Thank you for sharing all of these wonderful experiences. Myself, I'm Vietnamese. I was born in the Hà Nội and migrated to Sài Gòn with my parents in 1954. I'm 72 now and haven't seen or heard of anything like this before. What an experience. Human beings try to live and survive in all situations and scenarios. Before critically scrutinizing the ways people live, wait until you ARE starving, then, only then, y'all understand. Being poor is the deepest sin and the worst crime of all.
@PeteZahSlice2 ай бұрын
@trungnguyen-hv4ji thanks for sharing your story. I was born in Bangladesh, & my paternal grandfather married his second wife because my grandmother suddenly became sick. Unfortunately, I was born after all 3 of them passed, so I never got to meet them. However, I had very loving grandparents who passed away in the last few years. I miss them all dearly. My grandfather was my hero. He was a freedom fighter during the war for independence against Pakistan. I try to appreciate all cultures around the world & their customs. We are all more alike than we are different. We should all try to get along so our future generations can live happily, & maybe then, we can heal the earth.
@satiricalsartorial24 күн бұрын
@@PeteZahSlice🙏🏿
@miaabano83674 сағат бұрын
I have been homeless and lived in bush had my bones sticking out ribs knee joints etc and I would still not eat that so yes I have actually been starving and I say fk that I still have standards I’m not an animal don’t tell me what not to scrutinise been proper down and out
@duongquynh81294 ай бұрын
As a Vietnamese person, I can say claim that these traditional customs just exist in remote tribes in Vietnam. But even most Vietnamese citizens are not familiar to these customs ._.
@AG-en5y3 ай бұрын
Lies!!!! I know you keep amputated limbs in the back of your closet as well!!! Not like in the west where the doctors stole MY appendix after my surgery. Thieves.
@JeffBilkins3 ай бұрын
Everyone got their local flavour of hillbillies doing weird shit out there.
@DerpPers3 ай бұрын
@@JeffBilkinslolololol so true
@kemonoyama20842 ай бұрын
People don't realize these are Indian villages and not Viet Kinh.
@NunuDaRatАй бұрын
@@JeffBilkinsThe american version is scientology and mormom churches lol
@bishopkinlyside847729 күн бұрын
Hi, I lost my right leg above the knee in 2018 and I believe that makes sense. I was in a coma for 29 days. And when I wake up my leg was missing, but ever since I have been morning the loss of my leg because they just discard it like it is nothing but it’s been part of my body for 58 years, and I wish they would’ve spoken to someone before they just throw it in the fire or whatever they do with it keep up the good work Cliff from Australia 🇦🇺
@anabella416617 күн бұрын
You cannot be serious. What else should they have done? Kept it on ice for you to kiss it goodbye first??? U need a psych eval
@bishopkinlyside847714 күн бұрын
@@anabella4166 have you ever lost a limb? If not, you don’t know what you’re talking about
@mjean676213 күн бұрын
@anabella4166 yes, actually they should have. It is a part of his body and he should have the right to decide what is done with it. You're comment lacks compassion, understanding and a basic respect for human rights. If you watched the video you had the chance to learn that people have all sorts of different beliefs. If this person had been a part of the culture in the video, then by discarding his leg he would have been doomed for all eternity. They believe in an afterlife. If the leg would have been preserved he would have had the chance to be whole again in the next life. Whether you agree with it or not has no basis. People have rights!
@saintevo69534 ай бұрын
1 hour 20 minutes 49 seconds of pure gold. My evening viewing is sorted! Thank you
@wallacedavis31104 ай бұрын
So the last second you disliked. Im so sorry about that
@saintevo69534 ай бұрын
@@wallacedavis3110 Always space for improvement
@christoman64593 ай бұрын
@@wallacedavis3110lmao
@hieunguyenhoangminh82273 ай бұрын
It's crazy that I'm Vietnamese. I visited Hoang Su Phi. And I know nothing about these traditions. Thanks for making the video!
