Why is a Rabbit s Foot Considered Lucky?

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  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 573

  • @damnbro_idc
    @damnbro_idc 4 года назад +153

    Rabbit: *signature large ears*
    Humans; "the foot must be magic"

    • @fatmn
      @fatmn 4 года назад +12

      He mentioned it was the whole rabbit at first - I imagine rabbits were hung about the person for luck until someone got tired of lugging the whole thing around lol

    • @MarkLoves2Fly
      @MarkLoves2Fly 4 года назад +3

      @@fatmn Nah... that was the punishment for killing one. (Tie it around the neck of the one who killed it, until it rots, and falls off of it's own accord.😅🤣

    • @Zomfoo
      @Zomfoo 4 года назад +4

      It’s the feet that make it fast, able to evade predators.

    • @Devin_Stromgren
      @Devin_Stromgren 4 года назад +3

      @@MarkLoves2Fly That's how we used to punish our dogs if they killed one of our chickens. Didn't leave them on quite that long though.

    • @MarkLoves2Fly
      @MarkLoves2Fly 4 года назад +2

      @@Devin_Stromgren effective , isn't it?

  • @iksarguards
    @iksarguards 4 года назад +82

    “If rabbits feet were so lucky they’d still be on the rabbit”- *99% of comment this section*

  • @williamchamberlain2263
    @williamchamberlain2263 4 года назад +20

    My take: if a rabbit is caught in a wire snare it may gnaw its own foot off to escape, and may even survive the shock and blood loss. If you're a trapper and find the foot without a fluffy corpse nearby, then you know that it _is_ indeed a lucky rabbit, and you've therefore got a bit of embodied luck it left behind in your snare.

  • @russellbrosam1722
    @russellbrosam1722 4 года назад +94

    The word abracadabra closely translates to “I Create As I Speak,” in Aramaic. Abra means “I will create” and cadabra means “as was spoken".

    • @Geburah82
      @Geburah82 4 года назад +6

      Ha Brachab dabarah.

    • @gatherformagic
      @gatherformagic 4 года назад +5

      What about alakazam?

    • @stefanschleps8758
      @stefanschleps8758 4 года назад +1

      @@gatherformagic And Shazam! lmao

    • @stefanschleps8758
      @stefanschleps8758 4 года назад +6

      @@gatherformagic alakazam alakahpoo hobra codobra I'm glad I'm not you. It is likely of Arabic origin. Meaning the will of Allah. Perhaps from the Ottamans influence in Bosnia. Good luck.

    • @adellaadams8018
      @adellaadams8018 4 года назад +7

      You are correct! It is in the Talmud. It was borrowed by Hudini who wanted people to believe that he created majically objects. Hudini was a Talmudic student in his youth. My father was born on Friday the 13 and taught me to hate superstition and witchcraft!

  • @joelhall5124
    @joelhall5124 4 года назад +118

    "A lucky rabbit's foot."
    Yeah, bet that rabbit feels lucky.

    • @thebigdog2295
      @thebigdog2295 4 года назад +3

      Yeah it's not so lucky for the rabbit is it.😂🤣😭

    • @baggieknight8411
      @baggieknight8411 4 года назад +5

      Well the faster rabbit feels lucky lol

  • @zacharyouten4525
    @zacharyouten4525 4 года назад +112

    Well one thing is for sure, those feet weren't giving the rabbits any luck

    • @sketchesofpayne
      @sketchesofpayne 4 года назад +3

      I think the idea was that the rabbit's foot absorbed the bad luck.

    • @tpl608
      @tpl608 4 года назад

      @Timothy McCaskey rabbits will eat eat too

    • @davidkugel
      @davidkugel 4 года назад

      I thought the very same thing.

    • @OneCatholicSpeaks
      @OneCatholicSpeaks 4 года назад +2

      Beat me to it. If the rabbit's foot really was lucky, it would still be n the rabbit.

    • @joshglover2370
      @joshglover2370 4 года назад

      Right!? 😭

  • @nemisisomega
    @nemisisomega 4 года назад +14

    "abra kadabra u re preggo"
    OMG I laughed so hard at that!! That was so hillarious!!!!!

  • @thirstfast1025
    @thirstfast1025 4 года назад +87

    "If rabbit's feet were lucky, they'd still be attached to a rabbit".

