Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • wait for the day and they get everybody who's live stripping watching us right now from the comfort of your living room.

  • We have a night full of awesome sci ahead.

  • And are you feeling the lab?

  • Are you feeling I feel the love, but there's something I actually really dislike about love.

  • What's that?

  • Mitchell, but not about the act itself.

  • But it's the fact that the heart gets all the credit, but the brain actually does all the work.

  • That's, um, truth.

  • That's the truth.

  • T Way actually decided to write a song about it to show our frustration.

  • Ladies and gentlemen, this is the science of love.

  • I'll be the spark if you'll be the flames, start a reaction that can't be contained.

  • Balance your pH by sharing my base.

  • I'll be your star if you'll be my space, because there's no distance that I couldn't go to space.

  • Time and work matter would float to the edge off you.

  • Never I'll be your G if you will be see or I can be a if you will be teed.

  • If there's a mutation, I'll fix every base.

  • Working as using finger nuclear is just like an Adam, Don't rip us apart unless you want a big boom in my heart Waken Take it fast or really slow But we can't know with certainty where way First you don't succeed Try to more statistically significant like an equation It over size thing is your science place start are researching, right Just like steal your heart But then you guys so I won't do that if we broke up I mean no more I give up, bitch Duro foraged u S o for you could takeaway gravity and I'd still fall for you.

  • Share my last electron in a cove like that angle a cute and you're smart.

  • Wait.

  • Yeah, Thank you, guys.

  • Thank you.

  • Okay, So wait, this is when we're going to start a Q and A.

  • And we were gonna maybe ask each other questions and answers, but we spend all our time together in any question.

  • Have you already know the answer?

  • D'oh!

  • So we started thinking about, like, who would be appropriate to ask us questions to a love science as much as we d'oh and be loves us as much as we love us on it only came down to one person really?

  • Ladies and gentlemen, Jake Roper V c tha tha Wonderful.

  • Hello?

  • Hello.

  • Oh, my goodness.

  • I have except sizes aesthetically pleasing.

  • It is.

  • Did you touch the hardcover?

  • Yeah.

  • Oh, so good.

  • I'm pretty sure you could get that at a stop sign.

  • You You can't just come out insane.

  • Obviously, everyone here loves the book already.

  • Theo, One thing you guys do, a lot of you answer.

  • You ask interesting questions and answer them interestingly as well.

  • But I have some questions I would like to ask you both if we could look.

  • Hey, it's Please take a seat.

  • I'm gonna cross my legs very slowly there.

  • Look directly at all of you as I do it.

  • Did you feel something, Actually, Did you know, um, when you're in love, you're giving Your brain is similar to when you're on cocaine.

  • Yeah, I learned that in the the right.

  • They're natural.

  • Oh, wow.

  • I don't even make ones that have the YouTube symbol on them.

  • Good job, you two spending your money wisely?

  • Um, so first, Mitch.

  • Greg, why did you decide to start except science?

  • And when did you realize it would need to be a full time job.

  • Well, like many people after university, we were a little lost and we didn't really know what we're gonna do.

  • I went off to Teachers College, so I learned a lot about how you know young people were learning from YouTube whenever I put you to bond the classrooms when the kids would actually like, stop talking and listen.

  • So that got me thinking about it.

  • And I had met some YouTubers who were doing videos and had amazing content and or like building these audiences.

  • And that's when we first sort of learned about, like, what?

  • You two being less?

  • To be honest, I think about 2.5 years ago when we started the channel, we didn't really have that concept.

  • But we started realizing, Hey, maybe instead of just forcing our family and friends to always listen to us, we could force other people.

  • Mentalist does instead, and it just kind of rolled out from there when we decided we would do one video a week for a year and see what happens as pet project.

  • And now we have a look.

  • And what was the first video that really kind of like blew up.

  • It makes sense.

  • It was the sign to the hangover cure.

  • So, yeah, today is tomorrow morning.

  • That's Amore way.

  • Like what?

  • A.

  • We realized that the video spread like a virus.