@naju3324 ай бұрын
this guy deserves more subs hes going through soo much for us.
@Junitunes3 ай бұрын
Is it for a TV show or he just produces this quality for KZbin
@catherineechevarria8972Ай бұрын
YT only so far @@Junitunes
@TimK26464 ай бұрын
You are amazing Andrew. You have taken us on your amazing journey, introducing us to the amazing different tribes of the world. The Nung and the Hmong.
@barrynamon19373 ай бұрын
The video production is pure gold. These kinds of videos are rare this days on KZbin. So glad i stumbled on the channel
@Andrew_Fraser3 ай бұрын
Thanks, appreciate it. We definitely try to go above and beyond the standard vlogger routine.
@barrynamon19373 ай бұрын
@@Andrew_Fraser Andy, frankly I think your production is too good and need to be seen by millions of people around the world as you share the cultural experiences of minorities. This is almost similar to early days of Johnny Harris after he left Vox. Informative, expository, crossing boundaries and unique topics. I might be wrong here but I believe you might not have a strong social media campaign unit. Though your channel has been up for more than a year dedicated viewers (like myself) have never heard or seen your channel. Case in point; I noticed you have only uploaded very small number of YT Shorts, without Shorts the potential viewers engagement is going to be low compared to other channels. I mean, imagine putting a catchy title on a Shorts videos about a bizzare custom in one remote village, people will be curious to see more. Shorts draw in millions of views and subscribers through conversion so you might want to look into that. No sponsors? I mean for the quality of effort you and your team must have put in to produce these videos you need to recoup the cost quickly to enable you continue giving us these beautiful documentaries. I love that you interact with your viewers, shows humility and connection. But you might want to throw in some Merchs and affiliates for loyal subscribers to buy in order to support the channel. How are you doing on Patreon and Channel membership. I see lots of ways your team could explore to increase viewership and subscription. I wish you the best on your journey🙂
@kasie6804 ай бұрын
I actually thought the title meant they were actually physically smoking 🚬 their cut off limbs 🤦🏼♀️😂😂😂
@joannakjorstad81163 ай бұрын
same lol
@xenonmob3 ай бұрын
that’s exactly what he wanted us to think. it’s called clickbait
@mizaru6663 ай бұрын
@@xenonmobHow should they have put it while at the same time keeping the title short and informative? I can’t think of a better way. English has several meanings for certain words and it’s practically impossible to avoid double meaning sometimes,
@Wtfinc3 ай бұрын
Haha me too!!!!
@u3k1m63 ай бұрын
I thought they turned the limb into a bong or something
@billyb90674 ай бұрын
It’s not actually poop. It’s the digestible grass extract that’s about to be absorbed in the small intestine. The actual poop will be in the large intestine
@koolkat52174 ай бұрын
Somehow the difference eludes me 🤮
@alfredbalauro32154 ай бұрын
It is also in Filipino cooking
@billyb90674 ай бұрын
@@alfredbalauro3215 it’s ancient Austro Tai food my Pare.. look up Austro-Tai language
@andreeaboloca44404 ай бұрын
Stinks the same 😂😂😂
@billyb90674 ай бұрын
@@andreeaboloca4440 no methane in edible stuff actually lol 😂
@nguyenquanghung2344Ай бұрын
Your Tour guide in Hoang Su Phi sound very polite and feel like a man with alot knowledge in Vietnamese language, must be good to have him as a guide your tour.
