Ask Adam Savage: Testing Fiction-Based Myths on MythBusters

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  • Опубликовано: 27 фев 2021
  • Tested member Andrew Green asked Adam, "As urban legends are often based on some sort of truth or historical evidence, did you prefer these as science-based experiments or did you prefer to recreate the elaborate fictional scenarios from movies knowing that they were often only created for storytelling purposes rather than actual real science?" Here's Adam's answer, and thank you, Andrew, for your question and support! Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks, like asking Adam a question:
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Комментарии • 576

  • @tested
    @tested  3 года назад +17

    Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks, like asking Adam a question:
    ruclips.net/channel/UCiDJtJKMICpb9B1qf7qjEOAjoin
    More MythBusters-Related videos: ruclips.net/p/PLJtitKU0CAehaZdgrPRzjyGFSEQ8URiQl

    • @ricardomeertens9165
      @ricardomeertens9165 3 года назад

      Removing videos because the comment are hammering on about Disney their slave labor and the fact they fires someone because of het opinions is really censoring tested is being censored by Disney. Is just said in one of those comments I watch Adam since 2003 but not saying anything about this situation has lost my respect the world is not a comic book or story its real life Adam by supporting Disney you support child slavery and censoring because of opinions even wors is you delete the video and make it for premium members in less than 20 hours. Shame on you now you lost alot more respect.

    • @lexluthermiester
      @lexluthermiester 3 года назад

      Adam, you are so awesome! You really held back on that one...

    • @jenlc1536
      @jenlc1536 3 года назад

      Could the boulder test have hypothetically been done by narrowing down the most likely candidates based on the most common rocks in the area that the Indiana Jones scene took place (perhaps also taking appearance into account)? Then, the weight could be estimated instead of getting a real boulder. Would a sphere of that weight be considered too dangerous for the show? Two parallel tracks could be used for the boulder and the person but there's always the risk of it going off course.

    • @NinjaNezumi
      @NinjaNezumi 3 года назад

      Busted! The Molasses Flood was in 1919, and it was not an urban legend. It killed a lot of people.
      Molasses was not primarily used as a sweetener. People used Honey and products such as Beet Sugar and fresh fruits.
      Molasses was primarily used as an oil for industrial purposes, up until a reliable synthetic oil was developed.
      The Great Molasses Flood of 1919 was a military stockpile commisseioned out to a private individual/business. The failure of the tanks caused a major military investigation and some of the earliest sub contractor regulations we have on the books.

  • @cabbycabby1770
    @cabbycabby1770 3 года назад +640

    We all learned a valuable lesson today. Especially Andrew.

    • @munkykng416
      @munkykng416 3 года назад +13

      I think we just observed how myths and urban legends propagate in the form of fan mail. SCIENCE!

    • @feeling-dizzie
      @feeling-dizzie 3 года назад +73

      Poor Andrew, I interpreted his wording as saying the *movie* scenarios weren't created for science, not that the *mythbusters* recreations weren't for science!

    • @3.k
      @3.k 3 года назад +20

      @@feeling-dizzie
      Yes, totally my interpretation as well.

    • @insane0042
      @insane0042 3 года назад +9

      Andrew was testing Adam's Patience.

    • @tmi1234567
      @tmi1234567 3 года назад +10

      @@insane0042 Adam busted Andrew's question fair and square. 🤣

  • @andrewgreenroom
    @andrewgreenroom 3 года назад +683

    Hey folks, first of all I was absolutely delighted that Adam spent so long picking my question to pieces
    I think essentially my question was “did Adam prefer the urban myths rather than the movie myths?” One being based on a ‘possible’ truth rather than the other being based on a fantastical fictional scenario (in the majority of cases)
    I appreciate that both have physical elements that can be tested. Having heard my submission back it certainly reads that I claim one is fantastical and the other one is science. But I think Adam knew what he was answering and enjoyed picking the meat from the ‘statements’ I made about science.
    I certainly enjoyed making Adam’s brain work in dissecting the ‘assumption’ of what is and isn’t science.
    Certainly having one of my favourite people on the internet challenge the logic or reasoning in my question is most certainly a win in my eyes.
    Adam’s answer was to challenge everything. He challenged the wording of my question. Job done!!

    • @majuss06
      @majuss06 3 года назад +49

      I think he knew as well. I also think he knew that he would not hurt your feelings when he used your question to highlight one of his major pet peeves, gatekeeping (4:10).

    • @GardnersGrendel
      @GardnersGrendel 3 года назад +24

      I totally understood your question and was so surprised when Adam interpreted it the way he did.

    • @RickMeasham
      @RickMeasham 3 года назад +5

      I got where you were coming from. Personally I hated the movie episodes. They were clearly paid promotions and the Mythbusters were forced to find something they could hook into.

