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Outtakes #4: Crash Course Psychology
YouTube: | https://youtube.com/watch?v=J_poRAsCeuY |
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View count: | 139,362 |
Likes: | 2,906 |
Comments: | 182 |
Duration: | 04:30 |
Uploaded: | 2014-12-01 |
Last sync: | 2024-12-08 22:30 |
Citation
Citation formatting is not guaranteed to be accurate. | |
MLA Full: | "Outtakes #4: Crash Course Psychology." YouTube, uploaded by CrashCourse, 1 December 2014, www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_poRAsCeuY. |
MLA Inline: | (CrashCourse, 2014) |
APA Full: | CrashCourse. (2014, December 1). Outtakes #4: Crash Course Psychology [Video]. YouTube. https://youtube.com/watch?v=J_poRAsCeuY |
APA Inline: | (CrashCourse, 2014) |
Chicago Full: |
CrashCourse, "Outtakes #4: Crash Course Psychology.", December 1, 2014, YouTube, 04:30, https://youtube.com/watch?v=J_poRAsCeuY. |
In this episode of Crash Course Psychology, Hank has trouble saying the words and posits a world in which he can be hypnotized to forget things just so he can enjoy them all over again.
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Director: Let's do it once again without the blink.
Hank: (Laughs) Now I'm thinking about blinking. Am I blinking? I don't know! (Laughs) Do it one more time without the blink. Blinkblinkblinkblinkblink. (Laughs) I cannot - I can no longer not blink.
(0:15) Intro music plays.
They just kind of crack, confessing something very important about their adolescence in the process, which is the struck - ahh.
By this stage in life, most of us have begun exploring intimate relationships, whether that's a steady sweetheart or just an OKpew - pewpewpewpid? OKPewkid. That's - don't go on that site.
Just a reminder about how things - zzzzzllu. Just a reminder about how things like, uh, so bad at words.
What song is it?
Michael Aranda: I've never seen The Breakfast Club.
Hank: Gasps.
Offscreen voice (John?): WHAT? My gawd. Michael, you're missing out on something important!
Hank: American psychologist Lawrence Kkuuuuwberg...
You might want to take a day - you might - might need to back off and take a nap!
You might need tobehh (beep) dyah!
Which emphasize the notion that our mornerstern. Mr.
Well, American psychologist Lawrence Kohlberg modified and expanded and blew it aaah...
Psychologist Raymond Ca - ca... why it wasn't on this? Ca? Cat? I have no idea how to say this.
This type of experiential intelligence gets stronger with age, as we continue to take in knowledge and understanding. It's my part and it's y part and gardi part?
But one thing is certain. What we experience during our first years on our planet arrrrrr arr! Arr!
On the other hand the permissive parent often caved to their child's demands and exerts little control or (gags)
Sometimes I worry that that's going to happen and I'm never going to be able to talk again.
That becomes severe enough to interfere with rether - with rether? Rether.
Alzheimer's disease is a form of progressive irreversible dementia; first memory declines, then reasoning, then eventually basic physee - physeeological? Physeeological? That's not a word.
That it's not part of normy - normy? Normy healthal aging.
But in the 1950s, American psychologists Harry and Margaret Harlow came along with a barrel of monkeys, complicating and illuminating or dideedideedi,
Care- care - care - (tongue noise)
The authoritative parent, meanwhile, (mouth noise)
We talked last week about Jean Piaget and his three-tiered model for cognitive development. Well, Amer - (burp)
How well you take care of your body counts for a lot.
But the big question is: why? Why do we do anything? I mean, why bother ever changing out of pff...eh.
And loving touch and care are tremendously important, but filam - filaments. Filamentierity.
They all set the stage for our adollol. Adollolol. This is it? This is the... I guess... OK. Yeah.
For example, dogs instinctively shake their fur - fyuur. Fyuur.
The unfamili -
Your zookeeper or whoe - whoemememe. (Beep) So many words.
