Hi Pete & Chris, when visiting Kyoto 15 years ago me and my girlfriend were on a bus full of elderly women. Suddenly a wasp came through the window and all the women were freaking out, the women all looked at me as I was the only male in the bus and started handing me napkins and pointed at the wasp telling me to catch it. I was freaking out too but felt I had no choice but to bravely grab the wasp and toss it with all the napkins out of the window. Just a funny scary memory I'll never forget.
@Collector_Phil20 күн бұрын
What a great Trial by Fire in Japan story…Excellent! You earned some points and Gaijin respect with these Japanese present in that bus
@Rambonz224 күн бұрын
Another great episode from Radioactive Chris and Pumpkinspice Pete
@spencerking589624 күн бұрын
Came buy Lost bar yesterday with kids bf they opened. Nice man came out and said no kids aloud. But he was ever so nice and let us in for a photo, I didn't catch his name, but I really appreciate what he did. Your bar looks amazing.
@AlexxAmadeo23 күн бұрын
21:42 I’m impressed by any English-speaking person who can pronounce Zaporizhzhia correctly. Well done :)
@elford390622 күн бұрын
As an english speaker to me it isnt that hard. Anyone as an english speaker have trouble saying the word?
@samohara518724 күн бұрын
Perphaps you could do a repeat of OG Journey Across Japan but as a road trip, stopping at some of the same places to see how (if) it's changed. If that leads back to Chris and Pete singing Wannabe by the Spice Girls at a karaoke bar in Osaka, so be it!
@xenocrisis015324 күн бұрын
Not only did they mess up by not building the wall higher, they also should have stored the back-up gas generators further inland. When the tsunami waters flooded the grounds, the generators became useless instantly. I was an ALT in the area from 2010-2012. I'd love to share some stories about life in the area in the year before, the day of, and the year that followed. I haven't been back since I left. Most of the places I knew are in the exclusion zone, so there hasn't been much reason to return. I'm just disappointed that I never got to say good-bye to so many of the wonderful people that lived there.
@davidlericain24 күн бұрын
The reason it's so hard to build robots that can remove the radioactive material is that the radiation basically fries the robot. To do it successfully you need radiation hardened circuitry, which is costly and very limited. And even then it can only handle so much radiation before it's toast.
@ninjawithnobalance23 күн бұрын
I Imagine with the radiation handling it for repair will not be easy as it will be contaminated with radioactive.
@CaptainKeeez23 күн бұрын
@@ninjawithnobalance Actually not really! The gamma radiation from the damaged core won't really contaminate it, just damage the electronics. What you have to worry about when it comes to contamination like that are unstable nuclei that were produced by the fission reactions when the reactor was on or melting down, most of which should be solid and in that melted mess. Basically, they just have to very carefully make sure the robot doesn't have any dust on it; the robot itself won't now be radioactive so could be worked.
@kaleeyed24 күн бұрын
Once stayed with my partner's mother in Brittany, just before we bedded down for the night, she left us with the cheery observation "Oh, by the way, there's giant hornets flying about, one may come in your room, but don't worry, good night." The temperature in the room was about 30 degrees C, and we had no choice but to sleep with the window open. About 5am, I was woken by a loud buzzing at the window. I was instantly awake and sat up in terror, to see a single bumble bee fly into the room. One of the worst night's sleep of my life.
@FJGenso24 күн бұрын
If following the theme of abroad in japan podcast, You and Pete should visit that expensive giant squid statue that has been discussed in this podcast before.
@主水-p5b23 күн бұрын
We Japanese live in a physical culture, so we are used to this kind of endless work. 100 years of work is easy. In that work, we find small discoveries, find joy, and increase efficiency. 5000 years is within reach.
@saipsych353024 күн бұрын
Ah, my favorite podcast has a new episode!
