Were Any Myths Deemed Too Simple to Test on MythBusters?

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  • Опубликовано: 2 янв 2021
  • Tested member Morgan Crisp asks Adam, "Are there any MythBusters myths that countered laws of physics that were dismissed for being too simple? Or myths too simple for testing?" Thank you, Morgan, for your question and support (and sorry, everyone, for the ambient noise)! Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks, like asking Adam a question:
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Комментарии • 4,4 тыс.

  • @tested
    @tested  3 года назад +340

    Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks, like asking Adam a question:
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    • @RailPreserver2K
      @RailPreserver2K 3 года назад +3

      I'm pretty sure I'm not the first to say this but I'll say it anyway, I think MythBusters will be what you're most remembered for because you and the others touched and changed so many lives whether it be those on the show or those who watched it from its beginning all the way to the end.

    • @Sam-bd3qr
      @Sam-bd3qr 3 года назад

      Dare you test Dr.Judy Wood and her book "Where did the towers go?"

    • @Digitalhunny
      @Digitalhunny 3 года назад +1

      Your chair sounds like a barking dog! 😂 Lub it up, eh?!

    • @DetroitMicroSound
      @DetroitMicroSound 3 года назад +2

      The bomb detecting device reminds me of our American government as a whole, with it's corporate masters. So man, what about a new internet media based Myth Busters? I think it would be a hit all over again!!!! ❤ (Btw, having lost The Amazing Randi not long ago, reminded me the world could sure use a few more to help expose charlatans OF ALL KINDS....)

    • @Digitalhunny
      @Digitalhunny 3 года назад +3

      @@DetroitMicroSound - Can I give you a mind blowing conspiracy theory? What if... that 'bomb detecting device' was just a 'prop' the company used? You know as a front when they laundered money or sold government secrets, to militaries over seas? 🤯 Enjoy you day! 🤗🇨🇦

  • @glitchy8429
    @glitchy8429 Месяц назад +80

    My theory on dowsing is that finding water for wells in early times was a good paying trade, and dowsers likely had a good understanding of what geological features to look for, but kept that to themselves by using some bogus technique that couldn’t be replicated in order to guard their trade. It’s obvious that it fooled many people, so no surprise that the technique spiraled out of control from there.

    • @daniwalmsley611
      @daniwalmsley611 2 дня назад +5

      I like this idea, it could also come from charlatans and people seeing them do it and trying to replicate it themselves and in doing so end up learning how to read the geography subconsciously

  • @jocax188723
    @jocax188723 3 года назад +6986

    Quick note: The inventor of the dowsing bomb detector, James McCormick, was sent to 10 years in jail for fraud in 2013.

    • @KsanUwU
      @KsanUwU 3 года назад +488

      Not enough...

    • @jocax188723
      @jocax188723 3 года назад +113

      @@KsanUwU I’m of the opinion he should be dropped into an active minefield with his own products, but apparently that’s not legal.

    • @dampdoily
      @dampdoily 3 года назад +177

      @@jocax188723 surely the onus of proof should be on regulatory bodies and not the inventor. buyer beware is codified in law and millions of products don't do what they claim.

    • @janzy58
      @janzy58 3 года назад +751

      @@dampdoily It was incredibly naive of the people who bought them, but buyer beware?! What a load of crap.

    • @dampdoily
      @dampdoily 3 года назад +22

      @@janzy58 Caveat emptor

  • @EricLinstone
    @EricLinstone 3 года назад +2835

    There was an episode of Mythbusters where they tested the myth that poppy seeds can cause you to fail opiate drug tests. And what they found out was that the tests were bad and that the companies that make them lobby hard to keep them in use. Even though they can send innocent people to jail.

    • @halcyonacoustic7366
      @halcyonacoustic7366 9 месяцев назад

      In the same category is lie detector tests. Its effectiveness is practically within the margin of error.

    • @undeniablySomeGuy
      @undeniablySomeGuy 8 месяцев назад +204

      eyyy only my favorite capitalism

    • @michaelc.4321
      @michaelc.4321 8 месяцев назад +49

      Drug tests pretty much will never get you any criminal charges. You might lose your job but you’ll almost certainly never go to jail lmao

    • @habitcresvna559
      @habitcresvna559 8 месяцев назад +514

      @@michaelc.4321if you’re on probation and fail one, yes, you will.

    • @Zack_Wester
      @Zack_Wester 8 месяцев назад +23

      wasn´t that a problem whit that there you are supposed to do two tests.
      one is super sensitive and will trigger if you eat enouth poppy seeds. and one that requires a actual amount. I call them light (trigger on poppy seed) and heavy (only trigger on a serious amount)
      the ide been you do both tests. if the light test triggers but not the other.. ignore not enouth to be conclusive on).
      if the Heavy test triggers but not the light one... something went wrong do it again.
      if Both trigger (not you can be sure).
      that or cops would just read the light one that on the box state dont only read the light test as it can be triggered by room stuff. and its more to use for calibration of the test room and so on.

  • @justageneraluser
    @justageneraluser Год назад +374

    Adam: "No one ever wants to ask about my lecture on dowsing but this question is close enough and I'm taking this opportunity."

    • @EpicNerdsWithCameras
      @EpicNerdsWithCameras Год назад +10

      This might be the best "Nobody asked, but..." video I've ever seen on this site.

    • @billeastwood597
      @billeastwood597 13 дней назад +4

      still fucking interesting though

  • @iainmcculloch5807
    @iainmcculloch5807 3 года назад +3833

    "I'm done being mad. No, I'm not done being mad, I'm just done being mad on camera!"
    I can really empathise with that.

    • @xNothing2Lose
      @xNothing2Lose 3 года назад +58

      Classic Savage honesty.
      That's what I am here for

    • @pobvic
      @pobvic 3 года назад +32

      He can walk 3 paces, pick up a hammer and beat on something until he feels better, that must be carthartic.

    • @mattlane2282
      @mattlane2282 3 года назад +1

      He is mad right... how do people go to sleep blah blah... um, what about those at the FOB, invaders in another country... killing people in their own country... Just picture russia having military bases in the USA... and making threats to kill and killing US civilians... LOL okay... well that is what the USA does all over the world... GOOD JOB to those guys getting millions and millions for a device that does not work... maybe the gov should oh idk... test shit first?

    • @ThePhrog714
      @ThePhrog714 3 года назад +19

      @@mattlane2282 huh

    • @theworstmaid
      @theworstmaid 3 года назад +15

      @@ThePhrog714 this happens in youtube comments way too often

  • @flyingskyward2153
    @flyingskyward2153 3 года назад +2763

    I still remember an interview with a dowser, he claimed that he had a 90% success rate and literally the next sentence he said there was water under 95% of the land around here.

    • @pulaski1
      @pulaski1 3 года назад +80

      Every home in the subdiv where I live has a well. Lots are all an acre or more, up to as much as 20 acres, but 2 acres is about the mean and 1.1 acres is modal - but _every_ house in the subdiv has water. The depth of the well varies, but not the fact that across the entire subdiv you can drill a well and in little as 70ft, and I doubt more than 300ft, find enough water to supply a home.

    • @frozenepsilon5295
      @frozenepsilon5295 3 года назад +305

      So therefore he had a lower than average success rate of finding water.

    • @slithra227
      @slithra227 3 года назад +34

      Honestly after growing up in swamp land where that water would regularly flood out into the street, I believe it 100%

    • @IT-kone
      @IT-kone 3 года назад +142

      It's no wonder dowsing culture exists only in places, where it's easy to find water. There's practically no dowsing culture in arid and dry places like middle east.

    • @reciprocating_popcorn_blade
      @reciprocating_popcorn_blade 3 года назад +58

      I mean, ground water is were most of the earth's fresh water is, something like 99% of freshwater is ground water. Dig deep enough, pretty much anywhere, probably even in a desert and you'll hit water.

  • @SamZinski
    @SamZinski 2 года назад +823

    I bet Jamie is very glad that Adam's so willing to talk about Mythbusters this much, just for his own sake

    • @BariumCobaltNitrog3n
      @BariumCobaltNitrog3n 8 месяцев назад +71

      Jamie and very glad do not appear in any sentences. That is not something that happens. He does not fear talking he just doesn't do it.

    • @OriginalContent89
      @OriginalContent89 8 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@reklezzz9038Was this guy's name Heisenberg?

    • @TheRealForgetfulElephant
      @TheRealForgetfulElephant 8 месяцев назад +53

      @@reklezzz9038Waltah stop telling people about your meth empire on RUclips

    • @hugsforastarion
      @hugsforastarion 7 месяцев назад

      @@reklezzz9038 Eyo do drugs if you need to but dont sell em. That's kinda evil of you homie.

    • @2e826
      @2e826 7 месяцев назад

      @@reklezzz9038silent bobs a good guy man

  • @gildedbear5355
    @gildedbear5355 9 месяцев назад +19

    On dowsing: It is SUPER important to understand that there is subterranean water almost EVERYWHERE on land. Even if the surface is arid and has no rivers or streams. It's not everywhere, but in general the question is not "is there water" but rather "how deep is the water and how easy is it to get to" (also, "what's the refill rate" but we can leave that aside for this).
    That means that anywhere a dowser says there is water will likely have water even if the dowser is just guessing.
    That being said. There ARE signals on the surface that there is shallow water. The color of leaves/grass, the mix of plants, the smell in the air, the softness of the ground, that area always stays muddier than the surrounding area, the temperature of the ground, maybe even the insect activity. The human mind is capable of knowing things without even REALIZING that it knows those things. (did you know that there is a correct order for adjectives in English (actually, not just English, but you're reading this in English so we'll keep it as that)? Were you ever taught that in school? Doesn't "big red ball" sound more correct than "red big ball"? weird that you can know a thing without realizing that you know it, right?)
    It's entirely possible that the HONEST dowsers (the ones who have some level of success and truly believe) just have knowledge of how to read the terrain without realizing that they know how to read it. Of course, then there are also the dowsers that just work in an area that has a lot of shallow water so they get lucky all the time. Then there are the ones that play the part, but don't believe, and so check hydrological maps before they dowse. And then there are the ones who don't believe and are fully aware that they are just taking people's money.
    The human brain is a pattern matching and story telling machine. But it doesn't really concern itself with whether those patterns that it finds or stories that it tells are real or not.
    Trust the person who can say WHY there should be shallow water at that spot, rather than the person who says it's there because of sticks.