My need for food and my hunger and behavior is eating. Is that right?
You're bored and lonely and getting weird, so you call up some friends and go mountain biking or to go to a go to a tg - tgatgatga.
(Blank stare)
Obscure biologist Charles Darwin, not actually - (laughs)
This so-called imprinting process can be difficult to reverse, which can make it a big a - peacko! peacock peacock bawk bawk bgabga.
Last week we talked about Jean Piaget and his three-tiered model for "cognitive development" well American psychologist - tongue noise.
This is going to be good when we get it. It's going to be so good. Everybody's going to say "wow, that was a really great take."
Hank: (Laughs) Now I'm thinking about blinking. Am I blinking? I don't know! (Laughs) Do it one more time without the blink. Blinkblinkblinkblinkblink. (Laughs) I cannot - I can no longer not blink.
(0:15) Intro music plays.
They just kind of crack, confessing something very important about their adolescence in the process, which is the struck - ahh.
By this stage in life, most of us have begun exploring intimate relationships, whether that's a steady sweetheart or just an OKpew - pewpewpewpid? OKPewkid. That's - don't go on that site.
Just a reminder about how things - zzzzzllu. Just a reminder about how things like, uh, so bad at words.
What song is it?
Michael Aranda: I've never seen The Breakfast Club.
Hank: Gasps.
Offscreen voice (John?): WHAT? My gawd. Michael, you're missing out on something important!
Hank: American psychologist Lawrence Kkuuuuwberg...
You might want to take a day - you might - might need to back off and take a nap!
You might need tobehh (beep) dyah!
Which emphasize the notion that our mornerstern. Mr.
Well, American psychologist Lawrence Kohlberg modified and expanded and blew it aaah...
Psychologist Raymond Ca - ca... why it wasn't on this? Ca? Cat? I have no idea how to say this.
This type of experiential intelligence gets stronger with age, as we continue to take in knowledge and understanding. It's my part and it's y part and gardi part?
But one thing is certain. What we experience during our first years on our planet arrrrrr arr! Arr!
On the other hand the permissive parent often caved to their child's demands and exerts little control or (gags)
Sometimes I worry that that's going to happen and I'm never going to be able to talk again.
That becomes severe enough to interfere with rether - with rether? Rether.
Alzheimer's disease is a form of progressive irreversible dementia; first memory declines, then reasoning, then eventually basic physee - physeeological? Physeeological? That's not a word.
That it's not part of normy - normy? Normy healthal aging.
But in the 1950s, American psychologists Harry and Margaret Harlow came along with a barrel of monkeys, complicating and illuminating or dideedideedi,
Care- care - care - (tongue noise)
The authoritative parent, meanwhile, (mouth noise)
We talked last week about Jean Piaget and his three-tiered model for cognitive development. Well, Amer - (burp)
How well you take care of your body counts for a lot.
But the big question is: why? Why do we do anything? I mean, why bother ever changing out of pff...eh.
And loving touch and care are tremendously important, but filam - filaments. Filamentierity.
They all set the stage for our adollol. Adollolol. This is it? This is the... I guess... OK. Yeah.
For example, dogs instinctively shake their fur - fyuur. Fyuur.
The unfamili -
Your zookeeper or whoe - whoemememe. (Beep) So many words.
My need for food and my hunger and behavior is eating. Is that right?
You're bored and lonely and getting weird, so you call up some friends and go mountain biking or to go to a go to a tg - tgatgatga.
(Blank stare)
Obscure biologist Charles Darwin, not actually - (laughs)
This so-called imprinting process can be difficult to reverse, which can make it a big a - peacko! peacock peacock bawk bawk bgabga.
Last week we talked about Jean Piaget and his three-tiered model for "cognitive development" well American psychologist - tongue noise.
This is going to be good when we get it. It's going to be so good. Everybody's going to say "wow, that was a really great take."