That Time a City Randomly Blew Up (And Drilling a 14 Inch Hole Accidentalleed a HUGE Saltwater Lake)

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  • Опубликовано: 21 май 2024
  • There have been no small number of rather bizarre accidents from humans humaning, everything from that time the City of Boston almost literally drowned in molasses to how humans drilling a 14 inch hole accidentally created a 1,300-foot deep saltwater lake out of a formerly 10-Foot deep freshwater one (more on this hilarious event in the Bonus Facts later.) But yet another curious such event was that time a rather large portion of the Reforma district of Guadalajara, Mexico just up and exploded one day for reasons... This is the story of one of the greatest urban disasters you’ve never heard of.
    Author: Gilles Messier
    Host: Simon Whistler
    Producer: Caden Nielsen

Комментарии • 374

  • @tuvelat7302
    @tuvelat7302 27 дней назад +56

    Kudos to the crew of the salt mine. They recognized the danger and made sure everyone got out. That could have gone rather differently even with a small delay.

    • @halifornia2001
      @halifornia2001 22 дня назад +8

      Imagine if Amazon had been running it. "Everything is fine! We haven't had any official warning, so if you leave now you'll be fired. BACK TO YOUR STATIONS!" Because, y'know, that's what Amazon did with workers at a warehouse that was inside a tornado warning zone. And then it was hit by a tornado. And people died.

    • @jwalster9412
      @jwalster9412 8 часов назад

      ​@@halifornia2001to be fair, (not saying that they were in the right) the best place to be in during tornado is under a desk or against an inside wall. And I don't exactly know if that facility had a safer place to hide. And evacuation isn't exactly an option if the weather is severe enough.

  • @Demonic_Tang
    @Demonic_Tang 28 дней назад +106

    Seeing a several hundred foot tall rig swallowed in 10 feet of water must've felt like witnessing a cursed meme

    • @alistairmackintosh9412
      @alistairmackintosh9412 21 день назад +10

      Imagine having to call the head office and explain it...

    • @jwalster9412
      @jwalster9412 8 часов назад

      I would have sat there thinking "is the water rising, or is the rig sinking" as everyone was probably dead silent..

  • @ArtusDigitalMediaOfficial
    @ArtusDigitalMediaOfficial 28 дней назад +322

    Accidentalleed?

    • @nade5557
      @nade5557 28 дней назад +42

      I love accidentalleed

    • @TodayIFoundOut
      @TodayIFoundOut  28 дней назад +197

      When you accidental something into happening. :-) -Daven

    • @forrestfoellinger4020
      @forrestfoellinger4020 28 дней назад +39

      Whoopsadoodle!

    • @ARIXANDRE
      @ARIXANDRE 28 дней назад +7

      Don't worry. AI did it but a human will correct it soon. 😉

    • @burtbackattack
      @burtbackattack 28 дней назад +9

      Ok I thought this was maybe one of those real but rarely used words. It's not though...

  • @heroedeleyenda05
    @heroedeleyenda05 28 дней назад +82

    I was 5 years old when this happened
    but clearly remember how it was living trough that time.
    I was extremely fortunate to not live in the danger zone, but at the time, there was so little info, that it seemed like any street could blow up, anywhere, at any given time.
    they opened up all the sewers and there was an eerie feeling in the air.
    I wasn't old enough to understand the potential danger, so to me it was kind of a cool experience
    (given that i wasn't exposed to the real horrors of it)
    it felt like being in some sort of disaster movie.
    as soon as my extended family established communication it was decided that it would be best to wait it out at a restaurant that my aunt owned literally at the edge of town.
    it was one of my most fun memories, since it was the biggest family reunion we ever had.
    it was essentially a giant sleepover. I was greeted by my cousins who were already having a blast, then
    once the sun came down, we all prayed for about an hour.
    then the adults started to go to sleep while my cousins and I stayed up chatting, but whispering as to not wake up the adults.
    if i remember correctly we avoided turning on the lights for fear that the electricity might spark an explosion, so it was completely dark.
    I'm sure it must have been very calming to all the grown ups to see us all having fun, and knowing that there was relatively little risk of explosion since we were in a very underdeveloped area, surrounded by fields, on the side of the highway.
    the next day, word started spreading that it might be over and everyone started heading home.
    before anyone says any hate, i do understand how fortunate i was to be sheltered from the entire experience which killed hundreds, injured thousands, and displaced tens of thousands, and mortified the entire city.
    interesting fact;
    one of my cousins, who was also there, but was about 6 months younger than me, had completely zero memory of that entire event even happening during our lifetimes.
    as adults we were arguing because he didnt believe me that we lived trough it , and he was adamant that it happened before we were born, he even called his mom on speakerphone to ask her, only to have her corroborate everything i had just told him.

    • @jessicascoullar3737
      @jessicascoullar3737 28 дней назад +14

      Thanks for sharing your story. Kids are so resilient and your family did a great job of keeping you all calm and away from the horrors.

    • @heroedeleyenda05
      @heroedeleyenda05 28 дней назад +13

      @@jessicascoullar3737 thanks, we were really lucky to have somewhere to go. and not be affected by it. The path of the explotions was huge. it was an "L shaped" path along 10 kilometers in the heart of a densely populated city. it was also pure luck that not more people perished.

    • @leafyrox
      @leafyrox 26 дней назад +5

      Well, that was quite an experience. I'm glad you have fun memories, at least.

    • @phaedrapage4217
      @phaedrapage4217 25 дней назад +7

      I'm also glad that you were so fortunate!

    • @rhov-anion
      @rhov-anion 24 дня назад +2

      I lived in California at the time, but I had many classmates with families back in Mexico who were injured from this. You are lucky to have not been injured, but I can only imagine, being so young, it must have been immensely terrifying for you. Although, I had to laugh about your cousin. It's interesting what memories remain vivid in our minds and which fade away.

  • @HikuroMishiro
    @HikuroMishiro 28 дней назад +193

    People keep insisting flying cars will never be a thing, but Mexico had them back in the 90's.

    • @flopthefish9363
      @flopthefish9363 28 дней назад +10

      Nah I gotta make an alt just to like this twice😭 I’m rolling rn

    • @radaro.9682
      @radaro.9682 28 дней назад

      They aren't going to be adopted en masse is what people mean. Of course they exist.

    • @prettypuff1
      @prettypuff1 28 дней назад +6

      Spain did it in the 70s

    • @lijohnyoutube101
      @lijohnyoutube101 27 дней назад +1

      There are actually a lot of flying cars now. They are well beyond early development with a lot of them now getting thru regulations. I would guess by 2026/27 we will see multiple available to purchase by the general public.

    • @antiisocial
      @antiisocial 27 дней назад

      ​​@@lijohnyoutube101Oh God no! Please no. This is a horrible idea. People can't drive now in regular cars. Every parking lot or neighborhood fender bender is going to result in multiple flying cars crashing on people's houses and on grocery stores.
      Drive down any road in any city for 15 minutes and tell me I'm wrong.
      Edit: There will be so much death.

  • @Private-GtngxNMBKvYzXyPq
    @Private-GtngxNMBKvYzXyPq 25 дней назад +19

    Kudos to Diamond for having safety protocols and getting everyone out of the salt mine.

  • @brandongaines1731
    @brandongaines1731 28 дней назад +66

    Sewer Department: Guys, we've got a problem.
    Fire Department: Guys, we've got a problem.
    Civil Defense: Fire Department, you do this, we'll do that, problem solved!
    Later that night:
    Sewer Department: Guys, we've still got a pro-
    Everyone else: Shuttup, Juan! You're just the sewer guy!

    • @kaldo_kaldo
      @kaldo_kaldo 18 дней назад +2

      Juan: Well yeah, but.. the problem is in the sewer...

  • @mm-yt8sf
    @mm-yt8sf 28 дней назад +56

    i'm impressed a member of the seed oil company board shut down operations for safety concerns.

    • @Robplayswithdragons
      @Robplayswithdragons 24 дня назад +10

      that one decision helped becuase as stated when the finger pointing started they could honestly say hey we stopped working lol

    • @tsm688
      @tsm688 22 дня назад +2

      I'm sure the authorities knew what was up the entire time, but blamed them to placate the oil company... This **HAD** happened before, and recently, after all. They just wanted a scapegoat while they waited for things to blow over.

    • @halifornia2001
      @halifornia2001 22 дня назад +1

      They had shut down for the Easter weekend holiday. Not out of any safety concerns.

    • @harringt100
      @harringt100 20 дней назад +1

      ​@@halifornia2001 I thought Simon said it was a precaution?

    • @sinocte
      @sinocte 7 дней назад +1

      @@halifornia2001 and then kept it closed after the holiday weekend.

  • @lizdierdorf
    @lizdierdorf 27 дней назад +16

    only from the title and the thumbnail I knew you were going to talk about the Guadalajara disaster, I clearly remember all channels (all 5 of them) cutting transmission for the news and everything looked like a scene from an apocalyptic movie. I remember my father saying something about how "as always Pemex being careless".

  • @Awzn123
    @Awzn123 28 дней назад +27

    Yo my family lives in Guadalajara I never expected in my life to hear this story from fact boy

    • @Jason-fm4my
      @Jason-fm4my 28 дней назад +1

      I swear he's covered it at least once before. Maybe on another channel.

    • @heroedeleyenda05
      @heroedeleyenda05 28 дней назад +1

      yeah, he covered it on a previous video featuring the city of guadalajara. but this is the first time they do a video focusing on the tragedy

  • @A.Hippie_named-Sammy
    @A.Hippie_named-Sammy 28 дней назад +21

    I was a scared little kid at the time legitimately asking if the teenage mutant ninja turtles were ok.

  • @liquidrockaquatics3900
    @liquidrockaquatics3900 28 дней назад +44

    When your gut tells you that something is wrong and the government says “nothing to see here”.. it’s time to get out of dodge.

    • @rebny7801
      @rebny7801 23 дня назад +1

      I thougt the same. If it smells of gasoline, it's time to go spend the weekend at grandma's (if she lives sufficiently far away).

    • @SD-vy7gj
      @SD-vy7gj 23 дня назад

      "If the govenment sent out a tweet tommorow telling everyone to get outside and have some fresh air.... I'd automatically think.. what have you done to the air?"

    • @jaap7374
      @jaap7374 22 дня назад +1

      When "the government" governs money instead of people, one should reevaluate democratic principles. If one sees the government as an "us vs them" it's time to get out of dodge.

  • @PGMP2007
    @PGMP2007 27 дней назад +8

    I am stunned this managed to come into the radar.
    To add into the mix, the response of the population to help in the disaster was unprecedented.
    Even when they were told that more explosions could occur the heroism of the people helping trapped residents was unmatched.

  • @jmr
    @jmr 28 дней назад +13

    You had me at city blew up.

  • @pepelopez8372
    @pepelopez8372 28 дней назад +10

    Thank you for posting, Simon. As someone who lived through it, that's pretty much as I remember it.

  • @Ploxtifs_OldAndDeadAccountXD
    @Ploxtifs_OldAndDeadAccountXD 28 дней назад +40

    “That’s the LAST time I eat Taco Bell.”

  • @deusexvesania1702
    @deusexvesania1702 28 дней назад +67

    What is it about the oil industry that makes everyone involved to be comically corrupt and evil?

    • @NnH_Kairyu
      @NnH_Kairyu 28 дней назад +12

      I'd have to guess it's probably the second largest economic industry around the world, behind weapons. Looooots of money internationally.

    • @rjswas
      @rjswas 27 дней назад +6

      they just be slippery mofos.

    • @stephenluttrell8958
      @stephenluttrell8958 27 дней назад +13

      $$$$$

    • @xonerate371
      @xonerate371 26 дней назад

      ‘Everyone involved’ is also involved in food, shipping, communications, pop music industry and media, they’re called stakeholders, ssoooooo…!

    • @BigDaddy-dr8gf
      @BigDaddy-dr8gf 26 дней назад

      Petróleos Mexicanos is owned by the Mexican government. I thought anything run by the government was beyond corruption or evil intent.

  • @SquishySenpai
    @SquishySenpai 28 дней назад +35

    "Whoopsadoodle" is what I said when I read the title. 😅

  • @antoniopetrarca2138
    @antoniopetrarca2138 28 дней назад +13

    All the black and white photos from the 90's really makes me feel old...

    • @heroedeleyenda05
      @heroedeleyenda05 28 дней назад

      there were plenty of color cameras around. some of those pictures might be from newspapers since it would have been cheaper to print in black and white. but yes, living in mexico in the 90s you would encounter a lot of old tech actively being used from time to time.
      for example, we did use to have a black and white camera. we had a color tv but we also had a small black and white tv. my mom still used cloth diapers on us, we had a kerocine lantern that we would use when the power went out. my grandpa had one of those phones with the rotating wheel for dialing out. we had a NES when the N64 was already out, there was an actual Telegram station that we used once. there were people in the downtown area that worked typing and reading letters and documents for illiterate people, not everyone had house phones, so if someone was calling you from the united states, they would call the local convenience store, who would then send someone to knock at your house and relay the message.
      fresh, unpasteurized milk straight out the cow was still commonly sold (that's illegal here in the US) some people would still use donkeys as a daily form of transportation.
      but those are some rare examples.
      not just that, today the technology gap has been inmensely shortened. every time i visit, im surprised at how up to date all the technology is . and feel embarrased for still having my old stereotypes from living in mexico in the 90s when there was a bigger technological gap.
      the only times when you see less advanced technology being used, its usually a budget thing, rather than the lack of that technology in mexico.

    • @1GoodWoman
      @1GoodWoman 23 дня назад +1

      They most likely were in color but put up differently digitally. Color was everywhere and absolutely normal in the 1990s. I was alive then too.

    • @tsm688
      @tsm688 22 дня назад +1

      Black and white film was super super duper cheap, easy to use, easy to develop, and reliable. Test shots, cheap shots which didn't need color, and technical uses kept using it for ages. A reporter who didn't think they'd be shooting something major today might get caught with a camera full of plus-x, until digital finally replaced film outright. Kodak only stopped manufacturing plus-x in 2011...

    • @briebel2684
      @briebel2684 10 дней назад

      Journalists used black and white for a long time after color film became common, because newspapers were mostly in black and white. That remained the standard up until the late 1990s.

  • @foo219
    @foo219 27 дней назад +8

    Texaco destroys two ecosystems (the lake and the mine) in one day, gets the equivalent of a disapproving look and a finger waggle as punishment. Seems like par for the course.

  • @dustybunny6716
    @dustybunny6716 28 дней назад +8

    Man,no one can beat Mexican fireworks

  • @alyciab7417
    @alyciab7417 23 дня назад +2

    Both very interesting cases. I think I would have preferred each as a stand-alone. There was a lot to process from the Guadalajara tragedy and it felt, to me, disrespectful of their incredible losses to jump straight into the next case. Thank you for sharing these anyway!

  • @danielbarreiro8228
    @danielbarreiro8228 24 дня назад +2

    I went to Guadalajara on a business trip a few weeks after the event, The taxi from the airport to the hotel drove over a temporary bailey bridge, one of many bridging the gap since the hole city was cut across. At the time it had been cleared from most debris, but it was quite strange to see the broken houses opening over such a huge gap. Since the subway had just been opened we joked that they were working on an extension. It really was that big, enough to run trains on it.

