i like how Garnt always says something too easy to understand , like "we didnt schedule anythin" and then goes on for 10 mins trying to explain it more and more and more
i dislike how Garnt always says something too easy to understand , like "we didnt schedule anythin" and then goes on for 10 mins trying to explain it more and more and more
This episode shows the 3 most common kids from school classes. The smug smart kid, the degenerate at the back of the class cracking jokes the whole time, and the kid getting everything wrong saying “I knew it was that” or “I wrote that but changed my answer”
My husband LOST his shit at "Hudson Bay" being one of the major inland seas. "It's attached to water! This is why 5th graders don't trust!" I think he was saltier about that then Connor and Garnt was about how long the earth takes to go around the sun, LOL.
@@antoniohugo289 the Black Sea isn't technically inland as it is naturally connected to the Sea of Marmara, which in turn is connected with the Mediterranean Sea which is connected to the Atlantic Ocean
@@serbanionita239 That's not the definition of "inland sea". If it was, Hudson Bay definitely wouldn't be one. It has some stupid bullshit definition. You can look it up pn Wikipedia.
It’s actually incredible how the protagonist manages to ALWAYS without fail surpass the villain in the last moments. How does Connor always do this, every time
That's because he had a fucking point they needed to pick how pedantic with the answers was they were going to be. Not that it fucking would of helped they got several wrong "they" being the ones behind the cameras. Black sea and Red are major inland seas they are also considered other things but they are also still inland seas, Antarctica is both an island and a continent. Basically this boiled down to in many of the question not "are you smarter then an 5th grader" but "did you write this test or take it and remember the answers it wanted". What's weird is I'm pretty sure this happened on the tv show as well a few time the person was right but it wasn't the answer they wanted so they declared them wrong when they weren't.
@@Chronos4088 Well, they're only halfway through the year - lots of things still to learn! And some of the questions were very topic focused - noone had the pony express question right, but we don't study American history in that kind of depth in our school. Gotta grit our teeth and keep on going!
@@jameslewis2635 i keep hearing about the American education system and, as a high school student from America, I don't see the problem. What is it about our education system that's so bad?
@@AlphaNinjaFTW1 exactly. Many people would rather rely on computer calculation than the engineers. They’re expected to know how to use these systems not to calculate it by hand.
@@ellusiv5121 bro it is literally long division/multiplication. The rules of it are so basic, you can use it every day for everyday things like shopping. And if you are an engineer shouldn’t you know this basic process to talk in estimates with ur colleagues before pulling out calculators to do the actual calculations?
@@eleonarcrimson858you don't do long multiplication for estimates. If you were asked how much is 456*124 you'd think 400*100 so at least 40k. estimations are meant to be rough
For clarification, UPS =/= USPS. USPS does mean United States Postal Service and is part of the federal government. UPS stands for United Parcel Service and is a private service.
The two largest landlocked seas are the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea. The Hudson Bay connects to the Northwest Passage, the Mediterranean Sea connects to the Atlantic Ocean, and the Baltic Sea connects to the North Sea, and therefore aren't landlocked.
As an Ecuadorian, I’m not even mad that Garnt spelled my country name wrong, I’m actually glad we got some type of recognition 😂 It gave me a nice laugh.
According to Merriam-Webster, Y is considered a vowel when: The word has no other vowel: gym, my. The letter is at the end of a word or syllable: candy, deny, bicycle, acrylic. The letter is in the middle of a syllable: system, borborygmus.
It’s almost always a vowel. It’s simpler to say when it’s not a vowel, which is basically only at the beginning of words, and really only when the following vowel is the “ee” sound like yeet. In this case the y involves slight friction of the tongue against the back of roof of the mouth (say it slowly, it’s like an h but further forward) to distinguish it from the following ee. This non-voiced sound is what qualifies it as a consonant in this case, because that’s what a consonant is, an unvoiced toneless sound. But in words like yet, yacht, young etc, where most people would agree it’s a “consonant”, the y is basically just a quick “ee” sound and it’s a sketchy technicality to call it a consonant in that case. Phonology is complicated AF and these dudes never stood a fuccin chance. Even M, N, and the American R function as vowels. Basically nobody is actually aware of how it works, much less them lol.
7:00 damn, Joey really did a "This is brilliant, but I like this" on camera. And I respect him all the more for it. If you have a chance to chase your passions, go for it.
I like how the boys are making fun of how the heck would know Ada Lovelace was the first computer programmer and she was lord Byron's daughter, and I'm here awkwardly sweating
The Baltic Sea and Hutson Bay are not really inland seas, they are naturally connected to the rest of the oceans and just happen to have entrances that freeze over in the winter, but during the summer they are not inland by any means, somewhat similar to the Black, Red or Mediterranean seas which are also connected to the rest of the rest of the Ocean. The only body of water i'd say is truly deserving of the title "major inland sea" would be the Caspian Sea, with the Aral sea, some of the American Great Lakes and some of the African Great Lakes being potencial contenders for that title.
Holy fck, I was afraid I was the only one who lost his mind over that question. Like I can get why Baltic (even tho it's totally incorrect, I live by the Baltic Sea, I know it is fucking connected to the North Sea by staits), but going by that logic Red, Dead, (not Redemption) Black and Mediterranean Seas would also count. And Hudson Bay, as the name says, is not even a goddamn sea, it's a BAY. And if they call Dead Sea a lake then I honestly see no way to call any of the Great Lakes inland seas (also, they all have natural connection to the rest of the oceans, definitely Victoria and American Great Lakes have, thanks to the Nile and St. Lawrence Rivers respectively). But yea, Caspian and Aral Seas (until it disappears completely) are the only legit.
The Hudson Bay and Baltic Sea ARE inland seas. The definition of inland sea they were given was incorrect. An inland sea is not completely enclosed by land. If it were, it would be a lake (like the Dead Sea or Caspian Sea).
I got confused by Hudson's Bay as well, turns out it is seasonably inland as during the coldest months, its connection to the ocean is severed by frozen ice.
@@precisa_ Here's the definition of an inland sea: "a shallow sea that covers central areas of continents during periods of high sea level that result in marine transgressions. In modern times, continents stand high, eustatic sea levels are low, and there are few inland seas, the largest being Hudson Bay." So basically the Mediterranean is too deep to be considered an inland sea.
I absolutely love trivia questions and knowing random stuff that no one else would, but even I think ten year olds shouldn't be learning about this stuff.
Yeah, I used to eat stuff like this up as a kid. I thought people would like me because I was "smart," but I was one naive online/home schooler. Finally went to school in person for a year and no one liked me for being smart unless it meant that they could profit from it (having me on group projects and other teams). Also, with random facts like this, I feel it has more to do with memorization than intelligence itself. These guys definitely have some sort of high social/emotional intelligence to garner such an audience and I love them for it, even if their book smarts are rusty (they still have the same capacity to understand material). Anyhow, I guess my main point is that a lot of this is stuff a kid will never use practically and shouldn't waste time on (or be expected to remember as an adult), which I take as your point as well. That being said, if someone feels happy learning these things just for the sake of knowing them, good on them. Then it's not wasted time. I personally have a huge crush on a coworker of mine because of how passionate he is about learning and sharing random facts, probably because I still have an innate love for this sort of thing despite having to dedicate time to more practical matters.