  • Bayram, comfortably watching, refreshing to see that I was actually on the way to Greg's house driving, I think, and had gotten, like, hundreds of e mails that, like new subscribers and was like, Oh my God, A broke like what has happened?

  • And then I realized like, Oh, my gosh, this video's been shared so many different places and I think that was the first instance where we, like, understood.

  • Yeah, like what?

  • How far the videos could reach beyond, like my mom and grandma.

  • Very nice.

  • And then this question actually comes from somebody.

  • Maybe here named Danny doesn't spirit Danny.

  • Thank you, Danny.

  • But Danny asks What kind of challenges, if any, did you go through to get where you are now?

  • Well, one challenge we have right now is that working on the Internet, it never stops.

  • So we don't really having a tough time bouncing life and work.

  • So it's something that we love to do, and so we so often are involved hooked onto the Internet.

  • So that's one thing that is like, sort of a challenge trying to figure out, you know, when do we stop refreshing the page?

  • And so I think, Okay, like I should look at this tree because it's pretty just like building the channel and starting to understand, like the best way to make these videos like the biggest challenge was learning how people learn.

  • And I think it was an amazing experiment for us to like start from ground Zero and not really be sure where it was going, and then see how some videos did better than the others.

  • And like understand how the best thumbnail works, the best title works or whatever on Dhe from there.

  • Just having that learning experience the whole way has always been a challenge, but like an exciting challenge, and then you guys are pretty consistent with doing like a video every week.

  • Has that been challenging keeping up with them?

  • That's a lot of YouTubers.

  • Do you have a day that they come out?

  • And so our first time we're like we're going to have every Wednesday and then that Wednesday we like jokes.

  • Wait, scratch that.

  • But that is a really good practice if you want a youtuber, but we don't follow it.

  • But we do make weekly videos sometimes.

  • Yeah, it's like week ish.

  • Every weekly weakest, you know, quality over quantity.

  • This is from Mario.

  • Is there a Mario here?

  • I don't look good.

  • Okay.

  • What is the most amazing experience you've had due to your YouTube excessive success?

  • A little.

  • Well, we kind of had a joke when we started that.

  • Like, I remember we were in the backyard with a little, you know, notebook.

  • As you do being like, I'm gonna do something my way.

  • Sad like you so called one day we worked with Bill nine and then it happened, like, kind of early on.

  • It was kind of it was a joke that it was like the goal of the channel were once we do that, we're done.

  • That's all we need Thio, like maybe I don't know how far injured, but one day we were, like, got called from your people wear just like, wow, where life is complete, we're done.

  • But things went on and we but that was, like, surreal for us to think that it could go from like no subscribers, no one having watched the videos.

  • But the book and this is pretty cool like this is the most way.

  • Don't give our house like this is the first time we've seen so many people.

  • Yeah, sunlight for the first time.

  • Yeah, is that it was great.

  • I think this one is from Jill.

  • There may be multiple deals.

  • Just say, Let's just do it for Jill.

  • Jill, Jill, Jill Jill asks what was the most shocking thing you learned while researching the book?

  • Well, one thing that I personally learned, though, that probably wasn't about actual research of it was that drawing for a video, which is really Connecticut's much different than drawing for a book.

  • So I was kind of this will be easy, and then all of a sudden I was like, Oh, my God, this is so different.

  • So that was the most shocking challenge.

  • Yeah, going from like vertical to suddenly horizontal pages and not be able to use movement.

  • It was like an interesting challenge, a creative challenge for us that way.

  • We're, like, excited to tackle, but it was definitely hard.

  • Yeah, like the whole design aspect of it was something was brand new, threw us.

  • But we love it.

  • And it worked out.

  • But it was like it was challenging.

  • Were also must be kind of a different dynamic.

  • Because, General, you're making a video every week.

  • And with this book, it's not like you write it, then it doesn't come out immediately.

  • What is good way won't find out till now, huh?

  • Yeah, It's exciting, though, because there were so many questions because we only do one bill because the production of the videos can take so long.

  • Yeah, we have, like, like thousands of questions.

