Keegan-Michael Key reads a letter from the Smithsonian to a man donating 'artefacts' from his garden

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  • Опубликовано: 17 фев 2022
  • Legend has it that in 1994, a letter was sent by the Smithsonian Institute to a man who regularly and very kindly donated artefacts discovered in his back garden.
    Actor, comedian and producer Keegan-Michael Key joined us to read this rather special letter at London's Royal Albert Hall in October 2021.
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @realityjunky
    @realityjunky 2 года назад +4906

    I applaud the Smithsonian. I worked in a Museum for twenty years and I was one of the few who took time to meet the walk-ins, identify their object, then tell then why it wasn't what they hoped it was. It was best if I showed them an example from our collection and let them see for themselves why their item was different. But I always encouraged their curiosity and enthusiasm. I was never dismissive because that will sour a person's view of science immediately. Privately, I was dismayed at how many people were hoping their item was worth money.

    • @CollecTortoise
      @CollecTortoise 2 года назад +193

      Also work in a museum and completely agree. 'Contributers' in my experience range from the folks who earnestly bring you their heirlooms (and you always feel soo bad letting them down, because 95 percent of it is junk) and then you have de a-holes who just plunk a shoebox of trash at reception and walk away, like they just dumped their pet at the roadside.

    • @kaitan4160
      @kaitan4160 2 года назад +503

      "Privately, I was dismayed at how many people were hoping their item was worth money."
      I remember as a child finding a Roman Coin. Which is not a big Deal here in Germany to be honest.
      But i was so proud (and still am) that the Coin is now in a Museum and on that Little Paper still stands "donated by". Personally i think thats worth more.

    • @donmiller2908
      @donmiller2908 2 года назад +93

      "I was dismayed at how many people were hoping their item was worth money"
      What is wrong with hoping it was worth money? Money is something everyone needs correct?
      Are you saying it's morally wrong to have acquired an object that may have monetary worth and hoping to profit from it?

    • @Revan2662
      @Revan2662 2 года назад +236

      @@donmiller2908 I think its more an issue of perspective. Those who work at or with musuems often don't do it for the money - that's only there to support them. They're largely there because they're passionate about their work and want to share it actively with others.
      From that view, it's bothersome that one of the first thoughts someone has of a discovery is "I'm rich!". It's not that it's wrong to want compensation for the discovery, it just collides heavily with those who do it solely out of love and curiousity.

    • @donmiller2908
      @donmiller2908 2 года назад +44

      @@Revan2662 - Thanks for commenting, I can understand now why someone may be dismayed at the thought of other people constantly asking for cash. I'd still like to hear her explanation though.

  • @sicktodeath0_0
    @sicktodeath0_0 2 месяца назад +119

    The staff at the Smithsonian are a truly wonderful bunch of people. My father donated a box of fossils that he had collected in Oregon, to the Smithsonian. The staff gave him a tour through their fossil archives then they took my parents out on a dinner cruise to thank him. As a lifelong amateur fossil hunter, that was possibly the highlight of his paleontological career.
    ♥️✌️

    • @user-ve5eg2mv7h
      @user-ve5eg2mv7h Месяц назад +2

      That’s so sweet 🥹

    • @sicktodeath0_0
      @sicktodeath0_0 Месяц назад

      @@user-ve5eg2mv7h
      I forgot to add that the Smithsonian carried two of dad’s self published fossil hunting books, also donated. I don’t know how many copies he sent them over the years, but it was in the hundreds. Dad has had a lifelong mission to raise interest in paleontology and to encourage people to search the fossil beds all over Oregon, our home state.
      Last time I talked to him he had fossil exhibits in the Central Point OR and Jacksonville OR museums, and a hands-on display at Science Works, a science activity center for kids, in Ashland Oregon.
      ❤️✌️

    • @marthacastro9162
      @marthacastro9162 27 дней назад +1

      Aww❤❤

  • @lskulski
    @lskulski Год назад +1157

    As a museum worker, I can confirm almost every museum in the world has at least one story like this.

    • @suzy1750
      @suzy1750 Год назад +21

      I hope so - it would make the day of those that receive it!

    • @polarbearhero9803
      @polarbearhero9803 Год назад +17

      It might be fake but ever museum has a large file of similar letters.

    • @woah6958
      @woah6958 6 месяцев назад

      What's yours? Please, please tell us!

    • @Tleilaxu0
      @Tleilaxu0 6 месяцев назад +16

      As a librarian, I share in your suffering. Just a few weeks back I watched one of my co-workers spend over 20 minutes patiently explaining to an elderly gentleman that his USB stick supposedly containing the lyrics to 2000 hymns, personally collected by him, is not something we can add to our collection.

    • @stephen88hox
      @stephen88hox 4 месяца назад +3

      how did you get jobs in all museums in the world?

  • @FabianMacGintyONeill
    @FabianMacGintyONeill Год назад +815

    If you can tell someone they're completely and utterly wrong in a way that doesn't make them feel bad, you are a master diplomat

    • @TangoWolf09
      @TangoWolf09 Год назад +49

      Reminds me of one of my favorite definitions: Tact is the ability to tell someone to go to hell, and make them look forward to the trip.

    • @PlayMoGame
      @PlayMoGame 5 месяцев назад

      Eat shit: "I implore you to imbibe the foetid detrius which no other individual may have the privilege of consuming."

