I love how they describe the shark leaving after biting the kayak as some kind of weird unexplainable mystery, and not just the thing it bit turned out not to be food so it left.
"Why are we surprised when living things retaliate?" Giving me flashbacks to the time a girl ate a LIVE OCTOPUS on camera, then it latched onto her face and gave her a small cut with its beak, and she started sobbing. I must point out octopus have been proven to feel pain unlike fish where it's debatable, so she doesn't even have an excuse. She was eating a creature alive, then acted like a victim when it inflicted minor pain on her...
I was cheering the octopus on and hoped 1 of the legs would crawl back up her pipe and get stuck and if it ended up killing her well that's karma for trying to eat something that is still alive.
@@Fetidaf So what you're saying is that it's not fair to root for the innocent octopus that's being eaten alive instead of the complete moron that is trying to eat a creature while it is still alive and possible fighting to stay that way without thinking of any possible consequences?
@@Kyomara1337 … how did you get that from what I said? It’d be like if someone stepped on your grass and you said they should be shot in the face. And when I replied “yea, they shouldn’t do that but you shouldn’t kill people”, your response would be “so people should be able to go wherever they want!? So you’d be fine if people walked into your grandmothers house and gang raped her?” Like, no…. There’s a gigantic gap between complete apathy and gross overreactions… you should generally try to be in there somewhere
• Gets right into content • Doesnt clickbait • actually is educated on content(opinion valid) • debunks false information This channel is a breath of fresh air.
I definitelly trust orcas and dolphins to be able to be sadistic. The human brain isn't fundamentally different from other animal's and so I expect those to have similar emotions too. Sure, there are differences in the complexity of thoughts and yes, animals don't express emotions the same way as we do. But I'm sure they have them. At least dolphins and orcas do. I wouldn't trust the video narrator to be able to tell the emotions of an orca though.
true, but I would like to point out your comment makes it sound as if humans aren't animals, we are animals, apes to be precise EDIT: also you are talking about the "Prefrontal cortex" I think its the only thing humans have that other animals don't, it's part of our self-awareness
@@raviolifromiceland6441 Fair. I changed "an animal's" to "other animal's". At least mammals also have prefrontal cortices. Ours is just extremely overdeveloped. In other animals other parts of the brain are theorized to fulfill similar functions like the Nidopallium caudolaterale in bird brains.
I can imagine that if you are a small mouse like proto mammal living in a group borough and you are the top of the pack, your sadistic behavior could weed some of the week out and can force the others to be stronger so sadistic behavior could be selected for in natural evolution. However it is known that killer whales like to "play" with their food and I think that this is much more likely to be what happened here. This is done to test them selves and teach the others in the pod how and catch food for themselves and to give them a chance to practice it before hand. In the one before that where the orca attached the boat then ripped its anchor line off I feel like it's more likely that an orca swimming by got caught on the anchor line, realized that it was attached to the boat and then tried to get away by breaking the anchor line.
They aren't sadistic, they're just assholes. People just project that they're cute, cuddly and always awesome. Dolphins are opportunists. Orcas are just assholes.
I once got attacked by something huge, it had a giant pincer, It snapped my boat in half! Luckily, it was to busy chewing my boat up to focus on me, When I looked back to see what it was, Crabzilla!
I'm dead. 10 entries and not a single one of them even mentions actual attack and sinking of the Essex by a whale. They left an actually fascinating story off the table! I'm probably giving them too much credit tho, tbh.
"you're projecting human emotions onto animals" Are you telling me that Disneys depiction of animals over the decades is incorrect? Heretic! Kayak is NOT a boat. It's personal watercraft.
I bet you the kayak story went similar to that. But it just proves that sharks aren't trying to eat whatever they can. It hit the kayak, said "nope don't want that" and left.
To everyone saying alternatives; anthropomorphic is correct, personalization is correct, humanization is correct. A word describing the event of emotional projection is correct, we don't need to play favorites with the English language, its ego is bloated enough lol.
Humanization and personalization are not correct alternatives no. Personalization would mean having something personalised to your tastes. Humanization means to recognize that your opponent is a human too and this should effect your morality around them. Well done for sounding confident despite being utterly wrong though. Very RUclips of you.
