+1 for Brit's enthusiasm +1 for Brit's ideas +1 for Brit's preparation and ability to communicate her science Keep up your good work, Brit, the world needs people like you. So much.
I don't like the fact that this video reinforces the stereotype that female scientists are unattractive women who can't get a man. Put on some makeup ladies, wear a dress, and maybe you wont have to be married to a vibrator you named "Heisenberg."
Brit's expression the whole time was just so god damn adorable. She kept delightedly staring at her cockroach, like "Look at _you_ ! Oh, you're so cute. I have an awesome bug. Wanna see my awesome bug?" XD
She strikes me as a very all around intelligent person. We need people who stick to one thing their whole lives but we also need people willing to cross academic lines. I am sure she will do great things.
I love it when we get to see Brit talk about things so passionately. She is truly one of the best, if not the best, scishow hosts. She has a way of talking that really makes you want to keep learning.
As a computer science major who is wanting to apply the skills I’m learning to either the medical field or the environmental field, I found the work that Brit is doing to be really handy to find out what I can be doing in the future
Love the conversation around the role of justice in environmental conservation and the necessity of transgressing some of the traditional epistemological boundaries of the hard sciences. Thank you, Hank and Brit!
Hands down the best episode I've seen yet. Both guests were very engaging and had great chemistry with the host. Too often, Jessi is the only reason I'm watching, and the first guest is just excruciating to sit through. This was the first time for this series (aside from the time she occupied the entire show and talked about poop), where I was really into the entire episode.
Woooo love this video. I'm studying conservation and environmental management in Saskatchewan and loving it. Love seeing vids about these topics, especially with women 💪♀🔬You go ladies!
Yes to the interdisciplinary education! 100%! My degree was in Management Information Systems (basically computers for business), but I also pursued a minor in Geology and took so many courses in the various social sciences I ended up creating my own Global Studies minor (which then became an actual minor). I got so much more than just an education on how to write code. And now, in my career, I've worked with people from India, The Gambia, The UK, Kenya, Mexico, Morocco and I'm sure quite a few I'm not thinking of. My world lit and world history courses helped me understand the dynamics of postcolonial countries, my Japanese courses helped me win some points with a customer, all of my business courses helped me with understanding what all of the business people were coming to ask me for, etc, etc, etc. And in a weird stroke of luck my geology background ended up kicking off some great green room conversations with the band for a circus arts rigging crew gig I did as the drummer was a geologist. Honestly, there's very little of my education that didn't come in handy at some point. And some of the biggest breakthroughs happening right now are in multi-disciplinary topics. So when John Green did his "Yeah, about the test..." riff on Crash Course World History I just wanted to hug the man. Not everyone today can afford a 4 year degree program. But whether you do it in college or community classes or your local library, or just talking to someone on a bus ride, just take the opportunity to learn what you can about as much as you can. Don't limit yourself to what's going to make you a buck right now (unless you're totally broke in which case, feed yourself, then branch out). You never know what's going to come in handy. Seriously. Life is going to throw you some curve balls where you're sitting back stage chatting with a drummer about Wisconsin bedrock or the impact of colonialism and apartheid on South African Blackfoot Penguin populations.
I love this conversation. I'm studying ecology now, having gone back to school at a liberal arts college... and as much as I'm sick of writing humanities papers, it has been extremely useful to get that kind of perspective. I intend to work with ecosystems on a global scale, so understanding the fraught history and power dynamics involved in globalization's impact on global poverty and land-based communities around the world is crucial for me.
Fascinating to see and hear Brit off-script. She is, of course, a fantastic presenter, but she is wonderful when she is exploring and talking about her passion for life on the planet. This up and coming generation of scientists is going to lead us into new frontiers of how we understand our life on Earth.
I love the discussion about connectedness and science. This gives me hope about more people understanding that science is in every part of our lives and that we as people are a part of science.
I love learning about everything but especially animal behavior, including animals. We are animals. Since I was ten I understood I'm just another species. I'm not better because I'm human. Like she said people can't be separate from nature. I was judged so much and still am for this belief. Evolution is always happening. It hasn't stopped and won't stop. The earth, animals, everything is always evolving.
I just have to say her love of this is eminating. See seems so thrilled and enjoying discussing and informing. Just her enthusiasm is truly engaging! Also like the discussion but like her excitement is catchy! Enigmatic
I'm super interested in big data, and I'm also looking to apply it to other fields. I'm so happy to see people who are super enthusiastic about what they do and about learning. Thank you so much for this video!
