That was cheap. And why did it also LOOK like you blew on it? Because I am quite certain that is not how smoke would behave next to a speaker. While I am aware that it is possible to extinguish flame with the changing air pressure generated by a speaker, I am also aware that it is a rather difficult effect to achieve. I would be utterly unsurprised if you had blown on it because you were unable to achieve the desired effect with your setup (and you’re saying you “added the blowing sound effect” as an excuse), although that it not to say I would not be disappointed. So tell me, am I right? Or did my imagination just run a bit wild..?
The blowing sound effect was evil, I was like “damn I’m being gaslit”. The apple one looked a bit too fake though so I went with my gut and said that one anyway.
I choose the apple cause when i heard the blow sound effect and the candle it felt too obvious. its like that one time where he made a obvious cut in the video to make it seem fake a while back
@@Omari-Borcoda Yeah, it looked like a blue mask on the video rather than something on the actual apple. That was my first guess from the thumbnail, even before seeing that the first two were things I'd seen physics youtubers do in the last couple of weeks.
The phenomenon in the second video is called sympathetic resonance and it happens all the time, it’s super interesting and I recommend looking into it if you’re into the science of sound and harmonics
This is your best one yet. You made all 3 seem "no way." Knew it wasn't 2 because I like playing with resonance frequencies, but I could practically see the digital brush on that apple.
How are the 2 first a "no way"? 1. Sound waves can move stuff but not blow out a candle?? 2. And that's just how tuning forks work. Probably the easiest of these he's made imo.
What are the two replies above me? The guy literally said they knew it wasn't 2 because of resonant frequencies and that they could tell the apple was edited. Are y'all alright?
The tuning fork one is called sympathetic resonance, it's a cool concept to see in action. I knew about the candle because certain sound waves can actually put out fires.
the tuning fork one is called sympathetic resonance i think and its kinda cool to see used for natural 'reverb' on some traditional instruments around the world
Yeah it's a really fun thing. You get really good at recognizing it when you play timpani a lot since its one of the easier ways to tune the notes you need for a performance.
Pianos actually use this too! Almost all of the strings on a piano are dampened when not played, but the highest notes are not dampened at all, allowing for those strings to resonate sympathetically. This gives a subtle sparkly reverb effect. Try it next time you're near piano, play a short, low note and hear the piano reverberate!
I deal with it all the time as I play viola and violin, when I play tones that are either harmonics, unisons, or octaves of a string, that string will vibrate if it isn’t already
theres also that norweigan violin (Hardanger fiddle) with a matching pair of strings going from the bridge up inside the fingerboard of the violin purely for sympathetic resonance@@erevansilverfrond4911
As a musician, I immediately knew the tuning fork one was true. It’s called sympathetic vibration. Usually when my ensemble finishes sustaining a chord, we can hear the piano’s strings continue to play the chord for a few seconds after the fact (to clarify, there is no person playing or sitting at the piano at this point)
I heard this and went back to check that he said the tuning forks were identical before confirming that I knew it was true, we learned in orchestra back in high school that if we were really in tune with a note, the open string on a different octave (A, D, G, or C for me) would resonate
@@burnsboy101 If I clap while a gun is fired and told people that a gun makes a [clap] noise. Obviously the clap is fake, but the gun firing is real. Weird analogy, yes... but i cant think of anything to describe it better
I was like that makes it sound like it's fake but I could have swore I've seen a video talking about this before probably by the action lab. But I could be getting the CZcams channel name wrong.
I was lucky I had heard about an app that used the first thing and I knew enough about resonant frequency to know that the second one probably made sense
@@Galaxxymeeps nah man, about how your instrument can make other instruments and stuff vibrate as you play. It's like how when you play one string, it'll make the rest of your strings vibrate a little, especially the G string.
I figured out this one was the apple immediately because the candle one I feel like I’ve learned about before, tuning forks makes sense to me because I remember playing in orchestra and when a violin played a note, I could feel my own violin vibrate to the note even though I wasn’t playing. Metal has a tendency to have sounds continue to linger (dropped a metal pot on the ground too often for this). So process of elimination just made me guess the apple
Being a musician, I can proudly say that I understand sympathetic resonance (if only because my acoustic guitar can never shut up when I'm playing piano; it'll add an unwanted hall reverb effect whenever I play certain notes 😅)
Speaking of piano, if you press down a note (pressing just the button without playing the note) and play the same note in another octave, the pressed one will play too.
