Jimmy Here Can't Get ENOUGH Of This Daily Dose Of Internet
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- Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2024
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Canadian here and the fact he doesn’t believe the sky can look like that without light pollution genuinely breaks my heart
I mean it doesn't look exactly like that. That photo is a long exposure with a wide open aperture. it's definitely picking up way more light than the human eye.
Let’s be real, there’s plenty of places in America without light pollution as well. Jimmy just doesn’t leave the city 😂
@@bendover9813absolutely I’m just not coming from that context
@@ScottServais-poet I will say it’s difficult for me to know for certain, I’m very colorblind, so if there’s colours or something coming through, I might not see it quite the same, but you can see the Milky Way itself like this smoke, that all wraps in the same direction full of stars at night
@ericpalmer4285 if you go back and look at how bright the ground and the farm house is, with no light sources around it, and then you imagine standing in that same spot. No artificial light, in remote land, in the middle of the night, that house would be almost pitch black. That should give you an idea of how much more light that camera is picking up.
Source: I've taken a bunch of these types of photos myself. It's incredibly easy to make the milky way pop way more than is humanly visible
1:57
"HELP, THE BAG IS CHASING ME HELLLLLP"
the cat probably.
The excitement of finding a creature thought to possibly be extinct just to find it alive and well. So wholesome
Reasons serious biologists are awesome....and why marine biologists LOVE when they found that Coelacanth love that stuff...literally a fish from like....almost 300 million years ago....and they still found one.
@@joshuawargo6446 Living Fossils are my favorite types of animals. Insane how they kept a similar form despite millions of years of environmental pressure and change.
20:19
Longer exposure time (ie: the shutter in the camera lens is left open linger per frame to absorb more light.)
You can do this with photos easily, and most phones have the setting adjustable in their camera now.
Theres lots of cool tricks you can do with it. But in the most basic case, it makes everything brighter and more detailed the longer something is exposed.
Edit: additionally, you will not find a view like that with zero light pollution. Close, yes... But our eyes aren't sensitive enough to pick up all that red light easily. It would look like a pale and dim blue and grey streak with hints of orange in the sky. A view like that is only possible through a camera. Even space doesn't give you that view. Its unfortunate our eyes dont work like that. Truly wish they did. Im pretty well traveled, been to so e of the most remote places in the US and even the middle of the Pacific Ocean... The night sky is undoubtedly beautiful and colourful in its own right and worth seeing in person, just dont expect it to look like it did on camera.
“Jimmy here just can’t get enough of this”
Please.
I read that in an old fancy accent
this dude didnt eat his spinach
@@M0no3hr0me knock knock
@@hybridvenom9 No
Accent girl. Does near perfect impression of multiple accents while speaking english. Jimmy "I can barely speak english." Never change Jimbo LOL
5:56 “these are trained professionals, please do not attempt.”-AAAAAAHHHHHH
I hope the kid is okay
do you expect them to be silent the entire time
@@veinfish nah it’s funny tho 💀💀💀
“We are going to be over-dosing[!]”
Nah, what is Jimmy doing?
Jimmy: ain't no way I can see the sky like that
The entire chat: yes.😐
Bruh fr. Yhe sky always looks like that where I am at. Its the biggest reason I want to live in the middle of nowhere
Yall are wild. That camera picked up way more light than the human eye ever can. Sure you can see the milky way pretty good in a remote area but not that good.
i love me some Daily Dose of Internet.
but i cannot get enough of Jimmy's content. it truly sticks to ya, both inside AND out.
Hearing Jimmy laugh feels so illegal💀
21:34 scraching a sheet of paper the sound and the feeling makes me want to cry
go ahead
ok for me its bar soap
For me, a real unsettling noise is a fingernail against a seatbelt, because every time I hear it, my mind just floods itself with the thought of the nail being ripped upwards from the finger/thumb due to the friction against the seatbelt's material.
Keep up the amazing work Jimmy
For the reason we Americans spell things differently is because when we started printing newspapers they charged by the letter, so people started cutting off letters to save money and it stuck.
Is that actually the reason though? Because I always heard it was Webster of Meriam-Webster fame that wanted to make the changes
@DarkVortex97 I'm not 100% sure, it's just what I've read, but I'd believe we changed words just to save a bit of money.