  • @eugenecbell
    @eugenecbell 23 дня назад

    I lived in Guadalajara when I was a kid so when the story of the explosion came out I paid attention. I followed the story at the time. What I remember is them blaming some guy and his mother cycle that had a fuel tank leak for the whole thing.
    Thank you for the update.
    I never could imagine one motorcycle tank of fuel being enough to cause such an explosion.

  • @outdoorfr3ak
    @outdoorfr3ak 28 дней назад +9

    11:55 hahaha 15,000 isnt 1500 😂 whoopsie

  • @EShirako
    @EShirako 26 дней назад +2

    I've heard of this disaster before...one of those "Seconds From Disaster" variants or something...but it's still insane and shocking to hear, even though I've heard it before. I can't imagine how the gas company couldn't NOTICE they were losing THAT much gasoline.

  • @leonardomapache
    @leonardomapache 26 дней назад +3

    Greetings from Guadalajara.
    We still remember the day. It's like a collective trauma. There are songs about it. The news and local tv still talk about it every year.
    By the way, Pemex was not a private company. At the time, Pemex was the only company in the country who could legally extract, process and sell oil. Going against Pemex would be going against the goverment directly.

  • @zeni3382
    @zeni3382 28 дней назад +23

    The whole fading in and out blur effect is fucking with my eyes

    • @sophierobinson2738
      @sophierobinson2738 28 дней назад +1

      That’s the dust blowing around. 😊

    • @sejtam
      @sejtam 28 дней назад

      What blurring, which effects?

    • @rickgreer7203
      @rickgreer7203 28 дней назад +1

      This. Love the content. The very slow unblur eventually just made me listen only.

  • @salty82ndveteran
    @salty82ndveteran 28 дней назад +5

    We truly don't deserve this world, but humans are going to human.

  • @pirateadam3686
    @pirateadam3686 27 дней назад +1

    I thought you were going to say that "thinking their job had been done, they settled back and had a celebratory cigarette "

  • @richardjones2811
    @richardjones2811 28 дней назад +15

    15,000 feet isn't 1500 feet oopsie.

  • @DanielChaves1984
    @DanielChaves1984 27 дней назад

    Could you do a more detailed video on that Texaco lake accident, that sounds really interesting

  • @dropkickninjatuan
    @dropkickninjatuan 26 дней назад

    Simon your beard is amazing. your videos are awesome too

  • @Poverty-Tier
    @Poverty-Tier 28 дней назад +2

    If only there was a banger podcast about engineering disasters.
    Oh shit, it’s “well there’s your problem”

  • @daftirishmarej1827
    @daftirishmarej1827 17 дней назад

    I've adopted the "whoopsadoodle" and my students love it, so thank you for entertainment value

  • @kosakukawajiri5007
    @kosakukawajiri5007 22 дня назад

    I remember learning about the Guadalajara explosion in an episode of Modern Marvels Engineering Disasters. It detailed that a bunch of fuel leaked from the Pemex facility and nobody could hold them accountable. And the engineering problem came when a sewer pipe created an airlock due to the pipe bending down then up again while filled with liquid and yes fuel, then apparently a spark or lit cigarette found its way into the sewer. The details of the corroding pipe due to another being nearby was just one of a few plausible explainations.

  • @LizCant
    @LizCant 27 дней назад

    Plainly Difficult has a wonderful doc on the lake on his channel it really is very good.

  • @MrYTGuy1
    @MrYTGuy1 28 дней назад

    has simon done a video about what can happen when two bodies of water are joined for one reason or another? this salt mine flood appears to have similar mechanics behind it. what starts as a trickle turns into a gushing torrent pretty quick

  • @deanfirnatine7814
    @deanfirnatine7814 28 дней назад +28

    Here is a story idea, in the 1950's the town of Roseburg Oregon blew up, thanks to one idiot truck driver not following safety protocols. It was so powerful of an explosion it caused landslides several miles away.

