Kazoobie Kazobo - Best LOUDEST Meme Version

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  • Опубликовано: 21 фев 2017
  • IT'S LOUD. You have been warned. Taking ten inches of awesome to the next level.
    A PM Screamin' Meme™
    Original source, no ear protection needed-
    • The Kazoobie Kazobo Co...
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Комментарии • 21

  • @nacelade1464
    @nacelade1464 2 года назад +3

    **the kazoobie sound**
    All in that city : * literally freaking out *

  • @simoncooper6752
    @simoncooper6752 4 года назад +3

    Help me Obi Wan KAZOOBIE. You're my only hope.

  • @I.dont.need.nothing
    @I.dont.need.nothing 4 года назад +3

    10 inches of awsome.
    10 iNcHeS oF aWsOmE

  • @rogeraydin908
    @rogeraydin908 6 лет назад +5

    11/10 best kazoo ever.

  • @piper964
    @piper964 4 года назад +3

    Sirenhead be like

  • @lolwot1742
    @lolwot1742 4 года назад +3

    0:20 world war lll horns

  • @UnordinaryCarl
    @UnordinaryCarl 5 лет назад +2

    Zeppelins were first used as luxury transport. The military saw their potential for bombing distant enemy cities after the outbreak of the First World War. At first, hand-held bombs were dropped by the crew of the airship on to targets below, and so they were not very accurate. Zeppelin raid on Loughborough, 1916
    At around 8pm on 31 January 1916, the inhabitants of Loughborough were startled by a succession of loud explosions. An hour earlier, the police had warned the local authorities and tradesmen of air raids on the coast but, as German bombers had never traveled so far in-land before, no one in Loughborough had been concerned.
    When the Zeppelin airships approached, the town was entirely unprepared. Street lights were blazing, the Ashby Road Picture House was lit up to lure in cinema-goers, and lamps glowed behind curtained windows across Loughborough.
    The Zeppelin's Route:
    The first bomb fell in a garden behind Orchard Street, followed by another in the Rushes, the next street. The location was at equal distance between the gas works and the electricity station. Broken glass showered down on the road and fell from shattered windows onto night school students’ books at the local college.
    Then, the raiders passed on to the Empress Works, a local crane manufacturer, just missing the site. That night employees had been sent home after the police warned of a possible air raid. Two workers, however, disobeyed orders. Crane driver Beatrice Smith dashed back in the dark to shut down the main electrical switch, while Ernest Stubley, the plant electrician, stayed overnight to limit any bomb damage. Both were later awarded medals for their bravery.
    Beatrice Smith Receiving OBE:
    Within five minutes the airship had passed over to Burton-on-Trent, yet 10 people had been killed, including 50-year-old father of 12, Arthur Turnill and a recently married young couple, Joseph and Alice Adkin. Mary Anne Page and her two teenage children (pictured below) were killed when their home was hit. Mary Anne's husband was away serving in the army at the time. He would survive the war, now with no home or family to return to.
    The Page Family, Loughborough
    Aftermath of the Raid:
    Shocked by the tragedy, the local townspeople rallied round after the raid and a relief fund of over £500 was raised to pay for the funerals of the victims and compensate those who had been injured or had their property damaged.
    Daily Chronicle Newspaper Drawing by Frank Brangwyn:
    In many towns and cities across the country the civilian population was now experiencing, at first-hand, the trauma and violence of war. The air raids of 1914-1918 gave a hint of what was to come during the Blitz of the Second World War.
    Glossary
    Compensation - money given to pay for a loss or damage
    Insurance - when a company pays for loss, theft or damage, in return for a fee
    Munitions - weapons manufactured in wartime
    Relief fund - money given to victims of a disaster
    Succession - one after another
    Trauma - a severe shock
    In wartime, the authorities produce different media to convince people to do certain things, like volunteer for the army or grow their own vegetables. How might the German air-raids have been used in British propaganda?
    - Create a propaganda poster about the air-raids on Loughborough to encourage young men to join the army.
    - When you have finished, add arrows explaining your choices of pictures, colours, facts, persuasive language.
    - Also, if you can, explain what you have left out of the poster and why.
    - What specific areas of Guilford, London or Loughborough were targeted by German bombers?
    - Which other UK cities were bombed and why?
    - Can you find out the course of a single Zeppelin raid (which towns it crossed and the damage it did?)?
    - Can you find any estimates of how many Zeppelin raids on Britain were completed?
    - Why were Zeppelins replaced by Gotha and Giant bombers?
    - Find examples of the sort of damage Zeppelins did (eg. shrapnel, injuries, destruction of buildings)?

  • @8bitnathan130
    @8bitnathan130 5 лет назад +2

    Here before 1000000 views

  • @pootis000
    @pootis000 4 месяца назад

    Lol

  • @crowtalez766
    @crowtalez766 5 лет назад

    So glad I got that kazoo

  • @laurenbear4670
    @laurenbear4670 4 года назад

    😂

  • @victorydance6439
    @victorydance6439 6 лет назад +1

    you just made the first part silent so people would up their voice. the sound on audacity etc. cant be any higher than 300% or 400%