@@vrinkee That's great that you still have a passion for it. Personally I've been trying to build a career as a writer, so even when I say that an average 8 yr old shouldn't probably know everything, I'll be lying to say it hasn't helped my career in some aspect. Being able to reference obscure facts on the fly helps a lot especially when I don't want to really double check the facts I'm writing down and continue being in the "zone". But I have a very niche job so it's not like everyone should be like me. Maybe people like us can be the exception though.
Got 9 and I'm still studying most of these subjects while also being at the top of my high school. Who are supposedly these 5th graders and where did they study? What kind of abuse did they go through to know this stuff?
huh i dont know which country ur from , but since the education system is hell in india we pretty were taught this in 3rd 4th and 5th grade :( and some in 6th too
Currently listening while having 20 tabs of references open, a pile of chemistry note to my left and a pile of calculus homework to my right. Doesn't get better than this. #unilife
Garnt: You guys were the good kids Connor: No, no. Cause I just wanted to not worry about it Yes, same thing all the good kids who did their homework always said.
As someone who streams games that involve a lot of math, I did question 2 in my head while listening and was horrified to learn they forgot how to multiply
For instance, multiplying by 124 is easy for me because I have multiplied 24 a lot. Since it's a highly composite number it occurs naturally quite often. You multiply by 25 then subtract the number, like how for 9 you multiply by 10 and subtract the number. I simply multiply by 25, subtract the number, then multiply by 100 and add them together.
I am just a history nerd so I just felt like "How can you guys not remember one of the first things you learn in most history courses?" Because in most world history books some of the first things are about Mesopotamia being the cradle of civilization and that the Sumerians were the first people we know of to have invented a writing system in the form of Cuneiform, I more annoyed that Connor said Greek, because Greek comes way later and is derived from the Phoenician Alphabet, which overtook Linear A and Linear B in the region after the Bronze Age Collapse
Connor not understanding how what he put is different for literally the first question is amazing. Also it’s 365.256 years, which is why leap years are skipped every 100 years but not if it’s divisible by 400. So the year 2000 was a leap year but the year 2100 won’t be. To keep the adjustment in line. RE: the inland seas. Neither of the two mentioned seas are landlocked even though you keep referencing them as if they are. Hudson Bay is connected to the Labrador Sea by the Hudson Strait. And the Baltic Sea is connected to the North Sea by several straits through Denmark/Sweden. The Black Sea is real, and connected to the Aegean/Mediterranean by the Bosporous Strait. Not sure why it’s not classed as an inland sea while the other two are.
I think the inland sea question is so fucked up 😂 Everyone thought about landlocked seas, instead of inland seas. Because neither Hudson Bay or Baltic Sea are landlocked.
2 things about that last qeustion: 1. Y is a vowel when used like like that. 2. Twyndyllyngs is an obsolete word and therefore not valid to consider a part of the US language. Middle English is not English.
I've gotta say, question 13 was arbitrary nonsense. I'll start with the definition of "inland sea". The common dictionary definition, and the one that most 10 year olds are most likely going to be told, and the one that they were saying when Connor asked for clarification, is "An entirely landlocked large body of water," which over laps with the definition of a lake, so it is common to add the caveat "salt water" versus "fresh water". Strictly following that definition and the term "major", which I will get to, the only thing that works is the Caspian Sea, and if I had to say a second I guess the dead sea by pure name recognition, but there are plenty of other salt water bodies of water that are just as regionally important as the dead sea, they just aren't as well known outside of their regions. A broader definition that would completely differentiate it from a lake, which fits the more classical idea of an inland sea, and thus what most people not thinking of the earlier strict definition would likely think of, "A mostly landlocked large body of salt water, only connected to other bodies of water by a strait". Depending on how strict you are with this definition this would include The Mediterranean, Black Sea, Baltic sea, Red Sea, Gulf of Persia, Hudson Bay, South China Sea, and the Sea of Japan, just to name some large ones of the top of my head. Then there is the definition that the people who originally made the question intended, which I could tell from the claimed answers, that being the scientific definition, which only maters or makes sense to somebody who studies the oceans and landmasses and their relationships with each other, that definition being, "a shallow sea that covers central areas of continents during periods of high sea level that result in marine transgressions," roughly meaning an area that is underwater right now do to current sea levels but may not have been in the, relatively by geographic standards, near past or future. By that definition the only two option are the Baltic sea and the Hudson Bay, as the only other options are just small parts of much larger bodies of water, like the Seto Inland Sea or the Argentine Sea, or are of disputed status like the Caspian Sea. This brings us to the wording of "the two major". This would mean there are only two that would be considered "Major", which is ultimately an arbitrary term, if you give no context of the comparison it has no meaning. Is it about the size, it's economic importance, cultural importance, historic importance, scientific importance, or any number of other factors that I'm not thinking of in the moment? The only context you have here is if you know which definition of inland sea they are meaning, as if you know it is the scientific definition you can deduce which two would be considered major relative to the others. A more precise question that asks for essentially the same information in a more direct way would be to ask "What is the scientific definition of an inland sea?"
I'm glad I'm not the only one that was thinking "Major has multiple definitions. Which one does the question want?" It's the same with the first question because the question never stated the exact unit of time and as such, can be misinterpreted greatly. This whole quiz (besides the math questions) is one, giant "What the fuck...".
most likely they can. those questions are definitely from 5th grade text books. Adults to don't retain that shit unless we use it in everyday life. which we mostly dont
I remember when I was younger, I moved to Europe and I made the terrible decision to consume dairy. I already had a slight issue while pooping, but the dairy made it infinitely worse. I remember for I’d say for the entirety of 1st grade I was either pooping my pants or the poop was as hard as rocks when it came out. It would actually scratch me so bad it would draw blood. Eventually my body got used to the dairy and I grew out of my slight issue while pooping. To this day sometimes when I need to poop I have a slight urge to hold it in due to the trauma. I got so embarrassed during that time pooping in my pants during recess, during class and the worst one was during a play. I also poop once every day usually, sometimes once every 2 days
I used to have a shitty shit (LOL) experience, but I don't solved it with coffee. At that time, I was on a diet, so I be like "let the vegetables do the job", and it kinda work? I don't know, I have a more frequency shit now
What.. This guy is shiftting 3 times per day. That's not the norm. The norm is like a hand full of times a week for an average healthy lifestyle. Any more or less and you're either in an extremely active or unhealthy lifestyle or activity surely..
@@F1ll1nTh3Blanks lmao no?? peoples bodies are different dude, the range for what is healthy is much wider. please open google and fact check yourself before trying to lecture other people on shit you clearly have no idea about.
Okay, so... The british history questions were meant for 5th Graders studying in British Schools. THe music question was for 5th Graders in a music school. (Ff something like that exist. I honestly don't know at this point, since Japan has VA Schools, so...) The math questions were meant for Asian 5th Graders who were groomed for Gaokao (or maybe the equivalent in India, whose name I don't remember). etc
Not to mention, whether or not Dead Sea is a sea or lake is actually IRRELEVANT as it's way too small to be a major one above the two answers. Regardless Garnt would have lost this, so him being salty about it is both hilarious and dumb.
Remember your first year of Uni is basically your practice run, it's not good to fail but it's ok to f@ck up, don't put an absurd amount of pressure on yourself when the grades you get (in that UK anyway) don't actually contribute to anything in your second or third year
Question 7 was a piss-take as there aren't any island continents because the words are mutually exclusive, when something is a continent it's no longer an island because it's too big.