@Samouraii23 күн бұрын
Chris and his Dad about to ACTIVATE once again 🤖
@Tornroot23 күн бұрын
In regards to activities you could do a cooking class (ramen & gyōza, sushi, etc), calligraphy course, bike tours, food market tour, tea ceremony, sake tasting, Buddhist monks sometimes offer things, samurai/ninja experiences, the list goes on!
@Slammer_197021 күн бұрын
Hey Chris, if Pete is going to be in Japan between November 10th to November 24th, take him to see a day of Sumo in Tokyo. Then both van say that you've both seen Sumo when asked about it in the fax machine.
@cheriestl24 күн бұрын
The aisle of shame! Love Aldi!
@runcows23 күн бұрын
With the fukushima melt down, its worth it to mention that TEPCO also lobbied to not spend money on waterproofing their back up generators as they were supposed to. It's so tragic that the melt down could have been prevented should more money had been spent to actually make it safe
@Ethirical23 күн бұрын
Wait, did Pete make a Habbo Hotel reference?? 11:09 That is crazy.
@MaximumEdition23 күн бұрын
Onagawa NPP was the closest npp to the epicenter of the earthquake , all the safety systems worked as intended and the people living in the nearby town took refuge in the plant's gymnasium.
@TheBaldr23 күн бұрын
Even cheaper way they could have prevented the Nuclear Disaster, they could have built the backup generators/pumps on the hill.
@zDToddy23 күн бұрын
Nuclear fear is the greatest achievement of the Oil industry
@HiroBrown24 күн бұрын
Chris! I will be in Aizu Wakamatsu next Wednesday visiting my family. If I see you, I’ll be sure to say hi :)
@ItsBAndBees23 күн бұрын
I always thought it’d be fascinating to see a Butoh performance. Closest I’ll ever get is Nashville does a yearly Japanese festival with tea ceremonies and Taiko drummers ❤
@emperortivurnis916123 күн бұрын
Dryer your seasonal clothing for like 10 minutes (maybe with some dryer balls!) to freshen them up and dedust them quickly before you have the need to wear them!
@kaleeyed24 күн бұрын
You forgot about the Sellafield fire in 1957, almost the first ever nuclear accident in the world, so bad that the government rebranded the name of the reactor from Windscale. Caused cancer clusters of luekaemia in children in Cumbria. I'd stuck with the windmills.
@pdxtraveler23 күн бұрын
Hi guys, when Pete comes to visit you should do things you haven’t done before. Kabuki theater, sumo, visit Nikko, etc…
@jamesrios945723 күн бұрын
I've been to the kabucki theatre years ago. Tourist were only allowed for about 30 min and we could only stand. And we were partially hidden from the regulars
@MUSHIN_88824 күн бұрын
Sgoin on mate
@millennialchicken24 күн бұрын
what a brave little robot
@Zerphane24 күн бұрын
Another good show, I can't wait for my trip to Japan in Feb. I've dropped 130 lbs so far so I can "fit" into places lol. I hope to hit up Lost Bar.
@MrEskadi24 күн бұрын
Congratulations on that. If no one told you yet that's a amazing change and also that's as much as I weigh, I struggle to gain weight though
@Zerphane23 күн бұрын
@@MrEskadi Thanks , it was Chris' videos that really made me kick it into gear, I've wanted to visit Japan for 30 years, and I saw a bunch of his travel videos and said "screw it, lets doing this" and while I'm not at the size I want, I'm in a better place then I was.
@MrEskadi23 күн бұрын
@Zerphane well job well done your putting in the effort it will pay off
@Stephen-up3sd22 күн бұрын
Incredible! Good for you! Have a fantastic trip!
@AnonYmous-rw6un24 күн бұрын
People don t wear cycle helmets in the Netherlands either. Definitely helped by good separation from vehicle traffic.
@rockerbob94924 күн бұрын
Greetings from Laguna Beach California
@nicholausbuthmann142124 күн бұрын
Fellow Californian, "Winston Churchill" time for us in California to stand up to the "Orange Hitler" !
@Ascot8923 күн бұрын
We did chopstick carving ing kawaguchiko and etagami painting in Osaka, both great activities close to tourist spots.