    • @DangerVA
      @DangerVA 16 дней назад

      This deserves more likes, this explanantion is great

  • @tomwileman7619
    @tomwileman7619 3 года назад +5024

    If you point the sticks in one direction there will be water in that direction at some point just gotta walk further 😂

    • @cavemanvi
      @cavemanvi 3 года назад +49

      @@davidcarter2368 so the bomb one has to be a moving bomb that makes sense why it didn’t work

    • @SweetChuckPi
      @SweetChuckPi 3 года назад +142

      @@davidcarter2368 Oh please, any magnetic field created by moving water even on the scale of the Mississippi river would be so monumentally tiny it would completely undetectable against the earth's own magnetic field and it's variations.

    • @nukeout
      @nukeout 3 года назад +2

      .. or bomb 💣

    • @socks876
      @socks876 3 года назад +48

      @@davidcarter2368 moving water doesn't create a magnetic field...

    • @brly4542
      @brly4542 3 года назад +7

      @@davidcarter2368 agreed the water or even electricity had to be flowing, something to do with the magnetic field created by following water/electrons. I found an old septic line (solid copper) and an old electrical line that was still live at a property I bought, neither me or the previous owner new it was there. I was dowsing to track a known well line when I find them

  • @mistertwister2000
    @mistertwister2000 3 года назад +7192

    “Were any myths deemed too simple for Mythbusters?”
    *No, but let me tell you all about these bullshit dowsing rods*
    Edit: Adam made a WHOLE VIDEO about how dowsing is BS and why, yet there are still a bunch of you trying your damndest to convince us it’s real. It would be funny if it wasn’t so sad.

    • @katiecat9353
      @katiecat9353 3 года назад +160

      He's worse than Michael Stevens when it comes to tangents

    • @mats852
      @mats852 3 года назад +132

      If it was a simple myth, they knew how to build around that, and most of the time it was the trio that got those myths and did a fantastic job.

    • @mikemiller5637
      @mikemiller5637 3 года назад +1

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @apinajakorillakaveli
      @apinajakorillakaveli 3 года назад +81

      But it wasnt a SIMPLE myth. If someone says it works and "really" works for them it becomes problematic to prove wrong. It leaves so much to user: "you didnt hold the stick right" "you didnt have sun over your head" or whatever.

    • @myrrhfortheroad
      @myrrhfortheroad 3 года назад +96

      Well, the question was kind of two-fold. Morgan asked if there were any myths that were too simple, but they also asked if there were any myths that “broke the laws of physics” that they didn’t do. He answered both sides, the first being “not really” and the second being the rod story.

  • @mattjohns3394
    @mattjohns3394 Год назад +196

    The pyramid thing comes from a scientific journal in the 60's or 70's that ran a pyramid power article on April FIRST one year.

    • @lucyferos205
      @lucyferos205 Год назад

      A lot of the people who buy into that suffer from an actual pathological inability to distinguish fact from fiction. That group of people has a much higher rate of schizotypal, schizoaffective, and schizophrenic people than the average population. They aren't unintelligent. Just sick.

    • @dizzydial8081
      @dizzydial8081 Год назад +18

      Most video game myths and rumors came from magazines issued on April 1st.
      Something like that rarely happens anymore but it was fun talking about these dumb rumors in school.

    • @SavageGreywolf
      @SavageGreywolf Год назад +6

      "It's the day the internet gets on the internet to make fun of the internet" - Homestar Runner

  • @Gormathius
    @Gormathius Год назад +878

    4:06 This is my favourite part of this (tied with his outrage at charlatans knowingly endangering people with a false sense of security). Intuition is that weird outlier in types of intelligence that's often so hard to define it sometimes looks like magic.

    • @DeltaDanner
      @DeltaDanner Год назад +89

      It’s an explanation I had never considered. I’m in school for land management and I can tell you with a certain degree of certainty where to find water underground based on the terrain and vegetation. I don’t know why I never stopped to think that’s probably what these dowsers do too, wether they know it or not.

    • @jamescheddar4896
      @jamescheddar4896 Год назад +37

      yeah all the "dowsing rod" does is increase your sensory exposure. that's no small tool to have, but it's not detecting water, it's helping you feel the incline shifts of the terrain

    • @ImHeadshotSniper
      @ImHeadshotSniper Год назад +19

      @@jamescheddar4896 the dowsing rod does NOT increase your sensory exposure whatsoever. you can feel shifts in the terrain with your feet, and see it with your eyes.... explain to me exactly how waving a rod around in the AIR is helping you feel the TERRAIN? would holding out
      it is at best, providing the ILLUSION that it is helping you navigate the terrain, because you'd have to be impossibly sensitive to weight imbalances, almost like a high precision electric weight scale in order to actually detect whether the terrain was changing from a wand you're swinging around. you'd also have to swing the rod up and down in an EXACTLY precise frequency, otherwise, your own extra arm or body movements are causing the wand to move, which is then not at all the result of the terrain changing.
      in order for rod dowsing to be even a remotely accurate tool to measure differences in terrain, you would need all 3 of these things:
      1. the ability to detect impossibly small imbalances just as a highly precise electric scale does,
      2. the ability to impossibly precisely bounce a rod up and down at a perfectly even frequency, as to establish your "zero" for your rod sensing scale.
      3. the ability to actually sense these the delta difference in the rods bouncing weight relative to the scale "zero"d weight of your consistent rod swinging.
      you can google to find out that nobody has ever been demonstrated the ability to even remotely accurately guess the weights of things, and trust me, MANY people have claimed they could do so, and have failed trying.
      even if someone did have the ability to accurately judge weight by waving around a wand (which is an organic impossibility as far as i am concerned), it'd STILL be uncertain whether the swinging is actually detecting the terrain changing, or if it is being caused by small movements from the wrist, or from bouncing from walking, which would cause uneven shifts in weight regardless of the "terrain" you walk on. i think we can say that there's absolutely nothing scientific to support the idea that this rod assists in any way in finding water.

    • @AliceHearthrow
      @AliceHearthrow 8 месяцев назад +14

      @@ImHeadshotSniper I think you're attributing more to the ability of dowsing rods than James here is claiming. Like you're judging it on the scale of accuracy as a piece of scientific equipment, which quite rightly it isn't, but is that what is meant by "increase sensory exposure"? I don't think so
      The dowsing rod works on the same principles as a spirit in a bottle does. For those who don't know, a spirit in a bottle is a bottle with a small pendulum inside of it that you place in the middle of a table, where the participants will place their hands on top. You can then ask the group of participants yes and no questions, and the pendulum inside the bottle will change the way it is swinging to give you either a yes or a no, based on what the participants feel like the answer should be. Same principle as the ouija board.
      Obviously that's just a magic parlor trick, but it is based on an actual scientific effect called the ideomotor response. Without consciously making the exact movements in your hands that allows the pendulum to swing one way or the other, your mind will make your hands move in tiny imperceptible ways that travel through the table and the bottle and into the pendulum, giving you the answer that was already in your mind.
      Same with the dowsing rods. they can't make you feel or sense or give you an answer to anything that doesn't already exist in your mind, but it can help express those tiny things you're not even conscious of.

    • @ImHeadshotSniper
      @ImHeadshotSniper 8 месяцев назад

      @@AliceHearthrow i personally believe that when someone spells out a specific name on a Ouija board for example, that somebody is fully consciously directing the result.
      i'm not even convinced that less specific choices like the "yes, no, maybe" would be even remotely unconscious, since someone MUST consciously intend to move their hand in some direction, otherwise they wouldn't move anywhere and the Ouija would be boring, especially when asking a question suggests to the players that there should be an answer.
      i believe the same goes for essentially every ideomotor function actually.
      the wikipedia page says that ideomotor is a concept in hypnosis research which i think is bullshit, and honest hypnotist performers like SpideyHypnosis on youtube admit that you have to play along/act/role play for hypnosis to convince the audience that it "worked".
      if you're going to mention "medical" hypnosis like "memory regression" i would like to point out that what someone claims to suddenly remember might not necessarily be accurate, and could potentially even have been newly made up, possibly even caused by a suggestion from the hypnotizer.
      basically, i think the power of suggestion exists vaguely in the sense that if i suggest you to drink water and you're thirsty that you'll (likely) do it, but i don't think that it can help recover lost memories, or convince someone to instantly sleep.
      when i ride my bike, i can just "think" about turning left, and i go left. while i can pretend that was unconscious, it required my fully conscious intention to turn left.
      just because i didn't catch myself making the incredibly small imperceptible motions i had to in order to make to turn me left on my bike, doesn't mean that i didn't consciously choose to do them.
      edit: i think it's important to clarify that i don't mean to imply that the unconscious mind doesn't exist, though i do realise it might seem like i'm saying that. i just don't believe that dowsing (the entertainer consciously going where they choose), and ouija moving are actually unconscious. -----
      ------ i think unconscious things would be for example, the causal determination of a conscious decision to want to choose to turn left, or to choose to tell people that you can detect water with a special rod when you consciously know that you're not entirely sure yourself that the rod does anything.
      now when it comes to dowsing, i don't think it is even remotely plausible for someone to actually judge imperceptive differences (like the ones i make when i "unconsciously" turn my bike left) in the ground level effecting a rod, while they move around to deduce the location of water based on these effects on the rod they definitely can't feel whatsoever.
      we must be careful not to conclude that just because a person who found water has a dowsing rod in their hand, does not necessarily mean the rod was any help whatsoever in finding it.
      to me, a functioning dowsing rod would lead any trainable person directly to water without the need of ideomotor b.s. to help them.

  • @Alia-bc3rc
    @Alia-bc3rc 3 года назад +1980

    I just realized the nature of Mythbusters that doesn't try to appease their ego by damning other people is one of the reason that makes the show so endearing to me.

    • @sondosoft4603
      @sondosoft4603 3 года назад +67

      You’re totally right, it’s lovely to have a good side. But I think the flip side, Penn & Teller Bullshit is probably the best example as other commenters have mentioned is equally beneficial. Charlatans deserve no respect.

    • @SievertSchreiber
      @SievertSchreiber 3 года назад +3

      Agree!

    • @notfeedynotlazy
      @notfeedynotlazy 3 года назад +58

      @@sondosoft4603 You would be surprised to know, there are people who _honestly_ think they are dowsers - because they _do_ find water. Nothing magic here, it's a simple ideomotor response (TL;DR: the dowser moves the wands involuntarily). It's people who have a good subconscious idea of where water _ought_ to be, and involuntarily move the wands to mark that place - and chalk it to "magical dowsing" instead to their own knowledge. It's surprisingly well documented, actually. (Hey, even James Randi himself adknowledges those are not charlatans but simply are wrong, and that's truly saying something.) My educated guess is that is THOSE dowsers are the ones Adam and Jamie had no wish to demean.