Thank you for bringing Brit to us! This girl is amazing! Really enjoying the dynamic between you, especially once Jessie joined in. A very enjoyable, educational, and wince-inducing episode.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I've been thinking all this for years! I'm so excited to see this talked about it on here! and something that I've been thinking about that's along the same train of thought is the idea of a wild verse domesticated animal? and why is it so horrendous to take a wild animal from it's habitat? Taking an animal from it's home and then treating it poorly or not giving it what it needs to thrive is 100% bad, but if you're making the animals life more comfortable if you feed it well and keep it safe and happy then I don't understand the problem? but really the idea that there's an inherent difference between the wild and civilization just because humans made buildings is absurd! we just changed our habitat to fit our needs like any burrowing or building animal. I don't here people calling ant hills a civilization but its the same idea just on a much smaller scale! we act like other animals don't belong here and that's silly, really people talk and act as if humans are alien invaders on earth who are carelessly ruining this magic planet we found when we are native to earth! and yeah it sucks that we're probably gonna cause (or have caused I don't know) the next mass extinction, but the earth will survive and so will life, life has survived much worse things then the humans messing up our own environment. death is necessary for life, with out it there would be no food and or we'd run out of space. and yeah it sucks especially since most of it is preventable, and we should prevent those things but humans aren't evil for failing that just like the meteorite wasn't evil for killing the dinosaurs! (I know that's not 100% accurate but my point still stands) and yeah the meteorite has no thought or will but 99% of humans have close to no control over the environmental disasters anyway its law makers and corporations that are doing the worst damage, and people like brit who work so hard to try and help earth with science who can make the best change! but not everyone can be a scientist and not everyone can be a law maker who does good... I feel like I'm rambling but I feel very passionate about this topic and it's something I think and talk about a lot! p.s. I really like britts room mate analogy cause its so true!
When my sister and I were quite young, we watched the movie Creepshow, which had a short but disturbing film about cockroaches. After the movie was over, I told my sister that there was a cockroach on the wall behind her. She of course didnt believe me, till my dad said I wasnt joking, at which point she turned around and let out the most blood curdling shriek I've ever heard. It was hilarious, to me, and my dad...not so much to her.
I've always liked Brit as a host. What a pleasure to see her light up as she shares her academic passions and her joy for exploring the intertwining, interdependent, interdisciplinary study of Nature.
Thank you so much for this video. I will be going to college next year and my major is environmental studies. I have no one from the field to talk to about it so thank you so much this gave some much needed insight. Thank you Brit and Hank!
I found this fascinating when they talked about people as roommates on earth. As an urban planner we discuss human developed areas as the "built" environment because it is an environment just like a forest or savanna.
Also, I work in the invasive species field, and invasives are specifically organisms that are spreading too fast and taking over areas in a way that causes harm to other organisms. We acknowledge that there are non-native species that arent invasive, and we dont call them that. I think the definition of the term invasive species was distorted here...
From the thumbnail I know this is going to be fun. It's great to hear Brit and Jessi talk, they're so enthusiastic about what they do. Also, Hank's 'lack of interest' in the roaches is hilarious (even though I'm kind squeamish about them myself). Also, gravid is a new word for me, so thanks for that (you know, besides all the science knowledge)
When the thumbnail is too small on your screen and you don't see the cockroach in Brit's hand ;__; I don't know what I expected with invertebrates in the title. It's not like a cute coral or echinoderm or jellyfish was gonna be chilling in Montana lol
springtime in texas and i have the same cockroach terror- woke up with one on my neck last summer and can still recall that feeling. don't know why (i have asthma? maybe it is that?) but they've got my number. i even tried reading kafka... great show! i'm glad for Brit's new direction and for jesse's love of the bugs :)
This also shows an example of perspective and interpretation. I still wholly believe nature does what it can to maintain a balance, but my idea of balance isn't pristine or everything in order, but that all the chaos that creates life is in rhythm. When nature unbalances certain aspects of that chaos will flare up to counter balance, and just like settling a set of scales it takes a bit of back and forth before the rhythm is reestablished.
