I might try it. Sound interesting, but I probably would start early on figuring out who is chow and those that can crew.
The dude laughed at and filmed the suicide victim and posted it on his channel which is mostly watched by kids. I don't see how you guys don't see how that's fucked up.
The video I saw, which admittedly might be only a portion of the issue, didn't seem to be that crass. Sounded more like nervous laughing than anything. The guy does look like he's a complete dumbass though
Shit man. $2-$3 per 1000 views. 2M views a video... that's $5,000 a video. To film your day... Ridiculousness. Hopefully somebody my YouTube stuff will be a source of a little extra cash. Making $5 a video would be awesome. People like that can never expect it to be more than a hobby, but if you get big enough, goddamn.
Well I found the test. It seems most of the fun would come from taking the test with several others. But I forged on by self. Then I found this list of survival supply we are suppose to rank in importance. This list shows the correct ranking we should achieve. What a load of shit! Shaving mirror. (One of your most powerful tools, because you can use it to signal your location by reflecting the sun.) Can of petrol. (Again, potentially vital for signalling as petrol floats on water and can be lit by your matches.) Water container. (Essential for collecting water to restore your lost fluids.) Emergency rations. (Valuable for basic food intake.) Plastic sheet. (Could be used for shelter, or to collect rainwater.) Chocolate bars. (A handy food supply.) Fishing rod. (Potentially useful, but there is no guarantee that you're able to catch fish. Could also feasibly double as a tent pole.) Rope. (Handy for tying equipment together, but not necessarily vital for survival.) Floating seat or cushion. (Useful as a life preserver.) Shark repellent. (Potentially important when in the water.) Bottle of rum. (Could be useful as an antiseptic for treating injuries, but will only dehydrate you if you drink it.) Radio. (Chances are that you're out of range of any signal, anyway.) Sea chart. (Worthless without navigational equipment.) Mosquito net. (Assuming that you've been shipwrecked in the Atlantic, where there are no mosquitoes, this is pretty much useless.) Sextant. (Impractical without relevant tables or a chronometer.) My comment >>> below Shaving mirror. (One of your most powerful tools, because you can use it to signal your location by reflecting the sun.) Can of petrol. (Again, potentially vital for signalling as petrol floats on water and can be lit by your matches.) >>> Man I carry a VHF radio to communicate with, not a friggin shaving mirror or can of petrol. WTF? Water container. (Essential for collecting water to restore your lost fluids.) Emergency rations. (Valuable for basic food intake.) Plastic sheet. (Could be used for shelter, or to collect rainwater.) Chocolate bars. (A handy food supply.) Fishing rod. (Potentially useful, but there is no guarantee that you're able to catch fish. Could also feasibly double as a tent pole.) Rope. (Handy for tying equipment together, but not necessarily vital for survival.) Floating seat or cushion. (Useful as a life preserver.) Shark repellent. (Potentially important when in the water.) Bottle of rum. (Could be useful as an antiseptic for treating injuries, but will only dehydrate you if you drink it.) >>> Might be a little more useful than the gasoline for fire as it can also do the antiseptic role too. Radio. (Chances are that you're out of range of any signal, anyway.) >>> Yeah well your chances are you're out of range of fire and the friggin mirror too. But the VHF can communicate a litter farther in any case if you see or hear someone to contact. Sea chart. (Worthless without navigational equipment.) >>>Bullshit, I am keeping the chart. I always have some navigation equipment in my head. I don't need time for latitude. Mosquito net. (Assuming that you've been shipwrecked in the Atlantic, where there are no mosquitoes, this is pretty much useless.) Sextant. (Impractical without relevant tables or a chronometer. >>> The guy that wrote this doesn't know much. The sextant is not of much use because you can't get a very good read off a small boat, not much chance at all in a life raft. But you don't need tables to get latitude off polaris. I can swag it though just about as accurately as taking a sight. Chuck the sextant.
That's what bell bottoms were designed for...tie the legs, slap them on the water and you've got water wings....lot of folks didn't know that
This kid and his brother are the biggest idiots on YouTube and they have young kids watching all their shit. He knew what he was doing, he even monetized the apology video he made for it after. They only care about getting certain content out that will get the views.