I haven't taken acoustic physics yet, but I know this one too! All the practice rooms in the music building have a piano, and when I play specific notes on my clarinet, the piano also vibrates the frequencies. It's really interesting, but can be annoying lol
As a string player, I see this as an absolute win (If I play a note that is the same as my open strings, the open note will vibrate without me bowing IF it’s in tune)
Yes, i knew it, no apple can be turned to blue, even with a heat gun, and any liquid solution! So, the candle can be extinguished with the phone's sound being transformed into wind, and the tuning forks keep reverberate the sound frequencies from point A, to point B!
If you sing an E next to a guitar, the guitar sings back. So that works. The first clip feels like a bait, the audio of the blow was clearly overlaid and wasn’t present in the original video, but the original video might’ve had static and the blow might’ve been re-added in editing. The final video, even the core turns blue, and the blue isn’t correctly shadow matched, being too light in places that it should’ve taken on a more purplish colour due to lighting. As such, I’m saying the apple is the fake. Although I’d love to learn about why the sound waves become strong enough to blow out a candle!
@@alixx_legenddark_xx2819 if there’s a doubt as to whether something is meant to be rude or not, I’ll always choose to assume it wasn’t 😌 life’s too short to worry about the tone of a CZcams comment 😂😂
That was the one thing that clinched it for me too. before that I was doubting over the sound blowing a candle one, just because I would not expect a vibration to cause such a strong air current.
I have never stumbled across round 1 before... this is crazy. I ALWAYS get round 2 shorts ONLY, so I was very surprised to hear "Round ONE let's begin" instead of round 2, lol!
@@erikm8707 dude this is literally the type of fun facts that they would teach in first grade if someone would have really discovered this bizzare event, it would have become a big topic
It's a well known fact that fruit produce waxes to coat their skin for protection, yet I still know people, even after explaining it to them, that still believe the wax boogyman exists.
Or a very annoying thing when you play a high pitched instrument and are trying to get the sound to stop before the rest of percussion tells you to stop that infernal ringing noise
When you showed the tuning fork one, I knew that one was real because you can do the same thing with guitar strings, and your voice if you sing close to a guitar or ukulele, the same note as one of the strings, the string will start to sing back at you!
Glad you think so! This trickshot took way longer than the last one so when I finally got it I was relieved. I made the shot once before after only like an hour of trying but it went out of the top frame slightly so I figured if I used that one people would think it was fake lol
for this might be confusing but in my knowledge, it’s simple. There are molecules and also three ways to travel. One way to travel sound is by air. air molecules are far apart because they are in the air. While air molecules, water molecules are close because they are moving. In solid, molecules in there are literally touching each other so it is way much faster in solid so you can hear it much faster and that’s why it vibrated. This took me a while because I accidentally deleted the other one while I was typing so I got frustrated so pls leave a like. ❤🎉
the tuning forks example was fun. if you ever talked to a bass player or tried to learn yourself, you ll have heard of sympathetic vibration. part of learning to play bass is managing the strings and making sure they don t make noise.
Yes, for those wondering, I did add a blowing sound effect to the first one to try to make it more tricky! Hope yall don't think that's too cheap 😂
Thats cheating 🤓
(Now fr love your videos)
That's what conflicted me, and it got me. Well played (I also said "but it's most likely a trick" to the first one...)
You got me
That was cheap. And why did it also LOOK like you blew on it? Because I am quite certain that is not how smoke would behave next to a speaker. While I am aware that it is possible to extinguish flame with the changing air pressure generated by a speaker, I am also aware that it is a rather difficult effect to achieve. I would be utterly unsurprised if you had blown on it because you were unable to achieve the desired effect with your setup (and you’re saying you “added the blowing sound effect” as an excuse), although that it not to say I would not be disappointed. So tell me, am I right? Or did my imagination just run a bit wild..?
@RubyCascade I totally agree and it was quite surprising to me too, but it's legit, no visual editing or blowing on it whatsoever
The old intro will be forever remembered
Which one? There's 2 old ones now haha
For me it's the one with the bananas.