I always had an extremely diverse set of interests and a very unusual career path and she's absolutely right. You look at things in a different way. I always struggled to get the focused people to hop on board though.
i think for the past few years we have tried to shape the ecosystem to our advatange... once we saw damage we tried to restore and preserve it the way its been in our societys recent memory. we want to keep it the same as a species because this is the enviorment we have thrived in. once the ecosystem changes beyond recognition we would need to adapt our resources to survive. i think it is brave to accept the change in our enviorment because rather than taming our surounding we are accepting and adapting to it.
It sounds like we need an almost (and I shudder to say this) Holistic approach to conservation/biodiversity/saving stuff from extinction. Mixing the hard science and scientists with the humanities subjects with a pinch of animal/plant/ecosystem engineering o get a much more complete picture for a way to try to undo as much harm that w humans have caused as possible. And yes, space science is totally a part of this too! Compartmentalising is not going to work to fix these particular problems, we NEED to mix things up!!
Love how badly some people squirm at the sight of things like roaches, I'm always fascinated by unusual animals and I've had several species of roach colonies to feed to my lizards I used to have. They were so interesting to watch.
Seriously. The first part of this when they're talking about the lit review and the problem of new tools/approaches? THAT. That was my FREAKING DISSERTATION. Do you have any idea what a giant pain in the BUTT it is to try to get a dissertation through committee when the lit review falls into this ... dead zone? ARGH. I have so many feelings about this episode. lol
Madagascar hissing cockroaches actually have very sweet, cute little faces. That carapace (shell) on top looks fierce and all those legs look awful but if you hold one on your hand and tip your hand up so that you can see their faces, they look modest and retiring.
DAMNIT, HANK! I THOUGHT THIS WAS GOING TO BE ABOUT INVERTEBRATES FROM THE BRITISH ISLES, NOT SOMETHING ABOUT VERTEBRATES HOSTED BY SOMEBODY NAMED BRIT! I give it 1 click out of 10 baits. semi click bait
I also interpreted it like that, but I'm not at all disappointed. I've had to pause 5 mins into the video because this is SO MUCH MY AREA OF BIOLOGY and I need space to process. I'm loving your "1 click out of 10 baits" system for rating clickbait too :)
Thank you! Plus, I made it up off the top of my head. Damn, that sounds really weird when you write or read it, so I guess it's something that's meant to be spoken instead of being read or written.
a little shocked that the cockroaches hissed so much. my school kept some as classroom pets and they were unflappable. even the teachers had trouble getting them to hiss. cockroaches completely failed to care about anything.
I did Biology in College, and I was required to take one computer science course, and one philosophy course in undergrad. I figured this would be standard for science majors. The philosophy course was in critical thinking (understanding logic which is also part of computer science, debunking myths and fallacies). I thought I was a pretty logical person already, but the fallacies are actually a lot easier to miss than most people realize. Making me conscious of that was essential to making a scientific thinker. P.S. We're like that roommate that showers for 2 hours and uses up the hot water, drinks all the milk and never goes out to replace it, and never takes the garbage out. Also these cockroaches are a lot cuter than ones you find in the house. Especially up close... their heads are adorable.
The cockroaches look a lot like the dubia roaches I breed as food for my husband's bearded dragon. They really are cool, and I think the freshly molted white ones look really awesome.
I would say that the Blaptica dubia is very different to Gromphadorhina sp, especially in terms of size. Granted, adult female dubias, who don't have wings (or not full ones, anyway), have more of a resemblance than their male counterparts. But still, they are smaller. And of course they don't hiss. I quite like the hissers. They certainly aren't as nasty as the drummer roaches (Rhyparobia maderae), who not only drum but also smell.
Brit Garner is sweet and smart, as humans in general we need to focus less on profit and more what is good for us as humans. I have done so many projects because I believed in them and with no monetary reward I question myself. I am like a monk that knows computers and the internet. I just want to help people.
I agree, the guest is very attractive, and it's even more attractive watching her talk about her passion of animals. You should check out her RUclips channel called "AnimalWonders Montana", especially if you like animals.
+1 for Brit's enthusiasm
+1 for Brit's ideas
+1 for Brit's preparation and ability to communicate her science
Keep up your good work, Brit, the world needs people like you. So much.
+500 for Hank's diverse array of facial contortions every time he lays eyes on a cockroach
+
+ 10 for being a supper cute person.
I don't like the fact that this video reinforces the stereotype that female scientists are unattractive women who can't get a man. Put on some makeup ladies, wear a dress, and maybe you wont have to be married to a vibrator you named "Heisenberg."