@heidiluegisland832623 күн бұрын
What about go to a English Rakugo show in Tokyo? Katsura Sunshine has a show on November 29 in Tokyo. An interview with him would be fun and interesting (I know, you don't do interviews often😄)
@bornakreca262523 күн бұрын
this is actually an extremly health way of thinking about nuclear energy
@DovidM16 күн бұрын
A wool jumper can cause itchy, watery eyes in those allergic to wool. Dust mites can cause this as well. However, if there are dust mites they will be in the bedding (including the pillows), rugs, drapes and clothing. The problem with dust mites should be year round.
@Roqedda21 күн бұрын
I worked in tech connected to nuclear. I trust the tech, but iI don't trust the people, especially the ones dealing with money -_-
@rujkantanadigital109023 күн бұрын
i need a video where Pete reviews all the flavors of Coolish and ranks them!
@co_dy_be_st24 күн бұрын
If they deal with any Seaside nuclear plants or towns I just learned this a while back but they should look into creating barriers based off the Tesla valve as it might actually help eliminate tsunamis entirely depending on how it's built they could also put any contaminated soil that they had collected up in the bags and use it in the construction of the Tesla valve by hollowing out certain sections of concrete and then using the contaminated material to fill the inside before sealing It Off
@Crossingt23 күн бұрын
I like to see Pete do the white water course in Mitake. It is only 90 minutes from Tokyo.
@krozzer274823 күн бұрын
I love the idea of Hypnodisc being sent into the reactor, just obliterating nuclear fuel, sending it spraying as dust. Doesn't help, but Craig Charles gets to yell about it.
@Akkothen20 күн бұрын
Good way of talking about nuclear energy. It wasn't really the earthquake to cause the damage but rather the tsunami. As someone said the Onagawa plant was even closer to the epicenter and was used as shelter. The topic of radiation is naive, true we don't see it, but we also don't see CO2 emissions or most pollution (unless it's at insanely high levels), but radiation is probably the one thing humanity can measure insanely precisely. It's good to rememeber that nuclear covers all points needed to fulfill the energy transition: low carbon energy, safe, reliable, can be built virtually anywhere, covers a small surface, and while it's true that it costs a lot at the start, not only are operating costs very low, but current reactors have 60 years lifespan. I'm glad both of you are pronuclear, afterall there's no reason to be against it when one looks at the data.
@Fanaro24 күн бұрын
I think nuclear energy is 5-10x safer than what you guys seem to believe. Try taking a look at the series Kyle Hill made on it.
@jakoblarok21 күн бұрын
I'm currently teaching in a town that had a cyclist in the recent summer olympics, and it was the first time I've seen such an abundance of cyclist culture since I left Texas. Not just kids and teens making their commutes to schools and stations (to get to or from farther schools), or mama-cha's powered by elderly folks on their way to buy catfood... but real, honest-to-goodness, helmeted, spandex-clad middle-aged men on ultra-light, hyper-carbon/graphene/whatever bikes that cost as much as a kei-car... And they do NOT use the side-walks like the kiddos. Because they are "flying" along at 20 kph, they need to use the street (and I'm glad they don't try to share that space with the kids and elderly). It's not so bad when they're doing it on side roads with sparse enough traffic to only wait a minute for a chance to pass them. But they seem to favor the main road through town, which is exactly as hilly as the side roads here. The only difference is traffic. I'm thinking it's just a flex, but who knows?
@jonhaugen579924 күн бұрын
Three Mile Island may reopen for powering Microsoft facilities and other businesses. A little scary to say the least.
@StreyX23 күн бұрын
The problem with windmills is that it's very location specific and it has the same issue as solar where there needs to be infrastructure built to store all the excess energy for later use. Unfortunately, the current lithium based battery tech is expensive and potentially dangerous(think tesla car fire x1000000 if we're talking about a battery bank that stores power for a city). There are safer, but less efficient thermal based battery options which are still developing, but no one is willing to make that that investment.
