Geoguessr Maps: Areas with Tragic or Disturbing Backstories #2 [PLAY ALONG]

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  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024
  • We're back again with another play along video on this fascinating custom made map.
    Terrorist Bombings, Murders, Industrial, Environmental and Natural Catastrophes are some of the tragic events that we can expect to learn about on this map. Every round has it's own disturbing backstory, so join me as I try to figure out what happened, and of course where..
    Don't forget: you can play along to try and beat me score!
    PLAY ALONG: Play your round, put your marker down, then switch tabs back to RUclips to watch my attempt and the result. This way you don't ruin the game or the video!
    The link: www.geoguessr....

Комментарии • 797

  • @orktv4673
    @orktv4673 Год назад +1689

    Imagine Tom's face when he says "are we recording?" and he finds out no, as a matter of fact we were not...

    • @DinosawrsAreAwesome
      @DinosawrsAreAwesome Год назад +86

      Unfortunately we can only imagine it.

    • @ideath4lif3
      @ideath4lif3 Год назад +7

      Unless next time he instantly presses record, freezes for 2 second, let's us know about the bother and goes on to play another round

    • @johnthebomb06
      @johnthebomb06 Год назад +8

      "Oh bugger"

    • @Gameboygenius
      @Gameboygenius Год назад +5

      If only he had recorded so we would've seen his reaction. Wait...

  • @wojakc7745
    @wojakc7745 Год назад +2283

    “They would’ve drowned, awful…
    But on the plus side we’ve got a good score”
    I love tom

    • @alangknowles
      @alangknowles Год назад +115

      And no-one seems to have died. A bit disappointing.

    • @Elwene2fr
      @Elwene2fr Год назад +38

      This sounds like a sentence Philomena Cunk could've said 😆

    • @amotionh
      @amotionh Год назад +4

      @@Elwene2fr😂😂spot on!!

    • @DarkViperEU
      @DarkViperEU Год назад +22

      7:22 “well they would’ve drowned, probably… LOVELY” 💀

    • @romainsavioz5466
      @romainsavioz5466 Год назад

      @@Elwene2fr nah she would be like how does people cope with having drowned.
      - They didn't cope they died
      - You mean that all those people died

  • @swaree
    @swaree Год назад +2798

    the most tragic thing is not seeing Tom not being recording

    • @archie5594
      @archie5594 Год назад +51

      would love to be a fly on the wall,

    • @shipwreck9146
      @shipwreck9146 Год назад +134

      "Are we recording?......." *Concerned look* "Are you joking?" *Concerned look* *Facepalms*

    • @Temme142
      @Temme142 Год назад +60

      He needs to set up a CCTV camera in his recording room for exactly these moments.

    • @nate9065
      @nate9065 Год назад +2

      @@shipwreck9146 lmao

    • @KalicoUmfields
      @KalicoUmfields Год назад +1

      No the most tragic thing is that I accidentally disliked this video

  • @roastghost901
    @roastghost901 Год назад +534

    "I can't see anyone that died. How disappointing." - GeoWizard 2023

    • @viewer.123
      @viewer.123 Год назад +5

      Serial killer Geowizzard vibes

  • @Cheddarhead7
    @Cheddarhead7 Год назад +633

    "Did some of the locals escape?"
    That cracked me up so hard

    • @DKlegacyRS
      @DKlegacyRS Год назад +3

      Me too😂

    • @codmonster1493
      @codmonster1493 Год назад +3

      Can you give some context for it?

    • @Samouraii
      @Samouraii Год назад +42

      ​@@codmonster1493no real context, just a joke that the place is like a prison or zoo or mental asylum. Can be said about many towns and cities in the UK

    • @davefish2280
      @davefish2280 Год назад +10

      @@Samouraii fr tho they need to put a gate up or something. ppl from Tayport keep getting over.

    • @Xdqer.Yxw0
      @Xdqer.Yxw0 Год назад +11

      @@Samouraii Theres a reason we all call it scumdee

  • @Straumnes
    @Straumnes Год назад +865

    As someone from BC, the second one is definitely supposed to be the Highway of Tears.

    • @furrywalls96
      @furrywalls96 Год назад +47

      Also from BC, this is right

    • @noemipomerleau8219
      @noemipomerleau8219 Год назад +335

      Yup. I recognized it instantly.
      That area is covered in signs begging people not to hitchhike, and there is at least one serial killer who is/was suspected to be operating there. It is famous in the whole province and people keep disappearing from it.
      I think what's not clear from the wiki article is how incredibly sparse the population is near there. The idea that 100 women could go missing when there are only a few thousand in the area to begin with really paints the picture. If it were drugs/domestic violence/etc. it would be proportionate to the rest of the province. That is absolutely not what's happening there.

    • @alexg1778
      @alexg1778 Год назад +18

      ​@noemipomerleau8219 that's crazy. What sort of measures are they putting in place to stop it from happening, or does it just sorta go unchecked?

