Many of us don’t know the true origins of Valentine’s Day…scrap that, ALL of us don’t know the true origins of Valentine’s Day, but what most people can agree on is that Valentine’s Day originated after the death of St. Valentine. Come with me as I take a humorous, and probably offensive, look into this holiday’s mysterious origins.
Fun fact: this is the second video this month in which I apologize to black people.
500 subscribers! This is incredible. Wow. (more gushing on the actual video)
Time for a milestone giveaway. I think this giveaway is unique in the YouTube world. Maybe I’m wrong. Probably not though. I rarely am.
One random winner will receive a package from me in the mail/post. How I go about accumulating the item or items in this package is the magic. The winner and myself will have a short, 20 min or so, Google+ Hangout where I will get to know the winner. I will then use this data to go on a shopping spree to find something special for the winner. NOTE: Shopping “spree” will likely take place at a second-hand shop/thrift shop/charity shop, as my hope is to find something cost-conscious but still interesting.
The shopping excursion will be recorded, edited for maximum hilarity, and uploaded for all of YouTube to enjoy.
But that’s not all. There will be a second-place winner who will also receive a package. However, this package will contain purchases made solely on what I learn by creeping through your publicly available internet profiles. Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, I’ll use all of these methods to learn about you enough to hopefully find something special/probably weird.
But the “That’s Not All” doesn’t end there. How do I choose this runner up, you ask? Well, I don’t. I will ask the 1st place winner how he/she found out about my channel. That person will be the runner up.
To break it down for you, the more people you get to subscribe to my channel, the more chances you have of winning something.
If the winner doesn’t remember exactly how they came to my channel, I will let the winner simply choose who they want to be the runner up.
Rules:
Must be a subscriber
Must be over 18 years old
Must favorite this video
Must leave a comment on this video. Bonus points (not really) for suggestions for future videos.
And of course you must be willing to Google Hangout with me, live, for one short session, and you must be okay with me mailing something to you.
Status Starters:
I just had my mind blown by the best video I’ve seen in my entire life (also, I might win something). Watch it: http://youtu.be/7BGQPzeSRMY
@calebjross, yes the YouTube personality with the handome biceps, has 500 subscribers. You should be one: http://youtu.be/7BGQPzeSRMY
@calebjross is going shopping just for you. Simply subscribe to his YouTube channel (and win a random drawing): http://youtu.be/7BGQPzeSRMY
If you subscribe to the @calebjross YouTube channel, we both might win something cool (or lame): http://youtu.be/7BGQPzeSRMY
Watch this @calebjross 500 subscriber video. It might save a kitten: http://youtu.be/7BGQPzeSRMY
Mentioned:
The BookTube Network Google+ LIVE Hangouts are announced here:
To honor Black History Month I was prepared to make a “my favorite books I own by black Americans” video. But when preparing for this video, I noticed that I own very few books written by black Americans. I have plenty of books by non-whites and non-Americans so I can check diversity off of my white-guilt bucket list, but black Americans specifically seem under-represented. This video asks, why?
Also, I’ve somehow managed to work farts into this video. You’re welcome MLK.
Many people don’t realize that the term Super Bowl is trademarked, and is actually quite expensive to use, which is why one is likely to hear a version of the term “The Big Game” as a replacement in media not directly connected to the NFL.
What about all those other ubiquitous terms out there that are also trademarked? I’m going to look at 4 such terms in an effort to make you think I’m some fancy learnin’ specialist.
It’s been a while since I’ve done a book review. It feels weird, like I’m returning to an abandoned lover, hoping for a warm reception. Please, viewer, take me back!
This time I’m looking at The Colony by Jillian Weise, a novel about a science collective/get-away for people with genetic abnormalities. But this book is less The X-Men and more if Gilmore Girls had predispositions to suicide and strange abilities to grow missing appendages. Trust me, it makes sense.
Should you be interested in reading The Colony, I’d appreciate you purchase using the link below (I get a very small percentage):
Like most reasonable people, I tend to shy away from the grandiose, unachievable New Year’s Resolutions. Really, even though it took you 30 years to gain all that weight, you’re going to lose all of it in a single year? Sure, that’s reasonable.
Rather, I’m sticking to some promises that I might actually be able to keep. Join me. We can underachieve together.
The title says it all. I give a few books what’s coming to them. The torch comes this time to Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, Philip K. Dick’s A Scanner Darkly, Amy Hempel’s The Collected Stories, Denis Johnson’s Tree of Smoke, Lorrie Moore’s A Gate at the Stairs, and J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye.