When have you seen a SPOILED BRAT be SHOCKED by "the REAL WORLD" - Reddit Podcast

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  • @amithegenius
    @amithegenius Жыл бұрын

    🧠 NEXT AM I THE GENIUS STORY - kzread.info/head/PL5FcevqxOz5tuU1qghkOUcBqGKHKXHO0f

  • @judekohorst

    @judekohorst

    Жыл бұрын

    Big fan I love your vids

  • @ramie6014

    @ramie6014

    Жыл бұрын

    Love ur am I the jerk stuff but this is basically = I love this

  • @Jenolic

    @Jenolic

    Жыл бұрын

    As soon as I looked at the background I know exactly what the game was. Edit: if you didn’t know, it’s stray look it up. It’s the best cat game out there😃

  • @ShiroiPikmin

    @ShiroiPikmin

    Жыл бұрын

    What happened with the story #13 and #14 labels during story #12?

  • @gpotatofatcatbrawl

    @gpotatofatcatbrawl

    Жыл бұрын

    5ththth

  • @Ariesgirl8403
    @Ariesgirl8403 Жыл бұрын

    #11 isn't an entitled brat, it's just that his mom never taught him how. I know plenty of "poor" kids that have no idea how to do laundry.

  • @mhikari92

    @mhikari92

    Жыл бұрын

    Yup , he is just never been taught to do it.....and is nice enough to be willing to do it right also be humble enough to admit he didn't know everything and willing ask for the direction. .....at least , compare to those who just throw everything in a XL garbage bag , and have the "mom" drove all the way from home to dorm , pick it up weekly.(or just pick a semester worth of dirty boxer back home for summer vacation) , #11 is totally not an entitled brat , but a regular "first time live on his own freshman."

  • @tumblingartist

    @tumblingartist

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, he was privileged , but he wasn’t entitled

  • @matasa7463

    @matasa7463

    Жыл бұрын

    lol my mom made me do the family's laundry, wash the dishes both by hand and with machine, and also learn to cook. My pops made me get into the habit of at least learning and look into to do it myself before hiring a professional to do it for me. This allowed me to become at least somewhat self-sufficient, so I wasn't a totally clueless idiot that would destroy his home the moment he's left alone. It was eye opening to see just how many kids weren't ever taught how to do anything, or even had to consider learning how to do it.

  • @kellymal3693

    @kellymal3693

    Жыл бұрын

    @A5 BSR4 I was doing all the laundry in the house when I was around 8 or 9, it was one of my first major household chores.

  • @TeboShepherd

    @TeboShepherd

    Жыл бұрын

    Fabric softener is trash. The only reason anyone would use it is if they're trying to give the entire family cancer. I find it so frigging sad and hilarious that people will willingly fork over money for fabric softener aka poly systemic cancer of the everything.

  • @alexandergaus493
    @alexandergaus493 Жыл бұрын

    That father with the "bus cleaner" son: Respect! For all 3. The father for finding THE best solution to teach his son, the son for doing it and trying to be nice and the bus driver for going along.

  • @josefinbjork1086

    @josefinbjork1086

    Жыл бұрын

    I wish all parents would do stuff like that it really teaches kids that if you make a mess ore destroy somthing your fixing it. Some parents just throw money around ore yell at everyone ells becous there angelbaby couldt have done somthing bad

  • @darkfire2941

    @darkfire2941

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josefinbjork1086 r/ihadastroke

  • @josefinbjork1086

    @josefinbjork1086

    Жыл бұрын

    @@darkfire2941 sorry i am littel dens what do you mean

  • @darkfire2941

    @darkfire2941

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josefinbjork1086 well, at least you don't use reddit

  • @ADHDSadPerson

    @ADHDSadPerson

    Жыл бұрын

    @@darkfire2941 I use reddit, but am new. Should I quit it? also what does "r/ihadastroke mean?

  • @shadowstrider42
    @shadowstrider42 Жыл бұрын

    "Do you know who my dad is?" Someone who contributed to society enough to be a notable public figure worthy of some respect, with an egocentric child who achieves nothing, despite being given every opportunity to exceed their father's succes? Yeah, might have seen him around.

  • @spectra1096

    @spectra1096

    Жыл бұрын

    Woah you killed him, there was no sound

  • @SkiggsMoDiggs

    @SkiggsMoDiggs

    Жыл бұрын

    fr, such an easy response would be "Someone who isn't you."

  • @badkatz_yt

    @badkatz_yt

    Жыл бұрын

    “Do you know who my dad is?” “What, your momma never told you?”

  • @watchmychannelorelse

    @watchmychannelorelse

    Жыл бұрын

    im using this comeback

  • @Breeadkurmbz

    @Breeadkurmbz

    Жыл бұрын

    Holy shit,you kamikazed him,crushed him,electrocuted him,attacked him and burned him all at the same time

  • @monroerobbins7551
    @monroerobbins755111 ай бұрын

    I once met this super rich kid during middle school. She wasn’t bratty, per say, but wasn’t super forth coming. I honestly just thought she was snooty, an unfair judgement on my part. Didn’t have a lot of friends, lot of people talked crap about her, etcetera. One day she broke a nail (not as in “oh the polish chipped”, no, it was full on down to the nail bed break. It wasn’t broken off, but it was a solid split), and she was biting her lip and trying not to cry in the middle of class. One of the more popular (and poorer) girls immediately scootched over and began to help her. This girl whipped out her purse and began patching up her nail (the classic tea bag trick), and even put on a thick coat of red nail polish to cement everything together. This rich girl, who never said a word to anyone but teachers, just sat there silently crying as the popular girl patched her up, and began quietly talking with her. It was like watching origami unfold, this rich girl immediately softened and began to quietly talk back. After that, those two were thick as thieves, matching bracelets and all. Honestly? It made me feel kinda bad for judging the rich girl, cause I worked with her once after that, and she was super smart, and super kind. For someone who was so shy and quiet, I was immediately happy to work with someone who was quieter and kind.

  • @sfk1doesstuff207

    @sfk1doesstuff207

    20 күн бұрын

    Finally, popular people who aren’t a-holes.