    • @enclave2k1
      @enclave2k1 4 месяца назад +2

      @@DeReAntiqua
      The tone of the recitation, most certainly.
      The intent of the author, maybe so - but not necesarily.
      Can you cite a portion of the letter that could be interpreted *only* as condecesion?
      (ps not trying to be *"that guy"* - legitimatly looking for evidence to change my mind)

    • @shawnbottom4769
      @shawnbottom4769 4 месяца назад

      It might make a person feel good about their clever response, but it is unlikely to have the desired effect. "You have to speak in a 'language' the other person can understand".

    • @mbrackeva
      @mbrackeva 3 месяца назад

      Or really good at hidden sarcasm...

  • @melt4769
    @melt4769 11 месяцев назад +542

    I worked in an archaeology lab in graduate school. One day an old man called insisting that we send someone over to his house because he had a live dinosaur trapped in his back yard. Archaeologists typically don’t work with dinosaurs (that’s paleontology), but he was so frantic, we decided to check it out. We got in the old suburban and headed over. Turns out it was an armadillo. At the time, it was highly unusual for armadillos to be in this particular part of the state.

    • @jessebarlow1277
      @jessebarlow1277 9 месяцев назад +18

      love this. just how old was he?

    • @22espec
      @22espec 4 месяца назад +21

      @@jessebarlow1277 it doesn't matter the age, if you have never seen an Armadillo, you will freak out, I still remember my cousin screaming all over my backyard because she has seen a really big rat, of couse it wa just a possum.

    • @ChaseThePinballWizard
      @ChaseThePinballWizard 3 месяца назад

      i saw an armadillo and i didn't freak out because i know what an armadillo is.@@22espec

    • @hydra7427
      @hydra7427 3 месяца назад +12

      @@22espec Yeah, I saw an armadillo once down in mexico, and it's like seeing a squirrel crossed with a tank, or perhaps a VERY fast turtle.

    • @SanityTV_Last_Sane_Man_Alive
      @SanityTV_Last_Sane_Man_Alive 3 месяца назад +8

      well hey, it was a fun trip out of the office, and you got to see an armadillo. lol

  • @lindaliriel
    @lindaliriel 10 месяцев назад +74

    My uncle-in-law has over an acre of land, in an area near a known Roman settlement. He kept finding random stuff while gardening (or dug up by his dogs) be it coins, bits of pottery and various odds and ends; he figured they were all likely trash, but took them to the local museum just in case. Now he has a whole cabinet dedicated to him in the museum. Never took any money

  • @chrisgatton621
    @chrisgatton621 Год назад +197

    I have a friend who wrote them a serious-sounding letter inquiring as to whether they had "Dillinger's pecker in a jar," because he was trying to decide whether to take his family to visit the Smithsonian or the Grand Canyon for their summer vacation. He stated that would be the deciding factor. They wrote a letter explaining that, although they did not have any of Dillinger's body parts in jars, they still thought they were a superior destination to the Grand Canyon, and went on to explain why.

  • @jackiesue9907
    @jackiesue9907 2 года назад +2809

    I love this. I want to see an inventory of his "contributions".

    • @DiffEQ
      @DiffEQ 2 года назад +16

      It's fiction. SMH Really? You thought that was an actual letter responding to an actual paleontologist?

    • @briancjohnson
      @briancjohnson 2 года назад +58

      @@DiffEQ No, they would like to hear more of the story. Unclench thine buttocks, good man, and roll with it. :)

    • @Fire-Queen
      @Fire-Queen 2 года назад +73

      @@DiffEQ someone could still want to see a full inventory... I know I'm curious😁 whether it's all make belief, or not, it's a very intriguing look into life by this amazing comedian 👀👍🏼

    • @lukehebert6207
      @lukehebert6207 2 года назад +130

      @@DiffEQ I assumed this was a real letter to a prankster or well-meaning jokester who submitted little hilarious contributions to the Smothsonian as a laugh. So, the request for an inventory made sense to me too.

    • @aazhie
      @aazhie 2 года назад +39

      @@DiffEQ consider it a creative art project. Obviously this was made up, but the original writer has a great sense of humor, and a joke display could still be educational. I don't think MOST Americans realize carbon dating doesn't work well either recent samples, and I'm sure more letters would be as equally hilarious...

  • @eleanorharvey3315
    @eleanorharvey3315 Год назад +254

    This is, absolutely, the best spoof letter ever written. I cherish my mimeographed, then copied and distributed so many times, copy of this. I have no idea where it originated, but it's been making the rounds for decades now. It's a Smithsonian urban legend, as the museum, department, and purported staffers do not actually exist. But we are magnets for this kind of love, and the letter is proof that as Smithsonian employees, we love it, too.

    • @disguisedcat1750
      @disguisedcat1750 2 месяца назад +1

      Wait so they put such a letter on this show… without even consulting the smithsonian? Wow, these guys definitely do their homework.

    • @cocoaddams4502
      @cocoaddams4502 Месяц назад

      I've been following this letter across the internet forever. I've read it a million times and i laugh until I cry every single time. I have to say, though, that I hate this reading of it. The humor is in the letter, the actor didn't need to do the nodding and facial expressions to get the point across.

  • @emilyz4104
    @emilyz4104 2 года назад +1261

    The letter was actually written as a humor piece, and isn't real, but I freakin' love it. And I think there needs to be a movie about rampaging prehistoric clam monsters with teeth.