1. I LOVE Brit's enthusiasm so much
2. I have never seen Hank cringe so hard over an animal!! He usually always wants to hold them!
+
Brit's expression the whole time was just so god damn adorable. She kept delightedly staring at her cockroach, like "Look at _you_ ! Oh, you're so cute. I have an awesome bug. Wanna see my awesome bug?" XD
@@robinchesterfield42 €
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She strikes me as a very all around intelligent person. We need people who stick to one thing their whole lives but we also need people willing to cross academic lines. I am sure she will do great things.
It's so clear that Brit and Hank know each other well, this was one of my favorite SciShow Talk Show conversations!
Wasn´t it? Just two people geeking out about cool stuff :-)
Intersectionality of the disciplines is important to understanding the sciences as a whole.
I love it when we get to see Brit talk about things so passionately. She is truly one of the best, if not the best, scishow hosts. She has a way of talking that really makes you want to keep learning.
As a computer science major who is wanting to apply the skills I’m learning to either the medical field or the environmental field, I found the work that Brit is doing to be really handy to find out what I can be doing in the future
Nicolayye Wow, that's actually really interesting Good luck with that, I love seeing people do what they are passionate about.
Love the conversation around the role of justice in environmental conservation and the necessity of transgressing some of the traditional epistemological boundaries of the hard sciences. Thank you, Hank and Brit!
Hands down the best episode I've seen yet. Both guests were very engaging and had great chemistry with the host. Too often, Jessi is the only reason I'm watching, and the first guest is just excruciating to sit through. This was the first time for this series (aside from the time she occupied the entire show and talked about poop), where I was really into the entire episode.
A _lot_ of people in CompSci don't realise how generally applicable what they do is.
all this time I thought she was a psychologist...
This was absolutely wonderful and really got me thinking about the world in a new way, I feel like this just gets better and better every episode
Woooo love this video. I'm studying conservation and environmental management in Saskatchewan and loving it. Love seeing vids about these topics, especially with women 💪♀🔬You go ladies!
LOVE the conversation about the need for diversity in educational background and frame of understanding!
Yes to the interdisciplinary education! 100%! My degree was in Management Information Systems (basically computers for business), but I also pursued a minor in Geology and took so many courses in the various social sciences I ended up creating my own Global Studies minor (which then became an actual minor). I got so much more than just an education on how to write code. And now, in my career, I've worked with people from India, The Gambia, The UK, Kenya, Mexico, Morocco and I'm sure quite a few I'm not thinking of. My world lit and world history courses helped me understand the dynamics of postcolonial countries, my Japanese courses helped me win some points with a customer, all of my business courses helped me with understanding what all of the business people were coming to ask me for, etc, etc, etc. And in a weird stroke of luck my geology background ended up kicking off some great green room conversations with the band for a circus arts rigging crew gig I did as the drummer was a geologist. Honestly, there's very little of my education that didn't come in handy at some point. And some of the biggest breakthroughs happening right now are in multi-disciplinary topics. So when John Green did his "Yeah, about the test..." riff on Crash Course World History I just wanted to hug the man.
Not everyone today can afford a 4 year degree program. But whether you do it in college or community classes or your local library, or just talking to someone on a bus ride, just take the opportunity to learn what you can about as much as you can. Don't limit yourself to what's going to make you a buck right now (unless you're totally broke in which case, feed yourself, then branch out). You never know what's going to come in handy. Seriously. Life is going to throw you some curve balls where you're sitting back stage chatting with a drummer about Wisconsin bedrock or the impact of colonialism and apartheid on South African Blackfoot Penguin populations.
Did you go to UWM?
I love this conversation. I'm studying ecology now, having gone back to school at a liberal arts college... and as much as I'm sick of writing humanities papers, it has been extremely useful to get that kind of perspective. I intend to work with ecosystems on a global scale, so understanding the fraught history and power dynamics involved in globalization's impact on global poverty and land-based communities around the world is crucial for me.
Naiadryade Hell yea, see ya out in the field sista!
Fascinating to see and hear Brit off-script. She is, of course, a fantastic presenter, but she is wonderful when she is exploring and talking about her passion for life on the planet. This up and coming generation of scientists is going to lead us into new frontiers of how we understand our life on Earth.
This is the redhead show.
I love the discussion about connectedness and science. This gives me hope about more people understanding that science is in every part of our lives and that we as people are a part of science.