I think this may be wrong. I've seen evidence of both spellings being used in Britain when aluminium/aluminum was being named and both America and Britain adopted one of the spellings
Aluminum was created by a Danish physicist and The American Chemical Society officially adopted aluminum in 1925, but in 1990 The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry accepted aluminium as the international standard. And so today aluminum is used by North America, and aluminium is used everywhere else.
this kinda doesnt make any sense. Like why spell words with a Zed?
Thank God i was jonesing for a Daily Dose
I was goosing
@@redmist6630 Being a JimmyHere fan is like being a Ted Nivison fan before the Rainforest Cafe
@@lilddm8558 I awoke because of his new vid. Ted melted me and opened my cryopod
btw, that fainting from the piercing is called Vasovagal syncope. I have it and it can be pretty scary. It happens when experiencing pain, and can cause you to seize like she did in the video
the only kind of syncope i know is the heat syncope.
yes i only know of it from that one jontron video
but im pretty sure syncope is, fainting and not 'i dont feel so good' like thanks 'how to avoid heat stress' video tape that costed 300 USD in the mid 2000s
Fun fact: both spellings of aluminium/aluminum were used in britain. Its just that later on the UK adopted aluminium while America adopted aluminum. This apparently happens a lot with words ending in -ium/-um, as these suffixes were used interchangeably
That's wrong.
7:35 me when the pipe bomb in the back goes off early (im really bad at fishing and am resorting to explosives)
20:22 The sky is genuinely really beautiful without light pollution! It may not be as bright as in the video, but it sure is something worth looking into.
cheesemonger here. the “cheese bugs” on mimolette are microscopic organisms that are not only safe to eat, but they are only allowed on there during the aging process! they sit on the outside and suck out moisture and eat a little bit of the cheese as they live on there. they are brushed off though so they are not present in the cheese after it’s been sent out for sale!
for those wondering, the taste is pretty salty, with a cheddary like tone, and hits of caramel and butter as you eat more. highly recommend you try it.
Jimmy never fails to goop it up.
bro wtf
I'm still laughing at the girl who crossed her shoes over and went 'not anymore' when told her shoes were on the wrong feet
Slow shutter speed and virtually zero light pollution will get you pictures of the Milky Way density.
Light pollution is real and to a degree, even small towns can produce a relatively high amount of pollution, in the city I live there’s relatively high pollution to the point where only the brightest stars will seem like tiny ones
Anyone complaining about a 3 dollar tip on a 30 dollar order is wilding, that's TEN PERCENT, AND WAS/SHOULD BE the standard
Just another group of people seeing the success of playing victim, so now it's easy to mimic it.
isn't tipping standard 15-20% though?
the insulting thing is that those apps give you a tip as a default option based on order size/distance/percentage, you need to go out of your way to tip less. still an insane overreaction tho
@@barrothontherocks3325 Yeah, not arguing that. Spitting in the food is wild, even if you didn't get any tip. But, "Anyone complaining about [a 10% tip] is wilding"? Really?
JimmyHere discovers light pollution exists.
30:17 The scientist that discovered the element proposed the name "Aluminum", but British scientists changed the spelling an pronunciation to "Aluminium" to match the traditional spellings and pronunciations of the other elements.
I've been to the Joshua Tree desert in California, for rock climbing, about 50 miles from the next settlement. I can attest that it does in fact look like this. I was unable to find the start signs because there were too many stars.
If you were curious Jimmy, the reason American English doesn't include a lot of silent or unnecessary letters is capitalism. Newspapers charged by the letter so people wouldn't include unnecessary ones, and that became the standard.
Actually it is because America ditched Europe in a time when books were not $2 on ebay so even though they knew the word they didn't have anything to back the spelling so they had to sound it out and guess. Then as the nation grew accents began to change creating even more discrepancies in sound and spelling and so on.
What you just said is Reddit tier alt history nonsense that just blames literally any "problems" that exist on capitalism. We are a solid 3 years away from the fall of Eden being blamed on Walmart doing fake black Friday deals assuming that isn't already a thread
The more you know.