    • @andrewgreenroom
      @andrewgreenroom 3 года назад +42

      And for the record I in no way think that the movie myth episodes were any less brilliant than the urban ones. I just wanted Adam’s take on the two.
      I think my badly placed ‘actual real science’ tipped this into a heated topic rather than a fun one. 😬

    • @GamePlague
      @GamePlague 3 года назад +15

      I instantly understood what you meant with the question but the more I think about it the more problematic it is to think of what a proper answer to it could be. A lot of urban myths can be complete nonsense and a lot of movie scenarios can be based (in varying degrees) on reality. JATO Rocket Car was a fantastical fictional scenario but it was also an urban legend. The only true difference between the two categories is whether somebody is claiming the event is something that has happened or is simply asking if it is something that could happen.
      You could just as easily swap those two categories around and the questions still work. "Did the historical molasses spill happen?" vs "Could a molasses spill I saw in a movie happen?" would both result in essentially the same mythbusters episode.

  • @pacificostudios
    @pacificostudios 2 года назад +20

    Archimedes's Mirror, both attempts, was a great college try, but hopeless from the beginning. The moment when Jamie stood directly at the focal point and announced that he was not burning to a crisp was comedy gold, and scientific silver.

  • @burunoshimoesu
    @burunoshimoesu 3 года назад +199

    I remember my “wait a minute” moment watching mythbusters when I was a kid back in the early 2000s, that made me a Engineer today

    • @skld3
      @skld3 3 года назад +15

      Good for you, I ended up as an unrecognised evil genius. :(

    • @lukehoffmann3461
      @lukehoffmann3461 3 года назад +7

      Mine was the plane on a treadmill one Ijust remeber thinking those people are idiots the wheels on an airplane have nothing to do with how the plane takes off as long as they can still spin it realisticaky doesnt matter if they are spinning twice as fast as the plane moves

    • @kelsouthdeaton5093
      @kelsouthdeaton5093 3 года назад +1

      What was it?

    • @dunigan3320
      @dunigan3320 3 года назад +1

      Me too 😅

    • @brandonjc13
      @brandonjc13 3 года назад +7

      @@skld3 It's okay Skid3, one day you'll build that "-inator" that will devastate the whole tri-state area!

  • @heartofdawnlight
    @heartofdawnlight 3 года назад +207

    "the only difference between science and screwing around is writing it down"

    • @danandoliver3613
      @danandoliver3613 3 года назад

      Beat me to it

    • @iciclecold2991
      @iciclecold2991 3 года назад

      Yep!

    • @harrybetteridge7532
      @harrybetteridge7532 3 года назад +5

      The reason you write it down is so somebody else at some other time can repeat the same experiment and show you can get the same results if you are correct.

    • @lauraodonoghue1348
      @lauraodonoghue1348 3 года назад +2

      My science teachers said and repeatedly drilled this fact in the most boring ways. Adam saying it in my early 20s changed the way I thought about the world.

  • @MvZiCMaN
    @MvZiCMaN 3 года назад +121

    That was "The A Team" steering the falling tank by firing it. Not F&F!!?? or did i miss something is the F&F movies?

    • @macmotuim4403
      @macmotuim4403 3 года назад +7

      thank you. i cant believe i had to go this far down to find this comment

    • @forgotn42
      @forgotn42 3 года назад +20

      To be fair, the F&F franchise had cars dropped from planes several times and launched a tank out of the front of another vehicle, so it's a pretty easy mistake to make.

    • @hejduken
      @hejduken 3 года назад +1

      haha thanks for not having to comment it myself, I'll accept the miss tho, greater crimes have been made

    • @benmcmahan8189
      @benmcmahan8189 3 года назад

      I thought the same thing, but definitely an easy mistake to make as Hollywood is over the top extremely often

    • @MvZiCMaN
      @MvZiCMaN 3 года назад +8

      @@hejduken all i could see was Liam Neeson yelling "FIRE!" and was like wait.... Liam wasnt in F&F lmao!

  • @chaos0547
    @chaos0547 3 года назад +80

    I think Andrew just used the wrong nomenclature - when he said "based in science" I think he meant the rules of physics are bent less in urban legends than they are in movies. Had nothing to do with testing methodology. At least that's how I take his question

    • @feeling-dizzie
      @feeling-dizzie 3 года назад +20

      I think based on his wording he was saying the **movies** weren't based in science. Adam took that to mean the mythbusters tests weren't based in science

    • @bennu547
      @bennu547 3 года назад +8

      That’s what I thought too. Urban myths are based on some real thing that supposedly happened. Movies are made up things that they tested

    • @GardnersGrendel
      @GardnersGrendel 3 года назад +6

      Yep, Adam just totally mis-understood the question and assumed the worst.

    • @JosephDavies
      @JosephDavies 3 года назад +3

      @David - I think that's what was meant, but the point is that it's a false assumption to make. At the very least, recognizing that it's an assumption and not fact is an important aspect of asking questions. That's why Adam focuses so much on whether something is testable or not; that's the most important part of science-based myth testing, not the source of the myth.
      It's certainly an interesting question though on its own: _are_ urban myths more often based in some historical reality? I somehow doubt it, but it would be very fascinating to devise a methodology to study it. My guess is that urban myths are just as often folk fiction as movie myths are Hollywood fiction. I might be wrong. Either way, I don't think it's a safe assumption to make simply on one's own sense of it.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 3 года назад +2

      There is no such thing as just science. There is something called the scientific method though. The pursuit of science is the quest for the truth. No one has a monopoly on whatever that is though. In fact I am pretty sure if someone could give us the ultimate answer it would be beyond our comprehension. That revelation would do us about as much good as an ape getting a cell phone contract. Enjoy the 5G network oh hairy one.