The one where you kick the thing into the trash@@JaDroppingScience
@@JaDroppingScience the banana one is the old one but i remember the kicking trash one more clearly
I remember the bread vs chicken intro more clearly (best intro in my opinion)
The blowing sound effect was evil, I was like “damn I’m being gaslit”. The apple one looked a bit too fake though so I went with my gut and said that one anyway.
he very literally gaslit you
I choose the Apple because the stem also turned blue
I choose the apple cause when i heard the blow sound effect and the candle it felt too obvious. its like that one time where he made a obvious cut in the video to make it seem fake a while back
@@Omari-Borcoda Yeah, it looked like a blue mask on the video rather than something on the actual apple. That was my first guess from the thumbnail, even before seeing that the first two were things I'd seen physics youtubers do in the last couple of weeks.
The candle blowing looked very fake, but I know that speakers can blow cadles.
The apple was super fake though.
The phenomenon in the second video is called sympathetic resonance and it happens all the time, it’s super interesting and I recommend looking into it if you’re into the science of sound and harmonics
Nah I'm good
isnt it because the vibrations in the air vibrate the other thing
@@dyngle2926 essentially yeah, but isn’t it so freaking cool?!
Ewww a furry (?
.
Second one works on the principle of resonance!! Yessss my high school physics lessons paid off 🙌 😅😂
Yes!!!!😂
This is your best one yet. You made all 3 seem "no way." Knew it wasn't 2 because I like playing with resonance frequencies, but I could practically see the digital brush on that apple.
Same!
2? The candle is the first one. You have so little attention span that you can't remember a video this short??
How are the 2 first a "no way"?
1. Sound waves can move stuff but not blow out a candle??
2. And that's just how tuning forks work.
Probably the easiest of these he's made imo.
What are the two replies above me? The guy literally said they knew it wasn't 2 because of resonant frequencies and that they could tell the apple was edited. Are y'all alright?
@@Izanagioomikami You're trolling
The tuning fork one is called sympathetic resonance, it's a cool concept to see in action. I knew about the candle because certain sound waves can actually put out fires.
Broski go away i see you everywhere
CHICKEN WHAT THE HELL BRO
@@insightfulno yes exactly its so annoying
hail chicken
If you play a fourth finger E on the a string on the violin, the e string starts to vibrate along with it. It’s what I use to tell if I’m in tune 😭
I love the apple effect because at first it looks really good, but then you can definitely tell it’s an editing effect when you go over the stem
Yup, that
That’s how I caught it too
If I had paused I'd probably notice, but shorts are so fast lol
@@_JustJoeyeah and shorts have a delayed pause so you can't even time it correctly
I cought it from the beginning lol
Dang,physics class finally paid off
Yea, when i saw same frequency i legit jumped and said OOOOH RESONANCE
Xdd
I just play violin lol
@@cappycap8144i know right lmaoo
i recently studied waves
@@cappycap8144it’s sympathetic resonance to be exact.
"The apple one is too obvious, it has to be the tuning forks" - rip 2024
YOU WONT BEILEVE WHERE IT SAYS GULLIBLE!
the tuning fork one is called sympathetic resonance i think and its kinda cool to see used for natural 'reverb' on some traditional instruments around the world
Yeah it's a really fun thing. You get really good at recognizing it when you play timpani a lot since its one of the easier ways to tune the notes you need for a performance.
@@blairbogard9236 playing timpani is why I know the resonance exists lol. fun times
Pianos actually use this too! Almost all of the strings on a piano are dampened when not played, but the highest notes are not dampened at all, allowing for those strings to resonate sympathetically. This gives a subtle sparkly reverb effect.
Try it next time you're near piano, play a short, low note and hear the piano reverberate!
I deal with it all the time as I play viola and violin, when I play tones that are either harmonics, unisons, or octaves of a string, that string will vibrate if it isn’t already
theres also that norweigan violin (Hardanger fiddle) with a matching pair of strings going from the bridge up inside the fingerboard of the violin purely for sympathetic resonance@@erevansilverfrond4911
As a musician, I immediately knew the tuning fork one was true. It’s called sympathetic vibration. Usually when my ensemble finishes sustaining a chord, we can hear the piano’s strings continue to play the chord for a few seconds after the fact (to clarify, there is no person playing or sitting at the piano at this point)
As a amateur musician who also knows Physics, it's the first thing you learn in Waves as Resonance.
