History Of The Thermometer
7:16
5 жыл бұрын
History Of The Shaving Razor
6:09
5 жыл бұрын
History of Coffee
5:39
5 жыл бұрын
History of the Barbecue Grill
4:40
7 жыл бұрын
Welcome To The History of Stuff
1:21
History of Comic Books
5:53
7 жыл бұрын
History of The Microwave Oven
3:56
7 жыл бұрын
History of Christmas Lights
3:52
7 жыл бұрын
History of The Remote Control
3:29
7 жыл бұрын
History of Thanksgiving Traditions
4:09
History of The Haunted House
3:39
8 жыл бұрын
History of The Traffic Light
3:52
8 жыл бұрын
History of The Sandwich
3:02
8 жыл бұрын
History of Toilet Paper
2:59
8 жыл бұрын
History of Pizza
3:21
8 жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@jozefserf2024
@jozefserf2024 12 күн бұрын
Superhero comics were initially the result of some Jewish selling soap to the masses, much like what Hollywood was doing.
@renatacachoeira3689
@renatacachoeira3689 25 күн бұрын
Chato de mas
@EraserCat-TheBattleCats
@EraserCat-TheBattleCats Ай бұрын
Water has left the chat
@ZombieSlayerN05
@ZombieSlayerN05 Ай бұрын
The seashells was 💯 a nod to demolition man
@draksonikirodashi7712
@draksonikirodashi7712 Ай бұрын
25 dollars in that time period was a lot of money
@Maryanomar-ez7ky
@Maryanomar-ez7ky Ай бұрын
Sfdt by ryf v hj g s as g r r v
@alperkoc7837
@alperkoc7837 3 ай бұрын
Great channel, great concept. I am sorry you had to give up early on. Hope you consider restarting.
@Neellssoonn1
@Neellssoonn1 3 ай бұрын
Wait for my Comic on FANSLY… Emperor Of The Universe Content 🇨🇴🌎🇨🇴🦾💪🏽🦁💪🏽🦾
@JorgeMendez-kn5ql
@JorgeMendez-kn5ql 4 ай бұрын
I shaved yesterday. I'll probably shave again tomorrow.
@Ganishtamil
@Ganishtamil 5 ай бұрын
you never mention gd naidu
@PhillipLemmon
@PhillipLemmon 6 ай бұрын
I always thought it was aliens that gave us microwave technology, lol
@MatthewFischer-k9o
@MatthewFischer-k9o 6 ай бұрын
Dubble edge safety razor wet shave is king!
@ewilliamson488
@ewilliamson488 7 ай бұрын
Time to break out the three seashells.
@CarliMongon
@CarliMongon 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for this information and joke in the end
@LeoStops
@LeoStops 8 ай бұрын
Who fist person created the comic strips?
@Unknown-ow5xy
@Unknown-ow5xy 8 ай бұрын
How do you know this story is true ?
@Dr_Larken
@Dr_Larken 8 ай бұрын
I honestly think people should understand, THE fabricated apocryphal story which first appeared in the late 1950s in a popular magazine. Claiming that Percy Spencer walked by a bank of World War II magnetron tubes that were operating and that radiation from those tubes melted a candy bar in his pocket and boom. He invented the household and consumer microwave oven. This Mythical story obscures the engineering method and strips away all the richness of how engineers create! It overshadows the extensive & detailed engineering that evolved that early commercial oven of the mid 1940s to the consumer oven! There were many different designs shapes and sizes which took over three decades, essentially arriving at the final form to become an eventually ubiquitous invention! This regurgitated fictional story of the Candy bar and microwave, however to hide the detailed engineering, hide the creativity of engineering. A creativity that we seen in mysterious structures like Göbekli Tepe, the majestic cathedrals of the middle ages, clever method to uncover uncertainty in the complexity of fluid flow or the directed evolution of proteins. The astonishing development of the steam turbine & now the evolution of the Magnatron to power a microwave oven! Hiding that creativity dissuades our best and brightest from recognizing engineering as a supremely, creative endeavor which robs us of the next generation of mental fire power. the new wave of engineers who can have help solve the problems our World faces!