    • @brucecharlie8613
      @brucecharlie8613 4 года назад +3

      Depends on how hungry I am lol

    • @thirstfast1025
      @thirstfast1025 4 года назад

      @Timothy McCaskey Only took ya a month to craft that gem response hey?

  • @yanyanc20
    @yanyanc20 4 года назад +25

    Hebrew speaker here, "Abra cadabra" literally translates to "I'll conjure as I speak"
    Abra became Evra in modern Hebrew, meaning I'll create/conjure.
    Cadabra became Ce'Adebra, meaning as I speak.

    • @stefanschleps8758
      @stefanschleps8758 4 года назад +2

      Thank you Maayan.

    • @louisvictor3473
      @louisvictor3473 4 года назад +1

      A Mayan who speaks Hebrew, the marvels of globalisation

    • @tmhchacham
      @tmhchacham 4 года назад +2

      Except that you are fudging the words a bit to translate it that way, both removing letters, adding letters, and changing vowels to get the right form of the word. If it did come from Hebrew, it changed a lot through the years, keeping only most of the right letters, but not all of them.
      Conversely, if it is Aramaic, little if anything, has to change. The literal translation being: I [will] create like the word.

    • @yanyanc20
      @yanyanc20 4 года назад

      Also talking about Harry Potter- "avada cadabra" translates to "it will disappear /get lost as I speak"
      Aveda means object/life lost.

    • @yanyanc20
      @yanyanc20 4 года назад +3

      @@tmhchacham it's the difference between modern Israeli spoken Hebrew to a more "biblical" one, in order to understand you need learn how the language was revived and changed to fit the modern culture in the last 100 years, in any case the translation is correct 😊 the words are written the same no matter how you read them
      אברא כדברא

  • @CarpeNoctem135
    @CarpeNoctem135 4 года назад +21

    Animal digs a hole and gets into said hole
    “It speaks to the gods!”

    • @Argonak1
      @Argonak1 4 года назад +1

      Its just beyond me how they couldve just dug up the burrow and been like "huh, the rabbit speaks to the dirt. There are no gods in these holes."

    • @CarpeNoctem135
      @CarpeNoctem135 4 года назад +1

      Mischievous Fish I’m the rabbit and I speak for the dirt

    • @Yhur4x
      @Yhur4x 4 года назад +1

      @@Argonak1 Can't risk to piss off the gods.

  • @TheSlizzer348
    @TheSlizzer348 4 года назад +16

    “Some bonus facts” aka 1/2 the video

    • @kari7403
      @kari7403 4 года назад

      I actually found the bonus facts more in testing and more in depth, too.

  • @lucid_icicle4602
    @lucid_icicle4602 4 года назад +6

    The subtle background music always makes me think there is an ice cream van passing by.

  • @carakuso
    @carakuso 4 года назад +5

    Bonus fact for you, Simon: 'Yt' in all likelihood is an abbreviation of 'that,' as back when the printing press first came out, the English still used the letter Þþ (called Thorn and pronounced as 'th'). However, there usually wasn't a Thorn in typeface sets, so a 'y' was often used in it's place, which is also why you'd see, 'ye' (as in, 'ye old shoppe'), which was meant to be read as the word 'the.' 🤓

  • @missymotors
    @missymotors 4 года назад +7

    I noticed many English say “having it off” and Americans say, “getting it on” 🤔

  • @meritholdingllc123
    @meritholdingllc123 4 года назад +24

    The rabbit had four feet and they were not enough luck to keep him from getting killed so four people could have a "lucky" foot.

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 4 года назад +2

      well? yeah, but they are yummy., the rabbit that is. I think I wrote the same thing , but in a different way.

    • @_ZeroSum_
      @_ZeroSum_ 4 года назад +2

      They only used the one foot though. 1 rabbit died for just 1 schmoe to get a lucky foot.

    • @defenestrator3900
      @defenestrator3900 4 года назад +3

      @@_ZeroSum_ Why would you think they didn't just eat the rest of the rabbit? My theory as to why the rabbit's foot became a sign of luck is because the two rear feet are the parts you have leftover from skinning it, everything else is used as meat, fur and bones for broth, some rabbit farmer who wanted to find a use for those rabbit's feet other than compost decided to bullshit people into buying them for luck

  • @GregMcMahan
    @GregMcMahan 4 года назад +39

    Here's an interesting story idea. Why is the magician's trick of pulling a rabbit from a hat iconic? Hint... it's really weird.