  • People have asked that we have, like, saved up our favorites and take from those every now and then or like most of time, rather for the videos.

  • So this was an opportunity to, like, answer even more of those, uh, in the book for all at once, which is really exciting for us.

  • So lot of the video ideas come from like fans and viewers and stuff.

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah, exactly.

  • Like pretty much every episode we do have come from some sort of suggestion.

  • Whether or not it's like what got our brain rolling.

  • Some are immediately just like that's it done.

  • Thanks, but yeah, like I mean, we wouldn't be able to do it week after week.

  • We kind of have to go back to the drawing board.

  • And so we need to take some inspiration.

  • And the whole point is to find, like, what is interesting to other people, like, we only represent ourselves, and so it's great, just kind of get a sense of what does the world want to know And how can we accommodate all these different styles of learning and interests and whatnot?

  • And so it's essential for us to sort of hear from everyone out in the world.

  • We're gonna move to Twitter, which is what it was like Twitter the night to physically write it on a piece of paper, which I thought was interesting.

  • Eso Elka mi 543 asks, 53 human being, uh, who are your biggest influences in science.

  • So Bill and I was one, which is crazy.

  • Yeah, for sure.

  • As a young age, definitely.

  • We always talk about like we both had great high school biology teachers, and I think that was kind of like the starting point for us and probably for many people to be interested in science.

  • And that's why we talk about now.

  • Like not everyone is always was lucky to get, like an amazing teacher in any subject to inspire you.

  • And so that's why online is also so amazing.

  • Because you confined so many different types of people, whether it's a stop signs or whether it's Visa.

  • Three types of channels that you love that you connect with that can inspire you to then want to actually go and learn more.

  • So.

  • But we also love your cause.

  • She makes this science not really well, like all right, all where it's like a perfect mix of art and science.

  • We don't you have York.

  • She'd like some amazing music video that you showed.

  • Oh, yeah, we did.

  • Yeah.

  • He's all that zooming into the cell and Good.

  • Yeah, it's beautiful.

  • You should watch it.

  • Yeah, there's a thing.

  • A moment?

  • Yes.

  • Moment.

  • Yes.

  • Fun place.

  • Now, Sam, is there a Sam Multiple Sam's?

  • How many Sams?

  • Oh, there's gotta be at least a saying.

  • Yeah.

  • Oh, Sam, before Samantha or Sammy, you want to know which of science is weird Mysteries.

  • Would you like to know the answer to Whoa!

  • Tough questions.

  • I would love to know what happens every day.

  • That's true.

  • That's definitely one of those questions that's like, How do you test that?

  • Like, how was dying?

  • I think it's an amazing part of life, but it's something that, yeah, it's definitely, like maybe perhaps one of the biggest questions.

  • But one thing I've heard about is that people have done research whether actually think about how they can actually like, use a specific laser on your skin and, like, got enough information to find out like one biologically you would die, which I would never want to know.

  • But I've got a healthy How dare you, sir, Have you seen this?

  • I think maybe the words instead of telling you like a general years like you have 10 more years, just say like you're gonna die in a car accident.

  • I'm never getting in a car ever.

  • But then it's like some of those weird things where it's like could be getting in a car being hit by a car.

  • Just yeah, you just don't let time way.

  • We're told that that's why we wear Fair enough.

  • And there's another one from Vanessa Hey, Vanessa, hopefully save Vanessa.

  • What do you think?

  • The most important causes in the world that needs science.

  • Good one.

  • You science.

  • You really sassy science.

  • One thing I think is a huge issue is water and water accessibility.

  • I think that's something where I think technology and science is gonna be extremely important for ensuring that people around world can get it.

  • And Canada doesn't call, get all.

  • So I think that's something that's important, I think certainly just the idea of exploration of space and making sure that we are adequately funding areas of science that are only gonna further like our understanding of the world and hopefully lead to better understanding of how we can conserve water or technologies, technologies that will preserve it.

  • Um, I think that's probably like the fundamental aspect is having people understand the importance of research and just science in general is like key to all of the things that matter.

  • Yeah, we'll likely.