    • @timcorey8474
      @timcorey8474 3 года назад +7

      We need a myth busters like show devoted to exposing all the scammers and conspiracy theories, live streamed flights showing the earth isn't flat.

    • @wyattfrizzell6672
      @wyattfrizzell6672 3 года назад +15

      @@notfeedynotlazy I think this is an excellent point Ive worked in irrigation so I've witnessed people do this successfully multiple times, I've never met a guy who thought it was supernatural ability they possessed it was always done with the acknowledgement of "this is dumb, but for whatever reason it's probably gonna work"

  • @burnblast2774
    @burnblast2774 3 года назад +1058

    "My old show 'Mythbusters'"
    Suddenly feels the years bear down

    • @ValentineC137
      @ValentineC137 3 года назад +17

      I’m never going to feel as old as I did hearing that

    • @alexboyer6691
      @alexboyer6691 3 года назад +7

      I'm actually 14 and I felt old

    • @FirstLast-gk6lg
      @FirstLast-gk6lg 3 года назад +2

      Yeah my age is becoming an issue

    • @dlxmarks
      @dlxmarks 2 года назад +4

      How about "way way back in the day"' describing 2008?

  • @NavigatorBR
    @NavigatorBR 8 месяцев назад +14

    Weird fun fact: In 2017, most of the water companies in the UK have admited to using dowsing rods to locate leaks.

    • @SirSX3
      @SirSX3 7 дней назад +1

      They knew that it didn't work, and they chose it because they didn't want to find any

  • @Wireball
    @Wireball 3 года назад +67

    "Two of these boxes are filled with booby-trapped explosives, and one is filled with your payment. Just use your equipment to pick the box without the explosives and you can be on your way."

    • @kreb7
      @kreb7 2 года назад +13

      He will be on his way regardless

  • @SharpVCN
    @SharpVCN 3 года назад +1840

    Seeing Adam answer the question in the first minute and then go on tangents about things he’s clearly just passionate about is so endearing to me.

    • @oxide9679
      @oxide9679 Год назад +17

      It's a ton of fun to watch

    • @Kulgur
      @Kulgur Год назад +25

      I think it's an excellent way to make a video. If someone only cares about the answer, they get it quickly and can move on, and the rest of us can enjoy his story.

    • @treborg.london
      @treborg.london 10 месяцев назад +3

      I was entertained and enthralled by this video. I also learned an awful lot.
      So ... wow!

    • @MikehMike01
      @MikehMike01 10 месяцев назад

      Annoying

    • @adamlesandrini312
      @adamlesandrini312 9 месяцев назад +3

      It's nice not to be strung along for a garbage answer, but instead earn us staying around because of an interesting rant.

  • @bobrichey1
    @bobrichey1 3 года назад +539

    I was an aid worker in Iraq and we’d see those “detectors” being used when we went to meetings in government offices and just kind of sigh.

    • @WoWhistorian
      @WoWhistorian 3 года назад +22

      Well, you're not in a billion pieces right now, so OBVIOUSLY they worked exactly as intended!
      Pretty sure this is how science works. ( :

    • @GreyAcumen
      @GreyAcumen 3 года назад +66

      It would not surprise me in the slightest if that company was a deliberate front designed to simultaneously leech money out of a target while also undermining that target's security via exploiting their superstitions.

    • @GuiSmith
      @GuiSmith 3 года назад +12

      @@GreyAcumen I hate that that makes sense 😬

    • @ReallyBigBadAndy76
      @ReallyBigBadAndy76 3 года назад +8

      @@GreyAcumen The only problem with conspiracy is that it requires people to be good enough to predict multiple future events consistently and accurately. In reality, fiasco is usually a better explanation than conspiracy.

    • @davidaldis8242
      @davidaldis8242 3 года назад +14

      The Movenpick Hotel in Bahrain used to use one during the Gulf War that was actually a "golf ball finder". A little black box with a telescopic car radio aerial on it that the gate security guard made a great show of waving all over your car before he would let you into the carpark. I talked to the manager about it and he was convinced it was the real deal. I believe some Brit guy was eventually prosecuted for fraud on that one.

  • @jimintaos
    @jimintaos Год назад +679

    Funny that you mention testing the razor blade sharpening pyramid. That whole thing became a thing when I was about 15 and my Dad was completely into it and it made no sense at all to me so I built several pyramids and tested to the best of my ability considering I didn't have anything like a microscope. I got my Dad to test the pyramid blades against new blades and used blades without him knowing which was which. I even got him to use the pyramid blade, which had been well used before it went into the pyramid, for about a week. A piece of tissue paper dragged across his stubble was the test. By the end of the week it looked like it had gone through a paper shredder. Myth Busted? No-he wanted to believe what he wanted to believe so he thought the pyramid had done some good. Foo!! What can you tell people like that? All you can say is, "Bless your heart, you lovable punkin' head."

    • @jamescheddar4896
      @jamescheddar4896 Год назад

      The Khufu Pyramid is a sound chamber that was used to enhance people's intelligence, but the shape might have just been for efficiency of materials. Archimedes and Socrates were part of a secret society that did a pilgrimage to egypt where they were put in this sound chamber. Modern medicine has discovered that extended periods of time in darkness and silence heals the brain, if it heals it it can make it more efficient.

    • @Toothily
      @Toothily Год назад +72

      I guess you could say he’s... not the sharpest tool 🥁

    • @roguishpaladin
      @roguishpaladin Год назад +39

      Confirmation bias is powerful and unavoidable.

    • @LolUGotBusted
      @LolUGotBusted Год назад +22

      Yet still they vote.

    • @sampsunsmith3529
      @sampsunsmith3529 Год назад

      Sounds like the same thing as the COVID vaccine effectiveness. Lots of people just want to believe.

  • @reidwallace4258
    @reidwallace4258 Год назад +178

    Me and some friends in a university town with a big theatre department got in a bit of a spat with a local dowser. We kept replying to her facebook posts about offering 2000$ dousing services with 'This is a WIZARD town, your kind are not welcome here'. She kept blocking us. A few of us showed up to a seminar she hosted dressed like discworld wizards, she was NOT impressed, but I think we might have undermined her beleivablity to at least some of the crowd, might have saved a few fools their money.
    Side note, this is an area of Canada with ABUNDANT ground water, may as well be a douser in a fucking swamp for all the service you are actually providing.

  • @ThePigKnight
    @ThePigKnight 3 года назад +2022

    “Billy what was your favorite Adam Savage interview?”
    “The one where he called dousing bullshit for a looooooong time.”

    • @TheMetroidblade
      @TheMetroidblade 3 года назад +113

      huh surprise grumps

    • @TeckTheBlooded
      @TeckTheBlooded 3 года назад +9

      @@TheMetroidblade xP I just finished watching a couple comps from them too

    • @cookiesyruplover
      @cookiesyruplover 3 года назад +13

      Adam and everyone deserves a grump rant for something this evil. I'm glad he got that off his chest, not that it helps much but hey "the more you know about corporate greed and scams!"

    • @RyukanoHi
      @RyukanoHi 3 года назад +13

      @@cookiesyruplover The more you know... Doesn't matter because capitalism has proven time and again there's barely any consequences for this kind of evil.
      Blood diamonds and sweat shops and scams like this are a thing and the people behind that are still getting rich while poor people go to prison for shoplifting and weed.
      The world is shitty and unjust and yet no one is going to do shit to stop it.

    • @MGrimm1226
      @MGrimm1226 3 года назад +11

      The grumps influence has far reaching arms

  • @stupidthefish4981
    @stupidthefish4981 3 года назад +762

    This went from “was there any myth you didn’t test because it was an easy “do it at home” myth to “DOWSING ISN’T REAL!” In about 2 seconds

  • @ChristianGiuseppe
    @ChristianGiuseppe 8 месяцев назад +32

    Dear God give me the list of the Goofballs

  • @Garfunkels_Funky_Uncle
    @Garfunkels_Funky_Uncle 3 года назад +36

    The inventor of the ADE 651 (Bomb detecting dowsing tool) got 10 years in prison for fraud in 2013.

  • @dvklaveren
    @dvklaveren 3 года назад +993

    I want to say thank you for the pyramid myth, because it illustrated exactly the difference between motivated thinking and scientific thinking. If you wanted to believe, then the initial result of the pyramid preserving the apple would have been convincing, but if you think like a scientist, you repeat the experiment and show it was something about the set-up that was wrong.
    It really taught me how to apply my thinking, not just in science, but also in social circumstances.

    • @tekvax01
      @tekvax01 3 года назад +17

      Hear HEAR!

    • @hotdogmilkk
      @hotdogmilkk 3 года назад +12

      Very well said!

    • @samsinger5135
      @samsinger5135 3 года назад +15

      i remember seeing that ep along with the mind reading cannon..[chuckles] yes a very silly myth but some things are just MENT and HAS to be busted to have people think in a more reasonable direction

    • @Idefilms
      @Idefilms 3 года назад +17

      This comment will never have enough likes. I came here to say exactly this. There is nothing to apologize for Adam - that is one memorable episode.

    • @GrigLarson
      @GrigLarson 3 года назад +10

      Same. I grew up in the 1970s when the ESP boon was seemingly at an all-time high: pyramid power, ESP, brain waves piloting toy race cars, biorhythms, and such. I loved this episode.

  • @PatrickStarfishman
    @PatrickStarfishman 3 года назад +442

    Atsc founder Jim McCormick was sentenced to 10 years in 2013. Some may reasonably argue the sentence was too short but he did at least face justice for his fraud.

    • @ryanhelmbold2288
      @ryanhelmbold2288 3 года назад +44

      I dont know if id call 10 years enough to be justice but at least he got something

    • @douglascampbell9809
      @douglascampbell9809 3 года назад +48

      He was only convicted of fraud.
      They should have sent his to a country where his device got someone killed and put him on trial there.
      I'm sure the sentencing would be fatal in at least one of the countries.

    • @hotdrippyglass
      @hotdrippyglass 3 года назад +21

      They should make him 'dowse' for weapons until he misses the one that kills him.

    • @jackoflanagan
      @jackoflanagan 3 года назад +4

      @@douglascampbell9809 On trial in Iraq sure would have been justice!

    • @GaryMarriott
      @GaryMarriott 3 года назад +3

      @Neil Peters @Douglas Campbell Once he is near or after release there is no reason other countries or persons could not go after him legally for other crimes & request extradition ( except that would cost them with little chance of getting a return ). BTW this ( www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-somerset-43900624 ) suggests he was due release in Summer of 2020

  • @thelisanalgaib9702
    @thelisanalgaib9702 Год назад +177

    I remember being at FSU going through Meteorology when the episode aired concerning the myth/cartoon where you shoot a bullet straight up and it comes down in the barrel of the gun. EVERYONE in the class knew that was busted in a picosecond...because we had just been going through the rotational constant of the planet. instead of the normal class that day, we got the teacher to help us calculate the distance the shooter moved by virtue of standing still on the planet. we also tackled the Coriolis effect on the bullet as it flew.

