This video was made possible by Ting Mobile. Get $25 off your cell phone bill at hai.ting.com. Since Half as Interesting Incorporated has
finally grown into the world-dominating tech-media conglomerate I always dreamed of, we were
planning to skip our annual mistakes video this year and adopt one of big tech greatest
traditions: never admitting to any of our mistakes ever. Unfortunately, we were instead forced to follow
another of big techâs greatest traditions: being called to sweatily defend our highly
profitable, ethically questionable business practices in front of Congress. âDo you see a potential problem here with
a complete lack of fact-checkingâ Well I wouldnât call it a complete lack of fact
checking. We do make a yearly episode that flags what
we got wrong. âYou may flag that itâs wrong, but you
wonât take it downâ Um⌠I guess not? âSo you wonât take down lies, or you will
take down lies? I think this is just a pretty simple yes or
no.â Well I donât know if I would call them lies;
most of the mistakes are just pronouncing stuff too Frenchy. âItâs almost like you think this is a
joke. When you have ruined the lives of many people.â Jeez, I donât think mispronouncing things
really ruins peopleâs lives. I mean, these videos are just a way to make
people laugh. âDo you -- do you agree with me that you
better come up with different ways, because this ain't working?â Wow, thatâs kind of harsh. I mean, surely you guys have laughed at some
of my jokes, right? âObviously thatâs a no.â Oh. Okay. Maybe weâre not as funny as we thought. âWell -- and I'm glad that you all have
gotten that message.â Okay, you know what, you guys are being kind
of mean. Look, I made the mistakes video you asked
for. Do you want to see it or not? âMhm.â Oookay cool. We started our third year out strong with
some mistake-ceptionâa mistake in our last video about mistakes. We had originally said that this password
was stronger than this password, but then commenters pointed to this XKCD comic saying
how that was incorrect, and I foolishly believed them, until commenters on that corrections
video did maths and stuff to prove that the xkcd comic was wrong. The moral of the story is, I was right in
the first place, and I should never listen to commenters again. In the video about the cruise ship people
live on, my mistake was trusting in the law, because I used photos in a way that definitely
followed fair use guidelines, but still got a cease and desist and then a copyright strike. Next, in this video, I over-trusted my aviation
advisors over at Wendover Productions when I said the hours the Dutch king flew for KLM
were to maintain his pilotâs license, because technically, a pilotâs license itself lasts
for life unless itâs revoked. In order to maintain currency, though, especially
as a commercial pilot, you also need to fly a certain number of hours within a certain
time period, which is what the king was doing. Moving to corrections so esoteric I barely
understand them, in the eruv video, we referred to the eruv wire as a symbolic wall, but apparently,
the two poles holding up the wire and the wire itself technically form a gate, so itâs
actually a whole miles long stretch of open gates, which apparently still satisfies the
law. Then in our video about the null license plate,
we said that there's no simple solution to the problem of databases confusing the word
ânullâ with nothing, but apparently there is. Now for a grammatical error, the video âThe
Highway Where Cars Are Bannedâ was briefly titled âWhy Highway Where Cars are Banned,â
which isnât words, and the video about New Yearâs started with âthis video is made
possibleâ which is words, but isnât the words every single other video starts with,
which are âthis video was made possible.â Gotta keep the brand consistent. Now letâs get to the mispronunciations. Ready? I pronounced âPeterboroughâ and âDerbyâ
like a filthy yank, I got all French said âGuymon,â Oklahoma when it should be Guymon,
Oklahoma, I got all logical and pronounced Whangarei, âWhangarei,â which in my defense
is the way it looks like it should be pronounced, I got all French again and said buffet like
âbuffet,â and I got too not-caring-about-board games and called the game Euchre âEuchreâ
which really upset the 6 people in the world who care about Euchre. But in the end, are these mispronunciations
really that big of a deal? Iâd say no. âWhoa, let me stop you right there. You say no? No?â Um, yeah. I mean I donât think that mispronounced
words make me a bad person.âAt best you are incompetent. At worst you are complicit. Either way you should be fired.â Okay, wow. That seems harsh. Just let me keep going. Now for some on-screen errors, our 600-person
