When Have You Seen A Spoiled Brats Getting Owned ?

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When Have You Seen A Spoiled Brats Getting Owned ?
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  • @SkiggsMoDiggs
    @SkiggsMoDiggs Жыл бұрын

    I'm gonna have to disagree with the Todd thing. Absolute demon spawns have come from perfectly fine parents, and if the dad was really at fault, he definitely would not have responded the way he did. Nature vs nurture is real, and for some kids, their nature can't be swayed

  • @Chubbasaurus

    @Chubbasaurus

    Жыл бұрын

    Could also be the mother, honestly.

  • @blackmooncultx9552

    @blackmooncultx9552

    Жыл бұрын

    I said the same thing. My mom was vicious behind closed doors.

  • @Tratatai

    @Tratatai

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I'm not subscribed and only occasionally click on these videos when they show up in suggestions, but this narrator has some extremely idiotic takes. Another example would be a story of a DRUNK guy getting accused of SA after a sober chick pretty much forces him to have sex with her, and his hot take? DUHHH THE GUY IS A RAPIST BECAUSE HE WAS DRUNK. If anything, by the "drunk = SA" logic and the story itself, it was the guy who was SA'd. Absolute moron. I need to stop clicking on these videos and giving him views.

  • @luxuryballer8291

    @luxuryballer8291

    Жыл бұрын

    OP should have Todd's dad come in and be like "Do you know who MY dad is?" And then have Todd's grandpa come in and beat his ass.

  • @ArcanineEspeon

    @ArcanineEspeon

    Жыл бұрын

    @@luxuryballer8291 Lol, no idea how OP would have made that happen, but I can agree that it would have been a great thing for Todd's dad to do.

  • @kareemdavis4068
    @kareemdavis4068 Жыл бұрын

    Hey sometimes parents can't be held accountable for how their kids act behind their backs. They can act like angels one minute and become GREMLINS the next

  • @mvb88

    @mvb88

    Жыл бұрын

    Done everything by the book. Adoption is still a option for my oldest.

  • @SkiggsMoDiggs

    @SkiggsMoDiggs

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mvb88 i am interested in your tale

  • @yungmo1599

    @yungmo1599

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mvb88 Lmao, I feel ya.

  • @i-am-a-lie...

    @i-am-a-lie...

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mvb88 never heard of the mighty belt?

  • @supervegito2277

    @supervegito2277

    Жыл бұрын

    Teenagers espicially.

  • @SchazmenRassir
    @SchazmenRassir Жыл бұрын

    I'm going to defend Todd's dad a bit. I'm pretty sure just almost all kids throughout history behave differently at home and at school. And until someone tells the parents, they might never find out.

  • @LordGeneralButtoms6969

    @LordGeneralButtoms6969

    Жыл бұрын

    The narrator is naive on how much children can be monsters

  • @SchazmenRassir

    @SchazmenRassir

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LordGeneralButtoms6969 Yeah, that, too.

  • @SenseiRaisen

    @SenseiRaisen

    Жыл бұрын

    That happen with a guy in my school. The parents went to said: "my son never does that" to almost literally beg to not expulsion for what the b-hole of the son did and show to do 1st hand. Worse as my grade school was catholic (After that went to a different high school).

  • @oisinlynch8427

    @oisinlynch8427

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SchazmenRassir yeah plus it could have been the mother that raised him like that and the father didn’t know or Todd did this himself

  • @mouse6064

    @mouse6064

    Жыл бұрын

    They are all just terrible. Thank God I was never a kid

  • @banjo3960
    @banjo3960 Жыл бұрын

    The dad in the first story is probably one of those dads who are rarely there because of work and stuff so the mother could've been the one to raise him

  • @Sans_the_skeleton_real

    @Sans_the_skeleton_real

    Жыл бұрын

    Actually that’s a good point.