7:35 me when the pipe bomb in the back goes off early (im really bad at fishing and am resorting to explosives)
Literally not true? Both spellings were used in Europe until America adopted aluminum and Europe adopted aluminium. Stop trying to find ways to make everything about capitalism. This may just be what you've always heard but the fact that you didnt check...idk bruh. And before you say "well they couldve just went with the shorter option because of capitalism in the first place" you'd also be wrong cuz then they wouldve went with the original name of the element, alumium
Partially true, maybe, but it's mainly due to it being a complicated way of spelling. Why would you spell color as colour when it's said the same way? Additionally, massacre and macabre stayed the same because people may have thought that the "c" was silent. Overall, it's to not be useless and posh and proper about things like the aristocratic British nobility that the early Americans despised. Instead, it was for the "people", and was for their ease and use, not just nobly educated elites.
21:33
literally me with any kind of paper or cardboard rubbing against anything.
god i just got goosebumps just from thinking about it :(
"its waterproof!" starts playing the intro to IGOR
20:10
reason the nightsky looks like that in videos is because its filmed in a place with little to no light pollution, and the exposure is cracked up to make everything brighter
32:17 I like how daily dose holds In a laugh here.
7:35 me when the pipe bomb in the back goes off early (im really bad at fishing and am resorting to explosives)
@@redmist6630 ok
5:48 There's just something about this clip that makes me laugh. The way this guy just comes in with that energy, it's funny 😅
It actually makes a certain amount of sense to pierce when they are very young, as it is infinitely easier to keep it clean if the child isn't moving on their own yet.
I actually went to a log cabin in the middle of the woods in Arkansas a couple of years ago, it was cold as hecc but you could see the stars and the milky way so damn clearly, it was actually crazy and made me wanna lay on the dock over the lake to stare at them. 😅
the thing with aluminium/aluminum, the original ends with ium, just like other substances, but just like pyrate being changed into pirate, the newspaper tried to shorten words to reduce ink usage
i can never manage to watch one of these all the way through in one sitting because i go autopilot at every single outro
They created something immortal just to watch it k*ll itself.
Thats another level of f*cked up.
Also i'm really high and i'm feeling sorry for the robot 😂
1:00 Hello!
3:55 Hello!
7:03 Hello!
11:22 Hello!
14:19 Hello!
17:03 Hello!
20:38 Hello!
24:10 Hello!
28:42 Hello!
1:46 so THAT’S what happened to my cat in his old home that made him deathly afraid of plastic bags I was wondering for all these years
U are not sans lil bro
@@quigglesnoopmcboop9087you are not quigglesnoopmcboop the 9087th lil bro (sarcasm)
@@quigglesnoopmcboop9087 syk
For the Sky thing ;
Light Polution and Long Exposure :)
That last one would explain where the plain bagels go
English guy here, the reason Americans drop so many letters from their words dates back to newspapers, believe it or not.
Back when the French started doing publications, and then to the English, you were paid per letter in the article, so they just started throwing in letters that didn't make any sense to be there but didn't actually make any difference. Then when the Americans started with the newspapers they were paid per word, so the more words you could fit in the more you got paid.
The scapula strength of that man
I think the vacuum that powers the hydraulics decided to break
So the American pronunciation of aluminum is the right way because Sir Humphry Davy (the element discoverer) named it so. The "official name aluminium" was adopted to conform with the -ium names of most other elements. They wanted to keep the Latin naming style. Sir Humphry Davy got no say on the matter.
The thing about Alumin(i)um is probably the same about flavo(u)r. To save on ink at the start of the printing press various words had 'unimportant' letters taken out of them, and those became the mainstream American way of writing/pronouncing them.
markers on construction paper. cardboard rubbing together.
fun fact: for the aluminium vs. aluminum it is just the difference between American and traditional English due to newspaper printers wanting to save money because they were charged per printed character and the words sounds similar or the same as with color and colour so they would drop many different letters to save on the extra few cents.
Im glad im not the only one who calls that cat breed, "Ballsac cat" xD
27:10 well you were correct all along, flying is both Super effective to bug AND grass
14:40 pov: the pitbull named cupcake trying to say hi
As someone who has had his fingers slammed multiple times in a row in those doors, you wouldn't lose your arm.... You'd get a bruise...
UPS driver pulled out that ocarina of time vibe.
World's going to crap. I'm going fishing.
Fun Fact about the Aluminum thing:
America actually uses the Older Traditional English Pronunciation. It wasnt until after the American Revolution that Britian started changing things
21:57 For me, it's graphite on paper. If I use wooden pencils, I have to grit my teeth, so I always use mechanical pencils instead.