    • @griffinbrown8182
      @griffinbrown8182 Год назад +5

      Holy shit it’s the Lisan al Gaib

    • @bigutubefan2738
      @bigutubefan2738 9 месяцев назад +8

      I absolutely adore the show, and all its presenters, but my only criticism of Mythbusters is that occasionally they'd take the Myth being tested too literally. The best trajectory from which to catch the bullet back in the barrel, should not be assumed to be initially vertical.
      There still might be some trajectory where it's possible, albeit a 'million to one' shot, and an even less likely catch, especially if bullets tumble at terminal velocity. A vertical barrel might even still work at the poles if the winds were unprecedentedly calm. The sadly missed Grant would've been in heaven building a robot to test this, but looking at what Mark Rober and Stuff Made Here can do, well it's infeasible, hugely challenging and incredibly expensive. But it's a big claim to say it can't be done at all, with the benefit of luck and technology.

    • @jamesbyrd3740
      @jamesbyrd3740 9 месяцев назад +13

      @@bigutubefan2738 yes, often times the outcome was dubious because of this. One that stood out to me was "throw like a girl". In the test, the girls flailed the ball, and the boys had better form. Then they had them use their non-dominant arm, and they all flailed. The verdict? Busted.
      The phrase isn't suggesting women are incapable of throwing the ball. Women play baseball and softball ffs. The phrase simply means to throw with bad form, or weak. All of the girls brought on had poor form and threw slow. Even with coaching they would still be weaker than avg.
      I get it's not pc to say anymore, but cmon.

    • @RyTrapp0
      @RyTrapp0 8 месяцев назад +5

      @@jamesbyrd3740 This is such a weird disconnect from the sports world and the rest of society. In the sports world, there isn't anything even vaguely controversial about this, it's sorta kinda already been born out through human history lol. So much so that most female athletes understand this(just like my scrawny 5'5 135lb ass always understood that I never had a chance at a basketball career, even against a lot of women LOL). I mean, the Williams sisters, as incredible as they've always been, said they could be any male ranked lower than #200, not #20 or #2(and they still lost when the #203 ranked male volunteered, beating Serena 5-0 and Venus 6-1 back to back).
      But, the moment you step outside of the sports world, everyone else is playing dumb like they just have no idea how there could be differences between male and female athletes - it's surreal, like some 'Twilight Zone' crap, people just pretending like they don't understand basic reality.

    • @mackenziehumphrey1992
      @mackenziehumphrey1992 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@jamesbyrd3740you’re misremembering. he myth was the idea that poor-er throwing was due to being a girl. I.e. women tend to throw worse due to being women. This is obviously not true. Women tend to throw worse on average because they don’t have the same amount of training or life experience with sports as men do on average.
      They busted it by showing that at the highest level of pitching, both the man and the woman pitcher had virtually identical stats. This shows that the biological differences between men and women don’t matter nearly as much as we think when it comes to a skill like throwing.

  • @HylianAlph
    @HylianAlph 9 месяцев назад +7

    When I was 8, I wrote into mythbusters asking them to test if it was possible to flip a fried egg just by flicking the plan.
    Now I do that every time I make eggs

  • @thetheflyinghawaiian
    @thetheflyinghawaiian 3 года назад +602

    I'm a hydrogeologist and unfortunately my step dad hires dowsers for his property. His well is in a terrible location on top of a hill, so of course he barely gets anything... But he blames the well driller, while the dowser gets all the praise for "finding water." The reality in the east coast is that you'd be hard pressed to drill a well that DOESN'T produce water.

    • @PatrickKniesler
      @PatrickKniesler 2 года назад +12

      Have any dowser debunker tests you've heard of map an area hydrologically and then set dowsers loose upon it? I haven't looked much, but the tests I see the folk practice subjected to just deal with bringing water to the rods or taking dowsers to still water out of the ground. Willow dowsing looks like BS to me but copper dowsing kinda makes sense in a moving water and electrical field kinda way, like the person or rods are reacting to the ground condition rather than just the presence of water. Not to say there aren't hacks, charlatans, and idiots and not to say I think dowsing has merit, but to try and find the positive case for scientists to use to debunk or enrich dowsing.

    • @Robb1977
      @Robb1977 2 года назад +55

      @@PatrickKniesler a fair point of intrigue. Plenty of superstitions and hoaxes were at one point semi-valid. For instance, modern medicine and cleaning techniques has made kosher laws practically pointless, yet at the time it makes sense. Some incenses were used to "purify the air" and do have some anti-bacterial properties (i mean its smoke its anathema to life) and adds a pleasing smell... which was another one, miasma. On average things that smell bad aren't clean, and so considering bad smells a sign of health hazards isn't crazy.

    • @brentkreinop1716
      @brentkreinop1716 2 года назад +15

      Where I am in the midwest, you can drive wells with a sledge hammer, fencepost driver, or similar manually operated implement. My dad and uncle drove a well in their mom's garage and only used about twenty feet of piping above the three foot wellpoint to get to enough water to run a 5-bedroom house. The biggest problem around here is sand contamination of the well point, which is why they had to drive a new well for the house. It's like the quote about WW2 bombs being 100% accurate in that they hit the ground every time :) Now, when I moved to the west coast, the rumor was that water wells were almost a mile deep. Since they are apt to get less rain in a whole year than my current hometown got in about 90 minutes earlier this summer, that's not too far fetched.

    • @matthamilton5902
      @matthamilton5902 2 года назад +27

      @@PatrickKniesler James Randi did some tests like this. He had several pipes buried and had water running through some, still water, and empty pipes. They didn't even have to get it right every time. They just had to do better than the average person guessing by a small margin. They couldn't do it.

    • @fredwupkensoppel8949
      @fredwupkensoppel8949 2 года назад +6

      I feel your pain. I work in the IT field, I get asked for advice extremely rarely.

  • @bobloblaw706
    @bobloblaw706 3 года назад +2074

    Does seem like dowsing would be a much more of a Penn & Teller, Bulls%$# episode, than a mythbusters show.

    • @RedShadow120
      @RedShadow120 3 года назад +22

      Feels too simple for them, too.

    • @Draugo
      @Draugo 3 года назад +14

      I remember someone making an episode about it, but if it wasn't Penn & Teller then I have no idea who. I remember clearly some of the blind experiments with buckets filled with something.

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast 3 года назад

      Is according to some linked to magnetoreception.

    • @RobertTempleton64
      @RobertTempleton64 3 года назад +31

      @Stefan Work: Of the few people who responded to and were actually tested in the Million Dollar Challenge that Randi had available for years, two who actually went through the preliminary tests were dowsers. Seems that their confidence in the efficacy of the ability surpasses that of charlatans like Sylvia Browne and such who are just grifters.

    • @chartle1
      @chartle1 3 года назад +17

      Adam brought up the pyramid power episode and may have not been clear. As I recall after that one and maybe another they banned all ogie bogie (I think that was the term used) myths.

  • @caifasvaca9451
    @caifasvaca9451 Год назад +46

    It’s unreal how there‘s one specific thought, that I keep having every time I watch any of Adams videos: „that guy is one heck of a kind-hearted human being.“
    For all his ingenuity, ability to entertain and technical knowledge - it’s his character I find most impressive.
    I think out of all people of public exposure, there may not be a single one I am more sure to never hear any disappointing stories about.

    • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE
      @DUKE_of_RAMBLE 8 месяцев назад +1

      I recent did this on a new video, but I feel confident that if America had a "Knighting" system, such as Britain does, that Adam would've been knighted long ago!
      He's is indeed an amazing human, in so, so many ways, but his kindness foremost! _(which is also why I think he deserves a Nobel Peace Prize!)_

  • @stenanderson1695
    @stenanderson1695 2 года назад +27

    Adam being pure and wholesome for a whole episode is good for the soul.

  • @OccultTincture
    @OccultTincture 3 года назад +1489

    A man in this modern era that isn't out to make an idiot of people he disagrees with even when they might actually be idiots. Adam is too pure for this world.

    • @missrocks
      @missrocks 3 года назад +50

      I think the proviso being that those he disagrees with aren't doing harm.

    • @jameshenderson4094
      @jameshenderson4094 3 года назад +25

      Ye and he has a point about dowsing being more just a way to read ones own intuition, one would probably need to spend decades being wrong 99% of the time until they saw results

    • @eee2861
      @eee2861 3 года назад +1

      So let's make the world worthy of that notion.

    • @WouldntULikeToKnow.
      @WouldntULikeToKnow. 3 года назад +18

      I still think some people should be called out and their awfulness exposed. We put up with far too much pseudoscience.

    • @doughouston5472
      @doughouston5472 2 года назад

      @@jameshenderson4094 Except unfortunately those who never did their own experiments make comments and yet never tried it. This was shown to me two nights ago. I was able to replicate it over and over on water lines in yards in my neighborhood. I literally could feel the magnetic pull. Why would I lie about that? I have no reason. to push an agenda of disbelief though, so many just try saying "he is lying" to protect their own "belief". As a scientist, it would be nice to see Adam explain the magnetic pull instead of disregarding what he has never tested.

  • @MitchellTF
    @MitchellTF 3 года назад +568

    "How do they go to sleep"
    "Illegal drugs they bought with the money."

    • @hariman7727
      @hariman7727 3 года назад +13

      And being completely amoral sleaze.

    • @xmarine73
      @xmarine73 3 года назад +15

      You wipe your sweaty brow with a disposable $100 bill before shooting it into your golden garbage can, from way out in three-point territory... SWISH!
      Ah... Good times. Night kids! Babe, I'm going to the strip club. I'll bring one home for us.

    • @PaulSteMarie
      @PaulSteMarie 3 года назад +2

      @@dennisthemenace3695 Good gravy, now I'm visualizing Smaug on his pile of loot.

    • @namAehT
      @namAehT 3 года назад +9

      I would also say that even though these guys are assholes, how in the fuck did the Iraqi government spend 60k on each without doing any research on their actual effectiveness?
      It's one thing to scam an innocent person, it's another thing to scam a government or organization too stupid to verify your claims. I'd say the lives lost are on the government as they bought these devices. They may have even known they were garbage but knew they would boost morale among superstitious troups.