@@ryanwalker8843 my apologies on auto correct grabbing personalization from personification, my bad. Humanization is still correct, as the people in this video are seeing these "monsters" as opponents, as such changing our perception of these sea creatures.
1:00 you would be surprised, elephents have been confirmed to be capeable of having many complecated emotions such as when an elephent attacked a village it wasn't because the people there outright angered him but it was because he took revenge on them after his parthner was killed by hunters (and as far as I know the only species apart from humans that even precieve revenge) Ted Ed has an excelled video on the subject
"This has to be AI generated because there's no way a human being could look at this, read this, and take it seriously." A.) There is this wacky thing that humans will just do whatever for to obtain called money B.) As an american to another american. These last 6 years have taught that humans being will absolutely do this
The problem with some human beings is the colossal amounts of propaganda fed to them, it pulverises critical thinking and makes people go around saying the Jews have satellite laser emplacements, the Earth is flat, libertarianism is a good idea and so are political compasses, that sort of thing.
the "furious attack" from the orca literally describes it playing with the boat. It thought the anchor was a toy. Noone got harmed and the ship was (mostly) fine. But yeah. What a brutal assault ..
If a shark did attack a kayak, the scenario probably went more like, "Ooh, seal!" *bumps boat* "Oh, not a seal. Well goodbye, I'm off to find an actual seal."
Some animals redirect aggression. If we assume sharks get frustrated when they can't access food, it actually is possible for them to attack something else to lash out. I had a cat that attacked me every time she got mad at an animal she couldn't reach. That said a shark would probably be too nervous around a boat to attack it out of frustration.
One time I was at a beach with my family and then a megalodon jumped out!. It was 500 feet and it ate everybody at the beach and severely injured me. (TRUE STORY NO CAP)
I saw it happen, I was eating at the picnic table that was slightly off the beach when the megalodon appeared out of nowhere, after killing everyone on the beach except the first guy it turned to me swam through the beach sand and slapped my food out of my hand and insulted my mother. Afterwards it swam back through the sand into the water and returned to the Marianna trench (it told me it came from there while insulting my mother) I’m thankful I wasn’t technically on the beach that day or I would have been killed surely!
It’s well known swordfish can and do end up flying up and impaling people. Not sure what’s so special about that one that they had to single it out as one of the “top ten real sea monster attacks.” Also, something being heavy like those jellyfish isn’t really an attack. What?
That tale fascinates me. Like it feels like it could be purely fictional. One of the people who died had the last name of Coffin. *Coffin.* The pure irony of not stopping at some islands after they had been adrift for a bit because of fear of cannibals, and then later having to become cannibals themselves. It’s poetic in a way. It’s no wonder it went on to inspire a book that became a classic!
Animals have emotions too, cetaceans ARE sadistic, they are known to toy with food for hours before eating it, or even torture them for fun and then not eat them.
I wouldn’t really call that sadism. Sadism is actively, consciously inflicting pain for your own enjoyment. If you’re sadistic, you know you’re causing pain. You know you’re being cruel. Cats play with their prey too but I think it’s more out of enjoyment on their end and not active cruelty. I don’t think cats, cetaceans, or any other animal known for playing with their prey do it out of malice. To the, they’re just playing without any forethought. Now dolphins… they’re 100% capable of being sadistic. They know what they’re doing.
Imagine if the orca was just telling the human to hand over the otter in whale language, and when it noticed it couldnt negotiate with humans it just gave up
The Ann Alexander is not the only confirmed sinking of a ship by a marine animal, the infamous Essex tragedy had happened only thirty years earlier. It also wasn't just a raft, it was a full ship with two smaller boats carried with it. The whale rammed the ship headfirst and punched a hole through the hull, same as what happened to the Essex.
In the 90's, there was a recorded instance of a giant squid attacking the sonar dome of an American frigate. They were just cruisin around, doin 'Merican navy things when they started having issues with sonar and were hearing weird sounds coming from it. when they hit port they sent divers and found the rubber all torn up and hooks that belonged to some sort of squid still in it. I don't remember the name of the ship, but there should be some record of the instance, though it is obscure
the shark attack on the kayak could have just been that the great white was curious, thinking it was a seal and after taking a bite realized it wasn't so it just left
Yes, that would be the novel "Moby Dick"! And yes spermwhales activly attacked whalingshipes in the age of sail to the point the insurance companies wouldn't take on contracts! They never attacked any other ships or humans just whalers, though! Today they just don't have any chance against steel huls, powerful motors and grenadetiped harpoons...