30:30
iirc, it's because way back when they used manual typesets for printing presses, for printing newspapers, in US the cost was determined by the amount of letters used in the print.
so, they cut costs by dropping random letters from various words.
Aluminium -> Aluminum, Colour -> Color, Travelled -> Traveled, Leukaemia -> Leukemia etc.
American way of writing changed forever because there were cheap ass printer-pressers.
I assure you Jimmy, if you go somewhere with basically zero or very little light pollution, you MAY see the Milky Way. It’s not guaranteed because not all nights will be great, but there’s at least a chance compared to cities or suburbs.
I went to Cherry Springs in Pennsylvania for a few nights of sightseeing, and the sky was so clear we could even see SATELLITES. Unfortunately we didn’t see the Milky Way as it wasn’t visible during that time range, but Cherry Springs is one of the best places to go for stargazing. Very low light pollution, only using red lights (due to the infrared wavelengths they emit), and large fields available.
If you ever want to go out for a few days to check it out, whether it be in Cherry Springs or anywhere else, I HIGHLY implore you do. The winter is also the best time to be able to see the Milky Way, IIRC, and the only downside is that you have to be REALLY prepared for the freezing nights. Other than that, please give it at least one chance.
The paint bucket step stool was the worst
For baby ear piercings, they heal quicker. Also, the baby will quickly forget about the piercing as well as not meddle with the earrings as opposed to a kid or young teen.
Another benefit is that they won't feel the fear beforehand or remember the soreness afterwards. However, if they choose not to wear earrings later, then the holes aren't as noticeabke unless you are directly looking at them.
I had my ears pierced as a baby and the holes are not that noticeable. Also, it makes putting on earrings as easy as switching clothes.
16:21 No Jimmy, that's why they have classes, to TEACH them to do that.
They wouldn't need classes if they could do it by instinct...
31:19 Jimmy, that's called ring toss 😭
20:36 it is a long exposure video with a lense that can capture more of the spectrum of light than the human eye can process, and the camera will make that part of the spectrum either more red or more blue depending on certain circumstances
jimmy seems like he would stand on the paint can
Jimmy im sick right now but when i watch your videos i still feel happy 🔥
The main reason for many English words being shortened in America was to either make it easier to put more words in a newspaper, or to save on ink. Not sure which reason came first. Any unnecessary letters (armor vs armour for example) were removed to save space.
I agree with Jimmy, it is super messed up to pierce a baby’s ears. At least with a kid they can say whether they themselves actually want it and you can explain to them that it will hurt.
23:06 NO WAY LITERALLY ME IRL
Hi Jimmy. In the aluminum vs aluminium argument, the discoverer Sir Humphry Davy originally wanted to call it Alumium in 1807, but threw that out. He then named it Aluminum, but also got indecisive and for a third time named it Aluminium in 1812. Eventually in 1925 the American Chemical Society (ACS) Adopted Aluminumm and in 1990 The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) accepted Aluminium as the international standard. Different societies, different choices. It's also worth noting that printing prices in the U.S. were priced by the letter, so keeping down letter counts nickel and dimed their savings.
Chat was right, if you go somewhere with no light pollution the sky actually does look like that. So many people don't even know what they're missing. There's a reason there used to be more poems about the stars.
About the sky lookin like that. It's long exposure photography. Leaving the lens open for 15-30 secs absorbs a lot of light so it can pick up galaxies and planets and such. It does have to be a super clear night with low light pollution though.
17:03 chat might be on to something.
Also, yes the sky looks like that. Went to a dirt poor town in Mexico. The moonless sky was so bright you didn't need the moon.
Jimmy! I got some Ctrl and Displates! Let's go!!
6:18 as Garfield once said, "life is like a Ferrari it goes too fast. and Too expensive for both." or something to that effect
The sound of styrofoam rubbing against itself is enough to make the muscles in my spine auto tense up to the point where I could fall over if the sound didn’t stop
19:22 someone in the chat: "babies are born at a really young age" ☠️
Girl talks about sound she hates, Jimmy proceeds to talk about the feels he hates
17:42 that's whats known as explosive diarrhea
Just to clear up the Aluminum vs aluminium (blegh) debate: The first person to officially name the element for the periodic table rather than just using the old roman term for one of it's compounds was Humphry Davy, a British chemist. He first suggested Alumium, but then decided on Aluminum, which uses the same -um naming scheme as other elements like Platinum. Then some other guys decided they liked aluminium better (blegh) and said it makes more sense because it follows the same -ium naming scheme as elements like Magnesium...