"Twyndyllyngs" uses the "y"s as vowels. When "y" makes the long "i" sound, it's a vowel (fly, cry), when it makes the short "i" sound, it's a vowel (gym, myth), when it makes a short "e" sound (Germany, twenty), it's a vowel. When it makes a hard "y" sound, it's a consonant (yes, yellow). "Yesterday" uses the y in as both a consonant and a vowel. "Tsktsks" is the longest word without a vowel according to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
as someone who just quit engineering university to find something else to do with my life, the boys talks about their time in that hell is very relatable, it makes me feel a little better about not being able to handle that life
@@specch.8873 As someone who knows basics of how egineering works, you can market yourself as a project manager, a technical writer, or an product analyst. All still pay pretty well, and don't require any actual engineering skill.
@@ghosydt9290 yeah, from my experience, when math in engineering gets compicated, you either say i need a ballpark answer so pi is nearly 3 or you need high precision, so you need a computer. My first math class in undergrad had me seeing a math PhD screw up basic addition on the fly. Its not really in the purview of any stem field degree.
11:03 Are credit cards that necessary? 31:31 First question and we are already fightning over it. We are off to a great start 1:07:53 the moment Garnt fails the Fate fandom 1:30:04 the moment from the beginning of the video 1:54:14 Will Garnt have an anime comeback moment? 2:00:12 what does "copium" means? 2:02:12 this feels like the origin of the "poor's barrel" from cartoons 2:06:04 What does "Twyndyllyngs" means?! 2:07:34 Connor's designated anime antagonist luck screwing him again
I’m not sure about other countries but in the US, it’s pretty much required unless you already have the capital to buy things (rent, houses, cars) up front with cash. For example, when renting you would need a cosigner unless you already have a somewhat established credit history otherwise your application will most likely get denied.
Credit cards are necessary for building a credit score. Credit scores are essentially your resume for the bank - a bank will look at your score to check whether or not they can trust you to pay back your loans on time. Without a credit score, they most likely won't trust loaning money to you since they can't gauge whether or not you're trustworthy enough to pay them back (banks need to make a profit after all). Unless you're rich as fuck and can pay for stuff with cold hard cash, you probably will have to take out a loan for education purposes, for a mortgage when you buy a house, for funding a business, to buy a car, etc The best strategy for building a good credit score is to pay for something using your credit card and repaying that amount to the bank on time. As long as you don't miss any payments you'll be all good. Late payments will not only ruin your score, but you'll most likely have you pay for the original amount + interest, which will set you back financially even more.
As someone who was studying for French for the entirety of this stream, thanks for the shoutout at 3:45, guys. Appreciate the support. My hand is cramping but I got the work done.
As someone from New Zealand, no, Oceania is a continent and Australia is a country. It depends on your definition of continent, one is that its a big landmass, another is that its just some arbitrary area.
Alan Turing is considered the father of Theoretical Computer Science (Or the Theory of Computation) thanks to his creation of the Turing Machine and for the Turing-Church Thesis. So, he is really THE big name in computer science. Interestingly enough, Babbage and Ada Lovelace aren't such big names compared to him among Computer Science major.
Because they're irrelevant in practical computer science. The British ministry of education only added that in for the snob points. It's the same when the French say they "invented canned food," even though they put food in glass jars, not metal cans...
@@alexfrank5331 I know they are irrelevant in actual computer science. The interesting part was the big names associated with them. I think part of the reason is also because the government didn't want to associate with someone who was openly gay at the time (Alan Turing). He was apologised to buy the government only in the early 2010s I believe?
HEY HEY HEY, I gotta take back the points on what was the first animal in space, Laika was not the first, we (we in this context being humanity, I'm not american) sent a batch of fruit flies up 10 years before Laika, Laika was the first animal to orbit the earth.
Connor saying "I didn't think it'd be M, that would be so obvious!" as though the Romans decided their numerals just to fuck with him thousands of years in the future
so question 7 is outdated. Continents no longer can also be considered islands. Because yes, then Antarctica would also be an island. So now the definition of an island is "a body of land completely surrounded by water, that is smaller than a continent."
Alan Turing wrote a book of instructions that a computer could follow to play a game of chess, but the computers of the time were incapable of running such a program, so in a sense he made the first computer game.
Men, I feel the Australia is a continent question was wrong. Everybody learns what the continents are by different social and political reasons. We in Latin America consider America a big continent, people in the US divide by North and South America. And, at least in my country we consider Australia part of Oceania.
But a continent is literally a huge piece of land which is Australia. Those other islands are so far from us and tiny, they're not apart of the Australian continent. Oceania isn't a continent its just a region like central america. Those island countries are located in Oceania but they're not in the continent Australia. Papua New Guinea, Tasmania and East Indonesia are in the Australian continent cos the animals, plants and indigenous people are similar and Australian though. Joeys right
@@sambros2 that's ok, men. There's nothing wrong about your response. Regarding this, I mean, your not wrong. But my point is that neither Garnt nor Connor were wrong, either. Continents are defined in a multiple ways. For example, isn't the Caribbean consider part of the America's? Isn't Japan part of Asia? Aren't Iceland, Great Britain, Ireland a part of Europe? The rules to define a continent are sloppy, inconsistent and very much based on cultural or political reasons. That's my point. Obligatory CPG Gray's video on it: ruclips.net/video/3uBcq1x7P34/видео.html
Also for reference, I leave a "comedy sketch" of a really popular show in Latin America, in which they're talking about the continents and the last one is "Oceania": ruclips.net/video/YSIssdirCvk/видео.html (around min 5:52) In Latin America at least, Australia is not the name of the continent, Oceania is. That's what I mean when I say continents are defined by cultural or political reasons.
Today I learned in some parts of the world Oceania is NOT a continent, but Australia is. Here in Brazil Oceania is considered a continent, but Australia not. And I had to check Wikipedia to confirm I was not making this up, which basically confirms it.
You know, I still really appreciate that you continue to keep the Goku Black in the front of the table XD Even after taking out other figures, he stays lmao
The dog was sent by the Soviets to fill a bucket list and show the accomplishments of their space program. The monkey was sent by the Americans by Werner Von Braun to test his rocket
Not gonna lie, at first I was like, "Yeah I learned this in school, you guys should know this!" And then by the end I was like "Ok yeah that's cap no ten-year-olds know this."
It makes me SO mad that people still don't know that the term "continent" has a strict definition. "A large contiguous landmass that possesses a "shield mountain range" somewhere within it." That's also why Greenland isn't a continent. It does not contain a shield mountain range. Continent has nothing to do with the tectonic plate it's located on
4:28 I'm that kid too, legit just studied for an hour the morning of a biology test (which the teachers informed that we'll be having one day before) and still got the highest marks. Meanwhile all my classmates were complaining that 1 day wasn't enough.
From where I am, Fable is often differentiated from Parable, so that might have been a more meaningful question. The answer they gave I believe is technically true for Parables too. In fact, that answer may have been a definition for Allegory, which Fable and Parable are types of. Fable is an Allegory involving animals/plants Parable is an Allegory involving humans At least, that's how I try to remember it.
That first question, either all of them get a point, or none of them get a point. And even the actual game show states it as 365 days, so they should've all gotten it right.
