• 9 hours ago
チャンハウス 2025年3月1日 宮世琉弥、驚き続々!言いたくなる雑学16連発
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00:00This is a story about a doctor who had surgery on his birthday.
00:02I can feel the pain in my heart!
00:07Do you know this?
00:14When a doctor has surgery on his birthday,
00:18there is a data that makes it easy for him to fail.
00:21That's not good!
00:23This is a story about a doctor who had surgery on his birthday.
00:26The data is from a paper published in 2020
00:29by the research team of Dr. Yusuke Tsugawa from UCLA Medical School.
00:37The data shows that the death rate of a patient who had surgery on his birthday
00:45is 5.6% compared to the death rate of a patient who had surgery on his birthday.
00:56On the other hand, the death rate of a patient who had surgery on his birthday is 6.9%.
01:03The death rate was 1.3 times.
01:07This research suggests that the death rate of a patient who had surgery on his birthday
01:11will be more careful, and the death rate of a patient who had surgery on his birthday
01:15will be faster.
01:20By identifying the cause of the decrease in the death rate of a patient who had surgery on his birthday,
01:24it is expected that various measures will be taken in the future
01:28to improve the quality of medical care.
01:32There is data that doctors tend to make mistakes when they have surgery on their birthdays.
01:38I want to say! I want to say! I want to say!
01:42I want to say!
01:43Thank you, thank you!
01:44For example, you can say,
01:45Is it your birthday?
01:47Yes, you can confirm that.
01:49What if it's your birthday?
01:51If it's my birthday, I'll change it.
01:54You should stop right before your birthday.
01:56It's better to have it a few days in advance.
02:00Do you know this?
02:07Do you use it on a daily basis?
02:08What?
02:10When you sit in a Western-style toilet,
02:12if you turn the axis of your body and the angle of your knees to 35 degrees,
02:16a very good thing comes out.
02:18It comes out!
02:19Is that so?
02:20That's awesome!
02:23According to Dr. Misawa of the Department of Internal Medicine,
02:26Yokohama Private University,
02:28if you just sit in a Western-style toilet,
02:31the rectum bends in a curve,
02:34and the angle of the anus and rectum is about 130 degrees.
02:37That's why you need to put strength in your stomach,
02:40and a normal thing comes out.
02:41A normal thing?
02:42That's fine.
02:43It's fine if it's normal.
02:44If you put a table under your feet,
02:47and turn the axis of your body and the angle of your knees to about 35 degrees,
02:52the angle of the rectum and anus expands,
02:55and it becomes straight.
02:57A very good thing comes out.
03:00When you sit in a Western-style toilet,
03:02if you turn the axis of your body and the angle of your knees to about 35 degrees,
03:06a very good thing comes out.
03:09It comes out!
03:11That's fine!
03:12That's fine!
03:13That's awesome!
03:14That's awesome!
03:16By the way, the ideal way to make it 35 degrees is
03:18that in a Western-style toilet,
03:20it's been done for a long time,
03:21but for Japanese people,
03:22I see.
03:2335 degrees is engraved in the DNA of Japanese people.
03:26What I've noticed recently is that
03:27if it's 15 degrees,
03:28it comes out more than I expected.
03:31Do you know this?
03:34I want to say it.
03:35I'll definitely say it.
03:36Yes.
03:37In white mode.
03:38In white mode.
03:39Yes, yes, yes.
03:41If there are three dots,
03:42it somehow looks like a face.
03:44You can see it.
03:46Simulacra phenomenon.
03:48Phenomenon?
03:49Phenomenon.
03:50Phenomenon.
03:51Phenomenon.
03:52It's a phenomenon.
03:53It's a phenomenon.
03:54It's a phenomenon.
03:55It's a phenomenon.
03:56It's a phenomenon.
03:57It's a phenomenon.
03:58It's a phenomenon.
03:59The outlet in our daily lives.
04:03Trash can.
04:05Smartphone camera.
04:07And USB.
04:10Doesn't it all look like a face?
04:12The one who named this phenomenon,
04:14which looks like a face,
04:16is Jean-Baudrillard,
04:17a French sociologist.
04:19In his book,
04:21he explains that the human brain
04:23has a defensive instinct
04:25to make anything look like a human face
04:27when it sees it.
04:31In other words,
04:32humans are programmed to look like a face
04:34when they see three dots,
04:36which are symbols of a face.