I could watch an entire month of this and never get tired. So much fun
I love learning about everything but especially animal behavior, including animals. We are animals. Since I was ten I understood I'm just another species. I'm not better because I'm human. Like she said people can't be separate from nature. I was judged so much and still am for this belief. Evolution is always happening. It hasn't stopped and won't stop. The earth, animals, everything is always evolving.
Life in general is just fascinating!
Carlosmp20 I agree. All life is amazing.
one of the best sci show talk show - thanks to the charisma of the guest. You should have her do some sci show videos!
I just have to say her love of this is eminating. See seems so thrilled and enjoying discussing and informing. Just her enthusiasm is truly engaging! Also like the discussion but like her excitement is catchy! Enigmatic
I'm super interested in big data, and I'm also looking to apply it to other fields. I'm so happy to see people who are super enthusiastic about what they do and about learning. Thank you so much for this video!
Lol the thumbnail
two redheads having fun, count me in hahaha
Clickbaited once again
puppy52
Roses are red
Violets are blue
I came for the redhead
so did you
Thank you for bringing Brit to us! This girl is amazing! Really enjoying the dynamic between you, especially once Jessie joined in. A very enjoyable, educational, and wince-inducing episode.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I've been thinking all this for years! I'm so excited to see this talked about it on here! and something that I've been thinking about that's along the same train of thought is the idea of a wild verse domesticated animal? and why is it so horrendous to take a wild animal from it's habitat? Taking an animal from it's home and then treating it poorly or not giving it what it needs to thrive is 100% bad, but if you're making the animals life more comfortable if you feed it well and keep it safe and happy then I don't understand the problem? but really the idea that there's an inherent difference between the wild and civilization just because humans made buildings is absurd! we just changed our habitat to fit our needs like any burrowing or building animal. I don't here people calling ant hills a civilization but its the same idea just on a much smaller scale! we act like other animals don't belong here and that's silly, really people talk and act as if humans are alien invaders on earth who are carelessly ruining this magic planet we found when we are native to earth! and yeah it sucks that we're probably gonna cause (or have caused I don't know) the next mass extinction, but the earth will survive and so will life, life has survived much worse things then the humans messing up our own environment. death is necessary for life, with out it there would be no food and or we'd run out of space. and yeah it sucks especially since most of it is preventable, and we should prevent those things but humans aren't evil for failing that just like the meteorite wasn't evil for killing the dinosaurs! (I know that's not 100% accurate but my point still stands) and yeah the meteorite has no thought or will but 99% of humans have close to no control over the environmental disasters anyway its law makers and corporations that are doing the worst damage, and people like brit who work so hard to try and help earth with science who can make the best change! but not everyone can be a scientist and not everyone can be a law maker who does good... I feel like I'm rambling but I feel very passionate about this topic and it's something I think and talk about a lot! p.s. I really like britts room mate analogy cause its so true!
This channel just keeps pumping out videos. Crazy. Very interesting.
When my sister and I were quite young, we watched the movie Creepshow, which had a short but disturbing film about cockroaches. After the movie was over, I told my sister that there was a cockroach on the wall behind her. She of course didnt believe me, till my dad said I wasnt joking, at which point she turned around and let out the most blood curdling shriek I've ever heard. It was hilarious, to me, and my dad...not so much to her.
Was there actually a cockroach or was your dad in on the joke?
There was indeed a cockroach...the universe has great comedic timing lol
We love you guys. Thanks so much for making my life better by makeing me smarter. Xxxxxxxxxx
I aspire to be as funny and fluent as Brit 💕 This episode is hands down my favorite SciShow!
I've always liked Brit as a host. What a pleasure to see her light up as she shares her academic passions and her joy for exploring the intertwining, interdependent, interdisciplinary study of Nature.
Congratulations on 5.000.000 subscribers,much deserved!
Thank you so much for this video. I will be going to college next year and my major is environmental studies. I have no one from the field to talk to about it so thank you so much this gave some much needed insight. Thank you Brit and Hank!
I found this fascinating when they talked about people as roommates on earth. As an urban planner we discuss human developed areas as the "built" environment because it is an environment just like a forest or savanna.
Also Hank, the first time I held a Madagascar hissing Cockroach, I dropped it. I have held one successfully, and have no desire to repeat it.
