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JACOB SOBOROFF: Hey, it's Jacob.
Every day we bring you the best videos around,
and today we're hanging out with Harley from Epic Meal Time.
-I'm talking about sex.
JACOB SOBOROFF: Taking the worst vacation ever,
and visiting Japan's love hotels.
[INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC]
-Locked and loaded.
JACOB SOBOROFF: Epic Meal Time's brand new TV
show Epic Meal Empire premieres tomorrow on FYI.
To celebrate, the guys threw a party yesterday
at YouTube Space LA, where we had a chance
to go catch up with Harley.
HARLEY MORENSTEIN: What's up, YouTube nation?
I'm Harley Morenstein from Epic Meal Time and Epic Meal Empire,
our new TV show.
I started Epic Meal Time, and four years later
after throwing burgers on a pizza,
we're launching our television show.
So far on Epic Meal Empire, we have
created things that are way bigger than on Epic Meal Time.
-At this point, the bakery burger is heavy.
How heavy?
Well, as heavy as a baby.
An 80 pound baby.
HARLEY MORENSTEIN: We filmed Epic Meal Empire
for about 60 days, six days a week, every single week.
And on the seventh day, we filmed Epic Meal Time.
We still have six and a half million subscribers,
so we want to make sure that those people get Epic Meal
Time.
The show is airing for the first time tomorrow at 10:00 PM
and, we're going be showing two episodes.
[INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC]
ALEX: Summer vacations are the best,
and Rhett and Link are here to show you
how to enjoy the hell out of them, if you don't mind
all the zombies and eye-gouging.
The guys just released this, and I have to say,
they have a pretty positive attitude
about the worst vacation ever.
[MUSIC - RHETT & LINK, "I'M ON VACATION"
ALEX: They only release a video once a month
on their main channel, but you could see them every weekday
on Good Mythical Morning, which just kicked off
its sixth season.
[INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC]
JACOB SOBOROFF: Just Plain Dancin'
is the number one dance studio in the country.
It is competitive, it is exclusive, it is demanding,
and now you get to see why.
The new season of AwesomenessTV's dancers
focuses on the legendary studio, and it really
zeros in on the professionalism and the drama of the dancers
in the group, like Kiera Brown.
-I've always known since I was a little girl,
I always wanted to be an entertainer.
-Transitions are important.
What's in between your moves?
-I want to see that spark in your eye at all times.
-My eyes are like, first place.
JACOB SOBOROFF: This is a fantastic series
about what it takes to become a professional dancer.
First episode drops tomorrow.
[DUBSTEP MUSIC]
CARLY: Have you ever noticed that the bad guys in movies
have the name Doctor Something, or that the good guys have
the initials JC?
John Connor, John Coffey, Jiminy Cricket?
Coincidence?
Cracked recently took a look at four rarely acknowledged,
yet widely recognizable rules for naming
fictional characters.
-By naming their character some variation of Shepherd,
or JC, writers are basically spoiling their own movies,
because Jesus type characters are almost always destined
to sacrifice themselves.
It happened with Stu Shepherd from Phone Booth,
and Bruce Willis' James Cole in 12 Monkeys, who ends up getting
shot as he tries to save the world from a deadly virus.
CARLY: Can you think of any other rules?
Let me know in the comments.
JACOB SOBOROFF: When you imagine a romantic get-away
with your significant other, do you picture hospital room
dungeons and the odd dinosaur?
Japanese love hotels are a $40 billion business.
There are more than 25,000 of these things.
Chris Broad, a British teacher and ex-pat,
recently decided to take a closer look.
-When you walk through the a love hotel, what you will have
is just the big screen, and you will
push the number of the room that you want to go to.
Hotel.
-This is what it describes itself as.
An ultimate healing that exceeds the sky of time is here.
[PIANO MUSIC]
-No.
JACOB SOBOROFF: These hotels actually
have a practical purpose: privacy.
Almost half of the Japanese population under 35
still live with their parents.
Chris's whole channel is a really fascinating look
at daily life in Japan.
It's going to make you want to visit.
-Stump Earnest.
JACOB SOBOROFF: OK, Earnest.
Today's challenger is FeedMe Chipotle.
Earnest, find me the oldest cat video.
EARNEST: Unfortunately, FeedMe Chipotle,
I'm out of quesaritos, so instead I'll
have to feed you some humble pie.
Here it is.
It was uploaded three months after the launch of YouTube
in 2005 by one of its founders, Steve Chen, which proves once
and for all that YouTube was founded on cat videos.
Next time you're at your favorite restaurant,
make sure you stay away from the hot salsa,
because you wouldn't want to get burned.
Again.
Boom.
JACOB SOBOROFF: [ANIMAL NOISE]
-I don't know what animal that was.
JACOB SOBOROFF: That was a cat, guys.
Think you could take down the champ?
Post your challenge in the comments
using the hashtag #STUMPEARNEST.
Every Saturday, our show focuses on just one topic,
and this week it is amazing LEGO videos.
Now plays us out, Bernhoft.
[MUSIC - BERNHOFT, "WIND YOU UP"]