  • @tomgoodwin3629
    @tomgoodwin3629 Жыл бұрын

    The father who told the bully to say thank you after he had his nose broken is a legend

  • @Vicioussnakeboy

    @Vicioussnakeboy

    4 ай бұрын

    The satisfaction I gained from that story is immeasurable

  • @aquawolfx8715
    @aquawolfx8715 Жыл бұрын

    The bus driver and the rich kid story was fantastic. His father used the situation to teach the kid a long standing lesson, and I really hope he went far with someone like that having his best interest at heart

  • @maxrobertson2834
    @maxrobertson2834 Жыл бұрын

    I’m glad that the security guard helped the kid learn how to do laundry. I’m glad the kid asked and didn’t act like the security guard was a maid or something

  • @Jourell1
    @Jourell1 Жыл бұрын

    I didn't see this but one story I always remember is a brutal malicious compliance that slapped an entitled brat so hard. The op was the owner of an upscale restaurant which had an occasional celebrity guest. For them, they had a VIP section which was quieter and also had a special menu with more expensive items and no prices because it was assumed that they would be able to pay. One night an entitled brat an her entourage came through and demanded a seat in the VIP section because she knew the owner (he had never met her). OP seated them and decided to serve them himself, even comping them the first round of drinks. All through this the girl is rude, conceited, constantly belittling him and any other staff members. They ordered round after round, some of the more expensive items, not thinking about the price because it wasn't on the menu. They racked up a bill in the thousands . As it kept going up, op was feeling a bit guilty but then remembered how they treated the staff. When he finally brought the bill, the girls went white, and declared that there must be a mistake. There was, he had forgotten to add one of their appetizers. they tried to get out of it, even contacting someone who claimed to be the owner who instructed him to just let them out of it. OP then dropped the act, revealed himself as the owner and asked if there was anything about the bill that wasn't accurate. There wasn't The next day the entitled girl came in with her dad, who was initially furious with OP. but, fortunately, they had cameras in the VIP section for security reasons and he was able to watch the girls, what they ate and how they acted. Dad turned his ire on the girls and agreed to pay. OP still has the first receipt that had the mistake on it framed in his office.

  • @Jourell1

    @Jourell1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@waddledeeanalista6675 Could be, it was one of those readers, though I don't think he asked AITA, so it was more likely a malicious compliance vid.

  • @360entertainment2

    @360entertainment2

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Jourell1 that was from a pro revenge, I’ve heard that story from at least three different readers and it’s always great!

  • @enterchannelname3213

    @enterchannelname3213

    Жыл бұрын

    To be fair they should put price tags on every item no matter how rich they think you are.

  • @juandelossantos4000

    @juandelossantos4000

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@enterchannelname3213 if im not mistaken there are prices listed in the non-VIP sections. Part of being a VIP is that money is not and will never be an issue. It is also the point on the restaurant side of racking up the bill. They chose to play a game without knowing all the rules and SURPRISE they lost.

  • @enterchannelname3213

    @enterchannelname3213

    Жыл бұрын

    @Juan De Los Santos True but the no price tag thing could have alot of potential for scamming and charging insanely high prices for a simple dish, even if the dish was luxury.

  • @yumark5800
    @yumark5800 Жыл бұрын

    The freshman girl story is similar to this lady that cut the long line of people at my restaurant. Started ordering and ignored every attempt I tried to tell her to wait her turn in line. I took her order and put it aside and took everyone, who waited their turn in line, orders and put them with the cooks. I put her order dead last, even behind people she would’ve been in front of if she had waited her turn in line. She didn’t say a word when she finally got her order. Lol

  • @StarlightNkyra
    @StarlightNkyra Жыл бұрын

    I feel like a lot of sporty kids and kids who are raised by parents who treat them like the sun are the main fronts to become bullies. I have no idea what is up with the sporty kids, about 15% of them I've met bullied me or I've seen bully others (I was the friendly kid that was somewhat reserved, sudo-nerd type.) For the spoiled kids, it just makes sense given their situation. I have personally never met any rude ones (at least that I know of) but I know they exist. I like listening to stories like these because I know that they will prepare me for future encounters.

  • @StarlightNkyra

    @StarlightNkyra

    Жыл бұрын

    @Elliott Hill thanks for the insight, since I am only really part of a bowling team that doesn't require too much teamwork (have been for a long time) and had been on an immature elementary school basketball team full of ball-hogs (I only EVER had the ball once, let alone get to preform maneuvers and shoot it) I really haven't had that sense of teamwork and sportsmanship in my sports, but I get it now. I'm sure if I did join a team in high school I would have a comparably positive experience. I see how the competitive wave that could wash up on some of the bad bananas can be that intense. Once again, thank you for the insight.

  • @fire_man3173

    @fire_man3173

    Жыл бұрын

    I mean... 15% of them isn't a lot but I get what you're saying

  • @StarlightNkyra

    @StarlightNkyra

    Жыл бұрын

    I just wanted to keep the number low to keep from offending many people. During my school days it was more like 2 out of 3.

  • @coffecrazy

    @coffecrazy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fire_man317315 percent can be alot

  • @princessmarlena1359
    @princessmarlena1359 Жыл бұрын

    I went to an all girl Southern California Catholic school. It had dormitories for the non-local celebrities’ kids, diplomats’ kids, or FES. Typically the “dorm kids” were very rich. One girl was an ambassador’s daughter, and she repeatedly got into trouble back in Washington D.C., so he sent here to our school to live in the dorms, under the supervision of the local consular general. She abused her diplomatic immunity, and got into more trouble. It got to the point where her dad contacted her directly and threatened to send her to live in their home nation with her grandmother (his mother)…in the highlands area of their nation…in a stone cottage with no water, electricity, tv, phone, internet, etc. She behaved after that.

  • @thereareantsbehindyoureyes7529

    @thereareantsbehindyoureyes7529

    Жыл бұрын

    Highlands? Was she Scottish?

  • @princessmarlena1359

    @princessmarlena1359

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thereareantsbehindyoureyes7529 no, different “highlands”, I can’t remember which country (this was over 20 years ago). If I do remember I’ll get back to you.

  • @Kiss_My_Aspergers

    @Kiss_My_Aspergers

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@Princess Marlena Do you remember the continent? That's at least a start, right? 🤷

  • @princessmarlena1359

    @princessmarlena1359

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Kiss_My_Aspergers Southeast Asia.

  • @grandiewandie

    @grandiewandie

    Жыл бұрын

    some kid at my school was sent to work on a farm for a whole summer because she was skipping school

  • @berdooli3326
    @berdooli3326 Жыл бұрын

    I volunteered at a kids camp in college and was supervising a basketball game which broke out into a big verbal argument. The 11 year old girl got upset because she travel balled and the other kids called her out for cheating. She started fake crying and quoted creepy therapy things like "I feel like I'm not being heard." I chimed in and told her that no one was buying her act and she needed to suck it up and put on big kid pants. She ran off crying and next thing you know my supervisor is having us sit down and "talk it out." The kid vented to me about her feelings being hurt and I asked my supervisor "why is she telling me this?" Which shocked them both and apparently I was expected to apologize but I refused and my supervisor didn't force me to but I could tell she really wanted me to. She laughed that off and just said no more basketball today. Interestingly enough, that girl the next day ran up and hugged me and asked how I was doing. It seemed like by refusing to apologize for not doing anything wrong, she gained a new level of respect for me. TLDR: Refused to apologize to an entitled kid causing trouble at camp

  • @Belugamale8738

    @Belugamale8738

    2 ай бұрын

    Good story, But such a awkward & embarrassing story I have ever seen

  • @elspethgraham9531
    @elspethgraham9531 Жыл бұрын

    There was this guy I knew in university. Growing up, his mother washed all of his clothes, did all of his room cleaning. Not a surprise, exactly. Lots of students grew up with moms who took care of all of this. However, Dean (not his real name) refused to change his sheets, even though students in residence were given a set of clean sheets each week. He had girlfriend who changed his sheets for him, washed and ironed all of his clothes. If she didn't do these chores for him, they didn't get done. He would just sleep in his dirty sheets, for weeks at a time. He'd wear dirty clothes all of the time, too. He never could keep a girlfriend for very long. Wonder why?