@ocmanga56854 ай бұрын
Một video có nội dung vô cùng chất lượng! Là người Việt Nam, tôi ủng hộ mọi người giữ gìn nền văn hóa của dân tộc mình. Chỉ là cần giữ vệ sinh cho ngôi nhà sạch sẽ hơn! 😊
@kerriarickards8508Ай бұрын
Thanks Andrew, I enjoy learning along with you in all these crazy places and unusual traditions etc! The animals in the markets get to me the most though-they all have emotions and to see them suffering whilst still alive is heart wrenching. I realise it’s their livelihood, still tough to deal with. Plus the amputee’s limbs is difficult also! I really felt sad for that gentleman who is finding it difficult to have his arm still “hanging around!” Bless him… Thanks for sharing… Greetings from Perth 🇦🇺💕🙏🏼
@CodebryoАй бұрын
Since I discovered this channel 2 days ago, I am just addicted. The content, the quality of production, Andrews way of presenting -- just top league. Should be at least 1M subs on this channel.
@MrBill2U4 ай бұрын
Your cultural experience is unsurpassed. Next level.
@JerseyCityGuy3 ай бұрын
Man you are the best. You almost meet my hero Anthony Bourdain. But you keep up the tradition and I love you for it
@taxicab7804 ай бұрын
21:09 is hilarious. man is straight up staring and it’s never even brought up
@wtf.igrind4 ай бұрын
🤣🤣
@Redranddd4 ай бұрын
Seems like a PNG
@dimelifetwon87364 ай бұрын
Looking like the meanest grandad in the world 😂😂😂😂
@Capt.huffer4 ай бұрын
Bet that's how he looks when he's having a good day.
@WylieWolfenstein3 ай бұрын
BWAAAHAHAHAHAAAH!!!
@belle66184 ай бұрын
Really enjoying your channel, it's very eye opening! (The soundtrack in this episode is awesome!)
@JadonLolley2 ай бұрын
Andrew Fraser, you make some of the best content on youtube. Amazing care you took to be respectful & still curious. love it all!
@lucretiabolin98512 ай бұрын
I love your videos and your sense of adventure. This is what I love about traveling and learning about other cultures. Thank you
@Awares493 ай бұрын
Scattered indeed. Dated a Hmong girl back in high school….in Michigan. They used to have a Hmong festival in detriot. Don’t know if they still have it though, was almost 20 years ago
@angelaw90063 ай бұрын
I think they still do it
@sharonrigs79994 ай бұрын
Between landmines and venomous snakes, I noticed a lot of amputees in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia
@holyheretic318529 күн бұрын
Notice the age, alot mid 50. Terrible regimes all gripped those nations when they were kids.
@pie94 ай бұрын
Andrew: your videos are fascinating. Thanks very much.
@mjean676213 күн бұрын
I've always wanted to travel and learn more about other cultures. I'm not able to travel the world so I highly value and appreciate the people that make content like this. I thoroughly enjoyed this video. Such an interesting way of life I would have otherwise never known about.
@jessyvalentine74924 ай бұрын
Im an American amputee, i asked to keep parts of my leg but i was not allowed, they said it had to be incinerated as medical waste which annoyed me, i just wanted my toe bones but then some poor soul would have had to prepare that for me, and i wouldn't wish that on anyone.
@momwhoknowz37584 ай бұрын
At their discharge they were handed the entire limb , no questions asked, I mean it's yours, so...
@TheLittleSukie3 ай бұрын
There is a girl on tiktok who keeps her amputated leg in the bottom drawer of her freezer. Pretty cool. But she did have to fight to get it which is silly. Like it was part of her. Yours was part of you, your body still.
@Brakzillaa3 ай бұрын
@@TheLittleSukie yeah but you got to look at it from a medical stand point. Amputated limbs count as biohazard, if not preserved correctly. Im sure not alot of people know how to mummify limbs here in the states. 😅
@meowsthree3 ай бұрын
I told my OB ahead of time that I absolutely wanted my placenta. When I delivered it and reminded her that I wanted it, she refused.
@Wtfinc3 ай бұрын
I swear that cant be legal. I want my goddamn foot! Religion ya know? Thats all u say
@myrnawashington90574 ай бұрын
It must make some people happy and sad or home sick watching some of these videos. This video is really good. I truly enjoyed it.
