Are Humans OP? (TierZoo Reaction) Some Human Facts

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No Protocol

No Protocol

Күн бұрын

Are Humans OP? as explained by TierZoo. My thoughts & commentary on the subject(s). 1) I dislike running. 2) Horses do sweat. Drop your animal facts!
Literary Recommendations:
-Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Harari:
amzn.to/3PNBHUD
-Try Audible for Audiobooks: amzn.to/3QMwv2G
Original Video: • Are Humans OP?
IG: @noprotocol_official
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#animalfacts #reaction #tierzoo

Пікірлер: 669
@Galaxia7
@Galaxia7 Жыл бұрын
4:50 yes he did correct himself in his recent video on horses, horses are also long distance runners who sweat too, but they don't sweat as efficiently as humans bc they still have fur even if it's short.
@Competitive_Antagonist
@Competitive_Antagonist Жыл бұрын
Long fur is for women animals or gay animals.
@LosJoshh
@LosJoshh Жыл бұрын
No they’re right, horses also have pores. Its just they still have a layer of fur, and sweat gets caught in it making it not as effective as bare skin. When humans sweat, since we for the most part have bare skin, the sweat can evaporate off our bodies no issues. But for horses, it get caught in their fur making it more difficult to evaporate and trapping som of it there either on or close to their skin which doesn’t do much good
@Skyl3t0n
@Skyl3t0n Жыл бұрын
@@Competitive_Antagonist Are you saying bears are gay?
@naolucillerandom5280
@naolucillerandom5280 Жыл бұрын
@@Competitive_Antagonist ? I thought dolphins didn't have fur
@thewonderfullymadejaraid7015
@thewonderfullymadejaraid7015 Жыл бұрын
@@Skyl3t0n I mean, they are called "bears".
@webx135
@webx135 Жыл бұрын
On your bit about the conversation with your friend. One thing to keep in mind is that fast walking and jogging also count towards this endurance, not just full-out running. Hunter-gatherers generally walk at a brisk pace or jog, rather than a full out run, which is way less efficient. Then they use their tracking abilities to keep track of the prey when it is out of sight. With humans, walking is pretty much a resting state. So even while we're resting, we can still be moving. So if you are running 2 miles, but had to slow down and walk several times throughout, that still counts towards this endurance. Though there's definitely something to be said about reaching ketosis, which I imagine hunter-gatherers do much more frequently. IIRC, humans have one of the most powerful systems of ketosis, and that most animals aren't efficient enough to keep moving while in that state. Meanwhile we can still keep up our usual pace. But you still don't need to be in a full run to take advantage of ketosis. It might be the difference between running 4 miles and 15 miles, but it can also be the difference between walking 10 miles or 50.
@DudokX
@DudokX Жыл бұрын
More tierzoo reactions, this is amazing
@ukcroupier
@ukcroupier Жыл бұрын
'oh, already started' instant like :)
@sheepsky
@sheepsky Жыл бұрын
TierZoo is great
@NoProtocol
@NoProtocol Жыл бұрын
First time watching, I liked it!
@barryschalkwijk9388
@barryschalkwijk9388 Ай бұрын
horses do sweat, but their coat makes it less effective.
@flightgangmembers
@flightgangmembers Жыл бұрын
Your reaction is so intellectually stimulating 😅😊
@moisessiqueira9541
@moisessiqueira9541 Жыл бұрын
I love the fact that you actually have a list of animals you don't trust lol
@nathanlaoshi8074
@nathanlaoshi8074 Жыл бұрын
Hopefully Canadian Geese are in the top 10. Atrocious beasts.
@marianacarina2580
@marianacarina2580 Жыл бұрын
Why a list tho? I don't trust any of them 😂
@xxXXRAPXXxx
@xxXXRAPXXxx Жыл бұрын
Humans in general should be there too.
@jokuz9133
@jokuz9133 Жыл бұрын
@@nathanlaoshi8074 i remember when a pair tried to drown my puppy. They teased & teased him & then turned towards the middle of the pond & my pup jumped in. They turned around immediately to drown him. I jumped in to save him. They are tricky
@CountScarlioni
@CountScarlioni Жыл бұрын
She's right not to trust chimps! A primatologist once told me that if you taught chimpanzee tribes to use guns, they'd drive themselves extinct within a month. They have the self restraint and emotional control of a tantrumming toddler. God forbid they ever became intelligent enough to devise nuclear physics. Now there's a species that would definitely press the button!
@fritos1445
@fritos1445 Жыл бұрын
TierZoo is kickass. Was fun seeing someone experiencing it for the first time.
@redneckturtle771
@redneckturtle771 Жыл бұрын
Talking about the stamina thing, hunger is a hell of a drug. Back when we were hunter/gatherers, we could turn off that voice in our head that said "stop." Mainly, because we knew if we didn't kill whatever we were running after, we would die.