  • @JacobL228
    @JacobL228 Жыл бұрын

    After living it up like a frat boy minus the frat in college, my little brother has been finding out that real life isn't like living in a dorm with people that will take care of you and agree with all of your opinions. He recently found out that other people aren't required to agree with his "insightful" takes on movies, and that other people's opinions are also valid. He responded to this by calling me a "horrible human being" and saying he "hopes I die alone" before storming off. He is 24 years old, and this is how he deals with people not automatically kowtowing to his will. Incidentally, his bedroom is constantly filled with plates of half-eaten food he's just left there on the floor after taking them into his room because he can't stand to exist, let alone eat, in the same room as another person. He recently had to figure out how to get rid of all the ants that started coming after his food scraps. I call that karma.

  • @RedNumber19
    @RedNumber19 Жыл бұрын

    The problem with having only 1 parent that actually cares about behaviour is that it makes that parent look bad to the child, and the lenient parent looks like the better parent 19:24

  • @bombdotcom2168
    @bombdotcom2168 Жыл бұрын

    When my mom was cut off of my dad's financial support after their divorce. She complained about my dad (who's been working hard for over 16 years to get where he is whereas she hasn't worked a day in her life) being able to afford a nice three story town home and a new truck while she was stuck living with her friends and having to borrow cars. Karma and the real world hit her hard in the face.

  • @mkourim05
    @mkourim05 Жыл бұрын

    Used to work at a gas station and we had to card everyone for alcohol regardless of age. after work this one local cop would always come in in uniform and attempt to buy a case of beer. if we carded him hed get mad thinking because he was in uniform he didnt have to be carded (registers required the ID to be scanned to complete the sale). Hed usually relent and just throw his ID at us. One day he decided to go one step further and threatened to pull me over if he ever saw me out driving if i didnt stop asking for his ID. What he was unaware of I was currently in the police academy and knew this was a blantent abuse of power, so I made a trip down to the local preceinct and had a nice chat with the chief. IDK what happened after that but next time he came in for beer it was all yes sir no sir and he handed me his ID. no one ever had an issue with him again.

  • @twiceshy9773

    @twiceshy9773

    2 ай бұрын

    Oh he's gonna be a wonderful cop *rolls eyes- you'd think that would be one giant red flag for his superiors!!

  • @Aponeynamedcat
    @Aponeynamedcat Жыл бұрын

    I can heavily relate to the autistic brother being bullied, I am so thankful I go to a school ment for mentally troubled, challenged, or mentally disordered people. When I was in 2-8th grade (only part of 8th grade as I got expelled, parents grounded me, then learned what happened and ungrounded) I was constantly bullied for my autism

  • @Topbeehler
    @Topbeehler Жыл бұрын

    #20 is very relatable. As a kid I was a bit of a nerd and a runt. An easy target. A kid in school often picked on me and would do just about everything he could to get under my skin, technically it was several bullies but this one was sort of the leader and pushy as hell. One day in the hall way the teacher was leading us the library for reading, this was middle school BTW so teachers taking whole classes around wasn't uncommon when it was required. He'd continue to shove me, throw pencils at the back of my head, and shove me, me being ahead of him and behind the teacher put me in a bad spot. Finally he shoved me again and I was sick of this. It had been like this all year and his fun was ending now. I turned around and decked him right in his nose. It must have been fast too cause he was shocked I even turned around. By the time he realized he was punched the whole class was freaking out. He ran off and the teacher lead us all the library, grabbed me, took me down where the bully had run, which was a bathroom by the principles office. When she got him he saw me and charged, screaming bloody murder. He did that football like tackle thing with his arms out (I'm still a nerd IDK sport stuff forgive me lol) And I just lifted my leg and kneed him right in the nose that just got punched. Obviously we were taken to the office where my parents and his were called. Guess this wasn't the kids first time being called into the office for bullying cause his dad came in shortly after and seemed more worried about me than his own son. Other students were also questioned and said he was bullying me too. When my dad showed up to take me home, I got suspended for this, a whole week. The bullies dad and my dad talked. He said how sorry he was for how his son acted and not to be to harsh on me believe it or not! I honestly felt bad for the bully cause it almost seemed like a bad home situation but I'd later learn that no he's just an asshole. My dad actually seemed pretty happy I stood up for myself and according to the bullies brother who I know as a friend of one of my siblings, he was to be grounded the rest of the year, and something about how if he puts his hands on another classmate again that broken nose will be the last of his worries. IDK what made this kid such a little brat but he was and not just to me. After that day he was still an asshole BTW. Last I saw him was a few years back on the local news for attacking someone. Some things never change.

  • @rya3190

    @rya3190

    Ай бұрын

    Lol, I'll call you an honorary sports player considering you knew where his face was going to be, and let him beat himself up.

  • @fredthemailman.1880
    @fredthemailman.188010 ай бұрын

    There was this one time I was waiting in line to leave for the bus with a boy. The boy's friend comes along and let me tell you, he thinks he destined to be a pro athlete and always brags. So he came along and started bragging, so then I asked him, "Are you great at every single thing in the world?" He said, "yes." Then K asked him. "Are you the best at being humble?" And he said, "I'm very humble." I'm kinda cracking up at how ironic that was. Then, out of nowhere, my teacher goes, "that's kind of ironic." The best part was that the bragging dude didn't know what ironic meant.

  • @sfk1doesstuff207

    @sfk1doesstuff207

    20 күн бұрын

    This made me chuckle

  • @Josh_the_jester
    @Josh_the_jester Жыл бұрын

    Story 3: some people argued in this that "the punishment doesn't fit the crime" (this was in the comments of another content creator who made reddit content on KZread) I argued back with "what punishment do you believe fits arson of a commercial vehicle, this is his dad issuing community service onto his son, and it's only one bus"

  • @mialeaver435
    @mialeaver435 Жыл бұрын

    After watching this video I started crying bc I was so nervous that I wouldn’t know how to do anything when I’m older and I had to text my mum to ask her to teach me everything and I’m still crying now even though she said yes 😭 I have really bad anxiety when it comes to expectations and preparations and the fact that I’m a high functioning autistic person doesn’t really help. Things changing freak me out, I need to plan everything down to the last second and if a minor detail in the plan changes I will cry and will not do it, so the thought of suddenly growing up into an adult and not having my parents always around me to support me freaks me out 😮‍💨 (just stopped crying now lol) anyway it feels good to vent lol 😂

  • @L4dyShadow320
    @L4dyShadow32011 ай бұрын

    This is why I like giving parents the benefit of the doubt. Some genuinely have no idea that their children are monsters and I really love when they're informed and they take appropriate measures immediately to make sure their child doesn't grow up to be a menace to society ❤

  • @elliottedwards1163
    @elliottedwards1163 Жыл бұрын

    As someone who’s growing up Mormon, I can confirm, there’s not much that seems to be able to beat these folks down- can’t say much for myself though 😂

  • @johnclaybaugh9536
    @johnclaybaugh9536 Жыл бұрын

    Honestly, if a college security guard has to teach your college student how to do laundry, you weren't that great of a parent. It takes more than money to be a parent.

