also, if you are getting radiation treatment and are planning on traveling internationally after it, make sure you get a doctors note so you don't trip an alarm coming into US customs like my dad did and give all the customs agents a twinge that they might get to fight crime that day!
I like to carry around a Radiacode and see how many times it alarms when I'm out and about. Goodwill is a prime spot to find people who are spewing radiation from their medical treatment 😅
I wonder what those few Americans with RTG powered pace makers do? How could you explain that to customs, like hey I just have some plutonium in my chest, it's fine let me through.
@darkpixel1128 If you want a genuine answer, people with some medical thing inside them that means they can't to standard security things carry around appropriate documentation or some other form of proof of that. Unsurprisingly, people whos job it is to scan hundreds or thousand of people a day are fully aware and used to these exceptions. Another common example is people with certain metal implants will always setoff a metal detector. They'll just be pad down, scanned with a more directional metal detector, or both
I don't understand why that would help. "Hi, I tripped your detector because I just got X radioactive treatment" -- no we don't believe you. "Hi here is a note I totally could have typed myself saying I just got X radioactive treatment" -- all good. I really fucking hope that's not how this works and the advice is just so you don't forget the treatment you recieved.
Not just cancer, but I had a nuclear medicine heart scan where they injected some technetium-99m into my body to see how blood flowed around my heart while it was beating. Pretty cool stuff. I think I had a letter, but I pretty much spent the next day or two at home. I did hear a story somewhere about a woman who had had such treatment, and then got on a bus to another city, and the bus set off a radiation detector in a tunnel. That was an interesting day for a bus full of people.
My wife had the same procedure and I got out my Geiger counter. She was at 54,000 counts per minute (about 3,600 times normal) an hour after. I work downstairs below our living room and she was on the couch above me. Through the floor where I was sitting I was reading 400 counts per minute (about 26 times background radiation). I guess you could say that's the hottest she's ever been. :)
Yup you are pretty toasty after that test. Waa so strong it made a cheap hand held geiger counter go out of range when over. It decays so fast that if I were a science teacher I could give a good lecture on half life with that one. ❤
@@christopherleubner6633 I looked it up after she got the test and it said about 6 hours for the half life. I checked her six hours later and the CPM was about half what it was before. Cool little science experiment!
Major landfills inspect incoming loads for radiation sources and the most common thing that sets them off is adult diapers from patients who have recently undergone some sort of radioisotope imaging procedure.
I was at a festival many years ago with my grandma and her friend who had recently had some kind of radiation treatment and the police literally tracked her down looking for the source of the radiation. Im sure any large event has teams dedicated to finding radiation sources
My step father worked for a power company and routinely went to nuclear plants. When he was treated for cancer, he wasn't allowed to go as they told him he would set off alarms they were so sensitive.
He would not set off alarms going in, he would trigger the contamination monitor on the way out. Which also would go off if there was a cold day which radon would be trapped near the ground. I had to leave my jacket there on a 30 degree day.
@@sdspivey he absolutely would set the alarms off going in. The PCMs and security portals are sensitive enough to detect the energy from Tc-99 that you can set them off from the entry point. I've personally seen it happen
@@blaine1987 At the plant I worked at, it only had a metal detector upon entering. The exit was down another hallway. I suppose each place is different.
@@sdspiveyThe 6 I’ve been to were also the same way. Monitors only on the way out. Which I have seen someone trip from the radionuclide injected into them for a radiation scan
Saw one of the NEST helicopters flying below my hotel room window, in between buildings in LAs Vegas recently just before the Formula One race. Flew for an hour on a roughly north/south grid, then that afternoon came back for an east/west pattern
No, they fly at an altitude of 46 meters over the site they’re surveilling. The sites just happen to be in Manhattan in this case. They’re using the helicopters for stuff in the city, I promise.
"...and they're not all nerds" - because 'nerd' is the colloquial term used for employees of the Nuclear Emergency Response Division; and although some people do split their time between both organizations, by far not all of them do.