@anthonymcrooster3703
@anthonymcrooster3703 Жыл бұрын
Back in highschool, I was quite overweight and I've only ever ran when late for a bus. But during one PE class, when we all ran laps, I just randomly started focusing on my breathing out of boredom and with every exhale I just went: "okay.......okay......okay...." And it felt like I unlocked a cheat code, because I got my pace locked on way above everyone's overall average, kept lapping everyone for at least 30 minutes straight (some of whom were triathletes and tried to give their best to keep up with me) and I felt like I cannot help myself to stop anymore. It felt so uncomfortable to hit the brakes afterwards. I still have no idea wtf happened. Was it all just from proper breathing? Or do we humans have some massive energy reserves that we can't access unless opened through focus?
@p2jack2000
@p2jack2000 Жыл бұрын
@@anthonymcrooster3703 you probably achieved runners high, or was just so hyper focused on running you ignored everything else.
@lk-music
@lk-music Жыл бұрын
@@anthonymcrooster3703 I can relate to the 'no stamina when running' folks, I can walk long distances just fine, but always been more of a sprinter than a runner. When I took up swimming it turned out I had the endurance for swimming any distance. I'd swim non-stop for 2hrs, and only feel tired later and then sleep though films at the cinema 🤣. When swimming, breathing is dictated by the stroke, i.e. when your face is out of the water, you must inhale, and a lot to fill your lungs for buoyancy, so exhale into the water to make more time for inhaling when out. I never went back to running because I never enjoyed it, but 'proper breathing' definitely helps when swimming.
@berserker3414
@berserker3414 Жыл бұрын
It's called adrenaline. When you are being chased or someone you care is in great danger the brain releases it and gives you a momentary energy boost and strength. It's the main reason why mothers seem to have super powers when their babies are in danger.
@cassesvultus43
@cassesvultus43 Жыл бұрын
TierZoo is a great channel. This is the first time I've seen anyone react to them. Thanks.
@skipstopstart
@skipstopstart Жыл бұрын
I thought it was called 'Animal Zoo' before...🤔?
@FullMetalEdits
@FullMetalEdits Жыл бұрын
Tigers easy S tier 🐅
@GrimFom34
@GrimFom34 Жыл бұрын
@@skipstopstart it wasn’t 😂
@ivy_savage69
@ivy_savage69 Жыл бұрын
Fr, imdontai been reacting for almost a year now
@MaetMen
@MaetMen Жыл бұрын
@@skipstopstart it is, if you Translate it to german
@Algorythmfpv
@Algorythmfpv Жыл бұрын
Hearing an incredibly in depth and intellectual point being made with video game terminology was something special. Truly unique, very interesting and retaining. This is a format I would watch again, that's for sure!
@danielcarvalho3079
@danielcarvalho3079 Жыл бұрын
check TierZoo channel, alot of vids like this one, just for diferent animals
@DeusKDuo
@DeusKDuo Жыл бұрын
As a former distance runner you are correct. It is just as much mental as it is physical you do get to a point where you just keep powering through it until your body finally transitions over to burning fat after burning up its easy energy stores.
@matheusbee3441
@matheusbee3441 Жыл бұрын
Not only on running, but any work that requires strenuous exercise, once you get past that initial limit your brain imposes over your body, you will suddenly stop feeling tired from the work and will continue for hours without an issue. However, the compensation comes next day when all your muscles hurts
@ryanhampson673
@ryanhampson673 Жыл бұрын
I came here to say this. I ran long distance too and it’s almost all an exercise in mental toughness. I just went into autopilot letting my body run and my mind traveled to other places.
@spoonlegs
@spoonlegs Жыл бұрын
Seriously love the chill af vibes you always bring--- and you continue to have amazing taste as always 😎
@NoProtocol
@NoProtocol Жыл бұрын
This was recommended to me! Glad you liked it though (:
@someoneelse8103
@someoneelse8103 Жыл бұрын
3:05 I can confirm that. When I started running to lose some weight I usually run 7.5km in one go but at one time I was struggling and decided to push even further, after I reached my marked, suddenly I felt like I can run forever, so I run to 10.5 km mark and stopped only because my feet were hurting, skin pale of on them which made the open area fee burning on a contact with my shoe. When I stopped I literally felt my blood flowing inside my veins, I don't remember exactly, but in my memory, it was as if you could've heard and seen it pumping from the outside of my skin. Damn it was a wild feeling, I think you are right about the statement that if you push past "I can't do it anymore" your body enters a special state which allows you to push even further
@schwartzy65
@schwartzy65 Жыл бұрын
Only depends on your physical shape and if you have the lungs for it. Of cpurse you can train those and mental state too. But it doesnt come out of nowhere.
@CrippledMerc
@CrippledMerc Жыл бұрын
I know that feeling you’re talking about where it’s like you can feel the blood pumping in your veins. It’s definitely a bizarre feeling but I feel it every now and again.