    • @themule137
      @themule137 2 года назад

      Sabre-toothed bi-valves patrolling the plains
      Selecting our gene pool while chewing on brains.
      Nature is perilous: danger's at hand!
      The ravenous man-eating Pliocene clam.
      Oysters and scallops---all pelecypod
      Bow in submission to Mighty Quahog.
      Nature's in balance, there's danger to man:
      The ravenous man-eating Pliocene clam.
      The larval soft body! That ligament scar!
      The unique pteroid bivalve a wonder to all.
      When the new pelecypod did struggle to land,
      It was the end of the man-eating Pliocene clam.
      -2006 poetic tribute , written by Ruth Ellis Haworth
      I agree, it needs to be a movie!

    • @brucecarter8296
      @brucecarter8296 2 года назад +17

      clams have teeth

    • @GlennTillema
      @GlennTillema Год назад +19

      @@brucecarter8296 Clams have legs!

    • @KlintKaras
      @KlintKaras Год назад +55

      @@brucecarter8296 clams have feelings.

    • @realityjunky
      @realityjunky Год назад +1

      Agreed!

  • @dannymorris1502
    @dannymorris1502 2 года назад +2254

    Years ago I worked in the Museum Of American History. One item in the collections, a hammer head, came from a donor who did his research. He claimed that he found the hammer head in a load of coal. Based on the age of the coal and where it had been mined the hammer was "the original hammer of God." He was sent the usual thank you form letter and the item probably still sits in the collections of Mechanical and Civil Engineering.

    • @kevinfoster2163
      @kevinfoster2163 2 года назад +167

      Plot twist: that was the hammer of god

    • @wirelesmike73
      @wirelesmike73 2 года назад +54

      What are the odds that it as submitted by the same person to whom this letter was written? XD

    • @charlesajones77
      @charlesajones77 2 года назад +71

      Why would God need a hammer?

    • @theprimo100
      @theprimo100 2 года назад +207

      @@charlesajones77 to smash frost giants

    • @derdurstbursch
      @derdurstbursch 2 года назад +23

      @@theprimo100 Doink

  • @chillchinna4164
    @chillchinna4164 2 года назад +519

    I would absolutely pay 20 dollars to see an exhibit of this man’s work, and accompanied explanations.

    • @someguycalledCh0wdah
      @someguycalledCh0wdah Год назад +12

      So would I, I REALLY want to see this.

    • @user-tk4in7dg1p
      @user-tk4in7dg1p Год назад +20

      I would ONLY go if they had the explanations 😂

    • @johnbrown1860
      @johnbrown1860 Год назад +6

      The Smithsonian kind of has some exhibits like this (but as folk art in the American Art Museum, not science exhibits in the Natural History Museum).

    • @christophertaylor8166
      @christophertaylor8166 8 месяцев назад +8

      Rather than the “this one guy” exhibition, I think it would actually be great to have a permanent one showcasing the most off the wall submissions from everyone who tried, with accompanying stories for each of those. If anyone’s junk could potentially end up in it, I think it might be engaging enough to ward off the complaints from people who otherwise don’t get the joke.

    • @henryc7548
      @henryc7548 4 месяца назад +1

      If you are ever in Los Angeles, make your way to the Museum of Jurassic Technology

  • @NightRunner417
    @NightRunner417 Год назад +208

    I've been to the Museum of Natural History and I personally would find it _hilariously awesome_ if they had a small corner display area for the best of the best bizarre submissions. Imagine if you were a first time visitor and after perusing the amazing sights of the museum, you rounded the corner and found ancient Astrelopithecus Spiff-arino heads and prehistoric Frisbees.🤣

    • @RICDirector
      @RICDirector Год назад +11

      Aaaand that is how P.T. Barnum became a rich man. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @NightRunner417
      @NightRunner417 Год назад +4

      @@RICDirector 🤣🤣
      Ladies and gentlemen, *_The Greatest Show On Earth®!!_*

    • @alexia3552
      @alexia3552 Год назад +3

      Duude excellent idea. I bet that would up visitor numbers

    • @NightRunner417
      @NightRunner417 Год назад +3

      @@alexia3552 I think it would be really cool. I mean, as it is, the place is just breathtaking. After being blown away by so much input of things you might have heard about but never expected to see, especially in person, I think it would be a huge comic relief to see things people _tried_ to pass off as real. Ultimately, like you say, it might become a "Oh! Don't forget to look for the cray-cray part of the exhibits!" kind of thing. 🤣

    • @eric2500
      @eric2500 Год назад +3

      I think we need this and other opportunities to confront and mock ignorance.

  • @1969Kismet
    @1969Kismet 2 года назад +906

    I want to work with someone who would write this sort of letter.

    • @faithshearer5956
      @faithshearer5956 2 года назад +9

      Yes!

    • @Altinget
      @Altinget 2 года назад +18

      Always treat a fellow scientist with respect...🤓

    • @somedaypilot
      @somedaypilot 2 года назад +29

      I also want to work with the kind of person who is creative enough to provide this kind of entertainment to the Smithsonian. "Making strangers' days just a little bit weirder" is a delightful hobby

    • @ianashmore9910
      @ianashmore9910 2 года назад +3

      @@Altinget
      "Fellow scientist" is an awfully big stretch here... Lol

    • @tarmaque
      @tarmaque 2 года назад +1

      You're welcome to work with me. Can you drive a Kenworth?

  • @LususSaule
    @LususSaule 2 года назад +1940

    This letter has been doing the rounds on the internet for at least a decade. Its a known fake, but the idea of someone digging up junk from their backyard and constantly sending it to the Smithsonian Institute alongside outlandish theories is hilarious.