Fun fact: there are also radiation detectors at at least some border crossings between the US and Canada. We found that out the fun way when we day tripped to Canada two days after one of my parents had had a radio marker medical test, and ended up getting pulled aside coming back for secondary screening. 😅
I worked for the Department of Health. One time a sample came into our lab for testing that was so radioactive it set off our alarms. NEST showed up and took it away, plus a team cleaned the facility. I got a nice scare, then a long weekend
3:40 As a Broncos fan that one hurt, thought my fellow Coloradan would have my back. And yes you were right, the offensive line was melting down that day.
I was staying on the 32nd floor of a hotel in Las Vegas recently for the Formula 1 race, and a NEST helicopter flew between my building and another, at an altitude lower than my hotel room. I’m sure I was over 150’ high but the flight tracker app showed it at 2500’
@@joeyb036 Las Vegas is at 2030 feet above sea level, ADSB transmit their true altitude and what you were seeing was not AGL (above ground level). Also, a helicopter doing radiation testing wouldn't likely have NEST on it or be identifiable so how would you even know?
@ flew close enough to my window that I could see its paint and markings, which matched what’s in this video. Also, used flightradar to look it up and it was a Nuclear department
Aircraft can absolutely fly that low if there are no obstacles. And while civilian aircraft will hardly ever do so, it's not uncommon for military or other non-civilian crafts. The closer you are to the ground, the better you can observe it, and in the case of military, the closer you are to the ground, the closer the enemy has to be in order to be able to spot you on their radar.
1:04 omg your not going to get explain the "puddles of radioactive pee" are you? So here is my payback: Anything else will be Less than half as interesting! Take that😘
"Puddles of radioactive pee" probably result from medical tests or treatment. Some involve the injection of mildly radioactive materials which are excreted through the kidneys.
@@Iris_and_or_George I was just saying that there is a decent chance that RUclips at least partially takes into account the sentiment of comments. Honestly, I am half as carefree as a house cat, so i don’t really care what you do with your comment lol, just thought it was a point worth making
Last time I had a scan with radioisotopes, they handed me a card to keep with me that said I'm radioactive and what I got, and its half life is. I admit when I got home, I reached for my geiger counter which beeped because I surpassed an internal threshold for the alarm (it was one of those always on geiger counters called a Gamma-Scout). I turned the alarm off, and my coworkers had fun measuring how far away I could be detected. I kept it on me because it was an interesting experiment on half-lives (about 4 hours for technium) so I kept seeing the reading halve over the next week.
NEST was featured in a 80s made for TV movie called Special Bulletin. If memory serves, there it was referred to as as the Nuclear Emergency Search Team.
I’m thinking this might be what those “mysterious drones” people keep seeing lately are Instead of using Beechcraft planes and helicopters, it would make sense to try and miniaturize it and automate it with drones twenty years later With a new administration change and a lot of intergovernmental hostilities lately, it would make sense to try and get baseline measurements of many potential targets before things potentially get screwy in the next couple years
Wasn’t at all concerning to see their helicopter surveying DC the other day… thank goodness I found the article saying that was just routine inauguration prep. Oddly timed video for me haha!
At 5:59 Boom.... "No boom today....boom tomorrow, always boom tomorrow." I missed such an awesome chance to release that quote from such an iconic television show....
Honestly, most of these videos make me feel worse about the world, but this one actually makes me feel better. It's comforting to know there's a government agency that's actually ensuring our safety around the clock
Another great song for a good cause, way to go! Of course it’s also always a treat to see Sister Beard so a real win there (more with Sister Beard please). Have a blessed Christmas!
Whatever Cpt. Midnight wanted with the ransom money, buying an additional nuke wasn't it. Absolutely gorgeous visual presentation! Cpt. Midnight fits right in with the overall theme😂
There's also the EPA's RADNET monitoring system with 140 gamma radiation monitoring sites around the country. Can't be too careful with invisible death rays!