@papafiendish6263
@papafiendish6263 Жыл бұрын
Your videos truly are the highlight of my every day. The way you said “I know chims throw things… usually feces” and then looked away from the camera had me dead
@Jadenette11111
@Jadenette11111 Жыл бұрын
The dinosaur, insect, and bird tier list is in my opinion the best videos I’ve seen on his channel.
@NoProtocol
@NoProtocol Жыл бұрын
I’ll put them on the list! Thanks Jaden
@elainealibrandi6364
@elainealibrandi6364 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for another great video. We lost our speed when we stood upright on two legs. We may have more stamina, but there’s no way we could outrun a cheetah. I don’t intend to personally prove that…. And yes, you’re right; horses do sweat.
@edonveil9887
@edonveil9887 Жыл бұрын
I hear that humans can outrun any fourlegger especially in warm conditions. Cheetah could be actually one of the easiest, horses and huskies hardest to catch. Jogging human will push fourleggers to gallop which ruins their breathing and cooling. There was a reason that our ancestors made it in the savanna.
@louishermann7676
@louishermann7676 Жыл бұрын
@@edonveil9887 We outpace not outrun, and only on the chase. These were hours or days long hunts our ancestors went on.
@elainealibrandi6364
@elainealibrandi6364 Жыл бұрын
@@edonveil9887 Cheetahs can run up to 75 mph. I wouldn't chance it. Before she got tired, I'd be her cubs' meal! Which would be a noble death, I think.
@elainealibrandi6364
@elainealibrandi6364 Жыл бұрын
@@louishermann7676 Yes, and that would usually be after a human hunter had wounded it with a spear.
@CountScarlioni
@CountScarlioni Жыл бұрын
Our stamina is developed as an offensive tool rather than a defensive one. Humans can jog for dozens of miles with the intelligence to keep on tracking fleeing prey even when they're long out of sight. Even the most spry of quarry will have collapsed in an exhausted heap long before humans do. Cheetahs would be no exception regardless of their speed bursts. Although it'd be an unusual day that humans are hunting a cheetah. Not a lot of meat on them really! Natural human defence relies on cooperation and intimidation - making ourselves too frightening or confusing to be worth the effort. Most cheetahs learned many millennia ago that humans are far too dangerous a target, especially in numbers. Human cooperation is the other God-tier stat we possess, and the stat that has seen us build whole nations and civilisations. Other species can organise themselves into packs or hives etc. but none with the runaway complexity and specialisation of human societies. Isolated from those societies and unable to create an intimidating aura, then we do become easy cat food.
@ceresdoesstuff6857
@ceresdoesstuff6857 Жыл бұрын
If you're looking for other channels to react to, I recommend Kurzgesagt and CGP Grey. Both of them are educational channels, but in different ways. Kurzgesagt does space, earth sciences, and existential despair about being one tiny mind in a vast and uncaring universe, and CGP Grey does hyperspecific videos on history, technology, and airports (seriously, he has three videos on minutiae of airports and they're all fascinating). They collaborated on a pair of videos together, which I recommend as a starting point: "What Are You?" on Kurzgesagt's side and "You Are Two" on CGP Grey's.
@DreJr
@DreJr Жыл бұрын
My opinion on the sweat being unique to humans part is it was referencing the effectiveness of it just as throwing is leagues better in humans than in other animals (I'm just speculating though).
@michael14195
@michael14195 Жыл бұрын
All mammals are descended from ancestors that had sweat glands, although I'm guessing that some (I'm thinking of whales) have lost them over time. I think it's more a case of sweat being a more effective cooling mechanism if you don't have fur, rather than other mammals not having sweat glands at all. My favourite video from this channel is "Earth's Worst Balance Patch".
@rikospostmodernlife
@rikospostmodernlife Жыл бұрын
It's more that we sweat water instead of the oily substance other mammals do
@chrisd7047
@chrisd7047 Жыл бұрын
The distinction is that we use sweating to cool down. Well, correction: sweating by itself doesn't actually cool us down; evaporation does. We sweat, the sweat evaporates, the process of evaporation causes a drop in temperature on the skin, cooling the blood. It works for us because we don't have fur. It doesn't work for horses, dogs, etc. even if they sweat, because their fur inhibits the evaporation process. It's also why the process works better in drier climates (the phrase "but it's a dry heat" exists for a reason).
@JRElyon
@JRElyon Жыл бұрын
"YOU'RE JUST WEAK !!" So unexpected, I'm still laughing 😂 thank you
@Telleryn
@Telleryn Жыл бұрын
Tier Zoo is one of those channels where it's definitely worth watching all of their stuff.