@claytonwoodstock8842
@claytonwoodstock8842 8 ай бұрын
The pizza commercial😂😂
@OPspike777
@OPspike777 8 ай бұрын
This is going to be my job
@RoryWilliams-p8n
@RoryWilliams-p8n 9 ай бұрын
I like the idea of condensed history of comic books, but this seemed too short. A good portion was just the intro. You did a good job, but I would like to place a vote for a longer version. The longest one I could find for general overview of all comic books was a 9 minute version that was hard to watch. Even with just 20 minutes I bet you could get a lot more information in there. I looked at your archive and I see all your history-of videos are quite short, so I understand this is your style.
@ThaddeusMorici
@ThaddeusMorici 9 ай бұрын
so close.....I was hoping to use this with my 8th graders....unfortunately the headless woman won't work. otherwise the first 2 min are great
@Shunya-p6x
@Shunya-p6x 9 ай бұрын
AMERICANS ARE THE DIRTIEST,, POOP STUCK TO THE BUTT WHOLE DAY, HOW CAN A MAN LIVE SUCH A LIFE.
@Cqat1
@Cqat1 9 ай бұрын
this focuses a LOT on american superhero comics,(I know this video is 6 years old but i'd still like to give some feedback) completely ignoring artists like Carl Barks, arguably THE most influencial comic artist of all time, or for example Fritz the cat, as well as completely ignoring the ENTIRE european side of comics, which is home to legendary storys like tintin, asterix and obelix or lucky luke. (and manga too)
@SAUBER_KH7
@SAUBER_KH7 9 ай бұрын
2:41 if you slow the video down to 25%, you will find that the POV car ran the red light.🚦
@BradStirrup
@BradStirrup 9 ай бұрын
Я от Евгении Сергеевны, кто тоже ставьте лайк
@reinaldassulskis3663
@reinaldassulskis3663 10 ай бұрын
hero fighter music
@simonwilliams4922
@simonwilliams4922 10 ай бұрын
Sequential art begin in 51,000 BC with 2 Cave paintings in Lucerne Valley France. The first American comic was; A visit to the gold Diggins by Jeremiah saddlebags which was published in 1849.
@arthurtripp6922
@arthurtripp6922 11 ай бұрын
You have forgotten fans first meet each other and sold comics and met Artists. This happened in New York 1964 Comicon and the.media reported it.
@lukeallan6486
@lukeallan6486 11 ай бұрын
There is indeed a place in Kent England called Sandwich. Never realised it came from that.
@mr.z_yt
@mr.z_yt 11 ай бұрын
the Carl guy is actually my English teacher right now COOL
@johnyoung9976
@johnyoung9976 Жыл бұрын
Why can’t we all switch to kelvin it seems really cool
@johnyoung9976
@johnyoung9976 Жыл бұрын
Only in America do we have to be complicated with how we measure 😂
@brianfuller757
@brianfuller757 Жыл бұрын
Interesting video. Although popularity for facial hair rises and falls , King Gillette significantly changed two important activities. Men began to shave daily and fewer went for shaves at barber shops.
@snka8993
@snka8993 Жыл бұрын
thank you
@SoularVAG
@SoularVAG Жыл бұрын
AYO WHAT DO U MEAN BY GRAB MY BUNS AND MY LONG HOT DOG
@Mr.X_MisteriX
@Mr.X_MisteriX Жыл бұрын
I just saw a video stating, and showing, that Gillette wasn't inventing "the disposable razor", he only made improvements to what already existed from 1876 (Star Safety Razor).
@Mr.X_MisteriX
@Mr.X_MisteriX Жыл бұрын
Oh, I might got lost in translation, it seems Gillette was inventing something, although he just copied from the original idea of Kampfe brothers: "in 1895, Gillette had the idea of substituting a thin double-edged steel blade placed between two plates and held in place by a Τ handle. Instead of being sharpened, the removable blade would simply be thrown away once it became dull." Although I still can see confusion there, Gillette wasn't inventing the T handle, lol. History is not accessible to anyone, I guess: "In May of 1880, Frederick and Otto applied for a patent for a “new and useful improvements in safety-razors.” This is widely accepted as the first use of the term “safety-razor. Trademarks filed in 1903 use the Star name and symbol and claim the Kampfe brothers began manufacturing the Star safety razor in 1875 “in a one-room stop in New York City.” However, by 1899 they occupied a space at 8-10-12 Reade St. An advertisement from 1911 for Kampfe stated: “The Star…has been made and used for thirty-six years. We were expert cutlery manufacturers before we invented the safety razor.” This would imply that the razor was first made in 1875 and some collectors have noted that early Kampfe safety razors had an 1875 date near or on the top part of the handle." "The patent held by Kampfe expired in 1897, but the Star razor was widely copied and sold in the United States and abroad, often under the label American Model. Due to the various copies of their product, the Kampfe brothers started to advertise more frequently, often including the phrase “All Others are Spurious.”