04:39Baudrillard named these phenomena
04:41as simulacra,
04:43which has the meaning of imitating or simulating.
04:47If there are three dots,
04:49it somehow looks like a face.
04:51It's a simulacra phenomenon.
04:54I want to say it.
04:55I want to say it.
04:56I want to say it.
04:57I want to say it.
04:58I want to say it.
04:59I want to say it.
05:00I've seen it since I was a kid.
05:02I didn't know what phenomenon it was,
05:05so I thought I could use it.
05:07You can use it, right?
05:08I want to say it.
05:09I want to say simulacra.
05:10Simulacra.
05:11It's not like Lafrecq-Lan.
05:13I have to explain it.
05:16The miscellaneous mathematics
05:18that makes people want to say it.
05:20The miscellaneous mathematics.
05:22Which team's miscellaneous mathematics
05:24will resonate with Ryubi Miyase's heart?
05:28We have a new member on our team.
05:30Kohaku can do it, right?
05:31Kohaku Shida came to my concert as a guest last year.
05:36We performed together.
05:37I thought she was not a cute girl, but an interesting girl.
05:40She's pretty interesting.
05:42Do you know this?
05:48It's not a simulacra.
05:49It's not a simulacra.
05:50It's just a hole.
05:51It's just a hole.
05:52Ants don't get caught in the nest of the ant hell.
05:57What?
05:58Ant hell?
05:59It's made to be caught.
06:00What do you mean?
06:03Ant hell is a larvae of Musubakagerou
06:05that live by eating fallen ants
06:07by making a nest
06:09with a diameter of a few centimeters
06:11and a depth of 1 to 2 centimeters.
06:14Musubakagerou.
06:15However, if you look at the actual video,
06:19It's a hole.
06:20It's a hole.
06:21It's a hole.
06:22It's a hole.
06:27The miscellaneous things that make people want to say come out.
06:32Do you know this?
06:40Ants don't get caught in the nest of the ant hell.
06:44What?
06:45No way.
06:47It's a larvae of Musubakagerou
06:48that live by eating fallen ants
06:50by making a nest
06:52with a diameter of a few centimeters
06:56and a depth of 1 to 2 centimeters.
06:58Musubakagerou.
06:59However, if you look at the actual video,
07:04It's a hole.
07:07The other ants
07:13are not caught.
07:14Even two ants were not caught.
07:25Professor Shintani, who is familiar with insect ecology, said,
07:30Ant hell is a place where you can live for 3 to 4 months without eating grass.
07:38It's a very strong creature for evacuation.
07:42Ants rarely get caught in ant hell.
07:47I want to say.
07:50It's interesting.
07:53By the way, I don't poop in ant hell.
07:58When I became an adult, I ate grass for 4 years.
08:02Grass?
08:05It's interesting.
08:08It's interesting.
08:11I'm sorry.
08:14I made a mistake.
08:17I want to say.
08:20I ate grass for 3 to 4 years.
08:22I want to say.
08:25Why do you say ant hell?
08:30It doesn't fit the theme of ant hell.
08:35Do you know this?
08:46There are flowers that look like monkeys.
08:48Simple is best!
08:51Simple is best!
08:54According to Director Matsui of Jindai Plant Park, which is famous for various plants,
09:01There are flowers that look like monkeys.
09:04This is an orchid that looks like a monkey.
09:12Monkey orchid.
09:14In short, monkey orchid is a plant that grows in the highlands of South America.
09:19It is vulnerable to heat and dryness.
09:22It is not native to Japan.
09:26So I took a picture.
09:29Great!
09:33We took a picture of you.
09:36Thank you very much.
09:38It's like CG.
09:41Thank you very much.
09:44It's a great monkey.
09:45I can't speak because it's a picture.
09:48It has various faces.
09:51There are various monkeys.
09:56It's not an exaggeration to say that it's a zoo.
09:58There are flowers that look like monkeys.
10:01Simple is best!
10:05I don't know how to explain it.
10:08You can search it on your cell phone.
10:17Do you know this?
10:20I don't know.
10:22I don't know.
10:24I don't know.
10:26I don't know.
10:28The original person made it first.
10:31The family sold it first.
10:34The headquarters sold it first.
10:37I didn't know.
10:39I didn't know.
10:40I didn't know.
