I like this, a test to show how difficult it can be to distinguish truth from lies. A lot of people just go with something being true because the vibes just seem right. I hope some people see this and realise that you can lie very convincingly
I'm not shure about that Most of these are really eazy there are sometimes some that I have to really think about but for the rest they aren't that hard
i’ve watched this whole series already, but i had the idea today to get my parents to watch! they’ve gotten so much discussion and thought out of just the first two episodes so far, and it really reminded me that we never stop learning. :) from a family of nerds, thank you and keep up the awesome content!
2:03 10-15 years ago a kid in middle school was doing this to an orange, he said it wouldn't go through his arm though, so he did the same and ended up needing a stitch because he basically took a forearm biopsy, unplanned and abruptly. I remember the bandage around the hole was bruised like stab or surgical wound
Used to do it with a pencil after learning about it in school. Its sort of due to both. The friction of the pressure of the object being slid on the wall, plus the texture of paint, allows it to act as a sort of adhesive. If you use a wooden pencil you can even see a little bit of the paint has transferred to the pencil, though its not really noticable on the wall. Since its so weak, it only works for lighter things, though I'd guess doing it in a corner is much more stable so that's why he was able to do an empty bottle.
I found this and love it, the best part is that you try and make each of them convincing so even though I got all of them right I was second guessing till the end almost
2:20 Receipts are NOT pressure sensitive,they are thermal sensitive. So you can sign your name on the receipt with your fingernail. Moving *quickly* generates enough frictional heat to turn the chemical dark.
Love these videos. I'll be taking a some of these experiments and getting my kids to try them over the school holidays. It'll keep them off devices for a wee while when it gets too hot outside.
I really loved this video and how you formanted, good job, I hope you make more of these in the future. But anyway these are what i guessed in the rounds for the one that is fake: Round 1: 2 Round 2: 2 Round 3: 2 Round 4: 3 Holy shit i got all of them correct
if the receipt was color changing with temperature and not pressure, then why did it change color when u scratched using your nail? What u did was apply pressure. If u just press with the edge of the nail i suspect the receipt should change color. This looks like classic first order phase transition. My guess is that u can apply pressure to change the transition temperature. To change the color of the whole receipt u have to apply a lot of pressure, which might not be possible using the method that u showed.
Friction, it is not JUST pressing with a nail, it is dragging the nail along the receipt, and just like rubbing your hands together will warm them up when you are cold, friction between your nail and the receipt will raise the temperature enough for the color change to occur.
@@shohamsen8986 Nope, the temperature generated by the friction. If you place something hot (or even particularly warm) on that receipt paper it will also change color.
@@Vertraic the fact that something changes with temperature does not contradict what I am saying. Your claim is it it's the heat that is changing the colors. My point is that it's the stress. The fact that stress generates heat is not the point. My claim is that "You could do the experiment slow enough to prevent the accumulation of heat, but u would still get the same color change". This would be im favour of stress than heat.
@@shohamsen8986 Stress may ALSO cause it, but heat definitely does. If you get it near a strong heat source (an oven for example) it will change color without even touching anything. As for testing it? I have not had access to that paper for close to 10 years now, so it would have to be tested by someone else.
The shadow of the candle looked fake. Even though fire may not cast a shadow you still see air distortion from the heat coming from the flame. The shadow didn't have any of that heat distortion. Was that because of how far away the candle was from the wall or did you do some video trickery?
Imagine A Old lady Watching 3:46 In how to make rock candy bc she wants to and she's here's "Now pause in comments for it's time decide which one was fake 💀
the bottle one at the beginning doesn't work at all, unless your glass bottle was coated in some kind of glue, which then the friction melted the blue and reapplied it to the wall and the bottle, then this is simply not true.
I did wish the poprocks one to be real but it was kinda obvious it wasn't :(. But DO you know a real tutorial to make them yourself? The real ones were made illegal or changed so much they're disgusting.
Really glad you didn’t actually put that battery into the water for a long frame of time like you claimed. Putting a battery into water with an electrolyte like salt is how you make hydrogen gas. And in an open container, that’s a recipe for a ball of flame.
Yeah, it is a relatively small amount of gas. I was going off the assumption he left it in for a long time if he actually would do that, which could produce a larger amount.