Brits mind is truly beautiful. This conversation is actually shifting my perspective
Loved this big time, the two science folks I really do love. Awesome 🍻
Best. Talk show. Ever.
Also, I work in the invasive species field, and invasives are specifically organisms that are spreading too fast and taking over areas in a way that causes harm to other organisms. We acknowledge that there are non-native species that arent invasive, and we dont call them that. I think the definition of the term invasive species was distorted here...
I damn love this. I subscribed to the nature channel by 15 minutes. I love conservation biology so much! Cockroach time so good.
Okay, Brit and Jessi are the *BEST* guests on this! MOAR REDHEADS-WHO-LOVE-BUGS-HANK-HATES!
Hank, Brit & Jessie - a trinity of awesomeness :) my favourite guys in one place has made me day. Roaches not so much.
Different ideas of better without communication leads to verschlimmbessern. Trying to make things better, but making it worse.
From the thumbnail I know this is going to be fun.
It's great to hear Brit and Jessi talk, they're so enthusiastic about what they do. Also, Hank's 'lack of interest' in the roaches is hilarious (even though I'm kind squeamish about them myself).
Also, gravid is a new word for me, so thanks for that (you know, besides all the science knowledge)
When the thumbnail is too small on your screen and you don't see the cockroach in Brit's hand ;__;
I don't know what I expected with invertebrates in the title. It's not like a cute coral or echinoderm or jellyfish was gonna be chilling in Montana lol
it's really good to just watch the contrast between Brit and Hank
I am so excited for the new show!
springtime in texas and i have the same cockroach terror- woke up with one on my neck last summer and can still recall that feeling. don't know why (i have asthma? maybe it is that?) but they've got my number. i even tried reading kafka... great show! i'm glad for Brit's new direction and for jesse's love of the bugs :)
This also shows an example of perspective and interpretation. I still wholly believe nature does what it can to maintain a balance, but my idea of balance isn't pristine or everything in order, but that all the chaos that creates life is in rhythm.
When nature unbalances certain aspects of that chaos will flare up to counter balance, and just like settling a set of scales it takes a bit of back and forth before the rhythm is reestablished.
This episode was amazing!!
I always had an extremely diverse set of interests and a very unusual career path and she's absolutely right. You look at things in a different way. I always struggled to get the focused people to hop on board though.
i think for the past few years we have tried to shape the ecosystem to our advatange... once we saw damage we tried to restore and preserve it the way its been in our societys recent memory. we want to keep it the same as a species because this is the enviorment we have thrived in. once the ecosystem changes beyond recognition we would need to adapt our resources to survive. i think it is brave to accept the change in our enviorment because rather than taming our surounding we are accepting and adapting to it.
LOL 33:30 "I know what gravid means!" :D
Nature league is amazing 🤩
Guys it would be great if you made one of how often you should wash different things, bed sheets, hair, towels etc
It sounds like we need an almost (and I shudder to say this) Holistic approach to conservation/biodiversity/saving stuff from extinction. Mixing the hard science and scientists with the humanities subjects with a pinch of animal/plant/ecosystem engineering o get a much more complete picture for a way to try to undo as much harm that w humans have caused as possible. And yes, space science is totally a part of this too! Compartmentalising is not going to work to fix these particular problems, we NEED to mix things up!!
YES more wildlife conservation vids please
Love how badly some people squirm at the sight of things like roaches, I'm always fascinated by unusual animals and I've had several species of roach colonies to feed to my lizards I used to have. They were so interesting to watch.
This episode was bloody hilarious!
Awesome episode. A lot of interesting topics
Hank's face is priceless when he sees those invertebrates. Lol
wow.just wow. britt - you are amazing!
I want to roadtrip to Montana to see all this awesomeness with my kids. Does sci-show have visitor days?
"Not counting invertebrates"
NICE SAVE. Really brought that one back in Hank. 😂😂
I fell asleep and woke up to this.
Loved Hank in this video. Haha! :)
This episode contained more amazing faces than most entire weeks of uploads. You guys are the best. XD
26:54 "Are you looking at her little mouthpieces?" "Yeah........" Hank's face!
I did Pop Gen for like 13 years. Including some conservation genetics.
Great show Hank!
"I'm tougher than you, I'm bigger, and I'll smash you!", but with more S's. This whole episode had me in stitches!
Brit is one of the most awesome ladies, I wish I could be her friend.
Oh my goodness I love her.