    • @coolnoah8183
      @coolnoah8183 3 года назад +2

      @@namAehT Bingo. He didnt sell them directly to the roops or try to convince them they worked, the gov. Bought them and conveniently didnt test them kr warn their troops, so it's the gov. Fault

  • @Sandul666
    @Sandul666 2 года назад +4

    4:44 made me think someone was knocking at my door!!!

  • @XeroV1
    @XeroV1 2 года назад +15

    So basically one of the reasons certain "Myths" that could be busted easily weren't was to not humiliate and demoralize someone who really believed it like the dowser, def can respect that and in a weird way its kind of heartwarming to know that there was that level of integrity hats off good sir.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade 8 месяцев назад

      They definitely could have found somebody that knows how to do it, but isn't committed to it being some sort of metaphysical thing. I learned how to do it back in the '90s from an old time miner, and it still doesn't sit right with me that something seemed to be happening. It would be a lot easier for me to dismiss as a crock if I wasn't able to do it.
      Where it does break down is that I have a great degree of skepticism that rods crossing really is in response to something external to the person doing it.

  • @richards7909
    @richards7909 3 года назад +595

    “I’m sorry for the Pyramid Power myth”.
    Just think of the 2020 versions of these things you could test now...

    • @stupidthefish4981
      @stupidthefish4981 3 года назад +25

      Five Minute Crafts

    • @GuanoLad
      @GuanoLad 3 года назад +19

      @@stupidthefish4981 All hail Ann Reardon.

    • @NOTNOTJON
      @NOTNOTJON 3 года назад +6

      Think you forgot the T in Ann's last name

    • @jmckendry84
      @jmckendry84 3 года назад +13

      @@davidmoutray2644 I guess after years of making the show they learned certain things such as what things they *shouldn't* do. I guess the pyramid myth might have made good TV but looking back maybe they thought it cheapened the show by giving some pseudoscience airtime?

    • @tymmezinni
      @tymmezinni 3 года назад +2

      Jimmy Hoffa buried at the Meadowlands, 12,000 votes missing in Georgia....

  • @gunnaryoung
    @gunnaryoung 3 года назад +248

    This is what happens when that company that sells x-ray glasses in the back of a magazine becomes a defense contractor.

    • @Artyomthewalrus
      @Artyomthewalrus 3 года назад +15

      Almost literally what this is. The original inventor was originally selling them as "golf ball detectors" - and then decided to sell them the the cops for detecting drugs in the USA. After that got shut down they moved around the world and started selling them for military purposes (sometimes even the identical model used for "finding" golf balls, but with a different sticker)

    • @benyspensierijr.5973
      @benyspensierijr.5973 3 года назад

      @@Artyomthewalrus Most police departments test out the equipment they are looking into buying to see if it works and if it actually helps them do their job. Too bad the military didn't try as hard.

    • @toomanyaccounts
      @toomanyaccounts 3 года назад

      @@benyspensierijr.5973 it wasn't the us military. it was arab militiaries whose ideology makes them hate dogs.

    • @cappypyramsaudpate5535
      @cappypyramsaudpate5535 3 года назад

      @@toomanyaccounts lmao

  • @garrethatch5362
    @garrethatch5362 Год назад +6

    I once worked a summer at my old university as a mover for a summer program that rented out class, dorm and lecture hall space for groups and organizations wanting to do summer programs. It was mostly Sports and Education programs for kids and middle schoolers but I remember doing a delivery for this one group using some class rooms and it turned out they were a dowsing group that taught classes in dowsing to people gullible enough to pay for them. The worst part was knowing this was happening on the grounds of a university, a place of higher learning and logic and reasoning. That university, like most, just valued the money they got out of the group in the end.

  • @dgundo
    @dgundo 8 месяцев назад +11

    MythBusters was such an integral and positive part of my late childhood and early adulthood. I'm so thankful to you for making such educational and instructional videos high on the moral compass.

  • @al-asadi
    @al-asadi 3 года назад +327

    I lived in Syria during the early years of the war and would see those sticks being used by military checkpoints outside cities, and of course, they didn't stop any bomb violence. Thank you for shining a light on this and I hope the people responsible get the justice they deserve.

    • @djsalose
      @djsalose 3 года назад +21

      @@markmcelroy1872 I agree that its terrible.. but does the military in these countries have no screening for what they buy?? do their guns work or is it airsoft?

    • @zym6687
      @zym6687 3 года назад +29

      @@djsalose I just presume corruption, just have to know the guy in change of procurement and get his beak wet.

    • @ji-di7zr
      @ji-di7zr 3 года назад +14

      @@djsalose probably because they make people feel safe even when they don't. Just like how our airport security checks work some of the time but not always, people feel safer and they scare off some of the people who don't have the nerve to risk it.

    • @mr.personhumanson6871
      @mr.personhumanson6871 3 года назад +3

      I think the officials who approve of the purchase should also go to jail

    • @robertmartinu8803
      @robertmartinu8803 3 года назад

      @@zym6687 plus a bit of "the others have & use it, if your country falls behind because you didn't buy it as well - it's your head on the line".

  • @youtert
    @youtert 3 года назад +608

    Dude's gonna be in a nursing home still answering questions about Mythbusters one day.

    • @Diortelon
      @Diortelon 3 года назад +6

      Come on now, Adam´s not *that* old...

    • @dexteritymaster
      @dexteritymaster 3 года назад +13

      He's too Savage to go be in a nursing home. Maybe if he builds one from scrap in another episode of daily builds, but it should have his garage inside.

    • @57thorns
      @57thorns 3 года назад

      @@Diortelon But Covid and glboal warming permitting he will be.

    • @bennybennerson7728
      @bennybennerson7728 3 года назад +1

      @@57thorns What's glbowl warming

    • @vrak24
      @vrak24 3 года назад

      Just shows how good the show was.

  • @brucecook502
    @brucecook502 8 месяцев назад +9

    As soon as you brought up dowsing, James Randy was a very first thing that came to my mind and I had a feeling there was a chance you were going to bring him up and his experiments with dowsers.

  • @peadarruane6582
    @peadarruane6582 9 месяцев назад +13

    Glad you mentioned about the clues in the landscape and intuition as that is my concept about how dowsing “works”. It shows that you have an open scientific mind. The Abhorghast should have had a dowser on board and you might have survived that encounter lol

  • @timbaleno9269
    @timbaleno9269 3 года назад +824

    “We had some experts who were real goofballs and we ended up making them look great on television.” That’s an odd way to talk about the cast of the show

    • @mazzucac
      @mazzucac 3 года назад +13

      You know Tim, you’re right. It is weird. But accurate.

    • @darkdeifan
      @darkdeifan 3 года назад +1

      I have no proofs but neither doubts (?

    • @MrTubeStuck
      @MrTubeStuck 3 года назад +8

      "Its hard to prove negatives..."

    • @ianmoore5502
      @ianmoore5502 2 года назад +15

      Oh I am so curious who he rly meant

    • @nestormarchan2447
      @nestormarchan2447 2 года назад +8

      I'm 100% sufre it was the ninja guy

  • @zep4814
    @zep4814 3 года назад +883

    The best way to test a bomb detecting device is to send the CEO into a mine field with it.

    • @daemonork6052
      @daemonork6052 3 года назад +17

      ruclips.net/video/IwBLL7Z3OvU/видео.html&ab_channel=SmithsonianChannel

    • @shanethrelfall416
      @shanethrelfall416 3 года назад +12

      Surely tho they’d need to show it working to sell so many? I’ve seen a documentary on this but I don’t recall them explaining how they did that
      It’s pretty f*cked up

    • @tetryl1
      @tetryl1 3 года назад +4

      @@daemonork6052 What a legend that guy is.

    • @XanderShadow
      @XanderShadow 3 года назад +59

      Basically.
      If someones selling a product, especially one that's meant to save lives, and they claim it works; they should be willing to test it themselves to prove it.
      Guys who made the first bullet proof vests; literally tested and displayed it? by wearing it and shooting each other. Thats someone who's made a product, believes in it, and will stake their own life on it before putting yours in it.

    • @XanderShadow
      @XanderShadow 3 года назад +34

      Falls by the old situation of:
      "Oh it's perfectly safe, go ahead!"
      "You do it first then and show me"
      "Oh I can't do that."
      "Then clearly it's not 'perfectly safe'"

  • @kevinharmon8227
    @kevinharmon8227 2 года назад +5

    Adam... You truly are a great person morally.... I commend you and your crew for keeping that moral standing

  • @anotherdave5107
    @anotherdave5107 2 года назад

    Kudos to Morgan Crisp! One of the better questions! Thanks Adam for your response,

  • @wanna877
    @wanna877 3 года назад +202

    I love the idea that you would get a douser, let him use his stick to find water, after finding water, taking away the stick for him then finding water again and be like: "the ability to find water was inside you all along"

    • @MatheusVenti
      @MatheusVenti 3 года назад +28

      Yeah, but if he believes he finds because of the stick, he wouldn't find it without it.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade 8 месяцев назад +6

      Dowsing involves a lot of different types of devices for a lot of different purposes. I cant imagine the forked stick doing anything at all. I have personally used metal divining rods and they definitely move on their own and quite suddenly. I would have been more than happy to go down just to finally have an explanation as to why and how they move on their own because the only thing I could come up with is polarizing the metal with the nervous system. Because they have to be held firmly enough that they don't wiggle when walking, and if you're holding them that tightly, then they only move to cross, they don't move parallel and they don't move away from each other.
      As somebody that's generally a believer in science, it bugs me that this seems to violate what I understand the rules to be. Hence, my suspicion that it's probably got to do with magneticism and probably the result of thoughts in the person dowsing rather than something metaphysical.
      Where I haven't found any sort of reliable proof of something happening would be the next stage of it actually predicting or locating anything. That's the part where I think that if we ever understand what's going on completely, we'll probably determine conclusively that it doesn't do anything.

    • @johns9652
      @johns9652 8 месяцев назад +3

      I'm an electrician, and I know some older guys who swear by dousing, I even know a few older electricians who say they douse for buried conduit or electrical wiring by holding two lengths of bare copper wire. They were so adamant about it, I didn't feel like arguing, I didn't believe it, but it really wasn't worth getting into it.