@@WarChallenger if he did, the real problem would be a closed container. On an open container, the hydrogen will dissipate very quickly, but in a closed one you are confining it without even separating it from oxygen more than the density would... And also the metal could corrode, which would obviously also make the battery dangerous
Comments below combined with updates in parentheses after reveals I have no idea how the bottle is sticking, but if it's only one fake, well, it has to be the 9V battery, that's a wild claim and not how current flows or...anything works. So I don't understand the bottle one, but the battery is fake. (seriously how did you make that bottle stick. what.) Nickel oxide feels like it should have colored something; isn't it usually...green? or something? I feel like nickel oxide crystals are green. I'm scratching my head trying to remember my nickel plating stuff. I think there's boric acid as a stabilizer. It's probably not good to dunk things in but I also don't recall it being that corrosive. also the way that styrofoam dissolves looks exactly like acetone to me (heck yeah, wait, did you make napalm?) considering how often my receipts are wrinkled to hell and back without black lines, there's no way that one's true. (so it's heat! that's interesting!) .....I'm torn on this last one. Melting candy and getting it glass-blowing-hot is definitely possible but it's dangerous as hell and why would you do that over the ranges on your oven? Clean up on that would be awful. But the poprocks strikes me as just...more wrong. That just...isn't how I expect solid carbon dioxide pockets would form; evaporation's really slow; if water can vaporize, the CO2 has plenty of time to escape, not like...hang around and form pockets in the remaining solids. And in my experience, melting a solution to the point it's evaporated usually leaves any solids pretty caked to the sides of the dish. So, poprocks. That recipe makes no sense to me, but I absolutely believe you'd do something dangerous and messy as heck for the sake of entertainment (ok seriously how did you clean up your oven, am I wrong? was it just...not as bad as I thought)
Pretty sure the straw/potato effect is not about pressure inside, but about more symmetrical clamping of the straw. You'd have to push quite a bit of potato into the straw to increase pressure significantly. By that distance the straw would have buckled, if increased pressure were necessary to stabilize it.
But some receipts are pressure sensitive, like the ones at the red lobster I work at, it you take like a spoon to it, and go slowly and with force it leaves a deep black line on it
I knew the receipt one was a lie because I actually worked at an Arctic Circle restaurant in Kuna, Idaho and I actually tested it out with a piece of fresh receipt paper. It is, in fact, HEAT that causes them to change color. Not pressure. The science behind it is really cool, sadly I don't remember what it is about heat that causes the receipt paper to change color. I think it might be a heat-sensitive pigment in the paper that does it, I'm not sure. I just know that it's SOMETHING in the paper that reacts with heat and makes it change color.
Beg to differ on the straw through the potato. It's not the air pressure, it's the force through the straw. Hold it from the sides and you are collapsing the straw, making it weak so it bends. Thumb on the top, and the straw holds it's shape. If it was air pressure, you would not get the piece of potato in the straw.
Do you really think that putting your thumb over the top of the straw makes it keep its shape? Its gotta be air pressure, the force behind the shove would have massively outweighed the force holding the air in the straw, hence why some potato was in it.
Receipts are not pressure sensitive, they are heat sensitive - the kinetic energy or friction is what's marking them. You can easily prove this by putting a receipt under a sofa or other very heavy object *gently* - there will be no marks.
If you mix baking soda with citric acid powder, and any drink mix flavor you will get a foaming reaction in your mouth. This is similar, but edible, as baking soda and vinegar.
0:47 2, I think. Both 1 and 2 sound weird, but 2 is outright impossible. 1:39 Well, I know 1 is true. So my guess is 3 is false. 2:45 1, I think The straw should do equal damage to your thumb. 4:13 2 I think.
Blue is by far, the best. Green is in second place, but not a close second. I can only eat a couple greens before I get tired, but I can eat INFINITE BLUE
Here's a link to the playlist with all episode of 2 Truths & Trash: ruclips.net/p/PLOEAbE8LkxoBvlAjxk6PofT_qgjQdluVT
Sorry for the re-upload. Some people reported that the audio was too quiet, so I normalized the audio and posted it again.
Lol I hate when i forget to edit my video correctly 😭😭😭👿👿👿👿
dont care about the reupload but i do want more two truths one lie
These comments are bots
The og video
I didn't even try with the last one because I was too busy hoping against hope that homemade pop rocks was real. 😭
This is actually fun content. Its structured really well and is extremely engaging. Wish you the best of luck
are you korean
That was a lot of fun trying to guess which were real and which were fake. Thanks!
Awesome! Thanks for the feedback
Stop guessing. Use ur brain xD
@@Crystalcluster you obviously don't use yours.
Npc comment
Yeah.
