if people knew how cool the truth is, there would be no need to make stuff up. Great stream I enjoyed it!
@brianneubecker4838
Күн бұрын
@kcloudz8182 greatest story ever told. It's better than fiction because you can't make it up, lol
@experienceanimation217
14 сағат бұрын
I must say. I read the books of Graham Hancock and Alice Roberts as a teen. Both got me Into archeology and mythology. Graham got people interested and inspired many, which we can't take away from him. But it's apparent that Graham is doing exactly what he claims "Archeologists" do, which is be over protective of an idea despite the abundant or lack of evidence and attacks those who try and dispute it. Your work and your colleagues work speaks for itself. A huge amount of YT channels are psuedo archeologist. But alot of them are just miss guided and don't mean any harm, so, more pros like yourself need to stand up and educate and guide people. Love the show, solid work. Keep it up. Sorry for the rant. I just feel that Quality professional archeological YT channels are hard to find and don't get the audience they deserve. But you will in time, and it's important to keep it up. Brains are melting out here from all the kaka.
@sorenzollamas
Күн бұрын
My main problem with the building of the pyramids is that most of the workers were old gizas!
@FlintDibble
17 сағат бұрын
Stealing
@owenjones3071
Күн бұрын
If you want to see fun but meaningful TV archeology try the original series of the UK show Time Team - one of my favourite shows ever!
@jimb9063
19 сағат бұрын
It had everything. Baldrick, a Yokel, and a Brummie digging the dirt. Loved the interaction between them and the Geo-phys folks!
@swirvinbirds1971
Күн бұрын
Ancient high tech civilization nuts are like Sasquatch believers... We just haven't looked 'everywhere' yet. 🙄
@lpr2244
Күн бұрын
Love the video!! Can’t wait for the next installment of this series, especially the collab with miniminuteman 💖
@filososabke
Күн бұрын
When merch was mentioned I was already imagining a Fedora with "real archeology rocks" on it 😅 Great stream, keep up the good work
@emma-on8hh
8 сағат бұрын
Graham Hancock won me over for like a full year when I first heard his theorys. You and Milo definitely helped me see through his psuedoscience. I'm actually so embarrassed I recommended ancient apocalypse to friends 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️ Your appearance on Joe Rogan was by far my favorite Joe Rogan episode to date. The way you dismantled him was incredible. That was probably one of the best live debunkings I've seen in my life. It was on par with James Randi and the spoon guy. Thank you for the work you do and I hope to see you on Rogan again. Also I really enjoyed you on bridges!
@coreyvandyke8778
Күн бұрын
Good choice for the name. It does kinda put you in the spotlight , every pseudo scientist and miss informer talk about Big Archaeology. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
@penelopemelson3797
Күн бұрын
❤ love the new hat
@FlyinRyan231
20 сағат бұрын
Really enjoy ur ch, can u please put the hat back on tho? The glare is terrible! Lol joking
@seanbeadles7421
Күн бұрын
Oh cool a Dr. Brad Lepper interview! I hope we get some juicy ohio valley archaeology discussion out of him
@MrChadwick
25 минут бұрын
Man i missed the livestream! I hope i can catch the next one
@penelopemelson3797
Күн бұрын
My bias is Occoms Razor. Horses not zebras. And that people are not all that different from each other.
@cleanpiecington2319
Күн бұрын
Imagine how many views he’d get if he mentioned Graham😂
@MossyMozart
20 сағат бұрын
He went head to head with Hancock on that Joe Rogan show not long ago. Then the Hancock sycophants flooded his university with letters demanding that he be fired. He was also _falsely_ accused of violating US federal law by mishandlng Native remains. They were vicious!
@russellmillar7132
Күн бұрын
To be fair, world population in 79 CE (Pompeii destruction) less than 300 million. Today's population about 8 billion. I'm happy for you, congratulations! Great show!
@FlintDibble
Күн бұрын
Thanks Russell!
@Aengus42
Күн бұрын
@@FlintDibble I can't initiate threads for some reason. Just wanted to say that was bloody brilliant Flint! I'll be at the front every lecture with a few bits of Hagoromo chalk just in case I need to ingratiate myself 😆 Could you do a piece on Roman lead pollution in ice cores and anything we've found before the Romans. No need to even mention "you know what". It's splendid evidence for when mankind (nearly) industrialised until a certain carpenter with a penchant for hanging around the harbour to meet all those butch trawlermen lost us 2,000 years of progress. We'd be colonising the local stars by now! I thought Flint, for your Dad to name you Flint, considering what his specialty was, he must've been so very proud of you! When I named my kids I know how much thought I put into it (if you were a guy called Leslie, you would too!) and it struck me when you mentioned what he studied. Apologies for replying here mate, I can't initiate a fresh comment for some reason. Looking forward to the next one, meantime, I'm exploring your links. 🍻 Lechyd da Flint! 🤠
@J.Battles
9 сағат бұрын
Thanks for this, Flint! Very excited about what you have planned for your channel!
@PalleRasmussen
17 сағат бұрын
Hey Flint. You know the experts? Do you happen know my friend Lars Grundvad? If not, he is worth knowing, and the various finds at Fæsted are amazing.
@McDevin77
11 сағат бұрын
Until I got into historical KZitemrs like TIK and Cynical Historian, I never considered historiography, which greatly biased my understanding of history Video games and movies also heavily bias my understanding of history Video games (specifically strategy games) make it more difficult for me to conceive of a world without nation states. They also make me think things like technological progress is more measurable than it is. Video games (especially multiplayer video games) also tend to portray different cultures nation states and empires in a morally neutral manner (I get it, no one wants to play as a bad guy, but it still probably skews my perspective) Movies of course narrativizes and individualizes my perspective on history. They make it difficult for me to see certain historical figures as human beings rather than archetypes. They also make me feel like humans have more agency when it comes to historical outcomes than they probably do.