    • @stefanschleps8758
      @stefanschleps8758 4 года назад +3

      From the Mormon storey of how the ''golden plates'' were interpreted. Complete mocking of this storey by Vaudevillian performers. No charge.

    • @alexblack8634
      @alexblack8634 4 года назад +2

      Would you prefer pulling a hat out of rabbit?

    • @stephenherbertson4544
      @stephenherbertson4544 4 года назад

      @@alexblack8634 How would you get it in there in the first place?

    • @eyekanspalwerds7824
      @eyekanspalwerds7824 4 года назад +4

      @@stephenherbertson4544 gingerly

    • @rashadpreston7389
      @rashadpreston7389 4 года назад +1

      I pulled a rabbit out of grown man's ass once.

  • @missshannonsunshine
    @missshannonsunshine 4 года назад +6

    The Negro part took me off guard 🤣😅

  • @petergray2712
    @petergray2712 4 года назад +13

    In the Chinese language, the phonemes for "four" and "death" are identical, and therefore doing anything in fours is to be avoided.

    • @minagica
      @minagica 4 года назад +2

      Couldn't they have just not started using the same sounds for the two different things? But I guess that's not really how it works...

    • @angelmochi9630
      @angelmochi9630 4 года назад +3

      @@minagica they arent using the same sounds. one is sì (four) and the other is sǐ (death)

    • @minagica
      @minagica 4 года назад +1

      @@angelmochi9630 ah, thank you! :D

    • @photonicpizza1466
      @photonicpizza1466 4 года назад

      @@minagica In Japanese, the sound is the same. 四 (four) and 死 (death) are both read "shi".
      Homophones happen. English has loads of them. "Ate" and "eight", "two" and "to", "you're" and "your", "they're" and "their" and "there", etc. Natural language isn't designed, saying "why didn't they just do X and Y, makes more sense" ignores the fact that language isn't logical. They also never just "started" using "shi" for both words, the sounds of the two words gradually got closer and closer over time until they were the same sound.

    • @patricklinford689
      @patricklinford689 4 года назад +2

      This comment is just to stop there from being 4 replies. You are welcome.

  • @oslonorway547
    @oslonorway547 4 года назад +20

    (Hey Daven): On the question of making a monthly summary of all the podcasts which you guys do; I'd suggest you do the same thing that _JRE Clips_ channel does, where you simply cut out highlights clips of the podcast and make a playlist for the best bits of the month.
    This way, you and Simon don't have to go through each podcast again to remind yourselves of what to talk about to make the proposed monthly summary video.
    ... It's easy, after each podcast, just take out 3 or 4 highlight clips and save them until you can release the playlist of summary clips for the month. Cheers.

  • @tawon1984
    @tawon1984 4 года назад +4

    Steve Miller Band loves the Bonus facts.

  • @shockmonkeyradio7128
    @shockmonkeyradio7128 4 года назад +5

    "I wanna reach out and grab ya" You know...discarded feet of rabbits might have been in abundance at some point. then again...no one in any movie threw a rabbit's foot at a zombie or a vampire. how much 'magic' is in leftovers? i mean, here in North America...we're still trying to figure out a use for pumpkins. (Hint: Zombies and Vampires are not scared of pumpkins)

    • @alphagt62
      @alphagt62 4 года назад +1

      But if you hit him in the head with a pumpkin, it might slow him down for a minute

    • @hydrolito
      @hydrolito 4 года назад

      Pumpkins are used to make pumpkin pies most Americans know that. Can also make pumpkin bread some should know that also.

  • @dragonmaster613
    @dragonmaster613 4 года назад +1

    it is so good to hear Celtic pronounced properly.
    thank you.

  • @thirstfast1025
    @thirstfast1025 4 года назад +14

    ".... I wanna reach out and grab ya.."

    • @maximeprometheas
      @maximeprometheas 4 года назад +2

      Love that song!

    • @michaeltobias3110
      @michaeltobias3110 4 года назад +1

      I remember that song. 👏👏👍

    • @Karin_Allen
      @Karin_Allen 4 года назад +2

      I'm not dissing the song itself, but the *lyrics* to that song are very nearly the worst written any popular artist. And of course, Steve Miller is actually *more* notorious for another of his atrocities, "the pompatus of love."
      And yeah, yeah, I know that if you dig deeply enough (which is very, very deep), you'll find out that somebody else made up that word before him. But that doesn't change the fact that Steve Miller's lyrics are generally shit.