1. As a VINwiki fan, I wonder if NEST ever found the X-ray machine Rabbit sent abroad. 2. As a weird media enthusiast, it was wild to hear the name Captain Midnight in a context unrelated to HBO (which incidentally could make for an interesting video.)
I was a technician on oil well logging tools for 8 years and we had tools with crystals and photo multiplier tubes that could pick up increases in background radiation from quite a distance.
I don't know why, but the method of scanning the background noise far in advance and then scanning again to compare when it's important is such a simple and neat thing.
The real public safety concern isn't nukes, but "dirty bombs", which are far simpler and cheaper than nukes, yet can yield surprisingly similar results when it comes to making an area uninhabitable. I once worked on a contract to develop a portable and sensitive detector that, from a distance, could detect all the radioactive isotopes that could be used in a dirty bomb. The resulting instrument worked extremely well, but turned out to be too expensive to deploy widely, and subsequently died a slow death. I also worked on "portal scanners" that were stationary radiation detectors for ports and border crossings, which were much more successful, largely because they had no weight limit, and could then use far less expensive technology.
Do you think it's possible that the current New Jersey drone activity could be a NEST operation searching for a possible threat? This would explain why nothing is being done to stop them and there has been no official disclosure of what they are, where they're from or who's operating them.
My cousin’s father-in-law was being treated for cancer, and he got pulled over going into Staten Island because he set off some radiation detector on the Verrazzano bridge. (Yes spell check, that is the CORRECT spelling of Verrazzano.)
Huh, when I hear the phrase ‘Captain Midnight’, the first thing that comes to mind is the story of when John R. MacDougal jammed HBO to protest price gouging!
When I was getting radiation treatments several years ago, my doctor warned me not to travel internationally. "You'll set off a lot of alarms going through the border."
In the usa they always say “volunteers”Or “part time volunteers” Does that mean they aren’t getting paid? That’s what it means in most of the places I know. Sometimes you’ll get a little volunteering bonus but nothing much.
I still think money would've been better spent to recover or clear out the nuke at 35°29′37.12″N 77°51′30.57″W in NC than searching for four years in NYC.
My mom got radiation treatment in NYC and they had to give her a nuclear hall pass because of the detectors. She's doing great now and didn't get arrested for having cancer.
also, if you are getting radiation treatment and are planning on traveling internationally after it, make sure you get a doctors note so you don't trip an alarm coming into US customs like my dad did and give all the customs agents a twinge that they might get to fight crime that day!
I like to carry around a Radiacode and see how many times it alarms when I'm out and about. Goodwill is a prime spot to find people who are spewing radiation from their medical treatment 😅
I wonder what those few Americans with RTG powered pace makers do? How could you explain that to customs, like hey I just have some plutonium in my chest, it's fine let me through.
Did you actually watch the video? That exact thing was covered.
@darkpixel1128 If you want a genuine answer, people with some medical thing inside them that means they can't to standard security things carry around appropriate documentation or some other form of proof of that. Unsurprisingly, people whos job it is to scan hundreds or thousand of people a day are fully aware and used to these exceptions.
Another common example is people with certain metal implants will always setoff a metal detector. They'll just be pad down, scanned with a more directional metal detector, or both
I don't understand why that would help.
"Hi, I tripped your detector because I just got X radioactive treatment" -- no we don't believe you.
"Hi here is a note I totally could have typed myself saying I just got X radioactive treatment" -- all good.
I really fucking hope that's not how this works and the advice is just so you don't forget the treatment you recieved.
i love how the NEST logo looks like something from a 2000's superhero movie
my first thought was Fallout :)
They came into existence because of a situation involving someone named Captain Midnight, so it fits
Looks like it could be the bad guy from Spy Kids.
