Discalculia is the term for the form of neuro divergency that effects number retention. Similar to Dyslexia, but with numbers. Because that part of our brain is doing something different.
@@MatthewTheWanderer Easily triggered by jokes about common cliches ✔️ Overly aggressive tone ✔️ So let me guess where YOU'RE from... I love America (the place) and a lot of Americans btw but there's some things the world justifiably laughs at you for. Deal with it
@@YeeSoest I'm sick of people, like you, making offensively ignorant generalizations about my country. They aren't funny. And, in this case, I happen to be a geography expert, so it's personal. You are not a good person.
As someone who attended American geography class, in honors classes one of the countries top public schools. @YeeSoest isn’t wrong. I also don’t remember learning any geography after elementary school.
There are 36 subways in Paris, so they apparently have fewer than 10 counter staff on rotation per store? Seems unlikely but plausible. Can't find any data for the number itself though so no idea where they got it from 🙃
I know Subways that run on fewer than 10 counter staff. Generally 8 is enough. 2 ppl / shift, 2 shifts / day, 2 day rotations / week. But, I'm in U.S. South, so vastly different labor laws and customer expectations.
When I worked at Subway (almost 23 years ago), I was usually the only one working during my shift. Subways are small and very easy to operate, so 10 total is plausible.
@@MadAboutBrows I NEVER said I was funny. I know I am not funny and I argue with anyone who says I am. I only meant that I would win a game of "Guess this country's population." NOT After Midnight itself. It turns out, this only had one question about country population, so I still wouldn't have actually won.
"Points for vulnerability" are the best points.
Love it when they do an actual (semi) competitive game!
5:56 ‐ Best admission by a show host ever!
I see Taylor, I click
Discalculia is the term for the form of neuro divergency that effects number retention. Similar to Dyslexia, but with numbers. Because that part of our brain is doing something different.
My brother and I both have that, yet working with pencil and paper we're fine.
* affects
American geography class must be like English class in France: Nobody cares, nobody learns..just sit there and wait😂
What kind of ignorant nonsense is this!?
@@MatthewTheWanderer
Easily triggered by jokes about common cliches ✔️
Overly aggressive tone ✔️
So let me guess where YOU'RE from...
I love America (the place) and a lot of Americans btw but there's some things the world justifiably laughs at you for. Deal with it
@@YeeSoest I'm sick of people, like you, making offensively ignorant generalizations about my country. They aren't funny. And, in this case, I happen to be a geography expert, so it's personal. You are not a good person.
@@YeeSoest he's a weird little troll, and you totally clocked him 😂
As someone who attended American geography class, in honors classes one of the countries top public schools. @YeeSoest isn’t wrong. I also don’t remember learning any geography after elementary school.
“This whole show’s kinda bullsh-t,” should’ve garnered points for vulnerability and listening to your heart.
(I love the show.)
The music sounds similar to Jeopardy's old Think music
There are 36 subways in Paris, so they apparently have fewer than 10 counter staff on rotation per store? Seems unlikely but plausible. Can't find any data for the number itself though so no idea where they got it from 🙃
I know Subways that run on fewer than 10 counter staff. Generally 8 is enough. 2 ppl / shift, 2 shifts / day, 2 day rotations / week. But, I'm in U.S. South, so vastly different labor laws and customer expectations.
When I worked at Subway (almost 23 years ago), I was usually the only one working during my shift. Subways are small and very easy to operate, so 10 total is plausible.
Not that it really matters, but there are in fact 99 Sandwich artists in Paris, and 2226 in France @AfterMidnightCBS
@@gmarkou How do you know that, lol?
Surprised they are allowed in Paris- I thought it was a trick question.
man I got so close on all of these. guessed 70mil, 2mil, and 400
I knew the answer to the first one, but the other two I had no clue.
Is Hannah wearing Des’ shirt and tie? Bring on Berner’s insanely witty Des Bishop. He’s smart AND easy on the eyes
This is a genuinely difficult game
I'd totally win this game, lol.
Except you're not remotely funny 😬
@@MadAboutBrows I NEVER said I was funny. I know I am not funny and I argue with anyone who says I am. I only meant that I would win a game of "Guess this country's population." NOT After Midnight itself. It turns out, this only had one question about country population, so I still wouldn't have actually won.
@@MatthewTheWanderer The perks of having autism I guess
I was guessing about 35 subway sandwich shops with about 10 employees each. I would’ve been pretty damn close.
I feel like Taylor’s going to be a really good parent, if she chooses to go that route
She has said so many times that she’s not going to have kids.
whats 3/5ths of 2.7m?
Rats??? In a Subway store? Hey, why should France be any different than the U.S.?
I live in the US and the only rats I have EVER seen are the ones sold by pet stores.
Why would ANYONE go to a Subway in Paris??