    • @noemipomerleau8219
      @noemipomerleau8219 Год назад +1

      @@alexg1778 The huge controversy/tragedy is that authorities are doing very little to investigate or prevent the issue. There are annual protests begging police and government to take more action. They seem disinterested in seriously fixing it. This is unfortunately a persistent systemic issue when victims of crime are Indigenous people - not just with police, but with government and in the public eye. It's just seen as "what happens to those people" and it's never addressed with the seriousness it should be. We've had serial killers in Vancouver that went ignored for years for the same reason.
      Beyond investigating the possibility of crime, there would be an easy way to prevent a lot of the deaths. Currently there's no way to get around in the area if you don't own a car, which many of the people don't because they don't have the income required. This forces people to hitchhike, and so the tragedy continues. The signs say "don't hitchhike" , and it's illegal, but if there's no grocery store/doctor/services closer than 50+km away and you don't own your own car, what are you meant to do?? A government run bus system would save many, many lives, even if it just ran a few times a day. But it's expensive to operate - and so we pay in human lives instead.

    • @koool56
      @koool56 Год назад +27

      @@alexg1778 Not much you can do with it is it, remote long stretch of a road.

  • @danjeory3659
    @danjeory3659 Год назад +329

    "...died an icy... Well they drowned... Lovely!" Only Tom could get away with this 😂

    • @jurgnobs1308
      @jurgnobs1308 Год назад +3

      he said probably, not lovely

    • @CoolioAlert
      @CoolioAlert Год назад +14

      @@jurgnobs1308he said both

    • @theoa701
      @theoa701 Год назад +13

      your pfp looks like a real life rendition of the estonian flag... probably not taken there though, right?

  • @stephencoyne9061
    @stephencoyne9061 Год назад +1000

    I like the disturbing/tragic backstories map it’s so interesting

    • @NicolasTagliafico420
      @NicolasTagliafico420 Год назад +17

      i often dont know what should i google to see the backstory

    • @Kyxul
      @Kyxul Год назад +1

      @@NicolasTagliafico420 imagine being scared to read shit from the past.

    • @imightbejakob
      @imightbejakob Год назад +65

      @@Kyxulthe person is saying that they often don’t know what to look up when trying to look into what the backstory is to a place on the map

    • @chickengogo1683
      @chickengogo1683 Год назад +2

      ​@@NicolasTagliafico420you could probably just look up the street name

    • @Sasquiny
      @Sasquiny Год назад

      Bunch of psychos in the making!

  • @kathme120
    @kathme120 Год назад +275

    The Highway of Tears is very likely. It is horrific the number of women that went missing or were found dead alongside the highway. It is remote and likely different perpetrators over years. Some have said likely men working in the mines and other resources in the area preying on vulnerable women, and others.

    • @R8V10
      @R8V10 Год назад +10

      Yes I watched an amazing documentary on RUclips ghosts of highway 20 about this.

    • @henrywalton5967
      @henrywalton5967 Год назад +5

      Canada suddenly not looking too friendly

    • @squidwardo7074
      @squidwardo7074 11 месяцев назад

      it also might've been the site where canada did some fucked up shit to the indians

    • @evs251
      @evs251 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@henrywalton5967 Trust me it isn't. It's a false generalization. I've been there

  • @netsquall
    @netsquall Год назад +294

    Hey Tom,
    Canadian here. the Highway of Tears is definitely a very big subject in Canada. Missing and killed indigenous women have been turniung up in garbage landfills and there've been protests even as recent as the last few months (July 2023) to exume their bodies and find them. Someone, or a series of people have been murdering them for years and it's a frustratingly ignored problem by Canadian authorities here.

    • @davidwalker3626
      @davidwalker3626 Год назад +6

      That's because it isn't one problem (and don't start some moral virtue signaling about oppression), it's many different problems that are not easy to solve in society.

    • @arvurebantra7639
      @arvurebantra7639 Год назад +32

      @@davidwalker3626 The oppression of indigenous people is certainly one of the issues, but not the ONLY issue. The sad fact is that there just isn't enough money and population in those areas to do much. The authorities can really only do so much on a long stretch of sparsely populated road. That being said, the people themselves need to take things into their own hands, if the government won't do it.

    • @darkraven8103
      @darkraven8103 Год назад +4

      It is being mostly done by Indigenous men though that's why they can't say or do much about it because people would just call them racist or something.

    • @WolfSeril107
      @WolfSeril107 Год назад

      ​@@darkraven8103 literally a straight up lie, maybe one a racist would tell? 🤔🤔

    • @arvurebantra7639
      @arvurebantra7639 Год назад +29

      @@darkraven8103 Claiming it's being done by indigenous men could be seen as racist, that's true. We really don't know who's doing it though. I get what you're saying. That if the mostly white run government stepped in, and said "Well it's your own people doing it." then that certainly would be seen as more oppression.
      It's not a simple subject with easy solutions. All sides of it must be willing to talk, but there's a lot of hostility and resentment. It's understandable considering the past transgressions of both Canadian and American governments against indigenous peoples.

  • @wolfclaw3366
    @wolfclaw3366 Год назад +216

    speaking as a Canadian 2 provinces away from BC i beleive that the highway of tears backstory is the correct one since even 1000+ kilometers away i've been hearing about these disapearances since i was a kid

    • @zackestin1368
      @zackestin1368 Год назад +9

      Highway 16 goes from BC all the way through jasper, through endmonton, and connects there to like Regina and into Manitoba, one of the largest highways in the country. Highway of tears is why hitchhiking on it isn’t legal.

    • @shipwreck9146
      @shipwreck9146 Год назад +4

      Granted, I'm an internet person, but even I've heard of these disappearances, and I'm east coast USA.