@FlowersfromNan4 ай бұрын
I have this love and Compassion for Vietnamese people, I can’t explain it. I don’t mean to stereotype, however, I see how very hard they work to survive. They have very little material goods. I know my view is narrow based only on videos. They often smile and accept what life gives them. I pray God blesses them and gives them hope and they find their purpose.❤
@rachie_v4 ай бұрын
your channel is so underrated wth
@daus60354 ай бұрын
What an excellent look into the life in this part of Vietnam great work Andrew
@elibell50984 ай бұрын
Top notch travel video! Best hour and a half I have had in a long time. Thank you!!
@Andrew_Fraser4 ай бұрын
Thanks man. Appreciate the kind words. Really glad you like the content-good to have you on board!
@uxtalzon4 ай бұрын
Now THIS is good KZbin content.
@Anitso4 ай бұрын
Here in the USA most specifically the southern region it is called chitterlings i.e. pig intestines. If they are cooked properly they are very safe and actually very tasty.
@SithMami3 ай бұрын
Chitlins, baby!
@dimetriusroberts5914Ай бұрын
🤢🤮🥵
@HoveringAboveMyselfАй бұрын
It´s not the same at all, chitterlings are thoroughly cleaned inside and out before cooking, here they are thrown into the pot with the poop instill inside and are served in the same oily poop water.
@KazuyawithYukiАй бұрын
in Myanmar, we also eat chicken and p'g intestines by properly cleaning and boiling enough for safely eating
@justme45714 ай бұрын
This whole video should be in a cinema! Its a masterpiece!
@TheStepsen3 ай бұрын
The amount of education in this Video is insane! Very high quality!! thank you so much I learned a lot!
@jawoapollon60194 ай бұрын
Bravo! you are one arm or one leg ahead of sonny in this place!
@needmoreramsay3 ай бұрын
Not sleeping past 60-72 hours becomes INCREDIBLY dangerous for your mental health. I've had experienced severe insomnia and didn't sleep a wink for 76 hours once and it was TORTURE ! It makes me cringe just remembering it. Sleep deprivation is actually a method of torture and is prohibited as per the Geneva convention. It's actually worse than any physical pain I've ever experienced.
@DylanWills-dg7kc2 ай бұрын
Seriously? I don't know a single that hasn't stayed up that long before by choice; and you're traumatized.....?
@foreverpainfulАй бұрын
yep happened to me after a point i kept trying to stay uo because my mom told me i needed to fix my sleep schedule but then i couldnt sleep, i got delirious, finally ended when i fell asleep standing up and gashed my chin open on the bathroom counter and had to get stitches. i was finally able to sleep after that. to this day my husband and my mom believe i was on drugs
@foreverpainfulАй бұрын
@@DylanWills-dg7kc yes its traumatizing just like sudden psychosis is. youre not in reality, you hallucinate, everything is terrifying to you, all your loved ones are out to get you, theyre plotting against you etc. Even when its not painful its TORTURE. Just like white room and water dripping is NOT painful but it is defined as torture, because the psychological effect on the people its used on. Really, if it gets bad enough, you will NEVER get over the trauma of it. I know me personally, it definitely added to my existing CPTSD.