@corrugatedcavalier5266
10 сағат бұрын
Around 19:00 perhaps not bias as most people think, but I tend to think about many things from a martial perspective first as that's my primary area of interest. Where common sees an embossed bronze dish, I may see a disc armor, etc.
@maninalift
14 сағат бұрын
When you (think you) know what's gone wrong with the audio but you aren't watching live and you just end up shouting at your phone 😂
@russellmillar7132
Күн бұрын
I have a bias. Archaeologists are all humble seekers of the truth and are free of biases. But you say nobody is free of biases? Damn...scratch that.
@kcloudz8182
Күн бұрын
You could leverage your conection with destiney to get him to help you with audio/video setup. Its like bait for him and its something he knows a lot about. Audio handling by computers can be fairly sophisticated, having a tech do setup can ensure you sound as beautiful as bossible.
@VeryBeautiful-u8t
20 сағат бұрын
Nice photo there buddy, you have my compliments.
@willmosse3684
Күн бұрын
My bias is towards the academic consensus. I’m willing to go against it with very good evidence. But that is my first point of call to a framework to put the new evidence into
@HeadofPlantGang
Күн бұрын
Nooo, I missed it!
@FlintDibble
Күн бұрын
Next time!
@MossyMozart
20 сағат бұрын
A *_year_* of chemotherapy? Oh, no! >_< I had chemo twice but for much shorter periods (cancer in my csse). Every drop of my empathy goes out to anyone enduring chemotherapy whether it is for cancer or not.
@FlintDibble
17 сағат бұрын
Yeah it was for melanoma, which hopefully ain't coming back after that. Wishing you strength too!
@Eyes_Open
4 сағат бұрын
Enjoyed the talk. Thanks.
@casualviewing1096
5 сағат бұрын
👌 nice hats dude
@jonni2317
Күн бұрын
"what about me? i saw the fall of troy, wwv, i pushed boxes at the boston tea party, now i'm gonna die, in a dungeon... in cardiff!" i'd like to visit cardiff someday
@jamierees6824
16 сағат бұрын
Cardiff is a nice city, but in all honesty Swansea is a "nicer" place to visit with some cool Neolithic sites within The Gower with one site (paviland cave ) dating back to 33,000 BCE.
@jonni2317
13 сағат бұрын
@@jamierees6824 i should really say i'd like to visit wales, i would love to visit paviland cave! maybe someday
@penelopemelson3797
Күн бұрын
My bias is Occoms Razor. Horses not zebras. And that people are not all that different from each other.
@MossyMozart
Күн бұрын
As someone with a rare immune deficiency that took my primary decades to recognize, at least in medicine, sometimes it _IS_ zebras.
@MossyMozart
Күн бұрын
PS: The immune deficiency forum has adopted the zebra as their logo. ^_^
@penelopemelson3797
20 сағат бұрын
@MossyMozart I have both autism and RA. Talk about zebras. In medicine zebras are horses.
@MossyMozart
20 сағат бұрын
@@penelopemelson3797 - Greetings!
@MossyMozart
Күн бұрын
I am so glad that Dr Dibble came to KZitem. Life is way too short to spend a second on pseudo baloney. Reality is so much more enthralling!
@Obsto123
19 сағат бұрын
Your channels has great potential. Just your personality and curiosity in the subject. Now you just need consistency and time to grow the channel. Wish you well
@timkbirchico8542
12 сағат бұрын
Hi, the sound is bad. Get a grip bro and get a good mike set up x
@barryrichins
15 сағат бұрын
Was there ever an Isrealite civilization In the Americas. I have met people who testify that such a community existed. Where did such and idea come from?
@seanbeadles7421
11 сағат бұрын
One of the early theories for the existence of native Americans (the peopleing of the Americas basically) was they were the “lost tribes of Israel”. This was like, in the 15th and 16th century, and then Joseph Smith, of Book of Mormon fame, adopted that concept and ran with it and it’s managed to stay in the fringes of public consciousness ever since. The land bridge/Beringia hypothesis started in the 16th century but it wasn’t the dominant theory in public consciousness until like, 100 years ago.
@ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095
9 сағат бұрын
I won't bother watching another live stream if you are going to be almost entirely inaudible. When you unnecessarily got up to get your hat you must have knocked something because you were suddenly *FAR* too quiet, muggy and distant. As if the microphone teleported into a bathroom 50 feet away. If you cannot learn to use your equipment properly your live streams are a waste of time. There's a political channel, _"A Different Bias",_ who has the same problem: high quality videos, utterly appalling live streams. And he shares your arrogance that it's not his fault and there's nothing he can do about it, so we should turn *OUR* volume up. Funny how it's only an issue on a small number of channels, don't you think? {:o:O:}
@FlintDibble
8 сағат бұрын
i never said it wasn't my fault, but it wasn't something i could figure out how to solve live on-the-spot, and since people in the chat were telling me to continue because they could hear me with the new mic, i did continue i've been working on improving my audio, and improving the channel as a whole. but it's a process, and costs money beyond my teacher salary. my experience is archaeology. i'm learning youtubing because people are interested in watching/listening end point. these technical issues with livestreams will be solved. but given their 'live' nature, sometimes they won't be solved adequately in the moment
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