Bro idk I'm not a fish expert but my first thought was that the shark thought the kayak was some kind of prey, bumped into it and maybe took a nibble (it's extremely unbelievable he safely got back with a kayak without a front part) and ran away once it realised that wasn't prey.
There has been a lot of evidence of orca whales being outright sadistic to animals, slapping seals and other creatures straight out of the water just because they can. Like, they might not square up with humans in the wild, but they REALLY like being cruel to smaller animals
Hey, how can I recommend a video for you to react? there's a video from Curious Archive about speculative biology on a water planet that I think would be really cool for you to react and give your opinion on, it's called "Seas of Policines | Speculative Biology"
Event: Shark wants to investigate if something is food so he bumps into it, but still isn't sure so he takes a bite. Turns out it's not food so it swims away. The guy's retelling THE SHARK TRIED TO RAM INTO ME AND THEN IT WAS SO ANGRY THAT IT BIT MY KAYAK AND LAUNCHED ME OFF, I WAS FACE TO FACE WITH DEATH, IT SWAM AWAY AND THEN I SWAM TO SHORE! Side note, how the hell does a shark biting your Kayak result in you getting launched off? Maybe if the shark poked its head out of the water, chomped and then returned back underwater, you might get flipped but not launched out.
I'd say the kayak attack was simply a shark being curious as they often bite things to help get an idea of what they are. Probably bit the kayak thinking it was a bigass fish thought "well that ain't food" and swam away
Yes, many close encounters with sharks could be cases of mistaken identity. Sharks attack from the bottom so a shadow of a kayak would look like potential food. They must take advantage of every piece of food they can get so tend to charge head-on at the target. Bite first, ask questions later. If it wanted to, it could have attacked the diver but humans look so unusual compared to most sea creatures that sharks tend to stay away or act with curiosity rather than brutality.
"10 Times Sea Monsters Attacked A Boat" Number 9: Sperm Whale attacking a boat Number 1: Otter jumped on a boat, chilled, and then left I feel like they ran out of things to put.
"Anthropomorphize" is the word you're looking for. But yeah, it's obnoxious when people do that. If the story is true, it's much more likely they could smell the whale carcass and saw something that appeared to be a similar shape as one, so they tried some experimental bumps and bites to see if it was actually a dead whale.
Anthropromorphising is the word you were looking for when we preoject human behaviors onto animals and expect that they would act similar to humans in a certain situation.
Animal acually do redirect anger sometimes. If a dog is lunging at another thru a fence it may lash out at you as well even though said dog is not agressive to people
If I was minding my business on a sunny afternoon, chilling in a kayak then out of nowhere got a flying elbow from a whale, you would never see me in a kayak ever again. Even if its in a small lake, I am not getting in one ever again
most of your comments are onpoint but it wasnt a "raft" that got sunk by the whale, it was a full on whaling ship that sunk them and the survivors floated aimlessly on the rafts for months even resorting to canibalism to survive, this attack is the one that actually inspired the author of Moby Dick
9:59 Fr bro? the ENTIRE crew, underwater, in a U-Boat which only had a periscope, Saw the 'creature' that hit them. bruh its probally a depth charge if im honest
The guy who got jumped on by a whale actually ended up making an entire documentary about trying to identifie the whale that jumped him, as far as i remember he never said something about the whale smelling bad. He said himself that the whale likely didn't do that on purpose. (also i forgot the docu's name, srry.)
Id like to know where the wibdows where in ww1 u-boats for everyone on the crew to see the croc and how they used their ww1 sonar to make a scan of their own hull
Some animals do get jealous or frustrated and take it out on their environment. Birds, primates, and mammals in general can show this behavior. However I'm not sure if that applies to any fish, let alone cartilaginous fish, since they are so distant from an evolutionary standpoint. I'm also not sure if it arose independently in mammals and birds, or if it came from a common ancestor. However it does exist in some animals. For example, if i feed one of my ducks bread, but not give any to the other ones, the ones who didnt bet any would often bite the one who did. However if they couldnt bite it, they would instead bite the nearest duck, dog, chicken or whatever was closest to it
Is it not possible the shark thought the kayak was something that was in his usual menu, bumped it then attacked it, realized that it was fibreglass not yummy meat, then swam off? That would be my instinct.