10:42I asked a convenience store, Yoko Naganuma, who is familiar with commercial patents.
10:47To be honest, in terms of Japanese, I think it's a mess.
10:52In terms of commercial registration, there is a basic rule that the person who registered first can be named.
11:00In that sense, it's hard to tell who made it first.
11:05Historically, there have been many conflicts about which is the original and which is the headquarters.
11:12In that case, I think it's a good idea to refer to our industry.
11:16The original is the person who made it first.
11:18Of course, there is a possibility that he didn't do business just because he made it.
11:22And the headquarters may not have made it, but I think it's the person who started the business first.
11:28And the headquarters has both the original and the headquarters.
11:32They have the right to make it and the right to sell it.
11:38By the way, both the original and the headquarter are in the stores where the staff often go.
11:45The headquarter is the original and the headquarter is the headquarter.
11:48I asked him why he added the word original again.
11:53The common Shisen-style tantanmen has sesame seeds in it.
11:59The original tantanmen has garlic, egg, chili pepper, and pork.
12:06It has a strong punch.
12:08It's like the soul food of Kawasaki.
12:11The original tantanmen headquarter includes the pride and the thought that it is the only one.
12:18But the headquarter includes the original.
12:21To be honest, it would have been good if it was just the headquarter, but it's the only strong thought.
12:32The original is the person who made it first.
12:35The headquarter is the person who sold it first.
12:38The headquarter is the person who made it first and sold it.
12:51It's a good story.
12:53It's a good story.
12:55It's the essence of the show.
13:01The first round of the math competition that makes you want to tell people.
13:04Which team's math did Miyase-san resonate with?
13:14This is it.
13:16The doctor's birthday.
13:19It resonated with me.
13:22Surgery is scary.
13:24If that person's birthday, it's despair.
13:27I wonder if I'm going to die today.
13:30The third round of math competition that makes you want to tell people.
13:33The first round of the second round is Team Chimura.
13:38Do you know this?
13:41Oh, it's Doraemon.
13:43Everyone loves Doraemon.
13:47The window frame of Kawasaki City Fujiko F. Fujio Museum is the same as the first episode of Doraemon.
13:54I don't know.
13:56What do you mean?
13:58I got a really good one.
14:00I immediately went to the museum.
14:03When you go inside, you can see the original works of famous manga such as Doraemon and Paman, which represent Fujiko F. Fujio's works,
14:13and various valuable materials such as the desk for the teacher's favorite.
14:18What we want to see this time is the window frame.
14:22The shape of the window frame is the same as the first episode of Doraemon.
14:29The shape of the window frame is the same as the first episode of Doraemon.
14:36I found the window frame.
14:40But I'm not sure.
14:44If you look from the inside, you can only see this.
14:47If you look from the outside, you can see the whole thing.
14:51If you look from the outside, you can see the whole thing.
14:55This is a dream.
14:57This is a dream.
15:00This is a dream.
15:04This is a dream.
15:06This is a dream.
15:08I wanted to say this.
15:11You wanted to say this, didn't you?
15:14This is amazing.
15:17The window frame of Kawasaki City, Fujiko F. Fujio Museum is the same as the first episode of Doraemon.
15:25I... I want to say.
15:27I like Doraemon.
15:29Wow, you got a high point.
15:31Why did he put Komawari and Madowako together?
15:35Fujiko F. Fujiko Sensei said.
15:37Give some more information.
15:39I said it carefully.
15:41It's hard for you to do it. Sorry.
15:43Fujiko F. Fujiko Sensei said.
15:45Fujiko.
15:46It's OK.
15:47Fujiko F. Fujiko Sensei.
15:50What's the difference?
15:51I want to say.
15:52D-Type.
15:54That's amazing.
15:56That's amazing.
15:58Two in a row.
16:00Fujiko F?
16:02Fujiko F?
16:04I want you to keep saying that.
16:06I want you to keep saying that.
16:08Do you know this?
16:14Are you okay?
16:16Uchimura-san, look at this.
16:18There's a turtle whose head is too big to fit in a shell.
16:22It's a shark!
16:24It's a shark!
16:26It hurts.
16:28You can see a lot of these types of turtles in Japan.
16:32You can put the head in a shell and hide.
16:36But there's a turtle whose head is too big to fit in a shell.
16:42Here it is.
16:44Look!