@DylanWills-dg7kcАй бұрын
@@foreverpainful I've had to sit it in a 10'x10' foot room for 10 days straight with no sleep and zero company. Nothing to do but stare at the wall, not even a book to read. You know what happened? I got bored, end of story lol, no joke. Virtually or literally copying and pasting from the Internet doesn't do much to convince me I'm wrong when real life has been nothing but evidence to the contrary. ( I'm speaking in general, obviously there are always exceptions.) In 32 years I've known hundreds of people and have never known someone who hadn't stayed up for a few days by choice multiple times. They stayed up to play a new game on release, stayed up to attend a music festival, stayed up for a 3 day weekend party, stayed up because they were simply having too much fun with their friends, stayed up because they have an important deadline, work in general, ect.. My point is if a few days of no sleep literally traumatizes you, you are in a small minority and I'm glad nothing worse has happened to you. I guarantee the underlying problem is the op has anxiety issues, no sleep would make that a lot worse, often in the ways you described, though it's not necessarily a correlating factor. One more thing: It's a bit incompetent and very misleading that people are saying sleep deprivation is used as a form of torture, and using that as evidence to a point, when no one is mentioning the things THAT PEOPLE ACTUALLY DO to make sleep deprivation torturous. Like they are just telling people, "hey don't go to sleep", and they listen with no incentive; lmao! CONTEXT PEOPLE. IF I locked a coke/sex addict in a room with a bunch of blow and prostitutes and said they couldn't sleep for 3 days I doubt they would consider that torture. You can't mention the torture unless you're mentioning all of the other accompanying things that comes with it all the things they're doing to you while you're not sleeping. Let's start with the fact that you're in a tiny room and can't go anywhere.
@foreverpainfulАй бұрын
@@DylanWills-dg7kc if you actually went 10 days straight with absolutely not even a few minutes of sleep, you would have gone insane.
@primitivebulliestony90904 ай бұрын
Hey Andrew, those are HMONG people that live in Veitnam that you visited... Another great video, I enjoyed this one very much.
@julioduan71304 ай бұрын
These people’s traditions, food, etc are exactly the same as Southwestern Chinese people. They are in fact ancient Chinese people who are living in modern Vietnamese territory.
@julioduan71304 ай бұрын
Their lives reminded me ancient China.
@xChimkin4 ай бұрын
you chinese get on my nerves man. leave your brethren alone and stop trying to spread communism
@duongquynh81294 ай бұрын
As a Vietnamese person, I can say claim that these traditional customs just exist in remote tribes in Vietnam. Even most Vietnamese citizens are not familiar to these customs. And even in China or any country else in the world, I believe there are still strange and weird traditions like those in my country.
@julioduan71304 ай бұрын
@@duongquynh8129 They are not strange and weird at all. We knew those traditions well through articles, documentaries, tiktok videos, etc. These traditions are still existent in Southern China.
@bigboi98564 ай бұрын
@@julioduan7130 so you're telling me intentionally amputating limbs and drying them so you can smoke out of them is not a strange or weird tradition? How many cultures are you aware of that do that?
@loved_omi3 ай бұрын
We also had "Cow Dung Soup" in my place but we cleaned it thoroughly with salt and lemon and we called it "Sachek".
@Junitunes3 ай бұрын
Is it good,?
@LyVanSung4 ай бұрын
I am from Hoang Su Phi, hello everyone ❤
@jolenataborn78094 ай бұрын
Hello from USA
@myrnawashington90574 ай бұрын
Hello Lyvansung
@utej.k.bemsel47773 ай бұрын
Hello from Germany!👍🏼
@jentealwavesАй бұрын
Hi from Georgia, USA! 😊❤😊
@LyVanSungАй бұрын
@@jentealwaves hello
@gatblau14 ай бұрын
I can understand wanting to keep the body part you lost, after all it was a part of you. I’m surprised more people and cultures do not do it to be honest.
@bass_not_bombs4 ай бұрын
Seeing this stuff makes me wonder what type of crazy stuff the US soldiers experienced and seen during the Vietnam war...
@forrestcarr86513 ай бұрын
Sooo I saw a different video recently about a Vietnam veteran telling his dad, who fought in WWII, about how the Vientcongs fought. His dad said that he couldn't believe what his son went through. So that was about the fighting but I can imagine the food the Vientnam veterans ate had to be interesting yet unpleasant. Unpleasant during war or never ever being accustomed to it.
@xabvwj4 ай бұрын
As an Asian growing up, eating that soup and seeing you trying it makes me proud.