  • @mr_StevenS
    @mr_StevenS 3 года назад +69

    2:00 I think that's the 2010 "A-Team" movie, not "Fast and Furious".

    • @nappa0582
      @nappa0582 3 года назад +5

      Thank you! I was about to comment that same thing, lol. As nutty as the FF series has become, the only thing they've dropped from the sky were cars.

    • @kmacow
      @kmacow 3 года назад +1

      Exactly! A non-existing tank carried in a plane that is not configured to carry a tank and the tank firing in mid-air! Sounds like Hollywood!

    • @coconutcam4297
      @coconutcam4297 3 года назад +1

      This was like the one thing I really wanted the Mythbusters to have actually tested. Maybe with a smaller scale thing tho

    • @djsomeguy
      @djsomeguy 3 года назад

      This, A-Team not F&F.

    • @neiljhopwood
      @neiljhopwood 3 года назад

      @@kmacow ruclips.net/video/oZIzreiseMk/видео.html

  • @IxodesPersulcatus
    @IxodesPersulcatus 3 года назад +3

    Blow Your Own Sail is one of those life-changing episodes.

  • @azbag1906
    @azbag1906 3 года назад +22

    2:00 your thinking of the A-Team movie good sir.

  • @forgotn42
    @forgotn42 3 года назад +18

    I love that the Mythbuster's crew was so excited about the idea of recreating the boulder getaway scene that it took several days of working on it to realize there just wasn't a story. lol

    • @donsample1002
      @donsample1002 3 года назад

      But Jaime's objection was based on a misconception. It doesn't matter what the ball was made of. The speed of a ball rolling down a ramp is independent of its mass. (As long as its heavy enough that air resistance becomes negligible.)
      Maybe a quick test of the myth that heavy balls roll faster than light balls was in order.

    • @JosephDavies
      @JosephDavies 3 года назад +7

      @@donsample1002 That's all true, but the point Adam is making is that the question "Could Indy outrun _this_ boulder?" in untestable because there are too many unknowns (with regards to that particular boulder as well as the temple), and the question "Could Indy outrun _a_ boulder?" is trivial, because you can equally well devise a path for the boulder that either disadvantages Indy or the boulder through the use of the vines and shape of the corridor, as well as the mass of the boulder (which could affect its ability to roll through an uneven environment).
      tl;dr - There isn't a specific claim to test that isn't either too vaguely specified, or too trivial to test.

    • @Peter_Cordes
      @Peter_Cordes 3 года назад +1

      @@donsample1002 It matters if it's not *perfectly* round; bumps and stuff that you'd find on a realistic ancient rock would slow it down some on each rotation. So would bumps on the track. That's where the materials aspect comes in. (But yeah, Adam didn't mention any of the things that would actually matter, like slope or reasons why materials matter.)
      Also note that acceleration depends on the exact angle of support, like how much faster the full circumference of the ball is going than the point where it contacts the ramp.
      (Because of angular momentum. For similar reasons why a hollow cylinder is slower than a solid cylinder web.physics.ucsb.edu/~lecturedemonstrations/Composer/Pages/28.27.html or a sphere vs. cylinder isaacphysics.org/questions/rolling_objects )
      (Ah, I see Joseph already mentioned vines, same idea as bumps. And good point that any changes in direction might involve the boulder hitting something and losing some kinetic energy and angular momentum.)

    • @oseds
      @oseds 3 года назад +1

      @@donsample1002 No, falling or frictionless sliding is independent of mass. But rolling depends on the moment of inertia because some of the energy is converted to angular momentum. The moment of inertia is the mass and how that mass is distributed in the object.

  • @ArtdesTests
    @ArtdesTests 3 года назад +162

    Poor Andrew got burned, that was… Savage

  • @XaleManix
    @XaleManix 3 года назад +8

    Adam, I am very, very glad that you tackled Pyramid Power. It was, in fact, very much a pivotal moment in my development as a human being. It was a 'wait a minute' moment for me (so much of Mythbusters was that.)
    But busting Pyramid Power, specifically, opened my eyes to the idea that 'magical' things could be tested and evidence demanded of them. That some of the things I took for granted as unequivocal and absolute and untestable, could in fact be tested, and doubted, and demanded proof of its validity.
    The Pyramid Power episode freed me from a future of misery, and agony, and fear, and self-loathing. The Pyramid Power episode helped my mind escape from a place that had trapped me in a spiral of thinking that my existence could not be reconciled with a set of supposed truths that made me feel sick, disgusting, guilty, and revolting. The Pyramid Power episode, frankly, is one of a number of things I can point to through my history and say 'This saved my life', and mean it with absolute sincerity.
    Thank you, despite your regrets, for testing it.
    Thank you for setting me free.

  • @JeffKraschinski1969
    @JeffKraschinski1969 3 года назад +29

    If I recall the molasses flood was in January of that year, so the aforementioned dead people were truly “slower than molasses in January”
    EDIT: January 15, 1919 was indeed the date 🤦‍♂️

    • @cybersilver5816
      @cybersilver5816 3 года назад

      Why the face palm?