  • @TheMixCurator
    @TheMixCurator Год назад +171

    19:20 - The fact that the ships 2 tonne anchor (in the pic) was blown 1.6 miles due to when Grandcamp exploded is wild.

    • @nightw4tchman
      @nightw4tchman Год назад +29

      Wait till you hear about the Halifax explosion. One of the anchors was found 2 1/2 miles away. It's said the water in the harbour exposed the river/ sea bed.

    • @smudgetheblurb
      @smudgetheblurb Год назад +6

      @@nightw4tchman I thought of the Halifax explosion as well, I've seen the anchor and where it landed and it's insane

    • @chdreturns
      @chdreturns Год назад +13

      He actually got the wrong disaster on that one. This was the Refinery fire of 04.

    • @WeaselKing1000
      @WeaselKing1000 Год назад +10

      Same substance responsible (ammonium nitrate) as in the Beirut explosion.

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz Год назад +291

    Interesting fact about the Tay Bridge Disaster is a poet called William McGonagall wrote a poem about it, he was considered one of the worst poets of all time. And his poem goes like this :
    Beautiful railway bridge of the silv'ry Tay
    Alas! I am very sorry to say
    That ninety lives have been taken away
    On the last sabbath day of 1879
    Which will be remember'd for a very long time"
    And ends :
    "Oh! Ill-fated bridge of the silv'ry Tay,
    I now must conclude my lay
    By telling the world fearlessly without the least dismay,
    That your central girders would not have given way,
    At least many sensible men do say,
    Had they been supported on each side with buttresses
    At least many sensible men confesses,
    For the stronger we our houses do build,
    The less chance we have of being killed."
    I learnt about this god awful poet when I was younger, I had some Horrible Histories CDs I got from cereal boxes, that I'd play when going to sleep and this was one of things on the Vile Victorians about the worst poet to ever live and they dutifully put on the most dreadful Scottish accent since Fat Bastard.

    • @alangknowles
      @alangknowles Год назад +45

      Some might say his poetry was equally disastrous.

    • @FedSmokerSaverOfBabies
      @FedSmokerSaverOfBabies Год назад +2

      😅

    • @nevreiha
      @nevreiha Год назад +5

      he should re release it

    • @wolfzmusic9706
      @wolfzmusic9706 Год назад +13

      I mean it's better than those random poetry books where a RUclipsr decides to publish their really crappy poems online

    • @toomanyopinions8353
      @toomanyopinions8353 Год назад +22

      Definitely not the worst of all time.

  • @keldaris8625
    @keldaris8625 Год назад +105

    I lived in Northern BC for 15 years and reconized Highway 16 instantly. I know people who have gone missing along the highway of tears....

  • @Randomii666
    @Randomii666 Год назад +88

    I can only imagine Tom going "Are we recording?" "Oh shit we are not recording"

  • @atenachos6282
    @atenachos6282 Год назад +128

    The shockwave of the Texas City disaster was so great that it brought an airplane down as well. The 1917 Halifax disaster is also similar and worth a read.

    • @woutvandersanden8288
      @woutvandersanden8288 Год назад +14

      Beirut but bigger.

    • @noahmay7708
      @noahmay7708 Год назад

      I just saw that Vsauce video about big explosions, yet completely forgot about the location. My brain is mush.

    • @0topon
      @0topon Год назад

      it was not one but two airplanes even

    • @AlfaGiuliaQV
      @AlfaGiuliaQV Год назад

      @@0topon Now that is f*cked.

  • @getsnipedhockey32
    @getsnipedhockey32 Год назад +335

    After the first video you posted with this disturbing map pool, I was really hoping you'd turn it into a series. Fascinating stuff. Also congrats on your marriage Tom!

  • @MatthieuCochard
    @MatthieuCochard Год назад +107

    I think there's a mistake in Geoguessr for the french round : the correct "Maillé" where the german slaughter took place is about 150km north-east away from the village pointed on the game. Congrats for the wedding and thanks for your videos !

    • @matthieugrandrie6746
      @matthieugrandrie6746 Год назад +4

      You're right

    • @Bre12_
      @Bre12_ Год назад +8

      Yeah I just found out about it as well. It hit me when I saw that the location was in the Marais poitevin near the Atlantic ocean while the article talking about the massacre started with "A small village in Touraine" (historical region near the city of Tours in central France)

    • @nyfyre3768
      @nyfyre3768 Год назад +6

      This is true however upon further research it may have been a mistake on the part of the game creators because when put in google maps, the maille that comes up first is the one in the park and there are no identifiable tragedies in the park

    • @crossingthechannel4631
      @crossingthechannel4631 Год назад +3

      Yes, I lived in the Deux-Sèvres département not far from there and immediately realised this was not the location 😢

  • @KausthubSekar
    @KausthubSekar Год назад +71

    Congrats to Tom and Verity for completing the straight line mission down the aisle as a platinum run in the first attempt. Here's hoping you have many more great adventures in store all over the world! Cheers! 🥂

  • @thespasm86
    @thespasm86 Год назад +14

    That Texas disaster really brings back memories of the Beirut Explosion. This friday is the 3rd anniversary, so many bad memories flooding back in