    • @thirstfast1025
      @thirstfast1025 4 года назад

      @@Karin_Allen the song just popped into my head cuz he kept saying abracadabra. I don't know any more of the lyrics than that! LOL! I still contend that the Police have a good shot at worst lyrics in "Every Breath you Take"

    • @Karin_Allen
      @Karin_Allen 4 года назад +1

      @@thirstfast1025 Well, thanks to your comment, now I have that song stuck in *my* head! ;-( As for "Every Breath You Take," it may not be poetry, but at least it makes sense. It's about a stalker boyfriend. Steve Miller just throws together any pair of words that happen to rhyme. ;-)

  • @kristinradams7109
    @kristinradams7109 4 года назад +15

    Yay! I'm early! Hello, Simon :) You are my favorite distraction from all that is wrong in this world. Thanks so much for such great content!!! Cheers and be safe and healthy, everyone!

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 4 года назад +1

      Who are you talking to? He's not there to read you your comment. In fact, he didn't even post this video. You " silly rabbit". Tricks are for kids!

    • @deviationblue
      @deviationblue 4 года назад +1

      Find him on Twitter; he's very active there.

    • @valiroime
      @valiroime 4 года назад

      Trix are for kids

  • @ogr8bearded175
    @ogr8bearded175 4 года назад +2

    Okay, so first off my Dad has been known to just make stuff up, so take this with a grain of salt. He says the lucky rabbit's foot came from trappers. A rabbit would be caught in a trap and gnaw off their foot and get away. So when the trapper came around all he found was a foot from the 'lucky rabbit' that had escaped.

  • @GDMiller419
    @GDMiller419 4 года назад +3

    Hoodoo is a living tradition, itself an African Diaspora Religion still practiced and being lovingly reclaimed by many of us. One need only read or listen to African and AfroAmerican folklore to gain some understanding of the significance and power of a rabbit's foot.
    Also, "mojo" has real import and refers to a Senegambian tradition of using amulets for various purposes. "Mumbo jumbo" is rooted in a reductive and dismissive racist mimicry of African languages and faith traditions.

    • @grilledleeks6514
      @grilledleeks6514 4 года назад

      I was taking you serious until you said mumbo jumbo is a racist mimicry of some obscure african cultural thing. Now I assume everything you said was taken from some internet article you read once. Oh well

    • @GDMiller419
      @GDMiller419 4 года назад

      @@grilledleeks6514 I find it interesting that this assertion upsets you so, and that you assume it's something i just "picked up". I'm not going to run you my CV, but this is something I studied in school across academic disciplines (linguistics, history, sociology, Africana studies). I would rather not argue about things I haven't actually looked into, but you seem to have made a different choice and I won't waste my time engaging with your reflexive rejection of facts.

    • @GDMiller419
      @GDMiller419 4 года назад

      "Mumbo jumbo" made mockery of African languages and particularly their connections to and use in ATR's. A mambo/manbo is a female priest in Vodou, the "jumbo" part has referents in nzambi/jumbie which are kiKongo-derived terms for spirits. The term "mumbo jumbo" mocked what colonial whites considered the primitive superstitions and practices of African peoples, which is also why hoodoo-voodoo is used dismissively/derisively.

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache 4 года назад +2

    Rabbit's foot is lucky because you're lucky enough to even catch a rabbit when it's hopping away from you

  • @tymime
    @tymime 4 года назад +5

    Who was the first stage magician to use "Abracadabra", I wonder?

  • @JasonGastrich
    @JasonGastrich 4 года назад +7

    Interesting. I had a rabbit’s foot when I was a kid. My parents said it was lucky. I wonder what Steve Miller Band thinks of Abracadabra’s history.

  • @1810jeff
    @1810jeff 4 года назад +3

    Probably something to do with how rabbits are hard to catch

  • @ZekeGraal
    @ZekeGraal 4 года назад +5

    My airline doesn’t have a 13th row, but my favorite plane to work on is serial number 666 haha!