I learned this in physics, same wavelength and stuff
As a percussionist I knew it was true immediately because it happened all the time to tubular bells, glockenspiel, and vibraphone
I heard this and went back to check that he said the tuning forks were identical before confirming that I knew it was true, we learned in orchestra back in high school that if we were really in tune with a note, the open string on a different octave (A, D, G, or C for me) would resonate
As s person i knew it too cuz my brain is braining too
The blowing sound gave it away
The speaker fr said WHHOOSH
A I'm am sure we all heard him blow the candle out 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
That's because he must have
I recorded the audio straight from my browser, bumped the volume up and you can obviously hear a blow
@@devwing0
I bet you have tons of friends
He added the sound in to try and make it more tricky.
To shay
It was fake -_-
"And when you point it at the candle, it extinguishes the flame." *phuu* 💀💀
And that’s not even a fake one
He added a blowing sound effect to throw ppl off
@@Whitemare_Blobthen that makes it fake?
@@burnsboy101 If I clap while a gun is fired and told people that a gun makes a [clap] noise. Obviously the clap is fake, but the gun firing is real.
Weird analogy, yes... but i cant think of anything to describe it better
@@nightowlowo149What…?
“You’re turning violet , Violet!”
The reason I knew the first two is because I knew sound was just the air vibrating
It was over when I noticed how the blue covered the apple like an edited picture
For Mr it was over when he started talking about the tuning forks.
Bro wut if I eat the bleach apple???
Yeah fr, I only knew that the second one was true, but I recognized the editing
@@marshallworthington8722 don't eat the bleach apple
The special effects on the blue apple looked too fake, especially when the stem area turned blue.
That sound of you blowing out the candle was actually genius (ps: nice intro)
Yeah, that was annoyingly good
Nice pfp
I was like that makes it sound like it's fake but I could have swore I've seen a video talking about this before probably by the action lab. But I could be getting the CZcams channel name wrong.
They had us in the first half
C sound waves move in specific ways and that’s why vibrations through the air can echo and even blow out a candle or cause other things to vibrate
Fun fact, the tuning fork trick is called sympathetic resonance.
Jontron mentioned it in his video on Goop.
Do people do that too? 😂
That one was actually confusing. Also good to see a new intro
Each season will be a new intro, glad you liked it!
I was lucky I had heard about an app that used the first thing and I knew enough about resonant frequency to know that the second one probably made sense
I never heard of apple turning blue and it one rarest color found in nature so I knew that one was fake immediately.
@@skylerlightning4620 yeah I was kinda sure it was that one
Thinkin C
Ok the first one being true is actually so sick also the fake out with the yellow apple got me for a sec
I could swear it was the candle, fooled by the Foley, i feel pathetic
I knew the tuning forks was real because I've played instruments
Exactly. You never forget that sht
same, im a singer
Lol I just remember it from physics class
I’ve played violin for 7 years and still haven’t used one
@@Galaxxymeeps nah man, about how your instrument can make other instruments and stuff vibrate as you play. It's like how when you play one string, it'll make the rest of your strings vibrate a little, especially the G string.
I was skeptical of the first two, especially the first one, but then you showed the apple and I knew it was the fake 😂
I wasn't sure about the first because of the blowing sound effect but the second one makes sense, as sound is just vibrations
The second one is a pretty well known fact though... At least I thought it was well known. I knew about it, and I'm not a scientist or anything, lol.
The second one is legit 10th grad physics
@@TalkingHands308yeah it is. I believe it's called sympathetic resonance. Happens with not just tuning forks but stringed instruments too.
@@mickmockedmack And metronomes if I remember correctly.
Bro I heard someone blow the candle 😭😭
Finally got this one right, because I'm a musician and know the basic physics of sound. I had to learn about it in my music tech class
I figured out this one was the apple immediately because the candle one I feel like I’ve learned about before, tuning forks makes sense to me because I remember playing in orchestra and when a violin played a note, I could feel my own violin vibrate to the note even though I wasn’t playing. Metal has a tendency to have sounds continue to linger (dropped a metal pot on the ground too often for this). So process of elimination just made me guess the apple
Smart. I agree with you
no more all options are true choice. Mind games are over
So you think... haha
@@JaDroppingScience 😨
all of This are NOT Fake they Are Really Truth and Mindblowing🤯
Man, I Really Wanted To Eat A Blue Apple.