  • @SimplemindedGamers
    @SimplemindedGamers Год назад +130

    Gutted we couldn't see your face when you realised you weren't recording

    • @rjScubaSki
      @rjScubaSki Год назад +17

      Needs a backup ‘not recording’ cam

    • @ritLoe4222
      @ritLoe4222 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@rjScubaSkibut then he wasnt recording on the backup cam too

  • @Shadow__Lugia
    @Shadow__Lugia Год назад +10

    23:00 “but I can’t see anyone that died… how disappointing” Jesus this had me keeling over laughing 😂

  • @JackMellor498
    @JackMellor498 Год назад +52

    4:55
    I’ve heard of that disaster before.
    Just to correct you the dam didn’t collapse, that photo on the Wikipedia article is from 2002 and the event happened in 1963, it didn’t collapse.
    There was a landslide into the lake behind it, almost the entire face of the nearby mountain slid into a deep but rather narrow lake behind the dam, instantly displacing the water in a giant splash really, it isn’t really right to call it a tsunami considering it didn’t propagate away like a wave, it was literally a colossal splash that leapt over the dam and into the valley below.
    The dam is still intact and the whole site can be visit as a tourist attraction.

  • @russellmcphee72
    @russellmcphee72 Год назад +143

    Congratulations Tom and Verity. Any video you post is all what makes my day. Enjoy your honeymoon and married life. :) I only knew the Texas City one.

    • @wezelgams
      @wezelgams Год назад +5

      I was sure the texas city one was a reference to the explosion of the oil refinery! Looked like one in the picture. Had never heard of the ship exploding before, but it seems to be a much bigger disaster.

  • @goldendonut7349
    @goldendonut7349 Год назад +43

    This map is really great. Not only do we get to see interesting locations, but also learn about interesting facts about the tragic occurences at these places. Great series!

  • @victornunes900
    @victornunes900 Год назад +71

    A tip for the future Tom, there's no "ón" in Portuguese. If you see that, it's definitely Spanish.

    • @JovemEverton
      @JovemEverton Год назад +3

      E o amor pelo balón do pugilista Sampaoli?

    • @leod-sigefast
      @leod-sigefast Год назад +2

      Isn't it -ão in Portuguese?

    • @JovemEverton
      @JovemEverton Год назад +1

      @@leod-sigefast Yes.
      Nación - Nação
      Asunción - Assunção
      Polución - Poluição
      and so ón... it's a common ending for nouns.

    • @WilliamAndrea
      @WilliamAndrea Год назад +1

      @@JovemEverton and specifically, Atención - Atenção

    • @JovemEverton
      @JovemEverton Год назад

      @@WilliamAndrea only one T though

  • @Mayyde
    @Mayyde Год назад +32

    9:45 Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women is actually a huge problem here in Canada. There's been a lack of government consideration over the issue, and most action against it is ignored by many because of absolute horrible reasoning like "they're just savages, was bound to happen" and so on
    As an indigenous person myself, it's genuinely terrifying

    • @shipwreck9146
      @shipwreck9146 Год назад

      It is genocide. Totally fucked that this is still happening.

    • @darkraven8103
      @darkraven8103 Год назад +1

      It is being mostly done by Indigenous men though that's why they can't say or do much about it because people would just call them racist or something.

    • @Mayyde
      @Mayyde Год назад +5

      ​@@darkraven8103 the problem happens a lot in large cities. Thunder Bay specifically has an incredibly high rate of crimes against indigenous people. Don't ever try to tell me that the men of our culture are the ones "mostly" behind this. That's dismissive and doesn't take into account any facts. Indigenous women disappear simply because of the fetishization of indigenous women. These are my sisters, aunties, and cousins. Don't play on the stereotypes and garbage you read on Twitter, it's plainly racist and absolutely ignorant to just pin the blame on "natives do that to other natives so it's whatever.".

  • @microcolonel
    @microcolonel Год назад +15

    The thing about the one in BC is that you can tell it's not America because of the length of the line segments in the road markings. Canadian road markings are very similarly specified, but some details like that are different. Having lived in both countries I could feel that it was not an American road.

  • @Pandametal_
    @Pandametal_ Год назад +13

    I think either you or the mapmaker got the wrong Maillé, the one where the massacre happened is a bit more north, south of Tours.
    I grew up near it, and got to visit the memorial there as a school trip. We talked with an old lady who lost several family members this day, while she was luckily out of town. Pretty striking experience.

  • @Cory_Springer
    @Cory_Springer Год назад +24

    I'm going to a wedding in Blackduck, Minnesota next month lol.
    I'll let you know if the menacing black duck is still ravaging the area, Tom.
    And congrats!

    • @CaraCreations1000
      @CaraCreations1000 7 месяцев назад +1

      so? any updates on the black duck?

    • @bennyboy7513
      @bennyboy7513 7 месяцев назад +3

      I assume the menacing black duck was deadly

  • @MoccasinAssassin
    @MoccasinAssassin Год назад +299

    Congrats on the marriage! ❤
    As a Dundonian, the shitty centre is accurate. 😂

    • @rhurieg
      @rhurieg Год назад +12

      As a fellow Dundonian, I concur

    • @Tam_Mullen93
      @Tam_Mullen93 Год назад +8

      As someone about 15 mins up the coast from Dundee, I also agree 😂

    • @fegoru
      @fegoru Год назад +10

      I've never been to Dundee (just saw the map in this video) and I don't disagree.