Multiplication can be done in your head pretty easily when you break it down into component parts: 456x100 = 45600 456x20 = 9120 456x4 = 1824 = 45+9+1K = 55000 + 1544 = 56,544
I feel so bad for our kids. They're forced to memorize all this useless knowledge and be tested on them like they're the most important things in the world. Then when they grow up they're told that they're not good enough to be hired for a job because all the crap they went to school to learn are useless.
I don't generally feel bad for children having to learn, especially as not all knowledge is useless to all people (and even information with no practical use is still fun to learn for some, like myself) but you're right about the emphasis that educators put on tests. I never had test anxiety that bad myself, but I know some kids get really stressed out about it. Every test you take is the most important test you'll ever take, apparently. Getting people to take it seriously is good, but not to that extent. As for the labour market it's such an old catch 22. Can't get a job without experience, can't get experience without a job. You'd have thought they'd have figured that one out by now.
The first question make me unreasonably mad. In any situation, when you measure something, you specify the unit of measurement, which gives you an approximation of the required value. Therefore, when Ashley gave them the unit of days, the answer 365 was correct. Otherwise, you could argue that Joey's approximation also wasn't exactly correct. I know no one cares but still I have to get it out there
Thats not how any scientific discipline uses units. You can have 0.5 km and have it still be kilometers. In fact the changing of units is a common practice, and it would be very dumb if you could only convert between whole numbers; That would break almost every discipline of science.
the continent question was poopoo stinky and here's why in english the word "continent" has a fuzzy definition, but it can be simplified into two: a geographical definition and a cultural definition. a clear example is eurasia vs europe and asia. eurasia is one big geographical continent, but it's divided into two cultural continents: europe and asia. australia is a geographical continent, and from what i've gathered, oceania is more of a cultural continent which includes multiple countries in that area. since the question is "name both island and continent", it most likely refers to the geographical definition. but then they said antarctica is wrong bc it has islands but like australia has islands too so bruh????? what was even the correct answer LMAO (anyways it's not that deep but the reason why i felt the need to say this is bc im swedish and we have two separate words for these definitions (im sure other languages do too) and knowing they mix these two up was making me very notlikethis)
I heard that the fifth graders are smart kids, but they get the questions and answers beforehand and have to do them as homework for the show. That's why they know most of the answers but still forget some.
Woke up to this episode and with as salty as the boys have gotten in places, goats and deer should be gathering round them to use them as salt licks! The emotional mineral runs deep in this episode.
As soon as he asked the first question I knew they were gonna miss the quarter! XD And I wouldn't have given Conner that half point either. Fractions of a unit are still that unit.
Mudan probably solved all questions flawlessly, while editing the video on 4x speed.
Like the human mecha he is!
He must be one of the Child prodigies / 5th graders back in the day
But thats not fair. He isn't human.
was there ever any doubt? 😂
4x speed? So a slow lazy day then?
i like how Garnt always says something too easy to understand , like "we didnt schedule anythin" and then goes on for 10 mins trying to explain it more and more and more
i dislike how Garnt always says something too easy to understand , like "we didnt schedule anythin" and then goes on for 10 mins trying to explain it more and more and more
True anime protagonist vibes
Well Garnt is an idiot whe needs to be replaced. What's new?
@@Earth2McKay well... If you think that, i guess you re the reason he needs to explain these things further
@@Earth2McKay they are good at what they do. They are not speakers.
This episode shows the 3 most common kids from school classes. The smug smart kid, the degenerate at the back of the class cracking jokes the whole time, and the kid getting everything wrong saying “I knew it was that” or “I wrote that but changed my answer”
Joey, Connor, and Garnt in that order?
@@navanithkrishnan7177 do you even watch the vidio?
@@Stynkrat yes
@@rifkyyosua6963 ikr like wtf
@@navanithkrishnan7177 I feel like the first one would be Joey, second would be Garnt, and third would be Connor.
This entire stream was just to show the idea that Trash Taste really wants to Punch a ten year old in the face
And smug ten year old kids.
*Finally, a good reason to punch a kid in the face*
@digduck2020 I don’t
The Connor Experience
I remember going to that website about how many 5 year olds could you clobber based on math from that one Vsauce video.
My husband LOST his shit at "Hudson Bay" being one of the major inland seas. "It's attached to water! This is why 5th graders don't trust!" I think he was saltier about that then Connor and Garnt was about how long the earth takes to go around the sun, LOL.
and the Baltic sea is also full of connection by Denmark
my answer would have been
Black Sea and Caspian Sea
According to World Atlas, it is Hudson Bay and Baltic Sea.
@@antoniohugo289 the Black Sea isn't technically inland as it is naturally connected to the Sea of Marmara, which in turn is connected with the Mediterranean Sea which is connected to the Atlantic Ocean
I’m not sure about Hudson Bay but the Russians straight up sailed a whole fleet of warships out of the Baltic. No way it’s landlocked.
@@serbanionita239 That's not the definition of "inland sea". If it was, Hudson Bay definitely wouldn't be one.
It has some stupid bullshit definition. You can look it up pn Wikipedia.
Connor: **starts trash talking**
Me: He's gonna lose.
Good sir, may I ask about the sauce of your profile pic?
@@SirAinlistor *no response 😢*
@@SirAinlistor I'll find it
@@SirAinlistor 388976
@@sifiz467 Holy shit, you sir, are a legend.
It’s actually incredible how the protagonist manages to ALWAYS without fail surpass the villain in the last moments. How does Connor always do this, every time
ChokeDogVA
I read this thinking he clutched, but it was quite the opposite
I mean at some point I think it's just not caring anymore
It was so funny hearing Connor rant live. They barley started and the salt is starting to grow.
Barely*
Wheat*
It's starting to get painful to watch at times ngl
Millet*
That's because he had a fucking point they needed to pick how pedantic with the answers was they were going to be. Not that it fucking would of helped they got several wrong "they" being the ones behind the cameras. Black sea and Red are major inland seas they are also considered other things but they are also still inland seas, Antarctica is both an island and a continent. Basically this boiled down to in many of the question not "are you smarter then an 5th grader" but "did you write this test or take it and remember the answers it wanted". What's weird is I'm pretty sure this happened on the tv show as well a few time the person was right but it wasn't the answer they wanted so they declared them wrong when they weren't.
Connor, a person with an engineering degree: "quarter of a unit is not a valid measurement".
People who use metric aren't used to having to use fractions is my take away lmao
Gave my kids the test, highest score was 5. You lads did alright after all!
Teaching continues to be hell.
If your kids are 10/in year 5, then this is bad. Though the team did make a lot of mistakes with the questions. Sorry for the inconvenience.
@@acht467 Totally not ego surfing, cough cough. But yeah, it was fun to play along while recovering.
@@Chronos4088 Well, they're only halfway through the year - lots of things still to learn! And some of the questions were very topic focused - noone had the pony express question right, but we don't study American history in that kind of depth in our school. Gotta grit our teeth and keep on going!
@@Chronos4088 There is quite literally no universe where a 10 year old that isn’t extremely advanced actually knows many of these questions.
@@Chronos4088 🤡
Get a grip man.
The absolute state of the British educational system
Idz buidt diff'nt
It could be worse, it could be like the American education system.
You're just gonna copy their joke?
@@jameslewis2635 i keep hearing about the American education system and, as a high school student from America, I don't see the problem. What is it about our education system that's so bad?