@jaakumitsukai8682
@jaakumitsukai8682 Жыл бұрын
You're right about Horses also sweating, it's just we do it better. As for more recommendations from TierZoo, i'd recommend just having a gander through his videos and picking one that interests you as that way we all get what we want :) Though, one of the channels he previewed in this video is called Primitive Technology. I also highly recommend this guy too, especially if you're interested in how primitive humans might have achieved certain things. Primitive Technology is the channel that basically started the 'Build a hut in the woods' trend that cropped up a few years back, the major difference being that John of Primitive Technology actually does everything with the tools he's made himself. Essentially at the start of his channel he is just a man with a pair of shorts in the woods with a camera. But yeah i definitely recommend watching a few of his vids, markedly the tiled roofed hut from 7 years ago (holy bologna that makes me feel old) but again just any that catch your fancy would be good. For comedy i'd recommend Ryan George, he has a pitch meeting series and many other sketches.
@finwefingolfin7113
@finwefingolfin7113 Жыл бұрын
I agree .. Primitive Technology and Pirtch Meetings are both excellent too.. though they are 'at opposite ends of the 'words per minute'; spectrum!
@HoundOfGod
@HoundOfGod Жыл бұрын
the running thing is 100% accurate. when i first joined the army i almost blacked out running a 8:30 mile, and i had asthma it felt like i was dying. by the end of a year of running 3-5 miles every morning and up to 100 in a week for a bit, i was running 5 miles in 30 min and just feeling like i could easily keep going. every human who is not disabled or morbidly obese should be able to run atleast 2-3 miles within 30 min. train for a few weeks or months and you'll be passing 5 miles in under 7-8 minute miles easily because thats what your body is designed for.
Жыл бұрын
TierZoo is great for learning more about random animals on a more generał level (with some exceptions) and the game-like narration style is awesome. Another great channel is Ze Frank and his “True Facts” series. It’s incredibly informative, uses unique, scientific footage and Ze Frank is also an extremely funny guy. I think you’d love it. 🙂
@NoProtocol
@NoProtocol Жыл бұрын
Thanks Adam! Yes, I’m definitely looking for channels to learn more about animals. I’ll check out Ze Frank (: I appreciate the recommendation
@cobusvanderlinde6871
@cobusvanderlinde6871 Жыл бұрын
The "game-like narration" has a little bit of a history before tierzoo. There is a subreddit r/outside which is dedicated to the mmo game Outside (the game your parents were talking about when they told you to "go play Outside") Initially it was mostly human-centric discussions - "how to complete the 'find mate' objective in the romance questline?" "What's your fix for the 'hangover' debuff from the alchohol potion group?" "What profession should I select if I want loads of money?" That sort of thing. In time discussion branched out to the idea that not all players are human mains and some players began posting their thoughts on non-human players and builds- and somewhere through that Tierzoo emerged.
@nukiesduke6868
@nukiesduke6868 Жыл бұрын
As someone that can only jump rope for 30 seconds before getting massive chest pains followed by getting drenched in sweat and arm numbness I'd really like to have some of that OPness.
@molybdaen11
@molybdaen11 Жыл бұрын
You can do it! Invest some time in grinding the jumping skill and you will improve to a minute soon!
@Eli4life
@Eli4life Жыл бұрын
What a coincidence; I've started reading the book Sapiens three days ago. Your channel is such a gem. I'm glad I found it. Keep up the great content!
@NoProtocol
@NoProtocol Жыл бұрын
Circle back when you finish and let me know how you like it!
@kkandola9072
@kkandola9072 Жыл бұрын
4:35 yes other animals sweat , but no other animal utilities sweat to the degree we do. Dogs sweat as well.
@thatlonewolfguy2878
@thatlonewolfguy2878 Жыл бұрын
Tierzoo is fantastic, presents genuine animal/biological education in an MMORPG style making it easier to understand
@abongilezulu3641
@abongilezulu3641 Жыл бұрын
Wonder why the humans in Africa didn't make the larger mammals extinct unlike the rest of the world
@Lee-hg7mg
@Lee-hg7mg Ай бұрын
Europe is like 15 times smaller, Africa is a big continent
@spoonlegs
@spoonlegs Жыл бұрын
cannot approve ENOUGH of your ordering of least trustworthy animals -- Dolphins cannot be trusted.
@NoProtocol
@NoProtocol Жыл бұрын
You get it
@Sythril2186
@Sythril2186 Жыл бұрын
You are correct. Horses do sweat. Shows when you ride them hard too not just from under the saddle but by their neck and on their legs. Saw it a lot when doing rodeo as a kid.
@eric1138
@eric1138 Жыл бұрын
But not in the same way or with the same efficiency as humans can do. It is a difference in degree as to be a difference in kind. In a hot environment, given continuous liquid replenishment, a human can run any land animal into the ground.
@TheFubz
@TheFubz Жыл бұрын
@@switchie9762 horses have much much more oil in their sweat so it becomes less efficient over time
@ShaimingLong
@ShaimingLong Жыл бұрын
Some horses even sweat a reddish colour that can look like blood, giving their fur a metallic sheen. The most notable breed being the Akhal-Teke, which also have very thin, pale skin which makes their red sweat even more distinctive.