graphics team had a banner year. In the video about Armeniaâs internet, I
said 12.6 Terabytes per second, whereas on screen it said this, which stands for terabits
per second; in the drunk trader video, the screen wrongly displayed $72,000 filthy, capitalist
US dollars when in the voiceover I was taking about 72,000 beautiful, constitutionally monarchical
pounds sterling; in the video about the nonexistent train station, I said Dover but showed a shot
of Beachy Head, which is two hours away, but in our defense does have a much funnier name;
in the middle ages conspiracy video, we referred to the Tang dynasty, but showed Emperor Yang
of the Sui dynasty, and in the video about how Poland invaded the Czech Republic, the
thumbnail originally showed the Czech Republic invading Polandâbut seemingly nobody noticed,
and we swapped it out a few minutes after upload, which means nobody will ever know
there was a mistake at all, unless some idiot makes a video admitting to it. Sometimes, though, the graphics team was right
but my mouth words were wrong, like in the Olympics scam video, when I wrongly said 13th
when the screen rightly said 30th, and in the one about mailing babies, when I incorrectly
referred to the nonexistent towns of Grangeville and Lewiston Ohio, while the screen correctly
referred to the real towns of Grangeville and Lewiston Idaho. We were both wrong in the video about keys
that can turn off the internet, when we incorrectly listed Paul Kane as a key-holder. He actually retired in 2017 and was replaced
by Kristian Ărmen from Denmark. There were two videos where the mistake was
making them in the first place: this one about Lawnchair Larry, because itâs our least
viewed video of all time, and this one about Australia being a US corporation, because
I used a viewer suggestion without realizing they had gotten the idea from a video Economics
Explained had done on the exact same topic, which was posted a few weeks before and was
also longer and also better. Now, though, letâs talk about a few mistakes
that werenât mistakes. In our most expensive things video, some people
took objection to our reference to Omaha, Nebraska as Gerald Fordâs hometown when
he mostly grew up in Grand Rapids, Michiganâbut guess what, he was born in Omaha, so youâre
wrong and you should feel bad. In the Antarctic accent video, a bunch of
commenters claim that we made a mistake and circled the wrong vowel but I really donât
understand how and linguistics also sucks and we will never make a video on it again,
and in the buffalo video, a lot of you pointed out that nearly all our footage is of the
American Bison, which are not technically buffalos, but guess what: in the US and elsewhere
the Bison has been commonly called the Buffalo for centuries, so boo-yah. Finally, letâs take a moment of silence
for our most tragic mistake yet: in the United CEO video, we had our fake airplane completely
miss Charlotte Douglass Airport and disappear somewhere in northern Alabama, killing hundreds
of fake people. So, those are all the mistakes. Does anyone from the committee have more questions? âI do not like that Sam-I-Am. Do you like green eggs and ham?â Um⌠well my name is Sam, not Sam-I-Am, and
thatâs kind of rude, and also, no, I donât. âWould you eat them in a box? Would you eat them with a fox?â Okay, well forcing me to eat them in a confined
space with a fox is worse. You do see how thatâs worse, right? âYou may like them, you will see. You may like them in a tree!â Okay is that a threat? Because that definitely sounds like a threat. This guy is freaking me out, does anyone else
have questions? âHow do you sustain a business model in
which users don't pay for your service?â Well, uh, we do ads. âI see. That's great.â Thanks, I guess. So anywaysâwe talked a lot about my mistakes
today, but if youâre often around WiFi, youâre probably making a huge mistake: overpaying
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can try it out with a $25 credit at hai.ting.comâwhich, by the way, is a pretty great deal, considering
the average bill is only $23 a month. I mean, the worst that could come of this
is you getting a month of free cell service, so, once again, head to hai.ting.com.
Thumbs up for the congress scene (even If I can't because nebula)
Found an error in your mistakes video: At 7:27 (Nebula Mean Time) you claim that users don't pay for your content, which is not the whole truth, because there are nebula subscribers, who do pay for your content and don't get ads.
Does anybody know what episode he says "Peterborough" in?