I love how they describe the shark leaving after biting the kayak as some kind of weird unexplainable mystery, and not just the thing it bit turned out not to be food so it left.
is likely it bit it out of curiosity
"Hmm. This does not appear to be edible. Peace out."
A littke bit of trolling
I don't know about you but I don't swim away when I bite a kayak
@@pencilcase8068 I definitely do, my teeth can't take a second bite.
"Why are we surprised when living things retaliate?"
Giving me flashbacks to the time a girl ate a LIVE OCTOPUS on camera, then it latched onto her face and gave her a small cut with its beak, and she started sobbing.
I must point out octopus have been proven to feel pain unlike fish where it's debatable, so she doesn't even have an excuse. She was eating a creature alive, then acted like a victim when it inflicted minor pain on her...
I was cheering the octopus on and hoped 1 of the legs would crawl back up her pipe and get stuck and if it ended up killing her well that's karma for trying to eat something that is still alive.
@@ethanmccormack9561 is it really that bad though?
I agree it’s a bit weird but wishing someone would die because of it?
@@ethanmccormack9561 Wishing someone death because she ate an octopus, nice dude
@@Fetidaf So what you're saying is that it's not fair to root for the innocent octopus that's being eaten alive instead of the complete moron that is trying to eat a creature while it is still alive and possible fighting to stay that way without thinking of any possible consequences?
@@Kyomara1337 … how did you get that from what I said?
It’d be like if someone stepped on your grass and you said they should be shot in the face. And when I replied “yea, they shouldn’t do that but you shouldn’t kill people”, your response would be “so people should be able to go wherever they want!? So you’d be fine if people walked into your grandmothers house and gang raped her?”
Like, no…. There’s a gigantic gap between complete apathy and gross overreactions… you should generally try to be in there somewhere
• Gets right into content
• Doesnt clickbait
• actually is educated on content(opinion valid)
• debunks false information
This channel is a breath of fresh air.
I definitelly trust orcas and dolphins to be able to be sadistic. The human brain isn't fundamentally different from other animal's and so I expect those to have similar emotions too.
Sure, there are differences in the complexity of thoughts and yes, animals don't express emotions the same way as we do. But I'm sure they have them. At least dolphins and orcas do.
I wouldn't trust the video narrator to be able to tell the emotions of an orca though.
true, but I would like to point out your comment makes it sound as if humans aren't animals, we are animals, apes to be precise EDIT: also you are talking about the "Prefrontal cortex" I think its the only thing humans have that other animals don't, it's part of our self-awareness
@@raviolifromiceland6441 Fair. I changed "an animal's" to "other animal's".
At least mammals also have prefrontal cortices. Ours is just extremely overdeveloped. In other animals other parts of the brain are theorized to fulfill similar functions like the Nidopallium caudolaterale in bird brains.
Jellyzilla
I can imagine that if you are a small mouse like proto mammal living in a group borough and you are the top of the pack, your sadistic behavior could weed some of the week out and can force the others to be stronger so sadistic behavior could be selected for in natural evolution. However it is known that killer whales like to "play" with their food and I think that this is much more likely to be what happened here. This is done to test them selves and teach the others in the pod how and catch food for themselves and to give them a chance to practice it before hand. In the one before that where the orca attached the boat then ripped its anchor line off I feel like it's more likely that an orca swimming by got caught on the anchor line, realized that it was attached to the boat and then tried to get away by breaking the anchor line.
They aren't sadistic, they're just assholes. People just project that they're cute, cuddly and always awesome. Dolphins are opportunists. Orcas are just assholes.
I once got attacked by something huge, it had a giant pincer,
It snapped my boat in half!
Luckily, it was to busy chewing my boat up to focus on me,
When I looked back to see what it was,
Crabzilla!
:0
One of the lucky few to escape from a crabzilla attack!
@@24flyingcats84 Absolutely no way, crabzilla must’ve used their phone after death to warn us of his existance.
I saw i too, at least they made a documentary about it in the new love death robots season!
You don't survive a Crabzilla attack, Crabzilla chooses if you survive a Crabzilla attack
I'm dead. 10 entries and not a single one of them even mentions actual attack and sinking of the Essex by a whale. They left an actually fascinating story off the table! I'm probably giving them too much credit tho, tbh.