@DutchFlavour4 ай бұрын
This is really, really next level content Andrew wow. It's crazy but tbh a beautiful tradition, however I would never hang my own leg over the same place where I cooked though, crazy! However you can't let your arm go if you always keep it close to you
@dyaenerysАй бұрын
More than the fascinating stories of the Hmong people to date, I felt sad knowing the dark stories they've endured during and after the vietnam war. As a free-people they identified themselves, I got caught at how they were able to preserve the culture and traditions away from the modernisation of the present civilisation. I love how Andrew just listens to the stories of these people and then narrating it, then, you'll never know you are just caught up watching his documentaries for hours. Thank you Andrew for these digital stories!
@athomenotavailableАй бұрын
The amazing thing is that even in such a place, the food still looks more hygenic than Indian street food
@CS-os5ptАй бұрын
Interesting! Love learning! ❤ I would love to see a follow up video where the host brings some prosthetics to the people who lost limbs to help them. ❤
@caihongrainbow41304 ай бұрын
Omg... good documentary.. thank you. Keep up the good work
@edward24484 ай бұрын
Hey Andy, I really enjoyed this series but I must confess that I have not had any dried or cured meats 🍖 since seeing a certain episode. Hope you are enjoying your vacation. Seeya Next Time ✝️🙏🐢
@am-rn6bc26 күн бұрын
I'm a Vietnamese, and I love love love your content
@ZennedOutPractice4 ай бұрын
Andrew's comparison to biltong ❤🇿🇦 Cultured AF.
@hltms3 ай бұрын
It was hard to hear you sometimes because the background sounds were quite loud. When you talked about how expensive the buffalo are there was a loud screech too. Good content tho
@brandonyoung-kemkes11283 ай бұрын
A good deal is actually having a vacation style job. You’re essentially a tourist wandering around with a translator.
@lyssums4 ай бұрын
The most fascinating part of the world, in my opinion! Thank you for sharing.
@KoobxwmBelieves3 ай бұрын
hmong american from the midwest here,was a joy to see you cover the hmong family that was polygamist. (the last words he gave you at the end directly translates "long heart" meaning be patient)
@dimetriusroberts5914Ай бұрын
Doesn't make since tho
@maisong4364Ай бұрын
You sure it’s not “long liver”? 😛 hello from another Hmong American from the Midwest.
@celticwolfvapes1272 ай бұрын
anyone else click on this thinking they where smoking weed out of body parts not going to lie to you people im smoking a bone right now
@user-yw9gc5ti9c4 ай бұрын
just discovered your amazing channel! Thank you for the top-notch and informative documentaries! Keep up the amazing job mate! :)
@BeauLeafulLife3 ай бұрын
Love it! Thanks Andrew, for posting and sharing. The videos are awesome, well-paced, informative, and thoughtfully narrated.
@maisong4364Ай бұрын
I kept trying to understand what you were referring to these people as… thanks to the comments I found out it was a Hmong village that you visited. Great content- this is also why most Hmong people are not organ donors.
@wallacedavis31104 ай бұрын
Their practices are just extreme to us because we don’t do it. It’s their culture but not ours so it’s just different but not extreme to them. Understand them without judgement is the best way to learn about someone else. Their norm isn’t ours but nothings wrong wit that. They may find people in America praising a false god or idolizing people may be extreme to us. Just saying
@petrospetrospetrospetros4 ай бұрын
He literally hanged his amputated leg over the stove that he cooks food you noob
@eddiekane26394 ай бұрын
People can still have an opinion.
@jimmiekarlsson44584 ай бұрын
I rather not understand people that literaly smoke human remains
@ColdestRage3034 ай бұрын
These are ape hybrids not humans. Stop your nonsense please as if this is normal.
@Baracuda-xj6zk4 ай бұрын
Dude they smoke their limbs, that is just pure an utter disgusting insanity, no matter the "culture" argument.