@eric1138
@eric1138 Жыл бұрын
@@switchie9762 You know what they say, you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink. Your wrong on both counts: "But not in the same way or with the same efficiency as humans can do."
@eric1138
@eric1138 Жыл бұрын
@@switchie9762 non sequitur
@gewgulkansuhckitt9086
@gewgulkansuhckitt9086 Жыл бұрын
From time to time I encounter statements about how physically flawed humans are or someone claiming that if they could design humans, we'd be so much better. My response is that we are the best or nearly the best at a few things in the animal kingdom. But you can't be the best at everything. If we were as strong as gorillas, we'd have to sacrifice our amazing endurance. If we could swim like an otter, we'd lose a lot of our land-based movement prowess. If we could climb like a monkey, we'd sacrifice some of our land-based movement abilities. And yet we can climb and swim better than most land animals. I've even seen people claiming that we'd be better off with wings, but don't they realized that wings are arms? We'd lose all or most of our arm/hand related abilities and have to have absurdly specialized physiques in order to fly. Others say we should be able to metabolize cellulose (which requires symbiotic bacteria and MAJOR internal modifications) or synthesize vitamin c. Okay, that last one about vitamin c kind of makes sense. Except apparently our alternative vitamin c situation means we can survive starvation better than those primates that synthesize vitamin c. (link below) academic.oup.com/emph/article/2019/1/221/5556105 There's a trade-off for everything and I say we got a pretty sweet deal.
@beanie5851
@beanie5851 Жыл бұрын
Sweating is uniquely powerful in humans but it isn’t unique to them. Fun fact dogs do indeed sweat. It’s just, very little. And not enough to cope with raising body temperature the way humans can.
@topshelf552
@topshelf552 Жыл бұрын
Your one S,O,B Smart, Opinionated, Beautiful .... love your channel
@tahoehiker
@tahoehiker 7 ай бұрын
Honey badgers are 100% trustworthy. You can trust them to do the most violently chaotic option open to them every single time!
@AaronTheBuddha
@AaronTheBuddha Жыл бұрын
You need to watch casual Geographic. Chimps need to be number 1 on you don't trust list. Lol
@claymore2of9
@claymore2of9 Жыл бұрын
would love to see your reaction to "The British Crusade Against Slavery"
@julianfox6548
@julianfox6548 Жыл бұрын
Please consider watching the Channel called Lemmino. He makes great documentaries.
@TornSoul062473
@TornSoul062473 Жыл бұрын
I choked on Christmas dinner when you said: "You're just weak!" Pretty sure I have part of an au gratin potato lodged in my lung. 😆
@DT-gn4qw
@DT-gn4qw Жыл бұрын
Urgh - The content starts straight away.... Why aren't we funding this?
@verummortis3851
@verummortis3851 Жыл бұрын
I'd love to see a reaction to " are goats OP"
@BenMJay
@BenMJay Жыл бұрын
He left one out. Humans have the ability to regulate their breathing while running. Four legged animals have to sync their running with their gate.
@SK-zi3sr
@SK-zi3sr Жыл бұрын
Running is also based on fitness and loungue/air capacity which can be trained, same with leg muscles
@noledelgado8111
@noledelgado8111 11 ай бұрын
Yes you are right No Protocol. Bees die after stinging.
@XKathXgames
@XKathXgames Жыл бұрын
Yeah, he corrects the Sweat thing on his video about horses. Maybe you can react to that one next?
@codyturner9741
@codyturner9741 Жыл бұрын
Humans have the most effective sweat system he clarifies this later and fixes it in a later video
@robert7256
@robert7256 Жыл бұрын
do casual geoghraphic on chimps and honey badger
@Phi_MD
@Phi_MD Жыл бұрын
Reccomendation: I understand that you have George Carlin many times on this channel. However, there is a tragiclly underspoken bit that he did called "I Am a Modern Man". Its a monolouge. Although he had never (as far as I know) said it explicity, I have inferred through his books that he considers this one of his most esteemed works. I perform comedey and I cannot begin to articulate the level of effort he has put into simply writing this. Nevermind the fact that he performed it flawlessly. As someone who calls Carlin his idol, and I do not take that claim lightly AT ALL, I think this is a widely underated piece that snuck into the porfolio of a man that was the true Master of his art. Please enjoy.
@LeonOC123
@LeonOC123 Жыл бұрын
I’m not usually a simp but you’re about as close to a 10 as it gets
@navagate1900
@navagate1900 Жыл бұрын
I read Sapiens it's by Yuval Harari who is one of Klaus Schwab's henchmen, you would find it interesting to look into both of them.
@KevinBrown-lv2fk
@KevinBrown-lv2fk Жыл бұрын
been watching this channel for around 3 years now tier zoo is witty and informative you wont regret watching more. id look for the early video which sets up his simulated game theme of patches and dev updates and tells the story of early life
@NoProtocol
@NoProtocol Жыл бұрын
I’ll check it out, thanks Kevin!