  • I mean, you guys are kind of doing that right with you, too.

  • I think science is becoming very popular and pop culture, and that is really important.

  • Yeah.

  • I mean, that is interesting thing.

  • A quick little side note.

  • Sorry.

  • Tangent is that science is kind of cool.

  • Now it's cool.

  • Bi curious because everyone is just is inherently curious.

  • I just want to find out the answers to interesting question.

  • Is anything to see that kind of be revitalized in people?

  • Yeah, I agree.

  • We do sometimes wonder for bias because we are so obsessed with science and talk, but all the time.

  • But we do see it a lot that we realize that, you know, science has become really popular for a lot of young people who watch our videos.

  • I mean, they're taking their free time watching it and falling in love with this science and curiosity.

  • So I do think there is something there.

  • And the dress was an example.

  • You see, black and blue.

  • Look, is that real quick?

  • We'll show him.

  • Wasn't black or blue, white and gold in your mind.

  • Gold.

  • Do you see why?

  • I don't know.

  • If you look at you Still brave, you're very brave, you know, you're in far between.

  • Yeah, that was an interesting experience.

  • To understand how you can connect with people like a pop culture, then can be a science.

  • I mean, We like to call our channel sometimes, like the gateway drug to science.

  • So finding those elements of like that pop culture a woman that gets the whole world interested and then using science as a way to explain those things and get him interested in more into science is, like, important.

  • Why not happen like this, is it?

  • Calling me Levada was like, Explain the science, dude us drink some coffee.

  • That was an all nighter.

  • Like it was an all nighter.

  • Yeah, there was a moment where we had been, like on the couch.

  • We both saw blood bag like this is just a prank like this is so weird.

  • That's not true.

  • And her roommate came home and she saw a black and blue, but then later came up and she was like, Oh, there's two pictures.

  • Is this one's mining gold?

  • We were like, You've gone to the way we like it.

  • This is crazy way something this way.

  • I was with people who went in a photo shop and got the color picker.

  • Yeah, yeah, Everyone know you're wrong way.

  • We'll just weird, huge way have questioned this question.

  • Their cameras on from Adam is there.

  • Adam in the room.

  • Multiple Adams.

  • Little Adam.

  • If you're watching this at home, my heart broke, my heart broke.

  • Adam, do it.

  • Did you hear it?

  • I said, Well, Adam asks What is one piece of advice you'd give to aspiring YouTubers that you wish you knew when you started?

  • Well, one thing that we say a lot, and we think we're like Nike got it right, which is just way feel.

  • We feel like that's the thing on a lot of people who they ask us for advice.

  • It's like you just have to make you to content and consistently do it and don't give up when.

  • Maybe it is just her friends and family watching and make sure you're making good content that you're passionate about and like things will fall into place.

  • So I think the biggest barrier is like fear of not being perfect or having if you go back and watch our first video.

  • We cringe whenever you look at those original videos, but at the time we were like, really proud of them.

  • But if we had waited to be like perfect, we never would have really started.

  • And so it's just you it just put it out there.

  • You learn from every single video you put out there.

  • You grow, you evolve over time.

  • And that's like the best watch.

  • They're they're so bad.

  • I would use brown for, like everything.

  • Everything, like the brains just looked like way withdrawing part.

  • What kind of incentivize?

  • That what made you want to use that format as a way to get science across?

  • Well, we knew we wanted this science to come first, and we wanted to see you know, that science can be really intimidating for people.

  • And so we tried toe eliminate that by being like, Oh, look, it's a continuing, but we're gonna explain some complex pathways.

  • It was kind of like tricking people.

  • That was the original.

  • Yeah, and even sort of strips.

  • Like for us.

  • It was like, How do we make this video is just about, you know, this topic just about the science of love are just about how much sleep you needed.

  • So in that sense, by sort of taking ourselves out of the videos, we thought, you know, when people see these, they know it like there's nothing else to it.

  • It's just answering this question.

  • So that was where it started from using the drawings.

  • A way to get people.

  • It's like accidental learning.

  • Yeah, I actually learned something big.