    • @ianbuilds7712
      @ianbuilds7712 3 года назад

      i shot molassas out of my air cannon a few januarys ago in honor of that day lol...

  • @NightshadeDt
    @NightshadeDt 3 года назад +109

    I'm imagining a disheartened Adam, in full Indy-regalia taking his hat into hand and being so disappointed that he wasn't going to get to run from 'The Boulder.'
    Edit: Because it looks like my reply was eaten, Discovery Nederland has the intro (complete with their boulder run) on their channel: "Adam als Indiana Jones."

    • @Florkl
      @Florkl 3 года назад +15

      The Boulder is disappointed he doesn't get to chase the leather-clad man.

    • @scottmantooth8785
      @scottmantooth8785 3 года назад +2

      *insert sad emoji face icon here*

    • @sanityormadness
      @sanityormadness 3 года назад +5

      Oh, they still did it (presumably because they had a "boulder" by that point). It was just that it became a small thing through M5 for the cold open, not a full Myth.

    • @NightshadeDt
      @NightshadeDt 3 года назад +3

      @@sanityormadness That certainly doesn't surprise me, but I really don't remember that at all. I guess maybe because it was the open?

    • @sanityormadness
      @sanityormadness 3 года назад +7

      @@NightshadeDt Found it: ruclips.net/video/XQOKzQhPGyY/видео.html
      There was also a brief BTS bit later in the show about turning the sphere into the boulder, presumably because it was filmed before - as Adam said - they realised there was nothing to test: ruclips.net/video/A3o4Fa1HDY4/видео.html

  • @FenTastic18
    @FenTastic18 3 года назад +3

    Don’t know if anyone mentioned it yet but: the molasses story Adam mentions did actually happen, it has a historical event, there are pictures (and also it was both the speed of the molasses gushing out of its container and the debris is picked up that actually killed people) the “urban legend” if you can call it that related to this incident is the street it happened on smelling of molasses all these years later when it’s hot out (which, is also something that can be tested with “real actual science”)

  • @sidewinder15599
    @sidewinder15599 3 года назад +12

    I would challenge calling the Boston Molasses Flood of 1919 a myth, because it's a photographically documented historical happening. That said, I'd certainly be curious what you would want to do regarding it!

  • @skid_Demon
    @skid_Demon 3 года назад +10

    Curious that Adam describes the molasses flood as an urban legend. I definitely thought that was real history, with no doubts to its actually happening.

    • @edwardrhoades6957
      @edwardrhoades6957 Год назад

      The History Guy did a story on this. ruclips.net/video/adPuti-SL5o/видео.html

    • @kathrynblack9152
      @kathrynblack9152 Год назад +1

      The molasses flood is historic.

  • @Commandamanda
    @Commandamanda 3 года назад +30

    I love when Adam confronts mythconceptions. Dude, you're too cool.

  • @djaaron23
    @djaaron23 3 года назад +1

    I love you adam!
    youve changed my young life for the better started watching myth-busters when i was 9, now almost 20 years later, ive learned so much from yall, and applied them to my own life in many ways.

  • @hotrodderrecycler3202
    @hotrodderrecycler3202 3 года назад +20

    Clothing used to be heavy. People drowned in water when they fell in. Imagine how a deep enough moving molasses wave would hold you down. Not to mention gasping in molasses over water.

    • @DrakeAurum
      @DrakeAurum 3 года назад +7

      Yep - and at least water can be expelled from your lungs once you breathe it in. No amount of CPR is going to clear molasses from your lungs.

    • @JonatasAdoM
      @JonatasAdoM 3 года назад

      @@DrakeAurum What a way to go.
      Hope they at least enjoyed molasses previously.

    • @zachbaker1401
      @zachbaker1401 3 года назад +3

      It was a real tragedy, there were numerous complaints prior to the tank failure that it was not strong enough. They had never filled the tank to full capacity prior to the flood, and there were many people saying the walls were too thin.

  • @daveayerstdavies
    @daveayerstdavies 3 года назад +3

    One of the most fun things about doing science is to be surprised by your results or to discover something that defies intuition.

  • @custos3249
    @custos3249 3 года назад +44

    Hell, "actual real science" isn't an inherent aspect to study itself. Science isn't a single, _magical_ test that ends inquiry but a systematic process of examination. Irritates me to no end how moronically elitist people can be about that, typically deeming only pure, perfect experimentation as the only valid methodology. By that definition, almost all of the sciences we have don't qualify as science for all the things that can't be directly tested through classical dependent v independent variables while controlling all possible confounds.

    • @Stettafire
      @Stettafire 3 года назад +3

      Agreed. People often confuse the scientific method with mathematical proofs. In maths you can prove x = y. In science you can theorise (of course, a scientific theory is stronger then a colloquial theory) but you cannot 100% prove x = y. New information may come about that makes x = z. That is the fundamental difference between maths and science.

  • @mcmoose64
    @mcmoose64 3 года назад +1

    Andrew will be absolutely stoked with this response !