I like this, a test to show how difficult it can be to distinguish truth from lies. A lot of people just go with something being true because the vibes just seem right. I hope some people see this and realise that you can lie very convincingly
In other words, this helps develop your bullshit detector.
@@DustyHoney exactly
I'm not shure about that Most of these are really eazy there are sometimes some that I have to really think about but for the rest they aren't that hard
i’ve watched this whole series already, but i had the idea today to get my parents to watch! they’ve gotten so much discussion and thought out of just the first two episodes so far, and it really reminded me that we never stop learning. :) from a family of nerds, thank you and keep up the awesome content!
Just found out about these full length versions of 2T&T. Feels so weird seeing this in 16:9 lol It's like using a widescreen hack on Mario 64
Blue raspberry is the BEST jolly rancher flavor
Was just about to comment the same thing.
@@jangusducacusnice
Facts
fact
facts
2:03 10-15 years ago a kid in middle school was doing this to an orange, he said it wouldn't go through his arm though, so he did the same and ended up needing a stitch because he basically took a forearm biopsy, unplanned and abruptly. I remember the bandage around the hole was bruised like stab or surgical wound
yikes
10-15? You don’t know what age you were in middle school? Or you were there for 5 years?
@@itskelvinn yes
Can anyone explain to me how the bottle sticking to rhe wall works? Is it bevause of friction or is it due to wall texture?
Used to do it with a pencil after learning about it in school. Its sort of due to both. The friction of the pressure of the object being slid on the wall, plus the texture of paint, allows it to act as a sort of adhesive. If you use a wooden pencil you can even see a little bit of the paint has transferred to the pencil, though its not really noticable on the wall. Since its so weak, it only works for lighter things, though I'd guess doing it in a corner is much more stable so that's why he was able to do an empty bottle.
@@Fa1seP0sitive I thought they just did that trick in illusion videos where they rotate the room 90° so the gravitational pull is rotated
@@Fa1seP0sitive so you basically just melt the paint a little bit and use it as adhesive
"Worst flavor of jolly rancher" proceeds to use the best flavor
Fr
Whyyyyy
Fr
I found this and love it, the best part is that you try and make each of them convincing so even though I got all of them right I was second guessing till the end almost
Bro started a war with only 4 jolly ranchers
Cave Johnson would be proud of the flammable lemons
My chemistry teacher played this on the first day of class and now I found your channel randomly
imagine terrorizing a school with a bunch of lemons and a lighter 💀
2:20 Receipts are NOT pressure sensitive,they are thermal sensitive. So you can sign your name on the receipt with your fingernail. Moving *quickly* generates enough frictional heat to turn the chemical dark.
You do realize that was the one lie, right? Do you understand the point of these videos?
Not sure why i knew this but in round 2 I was absolutely certain it was acetone on the plate 😭
Same
In Chinese, the paper used for printing reciept is literally called "heat sensing paper"
"Blahblahblah grab the worst flavour of jolly rancher-"
*grabs the blue one*
*accidentally triggers audience*
Dos again also I love how smooth the transition from short to long form content clever use of a link with a time stamp
Thank you for helping my chemistry revision😂 i see a lot of acid and base related topics here
The original intro was the best! Short, snappy, and a little humourous! (chicken bread? lol)
I almost thought the ketchup is fake untill the weird recipe released 🤣🤣
The fact that you scratched a commemorative 2€ coin hurt my heart.
Love these videos. I'll be taking a some of these experiments and getting my kids to try them over the school holidays. It'll keep them off devices for a wee while when it gets too hot outside.
Genius format for education.
This goes to show that stuff on the internet can be easily faked.
Keep up these videos. They are great.
2 the battery isn’t low enough to continue stirring even if it was a real thing
Thank you for making this, it was really entertaining
I thought you were just gonna say the chemicle wasnt actually called lemonine
this man does clean thumbarounds
I really loved this video and how you formanted, good job, I hope you make more of these in the future.
But anyway these are what i guessed in the rounds for the one that is fake:
Round 1:
2
Round 2:
2
Round 3:
2
Round 4:
3
Holy shit i got all of them correct
2:03 as a professional boba drinker I screamed as soon as this came on “ITS TRUE”
if the receipt was color changing with temperature and not pressure, then why did it change color when u scratched using your nail? What u did was apply pressure. If u just press with the edge of the nail i suspect the receipt should change color. This looks like classic first order phase transition. My guess is that u can apply pressure to change the transition temperature. To change the color of the whole receipt u have to apply a lot of pressure, which might not be possible using the method that u showed.