@@mech-x-xavious it's part of america, therefore bad
the two engineers couldnt do a multiplication problem. As expected 😂😂
To be fair as an engineer in this day and age you literally never have to do large multiplication by hand since calculators exist.
@@AlphaNinjaFTW1 exactly. Many people would rather rely on computer calculation than the engineers. They’re expected to know how to use these systems not to calculate it by hand.
@@ellusiv5121 bro it is literally long division/multiplication. The rules of it are so basic, you can use it every day for everyday things like shopping. And if you are an engineer shouldn’t you know this basic process to talk in estimates with ur colleagues before pulling out calculators to do the actual calculations?
@@eleonarcrimson858you don't do long multiplication for estimates. If you were asked how much is 456*124 you'd think 400*100 so at least 40k. estimations are meant to be rough
For clarification, UPS =/= USPS. USPS does mean United States Postal Service and is part of the federal government. UPS stands for United Parcel Service and is a private service.
The two largest landlocked seas are the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea. The Hudson Bay connects to the Northwest Passage, the Mediterranean Sea connects to the Atlantic Ocean, and the Baltic Sea connects to the North Sea, and therefore aren't landlocked.
"I don't know how people pay for their education, now."
That's the best part, Garnt! We don't, and stay under crippling debt!
As an Ecuadorian, I’m not even mad that Garnt spelled my country name wrong, I’m actually glad we got some type of recognition 😂 It gave me a nice laugh.
I'm also an Ecuadorian! I was tripping at that moment, the funniest thing is that Ecuador is a very small country lol
Ay same
You're all Equidorian now
Ecuador and Equator are very similar words, that's probably why he typed it wrong. Saludos de Portugal!
That's because Ecuador is how you spell Equator in spanish 😊
According to Merriam-Webster, Y is considered a vowel when:
The word has no other vowel: gym, my.
The letter is at the end of a word or syllable: candy, deny, bicycle, acrylic.
The letter is in the middle of a syllable: system, borborygmus.
Even in "syllable" it's a vowel.
It’s almost always a vowel. It’s simpler to say when it’s not a vowel, which is basically only at the beginning of words, and really only when the following vowel is the “ee” sound like yeet. In this case the y involves slight friction of the tongue against the back of roof of the mouth (say it slowly, it’s like an h but further forward) to distinguish it from the following ee. This non-voiced sound is what qualifies it as a consonant in this case, because that’s what a consonant is, an unvoiced toneless sound. But in words like yet, yacht, young etc, where most people would agree it’s a “consonant”, the y is basically just a quick “ee” sound and it’s a sketchy technicality to call it a consonant in that case. Phonology is complicated AF and these dudes never stood a fuccin chance. Even M, N, and the American R function as vowels. Basically nobody is actually aware of how it works, much less them lol.
So... every instance execpt for when it's the first letter of a word? Gotta love English, am I right? :D
In Norwegian, Y is _always_ a vowel.
@@acrojen03 Same in Swedish.
7:00 damn, Joey really did a "This is brilliant, but I like this" on camera.
And I respect him all the more for it.
If you have a chance to chase your passions, go for it.
becoming more and more like top gear
I like how the boys are making fun of how the heck would know Ada Lovelace was the first computer programmer and she was lord Byron's daughter, and I'm here awkwardly sweating
The Baltic Sea and Hutson Bay are not really inland seas, they are naturally connected to the rest of the oceans and just happen to have entrances that freeze over in the winter, but during the summer they are not inland by any means, somewhat similar to the Black, Red or Mediterranean seas which are also connected to the rest of the rest of the Ocean.
The only body of water i'd say is truly deserving of the title "major inland sea" would be the Caspian Sea, with the Aral sea, some of the American Great Lakes and some of the African Great Lakes being potencial contenders for that title.
Holy fck, I was afraid I was the only one who lost his mind over that question. Like I can get why Baltic (even tho it's totally incorrect, I live by the Baltic Sea, I know it is fucking connected to the North Sea by staits), but going by that logic Red, Dead, (not Redemption) Black and Mediterranean Seas would also count. And Hudson Bay, as the name says, is not even a goddamn sea, it's a BAY. And if they call Dead Sea a lake then I honestly see no way to call any of the Great Lakes inland seas (also, they all have natural connection to the rest of the oceans, definitely Victoria and American Great Lakes have, thanks to the Nile and St. Lawrence Rivers respectively).
But yea, Caspian and Aral Seas (until it disappears completely) are the only legit.
The Hudson Bay and Baltic Sea ARE inland seas. The definition of inland sea they were given was incorrect. An inland sea is not completely enclosed by land. If it were, it would be a lake (like the Dead Sea or Caspian Sea).
@@rubraformica but the Mediterranean is way bigger than either the Baltic or Hutson Bay, and it's more enclosed than Hutson Bay
I got confused by Hudson's Bay as well, turns out it is seasonably inland as during the coldest months, its connection to the ocean is severed by frozen ice.
@@precisa_ Here's the definition of an inland sea:
"a shallow sea that covers central areas of continents during periods of high sea level that result in marine transgressions. In modern times, continents stand high, eustatic sea levels are low, and there are few inland seas, the largest being Hudson Bay."
So basically the Mediterranean is too deep to be considered an inland sea.
I absolutely love trivia questions and knowing random stuff that no one else would, but even I think ten year olds shouldn't be learning about this stuff.
Yeah, I used to eat stuff like this up as a kid. I thought people would like me because I was "smart," but I was one naive online/home schooler. Finally went to school in person for a year and no one liked me for being smart unless it meant that they could profit from it (having me on group projects and other teams). Also, with random facts like this, I feel it has more to do with memorization than intelligence itself. These guys definitely have some sort of high social/emotional intelligence to garner such an audience and I love them for it, even if their book smarts are rusty (they still have the same capacity to understand material). Anyhow, I guess my main point is that a lot of this is stuff a kid will never use practically and shouldn't waste time on (or be expected to remember as an adult), which I take as your point as well. That being said, if someone feels happy learning these things just for the sake of knowing them, good on them. Then it's not wasted time. I personally have a huge crush on a coworker of mine because of how passionate he is about learning and sharing random facts, probably because I still have an innate love for this sort of thing despite having to dedicate time to more practical matters.
@@vrinkee That's great that you still have a passion for it. Personally I've been trying to build a career as a writer, so even when I say that an average 8 yr old shouldn't probably know everything, I'll be lying to say it hasn't helped my career in some aspect. Being able to reference obscure facts on the fly helps a lot especially when I don't want to really double check the facts I'm writing down and continue being in the "zone". But I have a very niche job so it's not like everyone should be like me. Maybe people like us can be the exception though.
@@vrinkee i am happy for you or sorry that happened.
Got 9 and I'm still studying most of these subjects while also being at the top of my high school. Who are supposedly these 5th graders and where did they study? What kind of abuse did they go through to know this stuff?
huh i dont know which country ur from , but since the education system is hell in india we pretty were taught this in 3rd 4th and 5th grade :( and some in 6th too
@@sumitapsinha good to know you're able to tell the dead sea is a lake but can't punctuate properly
@@gionsina7373 hmm , sorry for being a human and making mistakes
@@gionsina7373 its a yt comment, not a mail to the president. even if it was no one gives a fk
@@sumitapsinha next time try not to make mistakes while bragging about how smart you are :)
Most of the questions I was asking "How would a fifth grader know this?!"