@WanderEats4 ай бұрын
Xin chao Andrew! Yet another sensational video to your channel my friend. I really made it through 1hr 20mins plus the closing with you not wearing your glasses which is quite surreal.. lol! A huge prop to your production team behind the scene... they ARE the reason as well for your channel success no doubt. Hope to bump into you in Hoi An when I visit again. Cheers!
@hhbddjstarАй бұрын
The f***...I have never heard of polygamy being practiced in Vietnam let alone preserving limbs. This is wild!
@JAnotherday4 ай бұрын
I think it would have been kind that if you were filming them when the women go to get water or wood that you would take a container as well to draw water to take back to the village with her that would be 2 less containers that she would have to go back to fill up. You must give back in whatever way you can, simple thoughtfulness is very much appreciated❤
@colinhorton2 ай бұрын
I will never complain about the ques in Asdas and Tesco ever again!!
@mikenew53803 ай бұрын
Easily my new favorite channel 🤙🏼
@Tiny_Treasures4 ай бұрын
Can I suggest you review the audio mixer of the finished videos, the background music often overpowers the monologue and unless listening on a high volume it's hard to hear you sometimes
@AnzeRozmanArchestralMusic4 ай бұрын
Amazing documentary! And love the music choices. What are they?
@ianmarsh612312 күн бұрын
why is the music so loud? it made it very difficult to understand a word he was saying,had to use subtitles. Apart from that, it was an amazing vid .very good 👍
@mariepalmer69684 ай бұрын
It sounds simple, so I apologise for that, but I'd love if you could show on a map where you are. New subscriber x
@lovegansawАй бұрын
Mind blowing but yet very informative. Outstanding content.
@julieb39963 ай бұрын
There has been a large Vietnamese community in my area of Orange County CA, for many decades, and although I have learned a few things about their customs and cuisine, this video makes it apparent there are still many things I do not know about their country.
@TheLovetablet3 ай бұрын
This is south vietnam....
@lil----lilАй бұрын
Your work reminds me of the old "Nat Geo" where documentaries were high quality, informative, fascinating and full of surprises. Today, everything is behind a paywall, shallow, a two minute snippet here and there, subscription here, subscription there, or programs that were released _decades_ earlier. Join us in social networking or login required to get more access and _still_ requires payment. Not even PBS a "Public" founded Broadcast Station (it's in their name!) with lots of private endowments is immune to this which is crazy when you think about it. (ALL of their new programs are locked behind paywalls). Ironically the more money they want the less I want to visit/watch them. In fact, I can't remember the last I watched any of their programs probably more than five years ago. People like you are the reason why KZbin is still KING!
@MassimilianoFlorit-ce2ee3 ай бұрын
1:19:20 Marvelous Gentle simple beautifull Humanity,kind Peoples,i hope that could stay in health for all your life,and live in serenity with your lovely dears family !Emotinoal documentary !
@cristinagray67983 ай бұрын
We have it here 2 in r country d smoked food thing inalong Baguio city & b4r its normal 4 them dt it has flies in it but now generations they have stuck it in storage smoked room so dt it will much safe 2 flies 2 be eaten by clients.And some tribe here in dz area have diff.style of burying there dead 1 they hang it in a cliff of 1 mountains so when u visit u will so hanging the coffins in dt cliffs.Its amazing 2 know dt dz 2 diff.people in diff.country have d same style of meat preserving d foodie.Godbless 2 ur journey & keep safe u make us enjoy a good jour ney w/ u 2.
@antn83874 ай бұрын
I love Northern Vietnam...it's like travelling back in time.
@dfazen894 ай бұрын
Without sleep we lose the ability to form memories. Thats why long term amphetamine drug users almost always go crazy
@skatterpro3 ай бұрын
That's not the reason, at all, no.
@LiliumCruorem3 ай бұрын
@@skatterpro No, that's actually accurate. There are other factors. But one sideaffect of amphetamine abuse is loss of sleep. Sometimes for days and days. It's proven fact that getting sleep and good sleep at that is a huge factor in the health of our brains. When you don't sleep a lot of weird things start to happen. Even without drugs, lack of sleep can drive you insane. Mix that up with Amphetamine psychosis and you're in a for a bad time.