  • @jllaine
    @jllaine 2 года назад +5

    I actually appreciated the unbiased discipline exercised with "pyramid power", even though the outcome seemed "obvious to everyone" and "common knowledge". You did it the justice of a committed evaluation with the integrity and follow though of every other myth. and in the end that was its true entertainment value, unbiased discipline with integrity and commitment.

  • @SecretSquirrelFun
    @SecretSquirrelFun 3 года назад +1

    That molasses flood was absolutely incredible. There are some amazing images of the aftermath. I believe that, in Boston, there is a monument or some sort of commemorative plaque to that tragedy. It was the way the tank had been made and inspected - or not inspected.

  • @Simon-ph1nf
    @Simon-ph1nf 3 года назад +5

    8 minutes of a 9 minute video on light heartily word play and then 1 minute answer
    got to love mr savage :)

  • @ihidnan
    @ihidnan 3 года назад

    Your channel and enthusiasm are therapeutic

  • @nervoussystem3343
    @nervoussystem3343 3 года назад +3

    Adam Savage, you and mythbusters changed my life! As a kid, it stoked my love of science, as an adolescent it was the only thing that could calm me down amidst brutal panic attacks, and as an adult I still rewatch episodes to this day. Thank you for being amazing!

  • @thomasbarrasso6099
    @thomasbarrasso6099 3 года назад

    I am from Boston. The molasses accident was a major industrial incident. A good read on the subject is Steve Puleo’s book Dark Tide.

  • @sogwatchman
    @sogwatchman 3 года назад

    1:57 The tank firing its cannon to "fly" or push its fall toward a lake was one of the scenes in the A-Team movie.

  • @pleappleappleap
    @pleappleappleap 3 года назад +1

    The molasses disaster occurred in 1919. The tank was 90 feet in diameter and 50 feet tall. It held more than 2M gallons. 21 killed, 150 injured. Some of the people were killed by the shock wave of the air being driven in front of the molasses wave, some were crushed by the wave itself, and some got stuck as the molasses thickened due to the cold temperature and suffocated. Some people claim to still be able to smell the molasses on hot days a hundred years later.

  • @ncc74656m
    @ncc74656m 3 года назад +3

    Note: The molasses processing plant was for alcohol production. ;)

  • @rolandgdean
    @rolandgdean 3 года назад +17

    6:43 Because seeing Adam, dressed as Henry Jones Jr., running from a giant stone...priceless.

    • @wyattroncin941
      @wyattroncin941 3 года назад

      they did use the boulder in the special's cold open

  • @MrPhil1969
    @MrPhil1969 3 года назад +22

    The Great Molasses Flood of 1919 was not a myth and was well documented, studied and detailed reports written on. Why would you want to replicate that?

    • @TheGreatAtario
      @TheGreatAtario 3 года назад +4

      On several occasions they replicated things that were well-documented. For example, Bullets Fired Up. They even made the documentation part of the story on that one.

    • @redneckgaijin
      @redneckgaijin 3 года назад +3

      Because it would have made better television than, for instance, the Great Atlantic Sponge Migration.

    • @TheRich1981
      @TheRich1981 3 года назад +3

      @@redneckgaijin Whoa, to hell with molasses, I wanna hear more about these sponges!

    • @redneckgaijin
      @redneckgaijin 3 года назад +6

      @@TheRich1981 The definitive study was done by Drs. Stanz and Spengler. The sponges, I'm told, migrated about a foot and a half.

    • @TheRich1981
      @TheRich1981 3 года назад +1

      @@redneckgaijin Sounds pretty spooky, hope they were qualified to deal with that sort of thing. I'm sure they knew who to call if not.

  • @hannahfountain8060
    @hannahfountain8060 3 года назад

    Your joy is contagious

  • @heartofdawnlight
    @heartofdawnlight 3 года назад +3

    though they might have had less practical or usable implications, the fiction based stories often had very interesting an unique premises that made you think about something. and even if thats just simple physics, at the end of the day as a young kid watching people dodge star wars "blaster bolts" because they're slower then paintballs really gets your brain ticking on how physics works and interacts.

    • @RaphYkun
      @RaphYkun 3 года назад +1

      Really liked the "fan on a boat" one because it's used as an example in science textbooks for simple physics, but when tried in the real world (without the caveats and simplifications that those academic problems impose) the intuitive answer often wins out.

  • @Mikyll1969
    @Mikyll1969 3 года назад +1

    One myth I always felt they got a bit 'wrong'... though they used great science to work on it... was the 'hang time' of a football supposedly inflated with helium rather than air. The actual 'theory' was that the ball would stay in the air a bit longer, and thus, allow the kicking team more time to get down the field and stop the receiving team. They ended up focusing on the DISTANCE of the ball flight, rather than the time, and to me, that was an error.

  • @barryfields2964
    @barryfields2964 3 года назад +3

    Great Molasses Flood was 1919 January 15. That molasses was not for human consumption. It was use to make munitions for WWI. But the war ended in 1918, so they scaled back production, but the still had molasses coming in that was previously ordered. That coupled with, unusually warm weather, and a poorly built storage tank lead to the disaster.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 3 года назад

      That really doesn't make sense because when wars end canceling orders is par for the course. The government certainly cancels their orders with contractors.