Also, seems Joey redeemed himself from the 2021 in review quiz.
Currently listening while having 20 tabs of references open, a pile of chemistry note to my left and a pile of calculus homework to my right. Doesn't get better than this. #unilife
Yeah honestly these vods are the banes of my productivity
Hearing Nabi go off when fate lore was brought up represented the whole fandom
I think this episode I've heard Nabi speak the most compared to all trash taste episodes.
You know Garnt is a real fan when the question is about fable and Garnt literally wrote the definition of the word "fate"
Garnt: You guys were the good kids
Connor: No, no. Cause I just wanted to not worry about it
Yes, same thing all the good kids who did their homework always said.
As someone who streams games that involve a lot of math, I did question 2 in my head while listening and was horrified to learn they forgot how to multiply
what.
I get writing down, but in your head??
@@Iluvatar196 Yeah, if you do math in your head regularly, you just remember stuff and have to do a lot less actual math.
For instance, multiplying by 124 is easy for me because I have multiplied 24 a lot. Since it's a highly composite number it occurs naturally quite often. You multiply by 25 then subtract the number, like how for 9 you multiply by 10 and subtract the number. I simply multiply by 25, subtract the number, then multiply by 100 and add them together.
@@Iluvatar196 not that hard
I love Connors quip of "Rome ain't shit ya'know". His Welsh pride is strong 💪
Why would we invent 2 names for the same thing- Garnt
This is so true. I burst out laughing
I think it's called synonym...
Which are pointless...
After the first question's salt, I knew this was gonna be fun
Engineers btw, both failed the math questions. Truly putting that degree to full use
Damn my heart sank when Garnt missed the Summerians. It was literally Fate's Golden boy's back story.
Was it good?
I'm looking to start watching fate. Which one would you suggest first?
@@Sismo_V Fate Zero
Gilgamesh our boy 😂
I am just a history nerd so I just felt like "How can you guys not remember one of the first things you learn in most history courses?"
Because in most world history books some of the first things are about Mesopotamia being the cradle of civilization and that the Sumerians were the first people we know of to have invented a writing system in the form of Cuneiform, I more annoyed that Connor said Greek, because Greek comes way later and is derived from the Phoenician Alphabet, which overtook Linear A and Linear B in the region after the Bronze Age Collapse
Connor not understanding how what he put is different for literally the first question is amazing.
Also it’s 365.256 years, which is why leap years are skipped every 100 years but not if it’s divisible by 400. So the year 2000 was a leap year but the year 2100 won’t be. To keep the adjustment in line.
RE: the inland seas. Neither of the two mentioned seas are landlocked even though you keep referencing them as if they are. Hudson Bay is connected to the Labrador Sea by the Hudson Strait. And the Baltic Sea is connected to the North Sea by several straits through Denmark/Sweden.
The Black Sea is real, and connected to the Aegean/Mediterranean by the Bosporous Strait. Not sure why it’s not classed as an inland sea while the other two are.
I think the inland sea question is so fucked up 😂 Everyone thought about landlocked seas, instead of inland seas. Because neither Hudson Bay or Baltic Sea are landlocked.
“mom I want Alan Turing.”
mom: we have Alan Turing at home
at home: Andy Tiles
2 things about that last qeustion:
1. Y is a vowel when used like like that.
2. Twyndyllyngs is an obsolete word and therefore not valid to consider a part of the US language. Middle English is not English.
I've gotta say, question 13 was arbitrary nonsense.
I'll start with the definition of "inland sea". The common dictionary definition, and the one that most 10 year olds are most likely going to be told, and the one that they were saying when Connor asked for clarification, is "An entirely landlocked large body of water," which over laps with the definition of a lake, so it is common to add the caveat "salt water" versus "fresh water". Strictly following that definition and the term "major", which I will get to, the only thing that works is the Caspian Sea, and if I had to say a second I guess the dead sea by pure name recognition, but there are plenty of other salt water bodies of water that are just as regionally important as the dead sea, they just aren't as well known outside of their regions. A broader definition that would completely differentiate it from a lake, which fits the more classical idea of an inland sea, and thus what most people not thinking of the earlier strict definition would likely think of, "A mostly landlocked large body of salt water, only connected to other bodies of water by a strait". Depending on how strict you are with this definition this would include The Mediterranean, Black Sea, Baltic sea, Red Sea, Gulf of Persia, Hudson Bay, South China Sea, and the Sea of Japan, just to name some large ones of the top of my head. Then there is the definition that the people who originally made the question intended, which I could tell from the claimed answers, that being the scientific definition, which only maters or makes sense to somebody who studies the oceans and landmasses and their relationships with each other, that definition being, "a shallow sea that covers central areas of continents during periods of high sea level that result in marine transgressions," roughly meaning an area that is underwater right now do to current sea levels but may not have been in the, relatively by geographic standards, near past or future. By that definition the only two option are the Baltic sea and the Hudson Bay, as the only other options are just small parts of much larger bodies of water, like the Seto Inland Sea or the Argentine Sea, or are of disputed status like the Caspian Sea.
This brings us to the wording of "the two major". This would mean there are only two that would be considered "Major", which is ultimately an arbitrary term, if you give no context of the comparison it has no meaning. Is it about the size, it's economic importance, cultural importance, historic importance, scientific importance, or any number of other factors that I'm not thinking of in the moment? The only context you have here is if you know which definition of inland sea they are meaning, as if you know it is the scientific definition you can deduce which two would be considered major relative to the others.
A more precise question that asks for essentially the same information in a more direct way would be to ask "What is the scientific definition of an inland sea?"
I'm glad I'm not the only one that was thinking "Major has multiple definitions. Which one does the question want?" It's the same with the first question because the question never stated the exact unit of time and as such, can be misinterpreted greatly. This whole quiz (besides the math questions) is one, giant "What the fuck...".
They relied on Wikipedia, the fools
Yeah. What he said
@@tomasxfranco not wiki, but world atlas.
Next Trash Taste special:
Empirical research proofing that 10-year-olds can not answer the questions from "are you smarter than a 10-year-old?".
most likely they can. those questions are definitely from 5th grade text books. Adults to don't retain that shit unless we use it in everyday life. which we mostly dont
I remember when I was younger, I moved to Europe and I made the terrible decision to consume dairy. I already had a slight issue while pooping, but the dairy made it infinitely worse. I remember for I’d say for the entirety of 1st grade I was either pooping my pants or the poop was as hard as rocks when it came out. It would actually scratch me so bad it would draw blood. Eventually my body got used to the dairy and I grew out of my slight issue while pooping. To this day sometimes when I need to poop I have a slight urge to hold it in due to the trauma. I got so embarrassed during that time pooping in my pants during recess, during class and the worst one was during a play.
I also poop once every day usually, sometimes once every 2 days
I always thought AM stood for After Midnight and PM Past Midday
I'm a Canadian and this is the first time I've ever heard that Hudson's Bay is considered a sea.
Its just a big bay
Yep what the fuck I've never heard that either and I live in Ontario
i can relate to Joey, i had to drink coffee everyday just to have a normal shitting schedule
I used to have a shitty shit (LOL) experience, but I don't solved it with coffee. At that time, I was on a diet, so I be like "let the vegetables do the job", and it kinda work? I don't know, I have a more frequency shit now
Same here lol the main reason i like coffee
Same
What.. This guy is shiftting 3 times per day. That's not the norm. The norm is like a hand full of times a week for an average healthy lifestyle. Any more or less and you're either in an extremely active or unhealthy lifestyle or activity surely..