@premdasyesudasan5778
@premdasyesudasan5778 Жыл бұрын
The best system is the single blade system. Gives the closest shave with zero irritation when a fresh blade is used with minimal amount of pressure applied to the skin.
@ليليانعثمان-ص4س
@ليليانعثمان-ص4س Жыл бұрын
‏‪0:10‬‏
@johnmurray3888
@johnmurray3888 Жыл бұрын
This is a woefully INCOMPLETE History Of The Shaving Razor. Giilette safety razors used to hold a generic twin-edge blade that could be purchased from any number of competing manufacturers. Then Giilette's marketing team discovered a clever way to stick it to the consumer - manufacture a fancy Shaving Razor handle that sells at a slight loss but can only be reloaded with Gillette's own proprietory blades - blades that are, of course, obscenely expensive. This marketing strategy soon caught on and it was off to the races! Why not manufacture an electric toothbrush and charge an arm and a leg for the replacement brushes? In the nuclear age, Westinghouse and General Electric got in on the act by designing reactors that were only compatible with their respective fuel-rod assemblies; construction cost overruns often meant that initially there was a serious financial loss - but this was more than compensated for by the overpriced fuel-assembies that the power utility could only buy from one supplier. Voila! Each reactor was not so much a product as a revenue stream. This scam reached its zenith with the Hewlett Packard ink-jet printer, each unit retailed at a 30% loss but - you guessed it - would only accept Hewlett Packard's colored ink cartridges. Caveat emptor. "The inhabitants of this land look upon fraud as a greater crime than theft, and seldom fail to punish it by death. For they allege, that whilst vigilance may preserve a man's goods against thieves, honesty and vigilance hath no defence against superior cunning. Since it is necessary that there be a perpetual intercourse of buying and selling and dealing upon credit, if fraud is permitted, or connived at, or has inadequate laws to punish it, then the honest man will always be undone and the knave will always have the advantage." - Jonathan Swift (Gulliver's Travels)
@valentinoramirez7121
@valentinoramirez7121 Жыл бұрын
When I am well stalked with toilet paper I feel like millionaire
@Tupapcu
@Tupapcu Жыл бұрын
you know this is more story of when pizza became marketable it not a story who made the first pizza
@LEOFADS
@LEOFADS Жыл бұрын
Great history
@baskets8429
@baskets8429 Жыл бұрын
Excellent
@whysocurious163
@whysocurious163 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this video, this really helped with my english paper.
@Extreme_exotics
@Extreme_exotics Жыл бұрын
Too noisy
@untiporandom2410
@untiporandom2410 Жыл бұрын
buenardo.
@zakaep
@zakaep Жыл бұрын
ahhhhh~~~~~~~~~~😊
@DdDongDd-007
@DdDongDd-007 Жыл бұрын
Imagine shaving your beard with a clam shell today how long would that take
@williammizebee
@williammizebee Жыл бұрын
Percy Spencer or Nicola tesla?
@ianlowery6014
@ianlowery6014 2 ай бұрын
Tesla had nothing to do with it. The cavity magnetron was developed by Britain's radar research unit at Birmingham University, led by the Australian physicist Mark Oliphant. It went to the USA with the all important Tizzard mission, which was to try to pave the way for the exchange of research and data between the USA and Great Britain, and to prompt the USA into the manufacture of some of Britain's inventions as Britain was up to the neck in manufacture for the war effort, and could not manufacture more. The Yanks were wary and sceptical. Then one of their representatives talked about CXAM radar, which produced 10 watts of VHF radiation from a unit the size of a small room. Either Bowen or Cockcroft revealed the cavity magnetron which sat in a person's hand, and produced 1,000 times as much power. This disclosure dispelled any tension left between the delegations, and the meeting then went smoothly. The cavity magnetron was later described by a US historian as the most valuable product to have ever reached American shores. Any docco on the invention of the microwave oven should start with the invention, development and application of the cavity magnetron.
@timothyjamesjuan7935
@timothyjamesjuan7935 Жыл бұрын
thanx mate i needed this for my digital scrapbook