    • @barryfields2964
      @barryfields2964 3 года назад

      @@1pcfred in that time it would take months for a shipment of molasses to get from the Caribbean to Boston. The war just ended on November 11, 1918. So those deliveries were already inbound, and paid for.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 3 года назад

      @@barryfields2964 It did not take that long even in the days of wooden masted ships. Because of the currents going south to north is pretty fast in the Atlantic on the US side. You're going with the flow. The average speed sailing is 100-140 miles a day. It is only a 1,300 mile trip. So at most you can make it in under 2 weeks.

    • @barryfields2964
      @barryfields2964 3 года назад

      @@1pcfred I’m talking ship travel I’m talking about contracts theses ships were contacted to deliver that amount of molasses at that point in time

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 3 года назад

      @@barryfields2964 I'm talking about telling them to take that molasses and shove it. I ain't working here no more! Johnny Paycheck style. Everyone realizes at the outset that war economies are high risk ventures. It ain't quite business as usual. Orders are placed in good faith but one must still understand that things do in fact change.

  • @chiefinsclouseau
    @chiefinsclouseau 3 года назад

    Hi Adam, I hope you're doing well. Since you were just talking about Raiders, I wanted to ask you about something from the clip you tested with the temple dart run, VS the movie clip. In the film clip, when Indie is running away, and the darts are shooting at him, it looks like they're being shot from both sides of room. My friend, and I slowed the whole scene down, and we both see darts coming from both sides. When you, and Jamie tested it, only one side fired darts. My question is, if both sides fired darts at different times, would Indie have been hit? I just rewatched that episode, and it's always bugged me that only one side fired darts. Thank you for reading this.

  • @HarleyMothersole
    @HarleyMothersole 3 года назад

    There is also the sugar beet in Canada for our commercial refined sugar products

  • @0111DTheProphet
    @0111DTheProphet 10 месяцев назад

    I truly won't be happy in life until i see a blooper video, specifically with slow-mo lol

  • @sachdevariddhesh
    @sachdevariddhesh 3 года назад +4

    A happy day for a maker is must for his mood ! 👍👍

  • @ZekkSkywalk
    @ZekkSkywalk 3 года назад +1

    The question is actually something I've thought of I think, just not worded so. Like, in my mind, I tended to think of the myths as divided into sort of categories: stories like coins off skyscrapers killing people, turn of phrases like bulls in a china shop, logical extrapolations like how water heaters are pressurized containers so its bad if they fail, or things seen in movies or videos like curving bullets. The last one seems fantastical outright, so was it any more absurd to test than the other three, which seem more applicable to something people could actually experience or use the turn of phrase. Like, the "science" part isn't the question, it's more like, I always wondered if they ever differentiated between...something like applicability versus absurdity.

  • @JamesHelgesen
    @JamesHelgesen 3 года назад

    Hey Adam, at around 2:15 you speak about flying a tank in relation to Fast and Furious, did you mean the scene from the A Team movie?

  • @KiskaWreck
    @KiskaWreck 3 года назад

    The way Adam is lit makes his glasses are half full

  • @jeromethiel4323
    @jeromethiel4323 3 года назад +1

    Your comment about not caring what the result was, is in my mind, the keystone of good science. When you test some hypothesis, the results are what the results are. Entirely too many times you get into situations where the scientists doing the testing see only what they were looking for. And it's hard to be completely analytical, but being agnostic to the actual conclusion and not the conclusion you want should be the goal.

  • @tetchedistress
    @tetchedistress 3 года назад

    Thank you

  • @ChrisOnStage2
    @ChrisOnStage2 Год назад

    They did a terrific Indiana Jones "Giant Rolling Rock" recreation at the old Disney/MGM Studios. I remember seeing their "Indiana Jones Stunt Show Spectacular" years ago and they did that stunt (and many more) live in front of an audience! There's tons of videos of it on RUclips!

  • @blackcatgraphics1483
    @blackcatgraphics1483 3 года назад

    One way the Raiders boulder scene could've been examined, since you were using a hollow amalgam, would've been to add an increasing range of weights inside to gauge which weight of boulder would be slow enough to evade, and weather weight was a determining factor at all. A lot of other variables would have to be thrown in as well, like how smooth the surface it was travelling on, the pitch it was travelling down, air pressure inside the cave, lots of stuff could make a difference on the timing. I think, unless you were gonna write a thesis length document on it, the best you'd probably come up with would be a rough generalization though.

  • @logansinger2948
    @logansinger2948 3 года назад +2

    Yeah I always felt like the intention of urban myths was that they were surprising but true and that movie myths were never trying to present themselves as actually real.

  • @supertinnietank
    @supertinnietank Год назад +1

    Wait... Why is the molasses flood an urban legend?
    I've seen photos of newspapers clips from the event and presumably there are police and insurance records as well?

  • @redbarron7433
    @redbarron7433 3 года назад

    1.) That pendulum in the background on your right Adam is very mesmerizing. 😂
    2.) I know I’m not a Tested member, but I was wondering if you were planning on doing a video with Kyle Hill sometime in the future?