16:46This turtle is called the big-headed turtle.
16:50It lives in China and Southeast Asia.
16:54It has a big head.
16:56It's cute.
16:58The legs and tail can fit in a shell,
17:02but the head is too big to hide.
17:06There's a turtle whose head is too big to fit in a shell.
17:11That's it.
17:14I did it.
17:16I won.
17:17Isn't it cute?
17:19Your ending wasn't good.
17:21You should have said,
17:23You should have said,
17:25Uchimura-san.
17:27Do you know this?
17:36The British Cheese Commission
17:40When you eat cheese called Stilton before going to bed,
17:43you have a higher chance of having a strange dream.
17:46That's what they announced.
17:48What are you doing?
17:50I'm in a place where I've never seen before.
17:53In a tonjiru specialty store.
17:55What?
17:56That's not true.
18:00The miscellaneous things you want to say to people come out.
18:05Do you know this?
18:09Do you know this?
18:14The British Cheese Commission
18:17When you eat cheese called Stilton before going to bed,
18:21you have a higher chance of having a strange dream.
18:24That's what they announced.
18:26That sounds interesting.
18:28Stilton is a type of blue cheese.
18:31Along with Gorgonzola and Rockfall,
18:34It is known as one of the three largest blue cheeses in the world.
18:38According to a paper published by the British Cheese Commission in 2005,
18:43For 200 people,
18:45You have to eat 20 grams of cheese a week before going to bed.
18:52When you eat Stilton,
18:54Unlike other cheeses,
18:5675% of men and 85% of women have a strange dream.
19:03In addition, it is written about the content of the dream.
19:07Soft toys to talk
19:10Vegetarian traps that humans do not eat
19:14Soldiers who fight with bones instead of guns
19:18Certainly, the contents of the dream were written.
19:23If you eat Stilton before going to bed,
19:26Do you really have a strange dream?
19:30I actually tried it.
19:33The purpose of the experiment was not communicated to the four men and women.
19:37After eating 20 grams of cheese,
19:39It's rich and delicious.
19:41I got him to sleep.
19:43The next morning.
19:53Yes.
19:56Yes.
19:57Good morning.
20:00I'm sorry, but
20:02Did you have a dream yesterday?
20:04I saw it.
20:06Really?
20:07Yes.
20:08What kind of dream did you have?
20:10Well,
20:12A place where there is no wall at all
20:15I've been down the spiral staircase.
20:18I was dreaming at first.
20:21What was it?
20:23Did you open the door?
20:25When I opened it,
20:27I was in a place where I had never seen before.
20:31I'm being chased by something.
20:35The next participant is
20:38A boy was born in a relative.
20:41It's like a congratulations.
20:44I'm going to another relative and a tonjiru specialty store.
20:52As you can see, the contents of the four men's dreams.
20:57I'll leave it to you to decide whether to take it strangely or subtly.
21:03The British Cheese Commission said,
21:05If you eat cheese called Stilton before you go to bed,
21:08You have a higher chance of having a strange dream.
21:13I want to say.
21:14By the way, I ate this, too.
21:16What?
21:17I ate 20 grams of Stilton the night before the recording.
21:21I slept.
21:22I usually don't dream much, but I had a dream.
21:26For some reason, Mr. Chidori and the three of us,
21:30Mr. Daigo hit me.
21:34Mr. Nobu rated 52 points for the way he hit me.
21:40Isn't it subtle?
21:42Isn't it commonplace?
21:44Is it commonplace to be hit by Mr. Daigo?
21:47It's not strange to be hit anytime.
21:49You, too.
21:52If you want to tell someone, you'll have to do it three times.
21:54The second round of high school is Team Hasegawa.
21:59Do you know this?
22:01It's okay. It's really amazing.
22:03Really?
22:04Really.
22:05Look.
22:06It's a salad.
22:07You know this, don't you?
22:09Whether the mini tomatoes are sweet or not can be seen by floating in salt water.
22:17It is thought that when tomatoes are matured, their sugar level increases, and the water in their bodies decreases,
22:23so their density increases.
22:26When you add salt and increase their buoyancy,
22:29sweet tomatoes should continue to sink because they are heavy.
22:32So, prepare a super-common mini tomato bought at a supermarket,
22:37a water tank containing 2 liters of water, and salt.
22:43If you put a mini tomato in the water without salt,
22:47it will sink completely.