You know who named the majority of -ium elements at that time they decided to mimic? Humphry Davy. The guy who decided that Aluminum SHOULDN'T add an extra I.
The difference in "Aluminum" vs "Aluminium" is that the guy who literally discovered it was like "I'll call it Aluminum!" But a lot of the scientific community at the time used a different naming convention so confidently told him he was wrong in what he'd named the metal he discovered. America goes with the original version the creator named it, and Europe goes with the version his peers decided it was.
So the Americans are right and the Europeans did whatever some dweeb in a lab coat told them to say? Sounds accurate
Silly Europe
at least you tried to be believable, which country existed first? Which English country existed first? I can guarentee you that American English if flat out incorrect because England was the first English speaking country, not America.
@@Saki10001 You should read the wikipedia for Aluminum, he's right.
yeah, wikipedia, the least trustworthy source known to man@@Rosewell8
aluminum is spelled like that because of CAPITALISM (and the telegraph). they made you pay for each letter so people removed letters and made abbreviations to save money. using telegraphs to send news across the country was also a thing so newspapers made those grammar changes canon. i think i remember a similar pricing system in 2000s/2010s when flip-phones were popular so a lot of those abbreviations were reused and also updated for how we use it.
On the aluminum thing at the end, it was always named aluminum. When the US was a recognized country, they they continued to use it as aluminum, however the UK started using AluMinIum as their own thing
22:00 mine is that waxy paper used in calendars and cheap folders
18:05 the alien bodies were disproven and what’s funny about it is that this is the second time they’ve been presented as being real. They are made of plaster and various small animal bones.
7:09 yeah that almost happened to me, I got super dizzy and felt like I was going to be sick and pass out at the same time, it was not fun
Here's a fun fact regarding Aluminium/Aluminum thing, though I don't know how much truth there is to it. It's same as colour/color.
Yes, most words originated from UK. Then American news outlets back in the day decided to save on ink, and started removing letters that weren't really needed.
It stuck and now we have armor, color, etc in English US.
21:42 I got a similar reaction to the texture of frosted glass, sandblasted metal or chalkboards
You can see the milky way if there isn't light pollution.
Jimmy saying hear me out about the car and then proceeds to blush like an anime girl
21:57
For me, if I focus too much on a pencil scratching against paper, I just get a full body shiver.
It's weird. I'm weird. :P
I know EXACTLY what you mean. i get that with mechanical penicls mostly. It gives me negative ASMR or something
@@SirSqueakyMoose For me, I get it more from regular pencils. Maybe due to the increased surface area on the tip?
"Ok here me out"
What you mean by that?😂
27:00 that's scyther vs. Moltres with accurate scaling
aluminum vs aluminium bit near the end, here it is in short:
british made both of them, americans stuck with aliminum, british and others stuck with aluminium, both are correct, both are made by the same person who coined the term. in short from the internet as well:
"Davy originally referred to the element as alumium but ultimately altered the name to aluminum. The term aluminium emerged around the same time as Davy's aluminum." man was Humphry Davy.
american's didn't change anything to be special or anything, we just stuck with one version of the same word where both are correct.
now go use it to wrap things in thin sheets of it for your food, or what ever you'll use alumin(i)um foil for.
about the aluminum thing and just most words that have dropped out letters it used to be costly for papers because it was priced per letter on papers so they would drop out unneeded letters to cut the costs and eventualy it just stuck i think vsause explained it
The history of the name of aluminum is that the guy who discovered it called it aluminum, but then a bunch of other nerds threatened to badmouth him on 1800's Twitter because it wasn't Latin enough. So he changed it to Aluminium.
The Aluminum/Aluminium split is explained pretty well by LostinthePond
In a nutshell, two ways introduced interchangeably in the early 1800s in both countries, over time they settled on one spelling each.
Daily dose of internet "Okay but hear me out" edition
Aluminium is the element. Aluminum is the brand of a company