  • @360entertainment2

    @360entertainment2

    Жыл бұрын

    Some parents think certain things come “naturally”, often forgetting that they had to be taught those very same skills.

  • @DL-idk

    @DL-idk

    Жыл бұрын

    Some people don't realize how important basic life skills are. I remember asking my grandma to teach me how to knit as a kid, but she got angry and refused because "you'll just need to study hard and get a well paid job and buy knitted products from the stores. No need to waste your time on this type of things". To her, knowing how to do stuffs yourself is somehow a sign of poverty and she was trying everything to get the younger generations out of that. She would do the chores for us and wouldn't tell us how to do them properly because those are not paid labor and anything not paid is a waste of time in her world view. It is sad.

  • @Sailorsega

    @Sailorsega

    4 ай бұрын

    Every few years, there will be news report saying, "A high percentage of university/college graduates, don't know how to do laundry/ basic housework". So, it's not just this one girl. I don't remember ever being taught how to do laundry, but it always seemed self-explanatory.

  • @johnclaybaugh9536

    @johnclaybaugh9536

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Sailorsega I'm well aware that she's not the only one. Years ago, working a fast food job, I had to teach a 17 year old how to mop the floor. I really didn't think I'd ever need to do that. I didn't embarrass her, but I was joking with the manager later when no one else was around, asking if kids just didn't have to do chores anymore.

  • @rya3190

    @rya3190

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@SailorsegaLol, I remember my mom "tricked" me when I was 8/9 into loading my laundry...nearly 20 years later I still do my clothes. Then again, my parents were always passing chores off to me, not that I can complain.

  • @ajwinberg
    @ajwinberg Жыл бұрын

    I lived with a friends family and had a bed room in the basement and worked nights. In the summer time my fri3nds little brother was home when school was out for summertime and he and his friends won be loud on purpose. Th3y wod run through the house and scream. On fourth of July they almost caught the house on fire. Because of their antics, I didn't get a lot of sleep. I would ask nicely too. They didn't care. When my friends brother graduated high school and joined the work force he had an over night Jon and live with his friends family. The same friend that he caused mischief with when I lived in the same house with him just 4 years before. His friend wouldn't let him sleep for work. He told my friend, his sister, to tell me sorry for when I lived with them and they were loud and wouldn't let me sleep because he now understands how I felt when they were loud and wouldn't let me sleep. He has grown into a much better man which is a good thing because he was very entitled.

  • @juliam7638
    @juliam7638 Жыл бұрын

    Im going to tell my cousins story here, idk why. He was a TOTAL SPOILED brat. Nobody has ever raised their voice on him (idk in others but in my country its normal, no im not asian), he was never grounded, he got everything he wanted. Being raised like this he thought he can do EVERYTHING. When me (female), my older cousin and that spoiled brat were on a vacation with my aunt all together the brat was SHOCKED how does the real world look like. My aunt was strict. When we got here, he tried to beat me up. When he realized im stronger he was pissed and scared of me (no i did not beat him up i would NEVER). When he wanted to go to mcdonalds (he definetly shouldnt, im not fatphobic but its just unhealthy... he weighs more than me (10 kilograms more) and he is 30 centimeters shorter) he was so angry he stood in place and did not want to move. We didn't care. He demanded chips the whole time, did not show ANY respect to polish history (which made me see red and me and my aunt were the ones who told him this isnt okay, idk how i did not slap him right into his stupid grumpy face, probably from respect), called his parents when he didnt like something, etc. It was not okay. He always called me and my cousin (the normal one) stupid, idiots etc. Also if i were here to grade, he is just...not smart. After that week of him kicking my normal cousins suitcase etc. i decided im NEVER going to go ANYWHERE with him. (by the way both me and my normal cousin HATE this brat)

  • @OGrat
    @OGrat Жыл бұрын

    I had this person from a placement I went to for about a year. And basically, his name was ridge or something like that. And when he first got there, he was ordering the staff and all that to be careful with his bags and stuff. He walked into the unit and saw his room, went "Hey, where's the queen sized mattress? The headboard?" And apparently had the illusion of grandeur. Clearly it didn't break after he had first seen the campus and saw everything look like a literal prison encampment. So basically, he DID NOT understand that he had to follow the rules and I could clearly see why he had been brought there. He wasn't a gang kid, he wasn't some tough kid. He was just a spoiled brat that thought he could always get what he want. And so after several days of being there, he had managed to get himself MONTHS of CR which was 'Cottage Restriction' Erich essentially meant he couldn't leave the building for nothing unless it was mandated. The reason? He was sitting to a councilor who was the sweetest woman you would ever meet in your life and was going through some really tough personal stuff. I don't know what caused it, but he had apparently struck her across the face and when everyone saw it, he pretty much was five feet from 13 big, violent and pissed off teenagers who wanted to tear him Limb from limb because everyone loved that councilor. I left a month or two after that I think, and I've never heard from anyone there again. But sometimes I'd like to think "What if the staff weren't there to protect ridge?" And snicker like the devil. So anyways that concludes the story.

  • @LandShades
    @LandShades Жыл бұрын

    That security guard in story #11 is a real one for teaching the guy

  • @SeptemberMeadows
    @SeptemberMeadows11 ай бұрын

    Story 10: I was in the Marines, part of being a Marine is deploying to other countries and often that's aboard Navy ships. I get motion sick on and in about everything but fortunately a 10 day regimen of patch medication on my neck allowed me to make the adjustment to sea life and it was easy sailing after that. Many did not though. My Sqaud leader, someone who had earned my respect and I greatly appreciated and liked wasted away from being continuously seasick, even with various medications. After loosing 30 pounds in in three weeks and no improvement being expected, emergency evac to the hospital ship and then back to the states. If you can't make it on a ship, you can't be a Marine. We were told a couple months later that they had been dismissed from duty on a general discharge. This happens every single year in the Marine Corps. I suspect probably the Navy, too.

  • @swissarmyknight4306

    @swissarmyknight4306

    8 ай бұрын

    And that's a big part of why I went Army. Only got air sick on the C-130, and that isn't for days at a time.

