I'm a fan of Simon's editors from other channels and Aspen has definitely earned my admiration for his awesome/ unsettling juxtapositions of Simon's head
I question the whole theory that the gravity is so strong that not even light can escape. Personality I just don't think light is trying hard enough and it just needs more encouragement.
8:47 Gravitational lensing was first shown during the solar eclipse of May 29, 1919. It was not “first observed in 1979”. Rostrum used the 1919 event to prove that the gravity of our Sun appeared to displace the locations of stars.
One of the current Theories, is that the supermassive black holes at the centre of galaxies are created when a galaxy is formed. The mass that becomes the galaxy explodes outwards, but not all of it gets away. Most does, but some of it becomes stuck in the centre and that super-star (no pun) is too big to sustain itself and collapses relatively quickly into the super massive black hole. How much matter fails to escape for a given galaxy may vary, and as a result how massive is massive does too.
my fav animation you have is still the one of you riding the dinosaur. but that baby one is pretty funny too. You've got an astounding video editor for this series.
I have a theory on white holes and this fine video (good job as usual Simon) reminded me of it. My theory is perhaps once a black hole draws in enough compressed mass that it passes a zero point threshold and reverses polarity and begins expelling matter and energy until it reaches a mass equilibrium and then assumes a constant gravity and stability. The block holes and white holes are simply a gravitational instability
I hope to see this channel grow because I get the strong feeling it's one of Simon's favorites. Not just because it's new, but it has Brain Blaze energy while being about SCIENCE!
Black holes, a fave subject and a real rabbit hole to disappear down! 😉sorry, my ASD won’t let me not point something out. Gravity doesn’t bend light, it bends or warps the space/time. The light still follows a straight line, through the warped space.
I wish the BBC would commission Simon to do a whole series of this to put on their BBC4 factual channel. I mean they already have some good shows like Horizon and The Sky at Night but this would be next level.
Aspen, could we get credits at the beginning? I promise to keep watching past them. Btw, I've been catching up on previously missed episodes and enjoying your Jen-level snark. 🤪
I still remember when Andrea Ghez proved the existence of a supermassive black hole in the center of our Milky Way galaxy, and therefore the existence of black holes in the center of most galaxies. Her work got her the Nobel Prize. I was always interested in astronomy and astrophysics, but that’s the real reason I became seriously interested about astrophysics
I found brain blaze several months ago now and then all the other Simon channels. Just found this one and its high contender for moving brain blaze from my favorite spot. Im loving the unhinged Simon tell me cool science stuff its hilarious and im learning absolutely awesome
I now daily learn more from your multiverse of channels than i do from Google. BB is the best though, those powder powered tangents are actually worth taking the time from my busy schedule of watching shit on RUclips in order to improve your visibility to the algorithm
Just real quick, one theory for the size and age of super massive black holes is that when the universe was really young and MUCH more dense hydrogen could collect just like how it does now into stars. But since there was so much hydrogen back then in a much smaller universe the theory goes that the amount of hydrogen collected was so great it would result in a star unimaginably big and could never exist in our current times. With that size comes mass and a whole lot of gravity, so much so that the gravity of the star would crush its core into a black hole and feed it ungodly amounts of mass to make it grow. This star would last barely a few million years before exploding leaving a abnormally large black hole. That black hole would in turn merge with other black holes until finally we arrive at a super massive black hole only a few hundred million years after the big bang.
I agree, I believe this is how galaxies were formed originally. The Shockwave from such an event would cause billions of stars to form explaining how galaxies got so big so fast in the early universe.
I'll definitely watch this like the majority of Simon's videos, but I mean we can literally see them pulling light in, see the effects of their gravity on other bodies, measure these effects etc etc so to prove they exist, I mean not a massive deal in this day and age! Would probably be harder to prove Simon exists and isn't a fact spouting android in all honesty haha!
I'm going to age myself. From the Bob and Doug album Great White North, it's the blank area between tracks on a LP album. It's also the place where the US Government throws all the taxes it collects.
Just, before I continue with the video, I'll make my prediction (around 2:00). Basically, you can see a black hole by observing the effect it has on everything around it. So you aren't so much directly observing the black hole but are rather indirectly observing it by the effects it has on matter that surrounds it. Note, this is probably a bit simplistic (and is likely addressed as such in the video), but that's my personal prediction before I continue the video+
God! I love this channel!!! Thank You Almighty Simon for the vast wisdom Thou hast bestowed up us! but for realz, you do a great job thanks and keep it up! :)
What is gravity? An invisible force that can bend the path of planets, crush stars, and survive long after the thing that made them is squeezed out of existence.