Seriously. The first part of this when they're talking about the lit review and the problem of new tools/approaches? THAT. That was my FREAKING DISSERTATION. Do you have any idea what a giant pain in the BUTT it is to try to get a dissertation through committee when the lit review falls into this ... dead zone? ARGH. I have so many feelings about this episode. lol
Madagascar hissing cockroaches actually have very sweet, cute little faces. That carapace (shell) on top looks fierce and all those legs look awful but if you hold one on your hand and tip your hand up so that you can see their faces, they look modest and retiring.
Is that Thumbnail picture about the first Nature League superheroes?
Nope, but it is now!
DAMNIT, HANK! I THOUGHT THIS WAS GOING TO BE ABOUT INVERTEBRATES FROM THE BRITISH ISLES, NOT SOMETHING ABOUT VERTEBRATES HOSTED BY SOMEBODY NAMED BRIT! I give it 1 click out of 10 baits. semi click bait
One like in ONLY 2 MINUTES?! THAT LOOKS LIKE A NEW RECORD FOR ME! HELL YEAH!
I also interpreted it like that, but I'm not at all disappointed. I've had to pause 5 mins into the video because this is SO MUCH MY AREA OF BIOLOGY and I need space to process.
I'm loving your "1 click out of 10 baits" system for rating clickbait too :)
Thank you! Plus, I made it up off the top of my head. Damn, that sounds really weird when you write or read it, so I guess it's something that's meant to be spoken instead of being read or written.
dylan fox pls turn ur caps off! XD
26:58 Hank is all of us.
Got my snacks ready for the knowledge
I love the thumbnail
I'm with Hank on the roaches. Where is the nope escape?
a little shocked that the cockroaches hissed so much. my school kept some as classroom pets and they were unflappable. even the teachers had trouble getting them to hiss. cockroaches completely failed to care about anything.
Definately need more Brit, Jess n Hank in my life! Plus... I miss Holy F* Science soooooo muchly it hurts 😧
"Can you guys keep it down over there? We're trying to explore this pristine wilderness!" XD
Brit feels like a D&D character that rolled way to high in charisma, intel and wisdom.
Very enjoyable to watch.
Love your SciShow Psych videos!
now going to binge Nature League...later!!
I did Biology in College, and I was required to take one computer science course, and one philosophy course in undergrad. I figured this would be standard for science majors. The philosophy course was in critical thinking (understanding logic which is also part of computer science, debunking myths and fallacies). I thought I was a pretty logical person already, but the fallacies are actually a lot easier to miss than most people realize. Making me conscious of that was essential to making a scientific thinker.
P.S. We're like that roommate that showers for 2 hours and uses up the hot water, drinks all the milk and never goes out to replace it, and never takes the garbage out.
Also these cockroaches are a lot cuter than ones you find in the house. Especially up close... their heads are adorable.
The cockroaches look a lot like the dubia roaches I breed as food for my husband's bearded dragon. They really are cool, and I think the freshly molted white ones look really awesome.
I would say that the Blaptica dubia is very different to Gromphadorhina sp, especially in terms of size. Granted, adult female dubias, who don't have wings (or not full ones, anyway), have more of a resemblance than their male counterparts. But still, they are smaller. And of course they don't hiss.
I quite like the hissers. They certainly aren't as nasty as the drummer roaches (Rhyparobia maderae), who not only drum but also smell.
Brit Garner is sweet and smart, as humans in general we need to focus less on profit and more what is good for us as humans. I have done so many projects because I believed in them and with no monetary reward I question myself. I am like a monk that knows computers and the internet. I just want to help people.
Brit Garner is a dime 👌
Wish Olivia was here, she's would love to interact with these insects 😊
It's funny watching the two women handling cockroaches, and Hank freaking out. Way to disrupt stereotypes, guys.
Brin is brilliant and gorgeous.
Big Data! Just did a presentation on analyzing uranium minerals using Big Data Network methods.
Brit and Jessie are awesome but I'm with Hank on this one. No thanksssssss!
Why don't you make a video on the alternative theories on RUclips this would be interesting and good for the RUclips community!
Two gorgeous women in a room. I think I died.
RIP if you can read this from the grave
I agree, the guest is very attractive, and it's even more attractive watching her talk about her passion of animals. You should check out her RUclips channel called "AnimalWonders Montana", especially if you like animals.
It is really interesting 😊😊😊
Nice thumbnail.