  • @jancerny8109
    @jancerny8109 4 года назад

    I can't hear "abracadabra" without remembering Bugs Bunny in the Loony Toons short, reading the book "Magic Words and Phrases" aloud in a Brooklyn rabbit's accent, unintentionally transmogrifying the vampire stalking him. "Magic woids...it is to laugh."

  • @AntonSlavik
    @AntonSlavik 4 года назад +1

    On the Celtic side of things, to take someone's head or hand was to harness their power. The same may have gone for rabbit foot, and very likely conferred some other power before meaning luck.

    • @TeeLeigh66
      @TeeLeigh66 4 года назад

      Like swiftness, or fecundity (fertility)

  • @paulxaviercyr
    @paulxaviercyr 4 года назад +1

    My grandfather told me a reason the rabbit's foot was lucky.... he got away.
    If a rabbit got his foot caught in a hunter's snare, then managed to chew his own foot off to get away before being discovered by the hunter.... then the foot that was left behind should be collected by the hunter as a sign of good luck.
    My grandfather also used this tale to explain how in life, we sometimes get caught in bad situations but we cannot let them be our end.

  • @ShaneBermingham616
    @ShaneBermingham616 4 года назад +8

    "Abrahadabra; the reward of Ra Hoor Khut."
    (AL III:1)

    • @maximeprometheas
      @maximeprometheas 4 года назад

      "There is division hither homeward; there is a word not known." 93

    • @parkerzavinsky3824
      @parkerzavinsky3824 4 года назад +1

      @@maximeprometheas zodir mozod iad

    • @maximeprometheas
      @maximeprometheas 4 года назад

      @@parkerzavinsky3824 Ateh amen shemchet he ael! :)

  • @timothysanders226
    @timothysanders226 3 года назад +1

    I lost my foot in a boating accident a few years back..
    My best friend wears it around his neck to remind himself of how lucky he was for not going with me on the trip.

  • @rickintexas1584
    @rickintexas1584 4 года назад +2

    Thanks for the Abracadabra bonus fact. I am a magician and can use this little tidbit.

  • @terrypeace4222
    @terrypeace4222 4 года назад

    This was was also used in folk magick. A blanket would be used with abracadabra on it and done a triangle dropping thé last letter each time. It was put up until someone had a fever and the magick blanket with the letters embroided in. And the fever would break soon, that of coarse was done with lots of fluids and foods high in vitamin C.

  • @billbaggins
    @billbaggins 4 года назад +2

    Rabbit's foot.... meh. I've got my lucky roll of toilet paper

    • @Bildgesmythe
      @Bildgesmythe 4 года назад

      Getting one of the rarest of talismans, how lucky!

    • @billbaggins
      @billbaggins 4 года назад

      @@Bildgesmythe A family heirloom for the future😁

    • @intheforest7482
      @intheforest7482 4 года назад

      Definitely more useful

  • @cheaterman49
    @cheaterman49 4 года назад

    8:50 Sam was confused, he thought this was for Business Blaze? :-D epic meme hahaha

  • @guyvanarsdall7686
    @guyvanarsdall7686 4 года назад +1

    Simon calling babies "parasitic poop and drool factories" made me laugh .

  • @honey_bee65
    @honey_bee65 4 года назад +1

    You forgot the *"BLACK CAT BONE"* .... it's mentioned in so many blues songs.

  • @Supersonic
    @Supersonic 4 года назад +1

    reading that tapestry going down an back up i got AAAAAAAAAAABRACADABRA!

  • @Zeytrixx
    @Zeytrixx 4 года назад +16

    We are all lucky when we watch one of “Today I Found Out” ‘s videos.

    • @fairz7901
      @fairz7901 4 года назад +1

      Indiana jones, I loved the crystal ark movie

    • @joaquimrodriguez8961
      @joaquimrodriguez8961 4 года назад

      Um, what?