@bruno5336
@bruno5336 Жыл бұрын
Let’s gooo!
@HYDN150
@HYDN150 Жыл бұрын
I just need to say that you have a beautiful smile!
@MrBlister808
@MrBlister808 Жыл бұрын
Another good book touching this subject and is also controversial is 'Darwin's Blackbox: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution' by Michael J. Behe.
@HackerMan1010
@HackerMan1010 Жыл бұрын
Tair Zoo is great and so was this reaction.
@jeffnaslund
@jeffnaslund Жыл бұрын
I love how intelligent you are
@charismatic9467
@charismatic9467 Жыл бұрын
More Tier Zoo! So many good ones!
@millsy1861
@millsy1861 Жыл бұрын
Horses do sweat you are correct.
@vadstradamus
@vadstradamus Жыл бұрын
Can't go wrong with a good POV video. Thanks for the fun content!
@jdeamaral
@jdeamaral Жыл бұрын
December 23. There is a huge Blizzard outside. I get to see No Protocol one more time before Christmas. MORE IMPORTANTLY. I get to tell her and everyone on the channel. Merry Christmas.
@NoProtocol
@NoProtocol Жыл бұрын
Stay safe Joe, Happy holidays!
@jakewhite1760
@jakewhite1760 Жыл бұрын
Yesssss more Tierzoo pls. Such an underrated channel that only has like 4 people reacting to it on KZbin for some reason lol
@AG-vb6vv
@AG-vb6vv Жыл бұрын
We are the supreme master race
@zspider1778
@zspider1778 Жыл бұрын
I love TierZoo , can't wait for more reactions
@ilsleetli259
@ilsleetli259 Жыл бұрын
As a gamer this video is absolutely amazing
@chaimrudolph579
@chaimrudolph579 Жыл бұрын
Love your seriousness with which you communicate your list of animals you don't trust haha
@danielnetz5173
@danielnetz5173 Жыл бұрын
Birds don't speak tho. They quite literally parrot and use a limited set of signal sounds otherwise. And while some animals (perhaps most notably whales) do possess more elaborate communication abilities, these are still highly specialised for mating, hunting, navigating, etc. Furthermore, human language is more than just a means of communication. Language allows us to structure our thoughts, conceptualize and abstract the surrounding world and yes, it also enables us to convey these very complex ideas to our fellow humans. As Noam Chomsky once said: “A language is not just words. It’s a culture, a tradition, a unification of a community, a whole history that creates what a community is. It’s all embodied in a language.”
@theobserver86
@theobserver86 Жыл бұрын
She's an angel
@chardwbu
@chardwbu Жыл бұрын
I would highly recommend this video. Michael Reeves "I Built a Surgery Robot" Hilarious.
@McShaganpronouncedShaegen
@McShaganpronouncedShaegen Жыл бұрын
Love the TierZoo channel. There are a ton of great episodes that cover a great deal animals ranking and special abilities and attributes that some have that makes a big difference. It is true other animals can sweat but because of fur the evaporating sweat doesn't come close to cooling the animal down the way it cools humans.
@josephdonais4778
@josephdonais4778 Жыл бұрын
😆🤣😆🤣lmao, The title... maybe OP in idiocy. The crux is that we THINK we are something that we are not. Now I shall watch. Science's greatest contribution has been making known to us that we ae no better than mold on a loaf of bread.
@oliverbach3011
@oliverbach3011 Жыл бұрын
A sidecomment to the running argument: Atheltisism =/= High Stamina. Stamina is a very unique thing, people who might not look like it can sometimes run for absolute miles. My dad for example doesn't look like he's in great shape, but he can run 25km (decent tempo honestly), and Cycle for even longer. But stamina definetly is also a mental fortitude thing, but it's a thing thats uniquely developed by running and "being out of breath".
@darkarai5241
@darkarai5241 Жыл бұрын
" You do have that stamina or you could...you just might not have the mental strength " OUCH 🤣 I'm waiting for your album of dis tracks
@arned432
@arned432 Жыл бұрын
Humans are scary if you look out of the box. Stamina regen is faster that most of the life forms we know = you are faster but we can't be out runed. Imagine now predator who chase you and when you get tired and try get some rest, he is like in line of sight now. (BTW, horses can sweat, horse sweat act like soap for them, monkeys, apes, and hippos). He has line of sight on you = that mean you are probably in his strike range Humans move in herds. You see one except more, lots and lots more. You manage kill one? Congratulations , now there is 5 times more of them... and they all wanna kill you, fast if you are lucky one. And probably your entire race... They changed "fur" on the spot. HUMANS WANNA TO BE SEE you will see, don't expect if they don't wanna be found to see them.
