This is a video of Paul Stuart providing a fascinating and informative in-depth tour of the Space Shuttle Discovery, including what everybody REALLY wants to see: the interior, AKA where all the magic happens. Not unlike my bedroom. *wink* Honey, back me up. “He tries to impress me with his
This list. There are more breakdowns HERE if you’re into data the same way I’m into falling asleep laying in the shower. As you can see, there’s been a noticeable trend in recent history to draw from names from the past, almost as if parents want to pretend their children
This is a world map detailing the average lifetime toilet paper usage for different countries, measured in total number of rolls. As you can see, English speaking countries use an absolute shit-ton of toilet paper, with the average American using 141 rolls per year (almost 3 a week?! Lay off
This is a clip from How It’s Made taking a tour inside the Duke’s Mayonnaise factory to show how the condiment is manufactured in quantity. It was pretty fascinating to watch. Of course if you don’t have the five minutes to watch the video I’ll just tell you how it’s
This is a computer simulation of a pallet of wood being dropped on a car to visually compare the effect of gravity on different planets in our solar system. Is it accurate? Hell if I know. It was fun to watch though. And if it is accurate, I actually learned
These are two TikTok videos of Texas A&M University physics and astronomy professor Dr. Tatiana Erukhimova demonstrating inertia (the property of an object to resist change in its motion) with two experiments: one involving pounding a knife through a skewered potato with a rubber mallet, and another dropping an egg
This is a US map detailing each state’s most ordered hot sauce via Instacart, using data collected by the company. As you can see, sriracha is king, followed by Franks RedHot and Cholula. Well at least Cholula made the top three. I like Tapatio too. Honestly, I’m not sure if
This is another visualization comparison video from Meta Ball Studios (previously), this time comparing the depths of various known shipwrecks. The most interesting part of the video is at the very end when it zooms out so you can actually see all the wrecks at once. But the deepest wreck