  • @chebryan
    @chebryan Жыл бұрын

    14:03 I’m gonna be honest, the strategy and subtlety behind this plan is genius. Whoever did this is really smart, especially how they avoided being reprimanded for it.

  • @xelalexa3262
    @xelalexa3262 Жыл бұрын

    best "stray" game tutorial ever in the background

  • @elainehague12

    @elainehague12

    Жыл бұрын

    Do you know what game this is?

  • @brelade

    @brelade

    Жыл бұрын

    @@elainehague12 stray... it literally said in the comment.

  • @elainehague12

    @elainehague12

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh I'm sorry that went over my head, is it on ps5?

  • @brelade

    @brelade

    Жыл бұрын

    @@elainehague12 Yes, it's a PS5 original.

  • @ArtsyLili
    @ArtsyLili Жыл бұрын

    I liked Story 9. She actually learned something from her 'spoiled brat got hit by real word' experience rather than ignoring it.

  • @vWaffle
    @vWaffle Жыл бұрын

    story 6: she isn't really a brat, she just realised that others aren't npcs in her movie

  • @DJace3000
    @DJace3000 Жыл бұрын

    I know Mostly Fact hates the dad in Story 4 for calling out his son in front of the class due to thinking that the son got the behavior from him, but people gotta remember that the parent can do their best and the kid will STILL be a little shit. I feel unless it's proven the dad was a shithead, the kid had that comin'.

  • @TS-jm7jm

    @TS-jm7jm

    Жыл бұрын

    this is why you beat your kids, back in my school days you could tell who wasnt beaten at home because they were all useless delinquents beyond the social norm and often the children of single moms, with the others who werent beaten(and believe me we knew because we asked) being socially inept and bullied for it, everyone else who was beaten usually worked out alright with their heads screwed on properly

  • @sebastianb.3978

    @sebastianb.3978

    Жыл бұрын

    I will co-sign this from personal experience. At age 22, I can say without a doubt and lots of regret that up until I was like 20, 21, I was a nasty little shit, despite my parents best efforts. Took my dad actually kicking me out and only allowing me back home after finding a job (I lived with some good friends who only knew my side until very recently) to realize I'm the problem, not my surroundings. Currently happy at night shift binging Reddit videos while on break :D

  • @larrywest42

    @larrywest42

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@sebastianb.3978 Whoa. Good on you for figuring this out while young. Many people never do. Props to your father, too.

  • @detmstr341
    @detmstr341 Жыл бұрын

    I work at a supermarket, and had this co-worker who would call out or would say she couldn't work 3 to 4 times a week. She would even dump her shifts onto others and me. I remember 1 time she wanted trade shifts with me, and I refused. So, she went to the manager to change her schedule, and I was told to stay late. I was so mad, but, in the end, her money wound up in my pocket, and she wound up getting fired for not coming into work. I'd say, justice came out on top.

  • @Son_Goku159

    @Son_Goku159

    Жыл бұрын

    that’s good, that co-worker sucked anyways she was trying to make it so she gets breaks more while u get once or twice.

  • @detmstr341

    @detmstr341

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Son_Goku159 Well, justice came out on top. I got extra pay, and she got the pink slip. So, who do you think won in the end? Not her, that's for sure.

  • @Son_Goku159

    @Son_Goku159

    Жыл бұрын

    @@detmstr341 i’d say you’d win, she would not win at all since she just wants to relax while u do all the work.

  • @yankeevader
    @yankeevader Жыл бұрын

    My mom did something similar to the bus cleaning one, I was a bit of a clepto in 2nd grade. She knocked the stupid out of me and made me help the janitor after school every day for the rest of the year. Haven’t stolen since.

  • @amethyst1062

    @amethyst1062

    4 ай бұрын

    I was a klepto up to 3rd grade. Somehow I never got caught Then to age 10 when my first school needed more toys for the kids and I felt bad that I thought this was my fault, I stole too many little accessories for my LPS Now I realize that it was maybe a tiny part of the problem I’ve not been a klepto for almost 6 years now

  • @entidade_000

    @entidade_000

    4 ай бұрын

    Wait, so you were an actual kleptomaniac?

  • @typoriver3651
    @typoriver3651 Жыл бұрын

    I just had an epiphany watching this video, and although it has hardly nothing to do with it, I'm gonna share it anyway 'cause it just changed my viewpoint on a major issue in my life. My brother is an asshole. He's been disabled from birth and is in constant pain, has a myriad of health issues. And goes through at least one major surgery each year since he was 9. He's 32 now. I always made excuses for him in my own mind as to why he thought the nasty things he did, and why he was so easily duped into believing crazy conspiracy theories, and why he just had to bring up people's race and sexuality if he was insulting them. I would always think, of course he has a narrow view of the world! He can't go out and experience life! Of course he's angry, he's had every opportunity taken from him! Of course he's stupid and doesn't understand basic concepts, he spent the majority of his middle/highscool in hospitals. "I love him regardless because he is strong enough to live with his dusabilities" No, he said some severely horrible things last Christmas that I can't stop replaying in my head every day since then. I just realized thanks to this video that my brother is an entitled jackass. One wouldn't think it because of his medical issues and that he's had everything taken from him due to a bad genetic roll of the die. But he is, in that every person in his life has given his shitty behavior and thoughts a pass since he was disabled. People have no excuse to be terrible, it doesn't matter what you are going through. Basic empathy and good will towards others should always be expected from anyone regardless of their personal issues.

  • @SMCwasTaken

    @SMCwasTaken

    Жыл бұрын

    One time a Autistic Boy beated up a girl in high school, but the girl got in trouble for self defense and got 1 week of ISS but the autistic boy only got "time out", that's it? No ISS, No Detention, No Suspension, No Juvy? WHAT THE ACTUAL HELL? He should be charged with assault and not use his baby brain as an excuse, if i met that boy up close i yell at him "GROW UP"

  • @haplessasshole9615

    @haplessasshole9615

    Жыл бұрын

    I hate to say it, but it sounds like you're right about your brother. Are you going to ease into a series of conversations about his spiteful, nasty language and attitudes?

  • @egg2566

    @egg2566

    Жыл бұрын

    Jeez, this comment made me realize my own brother is a ass. This is now my fav comment

  • @towerofhelluse1

    @towerofhelluse1

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@egg2566 same pfp :0

  • @laughingmask3118

    @laughingmask3118

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah there's plenty of people who have it as bad as that, if not worse, who still managed to somehow be decent human beings. It's almost like being an asshole is a genuine choice regardless of the hand you're dealt at birth.