@AndrewDW44
@AndrewDW44 Жыл бұрын
Props @5:45 "look at Khabib" Knowing the man, and that he fights bears. Impressive, Most Impressive
@mikefufuffalo8487
@mikefufuffalo8487 Жыл бұрын
Not sure how true this is. Chimpanzees can't throw a spear hard enough to do damage? I mean there's a pic of an orangutan spear fishing. The fish was damaged, and it wasn't even thrown. Also, fun fact you might like: There's only one animal that ever asked a question. It was a Grey Parrot. They trained it for like 30 years, and eventually it asked, "What colour am I?" =)
@ericdubert5983
@ericdubert5983 Жыл бұрын
Harpy Eagle. This endangered bird likes knocking large animals off cliffs including humans. Under circumstances definitely one kill capable.
@beltedsleet
@beltedsleet Жыл бұрын
Love your reactions and chill nature. You should react to his bear tier list.
@alfresco8442
@alfresco8442 Жыл бұрын
There is a superb BBC documentary, narrated by David Attenborough on YT. kzbin.info/www/bejne/bmOZeYCCpM54ldE It's about the San people in Africa and explains so much about the way we evolved as a species...including the loss of body hair and our superior sweating ability. This is the way all humans evolved until we left the continent between 50 - 90,000 years ago. We are persistence hunters; and can run almost any other species into the ground...as long as we're fit.
@michaelliles69
@michaelliles69 Жыл бұрын
Our bipedalism and the development of complex communication are the two predominant features that move us to the top of the food chain, as it were. There are many who say it is our large brains that make us unique. While the modern human brain case is roughly 1,300 to 1,400 cc, the Neanderthals had a brain case that averaged over 1,500 cc, and others in the animal kingdom have much larger brains than us; whales and elephants are but two examples. There are still others who say it is our ability to rationalize or think abstractly, yet lions and matriarchal elephants are two examples of animals that demonstrate the ability for abstract thought. From LUCA (Last Universal Common Ancestor) over six million years ago to today’s modern humans. The two predominant features that have set us apart are bipedalism and the development of complex communication. Great video! I wish they had made anthropology that entertaining while I was seeking my degree. As to the book you referenced, all I will say is that it is a very interesting read! You want two interesting books to read? Try Life by John Brockman and How Forests Think by Eduardo Kohn.
@BruceEverett
@BruceEverett Жыл бұрын
Hmmm. It didn't cover the domestication skill. Turning wolfos into doggos is a helluva trick. Helps negate that vulnerability to stealth.
@maxu1988
@maxu1988 Жыл бұрын
Wait! I'm sorry, but did you just start the video without an obnoxious loud intro with stupid music or begging me to subscribe even before I watch the video?!? Your psychological trick just worked on me. Just subscribe lol
@Marcus_Aurelius_Maximus
@Marcus_Aurelius_Maximus Жыл бұрын
--- FROM The World; Lifestyle "Sweating is an essential and uniquely human function" -- Wernick and Hiler; August 28, 2017 For humans, however, something changed over the course of evolution that altered how we as a species thermoregulate and sent us down a unique path. The million-dollar question, Kamberov says, is why. “One possibility is that it enabled us to explore a niche that was free of predators,” she suggests. “If you cool off the way a human does, you can go out during the hottest periods of the day, when most predators are going to be hiding themselves from heat ... We, on the other hand, are able, under very strong radiant heat, to sweat to cool ourselves off. This opens up an avenue for us ... to exploit a niche that otherwise wouldn’t be available.” Another hypothesis is that, about 2 million years ago, with the inception of the genus Homo, humans started to develop adaptations that made them good endurance runners. This allowed them to do persistent hunting and gathering, which generates a tremendous amount of body heat, so they needed a way to dump that heat load.
@khajiitimanus7432
@khajiitimanus7432 Жыл бұрын
I recommend Hood Nature/Casual Geographic for animal facts. I will warn you, though - a lot of those animals facts are more than a bit concerning. Still, there's some fun ones, like: penguins are actually camouflaged Camels are good swimmers Orcas are a natural predator of moose And more. :p
@Sunaki1000
@Sunaki1000 Жыл бұрын
Yeah I think he corrected himselfe on the Horse thing, they sweat to. Try out ZeFranks Video about Mantis Shrimps, its very good, and edicational.
@miguelpadeiro762
@miguelpadeiro762 Жыл бұрын
I gotta agree with 2:59 your take on physical stamina. It has greatly to do with mental willpower from my experience, almost as if it's a second backup source of energy, even after your body tells you "ok...that's enough now, you can--hey stop!" I'm no doctor, but would our intellect and self-awareness be a defining factor of our physical advantage? Being able to go beyond through mental fortitude where animals would just heed to their instinct to stop?