@NemetFox22 күн бұрын
After trying them I thought the sake kit kats were kind of rubbish. Hopefully they've improved the flavour since the last time I had them.
@jordanbeagle577923 күн бұрын
Reminder that insects form the base of our biosphere and are essential to life on the planet. Too often we casually demonize nature and especially insects. Imagine the stories they could tell of humans…
@misake23 күн бұрын
Here in Québec, Canada pretty much all our power is hydro. (There was one reactor, but I believe it closed down because of the meltdown in Japan. ) We apparently have enough electricity we sell some to Ontario and the US... hmmm... wonder how long the US ones will stay when pro-coal and US only guy is in power... 🫤 Anyway, stuff you guys could do while Pete is there. Santa Maria in Osaka port? 🤷♀️ Go to a Kabuki, try Kyudo, kendo...
@RazulLD23 күн бұрын
correct me if I am wrong, but robots use Electromagnetic waves and radiation disrupts electromagnetic waves so it will be next to impossible to use robots to clear radioactive zones.
@CaptainKeeez22 күн бұрын
Physical radiation damage to the electronics would be the big issue. Radiation hardened circuitry is a thing (it's used for both space hardware and the detectors in particle physics experiments, for example), but it is expensive and only lasts so long.
@mattcy659121 күн бұрын
This week on episode 5 of Chis's bath mat saga
@tuoppi4224 күн бұрын
Catnip is a bug repellent. And it gets cats high, so it is kind of a win-win plant.
@CaptainKeeez23 күн бұрын
We'll probably need some nuclear fission to supplement renewables at least until such a point that we can figure out feasible space-based solar panels, but those are pretty far off, and we'd possibly still want to keep a few as backups anyway. Consistent power is just too important to be at the mercy of the weather in most countries. Maybe someday we'll finally get fusion working and can just fully switch over to that instead. Until then, we just have to settle for fission with the hope that it's properly regulated with regard to safety. It's very safe if done properly, but those profits aren't going to make themselves....
@breebaker765924 күн бұрын
Holy sheeet never made it this early to new upload lol hello Chris & Pete from Sunny Coast, Australia :D
@neko378024 күн бұрын
"Life Where I'm From" on KZbin did a video on bikes a few months ago, and one goes to a bike shop and they discuss the whole bike helmet thing.
@Dan_Letters23 күн бұрын
I would DIE if a giant hornet flew in and bumped into my head 😂😭
@aohige23 күн бұрын
Did that guy just... tried to swat away a freakin Suzumebachi? (known in US as the murder hornets) Dude coulda spent his trip in the hospital 😂
@ChineseKiwi23 күн бұрын
16:15 - Pete, you unfortunately are very misinformed! Hinkley C in the UK is nearly double the initial cost (**factoring in inflation**) and at least 6 years over due. and to quote the IEA - 'Nuclear power faces a contrasted future despite its ability to produce emissions-free power. With large up-front costs, long lead times and an often-poor record of on-time delivery, nuclear power projects have trouble in some jurisdictions competing against faster-to-install alternatives, such as natural gas or modern renewables.' - the UK is a North Sea wind powerhouse.
@jedirabiz20 күн бұрын
Renewable energy has become both far more efficient and far less expensive over the years. As far as reliability, when the sun is shining, solar is always churning, when the wind is blowing, windmills are turning. For times when the sun isn't out and the wind isn't a great source, planning ahead and building battery storage for those times of lower power generation is essential and most technologies have that contingency built in. Nuclear energy is a form of energy that most people in the clean energy industry would suggest that we stay away from. The long term effects of safety and nuclear waste (which is the true byproduct of Nuclear energy) is extremely problematic. Is the juice worth the squeeze gentlemen?
@Stephen-up3sd22 күн бұрын
You talk about the difficulty of disposing of all the radioactive waste from nuclear plants - no one seems to consider what is going to be done with all the spent batteries from electric cars It’s going to be a massive problem very soon!
