(rooster crows)
(lion roars) - Welcome to Good Mythical More. Can we solve riddles faster than you? Let's see what we can do, huh? - Well, I'll tell you what we can do. We can give $1,000 to the American Foundation
For Suicide Prevention to aid in their mission to
give those affected by suicide a nationwide community
empowered by research, education, and advocacy. The AFSP has given 30 years of service to the suicide prevention movement and is dedicated to saving
lives and bringing hope to those affected by suicide. Please join us in giving AFSP.org. - Thank you for being your mythical best. So we got us, we've got some riddles that are going to be presented
to us that are impossible. Impossible riddles. - [Stevie] I feel as if
they are very difficult. I'm very bad at riddles though. - Yeah, I'm not too great at riddles, riddles on the dark. - Okay.
- You want the first one? - Let's go, yeah, I guess. - Hit us. - [Stevie] What word
is pronounced the same if you take away four of its five letters? - What word is pronounced the same if you take away four of its five letters? - Ah! - Yeah, but that would be if you take, it would just be H it would be left. - It would just be an a, ah, 'cause it leaves one letter, right? If you take away four of its five letters, then it would only have one letter left. - Or is pronounced. Oh, but I think it's
probably gotta be like, like, you know, hey, or it's got to be a word that-- - Four of it's five letters. - It's gotta be a word
that saying a letter, just one letter, like I, but then I also. - Yeah, I don't know. - You? - But we are right in thinking that it's a one letter word or
it's with just one letter. - [Stevie] Yeah. - You would be like, well
no, 'cause E-W-E, no. Why? That's just three and one, no. - [Stevie] I think this would
be easier if you were British. - Oh, what's their word for? - Johnny Rockin, what? - What, what's the word for-- - Bobby. - Not a muffin. Muffin. - Biscuit. - A biscuit, yeah, a
biscuit's a cookie, that's it. - T, tea. - Tee. - Tea! - Oh, a British word. - Aye. Hey. - I give up, what is it? - [Stevie] Oh, come on, you
were on the right track. - Oh really? - [Stevie] It's a word that we
don't use here for something, but when you take away
four of the letters, the letter you're left
with is also the word. - See. So it's just-- - It's also the word? - [Stevie] Yeah. - So it's just-- - They use the same alphabet
over there, don't they? - It's a letter. - [Stevie] It's a letter. - B, C, A? Z, X, X. R, R, that kind of works. - Queue. - [Stevie] Yes. - I got it. Okay, I got it. Give me another one, I'm on a roll. - [Stevie] Tear one off
and scratch my head. What once was red is black instead. - Lottery ticket. - [Stevie] What am I? - Tear one off.
- Match. - Scratch my head, that's it. - [Stevie] Yeah, that one
was, that was pretty easy. - I wouldn't say it was easy. - [Stevie] Okay, yeah, no,
you're really good at riddles. What do you call a room
with no windows or doors? - A pit. - A box. - [Stevie] I feel like
this is more of like a, you know those popsicle stick jokes. This is to me less of a riddle, more of a Popsicle stick joke. - Claustrophobic. - A trap. - [Stevie] No. - A room with no windows, no doors. - A problem. A mistake. All of mine are true, wouldn't you say? A room with no window. Should we be taking this literally, or I take it like a pun,
it's like a pun, right? - [Stevie] Yeah. - Not a pun, but a--
- Dark. - Cheesy joke, it's more
of a joke than a riddle. - Dark?
- Yeah. No, it, it has the word room in it. - Call a room with no windows or doors. A dumb room. - A dark room. - A dark room. - [Stevie] I thought you
were about to say it. - A dark. - A mail room. - [Stevie] It starts with an M. - A man room. (chuckles) - [Stevie] What? A man room? - Yeah, you know, like
when I hear the word M, first word I think of is man. - A mole room. - [Stevie] No, this is a
word that's an actual word. A singular, actual word
that starts with an M and has the word room in it. - Mail room. Is that you said? - Yeah. Mushroom. - [Stevie] Yeah. - Oh, a mushroom. Hey Stevie, before you do the next one, - That's dumb.