There's a cool theory with super massive and ultra massive is that they came from an ultra massive star where the core of this massive star is so crushed by the weight of the star above it turning into a black hole and the radiation pressure from the black hole with a damn star ontop of it generates enough pressure to keep the entire star itself stable so basically a force fed black hole has the power to keep an ultra massive star from collapsing in on itself these stars might have formed from what's called a dark matter halo where a stupid amount of dust n gas surrounded by dark matter and stops stars from blowing the gas around it away as the pressure inside would press more and more gas on the star untill it swelled to the size of maybe a small GALAXY
Great video, but where’s the Sci-Fi? It’s just science. Kevin, could you please look into Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) and see if it’s possible to grow humans in pods that steal memories?
Simon your explanation of how a supernova works is actually incorrect. what happens is once iron starts to form there is something like a few hours or days remaining of fusion that will produce enough radiation from the core to keep the outer layers... well... out. when there isn't enough outward pressure the star collapses, and the outer layers fall into the insanely dense core at like 20% the speed of light or something like that. smashing into the hard iron core, compressing the core either into a black hole or neutron star. the outerlayers then rebound out and that is the "explosion"
So how do we know where black holes are, if we basically need to know where they are in the first place before even attempting to check if they are there or not?
To get Adam to believe what he can’t see… Yes we’ve been trying to manifest that to free Eve for millennia. It really makes you see value in the flood.
Actually, there is a theory about how supermassive black holes are formed. They form from smaller black holes(probably stellar remnants) which collide and merge together. this video talks about it, among other things. ruclips.net/video/FocZf26yTU0/видео.html
I expect the guys working on this are smarter than me, and I have no reason to believe they are dishonest, but this sounds like someone even more messed up than me talking bollocks.
We have pictures of stars going around something that we think is a black ⚫ At the senter of the milkyway There are stars whipping around this point I space that are moving at millions of miles an hour I'm not sure but I think that one of these stars is making a round-trip in less than ten years So in short moving like its got its ARSE on fire 🔥😂😂😂😂 Just saying 🇧🇻
@Marc Peterson Could be, but, I do trust the author, Kevin, as a reliable source of information because he writes for so many channels and tends to be very in-depth with the facts. So maybe it was the wording.. But also the universe is absolutely inane and loves to make us confused, so who knows? Maybe it's some Futurama situation where everything just happens over and over again.
@@ItsPizza. Yes, but who is Kevin? Where does he get his info? Also, by definition the Universe is everything we can ever observe or know anything about. Before the Universe is nothing.
So PepsiAdickhead has now turned up 10 hours late with their pathetic "first" comment and still put "first" as a comment just as they always do while numerous other comments have been made before theirs once again.
Because, at least according to General Relativity, gravity is a distortion of spacetime rather than a force, and the distortion doesn't just stop at the event horizon; it continues outside the black hole as it does for any object with mass. Gravitational waves are travelling distortions in spacetime, created by movement of an object with mass. With our current technology you need something incredibly massive and moving very quickly, such as a pair of black holes in orbit around each other just before they merge, to create a detectable signal.
@@Michael75579 I've studied astronomy and physics for years. I know the nearby stars around our own supermassive black hole scream around it. But I still wonder if gravity is somehow immune to it's own effects. We know the gravitational waves do travel at the the speed of light, they arrive at the same time. I think there must be a twist to gravity if it behaves as if it's not even present. I get that you say it is it's own cause. I think we worked out that the outreaching effect of gravity also travels at the speed of light due to the orbit of Mercury. I marvel that a galaxy can be held together with gravity that acts at the slow crawling speed of light, I mean what interaction is there between our Sun and the Centauri system? Yet, here we are orbiting away in our galaxy with 100's of other stars which are many light years ahead, out of place, of where we can actually see and feel the effects of their gravity. If only we could see the slow lethargic lag trails of gravity of other stars as they tug a bit at each other. We need better sensors.
@@Fizz-Pop Actually, photons have no mass, that is why they are able to travel at the speed of light."Within the event horizon of a black hole space is curved to the point where all paths that light might take to exit the event horizon point back inside the event horizon. This is the reason why light cannot escape a black hole."-National Radio Astronomy Observatory.