@@F1ll1nTh3Blanks lmao no?? peoples bodies are different dude, the range for what is healthy is much wider. please open google and fact check yourself before trying to lecture other people on shit you clearly have no idea about.
Okay, so...
The british history questions were meant for 5th Graders studying in British Schools.
THe music question was for 5th Graders in a music school. (Ff something like that exist. I honestly don't know at this point, since Japan has VA Schools, so...)
The math questions were meant for Asian 5th Graders who were groomed for Gaokao (or maybe the equivalent in India, whose name I don't remember).
etc
"How would a 10 y.o know who 'Prince' is?"
"Idk, maybe this was for 10 y.o who born in late 90's" 😂
Reading chat during this has proven to me that roughly 80% of them are also not smarter than a 5th grader.
Are you done?
Connor and garnt most of the time: Yes, i am done, specifically, obliterated.
"Why is it called the Dead Sea?"
Imagine when he hears about the 100 year war
It’s called the Dead Sea because that’s where the Dead Sea Scrolls are from, duh. /s
Not to mention, whether or not Dead Sea is a sea or lake is actually IRRELEVANT as it's way too small to be a major one above the two answers. Regardless Garnt would have lost this, so him being salty about it is both hilarious and dumb.
Remember your first year of Uni is basically your practice run, it's not good to fail but it's ok to f@ck up, don't put an absurd amount of pressure on yourself when the grades you get (in that UK anyway) don't actually contribute to anything in your second or third year
Question 7 was a piss-take as there aren't any island continents because the words are mutually exclusive, when something is a continent it's no longer an island because it's too big.
"Twyndyllyngs" uses the "y"s as vowels. When "y" makes the long "i" sound, it's a vowel (fly, cry), when it makes the short "i" sound, it's a vowel (gym, myth), when it makes a short "e" sound (Germany, twenty), it's a vowel. When it makes a hard "y" sound, it's a consonant (yes, yellow). "Yesterday" uses the y in as both a consonant and a vowel. "Tsktsks" is the longest word without a vowel according to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
as someone who just quit engineering university to find something else to do with my life, the boys talks about their time in that hell is very relatable, it makes me feel a little better about not being able to handle that life
the fact that Garnt has a master on engineering and had the most absurd answer for the math question tells me I made the right decision
@@specch.8873 As someone who knows basics of how egineering works, you can market yourself as a project manager, a technical writer, or an product analyst. All still pay pretty well, and don't require any actual engineering skill.
@@specch.8873 Engineers don’t do math, their calculators do
@@ghosydt9290 yeah, from my experience, when math in engineering gets compicated, you either say i need a ballpark answer so pi is nearly 3 or you need high precision, so you need a computer.
My first math class in undergrad had me seeing a math PhD screw up basic addition on the fly. Its not really in the purview of any stem field degree.
Neither the Baltic sea or Hudson Bay are landlocked, you can sail into them from the Atlantic Ocean
1:50:25 I thought Fables were stories that had talking animals 🤣
"Y is considered to be a vowel if the word has no other vowel"
Source: Merriam Webster
11:03 Are credit cards that necessary? 31:31 First question and we are already fightning over it. We are off to a great start
1:07:53 the moment Garnt fails the Fate fandom 1:30:04 the moment from the beginning of the video
1:54:14 Will Garnt have an anime comeback moment? 2:00:12 what does "copium" means?
2:02:12 this feels like the origin of the "poor's barrel" from cartoons 2:06:04 What does "Twyndyllyngs" means?!
2:07:34 Connor's designated anime antagonist luck screwing him again
I’m not sure about other countries but in the US, it’s pretty much required unless you already have the capital to buy things (rent, houses, cars) up front with cash. For example, when renting you would need a cosigner unless you already have a somewhat established credit history otherwise your application will most likely get denied.
Credit cards are necessary for building a credit score. Credit scores are essentially your resume for the bank - a bank will look at your score to check whether or not they can trust you to pay back your loans on time. Without a credit score, they most likely won't trust loaning money to you since they can't gauge whether or not you're trustworthy enough to pay them back (banks need to make a profit after all).
Unless you're rich as fuck and can pay for stuff with cold hard cash, you probably will have to take out a loan for education purposes, for a mortgage when you buy a house, for funding a business, to buy a car, etc
The best strategy for building a good credit score is to pay for something using your credit card and repaying that amount to the bank on time. As long as you don't miss any payments you'll be all good. Late payments will not only ruin your score, but you'll most likely have you pay for the original amount + interest, which will set you back financially even more.
Copium is like coping with lost and such like you failing but still believing you are doing good that is copium
As someone who was studying for French for the entirety of this stream, thanks for the shoutout at 3:45, guys. Appreciate the support. My hand is cramping but I got the work done.
As someone from New Zealand, no, Oceania is a continent and Australia is a country. It depends on your definition of continent, one is that its a big landmass, another is that its just some arbitrary area.
Alan Turing is considered the father of Theoretical Computer Science (Or the Theory of Computation) thanks to his creation of the Turing Machine and for the Turing-Church Thesis. So, he is really THE big name in computer science. Interestingly enough, Babbage and Ada Lovelace aren't such big names compared to him among Computer Science major.
Because they're irrelevant in practical computer science. The British ministry of education only added that in for the snob points. It's the same when the French say they "invented canned food," even though they put food in glass jars, not metal cans...
@@alexfrank5331 I know they are irrelevant in actual computer science. The interesting part was the big names associated with them. I think part of the reason is also because the government didn't want to associate with someone who was openly gay at the time (Alan Turing). He was apologised to buy the government only in the early 2010s I believe?
HEY HEY HEY, I gotta take back the points on what was the first animal in space, Laika was not the first, we (we in this context being humanity, I'm not american) sent a batch of fruit flies up 10 years before Laika, Laika was the first animal to orbit the earth.
Watching 3 grown men argue over elementary school questions is helping me get through my booster shot sick day
Connor saying "I didn't think it'd be M, that would be so obvious!" as though the Romans decided their numerals just to fuck with him thousands of years in the future
That moment when you're literally writing your bachelor thesis while watching this video lmao.
so question 7 is outdated.
Continents no longer can also be considered islands. Because yes, then Antarctica would also be an island. So now the definition of an island is "a body of land completely surrounded by water, that is smaller than a continent."
Antarctica is, in fact, both an Island and a continent. So is Australia. All of the boys should have gotten points for question 7.
I just love that Connor took an L by writing an L
Perfectly on brand for him xD
Alan Turing wrote a book of instructions that a computer could follow to play a game of chess, but the computers of the time were incapable of running such a program, so in a sense he made the first computer game.
Men, I feel the Australia is a continent question was wrong. Everybody learns what the continents are by different social and political reasons. We in Latin America consider America a big continent, people in the US divide by North and South America. And, at least in my country we consider Australia part of Oceania.
But a continent is literally a huge piece of land which is Australia. Those other islands are so far from us and tiny, they're not apart of the Australian continent. Oceania isn't a continent its just a region like central america. Those island countries are located in Oceania but they're not in the continent Australia. Papua New Guinea, Tasmania and East Indonesia are in the Australian continent cos the animals, plants and indigenous people are similar and Australian though. Joeys right
Sorry for the long comment btw
@@sambros2 that's ok, men. There's nothing wrong about your response.