  • Sad now from learning.

  • One last question on this is another one from Twitter.

  • It's from visas.

  • Three.

  • Really?

  • Well, I Oh, I don't know, but everyone goes.

  • You've been doing YouTube for almost three years now.

  • You have a book.

  • What else do you want to accomplish?

  • Where does a sap science go from here?

  • Well, we wanna keep going.

  • We as we said, we're really interested in trying to get science and pop culture to mix, So we want to think about that.

  • So we've started a second channel.

  • Is that thought where we actually talk more about pop culture and social justice and other things that were interested in because we like things outside of sign started blogging.

  • You can now all of our lives Yeah, for us, it's just, like, bigger and better questions like, what else are people curious about what?

  • Our new ways that we could get people to learn.

  • So maybe that steps outside of the white board and goes into something else that's a little bit more in depth for people.

  • It's just constantly brainstorming on, like, what connects with someone.

  • How can we give you guys an experience to make you curious in that moment?

  • And thankfully, science is about evolution and innovation, so and lately, we have to keep evolving.

  • Well, I think it's innovative.

  • I if we could I'd like to do something.

  • Now.

  • I think we all would like this.

  • We've all been thinking it haven't said it, which is, since we have the book here.

  • Could we could you read a part of it?

  • And then could you draw it while he reads it?

  • Wave.

  • It is selfie science.

  • Your favorite.

  • Okay.

  • Okay.

  • We can do this.

  • Okay.

  • You like my version of a marathon?

  • Okay.

  • All right.

  • Yeah.

  • Okay.

  • So Jakes inspired selfie Science actually should get my ace up.

  • Science voice.

  • Um, it's got a burning question asking the comments on Facebook and Twitter.

  • OK?

  • Thatis All right, Selfie science.

  • Why do we hate photos of ourselves?

  • You're ready for a big night out and take one last look in the mirror before you go.

  • Wow, You're looking great tonight.

  • You're looking great, Greg.

  • Au fait with all the confidence in the world.

  • You strut your stuff and make sure to take tons of photos to the night selfies galore.

  • But wait.

  • You hate how you look in photos and feel completely un photogenic.

  • So how come you never really feel that way looking in a mirror?

  • Why is it that so many people hate seeing photos of themselves, but usually have no problems with their image in a mirror?

  • Oh, you did that.

  • Okay.

  • You know, like, uh, stuffs L c.

  • All right, well, if you're going, there are a few factors at play with this phenomenon, but the mere exposure effect maybe so I can't write.

  • My writing is electable and mere exposure effect is an important part of this.

  • So I want you to write it cause you do the right way, Teacher, I just feel like I'm supposed to know that you should be able to write, right?

  • I can read.

  • I just can't.

  • Right.

  • Okay.

  • All right.

  • Also, I used to narrate the videos, but I never said I sounded like the honey Badger's stop.

  • Thanks.

  • Cyberbullying?

  • No, I'm fine.

  • It's okay.

  • I noticed and lithe on the audio book I read seriously Okay, so there are a few factors at play with this phenomenon, but the mere exposure effect may be the biggest.

  • Simply put, we all have a tendency to prefer familiar things.

  • I could never have written like that.

  • Alright.

  • Continuing on after repeated exposure to anything, you will psychologically prefer it over a version that you have seen less often as crazy as it may seem, This has been tested with words, paintings, sounds, pictures, geometric figures and even structures like the Eiffel Tower.

  • Is that right?

  • Close enough Or like Mona Lisa, for example, which is the photo in here?

  • We're all super familiar with that photo, and we tend to prefer it over like the thousands of other photos in the loo.

  • Because we've seen it so often.

  • This phenomenon has even been observed in other species, from monkeys to chickens.

  • Many organisms have been documented to react fondly to repeated stimulus chicken that's from the chicken and the egg.

  • Yeah, it's a really big chicken, and it just so happens that the version of yourself that you see most often is your mirror or reflected image every time you scare in a mirror or a window which I know you all do.

  • The view is flipped from left to right.