@@southcoastinventors6583 Well it it's better than saying "Hole" 🤣 Maybe "Black Star" I remember when we were kids at the school, our teacher explained the concept of light. The 7 colour spectrum & light being "white" instead of the "yellow" we had thought with "black" absorbing all "colours of light." I must have been around 11 at the time & got it immediately. The concept of a "Black Hole" especially with sc-fi of the time misrepresented it as an "abyss" therefore my comment. I guess I am a product of my time of youth.
@@louvendran7273 Actually this I feel is better term for it since these objects come in different sizes so Black Star or Dark Star sounds like a better term also because we are not sure exactly whats going plus it sounds cooler.
@@southcoastinventors6583 Well, a star is defined as undergoing fusion, so either term is incorrect/misleading. "Hole" is actually better, because it can be thought of as a hole in the fabric of spacetime. Maybe not entirely correct on a technical level, but not far off.
nowhere its a ball of superdense spacetime with physics at the center we have no real clue about... Wheeler, who coined the name "blackhole" even hated that name, because it distracts from what it is!
I'm a fan of Simon's editors from other channels and Aspen has definitely earned my admiration for his awesome/ unsettling juxtapositions of Simon's head
He came down from the Realm of Science to enlighten us all.
It's ok and even funny sometimes but, I find it to be annoying more often than not.
I feel like this channel is a pretense for Simon's editor to flex their editing and 3D effects chops and I'm there for it
It's too much editing honestly.
Alright, the image of Simon's head speaking from the body of a infant lying in a bath is just a little more than I was ready for today. 🤣
Simon's Graphic Design team truly have the most fun job on Earth ^_^
🤭… 😅😂🤣!
Same!
6am morning video for me and I can agree. Not ready 😂
Scarred for life
This channel feels like the love child between Megaprojects and Brain Blaze ❤️
Scientific learning is so much better when Simon drops a random "your mom" joke in there for good measure.
I question the whole theory that the gravity is so strong that not even light can escape. Personality I just don't think light is trying hard enough and it just needs more encouragement.
*Suggestion: Attack of the Clones*
Is it possible to make an army of clones to take over the galaxy or to make an endless number of RUclips channels?
You don't need an army of clones for the latter. Just a hyperactive, cocaine-fuelled Fact Boi. 😆
2:00 - Chapter 1 - The origins of black hole
5:35 - Chapter 2 - Proving the unseen
11:05 - Wrap up
8:47 Gravitational lensing was first shown during the solar eclipse of May 29, 1919. It was not “first observed in 1979”. Rostrum used the 1919 event to prove that the gravity of our Sun appeared to displace the locations of stars.
Thank-you. I should have caught that.
The editing for this channel is my absolute favourite 😂
This editing makes me feel like I took cyber shrooms. It's great
I was not prepared for bearded baby Simon 😂
gawd damn, the first 26 seconds in where just disturbingly funny 🤣
One of the current Theories, is that the supermassive black holes at the centre of galaxies are created when a galaxy is formed. The mass that becomes the galaxy explodes outwards, but not all of it gets away. Most does, but some of it becomes stuck in the centre and that super-star (no pun) is too big to sustain itself and collapses relatively quickly into the super massive black hole. How much matter fails to escape for a given galaxy may vary, and as a result how massive is massive does too.
my fav animation you have is still the one of you riding the dinosaur. but that baby one is pretty funny too. You've got an astounding video editor for this series.
I have a theory on white holes and this fine video (good job as usual Simon) reminded me of it. My theory is perhaps once a black hole draws in enough compressed mass that it passes a zero point threshold and reverses polarity and begins expelling matter and energy until it reaches a mass equilibrium and then assumes a constant gravity and stability. The block holes and white holes are simply a gravitational instability
I hope to see this channel grow because I get the strong feeling it's one of Simon's favorites. Not just because it's new, but it has Brain Blaze energy while being about SCIENCE!
The little channel that could, go Simon and crew, make this one work!
Black holes, a fave subject and a real rabbit hole to disappear down! 😉sorry, my ASD won’t let me not point something out. Gravity doesn’t bend light, it bends or warps the space/time. The light still follows a straight line, through the warped space.
Oooo, Simon told a "Yo momma" joke!