Friction, it is not JUST pressing with a nail, it is dragging the nail along the receipt, and just like rubbing your hands together will warm them up when you are cold, friction between your nail and the receipt will raise the temperature enough for the color change to occur.
@@Vertraic Well friction is just shear force. So u are saying that its stress that is changing the color not temperature.
@@shohamsen8986 Nope, the temperature generated by the friction. If you place something hot (or even particularly warm) on that receipt paper it will also change color.
@@Vertraic the fact that something changes with temperature does not contradict what I am saying. Your claim is it it's the heat that is changing the colors. My point is that it's the stress. The fact that stress generates heat is not the point. My claim is that "You could do the experiment slow enough to prevent the accumulation of heat, but u would still get the same color change". This would be im favour of stress than heat.
@@shohamsen8986 Stress may ALSO cause it, but heat definitely does. If you get it near a strong heat source (an oven for example) it will change color without even touching anything. As for testing it? I have not had access to that paper for close to 10 years now, so it would have to be tested by someone else.
3 out of 4 correct I learned so much!
OK so 1:34 It’s one or two I know it’s not three because I’ve seen it before so probably I think it’s 2
The jolly rancher glassblowing was extremely funny
3:19 I WILL DISASSEMBLE YOUR MOLECULES
-Bill cipher
No way you just said blue raspberry is the worst
The shadow of the candle looked fake. Even though fire may not cast a shadow you still see air distortion from the heat coming from the flame. The shadow didn't have any of that heat distortion. Was that because of how far away the candle was from the wall or did you do some video trickery?
Imagine A Old lady Watching 3:46 In how to make rock candy bc she wants to and she's here's "Now pause in comments for it's time decide which one was fake 💀
I thought you said the worst flavor not the best
the bottle one at the beginning doesn't work at all, unless your glass bottle was coated in some kind of glue, which then the friction melted the blue and reapplied it to the wall and the bottle, then this is simply not true.
Cave Johnson will be very proud
All four right! Go me! Though the last one between 1 and 3 was a bit more difficult :)
I did wish the poprocks one to be real but it was kinda obvious it wasn't :(.
But DO you know a real tutorial to make them yourself? The real ones were made illegal or changed so much they're disgusting.
I got all four, which makes me happy.
Really glad you didn’t actually put that battery into the water for a long frame of time like you claimed. Putting a battery into water with an electrolyte like salt is how you make hydrogen gas. And in an open container, that’s a recipe for a ball of flame.
The tiny amount of hydrogen you can make with a 9V is nowhere near enough to cause a fire.
Yeah, it is a relatively small amount of gas. I was going off the assumption he left it in for a long time if he actually would do that, which could produce a larger amount.
@@WarChallenger if he did, the real problem would be a closed container. On an open container, the hydrogen will dissipate very quickly, but in a closed one you are confining it without even separating it from oxygen more than the density would... And also the metal could corrode, which would obviously also make the battery dangerous
I actually feel like I'm starting to get good at this :)
"use the worst for it jolly rancher" proceeds to not use either yellow or orange.
Round one was a bit tough. Had trouble deciding if the bottle stuck to the wall or the batter was fake
same, but then i realized that the electrons would just be going both directions so why would there be a vortex
Comments below combined with updates in parentheses after reveals
I have no idea how the bottle is sticking, but if it's only one fake, well, it has to be the 9V battery, that's a wild claim and not how current flows or...anything works. So I don't understand the bottle one, but the battery is fake. (seriously how did you make that bottle stick. what.)
Nickel oxide feels like it should have colored something; isn't it usually...green? or something? I feel like nickel oxide crystals are green. I'm scratching my head trying to remember my nickel plating stuff. I think there's boric acid as a stabilizer. It's probably not good to dunk things in but I also don't recall it being that corrosive. also the way that styrofoam dissolves looks exactly like acetone to me (heck yeah, wait, did you make napalm?)
considering how often my receipts are wrinkled to hell and back without black lines, there's no way that one's true. (so it's heat! that's interesting!)
.....I'm torn on this last one. Melting candy and getting it glass-blowing-hot is definitely possible but it's dangerous as hell and why would you do that over the ranges on your oven? Clean up on that would be awful. But the poprocks strikes me as just...more wrong. That just...isn't how I expect solid carbon dioxide pockets would form; evaporation's really slow; if water can vaporize, the CO2 has plenty of time to escape, not like...hang around and form pockets in the remaining solids. And in my experience, melting a solution to the point it's evaporated usually leaves any solids pretty caked to the sides of the dish.