    • @dangeary2134
      @dangeary2134 8 месяцев назад

      @@SmallSpoonBrigadeI be used those sticks before.
      Half of the ability comes with how far your own personal aura extends.(don’t ask me how I know this, it’s personal)
      So, I was actually able to “train” others in how to use the divining rods.
      This was most evident in a steel yard, where the interference was so incredible, we couldn’t get a reliable read from any electronic monster we used.
      I handed a guy these rods, and we actually did find the underground pipe and the “missing” valve.
      We began to dig, and found the pipe that was leaking.
      Right after we found it, all of the “white helmets” and crew leads came out, and all their eyes were wide.
      “How did you find it?”
      We showed them the rods, and then they showed us the VERY old maps of the infrastructure.
      We had put cones where we figured the pipe went, and it turned out that were were right on the money!
      After that, we always trusted the rods when things were iffy, and whatever underground utilities couldn’t be found.
      One of the handiest uses was for underground clay drain tile that was never mapped.
      It was laid over 100 years ago to drain water from places, places I never did may research to find out about.
      The technique works, and most underground workers know of it, learn it, and trust it.
      We just don’t advertise it, or even brag about it.
      It’s just a fact we learned to accept and live with.

    • @sunderzilla
      @sunderzilla 8 месяцев назад +1

      The real water were the friends we made along the way.

  • @paradigm2266
    @paradigm2266 3 года назад +899

    *mythbusters in a room together*
    "It's too simple, we shouldn't test it"
    "Can it be blown up?"
    "Ok let's do it"

  • @SotiCoto
    @SotiCoto 7 месяцев назад +1

    Gotta say... whoever made that bomb-dousing device was truly doing the world a favour by helping to remove idiots from the gene-pool.

  • @juelonline
    @juelonline Год назад +19

    As a young man I was working on a wastewater team - renovating old sewer lines. I was choked to learn that they used dowsing to "figure out" where the old sewer lines were. Somehow it only worked if I didn't stood in the way of where the line most probably was 😀

    • @michaelmurray6197
      @michaelmurray6197 11 дней назад

      My theory has always been that it detects where the ground has been disturbed. Some sort of interaction between the very weak magnetic field of the human body and the fact that water is dipolar and/or some ground could have magnetic minerals in it that would all be running in a single direction unless they were disturbed. So in some cases it would work, but really it's more of a party trick when you compare it to using something like ground penetrating radar that will work basically all the time, anyone can use, and is far more accurate.

  • @JeremyAndrew182
    @JeremyAndrew182 3 года назад +680

    You know Adam Savage is awesome when he says "our" show after all these years.

    • @lincroyableprocrastinateur5414
      @lincroyableprocrastinateur5414 3 года назад +38

      Would you want an offended/angry Jamie coming after you, with all the skills he has, the supplies he can access? Oh, and the inside knowledge he'd surely have on Adam:-)

    • @erikaz1590
      @erikaz1590 3 года назад +57

      I'm just imagining Jamie on the other side of the camera, arms crossed, his stone-faced walrus mustache and beret just staring at Adam the entire time which is why he sometimes acts nervous XD

    • @Mythikal13
      @Mythikal13 3 года назад +18

      Literally at the beginning he says "my old show mythbusters" (0:08)
      Not to argue that Adam Savage isnt awesome tho, he is lmao

    • @bradlocken2621
      @bradlocken2621 3 года назад +6

      @@Mythikal13 well it is his show, Jamie’s as well

    • @mbushroe
      @mbushroe 3 года назад +19

      @@bradlocken2621 Actually, it was Peter's show. He came up with the idea, sold it to Discovery well enough to get some camera and sound equipment and start up money, and found just the right pair of goof balls to do it, including one who just happened to own the exact type of place you would need to pull off a show like that. Adam and Jamie breathed life into the show, turned one-liner myths and legends into something interesting for an hour of TV, and created a television role models for how to take the familiar and question it, test it, learn by doing even if you don't know at the start how this story will end.

  • @goblinqueen8015
    @goblinqueen8015 3 года назад +251

    "There are dead people on your dance card" is a phrase I am absolutely going to use.
    Gosh I am so happy I discovered this channel.

  • @pameladeering2450
    @pameladeering2450 10 месяцев назад +1

    Adam, that's why we love you. I wouldn't want to watch a dowser being made a fool of either. Your kindness is such a beautiful trait.

  • @DoctorDex
    @DoctorDex Год назад +2

    6:44 That is such a pure and beautiful expression of moral outrage, simply perfect! Thank you Adam!

  • @jfbeam
    @jfbeam 3 года назад +488

    "No no no no no no. 'Cuz if it was a bomb, the alarms would go off 'cuz all these hotels have bomb detectors, right?" - Ruby Rhod, _The Fifth Element_

    • @hariman7727
      @hariman7727 3 года назад +36

      Didn't the bomb detecting alarm go off a moment later?

    • @Mark_Goddin
      @Mark_Goddin 3 года назад +27

      @@hariman7727 either way, I’m choosing to appreciate the writing and acting in Fifth Element. Very good Movie.

    • @Purrfect_Werecat
      @Purrfect_Werecat 3 года назад +4

      @@Mark_Goddin very good movie

    • @radioactive9861
      @radioactive9861 3 года назад +5

      @@Mark_Goddin Definitely a 'cult classic'.(which would then make me a 'cult member'...because I LOVE that movie!!!!!)

    • @MarkiusFox
      @MarkiusFox 3 года назад

      @@radioactive9861 I strongly suggest Leon: The Professional, another Luc Besson film.

  • @brandonfox1617
    @brandonfox1617 3 года назад +122

    I was in Afghanistan in 2009 and saw those "bomb detection" devices. We had to take a half dozen of them from the Afghanistan Army company we were partnered with because they kept trying to use them to clear mine fields and identify IEDs for us.

    • @mattlane2282
      @mattlane2282 3 года назад +21

      Maybe they were just trying to kill off an invading force...

    • @brandonfox1617
      @brandonfox1617 3 года назад +12

      @@mattlane2282 insightful 👌

    • @pramienjager2103
      @pramienjager2103 3 года назад +25

      Well, in fairness if you let enough of them go try they will, in fact, clear the minefield.

    • @polyaddict
      @polyaddict 3 года назад

      @@pramienjager2103 hahahhaa

    • @toomanyaccounts
      @toomanyaccounts 3 года назад +3

      should have told them that if they believed in the devices they should walk every inch of the minefield with a rake behind them so that their paths could be marked. after seeing a few of their fellows blow up they should then learn to listen to the americans

  • @Friquido
    @Friquido Год назад +6

    Weird thing to answer since there were so many myths on the show that were on the level of "c'mon you could've calculated it in seconds rather than spend money for explosives"

    • @1draigon
      @1draigon Год назад +4

      read the last word you wrote.
      That answers why the money is worth it

    • @Friquido
      @Friquido Год назад +1

      @@1draigon Well yeah but a simple myth is a simple myth doesn't matter that explosives bring in the views.

  • @eukonidor
    @eukonidor 2 года назад +28

    Figuring out what environmental cues tell the dowser where water is would be a great thing to me. My father, who was not a particularly superstitious man, spoke quite casually about occasionally using dowsing AT WORK (he did maintenance for a YMCA summer camp) to find water lines when he needed to dig near them. And apparently was successful most of the time. It beggars belief, but he also wasn't one to make up stories like that, so figuring out how it worked for him would be great, if someone could.

    • @jsomebody2289
      @jsomebody2289 Год назад +5

      My dad did plumbing stuff and showed me how to bend two metal coat hangers and do this. He said it only worked with moving water and pipes relatively close to the surface of the ground. I was able to recreate it with a pipe he knew the location of, but I did not, in our lawn. He said anytime he was able to get the same 'positive' result after coming from multiple different directions, then he had 100% accuracy. The problem was that not finding something did not mean a pipe wasn't there.

    • @kahl4077
      @kahl4077 Год назад +1

      My father-in-law dowses for things like pipes and cables underground before he digs anywhere. He says earth that's been disturbed, even if it's old enough you can't see it, is usually just off enough to make 2 bent coat hangers wiggle if you hold them right while you're walking.

    • @m16ty
      @m16ty 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@jsomebody2289 That coat hanger deal will work, but I think that's quite a bid different than dowsing for groundwater. The coat hangers will work for buried wires too, and it will also do it if you walk under a power line. I think it has something to do with a faint magnetic field. Groundwater dowsers usually use a particular kind of stick (I've heard apple tree and willow tree) and the water they claim to find is often 100 or more feet down, I'm not buying that. The fact is, most places on earth have water under the ground, so I think that lends to the dowser's success rate.

    • @bigutubefan2738
      @bigutubefan2738 9 месяцев назад

      None of them ever do the world a favour and find water in drought stricken areas, or you know try to alleviate famine. They just want your money.

    • @m16ty
      @m16ty 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@bigutubefan2738 There are ways to find underground water, but drowsing isn't one of them. The reason nobody finds water in drought stricken areas is because there isn't any water there to be found.

  • @F_I_J_I_W_A_T_E_R
    @F_I_J_I_W_A_T_E_R 3 года назад +105

    I'm glad you've stopped using noise reduction in these videos, I'd rather have a little background noise than heavily processed audio.

    • @50srefugee
      @50srefugee 2 года назад

      I LIKED the background noise here. I felt as if I were actually in the shop with Adam.

  • @CrimsonRoamer8
    @CrimsonRoamer8 3 года назад +313

    Yeah I remember this, the CEO and some of his compatriots were eventually convicted for fraud, those ‘detectors’ were novelty golf ball finders bought in bulk from China with new logo stickers applied.
    Apocryphally when one less crooked employee asked if the device actually worked he got the answer; “It does what its supposed to do, It makes money”

    • @pvic6959
      @pvic6959 3 года назад +5

      lol how does a golf ball finder work

    • @delciotto
      @delciotto 3 года назад +25

      @@pvic6959 I think its a joke item you can pull out to make fun of someone who lost their golf ball

    • @NOTNOTJON
      @NOTNOTJON 3 года назад +30

      Employee 1: Ah crap! I just got fooled and bought a bogus goofball detector.
      Employee 2: When life gives you lemons you rebrand those lemons as yellow diamonds...

    • @pvic6959
      @pvic6959 3 года назад +3

      @@delciotto ohh lol that makes sense. i imagined those would work just as well as those detectors in the video

    • @TheBillerator
      @TheBillerator 3 года назад +10

      @@Murderbits Sadly this is an example of corruption winning contracts. The person that approved the deal clearly cared more about the money as well.

  • @RoyIMVU
    @RoyIMVU 7 месяцев назад

    I immediately recall the buttered side up vs down on toast dropping as being "too simple"

  • @ericventurino9011
    @ericventurino9011 2 года назад

    Hmmm this was very interesting. Ive never heard the term before but I was taught this "trick" to help locate underground utilities while working for an utility engineering company. I remember it seeming to work in a consistent spot but now I have to question the memory.

  • @stevencowan37
    @stevencowan37 3 года назад +257

    "There were some experts who were goofballs and we made them look great!"
    This *has* to be that one guy who said he was a ninja.