Wait that's the real logo? Definitely thought that was just an illustration made for this video haha
The last time the logo was updated was probably in the early 2000s
Not just cancer, but I had a nuclear medicine heart scan where they injected some technetium-99m into my body to see how blood flowed around my heart while it was beating. Pretty cool stuff. I think I had a letter, but I pretty much spent the next day or two at home. I did hear a story somewhere about a woman who had had such treatment, and then got on a bus to another city, and the bus set off a radiation detector in a tunnel. That was an interesting day for a bus full of people.
My wife had the same procedure and I got out my Geiger counter. She was at 54,000 counts per minute (about 3,600 times normal) an hour after. I work downstairs below our living room and she was on the couch above me. Through the floor where I was sitting I was reading 400 counts per minute (about 26 times background radiation). I guess you could say that's the hottest she's ever been. :)
Yup you are pretty toasty after that test. Waa so strong it made a cheap hand held geiger counter go out of range when over. It decays so fast that if I were a science teacher I could give a good lecture on half life with that one. ❤
@@christopherleubner6633 I looked it up after she got the test and it said about 6 hours for the half life. I checked her six hours later and the CPM was about half what it was before. Cool little science experiment!
Major landfills inspect incoming loads for radiation sources and the most common thing that sets them off is adult diapers from patients who have recently undergone some sort of radioisotope imaging procedure.
I was at a festival many years ago with my grandma and her friend who had recently had some kind of radiation treatment and the police literally tracked her down looking for the source of the radiation. Im sure any large event has teams dedicated to finding radiation sources
NYC is cool
Inted of having intelligence about knife attck , they use NEST 🪹
My step father worked for a power company and routinely went to nuclear plants. When he was treated for cancer, he wasn't allowed to go as they told him he would set off alarms they were so sensitive.
He would not set off alarms going in, he would trigger the contamination monitor on the way out.
Which also would go off if there was a cold day which radon would be trapped near the ground. I had to leave my jacket there on a 30 degree day.
@@sdspivey he absolutely would set the alarms off going in. The PCMs and security portals are sensitive enough to detect the energy from Tc-99 that you can set them off from the entry point. I've personally seen it happen
@@sdspivey100% absolutely this. Hahaha extra salt on your fries. Boom.
@@blaine1987 At the plant I worked at, it only had a metal detector upon entering. The exit was down another hallway. I suppose each place is different.
@@sdspiveyThe 6 I’ve been to were also the same way. Monitors only on the way out. Which I have seen someone trip from the radionuclide injected into them for a radiation scan
Saw one of the NEST helicopters flying below my hotel room window, in between buildings in LAs Vegas recently just before the Formula One race. Flew for an hour on a roughly north/south grid, then that afternoon came back for an east/west pattern
3:05. You mean to tell me these planes and helicopters fly at an altitude of 46 meters through Manhattan? Not bloody likely.
An airplane did in September 2001
No, they fly at an altitude of 46 meters over the site they’re surveilling. The sites just happen to be in Manhattan in this case. They’re using the helicopters for stuff in the city, I promise.
@@oh_finks Two of them, even.
Yup, a Beech KingAir at 150 knots at 150 feet agl is SO unnoticable...
They are just that good 😎
1:38 I am absolutely loving the drill and blast reference.
"...and they're not all nerds" - because 'nerd' is the colloquial term used for employees of the Nuclear Emergency Response Division; and although some people do split their time between both organizations, by far not all of them do.
Looks like Captain Midnight is met with Major F-up and General Embarrassment, not bad for a captain
Fun fact: there are also radiation detectors at at least some border crossings between the US and Canada. We found that out the fun way when we day tripped to Canada two days after one of my parents had had a radio marker medical test, and ended up getting pulled aside coming back for secondary screening. 😅
By CBSA? Or CBP?
Operation "Radiant Angel" goes hard.
Radiant Angel Defense would be even more rad.
NY everything is bigger
Insted of intel about knife attck , they have check for nuclear attxk buried.
I see what you did there!
I get it!