So, poprocks. That recipe makes no sense to me, but I absolutely believe you'd do something dangerous and messy as heck for the sake of entertainment
(ok seriously how did you clean up your oven, am I wrong? was it just...not as bad as I thought)
Pretty sure the straw/potato effect is not about pressure inside, but about more symmetrical clamping of the straw. You'd have to push quite a bit of potato into the straw to increase pressure significantly. By that distance the straw would have buckled, if increased pressure were necessary to stabilize it.
I like this Format :)
Honestly thought that 2 was real until I saw the water on the table immediately I knew it was fake
pov: you tested each one before you had to guess
Personal clue:
The chemical reactions are always suspicious.
3/4 right, this is really fun!
I love the voice crack at 2:15 😊
I got them all right. Super fun.
I don't even care anymore I just want to know HOW THAT GLASS BOTTLE STUCK TO THAT CORNER!
IS THE WALL SOFT OR SOMETHING?!
The glass bottle (doesn’t have to be) melts the paint and makes it sticky
@@Zayan.Ahmed4It works with almost anything flat
But some receipts are pressure sensitive, like the ones at the red lobster I work at, it you take like a spoon to it, and go slowly and with force it leaves a deep black line on it
Thats because of the heat from friction
Great video ❤
I SAW THE CUT 2:34
this was amazing ❤️❤️
I just was hoping that the pop rocks one was real but I had a feeling it was too good to be true
I knew the receipt one was a lie because I actually worked at an Arctic Circle restaurant in Kuna, Idaho and I actually tested it out with a piece of fresh receipt paper. It is, in fact, HEAT that causes them to change color. Not pressure. The science behind it is really cool, sadly I don't remember what it is about heat that causes the receipt paper to change color. I think it might be a heat-sensitive pigment in the paper that does it, I'm not sure. I just know that it's SOMETHING in the paper that reacts with heat and makes it change color.
Rip your ruler 😭
I got all of them correct! Yay!
no way he's back
What is the name of the table held together with string?
But why does the straw cut through the potato and not through your thumb?
I was so sad that the battery tornado was fake
seeing it in widescreen is so strange
Beg to differ on the straw through the potato. It's not the air pressure, it's the force through the straw. Hold it from the sides and you are collapsing the straw, making it weak so it bends. Thumb on the top, and the straw holds it's shape. If it was air pressure, you would not get the piece of potato in the straw.
Do you really think that putting your thumb over the top of the straw makes it keep its shape? Its gotta be air pressure, the force behind the shove would have massively outweighed the force holding the air in the straw, hence why some potato was in it.
3:21 that the best flavor
battery, lemon, recite, jolly rancher
Round 3: I already saw this one before
the jolly rancher one was cap, blue is the best flavor
what if it was a different coloured one that eh coloured blue
blud risked his credit card. 💀💀
How did you do the receipt video?
Round 1: ✔
Round 2: ✔
Round 3: ✔
Round 4: ✔
I did perfect
How did you do?
👇
Awww, but how will i make my knock off pop rocks now?
Receipts are not pressure sensitive, they are heat sensitive - the kinetic energy or friction is what's marking them. You can easily prove this by putting a receipt under a sofa or other very heavy object *gently* - there will be no marks.
so a combustible lemon CAN exist
Stop poking straws through my brethren!
Wait how will a bottle stay on the corner of the two walls
does the battery in salt water make chlorine gas?
yep
My guesses:
R1:1
R2:1 (i wasn’t listening)
R3:2
R4:3
Points:20/40
I actually knee the science behind all the non fake options for the last 3 rounds, i didnt know much of anything for the first one though XD
The part about pop rocks is amazing because I just watched Nile red"s video on making real pop rocks candy
The bubble one seemed fake but it seemed like it would be really difficult to fake the footage so it had to be real
BLUE RASBERRY IS THE ABSOLUTE BEST JOLLY RANCHER FLAVOR
Wait how does the bottle one work?
If you mix baking soda with citric acid powder, and any drink mix flavor you will get a foaming reaction in your mouth. This is similar, but edible, as baking soda and vinegar.
0:47 2, I think. Both 1 and 2 sound weird, but 2 is outright impossible.
1:39 Well, I know 1 is true. So my guess is 3 is false.
2:45 1, I think The straw should do equal damage to your thumb.
4:13 2 I think.
Blue is by far, the best. Green is in second place, but not a close second. I can only eat a couple greens before I get tired, but I can eat INFINITE BLUE
my work has pressure changing docket paper so the receipt one threw me off, allows u to scratch off different items without a pen