  • @yungmo1599

    @yungmo1599

    Жыл бұрын

    exactly what I thought

  • @thememeqween

    @thememeqween

    Жыл бұрын

    same

  • @Kuromi_-68t

    @Kuromi_-68t

    Жыл бұрын

    What if their both not there but still good point

  • @fatimaissufficient

    @fatimaissufficient

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah that's what I thought too

  • @darklightmagus1222
    @darklightmagus1222 Жыл бұрын

    Story 1: Sometimes they learn the "do you know who my father is" card from their mother who probably uses the "do you know who my husband is" card.

  • @Rio..o7..

    @Rio..o7..

    Жыл бұрын

    some kids are shit kids no matter what anyone does

  • @dstreet4599

    @dstreet4599

    Жыл бұрын

    My husband has TWO jobs! - Rochelle

  • @vamp2252

    @vamp2252

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dstreet4599 Do you know who my grandfather is?! He has 5 JOBS!

  • @Cell287

    @Cell287

    Жыл бұрын

    My husband is the CEO of X company

  • @maybefoxtart

    @maybefoxtart

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@dstreet4599I love that show 😂

  • @shadowhuntress1371
    @shadowhuntress1371 Жыл бұрын

    This reminds me about a story my dad told me from his days in the Navy. He was on a submarine and had minimal training from my grandfather on how to cook. He was pretty nervous about it until he found some instructions in the kitchen. They were step-by-step instructions on how to boil water. He didn't feel as worried after that.

  • @DarkFruitsAnimation

    @DarkFruitsAnimation

    Жыл бұрын

    Adds new meaning to the saying "such a bad cook he could even burn water"!

  • @Icalasari

    @Icalasari

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DarkFruitsAnimation I once did that. My parents wondered how the hell Especially as I know how to cook and can do it pretty well I just Am horrible with boiling water for some reason

  • @DaviGamingOFC

    @DaviGamingOFC

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Icalasari bro really made the "sans burning the water" video real 💀💀💀

  • @ryanhughes5288

    @ryanhughes5288

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Icalasari When you say you've burnt water, did it ignite on fire or something? Otherwise I can't see how you got water to burn

  • @Robynhoodlum

    @Robynhoodlum

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ryanhughes5288 If you boil all the water out of a non-stick pan, It will often smell and leave a residue, similar to if you over simmer a sauce.

  • @ConnorPugs
    @ConnorPugs Жыл бұрын

    It’s super satisfying when spoiled brats get a taste of the real world 😂

  • @arei.17

    @arei.17

    Жыл бұрын

    True that. First one was just so deliciously satisfying…

  • @barrykunst397

    @barrykunst397

    Жыл бұрын

    Fax bro

  • @flarethefox1779

    @flarethefox1779

    Жыл бұрын

    agreed

  • @aaronavitia4624

    @aaronavitia4624

    Жыл бұрын

    HEY!!!! I used to watch you

  • @hazywasxd

    @hazywasxd

    Жыл бұрын

    lmao i like how he commented here

  • @Cl0udS1nks
    @Cl0udS1nks Жыл бұрын

    About the Todd one, sometimes kids are just horrible when they aren't around their parents. A good parent can have a kid who acts like an absolute piece of crap even if the parents take care of them, and an absolutely horrible parent can have great kids

  • @razztastic

    @razztastic

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah. I've been friends with a lot of great guys and girls who come from dysfunctional families or abusive households. Beyond some mental problems that I always tried to help them through, they were always excellent people and never put themselves before anybody else. I'm still in touch with one of them and he's like a little brother to me, but I can't speak for the rest of them. Hope they're doing better now.

  • @SpectacularSpiderFan
    @SpectacularSpiderFan Жыл бұрын

    Aight the whole "its your fault for how your kid turned out" thing annoys me Contextually both fathers acted once they knew about the behavior, so clearly they werent heavily aware of a problem to correct. And also sometimes, people just turn out to be pieces of shit despite their parent's best efforts to do otherwise. IDK it just seems like an ignorant response, especially in the context where the parent does take action.