    • @leod-sigefast
      @leod-sigefast Год назад

      Yeah, but you've got a cool Desperate Dan Statue there!

    • @petemitchell9996
      @petemitchell9996 Год назад +4

      I'm at least 1200 miles away from Dundee but you're right

  • @RobynWilson23
    @RobynWilson23 Год назад +30

    The Tay Rail Bridge Disaster is something I actually have a connection too. After doing some family reasearch I found out that my 3*great uncle actually died in the disaster whilst travelling home after visiting family for Christmas. Also the foster care agency with which I had my first foster home through was actually set up after the disaster to care for and rehome those orphaned by the disaster.

  • @vigridr7614
    @vigridr7614 Год назад +7

    I have fairly obsessively researched the Highway of Tears for a long time and that is absolutely what #2 is referring to. It is a very interesting and harrowing subject, with a few decent documentaries about it on youtube. Lots of good material out on it in general.

  • @klausklaus9552
    @klausklaus9552 Год назад +7

    Adding to the second location, the yellowhead highway: not only is this road part of the highway of tears, it was also constructed by canadian-japanese people who were stripped of their rights, forcibly relocated into internment camps in british coloumbia and forced to work after the attacks on pearl harbour. Most of the 22.000 people who were stripped of their property and freedom were Canadians by birth, targeted because of their ancestry.

  • @BrynDaviesGoogle
    @BrynDaviesGoogle Год назад +24

    Congrats Tom and Verity! Hope youre having an awesome time 👍👍👍

  • @wilko871
    @wilko871 Год назад +11

    I'd like to let you know that you're the only creator who's videos I watch right away. Such simple ideas, but executed with humour and character. You're like an old friend. My favorites were the Wales trips. The farmer chasing you, and you running away apologising, cracks me up!
    Keep up the amazing work mate. You really do deserve the rewards.

    • @cvkline
      @cvkline Год назад +4

      That must have been terrifying, being chased by that farmer, but the farmer had one of the best lines in the video series.
      Running away from the farmer, repeatedly saying "We're sorry! Sorry! I'm sorry! We're so sorry!"
      Farmer: "You WILL BE fucking sorry when I get me hands on you!"

    • @wilko871
      @wilko871 Год назад +6

      @@cvkline Honestly it's one of the best impromptu comedy moments RUclips has ever seen. It's the build up. How terrified he is every time he nears a farm 😂 Reminds me of playing pranks on people as kids. Also hilarious in Birmingham recently on a building site.
      I'm a land surveyor, so this channel is basically my life 😅 Fighting through brambles, looking at Google Maps.

  • @CurtsXbox
    @CurtsXbox Год назад +25

    You just can’t beat a bonus tragedy to start the vid, cheers Tom!

  • @Charlie_Ses
    @Charlie_Ses Год назад +2

    Lol. Tom's deadpan delivery when talking about tragedy, interspersed by moments of levity at his score makes this video!
    7:12 "I don't know how that must have been for the people on the train, the water would have been freezing, it would have been an icy....well they would have drowned, probably.
    Lovely! On the plus side we've got a decent score to be sending us on our way!"
    😂😂😂

  • @brendangarske553
    @brendangarske553 Год назад +3

    25,000 tons of dead fish is astronomical. That amount would last the entire population of Japan, the biggest fish eaters in the world, 3 whole days.

  • @LyleH45
    @LyleH45 Год назад +2

    The original Texas City ship explosion had about 2,300 tons of Ammonium Nitrate. The 2020 Beirut explosion had about 2750 tons for comparison. Texas City of course had more explosions after the initial one. The Oklahoma City Bombing had a much smaller 4800 pounds for those wondering.

  • @Amalunatic
    @Amalunatic Год назад +5

    This is probably my favorite map / series at this moment. It's so interesting to learn about this! Granted, I do love history so even the morbid history fascinates me. Thank you for these!

  • @AnRuixuan
    @AnRuixuan Год назад +8

    I love this new series. Always really interesting to learn about some tragic incidents that may not be covered in media or history books.

  • @jamiebellingerphoto
    @jamiebellingerphoto Год назад +56

    The Texas City event is referenced in the new Oppenheimer film. Well timed release, Tom!

    • @swaree
      @swaree Год назад +13

      also some part of the Aznalcóllar case got a verdict just days ago

    • @almightysosa3007
      @almightysosa3007 Год назад +14

      Think that was actually the Halifax explosion.

  • @Hailerer2602
    @Hailerer2602 Год назад +264

    Now that Germany has finaly got propper Google Maps coverage, will you do a Germany Geoguessr or two soon?

    • @Schulzenberger
      @Schulzenberger Год назад +22

      I second that, came here to say that!

    • @YeeSoest
      @YeeSoest Год назад +6

      Können auch Deutsche mit weniger klischeehaften Usernamen hier mal unterschreiben?😅

    • @RoderikPlas
      @RoderikPlas Год назад +2

      Since when? I haven't noticed yet. Was it today?

    • @nicktankard1244
      @nicktankard1244 Год назад +9

      oh nice didn't know that happened. I left Germany 1.5 years ago. Just looked at the street I used to live in Berlin. Pretty cool but looks like the removed the old 2008 footage which is a bummer. It was really cool to see the difference between 2008 and 2019-2022 while I lived there. Berlin changed a lot in that period and half of the building on the street I lived on didn't exist in 2008.