"you're projecting human emotions onto animals"
Are you telling me that Disneys depiction of animals over the decades is incorrect? Heretic!
Kayak is NOT a boat. It's personal watercraft.
I bet you the kayak story went similar to that. But it just proves that sharks aren't trying to eat whatever they can. It hit the kayak, said "nope don't want that" and left.
and for anyone wondering its called "anthropomorphizing" animals is what its called when someone thinks an animal acts like a human
@@crispylizard4348 there it is, that's the word.
It’s a war vehicle
To everyone saying alternatives; anthropomorphic is correct, personalization is correct, humanization is correct. A word describing the event of emotional projection is correct, we don't need to play favorites with the English language, its ego is bloated enough lol.
Humanization and personalization are not correct alternatives no. Personalization would mean having something personalised to your tastes. Humanization means to recognize that your opponent is a human too and this should effect your morality around them. Well done for sounding confident despite being utterly wrong though. Very RUclips of you.
@@ryanwalker8843 my apologies on auto correct grabbing personalization from personification, my bad. Humanization is still correct, as the people in this video are seeing these "monsters" as opponents, as such changing our perception of these sea creatures.
Spot on about ego. 🤣😂
@@chamomilekelsi no humanization is still not correct. Smh.
True English Barley even follows it’s own rules
We need a triple threat between Crabzilla vs Sturgeonzilla vs Jellyzilla, to see who the real king of the sea is
* vs Megalodon because it's real
Also spiderzilla and rockzilla
With the way the last few years have gone, they'd just put their differences aside to focus on terrorizing *us*.
Don't forget the sea cucumber.
Seazilla the Cucumber.
1:00 you would be surprised, elephents have been confirmed to be capeable of having many complecated emotions such as when an elephent attacked a village it wasn't because the people there outright angered him but it was because he took revenge on them after his parthner was killed by hunters (and as far as I know the only species apart from humans that even precieve revenge)
Ted Ed has an excelled video on the subject
Camels too hold a grudge on humans and do take revenge.
A lot of animals are capable of complex emotions, most of the time they show them in different ways that we human's can't understand.
I'm pretty sure types of corvids are able to perceive revenge as well
I'm on to you!
I'm pretty sure there have been stories of tigers tracking down and killing hunters out of revenge also
"Imagine if you recorded that, the whale going down on you" 🤨
"This has to be AI generated because there's no way a human being could look at this, read this, and take it seriously."
A.) There is this wacky thing that humans will just do whatever for to obtain called money
B.) As an american to another american. These last 6 years have taught that humans being will absolutely do this
bro there are apes out there they think the earth is flat so nothing is impossible with humans haha
The problem with some human beings is the colossal amounts of propaganda fed to them, it pulverises critical thinking and makes people go around saying the Jews have satellite laser emplacements, the Earth is flat, libertarianism is a good idea and so are political compasses, that sort of thing.
@@melanoc3tusii205 some humans? nono... most people are completely manipulated you can see with corona and war
@@Old_Nosey everything you little sheep
@@Old_Nosey Are you f**king drunk? 😑
the "furious attack" from the orca literally describes it playing with the boat. It thought the anchor was a toy. Noone got harmed and the ship was (mostly) fine. But yeah. What a brutal assault ..
If a shark did attack a kayak, the scenario probably went more like, "Ooh, seal!" *bumps boat* "Oh, not a seal. Well goodbye, I'm off to find an actual seal."
Some animals redirect aggression. If we assume sharks get frustrated when they can't access food, it actually is possible for them to attack something else to lash out. I had a cat that attacked me every time she got mad at an animal she couldn't reach.
That said a shark would probably be too nervous around a boat to attack it out of frustration.
One time I was at a beach with my family and then a megalodon jumped out!.
It was 500 feet and it ate everybody at the beach and severely injured me.
(TRUE STORY NO CAP)
Rip in peace your family
:(
I was there’s too/ can confirm, I am a scientist but I can’t tell you my qualifications or my name or where I’m from.