    • @LL-kv1jk
      @LL-kv1jk 3 года назад +18

      The "AskaNinja" Ninja was on the program, but I think that was just for the giggles.

    • @davidolsen1222
      @davidolsen1222 3 года назад +32

      Goofball or not that guy spent a while trying to catch an arrow and managed it with some caveats. I dunno if he was just a random guy in a gi, but that guy did look like a great sport. Though again, maybe he was absolute trash behind the scenes and "made them look great".

    • @Ropetupa
      @Ropetupa 2 года назад +16

      "Come, Silent Walrus! Let us storm the castle!"

    • @Celticshade
      @Celticshade 2 года назад +1

      Honestly that one makes sense. But i wonder if any others makes sense cause i cant think of any others....

    • @PingTheRouter
      @PingTheRouter 2 года назад +16

      from some previous research on Mythbusters i don't think it was him it was actually someone who presented themselves as an expert in a topic but i cant quite remember who it was now but it has been mentioned before on fan forums about one of the guests was basically a fraud / wackadoodle

  • @KlintKaras
    @KlintKaras 3 года назад +1858

    He's talking about himself when he says they made a goofball look good on TV.

    • @KlintKaras
      @KlintKaras 3 года назад +169

      ALSO I mean like a lovable goofball not a crazy deluded one.

    • @davidmaries5468
      @davidmaries5468 3 года назад +46

      And for that we thank him

    • @KingTaltia
      @KingTaltia 3 года назад +44

      @@KlintKaras We knew what you meant. But it's good to be clear so Adam knows we love him.

    • @matejb.9068
      @matejb.9068 3 года назад +84

      No, it was definitely the 'ninja' catching arrows. He talked about it in some Q&A

    • @Sketchman911
      @Sketchman911 3 года назад +2

      I wanted to like but its at 666 likes and I don't want to spoil it

  • @InfestedTemplar
    @InfestedTemplar 8 месяцев назад

    On a family trip as a kid someone did a dowsing demonstration, then allowed us to try it. My parents didn't pay enough attention to the demonstration and had the rod tip up instead of down when they tried it, then I did it and it didn't move at all.

  • @Chris-pk6yb
    @Chris-pk6yb 19 дней назад

    Used dowsing when I worked for the city I live in repairing water mains and sprinkler systems in parks. Always found the “stream” of water for us. Never tried using the method to find a large volume of water however.

  • @ericb3157
    @ericb3157 3 года назад +53

    that "fake bomb detector" story reminds me of a story i saw in the news once:
    some people sold a police department something they claimed was a "drug detector", a plastic box with an antenna on the side.
    someone else opened it up and found NOTHING inside the box.
    NOT A SINGLE THING!
    literally JUST an antenna connected to NOTHING.
    and someone swindled a police department into buying a BUNCH of them!

    • @David_Hogue
      @David_Hogue 8 месяцев назад

      I think it was sold by the same guy. It was also promoted by Wolfgang Halbig for detecting drugs in a high school. But he's more well known for harassing Sandy Hook parents for Alex Jones.

    • @haroldbalzac6336
      @haroldbalzac6336 8 месяцев назад +14

      The police didnt get swindled. Its pretty much just " This drug sniffing device gave me probable cause to search you car."

    • @ericb3157
      @ericb3157 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@haroldbalzac6336 oh, that reminds me of that "hemet of truth" urban legend, where two cops pretend a COLANDER is a fancy lie-detector!

    • @Random3716
      @Random3716 17 дней назад +2

      They didn't just sell this to one police department, they sold it to MANY police departments, enough that the FBI put out a national bulletin about it and was able to secure an injunction that banned their manufacture and sale in the US in 1996.
      Here's the kicker: this is the same device Adam is talking about in the video. One of the people who made the original device you're thinking of escaped justice, moved to the UK, started selling exactly the same thing there as a £10,000 bomb detector, and one of the people who bought one realized he'd then been ripped off and started the company Adam is talking about in the video!

  • @alexanderchippel
    @alexanderchippel 3 года назад +1081

    I really respect them for not doing the "gotcha" thing. I remember watching that one episode of Bill Nye's show were they brought in a crystal healer and they just sat there and made fun of them and didn't let him talk for the entire bit.
    Like yeah he's objectively wrong, but being an asshole about it and not letting him explain his position is just a dick move.

    • @armageddon_gaming
      @armageddon_gaming 3 года назад +3

      Where can I find that episode?

    • @ValiantNoob
      @ValiantNoob 3 года назад +100

      Yeah, I've lost respect for Bill Nye over the years sadly.

    • @lucilaos
      @lucilaos 3 года назад +88

      Someone could die bc of this "healer".

    • @gayflower900
      @gayflower900 3 года назад +47

      That seems to be the structure of the entire show unfortunately
      Instead of letting people share their beliefs and experiences and politely refuting them, they just sit them in a chair and heckle them constantly

    • @alexanderchippel
      @alexanderchippel 3 года назад +45

      @@lucilaos Not really. Medical malpractice is like the 6th leading cause of death in United States, and that doesn't include alternative medicine (with the exception of chiropractor because for some reason the FDA thinks that is a real medicine even though it's not). The worst thing he's doing is scamming rich white women out of their husbands paycheck while he most likely fucks them after waving a crystal over them to cure their case of the Mondays.

  • @wraith2815
    @wraith2815 3 дня назад

    I completely respect that they didn't want to make the show a "gotcha" episode good for Adam for sticking to his morals

  • @nicholaskillmeier4895
    @nicholaskillmeier4895 3 года назад

    The "behind the scenes in the drawing room" adam almost came out in this one lol. I love it.

  • @johnwickham
    @johnwickham 3 года назад +144

    How Adam parlayed this question into war crimes is amazing

    • @Seraph.G
      @Seraph.G 3 года назад +20

      The tangents are like 80% of the reason I watch these videos and this one REALLY threw me for a loop

    • @stargazer7644
      @stargazer7644 3 года назад +1

      War crimes? I don't think this guy was violating the Geneva Conventions.

    • @adamlewis5765
      @adamlewis5765 3 года назад +1

      No one said anything about war crimes, Wickham.

    • @WMtheWM
      @WMtheWM 3 года назад +6

      More like war profiteering.

    • @kimaboe
      @kimaboe 3 года назад +1

      @@stargazer7644 Maybe he was talking generally about the entire Iraq war.

  • @WilliamPitcher
    @WilliamPitcher 3 года назад +88

    My three eras of Adam Savage:
    Era One: So impressed with Adam's maker ability.
    Era Two: So impressed with Adam's enthusiasm.
    Era Three (2020 COVID): So impressed with Adam's humanity.

    • @andyheffling5000
      @andyheffling5000 3 года назад

      Spot on.

    • @kg4wwn
      @kg4wwn 3 года назад

      I assume being impressed by his dashing good looks goes without saying?

    • @rainbow_the_llama
      @rainbow_the_llama 3 года назад

      @@kg4wwn you shouldn't even need to ask.

  • @Daniel_Schmaniel
    @Daniel_Schmaniel 6 месяцев назад +1

    This is why I respect Adam. Even if he doesn't agree with or believe what they believe in he doesn't want to make a fool out of them. He chooses to show them a basic level of respect as a fellow human being.
    If only more people learned to do this the world would be a better place.

  • @LostieTrekieTechie
    @LostieTrekieTechie 8 месяцев назад

    I wonder if dowsing in open terrain helps people find lower ground / valleys, which combined with the placebo effect and confirmation bias makes them *appear* more likely than random to find good spots for wells

  • @DaVeganZombie
    @DaVeganZombie 3 года назад +263

    His passionate fury and careful delivery knowing kids will be watching him. Look up to him. And his methodical navigation through it all to come off as friendly through it all is.... awe inspiring.
    Adam comes off as an aloof guy, who likes to joke.
    But I bet he’s sincerely one of the best people you’d ever meet. I wish I had a friend like him. I’m not worthy. Not even close. But I’m jealous of all those who are. He is so awesome.

    • @OldJabbaJaws
      @OldJabbaJaws 7 месяцев назад +4

      I, like Adam, have super severe, ADHD. His delivery and methods hit me better than any teacher I ever had in my life. I wish I had Adam to teach me every single subject growing up, I probably would’ve turned out a lot better.

  • @RedSlashAce
    @RedSlashAce 3 года назад +75

    There was a story this year that those devices were being sold again as COVID detectors. It is terrible 😡

    • @Wynner3
      @Wynner3 3 года назад +7

      I see a similar issue with temperature detecting cameras in the Security industry. Some fail to show accurate readings when people's foreheads are obscured by hats, scarves, or even sunglasses.

  • @Skyfire_The_Goth
    @Skyfire_The_Goth 2 года назад +2

    There is an archaeological show called Time Team, and there was one episode where they allowed a dowser who claimed they could locate the archaeology to have a try. The team was looking for the extent of a fogou, the dowser was using two metal rods with 90 degree bends about 1/4 from one end, one held in each hand with the longer parts pointing ahead of them, claimed the rods reacted to the difference in moisture between the earth and the stones and hollows of the fogou. The team placed a trench where the dowser said they would definitely find part of the fogou. To no ones surprise (except maybe the dowser but doubt it) there was no fogou there. The dowser though had many reason why he got a false reading there, everything from he wasn't in the right mental state to the magnetism there might be different.

  • @aarongauthier8455
    @aarongauthier8455 3 года назад +3

    You know what I would’ve thought so much differently about this show if they actually did the dousing rod episode and totally just tagged on the guy. I’m glad they(at least Adam) are as stand up guys as they are funny and fun to watch blow shit up lol, and btw my favorite episode ever was the concrete truck explosion lol I LOVED that one

  • @lordsmorgasbord2646
    @lordsmorgasbord2646 3 года назад +1002

    "If you go out looking for bigfoot and you can't find him, you haven't proven that bigfoot doesn't exist. You've only proven that you don't know how to find bigfoot."
    That's a really good way of explaining science as a whole, actually.

    • @kirotheavenger60
      @kirotheavenger60 3 года назад +49

      However, it is notable that abscence of evidence where evidence is to be expected IS evidence of abscence.
      For example, that explosive dowsing rod.
      Set up a test with a car park, some cars contain bombs.
      The fact that the dowsing rod failed to find anything is absence of evidence. However, it's fairly conclusive evidence of absence since you would expect it to definitely find something.

    • @jacobesplin9301
      @jacobesplin9301 3 года назад +32

      @@kirotheavenger60 yes and no. You can’t really prove a negative, but you can become more confident that it does not in fact work though never 100%.

    • @tonystark8757
      @tonystark8757 3 года назад +15

      @@kirotheavenger60 Absence of expected evidence is evidence of absence to a degree, but I think Adam's point is its not conclusive evidence of absence. You can approach 100% certainty of absence, but you can never reach it with the scientific method.