    • @TheHornet44
      @TheHornet44 4 года назад

      We’d be even luckier if we also watched a Business Blaze video

    • @Friendship1nmillion
      @Friendship1nmillion 4 года назад

      *PARTICULARLY IF* you're watching a #Video made by "Today I found out" requested by yourself. I'm still waiting on them answering MY suggestion. 😟. I'm sure they're busy, Although I'm not giving up too much hope about success with my submission. 👨‍💻📿🦄 👨‍🏫🐇 🎰🎄🧙‍♂️👹

    • @sipsofhell9018
      @sipsofhell9018 4 года назад

      he talks a lot of crap cause he is too lazy to research his topics properly. For example, the Scarab Beetle in his view is nothing more than Ancient Egyptian superstition. The beetle cover wings have anti-gravity properties, this is a scientific fact and can you imagine a race of people that built the pyramids being superstitious? we cant even build a pyramid today. He is arrogant and foolish undoubtedly a legend in his own mind. A bald fuk with a fancy accent

  • @tylerwazlavek4514
    @tylerwazlavek4514 4 года назад

    That lumé add was top notch. Solid advertising, I'm buying some.

  • @stefanschleps8758
    @stefanschleps8758 4 года назад

    Thanks Simone. Although I wish you had gone into the lucky penny thing. I am still going out, right now, today, and getting me a abracadabra triangle. You know, to protect me from the nCov'19. In Austria every new year is celebrated by giving those you care about a silver good luck coin. This are often beautifully stamped and either .900 Ag. or sterling silver. I can't wait to complete my collection. And then send it off to auction.
    Peace.

  • @MrTortureandtorment
    @MrTortureandtorment 4 года назад

    Very good commentary Simon. Keep up the good work.

  • @SigEpBlue
    @SigEpBlue 4 года назад +1

    Bring back winged phalluses!

  • @Chris-qg2fg
    @Chris-qg2fg 4 года назад

    Did no one else find Simon's description of 6 month old babies as heartwarming as I did? ;)

  • @Babarudra
    @Babarudra 4 года назад +2

    Almost time for a video on May celebration festivities at Padstow, Cornwall. Oss Oss!

  • @flamencoprof
    @flamencoprof 4 года назад +1

    I'm glad that the Enlightenment period happened.

  • @ahobimo732
    @ahobimo732 4 года назад

    "Abracadabra" is a pattern based on the first four letters of the alphabet, abcd... Medieval magic had a tradition of using very long made-up "words" like abracadabra. Usually they were much longer and more complicated, so that they had to be practiced in order to be able to say them properly.

  • @Katzztar
    @Katzztar 4 года назад

    It was either in Calvin & Hobbes or in Far Side, I saw a comic strip addressing the "lucky rabbit's foot". One character mentions needing one when the 2nd character states "It wasn't so lucky for the rabbit now was it?"

  • @mysticlv1
    @mysticlv1 4 года назад

    The beard is absolutely epic!!! Looks great brother.

  • @number1sun
    @number1sun 4 года назад +1

    Abracadabra was invented by Steve Millers ancestors.

  • @DayZeroChannel
    @DayZeroChannel 4 года назад

    Love the channel! Suprised your content gets demonetized so much. you deserve alot better and th team there

  • @blyxx7450
    @blyxx7450 4 года назад +1

    Are rabbits feet still sold as goodluck charms? Cant remember the last time i saw one. They used to be everywhere. Btw i thi k it refers to a rabbit escaping a trap and losing its foot. Makin it a lucky rabbit. Maybe you stated that i didnt watch the vid.

  • @conguyuk83
    @conguyuk83 4 года назад +1

    Awesome videos Simon! I enjoy all of them, also your Business Blaze ones too. How long does it usually take to put a whole 'Today I Found Out' video together on a average?

  • @JenniferDawe
    @JenniferDawe 11 месяцев назад

    It's not even the next day, it's the minute the babies come out. Rabbits can even get pregnant twice within the same day, as they have multiple horns on their uterus and can carry 2 separate litters.

  • @updownstate
    @updownstate 4 года назад

    "Journal of the plague year" is a spooky eye-opener as we're facing a corona virus pandemic.

  • @laurelkerossow9924
    @laurelkerossow9924 4 года назад +1

    And suddenly the reason Anya is scared of rabbits makes perfect sense.

    • @autonomouscollective2599
      @autonomouscollective2599 4 года назад +1

      Laurel KE Rossow
      LOL! Love the “Buffy” reference!

    • @laurelkerossow9924
      @laurelkerossow9924 4 года назад +1

      @@autonomouscollective2599 Thank you!! I was so worried no one would get it!!

  • @sewmeonekenobi639
    @sewmeonekenobi639 4 года назад +1

    Starting from the single letter ‘A’ , going up on the right side of the cone, it spells, ‘Abracadabra.’