    • @OleanderSmoothie
      @OleanderSmoothie 2 года назад +142

      it reminds me of the Calvin and Hobbes comic where Calvin digs up garbage and thinks it's dinosaur bones😂😂

    • @steveom5479
      @steveom5479 2 года назад +44

      Was it ever passed as real? I would've assumed from this video that it was a script but haven't seen anything else from this series.

    • @tallspicy
      @tallspicy 2 года назад +58

      My guess this actually happens with spectacular frequency! It is funny, hoax or not

    • @justvisitingterra6459
      @justvisitingterra6459 2 года назад +14

      SOUNDS TO ME LIKE A COMEDY ROUTINE. MAXXAUS.

    • @catmatt777
      @catmatt777 2 года назад +29

      @@tallspicy Its gotta be happening so often. There is zero chance anybody working there has enough time on their hands to go through them all looking for the fun insane ones, let alone pen semi-serious responses before either throwing the package out or slapping a return label on it.

  • @chrisball3778
    @chrisball3778 2 года назад +518

    I once had a job where I was the main public point of contact for a small organisation. During my time there, I got a few emails I thought were probably pranks, but wasn't 100% certain weren't written by someone truly deluded. I was expected to reply politely to every email, so had to create these carefully-worded responses that took their wacky email at face-value so I didn't come across as mocking them if they were serious. That's what I thought of watching this.

    • @GedMaybury23
      @GedMaybury23 2 года назад +24

      A challenging job, Chris! Props to you for acting with integrity and respect. (And I'm fairly sure that some of submissions to the Dept of Main Roads would been seen in a similar light!)

    • @maxleveladventures
      @maxleveladventures 2 года назад +22

      Similar experience working as a content/social media manager. I couldn't just not respond to someone who was either faking or had a disability. I don't think anyone actually required me to do so, but it felt wrong to assume it wasn't legit, so I always took them seriously and took time to respond. I got the sense that some of them were just lonely and wanted someone to talk to.

    • @GedMaybury23
      @GedMaybury23 2 года назад +8

      @@maxleveladventures You're a thoroughly decent human being, Max. Keep it up!

    • @TacosAreWizard
      @TacosAreWizard 2 года назад +5

      I hate formal business polite talk. Just tell people to stop being stupid, straight up.

    • @donmiller2908
      @donmiller2908 2 года назад +41

      @@TacosAreWizard - Sometimes the writer is sincere but deluded. If you rudely tell them they are stupid there is a chance they'll never submit another finding as you'd have squashed their desire to discover. I can't think of any situation in which rudeness should be the preferred response. A little empathy goes a long way.

  • @jasonvoorhees895
    @jasonvoorhees895 Год назад +41

    The fact that Harvey "Fought tenaciously" for him and wants to fly him to D.C. was the icing on the cake. And I need a picture of that special shelf in the director's office 😂

  • @cacampbell3654
    @cacampbell3654 2 года назад +233

    Key did an almost perfect job of staying in the incredible humour and outrageousness of this letter’s subjects, without belittling, patronizing, condescending to the author!
    No mean feat!!

    • @WinkLinkletter
      @WinkLinkletter 2 года назад +8

      The letter was excellently written by the Smithsonian author, as far as the deeply tongue-in-cheekiness "critique" of the contributor goes, read properly and with nuanced understanding by the exacting Key.

    • @retroboomer3197
      @retroboomer3197 2 года назад +5

      Every thing about this was belittling, patronizing, and condescending to the author, but okay.

    • @WinkLinkletter
      @WinkLinkletter 2 года назад +4

      @@retroboomer3197 So are you saying Key was belittling the Smithsonian, the authors of the letter, or that Smithsonian was condescending to the doll head contributor?

    • @thisguy916
      @thisguy916 2 года назад

      @@retroboomer3197 i was thinking the same thing

    • @JesusProtects
      @JesusProtects 2 года назад

      I know about another outrageous claim but no one is calling out museums for this.
      Dinosaur bones are not real bones, they are created for the exposition, and on top of that the full skeleton is imagined out of just a few pieces like a jaw, a few teeth and a few vertebrae. Basically 90% of the skeleton is made up, but they are presented as undoubtedly real and factual things. And if you try to see the supposed real bones the museum will never let you do it, or will just tell you that they are not there but somewhere else.
      I call bs on this.

  • @houseofdogatx
    @houseofdogatx 4 месяца назад +9

    Imagine that the person who submitted the “specimen” was a child. Imagine the joy it would bring them to receive such a letter in response, feeling that their “discovery” had been taken seriously. Imagine the impact such a small act of kindness would have on a young mind, encouraging curiosity, analysis, skepticism, as opposed to the defeat that comes with a rude denial or dismissal, or no response at all. I have no idea if this is the case… but I’m going to pretend that it is.

  • @deathwrenchcustom
    @deathwrenchcustom 2 года назад +235

    I ran across this letter when the internet was in it's infancy. It made me laugh so hard that I saved it in an email folder. Decades later, whenever I'm feeling down, I read it. I get about halfway through before I'm laughing so hard that tears are streaming down my face. I'm glad that it gets a new lease on life all these years later!! 😂😂👍🏿

    • @nunja_business
      @nunja_business Год назад +5

      Yes, I think it was one of the ones routinely forwarded around IBM in the mid-80s, along with the one about mouse balls.