Took me a second lol
I worked for the Department of Health. One time a sample came into our lab for testing that was so radioactive it set off our alarms. NEST showed up and took it away, plus a team cleaned the facility. I got a nice scare, then a long weekend
The federal Department of Health and Human Services?
3:40 As a Broncos fan that one hurt, thought my fellow Coloradan would have my back. And yes you were right, the offensive line was melting down that day.
Go home, sports nerd!
As a Seahawks fan, I thoroughly enjoyed that reference =)
As a football fan, Amy's assessment of that Superbowl is pretty accurate. The Seahawks cooked there. Denver's O Line must have missed the flight.
Commenting to appreciate Amy's Half as Book making an appearance again ❤
Anyone else notice the Drill from "Drill and Blast"?
My favorite instrument!
5:28 The animator raises a very valid question. Why DOES that clip exist?
The planes fly at 150 ft altitude? HAI going to the "what we got wrong in 2024"
They very much do fly that low in DC. But DC doesn’t have many tall buildings
I was staying on the 32nd floor of a hotel in Las Vegas recently for the Formula 1 race, and a NEST helicopter flew between my building and another, at an altitude lower than my hotel room. I’m sure I was over 150’ high but the flight tracker app showed it at 2500’
@@joeyb036 Las Vegas is at 2030 feet above sea level, ADSB transmit their true altitude and what you were seeing was not AGL (above ground level). Also, a helicopter doing radiation testing wouldn't likely have NEST on it or be identifiable so how would you even know?
@ flew close enough to my window that I could see its paint and markings, which matched what’s in this video. Also, used flightradar to look it up and it was a Nuclear department
Aircraft can absolutely fly that low if there are no obstacles. And while civilian aircraft will hardly ever do so, it's not uncommon for military or other non-civilian crafts. The closer you are to the ground, the better you can observe it, and in the case of military, the closer you are to the ground, the closer the enemy has to be in order to be able to spot you on their radar.
1:28 full quarter mill. That’s my rate.
1:04 omg your not going to get explain the "puddles of radioactive pee" are you? So here is my payback: Anything else will be Less than half as interesting! Take that😘
5:30 omg I'm so sorry and take it all back😂 won't remove for the algorithm 😇
"Puddles of radioactive pee" probably result from medical tests or treatment. Some involve the injection of mildly radioactive materials which are excreted through the kidneys.
@@Iris_and_or_GeorgeI mean, RUclips might employ more in depth analysis, especially for comments that are somewhat popular
@palmberry5576 so I should delete it? How would that help?
@@Iris_and_or_George I was just saying that there is a decent chance that RUclips at least partially takes into account the sentiment of comments. Honestly, I am half as carefree as a house cat, so i don’t really care what you do with your comment lol, just thought it was a point worth making
Incredible comic book aesthetic, animators killing it 🔥🔥
Last time I had a scan with radioisotopes, they handed me a card to keep with me that said I'm radioactive and what I got, and its half life is. I admit when I got home, I reached for my geiger counter which beeped because I surpassed an internal threshold for the alarm (it was one of those always on geiger counters called a Gamma-Scout). I turned the alarm off, and my coworkers had fun measuring how far away I could be detected. I kept it on me because it was an interesting experiment on half-lives (about 4 hours for technium) so I kept seeing the reading halve over the next week.
2:52 damn, I didn’t expect Sam from HAI to pronounce perfect Morse code
NEST was featured in a 80s made for TV movie called Special Bulletin. If memory serves, there it was referred to as as the Nuclear Emergency Search Team.
Special Bulletin is one of my core childhood memories... Oh, look, someone uploaded it on youtube, don't have to go hunting for a 30 year old VHS
That was what it was called in the 80s. At some point the name changed but the acronym stayed the same.
Crazy that they're mostly volunteers!
I’m thinking this might be what those “mysterious drones” people keep seeing lately are
Instead of using Beechcraft planes and helicopters, it would make sense to try and miniaturize it and automate it with drones twenty years later
With a new administration change and a lot of intergovernmental hostilities lately, it would make sense to try and get baseline measurements of many potential targets before things potentially get screwy in the next couple years
Yup. Spot on.