@joelbibeault1169
@joelbibeault1169 4 ай бұрын
The reason we're better at running when not full is pretty obvious if you think about it. While being malnourished and extremely tired degrades mental abilities, having gone through military training on many different levels, your mind is sharpest when you've spent a night up and haven't had any food. It's like it triggers your primal instincts to hunt for food. Your mind shuts out almost all of the discomfort when you're doing something physical, because you're working towards food and rest and that's when our intelligence became our strongest suit. You can run farther, think faster, and push yourself harder than you can when you're normally rested and fed. Also noticed a huge difference in sex, men had this buff to our endurance and mind but women generally don't, they deteriorated much faster than men, because they haven't evolved to hunt and think critically as much, it takes much less energy and focus to gather food than to hunt for it. As a side note, this girl is gorgeous
@derkhart6019
@derkhart6019 Жыл бұрын
Love your videos I've just subscribed,? Why dolphins don't they protect you from sharks
@Miller2h41
@Miller2h41 Жыл бұрын
I was just watching a video where George Carlin talks about extreme human behavior in his 2005 standup. It was interesting.
@carrdoug99
@carrdoug99 Жыл бұрын
Yes, the human animal (as opposed to the modern/western human) is OP. Although other animals sweat, they don't sweat anywhere nearly as efficiently as humans. Fur works against the OP sweating ability. Had to laugh, humans are weaker than other primates = lower ability to do damage. This statement followed, humans have the unique ability to throw, further, faster, more accurately, and with more deadly force than any other animal. We have the highest score in combination than any other animal (swimming efficiency, hold breath, function at greater altitude, parkour type skills, endurance, etc). Combine this with opposable thumbs, highest intelligence, advanced tool making, and highest ability to think and function tactically. It is no wonder we have become the dominant species on earth. It was stated in a recent video that homo has been an apex (meat eating) predator for 2.5 million years.
@MichaelLayne702
@MichaelLayne702 Жыл бұрын
According to Erika Thompson, (who is a professional bee keeper), says honeys bees were brought here from Africa. So I think he is wrong. Also b/c of malaria, Iv heard mosquitoes are the biggest enemy to humans.
@thomasgrahham2553
@thomasgrahham2553 Жыл бұрын
The human swarm. by Mark W. Moffet. Is a different perspective than Sapiens.
@Ninjadoku3779
@Ninjadoku3779 Жыл бұрын
I would really just recommend searching the big library that is youtube, you can find ALOT of stuff.
@jacktupp4358
@jacktupp4358 Жыл бұрын
Except... it WAS always the case hence, we're still here. It's our brain, which allows us to adapt(big brain) and repopulate in all manner of environment, that put us at the top of the animal kingdom and always has kept us there. That doesn't mean we'll always be at the top but it does explain the last X-Thousands of years.
@johnmoyle4195
@johnmoyle4195 Жыл бұрын
Many Australian birds can one-shot humans, especially the garru, which is the Australian magpie, and the cassowary. Also the dina’wan, which is sometimes called the emu. They can defeat entire armies of humans.
@klow6481
@klow6481 Жыл бұрын
Dolphins are amazing and friendly, been diving with them many many times. Stop being distrustful of them, I trust humans far far less.
@whendarknessfalls6969
@whendarknessfalls6969 Жыл бұрын
To be clear, don't trust adolescent Dolphins. They're very mischievous with their curiosity like some human teens. But! This is what makes them intelligent adult Dolphins. Also, there are a few animals that sweat even cats and dogs around their paws. But it's not really the same. They sweat more for cooling or just dumping toxins like pigs. But not for stamina regen like humans.
@mcflyingfury
@mcflyingfury Жыл бұрын
Humans are the only players to have unlocked the "New Sun" ability, which is a godlike power to reshape the entire ecosystem of the local planet, as well as vaporize most surface life in a 10 klick radius. They aren't too OP early game, but if you let them go down the tech tree too far, they will dominate everything else. They specialize in adaptation - when they see other players doing things they aren't allowed too, they simply make up for their biological shortcomings using non-organic materials, and usually are able to improve on the abilities of others. For example, they got jealous of whales and invented whale shaped mechanical beasts that can submerge far longer and travel faster. They got jealous of some species of cat and developed mechanical beasts that can travel across open terrain much faster, with significantly added range and cooling abilities. They got jealous of birds and developed mechanical beasts capable of ripping through the skies at such speeds they had to worry about metal melting. Furthermore, they continue to compound on their base game unique abilities, specifically throwing. They realized that while throwing may be effective, using explosions to throw things for them worked better. Now a single human, given enough prep time, can hold enough equipment by itself to neutralize dozens, if not hundreds, of the toughest attacker and tank builds already made.
@alanthompson2753
@alanthompson2753 Жыл бұрын
Tier Zoo Iis great bc of how he talks about features and abilities developed through evolution explained through gaming language like the devs snd the meta. Some videos to check out would the Big Cat Tier list, seperate Continent metas, anything w Dinosaurs, a n d cartoon crossovers. And yeah Horses sweat.
@toxxedgaming3885
@toxxedgaming3885 Жыл бұрын
A video that has more gameification and is very interesting that you might enjoy is Casually Explained - Evolution 3
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