    • @babababad
      @babababad Год назад +5

      ​@@nunja_business this particular one was written in '94, but it's definitely in the spirit of those early chains

  • @lindascott3386
    @lindascott3386 2 года назад +229

    When we were doing research in Peru, local people reported every ruin as an "Inka pyramid." Some of them were fascinating in their own historical right -- old missions and convents, pre-Inka Moche or Chimu sites, etc. People get excited about something they've been thinking about and come up with explanations. That said, people should always be encouraged to reach out and share with/learn from professionals. I think it's a positive thing that some people share their finds instead of hoarding "treasure."

    • @UnitSe7en
      @UnitSe7en 2 года назад +12

      I think it's more that people are mostly ignorant on a topic and what you see is Dunning-Kruger. Everything is an Inca pyramid because Inca pyramids are the only thing they know about.

    • @panzerswineflu
      @panzerswineflu Год назад +2

      Oh I'd love to see the non "known" sites. I went to peru in 2017 and fell in love with the country. Made it to kuelap last November shortly before they closed it

    • @alexia3552
      @alexia3552 Год назад

      That’s such a wholesome attitude I love that

  • @dlanska
    @dlanska 2 года назад +450

    This man is hilarious. I remember when he was Obama's "anger translator" during the White House Correspondents Association dinner. Such timing and delivery! Just amazing.

    • @acchaladka
      @acchaladka 2 года назад +36

      He and Mr. Peele are possibly the most underrated comedy team in the US.

    • @naomiarram5187
      @naomiarram5187 2 года назад +24

      @@acchaladka Underrated is THE most overused word on RUclips comments.

    • @Hazor7
      @Hazor7 2 года назад +16

      @@naomiarram5187's comment is underrated.

    • @DiffEQ
      @DiffEQ 2 года назад +2

      "hilarious" if you're twelve years old.

    • @ariochiv
      @ariochiv 2 года назад +35

      @@DiffEQ I guess some people just can't make it through the day without randomly shitting on someone else.

  • @smartereveryday
    @smartereveryday 4 месяца назад +102

    Amazing.

    • @donavanclark9433
      @donavanclark9433 3 месяца назад

      Hey, can I come learn something from you?

    • @zupra5638
      @zupra5638 3 месяца назад

      Why are you here arnold

    • @colorado841
      @colorado841 2 месяца назад

      Learn something new everyday.

  • @rsrt6910
    @rsrt6910 Год назад +100

    I know the letter is a hoax and not the first time I've read/heard this letter but Keegan sells it so well I needed to hear it again. He sold it SO well, in fact, that I feel like someone should approach Key to do a movie/series based on either:
    a) the curator of antiquities,
    b) the dude digging up things in his back yard or
    c) the ravenous man eating clams roaming the pliocene.

  • @OddWomanOut_Pi81
    @OddWomanOut_Pi81 Год назад +14

    When I saw that Keegan would be reading, I KNEW this would be gold. 😂😂😂😂😂😂 I wasn't wrong!

  • @truerthanyouknow9456
    @truerthanyouknow9456 2 года назад +18

    ‘Yours in Science’, what a great salutation. I’m keeping it.

  • @Dom_Maretti
    @Dom_Maretti Год назад +12

    I actually knew someone when I was in Utah who showed what he thought was a fossilized dinosaur egg to a curator at the SLC Natural History Museum. He'd found the object among rocks at a reservoir...and he'd actually found a real fossil. It wasn't a dinosaur egg though...it was part of a vulture's cranium, and it was actually a proper mineralized fossil. It was from a turkey vulture, and the museum didn't need it as they are a contemporary species and there was no indication that this fossil was older than the other known samples. Still...his fossil was probably more interesting to most than either of the ones I've found (both plant fossils, neither representing anything particularly uncommon).

    • @pathevermore3683
      @pathevermore3683 Год назад +1

      there is always private collectors, better yet, keep it. fossils are cool and make great conversation pieces.

    • @Dom_Maretti
      @Dom_Maretti Год назад +2

      @@pathevermore3683 I still have them in my minerals case.

  • @eattherich5409
    @eattherich5409 Год назад +16

    honestly, having your own personal cryptid that only you and your coworkers know about sounds like the best addition to a job possible. assuming its like this; harmless, wholesome, and unhinged

  • @intercat4907
    @intercat4907 Год назад +14

    "fought tenaciously" just hurt me. I love every move this man makes.

  • @parmesanzero7678
    @parmesanzero7678 2 года назад +42

    I can tell the person who wrote the responses back to this contributor really enjoyed writing it.

  • @nardo218
    @nardo218 Год назад +10

    Keenan is a national comedic treasure. I'm so glad he was invited to participate in this event!

  • @paulking4594
    @paulking4594 2 года назад +61

    I was there on the evening and he read this very well.

    • @LHyoutube
      @LHyoutube 2 года назад +2

      Because we wouldn't have ascertained that from the video alone? 😛

    • @ashtonandkylievideos2929
      @ashtonandkylievideos2929 2 года назад +2

      @@LHyoutube you can't tell he was there from the video

    • @LHyoutube
      @LHyoutube 2 года назад +3

      @@ashtonandkylievideos2929 - LOL not that we could have known Paul King was there from the video, I mean that we could have known Key read it very well from the video alone 😂

    • @brucecarter8296
      @brucecarter8296 2 года назад

      yes, he's so articulate

    • @ashtonandkylievideos2929
      @ashtonandkylievideos2929 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/YevjfzV4-qQ/видео.html

  • @lisar3944
    @lisar3944 Год назад +33

    ahhhhh I remember my first exposure to this letter. 1999, it was a "viral" (for the time) email running around at that time. The email was sourced from someone at MIT as I recall (no idea if it was a legit address) which made it instantly suspicious. My coworker forwarded it to me and I struggled to read it at my desk without howling - by the end I couldn't breathe I was laughing so hard!
    Mr Key certainly did it justice - I'm crying!!!

