Video sharing thread

UrbanMysticDee
Chatty Kirin - A user who has reached a combined 1000 forum posts or comments.
Liberty Belle - Sings the song of the unchained

Bae > Bay
Blacula Intro (1972)
 
I really like this movie.
 
@ANoobis  
Since souls aren’t fungible it’s impossible to solve the trolley problem without having perfect knowledge of the value of the people involved. Since it’s impossible to have perfect knowledge the only proper solution is to make an authentic choice. If I ever get around to it this will be discussed in the book and a video series on the subject.
UrbanMysticDee
Chatty Kirin - A user who has reached a combined 1000 forum posts or comments.
Liberty Belle - Sings the song of the unchained

Bae > Bay
My View of Mike Rowe
 
Martin Goldberg hit another one out of the park.
 
Here are the choicest comments from the video:
 
Joe Blowseph
 
I’d love to see Mike Rowe work as a roofer for 2 years, not just 2 days. See what he thinks then.
 
 
Guomond1
 
“Dude just wage slave for 50 years lmao” -Mike Rowe
 
 
BARBELL SAMURAI
 
mike rowe went to college, was an opera singer, then become a tv sales channel pitch man, started doing voice over work and hosting tv shows ie dirty jobs. He is not a tradesman as so many boomer conservatives seem to think.
 
trades for thee but not for me - gee whizz thanks mike rowe
 
 
Joe Blowseph  
Let’s see Mike work a “dirty job” for 3 months, then maybe I’d honor him with a miniscule slice of pity respect.
 
 
BARBELL SAMURAI
 
exactly. Twelve months hard manual labor and he would be running back to the voice over booth and telling everyone he knows to stay in school. I looked up the roosh v article goldberg mentioned in the clip and I give roosh created for acknowledging he had a romanticized view of manual labor, he had enough after a month
 
Goldberg mentions this article by Roosh V. I haven’t read it yet, but that’s okay because watching the video constitutes an implied covenant that I can speak as an expert on the article. Here’s just one thing I noticed in the article:
 
I don’t remember meeting any college-educated men on the sites I worked at. When I got hired, the second-in-command looked at the boss and exclaimed, “We’re hiring former scientists now.” What the workers lacked in book knowledge they made up for in practical experience.
I noticed that blue-collar men process information and content differently than my college-educated peers. The attention spans of the former are not trained to read dense books or listen to long podcasts packed with information; they much prefer shorter snippets and sound bites to get to the essential truth of the matter, which I imagine is why politicians and corporations create memorable slogans. Blue-collar workers also don’t waste time participating in political activism or getting to the bottom of intricate cultural issues. They don’t have a vague mission to “spread the truth” or “improve society.” They care more about getting through the day and then getting paid on Friday. They hate communism, love guns, smoke cigarettes, chew tobacco, engage in more direct communication without a labored sensitivity for other people’s feelings, are more masculine, are less politically correct, like making fun of gays, and curse in every other uttered sentence, if not every sentence.
 
In my last job I can say that is absolutely correct, and it’s actually refreshing. It felt authentic. I was working for a company that hired a lot of subcontractors and had to deal with a lot of blue collar mostly men but some women too and they were authentic. They did cuss a lot, and smoke a lot, and make fun of gays (mostly black guys did, which is something you don’t hear about because it’s not politically correct to admit just how homophobic blacks are, and black men also tend to be conspiracy theorists, at least most I’ve met). There was a lot of stuff we disagreed about, but we were never disagreeable. They came to respect my no-nonsense work ethic despite being the university-trained historian who lived a life in books.
 
Here’s another bit of absolute truth:  
Your body is either built for manual labor or it’s not
 
Mine most definitely is not, and I have the permanent injuries to prove it.
 
And this:  
Your mind begins to obsess about lunch, quitting time, and the weekend
UrbanMysticDee
Chatty Kirin - A user who has reached a combined 1000 forum posts or comments.
Liberty Belle - Sings the song of the unchained

Bae > Bay
EXCLUSIVE: First Look Inside the Great Pyramid Queen’s Chamber Northern Shaft
 
There’s a plastic disk located deep in one of the “air” shafts but no record of who could have put it there.
 
The Great Pyramid of Egypt is the most well studied ancient structure in the entire world, which makes it all the more strange that for 20 years there has been important information concerning this structure that is missing from the public domain, and that’s pictures, footage and a full description of the inside of the Queen’s Chamber Northern Shaft.
It is discussed in a 2014 paper written by Dr Zahi Hawass, which is part of a publication by the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities titled ’Quest for the Dream of the Pharaohs. The paper includes a description and a few black and white photographs, but is incredibly difficult to get hold of.
This shaft is critical in just about every Great Pyramid hypothesis and even if it isn’t, it can’t go unnoticed. Any pyramid researcher who tries to explain the finer details of the Great Pyramid must explain the four so-called air shafts in a logical way, but how can any hypothesis have any merit if nobody even knows what the inside of Queen’s Chamber Northern Shaft looks like? Thankfully we can change that with this video.
A friend of the Ancient Architects channel has supplied me with 51 colour photographs taken from the Pyramid Rover robot, which explored the shaft in 2002, as well as a copy of the original mission report. With this, we can now see the shaft in its entirety and learn more about this elusive pyramid shaft. Here I’ll add a disclaimer: The “Never” on the thumbnail image refers to 99.9% of viewers of this channel. Some people have obviously seen them but not many.
TheBridge
Boot badge - It's Bootiful
Fried Chicken - Attended an april fools event
Liberty Belle - Sings the song of the unchained

I know NOTHING
@Dex Stewart  
I have no idea what beetleborgs are at all, but it sometimes can be fun to watch on anyway on something like this. Of anything, I probably would’ve enjoyed the outside trapped window thingy. It would be fun to have someone fall through, if it worked right, and I could have some nice “action” scenes.
Dex Stewart
Chatty Kirin - A user who has reached a combined 1000 forum posts or comments.
Boot badge - It's Bootiful
Fried Chicken - Attended an april fools event
Artist -
Liberty Belle - Sings the song of the unchained

Ecto-Phase,Activate!
@TheBridge  
Beetleborgs was a 90’s show similar to Power Rangers,in that it recycled Japanese superhero show footage into an otherwise American show.  
The unique thing with Beetleborgs though, was that most of the show revolved around a group of goofy monsters who lived in a haunted house. They had strong personalities, and probably could’ve carried the show on their own, but Power Rangers was popular and VR Troopers and Masked Rider had both run out of footage,so they needed a new Power Rangers-esque show.  
Here’s the theme song which sums up the whole premise nicely.
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