking of is "What is the most important muscle in the body?". We often forget that the heart is a muscle.
Probably an act. I’m pre-nursing and even I know that skin is the largest organ. No nurse in their right mind would not know that.
- What’s the largest organ in a human body?”
NY woman: Yours or mine?😅
"It's not temperature..."
William Ross
I hate this kind of transparent cheating.
Is that a question? Haha.
+Sal sean QI has a nice way of dealing with that, your answer simply gets counted as wrong if it is what you said it isn"t
Love to hear politician’s answers
You'll never see that.
Upstate New York lady was funny, hahaha
Children in Russian grammar school are learning differential equations; here they're learning finger painting....That nurse!
Very good show, but let me correct you on this one:
There are four states of matter:
solid, liquid, gas and plasma.
Yup. I'm a substitute teacher. The regular teacher gave the class an on-line assignment which asked the class to name the four states of matter. Yet, the teacher herself had a poster on the wall, which the teacher made, naming "the three states of matter". I guess it doesn't matter, though. Most students in the class couldn't name two states of matter, even though three of them were named on the wall.
Plasma is not a state of matter. It is something that poor people sell to get money.
"Name the three states of matter"
"The three states that matter?"
"No. The three sta-"
"Texas, Florida, Alabama"
Honestly never realized how funny Jay Leno is!
I was watching a game show years ago called 'Street Smarts'. The host asked a woman, "What planet is the Miss Universe pageant held on?" She answered with, "Venus." 🙄🙄
4:02 - Shawn’s voice is awesome!
This was a really good show. It's not at all like the late night crap we have nowadays.
Q: Why do squirrels swim on their backs?
A: To keep their nuts dry.
Not the squirrel I shot when I was like 8-10 years old.
That fox squirrel had bigger balls than me.
If I had a camera phone at the time(they didn't exist) I would send you a picture right now.
He also had bigger nuts than I had when I got my scuba diving certification (it was the opening of dear season (aka cold as f). Peeing every 5 minutes didn't bother me it was the absolutely gorgeous woman who could see my profile through my wetsuit.
Hahahahaha Mick
Hee hee
and what about female squirrels?
@@johnnywalker2947 Next program will be on spelling.You are invited deer.
solid, liquid, gas, plasma - 4 states of matter
Also a barometer does measure air pressure but specifically atmospheric air pressure which @ sea level is The standard atmosphere (symbol: atm): a unit of pressure defined as 101,325 Pa (1,013.25 hPa; 1,013.25 mbar), which is equivalent to 760 mm Hg, 29.9212 inches Hg, or 14.696 psi absolute.