  • @megwilcox2878
    @megwilcox2878 2 года назад +54

    This is wonderful! As a museum professional myself, I have every confidence that there will one day be an exhibition of this "citizen scientist's" collection and correspondence.

  • @andrewcharles459
    @andrewcharles459 Год назад +16

    This letter was clearly inspired by the short story "A Preliminary Investigation of an Early Man Site in the Delaware River Valley" by Timothy O'Leary and Charles Ward found in the anthropological science fiction anthology "Apeman Spaceman" (Doubleday, 1968).

    • @YeshuaKingMessiah
      @YeshuaKingMessiah Год назад +2

      YES
      I knew it eerily familiar in a roundabout way!!

  • @magsj6474
    @magsj6474 2 года назад +42

    I remember reading this online in 1999-2000 somewhere in there. It cracked me up. Still pretty funny.

  • @rachelmckoskybennett8285
    @rachelmckoskybennett8285 6 месяцев назад +3

    I think about this letter a LOT. It was circulating via email around 1997. I loved it then. I love it now. I occasionally treat myself to signing off “Yours in Science,”.

  • @trillium.3.24
    @trillium.3.24 4 месяца назад +3

    His delivery is spot on, from his tones to his facial expressions and body language. Well done!

  • @cleverusername9369
    @cleverusername9369 Год назад +22

    This letter and it's reading are both masterpieces of non-malignant sarcasm

  • @truegrit7697
    @truegrit7697 4 месяца назад +4

    I read this letter online almost 25 years ago - hysterical! 🤣

  • @54tisfaction
    @54tisfaction 2 года назад +10

    I can't believe that the contributor so blatantly disregarded the obvious conclusion that this two million years old Malibu Barbie proves that Time travel works!!!

  • @DissociatedWomenIncorporated
    @DissociatedWomenIncorporated 2 года назад +47

    Keegan-Michael Key is an international treasure.

  • @MrJackWorse
    @MrJackWorse Год назад +6

    Someone at the Smithsonian obviously really enjoys their job! Kudos to them and kudos to Key for the perfect delivery!

  • @Doooooooooooood
    @Doooooooooooood Год назад +12

    What a spectacular letter, I hope we never ever stop sending letters to one another.

  • @michaelarrowood4315
    @michaelarrowood4315 Год назад +4

    The perfect letter combined with the perfect reader.

  • @archygirl1750
    @archygirl1750 Год назад +4

    As an archaeologist, I am constantly besieged by "artifacts" from neighbors, friends, relatives, people in stores, complete strangers. I applaud the Smithsonian for their sweet letter, and the lessons therein. The challenge is real. There is a fine line between compassion and sarcasm.

    • @benzaiten933
      @benzaiten933 10 месяцев назад +1

      did those around you ever bring you something of value? I myself once found a fossilized clam on a rock while hiking in the alps. but I've kept it as keepsake (and I couldn't exactly pinpoint where I found it anymore).

  • @stephaniecarrow4898
    @stephaniecarrow4898 8 месяцев назад +2

    The author of this letter must have had a blast writing it. I can imagine members of his staff chiming in suggestions. A fun morning.

  • @LauraC369
    @LauraC369 2 года назад +34

    A visit to the department of antiquities is now on my bucket list, a must see, not to be missed display 😉 . I am in tears, sir... 😂

    • @19Edurne
      @19Edurne 2 года назад +2

      Alas, I don't think the director's office to be included in the price of admission, which is where we could admire these "amazing artefacts".
      ;)

    • @helenbeahan2024
      @helenbeahan2024 2 года назад

      There is no department of antiquities at the Smithsonian. The letter, while hilarious, was written by a bored medical student and is entirely fictional.

    • @LauraC369
      @LauraC369 2 года назад +2

      @@helenbeahan2024 - Thank you for the clarification. My response was in tune to the humorous reading... it was on my list, right after the Room of Mysteries at the Ministry of Magic, London... shame, one less to visit.

  • @lenandov
    @lenandov 2 года назад +4

    "...and you may be quite certain that those of us who are familiar with your prior work in the field were loathe to come to contradiction with your findings..."
    Brilliant

  • @sean.butterworth
    @sean.butterworth Год назад +3

    It’s just so refreshing to listen to reading of such high calibre. Honestly it’s, very sadly, extremely rare these days.

  • @chefbanjo8139
    @chefbanjo8139 4 месяца назад +1

    Key is such a good actor that it’s easy to imagine him telling this to the man himself.

  • @dsantamaria713
    @dsantamaria713 2 месяца назад +1

    I love these letter readings...🤣🤣
    Keep them coming! ❤❤

  • @cindyneff6499
    @cindyneff6499 2 года назад +9

    NO!!! I have got to see this shelf. And the wrench.

  • @carlfranz6805
    @carlfranz6805 2 года назад +7

    Wow. This showed up again. I remember reading this, I believe, in the mid 80s. Still a hoot, though.

  • @skakdosmer
    @skakdosmer Год назад +7

    I already knew this letter well, and I occasionally re-read it when I need to be cheered up. I've even read it aloud to myself and, I might add, done so very well. However, I'm pleased to say that this performance is even better! Thank you, I needed this!