Respect.
I wish the BBC would commission Simon to do a whole series of this to put on their BBC4 factual channel. I mean they already have some good shows like Horizon and The Sky at Night but this would be next level.
Aspen, could we get credits at the beginning? I promise to keep watching past them.
Btw, I've been catching up on previously missed episodes and enjoying your Jen-level snark.
🤪
I still remember when Andrea Ghez proved the existence of a supermassive black hole in the center of our Milky Way galaxy, and therefore the existence of black holes in the center of most galaxies. Her work got her the Nobel Prize. I was always interested in astronomy and astrophysics, but that’s the real reason I became seriously interested about astrophysics
Came straight from the newest Brain Blaze. Okay, now pretty-please do a Planet X episode here.
I found brain blaze several months ago now and then all the other Simon channels. Just found this one and its high contender for moving brain blaze from my favorite spot. Im loving the unhinged Simon tell me cool science stuff its hilarious and im learning absolutely awesome
Woah woah the largest black hole discovered is TON-618 with a mass of over 40 billion solar masses
Please please please never stop ♥️
That "your mother " joke just casually slipped in there 😂. What the hell is a gravastar?
OMG, it's been so long since I've stumbled across another channel in the Simon Whistler cinematic universe!
You’re only a year behind
I now daily learn more from your multiverse of channels than i do from Google. BB is the best though, those powder powered tangents are actually worth taking the time from my busy schedule of watching shit on RUclips in order to improve your visibility to the algorithm
"reminds me of your mother" snooch!
Just real quick, one theory for the size and age of super massive black holes is that when the universe was really young and MUCH more dense hydrogen could collect just like how it does now into stars. But since there was so much hydrogen back then in a much smaller universe the theory goes that the amount of hydrogen collected was so great it would result in a star unimaginably big and could never exist in our current times. With that size comes mass and a whole lot of gravity, so much so that the gravity of the star would crush its core into a black hole and feed it ungodly amounts of mass to make it grow. This star would last barely a few million years before exploding leaving a abnormally large black hole. That black hole would in turn merge with other black holes until finally we arrive at a super massive black hole only a few hundred million years after the big bang.
I agree, I believe this is how galaxies were formed originally. The Shockwave from such an event would cause billions of stars to form explaining how galaxies got so big so fast in the early universe.
Is that what is aka "direct collapse"?
Have we named any of the black holes we've found "Dark Star" yet? I feel like we should in honor of the man who thought the concept of them up.
Jerome Garcia😁
I'll definitely watch this like the majority of Simon's videos, but I mean we can literally see them pulling light in, see the effects of their gravity on other bodies, measure these effects etc etc so to prove they exist, I mean not a massive deal in this day and age!
Would probably be harder to prove Simon exists and isn't a fact spouting android in all honesty haha!
I want a video on the Gravistar!!!!!!
I'm going to age myself.
From the Bob and Doug album Great White North, it's the blank area between tracks on a LP album.
It's also the place where the US Government throws all the taxes it collects.
Just, before I continue with the video, I'll make my prediction (around 2:00). Basically, you can see a black hole by observing the effect it has on everything around it. So you aren't so much directly observing the black hole but are rather indirectly observing it by the effects it has on matter that surrounds it. Note, this is probably a bit simplistic (and is likely addressed as such in the video), but that's my personal prediction before I continue the video+
God! I love this channel!!! Thank You Almighty Simon for the vast wisdom Thou hast bestowed up us! but for realz, you do a great job thanks and keep it up! :)
Simon and the team should cover mega corporations, video idea
I suggested a biographics on Laplace a few months ago, do it fact boi
What is gravity? An invisible force that can bend the path of planets, crush stars, and survive long after the thing that made them is squeezed out of existence.
Quantum physics might have some weird stuff to say about "things still exist when you're not looking at them."
There's a cool theory with super massive and ultra massive is that they came from an ultra massive star where the core of this massive star is so crushed by the weight of the star above it turning into a black hole and the radiation pressure from the black hole with a damn star ontop of it generates enough pressure to keep the entire star itself stable so basically a force fed black hole has the power to keep an ultra massive star from collapsing in on itself these stars might have formed from what's called a dark matter halo where a stupid amount of dust n gas surrounded by dark matter and stops stars from blowing the gas around it away as the pressure inside would press more and more gas on the star untill it swelled to the size of maybe a small GALAXY
everybody gangsta till baby Simon talking at you about The Science
If ghost hunters weren't just scammers, they'd be interested in how to prove the invisible.