  • If your reflection in the mirror were actually somebody you were looking at, his or her hair would swoop the opposite way.

  • When you raise your right hand here, she would raise their left hand and even that annoying pimple you have would be on the opposite side of their face.

  • Chickens got pimples, but ah, photograph is this is a big but but okay, not actually about a fire has got him all right.

  • But a photograph is not your reflected image.

  • In fact, your photo images the way everybody else sees you on a daily basis.

  • Your brain, however, isn't familiar with this view of you and might interpret it as off.

  • In studies of this phenomenon, participants prefer facial photographs of their mirror image to the photo image without knowing which was which.

  • Their friends, however, rated their photo image as preferable.

  • So if your acquaintances and loved ones suddenly saw your mirror itself, they would find it slightly off was a great brain.

  • All right, we're almost there arose that add to this the fact that you can adjust your position hair smile in front of the mirror and that photographs, photographs can capture angles that you can't see in the reflection.

  • And you've got a good case against your photo image.

  • But just know that there's nothing to worry about.

  • The photo version of you looks great.

  • Toe Everybody else so vain of Southeast.

  • We thought we're all right.

  • We're gonna take a selfie right now.

  • We're gonna use a live.

  • And if you're at home watching, take a selfie of yourself watching a video where everyone is with this side.

  • Okay, Theo.

  • Okay, All right.

  • Straight.

  • Okay.

  • Cool.

  • Well, now, we actually wanted to introduce another special gas.

  • Yeah.

  • So another person is here who we love and is near and dear to our hearts.

  • She's a science communicator, and she has a YouTube channel on youtube dot com slash brain craft.

  • Check it out.

  • It's super crafty and artsy.

  • Yeah, her name.

  • So why don't you tell us something interesting.

  • I would love to see Oh, we'll let you go, You see.

  • Oh, I love lots of things about science.

  • I'm sure all of you guys do is well, but something that I love is that science gives us a different idea about the things that we know best, like yourselves or our brains or even pizza.

  • Yes, Pizza.

  • Okay, so Peter is a super addictive food.

  • If you think about things like the sugar in the tomato sauce, the carbohydrates in the crust, there's another little thing.

  • A chemical called Cason that's in the cheese.

  • When you eat those all of those things together.

  • Activate your dopamine receptors, which are linked to addiction, so it feeds into your reward system.

  • I feel like I'm a pizza.

  • Evangelists, Peter aside, You guys probably remember signs from learning the periodic table in high school, learning all of those elements.

  • I know that I had to do that.

  • We had to, like, recite them to our science teacher.

  • Well, since then, I think that science has gotten a lot cooler and so has the periodic tables.

  • So for the final time tonight, here on Mission Greg with the periodic table Salt E.

  • Really, who hasn't wanted to learn the periodic table song by heart, right?

  • You'll know there's hydrogen and helium and lithium, beryllium, boron carbon everywhere.

  • Nitrogen all through the air with oxygen so you can breathe in flooring for your pretty team me on to light up the sign sodium for some magnesium, our Dominion Silicon forest.

  • So your grow strong, Is that right?

  • That's 96 point Get copper zinc gallium from a young nick.

  • So you broke up with me on this tree?

  • Is going to be a militant technician.

  • Believe silverware, then cadmium in India.

  • Really miss 56.

  • And this is where the table splaying hair.

  • Okay.

  • Where?

  • Let the knights have just begun landing on Syria, Theo, Next year from me beyond than 60 two's Cem Mariam, your opium gotta Lanny in Serbia.

  • Distressing young.

  • 10 points in Denver, medium and medium but no gold to make you show your girl You're your way is the periodic table Got stable How legends and aggressively experience will see New York You're a rainy California sent from Yemen Olivia Nobel awards anymore.

  • They're pretty upto remembering any of it.

wait for the day and they get everybody who's live stripping watching us right now from the comfort of your living room.

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

A2 初級

AsapSCIENCE LIVE新書發佈會!表演+問答+科學! (AsapSCIENCE LIVE Book Launch! Performances + Q&A + SCIENCE!)

  • 2 0
    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
影片單字