  • @-MacCat-
    @-MacCat- 4 года назад

    How could anyone not like a clip that contains ".... a baby is still a poop and drool" factory?! 😂

  • @dietersemmler2815
    @dietersemmler2815 2 года назад

    You don’t want a rabbits foot you want a rabbit missing a foot now that’s a lucky rabbit lol

  • @minuteman4199
    @minuteman4199 4 года назад +2

    It's hard to get good lion lard these days.

  • @primoroy
    @primoroy 4 года назад +1

    Which reminds me, how about "Hocus Pocus?"

  • @eshvartz
    @eshvartz 4 года назад

    I was always told AbraCadabra came from ancient Hebrew: originally pronounced Eh-vra Ka-adaber, meaning "I shall create the which I will speak.". I tend to agree with it since that's usually what magicians do after they say these words up to modern times. They say abracadabra and create something by "magical means".

  • @blazemordly9746
    @blazemordly9746 3 года назад

    3:23 the scariest paragraph I’ve ever read in my whole life. 😬

  • @TheElwain
    @TheElwain 4 года назад

    Friday the 13th is a local beach holiday where I come from. The more Friday the 13ths inn a year the better!

  • @charlesmiller6826
    @charlesmiller6826 4 года назад

    "Parasitic poop and drool factories" YES!! i finnally found a name for my punk-country fusion band

  • @squishmastah4682
    @squishmastah4682 4 года назад

    "Parasitic poop and drool factories."
    Damn. Now I have to change my password.

  • @DunnickFayuro
    @DunnickFayuro 4 года назад +1

    "Parasitic poop and drool factories" lmfao!!!

  • @LeadsTheFallen
    @LeadsTheFallen 4 года назад +1

    Every video simons beard gets longer lol

  • @thebandit7623
    @thebandit7623 4 года назад

    Damn Rabbits can get it on. Now we know where the phrase " going at it like Rabbits" come from.

  • @JC-ks3yk
    @JC-ks3yk 4 года назад

    My apartment building has no 4th, 14th, 24th, or 34th floors. The Chinese word for "four" and "death" are near homophones, thus the superstition. Similarly, the words for "pear" and "separate" are near homophones, thus you never offer a pear to a lover unless you are signaling that you are breaking up with them.

  • @sumoslamer180
    @sumoslamer180 4 года назад

    Avra kadabra actually means "I create as I speak" coming from the interpretation of the book of genesis of whether God created from words only (something from nothing), so "Avra kadabra", or whether by reshaping materials (something from something)

  • @Markle2k
    @Markle2k 4 года назад

    Abracadabra coming through to English from the Latin "Avra Cadavra" via Spanish would make sense. In Spanish the pronunciation of "B" and "V" is identical and intermediate between the English pronunciations of the letters' sounds.
    Side question: Who came up with "parasitic poop and drool factories"? Emily or Matthew?

  • @geofff.3343
    @geofff.3343 4 года назад

    In the immortal words of Mitch Hedberg: "But come on people on the 14th floor, you know what floor you're really on. If you jump out of the window you will die sooner."

  • @maryfreeman3341
    @maryfreeman3341 4 года назад

    There were no rabbits in Celtic Britain, there were Hares a different species, which were worshipped by the Romans. Rabbits were brought to Britian in the 10th centuary by the Normans, and it took a long time to get them to breed! There are purposly built warrens assaciated with many Norman and middle ages castles.

  • @drivestowork
    @drivestowork 4 года назад

    Especially considering how unlucky that rabbit's foot turned out for the former owner!!

  • @jameskosusnik1102
    @jameskosusnik1102 4 года назад

    Love these videos, good job simon, davin and crew. Positive vibes from Alaska.

  • @magic8ball1982
    @magic8ball1982 4 года назад

    Many record companies avoid having 13 tracks on albums

  • @andymanaus1077
    @andymanaus1077 4 года назад +5

    0:40 "Christians the world over wear crucifixes" while displaying a photo of a Christian cross. Only Catholics and a few Orthodox churches use crucifixes. Other Christians groups use crosses and still others use no specific symbol at all.

    • @Hubilicious90
      @Hubilicious90 4 года назад +2

      I dont think that people who aren't really "into" this whole Christian thing (despite being babticed) make a destinction between crucifixes and crosses, but use them as synonyms.