    • @clayroberts2951
      @clayroberts2951 Год назад +1

      Oh what, did they add a new update? I haven’t checked in like a month?

  • @unicorntulkas
    @unicorntulkas Год назад +6

    "I can't see anyone that died, how disappointing" ~Tom

  • @YPOC
    @YPOC Год назад +39

    Hey Tom, if you update OBS you'll get a very handy little notification in your task bar when you're recording. Makes it super easy to spot!

    • @Rebecca-fw3vm
      @Rebecca-fw3vm Год назад +6

      but then we don't get the 'are we recording' !

  • @aaronbieberdorf4604
    @aaronbieberdorf4604 9 месяцев назад +2

    Hey, Tom! I actually live close to Blackduck (I'm from Bemidji, MN). You know, having a ravenous big, black duck attack the town would be way more interesting than actually visiting there. There's a giant duck statute in the middle of town but that's all they have

    • @TJForehand
      @TJForehand 6 месяцев назад +1

      Sounds like Ravenden, Arkansas, where they have a goofy looking (demonic) raven statue. Some locals have tried to destroy it only for other locals (whom apparently love it) to repair it.

  • @Corzicant
    @Corzicant Год назад +2

    Great job, you got me this time. My final score was 17,619 (thanks, Canada...). Although I did find the 5ks in Dundee and Texas.
    A note about the Texas round: Apart from being the site of the deadliest industrial accident in US history, that region is also the site of the deadliest natural disaster in US history-- the Galveston Hurricane of 1900, which leveled the city of Galveston and killed 6,000 to 12,000 people. And the 2005 BP explosion (15 killed, 180 injured). And more widespread devastation during Hurricane Ike in 2008. In short, the Galveston-Texas City area has been absolutely plagued by disaster.

    • @CallieMasters5000
      @CallieMasters5000 Год назад +1

      Yeah, we live on the edge of destruction but there are good times too.

  • @flippert0
    @flippert0 Месяц назад

    German novelist and poet Theodor Fontane was a lifelong anglophile and wrote many ballads touching on British and Scottish history. One ballad was 'Die Brück am Tay' (bridge over the tay), which tackles that disaster. When I was in school (long time ago), all kids were compelled to learn this ballad.

  • @whatanoob96
    @whatanoob96 Год назад +10

    In the Texas City disaster the name of that chemical seemed familiar and yep, turns out it was also Ammonium Nitrate that exploded in Beirut in 2020.
    The one in Beirut was 2750 metric tons vs 2100 for the Texas one (76%), but in the latter that was only the initial explosion.
    Good lord, that must have looked like hell...

    • @jonc4712
      @jonc4712 Год назад

      Beirut also came to my mind almost immediately after texas City came up on the map after he made his guess.

    • @shipwreck9146
      @shipwreck9146 Год назад

      I caught that too, and looked at the wikipedia page for Ammonium Nitrate.
      Turns out, there have actually been 4 very large explosions due to this chemical, each killed hundreds of people. Also, "relatively minor incidents occur most years."
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonium_nitrate#Disasters

  • @Lueluekopter
    @Lueluekopter Год назад +8

    "no one died, how disappointing" - GeoWizard 2023 😅

  • @DoesThisWork888
    @DoesThisWork888 Год назад +14

    ''Well they would've drowned, probably. Lovely''
    - Tom

    • @TheGhostOfFredZeppelin
      @TheGhostOfFredZeppelin Год назад +4

      Also the "but I can't see anyone that died, how disappointing" on the last one

  • @MozzaBallBill
    @MozzaBallBill Год назад +4

    "imagine being that last guy, i'd have been handing in my notice" 😂 he didnt have anyone to hand it to Tom

  • @ramonjakobs
    @ramonjakobs Месяц назад +1

    Little late to the party but Uncle Lucius wrote a great song about the Texas City disaster called "Keep the Wolves Away", where he sings about his father who was severely injured but luckily survived in the end

  • @Azer182x
    @Azer182x Год назад +7

    Ooooh the Madeline McCann stuff was risky 😂
    Great video yet again. I like that the disasters aren't super obvious

    • @KKamm
      @KKamm Год назад +1

      it actually prompted me into doing a google search. Was interesting to see all the new developments from the last couple months

  • @DarrinRigo
    @DarrinRigo Год назад +4

    So weird seeing Tom talking about Northern BC! I live in that area. I would say you're likely correct on the Highway of Tears being the reference - it's an awful and ongoing tragedy of our region. Having grown up out here, I'm not aware of anything else it could be along that strip of highway. Also - just a quick note - that wasn't fog, it was wildfire smoke.

  • @DemonzSlayer49
    @DemonzSlayer49 Год назад +6

    Congratulations, tom! I hope you and verity live a very happy life together :D

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus Год назад +2

    As a British Rail-fan, I knew the catastrophe on the first round almost immediately after the picture loaded! Great video Tom

  • @Empathyz
    @Empathyz Год назад +10

    Tom: "Just an.. Insane series of explosions, this is"
    Tom: "Cool!"

  • @Chilledinho
    @Chilledinho Год назад +3

    Highway 16 was definitely relating to The Highway of Tears. I’ve done a lot of reading into and there isn’t too many specific incidents that you could use because of how of the people who die there, are never found.