The apple: throughout fruits and vegetables I alone am the unconsumed one, hollow core purple
THE JJK BRAINROT IS REALL!!!!
Nah, I'd turn purple
Nah, I'd pass
Lobotomy kaisen
nah, im you
*house on fire*
"Hold on lemme get some tape and my phone"
That phone better be big
@@stevenhthe21stnah his house is just really smol like him
@@flammable7961 Then how would he lift the tape for the phone, and even move the phone if it’s bigger than the house?
The real questions
The coins at the beginning show the answer
Bro forgor to make the lil wood on the apple normal💀💀💀💀
The red apple didn't even look real but the yellow one almost had me 😂
Being a musician, I can proudly say that I understand sympathetic resonance (if only because my acoustic guitar can never shut up when I'm playing piano; it'll add an unwanted hall reverb effect whenever I play certain notes 😅)
Actually you learnt it in Physics class, not necessary a musician
Speaking of piano, if you press down a note (pressing just the button without playing the note) and play the same note in another octave, the pressed one will play too.
I haven't taken acoustic physics yet, but I know this one too! All the practice rooms in the music building have a piano, and when I play specific notes on my clarinet, the piano also vibrates the frequencies. It's really interesting, but can be annoying lol
Pro Tip: Tune your guitar a quarter step up or down (at least when you don’t need to play it along with other instruments).
Yup with my violin and ukeelele never stops making chords when playing 1 string
I’ve never gotten one of these wrong 😂
As a string player, I see this as an absolute win
(If I play a note that is the same as my open strings, the open note will vibrate without me bowing IF it’s in tune)
You got me on the last one for a sec
E
Yes, i knew it, no apple can be turned to blue, even with a heat gun, and any liquid solution! So, the candle can be extinguished with the phone's sound being transformed into wind, and the tuning forks keep reverberate the sound frequencies from point A, to point B!
I mean... blue paint or dye can make an apple blue
the sound one can also work for over 10 meters as long as the openings point to each other.
I thought he said "tooting fork" lol
If you sing an E next to a guitar, the guitar sings back. So that works. The first clip feels like a bait, the audio of the blow was clearly overlaid and wasn’t present in the original video, but the original video might’ve had static and the blow might’ve been re-added in editing. The final video, even the core turns blue, and the blue isn’t correctly shadow matched, being too light in places that it should’ve taken on a more purplish colour due to lighting.
As such, I’m saying the apple is the fake. Although I’d love to learn about why the sound waves become strong enough to blow out a candle!
Here is a plausible explanation: Sound is just moving air. Need I say more?
@@alixx_legenddark_xx2819 makes perfect sense!! I’m a musician so could you say I’m an air-bender? 😂😂
@@evieashton8099 yeah maybe 🤣🤣 I honestly thought my comment sounded rude.
@@alixx_legenddark_xx2819 if there’s a doubt as to whether something is meant to be rude or not, I’ll always choose to assume it wasn’t 😌 life’s too short to worry about the tone of a CZcams comment 😂😂
B
I thought the blowing air sound was too good to be true you tricked me 😂
Electroboom had enlighten me already about resonance so im sure of what i choose
Damn, it got harder to choose once C popped up but I really thought A was fake... I guess it really was strong enough.
I wanted to say A so bad but I'll have to go with C
I knew it was 3 because of the apple’s stem turning blue
That was the one thing that clinched it for me too.
before that I was doubting over the sound blowing a candle one, just because I would not expect a vibration to cause such a strong air current.
Nice
Fr
Two were about sound, which people understand a lot more than chemical reactions.
I like the kick intro lol the trickshot is cool
Thank you Action Lab for making a short about how a phone can blow out a candle
He tried to bait us to use a yellow apple at the end there 💀😂😂
I legitimately thought A was BS but once i saw the apple one i immediately knew
I only knew that the first two were true because the third one was so preposterous that it had to be the fake one
I have never stumbled across round 1 before... this is crazy. I ALWAYS get round 2 shorts ONLY, so I was very surprised to hear "Round ONE let's begin" instead of round 2, lol!