22:49Oh, it sinks.
22:50Yes, it sinks.
22:51If you put salt in at once, it will be difficult to dissolve,
22:53so scoop the water in the container with a cup,
22:55add 15 grams of salt for 1 tablespoon,
22:59dissolve it little by little,
23:01and return it to the water tank.
23:05The first time.
23:09The second time.
23:12Oh, it's coming up.
23:13It's coming up.
23:14Look, look, look.
23:16Only one tomato is floating.
23:18This is probably the sweetest tomato.
23:21If you measure its sugar level,
23:26it's 6.9 degrees.
23:27Please remember this figure.
23:30The third time.
23:34It's floating more and more.
23:36The fourth time.
23:38Oh, there's one down there.
23:40Look, look, look.
23:41Only one tomato is left, and it's all floating.
23:44It's the sweetest.
23:45Its sugar level is
23:499.0 degrees.
23:53Looking at the difference in sugar level from the first tomato,
23:57it's 2.1 degrees higher.
24:00As you can see, the other two tomatoes have the same sugar level.
24:03As expected, the tomato that was sinking was the sweetest.
24:09Whether or not the mini tomatoes are sweet,
24:11we'll know when they float in the salt water.
24:15It's a good time.
24:16It's a good time.
24:17It's a good time.
24:18It's a good time.
24:22It's a good time.
24:23It's a good time.
24:24Miyasa, seriously.
24:25He likes tomatoes.
24:26I thought I could make this for someone who wants to eat something sweet.
24:31You can.
24:32You can, right?
24:33No, no, no.
24:34Miyasa can't be popular at all.
24:35Hey!
24:36He doesn't have that kind of technique.
24:39Do you know this?
24:45Brazilian Jujutsu.
24:50In Brazilian Jujutsu,
24:52when the color of the obi changes after the incantation,
24:56it is celebrated with a painful ritual called obitataki.
24:59You don't know what it is yet, do you?
25:01No, I don't know what it means.
25:02I don't know what it means.
25:03You'll know when you see it.
25:06Brazilian Jujutsu is a combination martial art
25:08that focuses on ground techniques that have developed independently in Brazil.
25:14There is an incantation system in which the color of the obi changes five times
25:17depending on the period of study and performance.
25:21This time, I asked Mr. Matsumoto,
25:23who experienced the ritual of obitataki
25:25when he took the most difficult black obi.
25:31I heard that there is a ritual called obitataki.
25:34Yes.
25:35There is a festival-like ritual
25:37where everyone hits the obi
25:39as a celebration of the obi's increase.
25:43There is a video, so let's watch it.
25:46I'm going to hit the obitataki.
25:48Mr. Matsumoto.
25:49You're doing it as you think, right?
25:51Hit the obitataki.
25:54Kids are quite merciless.
25:57He's swinging it.
25:59That's amazing.
26:01Why?
26:03It hurts.
26:04It looks like it hurts for adults.
26:06I don't like it.
26:07How many people are doing this?
26:09That's amazing.
26:11His back is turning red.
26:15This is a traditional Brazilian Jujutsu celebration ritual
26:19to show the determination and endurance to endure pain and suffering.
26:26But everyone is smiling.
26:30Of course.
26:32Everyone is celebrating.
26:34He's smiling the most.
26:39I thought it was over, but it's still going on.
26:47It's a celebration.
26:50This is the second round.
26:54You can't stand it.
26:57Kids can still take it.
26:59It's cute.
27:02It's like this.
27:04Of course, it's not forced.
27:06The representative says,
27:08You can choose the second place.
27:10There's a joy that only those who have done it can understand.
27:15In Brazilian Jujutsu,
27:17when the color of the obi changes after the incantation,
27:20it is celebrated with the painful ritual of obitataki.
27:23He's pulling it.
27:25If you don't like obitataki, you're in second place.
27:28Some people end it with a handshake.
27:31It's a wonderful culture.
27:33Next.
27:34Let's go to Narahara.
27:38Do you know this?
27:48There's no sand in the sandbag.
27:53Obitataki?
27:54It doesn't sound like martial arts.
27:59At the dojo where we did the obitataki interview,
28:03I asked him to show me the contents of the sandbag.
28:06There's cloth in it.
28:10There's cloth in it?
28:12It's a normal cloth.
28:14It's a mix-up.