    • @DejectRS
      @DejectRS 3 года назад +9

      @@OldWayArtisans This saying does get thrown around a lot but is not quite accurate from what I can tell.
      Absence of evidence is in fact evidence of absence, but it is in no way proof of absence. And that evidence can be strong or weak depending on the situation.
      Evidence and proof are defined terms but that phrase seems to use them interchangeably.
      Absence of evidence is not proof of absence. One cannot prove a negative, but that lack of evidence can increase certainty one has in the effects one can expect to see given this scenario again.

    • @Dennis19901
      @Dennis19901 3 года назад +4

      @@DejectRS "Absence of evidence is in fact evidence of absence"
      No it's not. A very simple explanation is that you weren't looking in the right place or were measuring incorrectly.
      This in no way provides any evidence for the absence of what you are trying to observe.
      People in the past had no way to measure radioactivity for example. Following your logic, they sure had an immense amount of evidence and increased certainty that radiation doesn't exist.
      I'm sorry, but that is absurd reasoning.

  • @lazyfoxplays8503
    @lazyfoxplays8503 3 года назад +322

    “Way back in the day... 2008.”
    Ahh. I’m old

    • @swanclipper
      @swanclipper 3 года назад +1

      yeah, my brain turned off for a minute trying to figure out where i was when i was 18. getting high and drunk watching youtube and playing guitar hero 3 like a boss!

    • @BloodWolf2005
      @BloodWolf2005 3 года назад +5

      Last decade was the 90s. No one can tell me otherwise 🙉

    • @firelord84
      @firelord84 3 года назад +2

      RUclips didn’t exist yet when I was 18...

    • @jpyka4x4
      @jpyka4x4 3 года назад

      Adam is immortal

    • @OrangeAtomicRugTM
      @OrangeAtomicRugTM 3 года назад +1

      @@BloodWolf2005 stop bring stuck in the past, it'll ruin you

  • @mandridhugh9555
    @mandridhugh9555 8 месяцев назад

    Funny thing for him to mention finding Bigfoot because I remember a Mythbusters promotional ad that shows Bigfoot growing paranoid that they were gonna start looking for him soon

  • @tigerweet
    @tigerweet Год назад +2

    I would absolutely love a sort of show where you tease out some intuitive or subconscious type of “phenomena” and show people some of the really cool “magical” seeming things that humans and their minds can do!

  • @darkdeifan
    @darkdeifan 3 года назад +133

    I really like this cause it started with a bit of nostalgia for MythBusters, then turned into a sweet emphatethic "we don't bring people here to make fun of them and their belief", and then to outrage of smoke sellers taking advantage of people in warzones, quite a rollercoster!

    • @botarakutabi1199
      @botarakutabi1199 8 месяцев назад +3

      I also like how he said that some of the people who peddle woo probably do deserve to be seen as silly, but that just wasn't what the show was about.

  • @rong1924
    @rong1924 3 года назад +449

    "I'm not going to tell you who it was!"
    I'm saying Ninja guy.

    • @fredygump5578
      @fredygump5578 3 года назад +83

      Wait, you mean the "I can catch arrows" guy?

    • @EviltheNub
      @EviltheNub 3 года назад +46

      I was thinking the same thing. He only managed to catch an arrow AFTER it hit his shoulder.

    • @zet0korp
      @zet0korp 3 года назад +5

      @@fredygump5578 lars andersen can really do that though :)

    • @TomMinnick
      @TomMinnick 3 года назад +6

      This guy? ruclips.net/video/WKvPFF-iEj4/видео.html

    • @zet0korp
      @zet0korp 3 года назад +2

      ruclips.net/video/BEG-ly9tQGk/видео.html

  • @gjourney5141
    @gjourney5141 2 года назад

    4:00 very insightful, problem-solving observation about humanity's awe-inspiring natural ability to recognize patterns and critically think; along with demonstrating through your enthusiastic and matter of fact tone that an open mind is unequivocally necessary to understanding phenomena which you do not personally experience- a situation which many would meet with unfounded skepticism. In short, no harm no foul.

  • @nolanturner5607
    @nolanturner5607 2 года назад

    I loved pyramid power, watching Kari, Grant, and Tori trying to keep strait faces through out the testing and that one scene with Tori siting there with one on his head.

  • @gideonbrown4215
    @gideonbrown4215 3 года назад +207

    Ahhhh, Pyramid Power. The infamous “oogie-boogie” myth.

    • @Lizlodude
      @Lizlodude 3 года назад +9

      Almost certainly didn't change the opinion of anyone on either side, but it was pretty fun to watch, which in a way was the point.

    • @Alex_Off-Beat
      @Alex_Off-Beat 3 года назад +7

      Also the psychic bike helmet, that was great lol

    • @alphamone
      @alphamone 3 года назад +5

      At the very least, we got a demonstration of confounding variables (if I'm thinking of the right term) in the form of the apple half that got coated in something by the table saw that made it decay less than the control.

    • @gideonbrown4215
      @gideonbrown4215 3 года назад +4

      @@alphamone That’s a valid point. Just goes to show that you can learn just as much from a failed experiment as a successful one.

  • @SilverBack_Props
    @SilverBack_Props 3 года назад +65

    It warms my heart knowing that Myhtbusters always had sensibilities towards other people’s beliefs and a solid morality when testing myths.

    • @joshuagibson2520
      @joshuagibson2520 3 года назад +8

      Beliefs aside though, science is science.

    • @vanline512
      @vanline512 3 года назад +5

      I'm really struggling with this-so as long as other people hold passionate beliefs then that's acceptable? If someone truly believes in their heart that essential oils cure cancer that shouldn't be scientifically tested? Wouldn't that exclude almost every conspiracy theory out there right now like Flat Earth. Adam mentions the deaths being on someone's scorecard but not testing obvious BS doesn't land those same deaths on his scorecard also?

    • @GoodxLad
      @GoodxLad 3 года назад +5

      A scientific test generally beats any arbitrary belief. At least no one should get offended for a scientific result that conflicts with ones previous belief/hypothesis.

    • @falconeer99
      @falconeer99 3 года назад +6

      @@vanline512 Thats not what he said. I think Adam Savage has proven pretty conclusively that Mythbusters was all about scientific method. He is simply saying they had no desire to embarrass people publicly or make people look foolish. That wasn't the nature of their show. They didn't want to be the "gotcha" kind of show. Really and truly, had Mythbusters been that type of show, it likely wouldn't have been as popular as it was.

    • @thakillman7
      @thakillman7 3 года назад +2

      @@GoodxLad it's not just a scientific test though. Mythbusters is also a TV show, and there's no good reason to publicly embarrass largely harmless people.

  • @KennethStone
    @KennethStone 2 года назад

    LOL! I love that! “I’m going to name names.”

  • @yaekmon
    @yaekmon 8 месяцев назад

    A couple of guys called Penn & Teller made the "gotcha" style show & I'm not surprised that Jamie & Adam didn't want to do that sort of thing!

  • @l8dawn
    @l8dawn 3 года назад +18

    2:29 "Absence of evidence does not constitute evidence of absence" one of the most frustrating phrases in my astrophysics lectures...

    • @katyungodly
      @katyungodly 3 года назад

      But as Matt Dillahunty has pointed out, absence of evidence in a place where evidence would be expected to be found but is not, might be evidence of absence.

    • @DarkSerris
      @DarkSerris 3 года назад

      @@katyungodly That would be evidence of absence of evidence

    • @VoltisArt
      @VoltisArt 3 года назад +2

      I'll take Adam over Matt. Local absence, even if unexpected, does not prove universal absence or even likelihood. It only proves you didn't find the thing in that one spot you looked.
      "Might" is not a word one relies on in scientific conclusion, unless the conclusion is that your experiment came to no conclusion - and some do.

    • @VoltisArt
      @VoltisArt 3 года назад +1

      In the same vein, proving one douser is a fake wouldn't disprove all of them; only the one you showed.

    • @stevenclark5173
      @stevenclark5173 2 года назад

      @@katyungodly I think a better saying for Matt would be that which can be claimed without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. Although I agree with Matt from inductive reasoning that if you keep looking for something in the places it's supposed to be and it's never found, the probability of it's existence continues to diminish.

  • @LazuliScarab
    @LazuliScarab 3 года назад +145

    For what it's worth I think debunking ths pyramid power thing was actually helpful. When I was a kid I totally bought the idea that psychics were a thing, or that the Loch Ness Monster existed, all kinds of "mysteries" like that because I was young enough to believe in Santa. Seeing someone test a claim that was presented as if it *could* be true and have it totally fail the test helped me be less gullible.

  • @drewmitchell9554
    @drewmitchell9554 Месяц назад

    I knew someone who bought rural land in a region where dowsing is common practice. He told me it's basically a very gentle payment to keep the local old codgers happy with you as a newcomer. One of said old codgers comes out, does their "magic" finding water in a place where it's almost everywhere, and while they're around you talk informally and learn all the locally common knowledge about the land that doesn't show on legal records.
    Yeah obviously this isn't a great system but it's basically a sociological thing going on. Being on good terms with your neighbors is ironically more important in the remote countryside than in the city where they can be yards away from or even on top of you.

  • @guthax30
    @guthax30 8 месяцев назад

    Adam is probably the most articulate speaker I’ve seen on RUclips.

  • @gruingas
    @gruingas 3 года назад +43

    Its awesome how often mythbusters stories are just solid lessons in the scientific method.

    • @AusyG
      @AusyG 3 года назад +1

      As I got older I look back at the old episodes and have a sense of longing for the old days. Sometimes I'll see something they are trying to explain and I'm like hey I know exactly what happened and how. I do that for a living or ive seen that happen in person.
      I think though they left out so much of the basic information that would explain many of the physical phenomena they explored, it still delivered the same affect by sparking the curiosity of millions of kids to build and experiment themselves.

  • @Hexlattice
    @Hexlattice 3 года назад +27

    I distinctly remember the episode on pyramid power. Yeah I knew it was a whole bunch of hogwash, but I learned something very valuable in that episode that I carried with me through my research in my grad studies and even today as an r&d engineer. If you recall, Tori cut an apple using a bandsaw and because he used something that was not clean introduced a variable that was not anticipated. So that episode had some real value for me.

  • @sorcdk2880
    @sorcdk2880 3 месяца назад

    In relation to remote bomb detection, I have seen some good research which managed to detect, locate and map out metal framed burried explosives through flybys with drones with some special equipment. Last I saw there were iterating through different designs to improve the quality, stability and speed of such operations.