Kidd and Cee Reacts To Family Guy Season 4 Funniest Moments
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- čas přidán 15. 09. 2023
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6:24 - I just have to correct you alittle bit. The US didn't go to the Moon just one time, there were a total of 6 landings, with 12 men walking the Moon :) It's just that the first one was the most televised and is the most well known.
Kidd singing Omarion's Touch at the end was gold 😂
Best duo: Kidd & Cee with another Family Guy reaction video. Thank you both for making the day better for all of us. Salute 💯💯🫶🏾
We went to the moon 7 times
14:40 😂😂 something tells me you felt him 😂😂
We mainly haven't been back to the moon because NASA's budget back during the moon landings was pushed up high by the US government because we were trying to be the first on the moon. The United States spent $25.8 billion on Project Apollo between 1960 and 1973, which was about $257 billion when adjusted for inflation to 2020 dollars. Adding Project Gemini and the robotic lunar program, both of which enabled Apollo, the U.S. spent a total of $28 billion ($280 billion adjusted). Spending peaked in 1966, three years before the first Moon landing. The total amount spent on NASA during this period was $49.4 billion ($482 billion adjusted). Now look at NASA's budget that the government gives them. They landed on the moon during the Apollo missions, brought back like 800+ pounds of moon rocks unlike anything on Earth and even distributed little pieces to leaders throughout the world as gifts and proof. After that, we had already been the first to land on the moon and pretty much did what we were trying to accomplish. Budgets shrunk and the American public lost interest. The Soviet Union dissolved in the early 90's. Now the government doesn't want to give NASA a budget for sh!t. They keep cutting it down more and more. So they focused on probes, instead. Things cost so much more now and people want a lot of money to work on things that were cheaper to manufacture back then. The Biden administration's request for the NASA budget in 2023 is $26 billion, for instance. That's an absolutely awful budget for something the size of NASA. Remember that with all of the ongoing probe programs, the SLS being built/tested, etc...NASA still has to pay for all of that out of their budget while trying to do new things in the future. There just isn't enough to go around for missions like there used to be.
As for the technology, even as advanced as we are nowadays, those (I believe they were F1?) engines...we opened manufacturing plants specifically for building all of that stuff for the Saturn V rocket that remains the largest and heaviest rocket ever successfully launched. It stood 363 feet tall, which was taller than the Statue of Liberty, and weighed 6.2 million pounds when full of fuel. When the Apollo missions were over, the warehouses/manufacturing facilities were decommissioned and removed. So basically in order to do all of that again, we'd have to start over from scratch with present-day materials.
We are working on the Space Launch System program to send humans back to set foot on the moon in maybe the late 2020's or sometime in the 2030's. However, since then we have also sent satellites and mapped the whole moon's surface and all sorts of things. There wasn't a true need to go back physically and the American people don't want to increase taxes to what they were during the time of the Apollo missions. A lot of the people who worked on the Saturn V are dead now and for those particular engines the know-how was essentially lost. The SLS is supposed to be more powerful.
We're still doing what we can with probes like Voyager 1 that was launched in 1977. As of August 2022, it was approximately 14.6 billion miles away from Earth and still sending back data. We have the same issue with that - very few people know how to program the freaking thing with the simplistic commands from decades ago. They don't teach that programming language anymore and the commands had to be in very small intervals because of what is on the Voyager 1 craft itself. So they had to code a lot of programming actions into a small line of code. There is one specific guy who is amazing at it. I understand that they have a younger guy who knows how to do it now, because the guy who has worked on the program for decades wanted to retire and was in like his 80's, if I remember correctly. Even then, the newer guy isn't anywhere near as good as the older guy who has worked on the program for so long. So yes, know-how does die, unfortunately.
Excellent lengthy but nicely detailed summary of the reasons why the US didn't return to the moon after the end of the Apollo missions. I don't know if they'll read or respond to your comment, but it was still informative.
You all do know how to take jokes on a comedy reaction, right? It's not that serious or deep
Never gets old😂😂😂✌✌
I mean theres not much to look at on the moon besides dust and rocks, and we did go a couple of times.
You all do know how to take jokes on a comedy reaction, right? It's not that serious or deep
That caveman reference was ahead of its time
8:30 is so funny
India just landed a rover on the moon less than a month ago.
😂😂😂😂😂 never failed
"and now I play the waiting game"
13:22😂
I have that segment downloaded 😂 never gets old
Ah so thats why the kids at school call Pinocchio 'poopnose'
Is that snot or KY?
@@SeekingHisWill78 lol oh God, he got Vaseline boogers 🤣🤣
Lmao i looked up Ted Danson too bahahah
Another fine & fun reaction!
Caveman obviously doesn't care😂😂😂
Funny
Did you guys rob a graphics T-shirt store or sum? Where do you get you T-shirts ? How big is you closet? How many Tees do you have?
😂😂😂
can you do b99 out of context reaction?
We havnt been back due to funding. Plus its very possible we were told not to. Same with the plans for the colonization of mars
first fr
Cuss that chick out caveman...