28:17Everything in the top is a piece of cloth.
28:22But he said he couldn't get that far.
28:26So I asked a manufacturing company.
28:29It's not sand.
28:31It's a piece of cloth.
28:33It's from a company that cuts clothes.
28:36It's from a company that cuts clothes.
28:39It's from a company that cuts clothes.
28:42It's recycled.
28:44It's recycled.
28:46Why is it called a sandbag?
28:51The word sandbag is a Japanese word.
28:55In the U.S., it's called a punching bag.
28:59In 1920, when boxing was introduced to Japan from the U.S.,
29:05I learned the practice of overseas fighters and brought it to Japan.
29:09But they only sent me a bag with nothing in it.
29:12I didn't know what to do.
29:16The shape was similar to a sandbag,
29:19so I just packed it in sand and used it.
29:23From then on, it was called a sandbag.
29:28I asked someone who had ever hit a sandbag with sand.
29:34The sand soon became damp and hard,
29:37and it became like concrete.
29:39It hurt so much that I couldn't hit it.
29:41It was almost never used.
29:46There's no sand in the sandbag.
29:50It's like a sandbag.
29:52It also had SDGs in it.
29:54I thought it was really good.
29:56The word sandbag is a Japanese word.
29:58It's amazing.
29:59It's a good idea.
30:02I want to say it.
30:04I want to say it.
30:06I want to say it.
30:07I want to say it.
30:08In the second round,
30:11which team's miscommunication touched Miyase's heart?
30:21Please say it.
30:22Yes!
30:23That was fast!
30:25Doraemon.
30:26Doraemon.
30:27This is strong.
30:29It's Egu.
30:30Other than that, the other two were like trash.
30:35The final round of the miscommunication battle.
30:38Team Chimura is in the lead.
30:42Do you know this?
30:46It's a pig.
30:47It's cute.
30:48It's cute.
30:50The piggy bank was born from a misunderstanding.
30:54I want to say it.
30:55I want to say it.
30:56What do you mean?
30:57It looks like it's going to pop.
30:59When it comes to piggy banks, the standard design is the pig.
31:03According to the world's piggy bank museum, Mitouri, who knows the history of piggy banks,
31:09the piggy bank was born in the UK in the 14th century.
31:16A craftsman who was asked to make a piggy bank made of red clay
31:21made a piggy bank by mistake.
31:24Why?
31:25The reason is that red clay is the same pronunciation as pig in English.
31:33It was a piggy bank born from a misunderstanding,
31:36but when I tried to sell it, people said it was cute.
31:40In addition, it is thought that if you use a piggy bank to raise a lot of children,
31:46you will get a lot of money, and it spread from the UK to the world.
31:53The piggy bank was born from a misunderstanding.
31:57I want to say it.
31:58I want to say it.
31:59In Germany, when there is an unexpected good thing,
32:04Schweinhabein.
32:05When you're lucky, Schweinhabein.
32:08Say it again.
32:10Schweinhabein.
32:11When you're lucky, Schweinhabein.
32:14What are you saying?
32:16Say it quickly.
32:18Schweinhabein.
32:20Say it slowly.
32:21I want to say it.
32:22Wow!
32:23Three points!
32:24This is impressive!
32:26Three points.
32:27That's amazing.
32:28Very good.
32:29Three points.
32:30Three points.
32:31It is a misnomer, but it is a person's model.
32:33It's a person's model.
32:36Do you know this?
32:42What's a padlock?
32:43I'm going to show you how to do it.
32:47You just need to pull the pen.
32:50It won't come off.
32:52It came off.
32:53It won't come off tomorrow.
32:54Let's check it out.
32:56Let's see how it works.
32:58First, you put the pen on the wall without doing anything.
33:04I'm going to attach 8g clips to see how long it will last.
33:09The first clip.
33:13The second clip.
33:15The third clip.
33:16It's amazing.
33:17It's surprisingly amazing.
33:19Then you keep putting the clip on.
33:22It's pretty strong.
33:24I put this on first.
33:27The fifteenth clip.
33:28Fifteenth clip.
33:32How is it?
33:33It's still going.
33:36Fifteen clips without doing anything.
33:40Next, you draw a line on the back of the glue.
33:51Then you attach the clip.
33:55It's easy. Anyone can do it.
34:00You draw a line on the back of the glue.