    • @the88thdarcstar
      @the88thdarcstar 4 года назад +1

      @@Hubilicious90 have you never heard of the Protestant Reformation? One of the points of contentions was icons. Therefore the Protestants took the icon of Christ off the cross turn the crucifix into a simply cross. No corpus, no crucifix.

    • @the88thdarcstar
      @the88thdarcstar 4 года назад

      I caught that too

    • @minagica
      @minagica 4 года назад +3

      @@the88thdarcstar hearing about the Reformation is far from knowing all of its details. I've definitely heard about the Reformation and even the figure of Jesus thing, simply wasn't aware there was a difference in meaning. Not everyone is aware of every possible detail of things they know about

    • @Hubilicious90
      @Hubilicious90 4 года назад +1

      @@the88thdarcstar of course I heard of the reformation, in fact, I'm from the country in which Luther sparked it. But what does that matter? All I said is that most western ("Christian") people aren't as hung up on their religion as they used to be and don't care for those semantic "subtleties" anymore; which honestly is proven by the fact that even a youtube channel which's main feature it is to look things up and do research on anything under the sun didn't care enough to make this destinction.
      I mean cool that you know the difference, good for you. I personally have also acquired tons of useless knowledge and facts myself, but frankly most people don't care about those either.

  • @matthewrobinett1012
    @matthewrobinett1012 4 года назад

    Simon looking like a Viking with that beard

  • @joshuaradick5679
    @joshuaradick5679 4 года назад +1

    As a left handed individual I can confirm that I am evil

  • @jeremy8189
    @jeremy8189 4 года назад +1

    Raccoons have dong bones and people carry them for luck. I learned 2 things in the first couple minutes 😂

  • @eileenbass952
    @eileenbass952 4 года назад

    Simon, my husband was born on Friday 13th March 1959.

  • @CChissel
    @CChissel 4 года назад

    I had read in a book on religions that it started as a killing curse/spell in Aramaic. You’re supposed to recite the persons name while performing the cone step. Don’t know if it’s true, and that book was written in the 50s.

  • @hydrolito
    @hydrolito 4 года назад

    I use my magic wand to activate my magic looking glass to see the future, however the weatherman on TV isn't always right.

  • @fatmn
    @fatmn 4 года назад

    TFW saying "abracadabra" is like saying "bless you"

  • @sealornodeal5668
    @sealornodeal5668 4 года назад

    Abracadabra also means ’With my words, I create.’

  • @stig1280
    @stig1280 4 года назад

    Suggestion for a future episode: the origin of "Phoning it in"...

  • @juliestevens6931
    @juliestevens6931 4 года назад +2

    My building in DOES have a 13th floor and I work on it (I live in the USA).

    • @brightstarlastname2812
      @brightstarlastname2812 4 года назад +1

      I hear your getting fired this Friday.

    • @juliestevens6931
      @juliestevens6931 4 года назад

      @@brightstarlastname2812 When we found out what floor we were being moved to (we moved about 5 years ago), many people decided they wanted to retire. We lost about 20% of our workforce.

    • @brightstarlastname2812
      @brightstarlastname2812 4 года назад

      @@juliestevens6931 Some people just can't deal with superstitions.
      PS. This week has a Friday the 13th.
      That's why I made the joke.

  • @hashtag415
    @hashtag415 4 года назад

    My dyslexia saw "rabbi's foot".

  • @donolinger6904
    @donolinger6904 4 года назад +2

    - A friend of mine who studied the occult most of his life said abracadabra is a real magic word.

  • @michaelclark9409
    @michaelclark9409 4 года назад

    "... Burning flame, full of desire, kiss me baby, let the fire get higher..." I forget what comes next...

  • @craigcrawford6595
    @craigcrawford6595 4 года назад

    Rabbit's foot- lucky to everyone except the rabbit...

  • @AntonSlavik
    @AntonSlavik 4 года назад

    How much bacteria on the skin is healthy or how long until it's unhealthy and it's better to shower? Same question, but with natural grease on the hair?

  • @jonathanvanboskerck2693
    @jonathanvanboskerck2693 4 года назад

    Thanks.

  • @groupcaptainbonzo
    @groupcaptainbonzo 4 года назад

    The “Lucky Rabbits foot” didn’t help the poor rabbit very much. And he/She had four of them 🤣