Another channel ☆
I like that Simon thinks Cygnus is a cool, badass name when it just means "goose" or "swan"
Wym. Geese and swans are hella badass. Their wrath is a terrible thing.
Great video, but where’s the Sci-Fi? It’s just science. Kevin, could you please look into Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) and see if it’s possible to grow humans in pods that steal memories?
Simon your explanation of how a supernova works is actually incorrect. what happens is once iron starts to form there is something like a few hours or days remaining of fusion that will produce enough radiation from the core to keep the outer layers... well... out. when there isn't enough outward pressure the star collapses, and the outer layers fall into the insanely dense core at like 20% the speed of light or something like that. smashing into the hard iron core, compressing the core either into a black hole or neutron star. the outerlayers then rebound out and that is the "explosion"
Cygnus
Nuff said.
did... I just get hit with a sneaky "yo momma" joke at around the 1-minute mark?
Not particularly waving. Drowning.
Dr. J. Rob. I just wanna give ya a hug. As bad as it was, you did good.
ay my favorite bald man on the internet.
how do you know my mother?
more baby Whistler please
So how do we know where black holes are, if we basically need to know where they are in the first place before even attempting to check if they are there or not?
Observation of gravity.
The edit. 😚👌
To get Adam to believe what he can’t see…
Yes we’ve been trying to manifest that to free Eve for millennia.
It really makes you see value in the flood.
12:14 Ha! Just like is impossible to directly observe.
What if, there is a black hole just outside the kuiper belt (not a planet nine) and this is what caused oumuamua strange shape speed and trajectory
Does the pucture of a black hole count as proof? Also, we can observe evidebce of their enormous gravitational effects.
Depends on what you consider to be proof.
"Uhuru", is the Swahili word for "freedom". --I was wondering if it had to do with anything close to Star Trek but I guess not.
Many black holes , connection with minds and the Entity of 🌍 ok
It’s all theory and speculation based on our assumptions.
You prove it the same way that you prove that wind exists.
Why do we look way the heck out in the universe for black holes rather than our own black hole at the center of the Milky Way? Seems dubious.
Interesting. Now I know from where the U.S.S. Cygnus got it's name. (The Black Hole, 1979)
If you like heavy metal, try the Rush song Cygnus X-1.
@@marcpeterson1092 Wow! There is even a connection to "The Expanse" - Thanks a lot! 🤘
It was the first movie mentioning the event horizon in 1979, while the first black hole story on screen was in Space 1999 Black Sun episode 1974.
@@car103d Thank you! May the Schwartz be with you, too!
@@stoerenungeheuer543 😂
He’s talking about your mama!
What's with this graphics man? Why are polygons floating around a blackhole?
Actually, there is a theory about how supermassive black holes are formed. They form from smaller black holes(probably stellar remnants) which collide and merge together. this video talks about it, among other things. ruclips.net/video/FocZf26yTU0/видео.html
the thing about black holes is they are... black. And the thing about space is, its black --- Holly
It is impossible. Next question.
I expect the guys working on this are smarter than me, and I have no reason to believe they are dishonest, but this sounds like someone even more messed up than me talking bollocks.
La place was a god
Please do a Casual Criminalist on Vincent Chin. His story is very relevant even today, and it's incredibly disgusting what happened to him.
What happened to the science of science fiction?
Doesn't prove the existence of the singularity theory...
This editor is doing too much editing. It's so distracting, I'm missing a ton of information
Schwarz 🛡 - not Schwarz 🧒
May the Schwarz be with you!
We have pictures of stars going around something that we think is a black ⚫
At the senter of the milkyway
There are stars whipping around this point I space that are moving at millions of miles an hour
I'm not sure but I think that one of these stars is making a round-trip in less than ten years
So in short moving like its got its ARSE on fire 🔥😂😂😂😂
Just saying 🇧🇻
I think these black holes could just be something like Lagrange points but on a larger scale.
What? Things were going on in the universe before the big bang?
Yeah, I also thought that was a crock. Simon's videos are entertaining, but they are not alwys reliable.