  • @charliedelfino2102

    @charliedelfino2102

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm a highschool teacher, sometimes we get the most adorable children start their first year, make friends with the wrong people, and just become horrible, entitled arseholes who don't help themselves and blame everyone else for their failings. We have far more kids that come from abusive/neglectful households who act out because it's the only way they know how to act. These kids would also be beaten by their parents every time they failed a class, it's the classic parent mentality of "do as I say, not as I do".

  • @addyshorhnr3544

    @addyshorhnr3544

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes but on responded with something that would teach the kids humility without threats, while the other immediately went to a physical threat making it more likely that fear is the only factor said father uses to control his child’s behavior, which might have been the leading cause of him acting out in a threatening and violent manner. We never actually see the first dad do anything other then threaten the child so therefore it can be assume that he either didn’t or used physical punishment.

  • @3rr0r123

    @3rr0r123

    11 ай бұрын

    the money raises them, NOT the parents, the parents probably love them enough to buy them things, and are too busy to do housework, i know a couple whos really friendly, but the kid... MAYBE IT WAS THE MAI-

  • @hyperwolf5420
    @hyperwolf5420 Жыл бұрын

    To all rich successful parents. I'm not a parent myself, but spoiling your kids and protecting them from the real world is not the same as loving them. You still have to set strict rules and punishments and teach them life skills. If you're too permissive of them, they will turn into entitled narcissists with terrible social skills, that embarrass themselves constantly and the world will eat them alive and spit them out.

  • @yungmo1599

    @yungmo1599

    Жыл бұрын

    what I tell my grandma all the time for her other grandkids and my aunt..

  • @idk_yt7797

    @idk_yt7797

    Жыл бұрын

    ratio

  • @possumorb3770

    @possumorb3770

    Жыл бұрын

    The harder you try to fight the world, the more it laughs in defiance. There are those that still try, and those who simply laugh alongside it.

  • @cassandrakennedy8182

    @cassandrakennedy8182

    Жыл бұрын

    @@possumorb3770 WeLl AcTuaLLy iT Is "Along-side"-Nerd Emoji

  • @lindac6919

    @lindac6919

    Жыл бұрын

    And some of us will enjoy spitting them out! What comes around, goes around.

  • @angelwatcher374
    @angelwatcher374 Жыл бұрын

    It’s not always the parents’ fault. I’ve known some great parents who had terrible kids. There was one time I was riding with my boss in the work van on the interstate and there was a bad crash so traffic was moving very slowly. Multiple cars used the emergency lane to get ahead which drove me and my boss crazy. We finally pull up to the large crash and see that there are at least a dozen police cars. I’m sure they pulled all of those law breakers over, but I only saw a couple of them getting tickets from the police because we were still moving and had to get where we were going so I didn’t have a chance to see if the police had pulled all of them over.

  • @jeffreycauwels1974
    @jeffreycauwels1974 Жыл бұрын

    "Hope that bully bettered himself! or fell down an open sewer grate..." This dude cracks me up!

  • @darklightmagus1222
    @darklightmagus1222 Жыл бұрын

    Story 7: Sometimes the Mormons are raised similar to the Amish. As soon as you're able to walk, you are expected to put in your fair share of labor in helping out with chores. There is scheduled time for study and for hobbies. Any other spare time you find is spent performing a task/chore or helping others with their chores. If you did all your regular chores, then you start working on home improvement or repair tasks that have been neglected. A friend of mine that joined the army told me about an Amish recruit that joined at the same time as him. The guy looked like a twig compared to most of the others. Yet he had the easiest time. When asked, the Amish guy explained that at home he would get woken up at 4 o'clock in the morning. So getting woken up at 5 instead is like being allowed to sleep in and any sooner is just the usual. As for making the bed and getting ready, he did that quite fast already as he needed to do a few chores quickly before breakfast. The long jogs that they were made to do so early in the morning in training were also no big deal for him. At home, he had to fetch the mail which was a bit farther than the jog they were made to do here. And at least here in training they got a ride back where as compared to home he had to jog back as well. He felt spoiled. My friend felt insulted. 😆