34:05Fifteen clips without doing anything.
34:07Fifteen clips without doing anything.
34:11It doesn't seem to come off, so I'm going to keep going.
34:14It's still going.
34:21Four more clips.
34:24It's amazing.
34:25It's still going.
34:26It's amazing.
34:27See?
34:28Twenty clips without doing anything.
34:31Here are the results of the same experiment.
34:35Clips without doing anything have an average of 12.6 clips.
34:39Clips with a water-based pen have an average of 16.6 clips.
34:44Just drawing a line with a water-based pen increased the adhesion by 31.7%.
34:51According to science trainer Ken Kuwako,
34:55If you draw a line with a water-based pen,
34:57the water contained in the ink of the pen is transferred to the material called acrylic, which is contained in the glue,
35:03and the adhesion is increased by the slightly inflated acrylic.
35:10Clips become harder to peel off just by drawing a water-based pen.
35:15This is really amazing.
35:18See?
35:20It hurts.
35:22Does that mean you're going to lose that part?
35:24You have to draw it.
35:25You can't draw that part according to the law.
35:28That's not true.
35:29It's over.
35:32It's over.
35:33This is the final round.
35:36This is Team Hasegawa.
35:38The winner will be decided here.
35:41Do you know this?
35:43In the Edo period, thin-haired samurai wore...
35:56See?
35:58Amazing.
36:03Next time, episode 8.
36:05This time, Masahiro, who plays me, will finally meet a mysterious man, Inugashira.
36:11Will his true identity be revealed?
36:13Don't miss it on Wednesday, March 5th at 10 p.m.
36:18Do you know this?
36:28In the Edo period, thin-haired samurai wore...
36:32See?
36:36According to Mr. Yamamura, who knows the history of the Edo period,
36:39samurai had to wear hairpins when they lost their hair.
36:44That's why they didn't have hair.
36:48If they were young and thin-haired samurai,
36:53they would wear hairpins.
36:56See?
36:57They would wear hairpins and hide their hair.
36:59The hair from the side to the back often remained.
37:02So, they tied their hair with hairpins at the back.
37:06Then, they bent their hair and put it on their head.
37:09What would happen if they completely lost their hair?
37:13They would die.
37:16They would retire.
37:18In the Edo period, thin-haired samurai wore hairpins.
37:23I want to say it.
37:25I want to say it.
37:26I want to say it.
37:27I want to say it.
37:28I want to say it.
37:29I finally said it.
37:32Seriously?
37:33I want to say it.
37:35I want to say it.
37:36This has been bothering me.
37:39This has been bothering you.
37:40This has been bothering me.
37:41I was wondering what I should do about it.
37:43It can't be helped.
37:44Right.
37:47Do you know this?
37:54It's by Miyako.
37:56A famous painter's painting has been displayed upside down for 77 years by mistake.
38:08In 2022, a work by a Dutch painter, Piet Mondrian, at the North Rhine-Westphalen Museum of Art,
38:17it became clear that the painting had been displayed upside down for 77 years.
38:24This is the painting.
38:27A work by Piet Mondrian, New York City 1.
38:34In this state, it was displayed upside down for 77 years without realizing it was upside down.
38:41From 1945 to 1980, it was displayed upside down at the New York Museum of Contemporary Art.
38:47Since 1980, it has been displayed upside down in Germany as well.
38:54When an artist at the museum happened to compare it with an old photo,
38:59he realized he had made a mistake.
39:03A famous painter's painting has been displayed upside down for 77 years by mistake.
39:11I want to say something.
39:13If you put the painting back in the right direction, the lines will come off because of the gravity.
39:20That's why it's still displayed upside down.
39:23It's a mistake.
39:25The third round of the game is over.
39:29The winner is decided by this result.
39:33Team Uchimura wins!
39:38Team Uchimura wins!
39:42Team Uchimura is the one who made a mistake.
39:47Team Uchimura is strong!
39:50Team Uchimura is the one who won.
39:52Team Uchimura will receive a gift from Miyase.
39:57It's my favorite beef tongue.
40:00I'm so happy!
40:03I'm so excited.
40:06It's a little rough.
40:08Out of all the miscellaneous games we have introduced,
40:10we will announce the miscellaneous game chosen by 5,000 people.
40:15You will also find miscellaneous games that make you want to tell people.
40:20Don't miss it!

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