  • @RemnantOfBirth
    @RemnantOfBirth 3 года назад +5

    This has needed to be said. For SO LONG.

  • @HSMiyamoto
    @HSMiyamoto 3 года назад

    I'm thinking of the Star Wars episodes, the Zombie-Killing episode, and Crimes and Mythdemeanors. Remember when Jamie tried to climb up an air duct with magnets, and it sounded like Norse demigod trying to break in?

  • @brycevo
    @brycevo 3 года назад +1

    Adventure has a name, and it's Savage

  • @kathyevans3251
    @kathyevans3251 3 года назад

    Great answer

  • @jonathanbarker831
    @jonathanbarker831 11 месяцев назад

    I always felt that mythbusters was more about applying the scientific method to random questions. It doesn't matter if the question is very wild as long as you can apply the scientific method to it and get a result based on detailed testing.

  • @undefined40
    @undefined40 3 года назад

    Wasn't that "steering a tank dropped from a plane by gunshot" from the A-Team Movie?

  • @MarshallLoveday
    @MarshallLoveday 3 года назад

    I've read that in the aftermath of the 'Molasses incident', the clean up was extremely hard. First off, it happened in the winter, and all the molasses froze, and second of all, when it melted, it was extremely sticky......

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 3 года назад

      Yeah but it was a sweet gig to get in on I'll bet.

  • @michaelconway8337
    @michaelconway8337 3 года назад

    Hey Adam when are you gonna get a bigger shop dude ? #texas /Florida ?

  • @Corn_Pone_Flicks
    @Corn_Pone_Flicks 6 месяцев назад

    If nothing else, the fact that Harrison Ford actually did outrun the plaster ball boulder for real already sort of proves it, much like the "Luke and Leia swinging across the Death Star chasm" story. The actors did it, it wasn't an effect, so it's automatically confirmed under those specific parameters.

  • @charleshanson9467
    @charleshanson9467 3 года назад +1

    A college sculpture teacher I had in the early '00s used to use the phrase, "Grey matter activated!"

  • @phrostbyte
    @phrostbyte 2 года назад

    I just heard about the molasses spill on Master Distiller. Sposedly on hot days you can still smell it. Interesting

  • @JonatasAdoM
    @JonatasAdoM 3 года назад

    I've heard someone say that a lot of beverages in the US (at least in the North) use corn sugar instead of sugar cane.

  • @kamodt
    @kamodt 3 года назад

    Wasn’t the scene Adam’s referring to, about steering a tank that’s falling from a plane, from the A-Team movie? I don’t think it was a Fast & Furious movie scene.

  • @michaelpipkin9942
    @michaelpipkin9942 3 года назад +1

    I'm happy to pretend that you have that moving Swiss Army Knife in your window on Christmas, like one of those creepy Santa's behind a window in a toy store.

  • @JamieBliss
    @JamieBliss 3 года назад

    "watch the gate keeping" thank you Adam

  • @H2Dwoat
    @H2Dwoat 3 года назад +1

    Hi, wasn’t the directing a tank dropping from a plane with its main gun from the A-Team movie not the fast and the furious franchise?

    • @Robert-up1yi
      @Robert-up1yi 3 года назад

      I came to say this glad someone else noticed

  • @tornadoswe
    @tornadoswe 3 года назад

    Wasn't it A-Team where they aimed by firing a tank? Did they do that in fast and furious # too?

  • @TerbInYourFace
    @TerbInYourFace 3 года назад

    There's a band called The Darkest of the Hillside Thickets that made a song called Great Molasses Disaster that's about the Great Molasses Flood of 1919

  • @rossradtke
    @rossradtke 3 года назад

    I misread the title as "Friction-based" myths...
    ...Still enjoyed it.

  • @daffyrwt
    @daffyrwt 2 года назад

    I've not seen many of the Fast and Furious movies, but I kinda do remember that flying tank from the A-Team movie... or am I wrong about that, it's been so long since I saw that movie?

  • @JonatasAdoM
    @JonatasAdoM 3 года назад

    Wait.
    I've always heard that tank scene was from The A-team movie.

  • @user-xg7ed9fy9f
    @user-xg7ed9fy9f 3 года назад

    You had me at "Boston Molasses Flood"

  • @Bea_Esser
    @Bea_Esser 3 года назад +2

    So...
    The molasses explosion was real & very dangerous because it was very powerful.
    Also trying to breath with molasses in your lungs is very hard nye on impossible.
    It’s worth researching. 😊

  • @samueldeter9735
    @samueldeter9735 3 года назад

    1:58 is he talking about the A Team, or did I miss a scene in the fast and furious movies?

  • @shoemakerleve9
    @shoemakerleve9 3 года назад +20

    Let's take a moment to appreciate how much Andrew was picked apart today. I could sense when it happened, all Andrews could

    • @andrewgreenroom
      @andrewgreenroom 3 года назад +5

      😩 I will certainly use the word science more carefully from now on!! That will teach me to post late at night after a beer.