  • @valenciageode25
    @valenciageode25 Жыл бұрын

    The story with the vandalism girl shows the consequences of spoiling your kids instead of raising them to be functional adults. She wasn’t punished for her previous vandalism and probably thought she could get away with it again, and/or had no clue it was wrong. Also, the lady who did that many makeup tests baffles me especially because if there were images on the box she could probably just look at them. If they didn’t, after a few boxes she should’ve been able to just figure out what wouldn’t work without using it. Also, who does that? Is she just going through the grocery sampling the ice cream with a spoon?

  • @amberlexicon

    @amberlexicon

    Жыл бұрын

    Taking a single banana out of a bunch and tasting it for quality assurance. Then moving to the next bunch.

  • @CRUSH40RULES

    @CRUSH40RULES

    Жыл бұрын

    I used to work in an ice cream shop and we allow customers to taste test flavours. We let them use plastic spoons but if they wanted to try another flavour, they have to discard the used spoon and get a fresh one.

  • @Ironica82
    @Ironica82 Жыл бұрын

    Love your content but must say this...not all kids who turn out bad are due to the parents. It is rather complicated and nuance but there are a plethora of other factors that causes kids to turn up rotten.

  • @paigemosher8697

    @paigemosher8697

    Жыл бұрын

    Pretty much. Some people are just bad seeds from the get-go. Good news is, even most people simply born that way can grow to unlearn that behavior and improve themselves.

  • @j.ackermann9110

    @j.ackermann9110

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes but even if they are just born to be assholes, it's the parents job to put them in their place

  • @NealCamerlengo

    @NealCamerlengo

    Жыл бұрын

    @@j.ackermann9110 In a perfect world that would be the case but since it is reality and not fictional television/movies that isn't always possible.

  • @wiosna4

    @wiosna4

    Жыл бұрын

    Sometimes kids take someone other than their parents as idols

  • @texasforever7887

    @texasforever7887

    Жыл бұрын

    Unless they are adopted it us their genetics though...

  • @7fallingstars
    @7fallingstars Жыл бұрын

    Story 1: It's either the brat acts different at home or the dad is barely present and it's the other parent that is coddling his behavior. Bratty kids can still rise despite having good parents. On the other hand, if one parent is trying to teach him life lessons and the other parent undermines it to tell him that the world owes and revolves around you, you don't need to guess where the kid will lean towards and learn that behavior.

  • @BriskiTheFreak

    @BriskiTheFreak

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeah. Ngl it kinda seems weird how often he said that repeatedly through the video. Not every kid is entitled due to upbringing. I knew one guy who's parents were super chill. He was mean to me and my bro about us being "different" (we are both extremely neurodivergent, adhd, and autism) and when his parents found out he was scolded hard! Not only that but apparently they had him help after school with some sorta program and he learned about the disabilities we had. After that he apologized in person and everything. He's a chill dude now and works as a mechanic. This all happened when we were kids and while we might not be friends with him we are always friendly towards eachother when we see eachother in town.

  • @RedneckSwede
    @RedneckSwede Жыл бұрын

    I've heard a funny story about a spoiled kid with wealthy parents beat the special needs kids every day. However, one day he was downtown walking along the street skipping school when he saw something on the other side of the street. Without thinking he took two steps out in the nearest lane and got hit by the short bus. He had to ride one for the rest of his years in school. I found this in an online article a long time ago. Karma is quite ironic sometimes.