@NimbusStroll23 күн бұрын
Chris we need proof of you sitting in an onsen for hours.
@thomasedwards151224 күн бұрын
Nuclear power is so weird to me as I'm from New Zealand where nuclear power is banned, even nuclear power ships are banned from visiting.
@janwilson948524 күн бұрын
People forget the long histories of companies and governments covering up for nuclear leaks, nuclear contamination, security scares, loss of nuclear material, etc. Which is why I'll never trustit. Also the tax payer gets fleeced re the building and running of nuclear power plants. Also the tax payers always get stung for billions when it comes to waste disposal and monitoring, and even more when its time to decomission them. Its a scam. Even worse government idiots and scientists are now working on plans for mini nuclear reactors that businesses can buy - great idea for lots of 'little' nuclear disasters, terrorist attacks and nuclear material being 'lost'!!
@danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk24 күн бұрын
It's clean and the safest we have.
@FAMEROB23 күн бұрын
benefits of a low population
@thomasedwards151223 күн бұрын
@danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk how is it the safest? Wind, solar and even hydro have had no major accidents.
@danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk23 күн бұрын
@@thomasedwards1512 Ruinables kill more than nuclear. Just one dam break, the Banqiao Dam failure in China, resulted in the deaths of an estimated 171,000 people.
@AnonYmous-rw6un24 күн бұрын
Nuclear's problem isn't really safety, it's cost. Safety is used as a distraction. If the previous UK government hadn't banned onshore wind there'd already be more of it. Japan has decent solar (one of largest installed bases) but the problem is wind. With the lack of continental shelf it needs floating wind to develop and come down in cost so it can install offshore in its deeper water. With floating wind it'd have more than enough capacity for its needs.
@danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk24 күн бұрын
When real numbers are used, nuclear always comes in as less expensive than ruinables.
@psycofire9324 күн бұрын
The cost is an agenda pushed by the Green Party that has already been debunked. When the science was too bulletproof, people started saying "time and money commitment is too much" Nuclear power has evolved enough that a new plant can be created in the same amount of time and for only slightly more than a coal power plant, and the cost saving it creates pays for itself 10 times over in a few decades. Wind energy is one of the worst renewable energy sources. Giant metal things that cannot be recycled and just have to be dumped somewhere when they break or are replaced will cause even more of an ecological waste problem, much worse than any amount of nuclear waste. I highly recommend watching Kyle Hill's more recent "Cost of nuclear power" video that's probably 2ish months old now. It's very good, very insightful. Wind and Solar still rely on battery backups, we need to move away from energy sources that requires those
@CaptainKeeez23 күн бұрын
It's easy to rile people up with the safety thing, since nuclear power is very poorly understood by the public and all they know of are the few high-profile accidents. There is also the association with weapons, even though the reality is that a reactor cannot fail in a way that is comparable to one. It is much, much easier to get people to emotionally oppose something with a very low risk of major disasters that require human incompetence to happen at all than it is to get them to recognize a guaranteed but long-term threat like climate change or even regular old air pollution. Long-term risk and things based on statistics are very hard to get the public to understand or care about. I suspect a lot of the opposition at the government level isn't even due to cost, but rather for political support from people who don't understand the technology and associated risks. Well, that and being funded by the oil industry.
@ChineseKiwi23 күн бұрын
@@danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk so do you know more than the literal World Nuclear Association now? - 'The French national audit body, the Cour des Comptes, said in 2012 that the overnight capital costs of building nuclear power plants increased over time from €1070/kWe (at 2010 prices) when the first of the 58 currently operating PWRs was built at Fessenheim (commissioned in 1978) to €2060/kWe in 2000 after Chooz B1&2 were built, and to a projected €3700/kWe for the Flamanville EPR.'
@alaner138323 күн бұрын
@@danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk Not at all, don't know where you got that from. Rather, it's among the most expensive forms of energy production per produced GWh
@nicholausbuthmann142124 күн бұрын
Take Pete Initial D. to that Ginza KABUKI THEATRE you just compared to Grumman's Chinese Theatre's Facade in Hollywood.