  • @lisaharter8087
    @lisaharter8087 Жыл бұрын

    Both me and my brother we both spoiled children. For me, when I was in high school, I had money management for a class in 10th grade. I struggled in that class. It was hard to comprehend what my teacher was teaching the class, and i was extremely stressed. To the point I started crying in my math class after money management was done. It was when I came to realize. I'm going to drown in the real world if I don't get help. So here I am today, with a social worker to help me out and my parents' help too. I was even able to get my first apartment thanks to the Social worker. 😊

  • @Belugamale8738

    @Belugamale8738

    8 ай бұрын

    School isn't helpful though, Most knowledgeable people I know, Learned more outside of the school than they ever did in the class. School is always Hell-bent on memorising instead of actually learning & Destroying creativity.

  • @lod4246
    @lod4246 Жыл бұрын

    #7's the best one so far, so satisfying that ending. #9 Didn't quite make it for me, more like an honorable mention, but the last 2 lines were hilarious. I might edit this as I watch the video further.

  • @janisber111

    @janisber111

    4 ай бұрын

    Where do I sign up for Nr. 9? Can non USA citizens apply? Would love it as vacation.

  • @randycarter2001
    @randycarter2001 Жыл бұрын

    As I listen to these entitled kid stories I make a prediction. Within 2 years of graduating high school they will be in prison. Before that they will have done something that will cost their parents thousands of dollars to fix. In prison they won't do well. When you disrespect the other inmates they won't hesitate to thump you. Why, because they're already there.

  • @pancake204
    @pancake20410 ай бұрын

    The dad from story 3 is a total chad that knows what can turn a brat into a good kid.

  • @user-zl1vf4me1p
    @user-zl1vf4me1p Жыл бұрын

    I sure deserved a spot on that list, glad I got scolded to the ground by my parents when I was 12 y/o, If some of y'all have kids, teach them not to be arrogant or don't spoil them so much.

  • @anonymous-ec6ij
    @anonymous-ec6ij Жыл бұрын

    the 70's bus driver story is from 50 years ago(53 to be exact) so the guy is minimum 74 old since you have to be atleast 21 to drive a school bus

  • @NickCamokidVisneski
    @NickCamokidVisneski Жыл бұрын

    As someone whose father took his own life, I feel the pain you do, Eli. Your description of shunning is what to me sounds like solitary confinement in prisons. Most countries see that as cruel and unusual punishment.

  • @madrika8318
    @madrika8318 Жыл бұрын

    I had an annoying, entitled, spoiled cousin who always made fun of me and bullied me for being American. His mom(my aunt) has 4 kids, and although she dosent have a job and thus has time for taking care of her children, she isn't really the best at parenting. All her kids are entitled and rude to others, including me. And their mom does nothing about it. Usually I would tell my cousin to shut up and leave, or I would go somewhere else. Once he mocked me for speaking English to my sister, calling me a donkey for no reason. It irritates me a lot, and I always would stay away from him.

  • @fireblade696
    @fireblade6964 күн бұрын

    The dads who actually punished their kids, like the dad who made the kid clean the bus, the professor dad, and the bully’s dad are all awesome dads for teaching their kids a lesson. Especially Todd’s dad, he is so awesome.

  • @michaelleader633
    @michaelleader633 Жыл бұрын

    When he tried to blame me for something in an effort to smoke screen bit his past was tossed back in his face. I felt angry at first, amused later, and sad for his victims after I shook off the yoke he tried to put on my life. 😂

  • @US.Car.Spotter
    @US.Car.Spotter Жыл бұрын

    Some may say I was spoiled when I was younger, which I agree with, but I wasn’t rude about it. But when my grandma passed away, I was shocked in the worst way, and even to this day I’m “shocked” in a way. I can’t believe she not here anymore. 😭

  • @supersaiyantravis6962
    @supersaiyantravis6962 Жыл бұрын

    As much as "brat" has it's ageist connotations, it's threads like these that prove just how widely applicable the concept of brattiness can really be and it's just icing on the cake for why I love these stories.

  • @velvety2006

    @velvety2006

    Жыл бұрын

    my brother's oldest is a brat, despite his attempts to rein it in, he refuses to go to school and is always tired except whenever he wants to do something fun and his mom constantly gives in. i suspect he is gonna be one of those guys who lives in his parents basement watching porn al day while mommy makes his food, washes his clothes and cleans his room.

  • @Fuzz32
    @Fuzz32 Жыл бұрын

    Story 1: My high school principal was the total opposite. His daughter was the same age as my brother, they were in ninth grade at the time (I was in college). But one night after a softball game, it was a home game, he took her to his office and gave her a paddling. Her crime, “unsportsmanlike conduct”. I can’t remember exactly what my brother told me she did, either she insulted an opposing player or yelled at the umpire. Whichever it was, she got her butt whipped.

  • @entidade_000

    @entidade_000

    4 ай бұрын

    I heard of this kid whose dad used to do the same to him. One day, he got so tired of it that he ripped the paddle out of his hands and beat his dad with it until he was crying on the floor. Honestly, the guy was a total asshole, and i'd say he was definitely the one who deserved punishment over his son.

  • @alexdenommee3219
    @alexdenommee32195 ай бұрын

    The Bus Cleaner story is honestly 10/10, that kid's father actually knew an apt punishment, wake up slightly earlier, and clean the bus you messed up. I'm happy to see he became a good kid. The difference of good parenting vs no parenting.

  • @tonychan8558
    @tonychan85588 ай бұрын

    A different spin: I had a kid from a VERY wealthy family. I'm talking Scrooge McDuck kind of money. One day, he made a mess on his desk and swept it off with his hand onto the floor. Without hesitation, I grabbed the dustpan and brush I had in my desk drawer and handed it to him, not saying a word. He looked at me for a couple of seconds with a face of confusion, before silently cleaning his mess. The next day, it was PTC. His mom mentioned the incident, and I explained the whole thing to her. She gently nodded her head in approval before discussing his academics. I realized I had asked a multi-millionaire child to carry out domestic work, but he did it without question or talkback. Good kid.

  • @sfk1doesstuff207

    @sfk1doesstuff207

    20 күн бұрын

    W parents and W child. :)

  • @nannyofmany8315
    @nannyofmany831510 ай бұрын

    Mother of 5 my kids had daily chores, be it laying table to doing the dishes. They are as adults more than capable of running their own homes very well. It starts in the home. Teach by good example. And keep it a happy home always. None of mine were spoiled. Love, cuddles and a strong sense of character in each of them.

  • @floopyfish6339
    @floopyfish6339 Жыл бұрын

    i hate people that don't even know how to do basic chores. like, bro, what? How are you going to live away from home at all? if I was a parent that could afford a maid, I would still have my kid do their stuff.

  • @johndoeman9187
    @johndoeman9187 Жыл бұрын

    The "Good Move by Dad" story must not be taking place in the US, students aren't supposed to take classes run by their own parent in the US plus it doesn't matter how "spoiled" a person is violating a student's confidentiality is a career ending mistake for a professor in the US.