  • @dipgrizzly25
    @dipgrizzly25 Год назад +1

    Man went in on Dundee😂 "What happened here? Did some locals escape?"🤣

  • @queenyblahblah
    @queenyblahblah Год назад +15

    It's funny, i only just started watching your videos because of the first part of the disturbing places series, and then all of a sudden the first round of this episode's game i instantly recognised it as a bridge i cross regularly! I had no idea about the disaster, but then again i'm not from the city and only moved there in 2016. I often get a weird feeling whenever going over it but that's just because i'm not a fan of crossing bridges over water.
    What a way to learn about local history.

    • @queenyblahblah
      @queenyblahblah Год назад +1

      (if this looks worded strangely i deliberately wrote it as to not spoil anything in the video)

  • @siirimakinen3312
    @siirimakinen3312 Год назад +2

    3:20 "because that's obviously going into Dundee... shitty cent- city centre 🙄" THIS CRACKS ME UP EVERY TIME

  • @Cayde-13
    @Cayde-13 Год назад +12

    Congrats on the wedding Tom! I hope the camera was recording!

  • @wizard0078
    @wizard0078 Год назад +3

    7:24 ''Lovely'' And 19:27 ''cool'' And 23:05 ''How disappointing'' 💀He really likes it when people die, damn

  • @johnthebomb06
    @johnthebomb06 Год назад +2

    Tom + Geoguessr + learning about history. Love these videos!

  • @martynazawadzka3882
    @martynazawadzka3882 Год назад +2

    I loved how you backed out of the McCann situation. But I agree. 1000%. Wish you continued 😂

  • @houba8222
    @houba8222 Год назад +1

    I laughed out loud, when I imagined how he must have looked after saying "are we recording?" xD

  • @ashleyfox3037
    @ashleyfox3037 Год назад +1

    That Texas one was nuts, it said the ships anchor got blew 1.6 miles away from the original explosion, thats insane

  • @graemewatson6896
    @graemewatson6896 Год назад +2

    Me and the missus are massive fans Tom. We live under the Tay Rail bridge and couldn't believe your first location was in front of our house 😂 keep up the great work!!

  • @Yamthief
    @Yamthief Год назад +1

    These are all fascinating. What an interesting way to learn about some horrific incidents! Keep 'em coming.

  • @MitchCyan
    @MitchCyan Год назад +9

    Dundee’s mere existence is a tragedy.

  • @flawed1
    @flawed1 Год назад +5

    Texas City is my hometown. We learned the disaster in school I sometimes forget it’s international news. That long road you saw is the Texas City dike. It’s made of earth and rock. It mean purpose is to keep the ship channel from filling in with silt
    …. absolutely crazy to see my little hometown on your channel

  • @Darkstar2342
    @Darkstar2342 Год назад +3

    There's a rather famous German poem by Theodor Fontane about the Tay Bridge disaster which was written only days after the incident and draws some motifs from Shakespeare's Macbeth. We learned about it at school so I immediately knew what happened there

  • @siccodierdorp6947
    @siccodierdorp6947 Год назад +4

    If you want to expand your knowledge, there are great channels on disasters on YT, such as 'the ravens eye' and 'fascinating horror'. It taught me enough to immideately recognise the Texas City one.
    The bizarre thing I remembered form the Tay Brigde disaster story is that they took time, money and effort to salvage the locomotive of that train and bring it back to service. Shows what was really important in the 19th century: machines over men.

    • @cdw2468
      @cdw2468 Год назад +1

      and what’s more important now i’d say

    • @jwnomad
      @jwnomad Год назад

      I don't know how to break this to you, but... if you take the same time, money and effort to salvage the bodies they won't run as men again no matter how hard you try

    • @chdreturns
      @chdreturns Год назад

      My old Podcast Channel of Catastrophe would work too, as well as the All Bad Things podcast (be warned they do get quite political on their podcast).

  • @BakaTaco
    @BakaTaco Год назад +14

    This was a bit of an odd video to discover that Tom is now married.
    Congratulations, you deserve it mate! All the best for the future, be it with your wife, your outdoors adventures or your Geoguessr scores.
    Been a fan for quite some time now, and I love all of your content.
    Congratulations again to you and the missus!

    • @leob4403
      @leob4403 6 месяцев назад

      Tommie married Varsity

    • @BakaTaco
      @BakaTaco 6 месяцев назад

      @@leob4403 Verity, and yeah, I guess he would marry his girlfriend, wouldn't he? haha

  • @v0ldy54
    @v0ldy54 Год назад +1

    5:00 we all know that story well in Italy, the dam incredibly is actually still standing and it's the one you see in the photo, what actually happened is that a big chunk of mountain collapsed into the artificial lake and that's what caused the wave that went over the dam and flooded the valley.

  • @shipwreck9146
    @shipwreck9146 Год назад +1

    This map satisfies my morbid curiosity, and I love watching it played. Good stuff :)

  • @Seruphin
    @Seruphin Год назад +3

    There was also a Texas City Refinery Explosion in 2005, you can see the result come up as Tom googles it, it was a couple blocks to the left on that map. Only 15 workers died though sorry Tom.