    • @davidjairala69
      @davidjairala69 28 дней назад +1

      I was just thinking of this lol

    • @ZeroCrystal
      @ZeroCrystal 28 дней назад +1

      And you could also wrap in when the Dept. Of Transportation blew up the whale in Florence in the 1970s. 2 hours between the 2 cities.

    • @twispi
      @twispi 26 дней назад

      I lived in Roseburg for a bit and never heard this story.

  • @raymondmartin6737
    @raymondmartin6737 28 дней назад +7

    15,000 feet?

  • @michaelcanty4940
    @michaelcanty4940 8 дней назад

    On April 13, 1981 in Louisville Ky a series of explosions destroyed several miles of the sewer system. The Ralston Purina prcicessing plant allowed a luquid hexane to flow into the sewers.
    Explosions began at befote dawn and continued until mid afternoon. There were no serious injuries but considerable property damage.

  • @arisaga822
    @arisaga822 24 дня назад +1

    I went to Guadalajara once, had a blast.

  • @johnwilliams8855
    @johnwilliams8855 14 дней назад

    I remember when that happened. Crazy.

  • @peggywoods4327
    @peggywoods4327 28 дней назад +2

    That firefighter in the lower left corner of the picture looks like he is wearing a Darth Vader helmet. Allegedly

  • @theodoreaguglia8902
    @theodoreaguglia8902 27 дней назад +1

    One of many good examples of why monopolies are bad

  • @Robplayswithdragons
    @Robplayswithdragons 24 дня назад +1

    I'm a commercial diver and the thought of any kind of water pull.. to take out an oil rig omg.

  • @wickedclownluva666
    @wickedclownluva666 28 дней назад +5

    People pick bouquets of oopsie daisies all the time.

  • @bobingabout
    @bobingabout 27 дней назад

    I remember watching this on a TV show called "Seconds from disaster" a couple decades ago. I don't remember what happened.

  • @BionicMilkaholic
    @BionicMilkaholic 24 дня назад

    You should cover the Louisville sewer explosion. I wasn't born yet. My parents moved to Louisville about a month after it happened and clean up was still going on.

  • @Elhuarache
    @Elhuarache 28 дней назад +3

    Watching this at Guadalajara 🎉

    • @heroedeleyenda05
      @heroedeleyenda05 28 дней назад

      the explosions happened a few blocks from parque agua azul

  • @jimf671
    @jimf671 27 дней назад

    I remember in the summer of 1992 being on a vessel tied up alongside a Mexican oil platform. Never seen such a dreadful mess. Scary being tied to that thing. We had departed from Louisiana so the lake story isn't too much of a surprise either. My previous trip had been to Belfast and I remember thinking how many more things were blowing up in Louisiana than in Northern Ireland.

  • @tonnywildweasel8138
    @tonnywildweasel8138 27 дней назад +1

    In any case, I learned a new word here 👍

  • @verdazair
    @verdazair 7 дней назад

    YAY!!! I'm not the only one who uses "humans humaning"!

  • @JoesCaribbeanVanLife
    @JoesCaribbeanVanLife 17 дней назад

    My neck is itchy from watching this.

  • @djdrack4681
    @djdrack4681 28 дней назад +6

    Today on 'Today I Found Out'...the script is put in the wrong pile: One of Danny's scripts for Blaze Brain ended up in the pile...10min+ of tangent story,

  • @lorenzoblum868
    @lorenzoblum868 28 дней назад +1

    Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely ~ John Dalberg-Acton.

  • @Liv-sz8rv
    @Liv-sz8rv 28 дней назад +2

    Hey I’ve seen Seconds from Disaster, I know about this 😎

  • @scinanisern9845
    @scinanisern9845 20 дней назад

    I remember that. At the time they reported gasoline dumped in the sewer by a refinery.