  • @lilyyoung1002

    @lilyyoung1002

    9 ай бұрын

    The dad might be the only professor for said course

  • @dragonballmagic69
    @dragonballmagic69 Жыл бұрын

    Story #7 the dad was amazing

  • @tumblingartist

    @tumblingartist

    Жыл бұрын

    Story #3 too Nice to see good parenting who actually discipline their kids for terrible behavior

  • @orcaman1353

    @orcaman1353

    Жыл бұрын

    #7 I’m the autistic nerdy non violent kid in my hometown. I get more bullying online and from family then from school very sad

  • @LivingDead53
    @LivingDead53 Жыл бұрын

    I have a relative like this. I have the pleasure of absorbing him since he's so generous and understanding. I am free! No more digital temper tantrums online because I have to protect someone while taking everything in as myself. This relative is very difficult to get away from or stop, especially when I was a child. He's already tried multiple ways to spy on me with cameras in my apartment as an adult. I didn't set them up. He sometimes taps the line and other weird things. He is one of the luckiest people and a POS. He gets so bad that grandma didn't even want to come while she was dying because he'd just make a mess mostly on purpose. In other news, there's always those kids in school who seem to have everything but they work extra hard, too, and their parents can afford a few nice items. It only annoyed me when they said that they did it all themselves. Meanwhile, my mom decided that I needed to be launched into the real world at 17. She said sorry later and that she'd made me too independent--and needed help, guess since I'm so weak. How would you like speeding over 80 along cliffs with only two lanes, with a guy who is drunk, while having this someone ask you if you'd say anything if he killed anyone? I said, yes. Big mistake.. I've been through several gutters and that was after my wonderful childhood. They told me it would get better. Nope, and it's like, that was a lot of effort. I was in special ed on top of it, so I couldn't escape anything. I have a sick, twisted smile. I ran off and joined the army. Now I'm trash like my dad, and they can say the apple doesn't fall from the tree. There is no longer a twinkle in my eye. My life is over, so I kind of exist in this world and not. I live in a facility and am content with one friend. I have my nook, my cat, my laptop, and my music. Eff off. Yes, sue me for being in the middle class with my truly insane father, having a mother with a habit, working 2-3 jobs and going to school in a small apartment, and riding 30-40 miles a day, and everything else. People love to justify doing that to their kids Insert Bill Gates, too. They save for 'retirement" for example and then don't leave their kids anything. Or the home of Hell drains it. With no money, you'll simply be on medicare. Straight to Hell. My disability makes it so that I don't deserve anything and discrimination is fair because it's my abilities, not my skin color. I loved the army for two years. People thought I was crazy. Then MM shows up and my hunter. lol I must be so spoiled, never had any problems. Look at my medical list, especially in the army. They'll come back, so I'm not going back to society. My own little world.

  • @marmot418
    @marmot418 Жыл бұрын

    I liked the response the brat got at the end of #4

  • @TheErikM

    @TheErikM

    Жыл бұрын

    That was so satisfactory that I'm starting to doubt it's veracity.

  • @johnnymcneal5914
    @johnnymcneal5914 Жыл бұрын

    What she found out is that the world does not always revolve around her and her alone

  • @boomerhunter5705
    @boomerhunter5705 Жыл бұрын

    Love how the guy described the german 5 year old child as Adolf.

  • @daikatarokamegawa542
    @daikatarokamegawa54211 ай бұрын

    If the kids grew up in a farm/ranch that's all the explanation you need for nothing bringing them down. There's a reason "I'm here, ain't I?" is a perfectly acceptable reason to rush a farmer into the ER, when you ask them how bad their injury is.

  • @ahsokatano22
    @ahsokatano22 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for skipping the cut scene in Stray. My feelings appreciates it😅

  • @hazelene_
    @hazelene_ Жыл бұрын

    I can clearly say that I'm a spoiled brat because I'm the only child and I'm becoming selfish growing up. Because I'm too comfortable and if I have to move out, it would be really hard for me to live. My parents have been helping me not die for the past 13 years.

  • @bobsburgers8497

    @bobsburgers8497

    10 ай бұрын

    You can choose to change your behavoir

  • @hazelene_

    @hazelene_

    10 ай бұрын

    @@bobsburgers8497 I am changing it. A bit of progress. I'll keep trying more.

  • @Soruk42
    @Soruk42 Жыл бұрын

    "Do you know who my dad is?" - asked by someone so detached from reality (s)he can't even remember her own family.

  • @WardofSquid
    @WardofSquid Жыл бұрын

    1:20 , 5:09 , This man is easily one of the Best Dads on the list. Good on him for whipping his kid into shape

  • @astrofan1993
    @astrofan19939 ай бұрын

    I remember seeing that video about the drunk college kid and the bacon jalapeño mac and cheese. Turns out, that wasn't his first incident. He actually ended up going to a different university, got in trouble there, had to leave that university, then ended up at the university where that viral video happened. He ended up being expelled over that incident, his parents helping him move out days later. The sad thing is, it wasn't his last incident, either. He got arrested in Florida about a year later for assaulting a police officer. Sounds to me like he was either so badly spoiled by his parents that he is now a male Karen, or he has some sort of behavioral disorder that was never treated. Either way, he's going to be in for a rough time for the rest of his life.

  • @Mogo-jan
    @Mogo-jan Жыл бұрын

    The kid having to clean a bus needs a movie

  • @blakethegreatone2058
    @blakethegreatone20588 ай бұрын

    I went to a private school where the son of the owner barely came to class his senior year. The principal didn't let him graduate that year and was fired about 2 weeks later. Dude still had to do another year to graduate though.

  • @The-Negative-Commentator
    @The-Negative-Commentator9 ай бұрын

    1:48 ayo this is like the best story like dad stepped up and the kid realized the meaning of hard work

  • @thomassmith839
    @thomassmith839 Жыл бұрын

    keep going with the good work! am i the genius and am i the jerk are amazing!

  • @thomassmith839

    @thomassmith839

    Жыл бұрын

    i love listening to these while playing games

  • @cassandrakennedy8182

    @cassandrakennedy8182

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thomassmith839 And i like watching the gameplay

  • @laughingmask3118
    @laughingmask3118 Жыл бұрын

    Who the hell has the kind of money to eat at a restaurant for breakfast lunch and dinner? Who the hell thinks that is a normal expectation to have??

  • @stormdog9169
    @stormdog9169 Жыл бұрын

    Alternate TItle: "How parents failed their children and dumped them into the real world."

  • @qtgaming6902
    @qtgaming6902 Жыл бұрын

    Honestly if a bully ever pulls the Do you know who my dad is card on me my response will always be No but he sure aint ganna be f**king here to stop me broken breaking your jaw

  • @romecottrell6444
    @romecottrell64447 ай бұрын

    This is why my mom always told my sister and I to get a job. No we wasn't rich or middle class. My mother worked a job and she wanted to let us know that nothing is free in life.