I was a flying pony who was riding a spaceship in the sea who saw the shark, i was severely injured and my organs failed, (NO CAP)
I saw it happen, I was eating at the picnic table that was slightly off the beach when the megalodon appeared out of nowhere, after killing everyone on the beach except the first guy it turned to me swam through the beach sand and slapped my food out of my hand and insulted my mother. Afterwards it swam back through the sand into the water and returned to the Marianna trench (it told me it came from there while insulting my mother) I’m thankful I wasn’t technically on the beach that day or I would have been killed surely!
It’s well known swordfish can and do end up flying up and impaling people. Not sure what’s so special about that one that they had to single it out as one of the “top ten real sea monster attacks.”
Also, something being heavy like those jellyfish isn’t really an attack. What?
They didnt even mention the Whaleship Essex, proper sailboat whaling ship, sunk by sperm whale, and inspiring Moby Dick
That tale fascinates me. Like it feels like it could be purely fictional. One of the people who died had the last name of Coffin. *Coffin.*
The pure irony of not stopping at some islands after they had been adrift for a bit because of fear of cannibals, and then later having to become cannibals themselves. It’s poetic in a way. It’s no wonder it went on to inspire a book that became a classic!
Animals have emotions too, cetaceans ARE sadistic, they are known to toy with food for hours before eating it, or even torture them for fun and then not eat them.
Sharks want to murder all humans. They will use ancient technology and kill us all. Just saying. Stfu
I wouldn’t really call that sadism. Sadism is actively, consciously inflicting pain for your own enjoyment. If you’re sadistic, you know you’re causing pain. You know you’re being cruel. Cats play with their prey too but I think it’s more out of enjoyment on their end and not active cruelty. I don’t think cats, cetaceans, or any other animal known for playing with their prey do it out of malice. To the, they’re just playing without any forethought.
Now dolphins… they’re 100% capable of being sadistic. They know what they’re doing.
@@Moony1568 stop acting like you know it all. Sharks are evil you swinelord
@@AgamemnonVsSocratesAandS troll harder
@@Moony1568 Dolphins are cetaceans, my guy...
Zak is slowly losing his sanity every time he watches one of these videos.
It's called anthropomorphization projecting human mindset/understanding/emotion onto animals
5:30 sounds like the beginning of a love story "A Shark's Tale" or "A Shark's Tail" whichever isn't taken
AVNJ: "Animals don't project things"
Octopus punching fish: I project my 'fist'
Coast guard: idk there were just a lot of jellies
This guy: *_Nobody knows why so many jellyfish formed around this person..._*
I feel like a lot of these problems could be solved by not fucking with wildlife.
11:35 "The orca was totally pranking them"
12:35 "Stop putting human emotions on whales"
Lmao
Zack is a hippocrite confirmed
They're right, these ARE the worst sea monster attacks! Humans _do_ attack things at sea!
I was literally just watching another one of your videos when you posted.
I think that means u have to give him all of ur money
@@jeremycogan1163 yea
Yup
I was in school
You should make your own top 10/5 things ocean creatures did/caught stuff!
It's amazing so many navys have subs with viewing ports for the whole crew.
I can’t stop laughing at your thumbnail 😂
#6! THEY DIDNT EVER SHOW A SWORDFISH! THEY ONLY SHOWED A BLUE MARLIN! I’m outraged.
Wait they’re two separate species?
@@jordandino417 yea there are Marlins, Swordfish, and Sailfish there all pretty cool
Imagine if the orca was just telling the human to hand over the otter in whale language, and when it noticed it couldnt negotiate with humans it just gave up
I once passed through the jaws of the mega.
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At a museum.
The Ann Alexander is not the only confirmed sinking of a ship by a marine animal, the infamous Essex tragedy had happened only thirty years earlier. It also wasn't just a raft, it was a full ship with two smaller boats carried with it. The whale rammed the ship headfirst and punched a hole through the hull, same as what happened to the Essex.
And consequently became the inspiration for Moby Dick.
In the 90's, there was a recorded instance of a giant squid attacking the sonar dome of an American frigate. They were just cruisin around, doin 'Merican navy things when they started having issues with sonar and were hearing weird sounds coming from it. when they hit port they sent divers and found the rubber all torn up and hooks that belonged to some sort of squid still in it. I don't remember the name of the ship, but there should be some record of the instance, though it is obscure
the shark attack on the kayak could have just been that the great white was curious, thinking it was a seal and after taking a bite realized it wasn't so it just left
Yes, that would be the novel "Moby Dick"! And yes spermwhales activly attacked whalingshipes in the age of sail to the point the insurance companies wouldn't take on contracts! They never attacked any other ships or humans just whalers, though! Today they just don't have any chance against steel huls, powerful motors and grenadetiped harpoons...