  • @kaldo_kaldo
    @kaldo_kaldo 18 дней назад

    Simon is my favorite AI presenter

  • @jasandipsingh235
    @jasandipsingh235 28 дней назад +1

    Nice

  • @outsider7658
    @outsider7658 28 дней назад +2

    Hello Simon. Thank`s for another entertaining video. But...
    As , I think, Mythbusters, tested the "cigarette" theory impossible, as in the film "Payback" with Mel Gibson.
    So..
    The cigarette, can not, ignite the fumes of gasoline.
    Quod erat demonstrandum.
    Please, correct me if I am wrong.
    from a Finn in Diaspora

    • @Ghost_Hybrid
      @Ghost_Hybrid 28 дней назад +2

      It definitely can, with the right mixture of air and fuel, especially if the fumes are able to accumulate and concentrate in an enclosed space.
      Mythbusters did a lot of awesome experiments, but they are for entertainment purposes primarily.

    • @outsider7658
      @outsider7658 27 дней назад +1

      @@Ghost_Hybrid Thank`s. It`s 🚭 then. Have a Nice one.

  • @pioneercynthia1
    @pioneercynthia1 28 дней назад +3

    If this wasn't an actual event, it'd be an excellent topic for Decoding the Unknown.

  • @ngjuicey2001
    @ngjuicey2001 27 дней назад

    Fun south Louisiana pronunciation. Delcambre is pronounced like “Dell-come” with the emphasis on the dell. You have to love a place with last names like Zeringue (zur ang) and Champagne (chom pon). 😂😂😂

  • @Pbav8tor
    @Pbav8tor 28 дней назад

    Simon, your beard distracted me. It's almost long enough to curl into ringlets and decorate with flowers. Like a Renaissance Faire Romeo. 🥰

  • @williamsullivan3967
    @williamsullivan3967 28 дней назад +1

    Dang, in early today.

  • @zethloveless7238
    @zethloveless7238 28 дней назад

    I live near that lake 😄. Many people in town don’t really have a clue about it anymore. My wife used to swim and play in it. I wouldn’t knowing the depths I do now 🥴

  • @DaleDix
    @DaleDix 27 дней назад

    They made a "seconds before disaster" show about the Mexico town. A few people knew about it.

  • @waynedieckmann9840
    @waynedieckmann9840 11 дней назад

    Always thought about the empty holes we leave in the earth.

  • @krishurlburt7375
    @krishurlburt7375 27 дней назад

    They should've listened to Jose, that dude always knows whats up

  • @Pbav8tor
    @Pbav8tor 28 дней назад

    This is an Unintended Consequences episode.

  • @pooryorick831
    @pooryorick831 13 дней назад

    I remember. It was absolutely horrible. So many burned. Terrible.

  • @summeronio9751
    @summeronio9751 28 дней назад +4

    Don't. Drink. Tapwater. In. Mexico. Ever.....

    • @potblessed
      @potblessed 28 дней назад +3

      It depends on city and / or watersource. Is like saying "don't drink tap water on USA" because of Flint. The locals will tell you if its drinkable or not.

    • @DM-kl4em
      @DM-kl4em 27 дней назад +1

      You're better off safe than sorry, if you are a casual visitor who is not familiar with the area. I've been there on business 3 different times, and I just stuck with bottled water and beer while I was there (The beer in Mexico is very good, and they have lots of good breweries there.)

    • @tsm688
      @tsm688 22 дня назад

      @@potblessed that the locals can drink it doesn't mean you can...

  • @nemisisarcher8213
    @nemisisarcher8213 28 дней назад

    Damnit Dave

  • @rupep2424
    @rupep2424 27 дней назад

    Re US lake draining into mine - sounds like a plot for a James Bond super villain! Oh, wait...

  • @grantfairley340
    @grantfairley340 27 дней назад

    Bree Street in Johannesburg, South Africa please Simon.

  • @katwitanruna
    @katwitanruna 28 дней назад +2

    Whoopsadaisy!

  • @KaiHenningsen
    @KaiHenningsen 24 дня назад

    _attributing it to annual cleaning at the nearby Nogalera gasoline storage facility._ Hmm, I suspect I can see where this might be going ...

  • @Derekzparty
    @Derekzparty 28 дней назад

    Pemex's logo is dope!