  • @catfacecat.
    @catfacecat. Жыл бұрын

    I love how he is playing stray in the background. Such a cool game.

  • @erraticonteuse

    @erraticonteuse

    Жыл бұрын

    I'd heard of the game before, but now I'm actually going to buy it lol.

  • @paulcollyer801
    @paulcollyer801 Жыл бұрын

    Respect to bus kid dad

  • @jaydonNEWi
    @jaydonNEWi Жыл бұрын

    3:07 "enough to make him quiver like a wet cat" while a cat game is played in the backround, what a coincidence

  • @nyneeveanya8861
    @nyneeveanya88612 ай бұрын

    #11 untaught, not a brat. A brat would have just added any soap a softener right at the beginning and then complained that the machine was broken. Luckily my parents taught us basics of housecleaning, maintenance, car upkeep, everything. Whether we were male or female.

  • @trevormillar1576
    @trevormillar1576 Жыл бұрын

    #4 is probably the CEO of his dad's company by now.

  • @UlyssesK402
    @UlyssesK4022 ай бұрын

    #4 had some *serious* nerve to try to pull the "do you know who my dad is" card *after* he had seen first hand that *his dad does NOT have his back "at all costs!"* What kind of response was he expecting after that?

  • @raymond9479
    @raymond9479Күн бұрын

    a rich father tell his son "i will kill you" is a epiphanty of back in my day our fist is the true judge among our enemy

  • @Inkytounge
    @Inkytounge Жыл бұрын

    I heard these stroies from the Mainly Facts Channel, I guess every Reddit commentary channel uses the same amount of questions.

  • @jamesbraun9842

    @jamesbraun9842

    Жыл бұрын

    And before that they were on Radio Reddit (the ones with the computer voice).

  • @SkiggsMoDiggs

    @SkiggsMoDiggs

    Жыл бұрын

    this is EVERY single reddit channel, NONE OF THEM use original threads. theyre all recycling each other's content, sometimes they even reupload their own videos all over again

  • @pokepoke1889

    @pokepoke1889

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SkiggsMoDiggs so what Reddit channel do I watch?

  • @SkiggsMoDiggs

    @SkiggsMoDiggs

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pokepoke1889 all of them basically, they're pretty much the same. just try to explore videos and hope its something new, but once you've watched nearly all the threads that can get really exhausting after a while.

  • @Disbanded9998

    @Disbanded9998

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@pokepoke1889emkay

  • @totally_not_a_possumlmao254
    @totally_not_a_possumlmao254 Жыл бұрын

    Can we be honest and say that stray should have an off shoot game where its just the parts with the 4 cats and parkour

  • @XiaoIOGW
    @XiaoIOGW Жыл бұрын

    30k for food for a year??????? I could buy 30422.3 bags of chips with that which would make 83.34 bags of chips every day das crazy fr

  • @kiwibird6671
    @kiwibird6671 Жыл бұрын

    There are 2 middles schools in my area one very lenient on many things and another (mine) is more normal good balance of discipline (not super strict ofc) One kids from the Lenient school comes to my school and thinks it’s okay to be on his phone no have a big fat picnic in the middle of History class. He becomes so shocked when the teacher is annoyed and eventually gives him detention. TLDR kid thinks you can do whatever in class, teacher says no

  • @n64briel
    @n64briel Жыл бұрын

    2:50 I remembered a story my dad once told me. In Chile, the standard test score goes from 1 - 7 in schools and 1 - 100 in college (im not sure if its still 1 - 100 since it was a long time ago) he told me that his first test in college he got a 7/100 and he comes home and says that he got a 7, his mom (my grandma) was happy to hear that until my dad told her it was out of 100.

  • @n64briel

    @n64briel

    2 ай бұрын

    i watched the same video twice wth

  • @n64briel

    @n64briel

    2 ай бұрын

    edited the thingy a bit

  • @telliex
    @telliex Жыл бұрын

    In Mormon religion, once you commit to service, you continue that service. A lot of times from a young age you're encouraged/made to do a lot of charity work, as the 'youth group' (there's like, multiple different things for kids in the LDS church and they're all called different things and--yeah) would often have you doing labour for other members of the church or serving in homeless shelter kitchens. It's not surprising they can putter through a lot. At least, in my eyes, as a former Mormon. Hard work is also a major value and some Mormons go on 2-year missions, and in the past they usually only had a bike and hardly any living space the whole time.

  • @senor-achopijo3841
    @senor-achopijo38418 ай бұрын

    19:49 Boy, that escalated quickly!

  • @randycarter2001
    @randycarter2001 Жыл бұрын

    Commander of ship? You don't get there without a lot of hard work and getting along with other people. He was definitely smoking something and I don't think it's legal.

  • @YourCasualChef
    @YourCasualChef Жыл бұрын

    “When have you seen the world hit a spoiled brat?” When I saw him get hit by a bus

  • @lagamerfuel9661
    @lagamerfuel9661 Жыл бұрын

    A comment for number 10. My brother while he was in basic training for the military, actually was in the same company (a company is like a smaller group of around 80-150 guys in a platoon of 800)as the son of the governor of Oklahoma and he never really ( from what he’s told us) said that he was entitled like 10 so I guess that not all rich kids are entitled and think their better than everyone

  • @flowern6499
    @flowern6499 Жыл бұрын

    "IT LASTED FOUR DAYS" I like how he reads it: "It lasted for days"

  • @jmi967
    @jmi967 Жыл бұрын

    #18: This is why kids shouldn't have an allowance. You want money? Do chores.

  • @Twilight24682
    @Twilight2468210 ай бұрын

    Hearing a bully get punishment for bullying an autistic child made me smile i wish the same happened for me i was bullied for being autistic and when i fought back i was punished

  • @flashstudiosguy
    @flashstudiosguy4 ай бұрын

    Back when I was doing Basic Training for my Sergeant's Exam, we'd one guy who said "There's no point you guys learning my first or last name because, before you know it,you'll all be calling me Sir..". College Commendant happened to be passing by and loudly replied "They could start right now, if you like,because if I or any of my Staff hear you talking shit like that again,you'll not only be off the course,you'll be out of the service!" Guy never said anything beyond what he essentially needed to say and im happy to announce he just called a week ago to say he got offered a position at said College as an Instructor in Engineering.

  • @ChaoticKris964
    @ChaoticKris964 Жыл бұрын

    I love the ending on #7. I love seeing fellow autistics have massive w’s

  • @bk-entertainz7081
    @bk-entertainz70814 ай бұрын

    TODDS FATHER IS HORRIFYINGLY A CHAD

  • @Oniri245
    @Oniri245 Жыл бұрын

    I have seen one, me i asked my parents and begged for a nintendo switch and when i had it, i saw the sad look my dad had, when i saw what he does in his job working 24/7 just to make half the money it’d take to buy 1 switch, i felt like i was thinking the wrong way.

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