@jemimar774622 күн бұрын
pete really stumbled through that nuclear chat
@timothyfolkins465119 күн бұрын
I agree. There are topics where a jovial and giggling attitude are appropriate, this isn't one of them. Maybe be a bit more sombre when talking about an incident that ruined thousands of lives, especially when you don't know what you are talking about.
@rechnin668023 күн бұрын
Why don't you take Pete to make some sweet and replace the manky ones in your shop front?
@interestsarefree14 күн бұрын
KitKat Sake >>>>> One Cup Sake
@natalian.132024 күн бұрын
Visit Kabuki Theatre together. 🙂👍
@mayonaise00024 күн бұрын
The snake was a king cobra bite. The guy wound up losing his finger
@rolfl327121 күн бұрын
How is the lesson of the Fukushima reactor meltdown that renewable energy is less reliable and less effective as nuclear energy????
@undauntedtheoni17 күн бұрын
I am once more begging for a redo of walking about tokyo podcasting
@IanSmithFrusionFizzion24 күн бұрын
Man I bought the KitKat Sake in August when on hols it’s Mega Chris I’m with ya buddy ❤ ignore the white chocolate haters 😅
@Vae_24 күн бұрын
440 operating nuclear reactors as of 2024, for clarity.
@co_dy_be_st24 күн бұрын
I'm looking to try to find an expat way to get out of Canada I wonder with having a bit of experience delivering heavy construction equipment related stuff to nuclear contaminated sites if there would be a way for me to get a job in Japan at Fukushima prefecture
@RyzawaCh24 күн бұрын
It's tragic how much money is valued over the lives that make money circulate in the first place, I hate how short-sighted these companies are.
@olehaugan955523 күн бұрын
I heard windmill parks kill a ton of bugs and birds. There are no perfect solutions, I guess
@Oni_Evergarden22 күн бұрын
If I got stung by a hornet I would simply not react. I've watched Coyote Peterson before, he survives way worse. I'd simply just be better
@NimbusStroll24 күн бұрын
Love white chcco, shame im now dairy intolerant, do wonder if i got bit by a lime tick, ive gotten bit by ticks for sure, but I heard lyme made you intolerant to meant, however meat is pretty much all i can eat.
@Delaney-and-the-Starlight24 күн бұрын
I wonder if the hornet in the story was one of those giant horrifying murder hornets? Is that why they acted like that?
@crunchyfrog55524 күн бұрын
He clearly said murder hornets.
@crunchyfrog55524 күн бұрын
Could get Elon Musk to design a robot to clean up the nuclear reactor. He'd propose something that looks bloody stupid, and has a load of features that break the laws of physics, but hey. Also, as the cleanup plan is about 40 years or so, then maybe we might get a fucking chance of it releasing by then anyway.
@user-tg6vq1kn6v24 күн бұрын
Don’t look into who else was allowed to fly after sep 11 grounded all flights
@MENTOKz24 күн бұрын
On the sea walls part u do know earth will cheat and move that wall down 50 feet then water goes over anyways dude.
@rbaxter28623 күн бұрын
Sorry, TINY BIT of fuel retrieved by robot, after years ...
@NimbusStroll24 күн бұрын
If you have a net just stomp it.
@NimbusStroll23 күн бұрын
bRO PUTTING A RMOTE CONTROLE ON A digger would do it.
@CaptainKeeez23 күн бұрын
The electronics all need to be radiation hardened, which isn't easy or cheap.
@TacComControl24 күн бұрын
This is the major problem with nuclear. The fuel stays radioactive, and the more there is, i.e. if it all slags together, the more radioactive it gets, as more neutrons bombard more particles and release more radiation. So the robot is basically coming in to ever so slowly chip away at the slagged fuel to reduce its mass one tiny bit at a time. And it's gonna take a LONG ass time to reduce it enough, to say nothing of the fact that that robot is not gonna last forever.