  • @flzrian3623
    @flzrian3623 Год назад +1

    funny how as a German I know all about the Tay River Disaster because a ballad about it by Theodor Fontane is standard lecture in school here

  • @SadCoffeeee
    @SadCoffeeee Год назад +1

    Congrats and enjoy the honeymoon! As exciting as the adventures are, I started watching you for geoguessr, and still very much enjoy these

  • @Fluteorwrite
    @Fluteorwrite 11 месяцев назад

    The Highway of Tears being on there definitely made my heart drop. Growing up I would hear about it a lot and we even learned about it in school. It wasn't until I was much older that I found out one of the victims was the sister of one of my dad's closest friends.

  • @paveltrifonov
    @paveltrifonov 10 месяцев назад

    As an Andalusian person, I can say that the Aznacóllar disaster could have been avoided: two years before, an expert who worked at the dam said that it was cracking and the toxic fluid could reach the river.
    By the way, Tom, if you see a green square sign like the one at 19:38 in a map (with that green bar to the left), you can tell you are in Andalusia. It is a sign of the autonomous government that says that site is legally protected because of its environmental values -that's why the disaster was so strong, because the toxic fluids river almost entered into Doñana, the most famous national park in Spain-.

  • @nnm2440
    @nnm2440 Год назад +1

    23:01 "But i can't see anyone that died. How disappointing"

  • @trippydrew8492
    @trippydrew8492 Год назад +2

    This is a very fascinating series. Full of new information to learn and made easy to digest by yourself! 😁

  • @Ironfranko
    @Ironfranko Год назад

    I am from not far away from Vajont. It happened so many years ago, and yet it is very well known and remembered by the population. The dam is still there, strong as it could be, what happened is that a piece of mountain dropped into the artificial lake, creating a tsunami-like wave over the city that was just below the dam.

  • @brothasphoenixbruh5801
    @brothasphoenixbruh5801 7 месяцев назад +1

    The Vijont dam didnt actually collapse, but a Mountain collapsed into the lake created by the dam (the dam was actually built 15m above the initial Plan and It wistanded the force of a 200m wave too on top of that, It was actually really well built)

  • @EnbyEl
    @EnbyEl Год назад

    Omg, I got the first one in _seconds_ ! Thanks for the 7th Grade poem lesson unit on Theodor Fontane's "Brück' am Tay" 🙈
    How I still remember lines from this ballad after 10 years I have no clue...

  • @benedictschofield4936
    @benedictschofield4936 Год назад +2

    Tom embodies Alan Partridge so many times this video 😂

  • @lost4468yt
    @lost4468yt Год назад +1

    Given the Canadian one was near a power plant or substation, I thought it'd have been the infamous "Starlight Tours". If you don't know about it Tom, then I'd suggest you do some heavy research into Canada's treatment of the natives, especially the residential school systems, which was essentially a form of genocide against the natives, especially their children. It's crazy because while the US's history and ongoing treatment is well known all over the world, while Canada has somehow managed to mask itself and even holds some sort of status as being a nation with an upstanding moral character - which couldn't be further from the truth. In just 2020 and unmarked grave of 215 indigenous children was found at one of these residential schools. And one of the worst things is Canada kept this going far longer than the US. Forced sterilisation of indigenous women was well documented and common up until the 1970s, and recently there has been people coming forward suggesting it kept happening until 2017 - fucking 2017. Furthermore more than 4000 indigenous women have gone missing over the past 30 years, and the issue is still all but ignored.
    And Canada has only very recently started teaching about the residential school systems in high school. In fact polling has shown that the majority of Canadians were ignorant of it up until very recently.
    And it's not hard to find people who will claim that starlight tours still happen to this day. And the RCMP is still extremely racist to this day.
    This comment barely touches on it by the way.

  • @keeganmcmahon8252
    @keeganmcmahon8252 Год назад

    At first when it was in Texas City, I immediately thought the the 2005 refinery explosion, then that feeling of "no, something bigger happpened" and then I remembered.

  • @Toyota--Camry
    @Toyota--Camry 10 месяцев назад

    One of the anchors from the SS Grandcamp was found 2 and a half kilometers away from the explosion.
    It weighed 2 tons.
    And amazingly that explosion wasn’t as big as the one from the High Flyer. I was talking with my dad about it for hours the night before the explosion in Beirut.

  • @ChokyoDK
    @ChokyoDK Год назад +2

    Geography and history combined. What's not to like.

  • @tysonsmith1120
    @tysonsmith1120 Год назад

    I thought I had a chance till you immediately zoomed in on the exact location for the first round. You really are a geo-wizard.

  • @hippohippo9344
    @hippohippo9344 8 месяцев назад +1

    Can you continue this series on this geoguesser map? I found it very interesting and different. May all those people who died in those tragic events rest in peace.

  • @jameso9221
    @jameso9221 Год назад

    "I'd be handing in my notice quickly" ye tom for your voluntary job ahaha. Love the vid as always

  • @Groggers96
    @Groggers96 Год назад +1

    "Dundee shitty center."
    *Eeryone from Dundee angrily nods in agreement.*

  • @cutegrassy
    @cutegrassy Год назад

    Really happy to see this map again

  • @dhanushivan
    @dhanushivan Год назад +2

    3:20 "Shitty centre" 😂 Interchangeable term if you ask me.

  • @JamesBeaucoup
    @JamesBeaucoup Год назад +5

    Sounds like Verity is on this mission for the long haul now! Congratulations!