    • @heroedeleyenda05
      @heroedeleyenda05 28 дней назад

      yeah, mexico's government uses a lot of cool iconography, also look up the "hecho en mexico" logo and just the eagle on the flag has a really cool and unique style as well. its a blend between medieval and native american styles.

  • @Phatxual
    @Phatxual 28 дней назад +2

    That title is wiiiildin😂

  • @GiulioRicciardi
    @GiulioRicciardi 28 дней назад

    Whoopsadoodle - Flanders as a kid raised by beatniks

  • @joesutherland225
    @joesutherland225 24 дня назад

    I remeber this

  • @JF80001
    @JF80001 28 дней назад +1

    This could be happening right now in Mexico city

  • @Crioten
    @Crioten 23 дня назад

    Starfishes pulled the rig down

  • @jodi_kreiner
    @jodi_kreiner 27 дней назад

    yo any fish in that lake before they started drilling would’ve had a WILD story to tell their friends… right before they died, that is 😂

  • @Jolfgard
    @Jolfgard 28 дней назад +1

    6:40
    so nobody is at fault? It's just the price of progress?

  • @shannongilligan930
    @shannongilligan930 8 часов назад

    Damn imagine being the guy/team that made that miscalculation

  • @patrickeisert6873
    @patrickeisert6873 27 дней назад

    Listening to this while doing hexane extractions

  • @jameslaidler2152
    @jameslaidler2152 27 дней назад

    One could say the mining company from the second story were feeling a bit, salty.

  • @NigelTolley
    @NigelTolley 26 дней назад

    On the plus side, they probably fixed that pothole fairly rapidly.

  • @TTOS69
    @TTOS69 28 дней назад +1

    Isn't this the same week of the La riots? Really nationwide? It was 4-20 through 4-26-92? Something like that.

  • @TheInternetHelpdeskPlays
    @TheInternetHelpdeskPlays 27 дней назад

    24 hours later, it's still accidentalleed.

  • @jfh667
    @jfh667 28 дней назад

    Funny how corporations are never held accountable ... unless they damage some other corporation's assets.

  • @jeffathomp
    @jeffathomp 27 дней назад

    Texaco was not drilling in the "wrong place" and drilled into the mine. The mine was incorrectly mapped.

  • @bauhnguefyische667
    @bauhnguefyische667 27 дней назад

    Dogs:
    What’s dat?
    Ima gonna find out about whorl pools. Shite.

  • @PlayNowWorkLater
    @PlayNowWorkLater 15 дней назад

    Flying Cars invented in Guadalajara Mexico 🇲🇽 on April 22nd, 1992. How is this not known to everyone?

  • @iamise
    @iamise 27 дней назад

    What is that title? Accidentalleed? :D

  • @petergerdes1094
    @petergerdes1094 27 дней назад +1

    WTF is explosivity level and what does is measure? Do you mean fraction of the stoichiometric ratio?
    If so, that's not a good name for it as usually it's a cutoff not a linear relationship (and volume matters) not to mention that overshooting the stoichiometric ratio makes it less explosive.

  • @Count_Smackula
    @Count_Smackula 27 дней назад

    As a former resident of New Iberia, I fully expected factboi to mangle the pronunciation of Lake Peigneur. Especially since he usually doesn't give AF about pronunciation.

  • @kirbymarchbarcena
    @kirbymarchbarcena 28 дней назад

    Another situation of "humans humaning" that resulted to a whoopsadoodle.

  • @Jason-fm4my
    @Jason-fm4my 28 дней назад +1

    Isn't Guadalajara incredibly historically important? That's sad.

    • @heroedeleyenda05
      @heroedeleyenda05 28 дней назад +2

      yeah, guadalajara is the most mexican, mexican city. it's where tequila, mariachi music, and charros (mexican cowboys) come from.
      guadalajara also has one of the oldest cathedrals in america, which was finished 2 years before the mayflower even arrived in north america.
      it is also mexico's 2nd largest city