@TacComControl24 күн бұрын
Also Qatar donates to universities with the explicit intent of forcing control over policy and hiring decisions.
@CaptainKeeez23 күн бұрын
This isn't accurate; what you are describing is supercriticality. Criticality is what is happening in a normally functioning reactor, where you have a moderator material to slow and reflect neutrons back into the fuel such that 1 atom splitting causes ~1 other atom to split, giving you a constant reaction. Supercriticality is the runaway reaction you describe, where you instead cause enough neutrons of the correct energy to remain in the fuel for 1 atom splitting to split >1 other atoms (this is a bomb). In corium (the slag in the damaged reactor), the control rods (neutron absorbers) have melted into the fuel, and it is now subcritical with essentially no ongoing fission. It is theoretically possible for a small piece of corium to briefly resume fission, but this would be rare and is unproven. The danger from the corium is "just" due to the normal radioactive decay heat from the remaining fuel combined with that from the gamma-emitting fission products from the meltdown. They are collecting samples to analyze for studies of the composition of the corium to better plan cleanup and understand the initial meltdown process, not chip away parts to stop a chain reaction. It will cool over time as more of the radioactive material decays, though half-lives can be very long.
@TacComControl23 күн бұрын
@@CaptainKeeez I know more than you do. Be quiet.
@CaptainKeeez22 күн бұрын
@@TacComControl If you're interested enough in physics to know the main operating principle behind a nuclear weapon, why not take the time to learn a bit more about the topic and find out how reactors differ? The information is readily available online if you don't want to take my word for it.
@nicholausbuthmann142124 күн бұрын
TEPCO & P G & E are different sides of the same coin. Both unforgivable.
@jb0258jr24 күн бұрын
Chernobyl definitely has a sad past too. If you want to see an extremely unique view of the place, the channel Shiey, has some insane trips there... All being sneaking in and staying for days at a time illegally 😅 but there really are no other videos like it.
@shtbllsfck24 күн бұрын
White chocolate is hot garbage. Use real chocolate for the special flavors, you cowards.
@RecAsiakoth24 күн бұрын
I generally prefer milk and dark chocolate (especially dark chocolate) but for the sake flavor, the white works well. I've had them before and milk or dark would take away from the subtle sake flavor.
@PTR747461488224 күн бұрын
I agree, subtle flavor, cocoa would clash
@SandeshShak23 күн бұрын
Real chocolate is hot garbage. Stick that up your you know where.
@DaDudeb24 күн бұрын
The problem is that said companies don't have to pay the clean up when they mess up. Privatize gains, socialize losses, a tale as old as capitalism.
@nicholausbuthmann142124 күн бұрын
Thank You Chris & Pete Initial D. For taking my mind off of the "Orange Fascist" taking power.
@philly133124 күн бұрын
Same
@FAMEROB24 күн бұрын
"elected by the people" but sure
@Stephen-up3sd24 күн бұрын
It was so obviously going to happen - back to secure borders, low inflation, rising wages, respect for law order, no new wars etc etc!
@Stephen-up3sd24 күн бұрын
There is a huge difference between “taking power” and being democratically elected in a landslide! Highest rates ever of African Americans, Latinos, Jews, Muslims and women for a Republican candidate!
@jwjwjw12345623 күн бұрын
@@Stephen-up3sd I feel so sorry for what is about to happen to you, and everyone else in America.
@kaleeyed24 күн бұрын
There's been a lot more than 3 accidents at nuclear reactors: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_and_radiation_accidents_and_incidents
@ForbiddTV23 күн бұрын
And now you can see why nuclear is the safest.
@DuelistVash12 күн бұрын
That hornet thing has been captured on film on the @emiru video about her visit to Japan. Plus @cdawgva makes a guest appearance.
@Alkaris24 күн бұрын
It would be nice to see these robots deployed to deal with Chernobyl's still very dangerous melted core to try contain the radiation more than it already has been with the sarcofficus.