  • @gnocchidokie
    @gnocchidokie 4 месяца назад +1

    I would absolutely pay full price to see a "denied specimens" exhibit at any and every museum

  • @surquhart64
    @surquhart64 2 года назад +18

    ".....Debbie Jellinsky: I was 10, and do you know what they got me? *Malibu* Barbie.
    Morticia: Malibu Barbie.
    Gomez: The nightmare.
    Morticia: The nerve.....
    Well, now we know what happened to the Malibu Barbie!!!! 🤣 sorry,.couldn't help myself....

    • @RICDirector
      @RICDirector Год назад

      So not clams, but Cleopatra the plant?

  • @AlejandroMeri
    @AlejandroMeri 2 года назад +16

    This would be so sweet if the "man who regularly and very kindly donated artefacts discovered in his back garden" was actually a hyperactive paleontology obsessed kid.

  • @leejudith5209
    @leejudith5209 5 месяцев назад +2

    Beautiful read and written ....love it

  • @granthurlburt4062
    @granthurlburt4062 2 месяца назад

    A friend of mine was the very patient Assistant Curator of a museum. When visiting him at the museum, I'd be amazed at his patience, in long phone conversations,saying over and over "Well,nooo...., actually..." over and over again. Never sounding frustrated. The hilarious letter read out here is over the top, but it is amazing how dedicated people can be to their broken piece of rock that "looks like something". Often people bring in cow or sheep bones found on the river-it is very easy to conclusively identify a cow or sheep, or even deer leg bone- and sometimes go away quite miffed and suspicious to be told what they have is not a dinosaur or mammoth or early human.

  • @Serai3
    @Serai3 8 месяцев назад +3

    "Australopithecus Spifferino" Is a perfect name for an accordion punk band.

    • @vdavis4785
      @vdavis4785 5 дней назад

      Perhaps an alter ego for Weird Al Yankovic?

  • @jon780249
    @jon780249 Год назад +7

    This is great and delivered brilliantly.

  • @tonyw1w1w14
    @tonyw1w1w14 7 месяцев назад +2

    This guy is brilliant, he has a wonderful sense of humor. The staff at the Smithsonian must eagerly await his next submission as it would add a great distraction from their daily grind.
    Well done sir, you are spreading nothing but good vibes via your actions, I love this little story, I fully expect you to be flown to the Smithsonian to present all your discoveries.

  • @acchaladka
    @acchaladka 2 года назад +49

    Harvey Roe, Curator, Antiquities, is a bloody genius. I hope he retired to a new career writing comedy in California.

    • @ev6558
      @ev6558 2 года назад +3

      The only thing funnier than the letter are the commenters who couldn't tell it was obviously contrived. It's a joke, never really happened.

    • @angelfish2529
      @angelfish2529 2 года назад +1

      Certainly he can become a staff writer at the Babylon Bee.

    • @RICDirector
      @RICDirector Год назад +1

      @EV Sure it was, does that mean we can't love it, or hope a fictional character went on to be ever more fun?

    • @DanaTheInsane
      @DanaTheInsane 4 месяца назад

      @@angelfish2529 no, they said funny.

  • @jlb9368
    @jlb9368 Год назад +3

    So elegantly read! Love anything this man does!

  • @fluuufffffy1514
    @fluuufffffy1514 2 года назад +6

    A fascinating specimen, Mr Key

  • @micahphilson
    @micahphilson 9 месяцев назад +2

    You know this guy makes their week with his new findings!
    I would love a video recording of him visiting the office, meeting his fans in the staff, and expounding for hours on his revolutionary theories!

  • @lfilm3
    @lfilm3 Год назад +3

    I like everyone involved in every part of this. They all committed to the bit.

  • @Madfattdeeb
    @Madfattdeeb 2 года назад +4

    This is f-ing Brilliant!! 😂🤣
    I want to see his collection and read the write-up of each item.

  • @cardinalgin
    @cardinalgin 2 года назад +18

    Just delicious ! The letter in itself is a work of humorous art and the delivery !!!!

  • @velapalim6281
    @velapalim6281 Месяц назад

    Brilliant 👏 Thank you 😊

  • @sarahleonard7309
    @sarahleonard7309 Год назад +2

    I love this video so much! Whenever I'm feeling gloomy, I watch this and feel uplifted by the kind humor of this busy scientist. OK, I mostly just giggle at the mental image of the shelf of contributions and their speculative conversations. But the wit displayed in this letter gets me every time.

  • @oldzoot
    @oldzoot Год назад +4

    This read is classic. Bravo!

  • @Professicchio
    @Professicchio 2 года назад +15

    Now I really want to see the original letter from the prankster (or deluded archaeologist) who sent that Barbie's head, along with all his other 'precious' findings 😁😂

  • @Promses2Keep
    @Promses2Keep 6 месяцев назад +1

    These letters are GOLD. I just discovered this channel, and I have to say it has brightened my week!

  • @katehardwick4283
    @katehardwick4283 5 месяцев назад

    One of the best readings yet!!

  • @Kameleonic
    @Kameleonic Год назад +3

    Class:) Read by a man of pure talent:)

  • @alliet.7582
    @alliet.7582 Год назад +5

    “Clams do not have teeth” had me dying! I’m pretty sure my coworkers now think I have some sort of epilepsy as my body spasmed with silent laughter.

    • @RICDirector
      @RICDirector Год назад +1

      I suggest you communicate that dosorder to them as expiditiously as possible, then!

  • @75blackviking
    @75blackviking Год назад +2

    Key's comedic sensibility breaks me in half. Hard to comment on this video through the tears in my eyes here.