- I want to remind you. Next week is the last week for
third degree monthly members of the Mythical Society to
get the final collectible item of 2020, which is our
bobbleheads, which are over there. They come in a box. It's the only way to get those things. - They come in a mushroom. - And the only way to get
it, third degree members is the only way to get it
joined third degree monthly by October 31st or third
degree quarterly or annual by December 31st to qualify. Visit MythicalSociety.com
for details, okay? Give me another riddle. - [Stevie] Thank you for reminding me. - You're welcome. - [Stevie] Turn me on my
side and I am everything. Cut me in half and I am nothing. What am I? - Wow. This is-- - A math.
- Math joke. Oh, turn me on my side. - And I'm everything, cut me in half and I'm nothing, a mirror? - I think it's a math joke. Cut me in half and I'm not there. - I think it's something
that if you were to cut, it would go away. - Like a balloon. - Oh, no, infinity. - Cut me in half, no, if
you cut infinity in half, that's three. - An eight. - [Stevie] Yeah! Morgan gave me a hand. - Morgan over there giving you a hint. - [Stevie] What'd you do, Morgan? Morgan, Morgan? - [Morgan] Turn the infinity sideways. - Yeah 'cause it's infinity, and then you cut it in half, - [Stevie] Oh here I am
being all proud and excited. - Well you can be proud
'cause I said infinity. But then I didn't realize what happens when you could cut it in half. - All right, give me another one. - [Stevie] What objectively
tastes better than it smells? - Objectively? - Not coffee. - Huh? What tastes better? - 'Cause coffee objectively
smells better than it tastes. - Broccoli tastes better than it smells. - But this is objectively
not subjectively. So, something that ... - A mouth. - Yeah, a tongue. - [Stevie] Yes. - Was it tongue? - [Stevie] It's a tongue, but
I think mouth is fine too. - Yeah, it was like what? Yeah, it's the tool. It is not the something
that it interacts with. - All right, are you writing these down? Wow your friends with these riddles. - [Stevie] Are you writing these down? - Oh gosh, that's a good riddle, I gotta, pause it, I gotta write that down. - [Stevie] The more you take, the more you leave behind. - The less you take? - [Stevie] The more you take, the more you leave behind, what am I? - Something about like life, like time. - The more you take? - Time? The more time you take, the less. - Yes, the more you leave behind. - [Stevie] That's good. It's not the answer, but I like that. - That's an alternate answer.
- That's not it? - [Stevie] No, this is a
little bit more literal. - The more you take, the
more you leave behind? - [Stevie] But it's also kinda-- - Love? - [Stevie] Love? - The more rope you take, the more you leave behind. - [Stevie] That also also works. You know what, time and rope
are better than this answer, I feel like, the answer is fingerprints. - The more you take? - That's not true.