    • @JosephDavies
      @JosephDavies 3 года назад +1

      @@andrewgreenroom Beer - Simultaneously both the cause and downfall of much great science throughout history. ;)

    • @Hexon66
      @Hexon66 9 месяцев назад

      Well, he was... until he wasn't. After Adam finished faffing on, lightheartedly, about the phrasing of the letter, he gave an example of the Raiders ball. The upshot of which was *entirely* to the point of the letter, a complete fiction that was not testable as there were no specifications to replicate. He answered the question, without realizing he answered it.

  • @pothoc1
    @pothoc1 2 года назад

    When he's talking about flying a tank out of a C-130 isn't he referring to the A-Team movie? I don't remember this scene in Fast and Furious

  • @nothanks7919
    @nothanks7919 3 года назад

    Adam's Flaming Laser Sword: If it is not testable by experiment, it is not worthy of television.

  • @ltlbuddha
    @ltlbuddha 3 года назад

    A bit of a correction. Molasses was not used prior to cane sugar in America.
    Molasses is a by-product of sugar refining, a sugar-laden source is needed, typically (always?) cane or beet.
    Before the turn of the 20th century, cane sugar was the primary sugar sweetener in the US.* Beet sugar then became a competitor there.
    *The slave trade was largely fuelled by sugar, even in the US.

  • @planetjendel
    @planetjendel 3 года назад

    Still happy the Swiss Army Knife is rotating the correct way lol

  • @sheltiesong
    @sheltiesong Год назад

    I’ve scrolled for a bit and haven’t seen it mentioned, but it was actually far more than two people killed in the Great Molasses Flood of 1919; 21 people died.

  • @moonrazk
    @moonrazk 3 года назад +1

    I only learned what molasses actually is when I read about the Boston molasses flood, before that I had only seen the word used in the phrase "slow as molasses", so I thought it was some kind of slug/snail. So when I read about a flood of molasses I thought "huh? that makes no sense" and looked it up.

    • @Luminousplayer
      @Luminousplayer 3 года назад +1

      i literally just did that because i didnt know what it translated to lol

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 3 года назад +1

      The speed of molasses is dependent on its viscosity and its viscosity depends on its temperature. Which is to say molasses is only slow when it happens to be cold. The whole phrase is as slow as molasses uphill in January. Now it was January when the accident occurred but they happened to be heating that particular molasses up at the time. Folks unfortunately were downhill too.

  • @d4slaimless
    @d4slaimless 9 месяцев назад

    Tank falling out from a plane was featured in A-team, not Fast and Furious. A did they have falling tanks in Fast and Furious as well?

  • @DWSOutdoors
    @DWSOutdoors 3 года назад +1

    I really appreciate the fact you exist Adam! Thank you for sharing your enthusiasm for life!

  • @JackCliffordWilliams
    @JackCliffordWilliams 3 года назад +11

    Andrew knows that he's amongst friends here, including Adam himself! 😀👍

  • @justinsmith6296
    @justinsmith6296 3 года назад

    The flying tank was in the A-Team movie not Fast and Furious

  • @shiftonephoto
    @shiftonephoto 2 года назад +1

    Adam kinda looks like Colonel Sanders at these lower angles lol.

  • @feldegast
    @feldegast 10 месяцев назад

    I love how the pyramid myth gave unexpected results with the cut fruit and how the test was repeated to show why the original experiment was flawed

  • @JonatasAdoM
    @JonatasAdoM 3 года назад

    I was watching it on a headphone with the phone in my pocket and every time Adam bad a long pause I thought that either Adam had fallen asleep or that the screen had turned off.

  • @donsample1002
    @donsample1002 3 года назад

    I'm pretty sure that the velocity of a ball rolling down a ramp is independent of its mass, so it wouldn't have mattered what the ball was made of.

  • @MikeJVernonTiberius
    @MikeJVernonTiberius 3 года назад

    I can see the molasses flood being an inspiration for the 1950s blob movie

  • @oFFtheWall518
    @oFFtheWall518 2 года назад

    Isn't flying a tank from the "A Team" remake?

  • @rsalbreiter
    @rsalbreiter 11 месяцев назад

    Indy running from the ball is testable because you can see the speed of the ball and the angle and calculate the weight from there

  • @borisvladimir7151
    @borisvladimir7151 3 года назад

    Hello Mr Savage. In a recent video you quickly explained that you think at some point in the future you will move to a new shop. I was wondering if you could spend more time on that subject to elaborate how you/the team see the evolution of Tested and what you would dream to have in a new shop that you don't here. Did you find the place already ? Will you keep both shops ? (1 for you and the smaller one for team B which will build smaller things). Do you think you'll keep the content of Tested focused on you (I love that, I love what you do) or do you think you'll find a way to diversify and bring more creators ? What do you think ?

  • @johns1307
    @johns1307 3 года назад

    If you know the approximate size of the stone ball, you could use the density of several common types of rocks for the area he was supposed to have been in. Then you replicate the weight, and put it on it's own track. The Indy stand in runs alongside it in an identical but separate track. You then race. Can even do it with several different rock densities tosee if that matters.

  • @JonatasAdoM
    @JonatasAdoM 3 года назад

    8:53 I'm imagining Jamie dressed like Vin Diesel.

  • @Kaziklu
    @Kaziklu 3 года назад

    The tank thing I believe is from the A-team not Fast and the Furious. Unless FF did it too.