Bro idk I'm not a fish expert but my first thought was that the shark thought the kayak was some kind of prey, bumped into it and maybe took a nibble (it's extremely unbelievable he safely got back with a kayak without a front part) and ran away once it realised that wasn't prey.
There has been a lot of evidence of orca whales being outright sadistic to animals, slapping seals and other creatures straight out of the water just because they can. Like, they might not square up with humans in the wild, but they REALLY like being cruel to smaller animals
3:20 “I shot this whale and it retaliated so now it’s personal” sums up Moby Dick pretty well ngl
“That is a small squid” “you can’t use water as a size comparison”
Your videos never cease to satisfy me, Zak. 👍🏻Bless you.
Hey, how can I recommend a video for you to react? there's a video from Curious Archive about speculative biology on a water planet that I think would be really cool for you to react and give your opinion on, it's called "Seas of Policines | Speculative Biology"
I chuckled like a baby watching this god content
Event:
Shark wants to investigate if something is food so he bumps into it, but still isn't sure so he takes a bite. Turns out it's not food so it swims away.
The guy's retelling
THE SHARK TRIED TO RAM INTO ME AND THEN IT WAS SO ANGRY THAT IT BIT MY KAYAK AND LAUNCHED ME OFF, I WAS FACE TO FACE WITH DEATH, IT SWAM AWAY AND THEN I SWAM TO SHORE!
Side note, how the hell does a shark biting your Kayak result in you getting launched off? Maybe if the shark poked its head out of the water, chomped and then returned back underwater, you might get flipped but not launched out.
For the orca, I wouldn't be surprised if it had been run into by the boat and got mad about it.
I'd say the kayak attack was simply a shark being curious as they often bite things to help get an idea of what they are. Probably bit the kayak thinking it was a bigass fish thought "well that ain't food" and swam away
Very late to the party. I genuinely love your videos. Thanks for helping me get through work
Why are people surprised when animals attack when they get messed with?
a kayak is defo a boat, but what surprises me is you didn't notice that doesn't appear to actually be a kayak
"A shark ripped my kayak in half and face to face looked at me. He could have kissed me. And sometimes, when I'm alone at night, I wish he had."
My guess is the sharks smelled the whale and saw the boat and took an exploratory bite thinking the hull was the whale.
Wailord used body slam!
Kayaker is unaffected!
😂
I like that cookie cutter sharks are so aggressive they reliably attack nuclear submarines, but they’re so small that it’s not worth a torpedo
Specifically its anthropomorphism - seeing non-humna animal behaviours and motivations as being identical to humans
Wasn't the with the Kajak just like
"Can I eat this?"
Took a bite of it (like with surfer's)
And realized he can't eat it so he then fucked of?
Yes, many close encounters with sharks could be cases of mistaken identity. Sharks attack from the bottom so a shadow of a kayak would look like potential food. They must take advantage of every piece of food they can get so tend to charge head-on at the target. Bite first, ask questions later. If it wanted to, it could have attacked the diver but humans look so unusual compared to most sea creatures that sharks tend to stay away or act with curiosity rather than brutality.
@@MunkyDrag0n That's my train of thought, makes sense
"10 Times Sea Monsters Attacked A Boat"
Number 9: Sperm Whale attacking a boat
Number 1: Otter jumped on a boat, chilled, and then left
I feel like they ran out of things to put.
💀💀💀
They should have at least worked on the order for a little longer
Still giggling at the thumbnail, LOL. And the word you were looking for is anthropomorphism.
"Anthropomorphize" is the word you're looking for. But yeah, it's obnoxious when people do that. If the story is true, it's much more likely they could smell the whale carcass and saw something that appeared to be a similar shape as one, so they tried some experimental bumps and bites to see if it was actually a dead whale.
yeah my dad's great-great grandad witnessed the shark explosion of 1880. it was tragic watching the mariana tower explode. 😢
"Now it's personal."
That is exactly the story of Moby Dick. And I"ll point out that Captain Ahab was kind of the bad guy in that book.