- What? - [Stevie] Like if you steal something. - Yeah, yeah, yeah, the more you take, the more you leave behind,
that's pretty good. - [Stevie] Or you touch, I
don't really know, your skin? Let's move on. You see a boat filled with people. It has not sunk, but when you look again you don't see a single
person on the boat, why? - They all jumped off. (laughs) - It has not sunk, but when you look away? - When you look again, you don't see a single person on the boat, because the boat has a platform on top that just dropped down below the horizon. - When you look again, you don't see a single person on the boat. - The boat is filled with people. It has not sunk. When you look again, you don't see a single person on the boat. - 'Cause they're all under,
they're all below deck. - It can't be that simple, right? It's just like something
that happens immediately. - You see a boat filled with
people, filled with people. How do you fill about with people? - Oh, there's couple of ways. - [Stevie] This is like a, I wanted to say I was trying to find a relative
that would tell this joke, 'cause it's not a dad, it's
more of a joke than a riddle, in my opinion, it's not a dad joke. It's more like a, like
a second cousin joke. Like a great aunt would
tell this joke, I feel like. - So it's not super dirty. - But it's not like a second grader joke? - [Stevie] No. - Or a second grader who
happens to be a father? - [Stevie] Well, I don't know to ask you. - I got it. It's a married cruise. - [Stevie] Yeah, all
the people were married. It was the great aunt hint, wasn't it? - Single person. - Yeah, that's it. - Single person on the boat. It's a marriage cruise, love those. Me and my wife, we are bonded. - [Stevie] You are lost in the woods and the path you are
following forks into two. One path will lead you to safety, while the other will cause
you to be lost forever. At the fork are two twin sisters who know which path is which. The sisters are identical
every way except one. One of the sisters always tells the truth, while the other always lies. You can ask only one question and you don't know which sister is which. What can you ask them so
you know which path to take? - You have to ask one of the sisters. You can only ask one question, but you got to ask one
of the sisters a question about the sister.
- That when you lie. - About the other sister. - But you can't ask a follow up question. So it does need to be, the
answer has to be the direction. So you have to ask it in a way that they both give the same answer. So 'cause if they give opposite, they have to give the same
answer for you to know. Right? That's the only outcome. So you got to ... - So what's a way to ask a question about whether or not you would, one of the ways is to safety and one of the ways is to be lost forever. Which way would you get an answer that both a truth and a lie would
lead you to the same answer? Is that a correct reasoning? - [Stevie] Yeah, you guys
are on the right path. - So if, oh, no, we're not. We don't know which path to take. - Are you, are you a twin? - So if it's something like I am going, what if it's
like, I'm going this way. Stop me if-- - Well that's not a question. - I mean, I might set up shop right there. One of them it's like, hey, you single? - Is ... I don't know, man. - [Stevie] I'm going to
read the answer and then-- - I'm going to kill you if you-- - [Stevie] Me? - Can we bring murder into this? 'Cause it seems like a,
seems like a grim fairytale, the opening scene. - Do you want to, would you
like to go with me this way? (crew laughs)
- Yeah, yeah, yeah. - Does this go anywhere? - That's it, it's like I'm going to follow you. - Would you like to go
with, I just pick one, I'd say, "would you like
to go with me this way?" And if she says "yes" and she's lying, then that means that I
shouldn't go that way. And if she says no and
she's telling the truth, she's saying I shouldn't go
that way as well, that works. You ask one of them, "would you like to go with me this way?" - One of them will say yes. - If she's saying yes, it's the right way, then you should go. If she says no, you shouldn't go. Right? - [Stevie] So let me just read this, 'cause I'm, okay. - Does that work? - I think that works.
- This is what it says. Ask one of the sisters which path their sister would tell you to take. Let's say the left hand path
is the correct one to follow. The sister that lies knows
their truthful sister would tell you the left hand
path, so as they always lie, they will tell you the right hand path. The honest sister knows their lying sister will tell you the right hand path, and because they're honest,
they will tell you this. So you should follow the opposite path to that which you are told, regardless of which sister tells you. - I couldn't get there, but my instinct to get them to ask a question
about the other one was right. I just couldn't find a way to get to it. It was just too, too, too complex. But now, if I ever find
myself in that situation. - Yeah, that's good to know. - Yeah, yeah, thanks for the tip. - Be like wow, and I'll be like dang. I wish I would've listened
to closely to how Stevie. So now my question is if
I have somewhere to be, would you tell me to leave now or to stay? - Well, it depends what's
on the line or not. - Should I stay or should I go? - You should go. - Where am I going? (upbeat music) Yeah, I got somewhere to be. - You got any more riddles? - [Link] Join the Mythical
Society third degree monthly by October 31st to get the
Rhett and Link bobbleheads. Third degree quarterly and
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