@NoneofYourbusiness-j8x24 күн бұрын
I did meth for 22 years as have my friends all 5 of us who grew up together we have been clean for 6 years and there are no memory issues whatsoever. We all remember just about all of it and we wouldn't sleep for 5 and 6 days
@gowithbazza15 күн бұрын
There's a first for everything and your making my tummy turn with your dung soup
@reneedenn58194 ай бұрын
Pasco County, Florida, I know some people that would call 11 days amateurish!!! 😂😂😂
@MartenKrueger-sx4me3 ай бұрын
I see what your saying...👁️👁️ wide open.... methology...
@HaopuKuki-h1l4 ай бұрын
What if the dog eat the leg or the hand
@jayjaykapone48763 ай бұрын
my hmong from Vietnam. thank you. your videos are great
@Everythingallthetime666Ай бұрын
Lived for years in Vietnam, never even ever heard about this tribe.
@RustyShacklefordJr1337Ай бұрын
Not all cultures are equal. Some are definitely better than others.
@hazwansyafiq64572 ай бұрын
At first you said smoke, I thought you gonna use that limbs as a bong 😂😂😂
@francescofalanga19353 ай бұрын
In italy, in Naples, exists a similar food to this one made with cow dung, it's called 'O pere e 'o musso, it's delicious
@ascn1549Ай бұрын
I’m Vietnamese and I didn’t even know these things were a thing. 👀
@HLGE-m9b25 күн бұрын
When u go around the world and u learn what people belief u will be shocked. Belief is stronger than the truth
@aobdesigned38814 ай бұрын
Not gonna lie, I read the title and straight up thought it was smoking human limbs in a Thuốc lào or Rizla....
@Maya-bn8wq4 ай бұрын
Correct, they are not Nung people but Hmong people. Orginated China dynasty (sub-group Miao), then migrate to Southeast asia. Scatter after Vietnam war, known as "vietnam secret war" recruited by the USA CIA. 100% understand what they are saying in Hmong.
@koalaminh4 ай бұрын
Are you talking about the amputees? Because the first guy is definitely Nung. Hoang Su Phi is home to many minoruty ethnic groups :).
@justplainmee-mic52983 ай бұрын
@@koalaminh1 hour in
@Kambo_1st3 ай бұрын
I'am from Indonesia, i wanna see this tribe. Very rare, never heard before about this
@albertbruhn931Ай бұрын
Andrew Fraser This is by far the most profound video log I have seen since my start with watching KZbin - You deserve an award for this masterpiece!
@anatomylee5874 ай бұрын
Great story telling
@MoneymagiАй бұрын
I’ve been awake for a lot longer than 11 days pushing three and a half weeks
@seandonovan89154 ай бұрын
Just found this channel and its absolutely incredible
@origreena4 ай бұрын
10:13 Andrew, you let your intrusive thoughts take over.
@daliborvik85943 ай бұрын
this stuff is better than movie. Ty
@shivalishankersharma15623 ай бұрын
That butterfly hair pin is gorgeous
@jwoody88153 ай бұрын
Glad i have a strong stomach... im eating Right now. BTW: Subscribed.
@HaopuKuki-h1l4 ай бұрын
What kind of tradition is it, you love this type of village. I'm scared bro.
@DrewishAF3 ай бұрын
2:10 The only reason Gardner has that record for longest time awake is because the Guinness commission stipped accepting entries due to the danger. And it's strange because I have personally beaten Gardner's record with the help of a LOT of stimulants. I got to 15 days, and it was genuinely one of the worst, most terrifying, and most depressing times of my life. It took me months to fully recover. That's not a record you want to attempt, trust me.
@OnlyJalenPhdАй бұрын
Did you buy those pearl earrings, the ones that you held up, for her? The bling is gorgeous.