Regarding this, I mean, your not wrong. But my point is that neither Garnt nor Connor were wrong, either. Continents are defined in a multiple ways. For example, isn't the Caribbean consider part of the America's? Isn't Japan part of Asia? Aren't Iceland, Great Britain, Ireland a part of Europe?
The rules to define a continent are sloppy, inconsistent and very much based on cultural or political reasons. That's my point.
Obligatory CPG Gray's video on it: ruclips.net/video/3uBcq1x7P34/видео.html
Also for reference, I leave a "comedy sketch" of a really popular show in Latin America, in which they're talking about the continents and the last one is "Oceania": ruclips.net/video/YSIssdirCvk/видео.html (around min 5:52)
In Latin America at least, Australia is not the name of the continent, Oceania is. That's what I mean when I say continents are defined by cultural or political reasons.
@@tiltiktekwani7562 Ok I agree continents are kinda just made up and are whatever you were taught based on the country u live in
Fun fact: my middle name is Ada after Lady Ada Lovelace (both my parents are computer programmers, lmao)
Today I learned in some parts of the world Oceania is NOT a continent, but Australia is. Here in Brazil Oceania is considered a continent, but Australia not. And I had to check Wikipedia to confirm I was not making this up, which basically confirms it.
Question 7 is BS because continent classification differs by source. In some, Oceania is a continent and in others NZ is on Zealandia
they can't do a show like that without specifying which country are the 5th graders from, since every country teaches different things
You know, I still really appreciate that you continue to keep the Goku Black in the front of the table XD
Even after taking out other figures, he stays lmao
And fable is btw even more specific, because its a story that always involves animals or plants with humanlike behaviour AND always has a moral.
The dog was sent by the Soviets to fill a bucket list and show the accomplishments of their space program. The monkey was sent by the Americans by Werner Von Braun to test his rocket
Not gonna lie, at first I was like, "Yeah I learned this in school, you guys should know this!" And then by the end I was like "Ok yeah that's cap no ten-year-olds know this."
It makes me SO mad that people still don't know that the term "continent" has a strict definition.
"A large contiguous landmass that possesses a "shield mountain range" somewhere within it."
That's also why Greenland isn't a continent. It does not contain a shield mountain range.
Continent has nothing to do with the tectonic plate it's located on
Gotta love the collection of trivia that they expect 5th graders to answer. I coach science bowl and some of those questions are even worse.
I love this type of stream they do. Makes me feel smart😂😂
Also, thanks for the shout-out. I needed that. Classes are about to start 😂😂
Thank you Trash Taste for helping me revise my Math Homework, I probably still won't do better than that smart kid but at least i did my best: >:D
4:28 I'm that kid too, legit just studied for an hour the morning of a biology test (which the teachers informed that we'll be having one day before) and still got the highest marks. Meanwhile all my classmates were complaining that 1 day wasn't enough.
From where I am, Fable is often differentiated from Parable, so that might have been a more meaningful question.
The answer they gave I believe is technically true for Parables too. In fact, that answer may have been a definition for Allegory, which Fable and Parable are types of.
Fable is an Allegory involving animals/plants
Parable is an Allegory involving humans
At least, that's how I try to remember it.
Riddle solving episode would be chaotic, argumentative and so much fun
That first question, either all of them get a point, or none of them get a point. And even the actual game show states it as 365 days, so they should've all gotten it right.
Exactly! 365 1/4 is so specific
@@staticbuzter452 yeah and even then its not the "correct" answer, as the 1/4 is close to, but not the real amount of time.
Multiplication can be done in your head pretty easily when you break it down into component parts:
456x100 = 45600
456x20 = 9120
456x4 = 1824
= 45+9+1K = 55000 + 1544 = 56,544
I feel so bad for our kids. They're forced to memorize all this useless knowledge and be tested on them like they're the most important things in the world. Then when they grow up they're told that they're not good enough to be hired for a job because all the crap they went to school to learn are useless.
Sad truth
I don't generally feel bad for children having to learn, especially as not all knowledge is useless to all people (and even information with no practical use is still fun to learn for some, like myself) but you're right about the emphasis that educators put on tests. I never had test anxiety that bad myself, but I know some kids get really stressed out about it. Every test you take is the most important test you'll ever take, apparently. Getting people to take it seriously is good, but not to that extent.
As for the labour market it's such an old catch 22. Can't get a job without experience, can't get experience without a job. You'd have thought they'd have figured that one out by now.
Ok, hear me out: AM- after midnight, PM- post midday😂 For a good minute I thought I was onto something...
The first question make me unreasonably mad. In any situation, when you measure something, you specify the unit of measurement, which gives you an approximation of the required value. Therefore, when Ashley gave them the unit of days, the answer 365 was correct. Otherwise, you could argue that Joey's approximation also wasn't exactly correct.
I know no one cares but still I have to get it out there
Y'all putting University level symantics to a fifth grade question. 🤣🤣🤣
Thats not how any scientific discipline uses units. You can have 0.5 km and have it still be kilometers. In fact the changing of units is a common practice, and it would be very dumb if you could only convert between whole numbers; That would break almost every discipline of science.
the continent question was poopoo stinky and here's why
in english the word "continent" has a fuzzy definition, but it can be simplified into two: a geographical definition and a cultural definition. a clear example is eurasia vs europe and asia. eurasia is one big geographical continent, but it's divided into two cultural continents: europe and asia.
australia is a geographical continent, and from what i've gathered, oceania is more of a cultural continent which includes multiple countries in that area. since the question is "name both island and continent", it most likely refers to the geographical definition. but then they said antarctica is wrong bc it has islands but like australia has islands too so bruh????? what was even the correct answer LMAO
(anyways it's not that deep but the reason why i felt the need to say this is bc im swedish and we have two separate words for these definitions (im sure other languages do too) and knowing they mix these two up was making me very notlikethis)
Yep. The term "continent" is very fuzzy to the point of not having much meaning, more a matter of convention than any rigorous definition
I was about to point that out as well.
Chat's answers for the AM/PM one was so f'ing hilarious HAHAHAHA
Lol seeing Connor, Joey and Garnt all fighting over the points here is a trend carried onto the next quiz they do 1 month later I see lol 🤣
49:58 LMAO GARNT
Longitudes are not also known as meridians. Lines of longitude is known as a meridian.
"Name a country Britain invaded."
All of them.
I heard that the fifth graders are smart kids, but they get the questions and answers beforehand and have to do them as homework for the show. That's why they know most of the answers but still forget some.
Sometimes Y Is A Vowel But Other Times It's A Consonant
i first learned about the sumerians during freshman year of high school and you’re telling me kids learned this in fifth grade? 😭
Petition to change Joey's 7 points to 6.9 points.
I got Ada Lovelace right, and I'm a programmer, so we'll call that a win XD. Funny watching Joey teach everyone and all the salt.
Woke up to this episode and with as salty as the boys have gotten in places, goats and deer should be gathering round them to use them as salt licks!
The emotional mineral runs deep in this episode.
As soon as he asked the first question I knew they were gonna miss the quarter! XD
And I wouldn't have given Conner that half point either. Fractions of a unit are still that unit.
Question 1: if you're going to be pedantic, none of them got it right, cause it's not exactly 365.25, it's slightly below at 365.242 +/- a bit