The yellow- no no it does not❤😂😂
Can’t go 2 seconds without laughing
Getting one of these videos correct makes you feel like Einstein
Dude blew out that candle 🌬️🕯️😂😂
Fr💀
czcams.com/video/tX6XSs2T5Go/video.htmlsi=vDLU_hgHQzM9SoK5
A heard him
@@Are_You_Tall_Or_Is_It_Just_me he actually didnt lol
It was sound of blowing get played from phone. The thing that makes it most evil plan.
This dude is a great person in science and editing
My teacher did that tuning fork thing in physics multiple times it is very cool
I thought the apple thing was obviously fake, but you got me stupid with that clever yellow apple bit, lol-
If apples did that, it would have been a well known fact.
Why would it be well known? Do people commonly spray febreeze on their apples?
@@erikm8707 dude this is literally the type of fun facts that they would teach in first grade
if someone would have really discovered this bizzare event, it would have become a big topic
@@erikm8707 why is eating 150 or more apple seeds able to kill you well known? Do people regularly binge eat apple seeds?
It's a well known fact that fruit produce waxes to coat their skin for protection, yet I still know people, even after explaining it to them, that still believe the wax boogyman exists.
@@erikm8707The way you said that made me think of those Arkham memes.
_"Why is Man spraying Febreeze on his apples? Is he stupid?"_
i actually knew the 2nd one as i do a lot with music, its actually a very useful thing that can be used in tuning instruments
Or a very annoying thing when you play a high pitched instrument and are trying to get the sound to stop before the rest of percussion tells you to stop that infernal ringing noise
I thought I heard you blowing the candle very audibly, lol, what the heck, didn’t know that one was real.
I know every apple fact in existence you can't trick me
damn playing a string instrument finally payed off 💀
He said the candle and all you hear at the end is 😮💨. My man 😂😂😂😂
A, you can hear him blow out the candls
The second one i only know it because of Rythm of War from TSA lmao
I’ve never been more thankful that I actually listened in science when we learned about sound waves
Almost got me with the yellow apple 😅
I out smarted my teachers and have no more homework 😂😂😂
I thought it was one but then I’d as the blue mask on the last one. Nice one bro
Nah the way I didnt even question the blow on the first one and was like "yep that checks out" 😭
I didn’t even know yellow apples were a thing lmao
Wich country don't have yellow apples
What how?!
Have you just made it to earth?
Looks like a potato lol
wait till you learn about green apples
the thing with the tuning fork is known as "sympathetic resonance" and you can hear this on guitars and pianos with the sustain pedal engaged
Doesn't exactly help that I've literally never heard of that 3rd one before lol
I miss the old version with the intro and abcd 😭😭
That apple really turned into a smurf😂
Not me thinking the blue apple thing was the coolest thing ever😭💀
I already knew it was 3 before you finished 2. Because i already went in knowing the first two facts, and that apples never turn blue.
When you showed the tuning fork one, I knew that one was real because you can do the same thing with guitar strings, and your voice if you sing close to a guitar or ukulele, the same note as one of the strings, the string will start to sing back at you!
I could see the editing on the apple
Yes, I am terribly gullible and I am so ashamed right now.
as well as acoustic instruments such as cello
This was super fun! Got all rounds correct
cool new intro
Glad you think so! This trickshot took way longer than the last one so when I finally got it I was relieved. I made the shot once before after only like an hour of trying but it went out of the top frame slightly so I figured if I used that one people would think it was fake lol
He has no style he has no grace
This Kong has a funny face
I’m ngl I feel like the beginning of the video with the coins was foreshadowing
I didn't believe that first one at all. But then I saw that LAST ONE
I'm glad I knew about the first one already 😂
Probably the easiest one so far, bless
for this might be confusing but in my knowledge, it’s simple. There are molecules and also three ways to travel. One way to travel sound is by air. air molecules are far apart because they are in the air. While air molecules, water molecules are close because they are moving. In solid, molecules in there are literally touching each other so it is way much faster in solid so you can hear it much faster and that’s why it vibrated. This took me a while because I accidentally deleted the other one while I was typing so I got frustrated so pls leave a like. ❤🎉
the tuning forks example was fun. if you ever talked to a bass player or tried to learn yourself, you ll have heard of sympathetic vibration. part of learning to play bass is managing the strings and making sure they don t make noise.
All I knew for sure was that the timing fork one was true, cuz that’s just simple sound waves