Wasn’t at all concerning to see their helicopter surveying DC the other day… thank goodness I found the article saying that was just routine inauguration prep. Oddly timed video for me haha!
6:02 Sooooo are we getting the official HAI Bomb Diffusal Mobile Game soon? (sponsored by NEST)
At 5:59
Boom....
"No boom today....boom tomorrow, always boom tomorrow."
I missed such an awesome chance to release that quote from such an iconic television show....
Great timing video with all the drones looking for something over New Jersey.
Literally perfect timing. Almost a guarantee that's what the drones are.
I absolutely love the “comicy” art style
Honestly, most of these videos make me feel worse about the world, but this one actually makes me feel better. It's comforting to know there's a government agency that's actually ensuring our safety around the clock
As someone who works on radiation detecting equipment, this was very w ell done.
I’m glad we got an answer about the radioactive pee
Hello Sam from Wendover productions 👋👋
2:26 HAI predicts a Bills Super Bowl
and cowboys 🥳🥳🥳
The Cowboys even making the playoffs would be a miracle
Another great song for a good cause, way to go! Of course it’s also always a treat to see Sister Beard so a real win there (more with Sister Beard please). Have a blessed Christmas!
All the drones flying over NJ at the moment!!!!!!!!
This is insane timing
Kinda almost too perfect tbh
"They need to EOD by EOD" 😂 absolutely brilliant writing. Chapeau, and well done!
Whatever Cpt. Midnight wanted with the ransom money, buying an additional nuke wasn't it.
Absolutely gorgeous visual presentation! Cpt. Midnight fits right in with the overall theme😂
Great job on this! Love the hard work you put into it. Keep it up!
There's also the EPA's RADNET monitoring system with 140 gamma radiation monitoring sites around the country. Can't be too careful with invisible death rays!
3:45 lmfao "keep their ion"
1. As a VINwiki fan, I wonder if NEST ever found the X-ray machine Rabbit sent abroad.
2. As a weird media enthusiast, it was wild to hear the name Captain Midnight in a context unrelated to HBO (which incidentally could make for an interesting video.)
I was a technician on oil well logging tools for 8 years and we had tools with crystals and photo multiplier tubes that could pick up increases in background radiation from quite a distance.
I don't know why, but the method of scanning the background noise far in advance and then scanning again to compare when it's important is such a simple and neat thing.
The fact that they don't have a Nuclear Emergency Response Detachment is disappointing.
the 1% accounts for traffic moving over the unsecured southern border! I bet all these drones flying over NJ are part of the NEST team...
Guaranteed. I would share this video everywhere if I were you
Thanks NEST!😀Thank you , HAI👍
Interesting to learn about another organization helping society function and be safe ya never heard about.
The real public safety concern isn't nukes, but "dirty bombs", which are far simpler and cheaper than nukes, yet can yield surprisingly similar results when it comes to making an area uninhabitable. I once worked on a contract to develop a portable and sensitive detector that, from a distance, could detect all the radioactive isotopes that could be used in a dirty bomb. The resulting instrument worked extremely well, but turned out to be too expensive to deploy widely, and subsequently died a slow death. I also worked on "portal scanners" that were stationary radiation detectors for ports and border crossings, which were much more successful, largely because they had no weight limit, and could then use far less expensive technology.
your editors are really killing it! I love the styling in this video!
Do you think it's possible that the current New Jersey drone activity could be a NEST operation searching for a possible threat? This would explain why nothing is being done to stop them and there has been no official disclosure of what they are, where they're from or who's operating them.
Possible, yes. Likely, not at all.
@@teebob21 not only is it possible, it is incredibly likely.
Incredible animation & illustration in this video. Editor vying for a raise and deserves it!
@6:35 figures they gov won't set one up in STL, considering we're still suffering the effects from the toxic waste dumped after the Manhattan Project.
