Yawning: The World’s Most Contagious Prank

Roman Atwood set out to create the world’s most contagious prank. He made a video of himself, demonstrating the power of the yawning on complete strangers from around the world. Every time I watch this video I start yawning, Its definitely contagious. Even a dog gets in on the act, following his owners yawn at the end of the clip.

Velvet Covered Ferrari 599 GTB Spotted in London

Is this the latest trend? A strange Ferrari 599 GTB wrapped in black velvet was recently spotted parked on the streets of London. Watch the video below.

Alnowair: iThank Campaign

Alnowair is giving up free iThank post-its notes at selected Caribou Coffee outlets, or at Alnowair booth in Marina Mall. Write down a thank you note and dedicate the post to the people that made our lives a better place. Watch the iThank campaign video below.

Airbus A330 Engine Explosion Caught On Video

A Thomas Cook Airbus A330 aborting takeoff after what appears to be an engine explosion. The entire scene was caught on video by plane spotter Simon Lowe who posted it on YouTube. The airplane was carrying 325 passengers heading to the Dominican Republic at Manchester Airport.

Slow Motion AK-47 Fired Underwater

Destin from SmarterEveryDay gave a demonstration using a Phantom Miro M320S high-speed camera to capture the amazing slow motion video of an AK-47 being fired underwater. The high speed video has revealed that submerging an AK 47 gun and firing it underwater appears to make it work better. The gun still works perfectly after the experiment.

Amazing Bead Chain Experiment in Slow Motion

On the latest episode of Earth Unplugged by BBC Earth Productions, they met with Steve Mould, the science guy from Britain’s Brightest, to explore the science behind the “self siphoning beads”. Steve demonstrates how the self-siphoning chain of beads works in slow motion. Amazingly, the entire chain of beads siphons out of the jar, float in midair seemingly against gravity. The chain levitate even… Continue reading Amazing Bead Chain Experiment in Slow Motion