Orcas have figured out how to shake down fishing boats for fish… they wouldn’t attack people but they’ll bump your boat for food
“Imagine having footage of that. The whale going down on you. That’d be sick.” -a lover of fish
Anthropromorphising is the word you were looking for when we preoject human behaviors onto animals and expect that they would act similar to humans in a certain situation.
Animal acually do redirect anger sometimes. If a dog is lunging at another thru a fence it may lash out at you as well even though said dog is not agressive to people
If I was minding my business on a sunny afternoon, chilling in a kayak then out of nowhere got a flying elbow from a whale, you would never see me in a kayak ever again. Even if its in a small lake, I am not getting in one ever again
So many of these were just "human did a stupid thing involving a sea animal and it went bad"
we actually have the same extension that lets you turn up video speed past 2x so I got really confused that there were two on my screen lol
I just love the thumbnail
suprised they didnt mention the time cookie cutter sharks viciously shredded submarine radars lol
most of your comments are onpoint but it wasnt a "raft" that got sunk by the whale, it was a full on whaling ship that sunk them and the survivors floated aimlessly on the rafts for months even resorting to canibalism to survive, this attack is the one that actually inspired the author of Moby Dick
1:41 you're looking for anthropomorphising
the orca vs otter video is literally on RUclips. the orca definitely wasnt teasing the otter...it was circling the boat waiting it out.
I remember seeing this video a few years ago and all of the Epic Wildlife videos use no actual photos or footage and just describe things
Top 10 times humans F***ed around and found out, with Marine life.
You should react to casual geographic
I was knocked over by a friendly dog kissing me. IT WAS A MONSTER ATTACK
9:59 Fr bro? the ENTIRE crew, underwater, in a U-Boat which only had a periscope, Saw the 'creature' that hit them. bruh its probally a depth charge if im honest
The guy who got jumped on by a whale actually ended up making an entire documentary about trying to identifie the whale that jumped him, as far as i remember he never said something about the whale smelling bad. He said himself that the whale likely didn't do that on purpose. (also i forgot the docu's name, srry.)
Mate, I found your channel not too long ago, and I can t wait to catch a twitch stream :D
We got jellyzilla
3:20 you just summarized Moby Dick
Pretty sure that octopods have been known to take out frustrations on other things.
The narrator was so bad on doing research he called an orca a whale, it’s a dolphin.
I don't blame the narrators on these top 10/5 lists. They just read what's on the script, get paid, and record the next channel's bs.
Sometimes though the Narrator runs the channel although i do see what you are saying.
Id like to know where the wibdows where in ww1 u-boats for everyone on the crew to see the croc and how they used their ww1 sonar to make a scan of their own hull
I hate when a shark pulls out a glock
Some animals do get jealous or frustrated and take it out on their environment. Birds, primates, and mammals in general can show this behavior. However I'm not sure if that applies to any fish, let alone cartilaginous fish, since they are so distant from an evolutionary standpoint. I'm also not sure if it arose independently in mammals and birds, or if it came from a common ancestor. However it does exist in some animals.
For example, if i feed one of my ducks bread, but not give any to the other ones, the ones who didnt bet any would often bite the one who did. However if they couldnt bite it, they would instead bite the nearest duck, dog, chicken or whatever was closest to it
Sounds like a bunch of teenagers accidentally dropped their anchor in the sea, and then claimed a killer whale stole it.
Is it not possible the shark thought the kayak was something that was in his usual menu, bumped it then attacked it, realized that it was fibreglass not yummy meat, then swam off? That would be my instinct.
I love this shit to much i chuckled like a baby
*Graphic design is my passion*
I hope Orcas actually pranked some people the day Jaws came out... that would be the best thing ever, pranked by a whale
orca: You just got pranked bro
i’m sorry but orcas can actually are be pretty sadistic by definition.
Seemed pretty obvious that the Orca got caught in the anchor and was trying to free itself.
Actually some animals do projects their emotions on other things and frustrations just not sharks
Number 3: A German submarine got damaged during WWII, this must have been a sea monster there couldn't be any other possible explanation.
Everybody talking about the video but are we just gonna ingnore how hilarious the tumbnail is?
I don’t need to look at the title the thumbnail with AVNJ a shark exploding a ship that’s all I need