... okay I love that logo.
Finally my country has done something I can support without caveat.
The animation style fits your channel, i like it.
Didn’t expect my Broncos catching a stray in this HAI video. Haven’t I cried enough for that Super Bowl
This feels like a NEST sponsored PR video to keep it off the upcoming DOGE chopping block! Ha!
Don't worry, only Medicare and the VA will land on that block.
Fortunately DOGE will have no actual authority, So of Musk suggests something dumb. Congress can just say no.
I love the pronunciation of "the big apple"
Captain Midnight needs to make a comeback, we need him more than ever :(
150 feet above the deck in major metro areas is INSANE
I’m part of the securing the cities initiative. Cool that it got a mention.
Can’t wait to see Sam say that 200k is not a quarter million in the next “Things we got wrong” video
Maricopa County isn't a city. Other than that, great video!
I was obsessed with the movie The Sum of all Fears as a kid. I had no idea it was based on an actual threat.
Imagine being a broncos fan and trying to forget that loss , then midway through an informative video about nukes they bring up the Super Bowl 💀
My cousin’s father-in-law was being treated for cancer, and he got pulled over going into Staten Island because he set off some radiation detector on the Verrazzano bridge. (Yes spell check, that is the CORRECT spelling of Verrazzano.)
I always have to google that bridge to spell it right, Just like the river in Philadelphia that is pronounced similar to Google.
6:33 My favorite city in Arizona, Maricopa County. Thought honestly, ignoring the existence of Phoenix is based.
This may explain New Jersey’s drones.
Your humility in success is what I admire most. Keep it up!
Huh, when I hear the phrase ‘Captain Midnight’, the first thing that comes to mind is the story of when John R. MacDougal jammed HBO to protest price gouging!
6:33 Ah yes, I am proud to be a part of the major city of Maricopa County, Arizona
Is NEST what the drones are?
Yes.
That 200k ransom makes dr evil look greedy when he asked for 1 million
This video deserves a glowing review.
The drill and blast cameo got me.
This video went nicely with my morning coffee
Thanks 😊
By a strange coincidence the only Army EOD WMD company is also on Kirtland AFB near Sandia Labs.
When I was getting radiation treatments several years ago, my doctor warned me not to travel internationally. "You'll set off a lot of alarms going through the border."
Well edited one 🔥
That broncos joke might be my last straw, brought me to my knees
I find it kinda cool that nuclear stuff is now common enough to require a management team.
If only they had pressure cooker detectors in 2013
I petition for a video on radioactive pee.
“They need to eod by eod” I enjoyed that 😂
6:14 missed opportunity to mention France
3:23 You can see a Civil Air Patrol cesna.
3:52 wtf happened with the audio on the word "all" right here? 🤨
Saw these helicopters flying over DC a couple weeks ago. They were crazy low. Probably for the inauguration. They do it every few years
Fr missed a crazy Optimus prime joke with nest
The miltary bases have nuke detectors at the entrances. Might want to get a note from your doctor before going back to work at one.
In the usa they always say “volunteers”Or “part time volunteers”
Does that mean they aren’t getting paid? That’s what it means in most of the places I know. Sometimes you’ll get a little volunteering bonus but nothing much.
That’s exactly what it means. I highly doubt the people working for NEST aren’t getting paid.
I still think money would've been better spent to recover or clear out the nuke at 35°29′37.12″N 77°51′30.57″W in NC than searching for four years in NYC.
Ahcktually NEST is a covert ops team of humans and Transformers, that hunt Decepticons. Its true saw it in a movie once. 👍
My mom got radiation treatment in NYC and they had to give her a nuclear hall pass because of the detectors. She's doing great now and didn't get arrested for having cancer.
Being this early to an upload makes me feel special-wecial
2:38 my favorite conspiracy is that the “drones” over Jerseys rn are a part of this
Literally without a doubt. This video needs to be shared everywhere