@Marc Peterson Could be, but, I do trust the author, Kevin, as a reliable source of information because he writes for so many channels and tends to be very in-depth with the facts. So maybe it was the wording.. But also the universe is absolutely inane and loves to make us confused, so who knows? Maybe it's some Futurama situation where everything just happens over and over again.
@@ItsPizza. Yes, but who is Kevin? Where does he get his info?
Also, by definition the Universe is everything we can ever observe or know anything about. Before the Universe is nothing.
@Marc Peterson He'd probably cite sources if we asked, but youtube won't let me @ him on mobile. Oh well, have a nice day
@@ItsPizza. You as well. It just seems impossible.
So PepsiAdickhead has now turned up 10 hours late with their pathetic "first" comment and still put "first" as a comment just as they always do while numerous other comments have been made before theirs once again.
Whoaaaa. A bearded baby Simon
1/137
I mean good job on the editing but this was like an off acid trip and why I usually just listen to videos these days
🖤
funny thing that, if light can't escape then how can gravity?
Because, at least according to General Relativity, gravity is a distortion of spacetime rather than a force, and the distortion doesn't just stop at the event horizon; it continues outside the black hole as it does for any object with mass. Gravitational waves are travelling distortions in spacetime, created by movement of an object with mass. With our current technology you need something incredibly massive and moving very quickly, such as a pair of black holes in orbit around each other just before they merge, to create a detectable signal.
Because if you spend several 100 million dollars on something then you better find something or least hope it something and not instrument distortion.
@@Michael75579 I've studied astronomy and physics for years. I know the nearby stars around our own supermassive black hole scream around it. But I still wonder if gravity is somehow immune to it's own effects. We know the gravitational waves do travel at the the speed of light, they arrive at the same time. I think there must be a twist to gravity if it behaves as if it's not even present. I get that you say it is it's own cause. I think we worked out that the outreaching effect of gravity also travels at the speed of light due to the orbit of Mercury. I marvel that a galaxy can be held together with gravity that acts at the slow crawling speed of light, I mean what interaction is there between our Sun and the Centauri system? Yet, here we are orbiting away in our galaxy with 100's of other stars which are many light years ahead, out of place, of where we can actually see and feel the effects of their gravity. If only we could see the slow lethargic lag trails of gravity of other stars as they tug a bit at each other. We need better sensors.
@@Fizz-Pop Actually, photons have no mass, that is why they are able to travel at the speed of light."Within the event horizon of a black hole space is curved to the point where all paths that light might take to exit the event horizon point back inside the event horizon. This is the reason why light cannot escape a black hole."-National Radio Astronomy Observatory.
Well it should be re-phased to "dark star" as society does not understand the concept.
Neither does anyone else for that matter
@@southcoastinventors6583 Well it it's better than saying "Hole" 🤣 Maybe "Black Star" I remember when we were kids at the school, our teacher explained the concept of light. The 7 colour spectrum & light being "white" instead of the "yellow" we had thought with "black" absorbing all "colours of light." I must have been around 11 at the time & got it immediately. The concept of a "Black Hole" especially with sc-fi of the time misrepresented it as an "abyss" therefore my comment. I guess I am a product of my time of youth.
@@louvendran7273 Actually this I feel is better term for it since these objects come in different sizes so Black Star or Dark Star sounds like a better term also because we are not sure exactly whats going plus it sounds cooler.
@@southcoastinventors6583 Well, a star is defined as undergoing fusion, so either term is incorrect/misleading. "Hole" is actually better, because it can be thought of as a hole in the fabric of spacetime. Maybe not entirely correct on a technical level, but not far off.
@@marcpeterson1092 If both are wrong then the rule of cool wins out Dark Star it is.
The actual video starts at about five and a half minutes.
You can see them through a telescope. There mystery solved.
Idk. Republicans said viruses aren’t real 😂
Holes to where though ?
nowhere
its a ball of superdense spacetime with physics at the center we have no real clue about...
Wheeler, who coined the name "blackhole" even hated that name, because it distracts from what it is!
@@mho... So darkstar then.
@@southcoastinventors6583 no
@@moritakaishida7963 Yeah forgot the space Dark Star
The mother insult was not necessary. I gave you a thumbs down for that sole reason
My Eyes 🙀👶🏻
Idk. Democrats said atoms aren’t real 😂
Very odd video on a complex topic, with a hint of sarcastic overtones....
first
The worst part of this channel for simon is the horrible editing
Just watch the first seconds of the vid, wtf........😂