  • @milktenders6219
    @milktenders6219 5 месяцев назад +1

    I think Keegan should narrate books, I love how he talks

  • @Abelhawk
    @Abelhawk 2 года назад +9

    Not real, but a well-written and funny piece of writing just the same! I like all the presuppositions it makes as a return letter.

  • @johnladuke6475
    @johnladuke6475 2 года назад +5

    All you people exposing it as a fake have crushed my dreams. I really wanted to meet this generous donor and examine their archaeological dig site.

    • @Denise11Schultz
      @Denise11Schultz Год назад +1

      I wouldn’t be sad about it being a fake. I’m sure the real letters like this far outnumber the fakes. If you like this, you might like the young British comedian (James Leitch, I think) who starts a correspondence with spammers and phishing schemers.

  • @madMARTYNmarsh1981
    @madMARTYNmarsh1981 Год назад +1

    I love this bloke, so talented. He was the highlight of the film 'Why Him'.

  • @SATXbassplayer
    @SATXbassplayer Месяц назад

    Absolutely brilliant!!! What a kind yet funny man the writer was.

  • @Dotte78
    @Dotte78 2 года назад +4

    😂😂😂 Oh lord, this made my day!

  • @starboard6372
    @starboard6372 Год назад +5

    Book to check out : "Letters From a Nut" by Ted Nancy Not only did he write hilarious letters, he got equally hilarious responses. What fun when the recipients of such are willing to play along so spectacularly.

    • @georgielancaster1356
      @georgielancaster1356 11 месяцев назад

      I am not sure, but The Henry Root letters might be predating them.
      "He" was writing to Maggie Thatcher, etc and if hegot a rey, would continue to write, each time adding some new extremist comment, until they realised it was a spoof or they were replying to a total nutter.
      Often, he would include a £5 donation, so that they would reply to acknowledge the donation, and then they would find themselves caught up in the madness of Henry Root.

  • @johnnytarponds9292
    @johnnytarponds9292 Год назад +1

    Clearly these submissions are prized and appreciated by the museum's staff for the very obvious comedic effort involved with the crafting of these letters. "Well done!" for the museum and "keep up the good work" for the submissions!

  • @BitterWillow
    @BitterWillow 2 года назад

    Oh this is delightful, thank you!

  • @nairocamilo
    @nairocamilo 2 года назад +34

    Man, Key has such a great voice for narration...
    Love this letter; the description says it's that "Legend has it..." Were these letters supposedly not sent to the man?

    • @paolagrando5079
      @paolagrando5079 2 года назад +13

      No, it's a made up story. I've checked typing Harvey Rowe and Smithsonian on a seach engine.

    • @nairocamilo
      @nairocamilo 2 года назад +1

      @@paolagrando5079 I see. Thank you!

    • @brucecarter8296
      @brucecarter8296 2 года назад

      clams have teeth

  • @albuseisenhorn3385
    @albuseisenhorn3385 2 года назад +3

    Amazing - they should open up a collection under his name to encourage his enthusiasm haha or even brought him in for a tour

  • @denisemcdougal6445
    @denisemcdougal6445 Год назад

    Beautiful and brilliant

  • @LadyPenumbra
    @LadyPenumbra 7 месяцев назад +1

    Jesus! When my family donated Civil War artifacts to the Smithsonian, we had them independently verified first. And the Institute just sent us a normal thank you letter.

  • @1rjbrjb
    @1rjbrjb 2 года назад +32

    This is funnier, by far, than any submission from a professional writer unless Fred Allen's insurance claim is counted.

    • @JohnDlugosz
      @JohnDlugosz Год назад

      If you're referring to the barrel of bricks, that "bit" dates back at least to the 1880's. I saw a different variation in The Readers' Digest, in the 70's or 80's. A musical version was performed by Stan Kelley-Bootle.

    • @1rjbrjb
      @1rjbrjb Год назад

      @@JohnDlugosz Thank you for the provenance of the routine. It was brilliantly delivered, this was a year ago, by Jude Law?
      I am pretty old but not old enough to remember Fred, who dropped dead in the west 50s during the mid-50s. Sincerity in Hollywood, agent's heart, navel of a flea. Maybe that wasn't his either. But he is being mentioned almost 67 years after dying. How many of us will be able to say that, 67 years after we die?

  • @HansLemurson
    @HansLemurson 2 года назад +4

    Since plastics are typically made from petroleum, Carbon dating probably would have shown that the Hominid Skull was in fact extremely ancient.

    • @Trucmuch
      @Trucmuch 2 года назад +1

      So true. In fact, the carbon is too old to be dated instead of too recent as the letter says. Well spotted!

  • @thepochade5992
    @thepochade5992 Год назад

    I'd love to hang out with these kind of folk. Finding and participating in the fun along the walk of life is such a gift ;)

  • @deltablaze77
    @deltablaze77 2 года назад +1

    Well this is amazing and I want much more.

  • @seattlegrrlie
    @seattlegrrlie Год назад +4

    The cranial capacity line did me in 🤣

  • @WormholeJim
    @WormholeJim 2 года назад +3

    So it did happen that Calvin finally grew up and started submitting his backyard finds. Doesn't bode well as to the ulimate fate of that thin voice of reason, Hobbes, however. Probably resting his tired stuffing in a backwater zoological exhibit of the Zorgg empire.

  • @rainlee1
    @rainlee1 Год назад +1

    Never get tired of this😀😀😀

  • @emeral311
    @emeral311 2 года назад +1

    Absolutely riveting