  • @ebonywillow77
    @ebonywillow77 Жыл бұрын

    I really, really love the lack of stupid robot voice 🥰

  • @mztweety1374

    @mztweety1374

    Жыл бұрын

    Same

  • @Ironica82

    @Ironica82

    Жыл бұрын

    Same. Tiss the reason why I only watch Mystery Recap for movie recaps

  • @tonyisnotdead

    @tonyisnotdead

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Ironica82 what about minute movies

  • @jedadiahpierson2007

    @jedadiahpierson2007

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed

  • @Ironica82

    @Ironica82

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tonyisnotdead Dont remember them. I'll check them out. To be fair, Mystery Recap also adds his humor to it as well

  • @gf_djacobi
    @gf_djacobi Жыл бұрын

    For the longest time, my brother was a demon spawn. My mother wasn't a bad mom and she divorced his dad before he was old enough to really remember him. He always had a father figure that made up for not having a dad before my mom remarried. He was taught right and wrong and how to treat people. But despite all of that, he was still a monster. He acted like his father, despite not knowing him. He's better now that he's a teenager, but I think the whole argument of nature over nurture really plays in to a lot of these stories.

  • @Chellythefox
    @Chellythefox Жыл бұрын

    I have to disagree with blaming the Dad in the 1st Story + 12th Story. Sometimes people can be shitty regardless if they have really nice parents.

  • @undeadladybug7723
    @undeadladybug7723 Жыл бұрын

    I will never understand how parents can just *not* teach their kids basic "take care of yourself" stuff like laundry and cooking, but then my mom was the "mean parent" because she made my sister and I do chores. So many of my sister's friends parents especially were shocked when Mom told them that.

  • @Robynhoodlum

    @Robynhoodlum

    Жыл бұрын

    I mean, my mom was verbally abusive, but teaching me how to cook, clean, and do laundry was some of the nicest things she did for me. It meant I never had to ask her to do things for me, I could just avoid her all together.

  • @oszievavoxrv3154
    @oszievavoxrv3154 Жыл бұрын

    *[Story 11]* I immediately felt proud just hearing someone like me (yes, I'm autistic) made a ruthless having what he deserved... The best grades for being firm before their ideals...

  • @adiithao732
    @adiithao7328 ай бұрын

    I was checking out at a grocery store and this brat was clearly misbehaving. He went to the salt blocks thinking it was styrofoam and punched one. The reaction from him makes me think he regretted his behavior.

  • @mjlh7079
    @mjlh7079 Жыл бұрын

    Story 20 reminded me of this: My 1st year of college I sitting in a traffic jam on my way to school when a Karen pulled over & started driving at high speed down the bike lane, she hit and killed a 5 year-old who was out biking with his parents - This was in the days before cameras and every driver & home/business resident in eye shot of her actions showed up in court to testify against her. She got 5 years in the big house

  • @3rr0r123

    @3rr0r123

    11 ай бұрын

    that should be 6+, it wasnt an accident of acidentally hitting while driving normally, it was the BIKE LANE, no one thinks "no one uses bikes anyways i can drive here"

  • @neliaferreira9983

    @neliaferreira9983

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@3rr0r123I'm sure the legal penalty depends on the country.

  • @Robynhoodlum
    @Robynhoodlum Жыл бұрын

    I'm with you about laundry. My mother marched me down to the basement when I was 11 and showed me how to do laundry. Even though we had a cleaning lady for years when I was young, my mom made me learn how to clean the house from top to bottom. As an only child, I learned how to do all the yard work, all the cleaning, and how to cook for myself, just in case. I'm in college, and I can't imagine how coddled you have to be not to learn this stuff.

  • @hollylappalainen2000
    @hollylappalainen2000 Жыл бұрын

    My opinions on story seventeen: I always get startled how people don't know how to do laundry because my grandmother taught me how to do it when I was eight and I've now been doing my own for five years, but then I remember my brother, who is only a year younger than me and to this day, refuses to learn how to do laundry. Oh, and I also know how to bake and cook and he still, refuses because he can make pancakes, kraft dinner and can microwave a tv dinner.

  • @amberlexicon

    @amberlexicon

    Жыл бұрын

    You would be absolutely startled at the amount of fully grown adults who don't know how to do chores or do something like take a bus. Just completely unfamiliar and inexperienced. I don't know how it happens because my mom specifically had me do chores which I hated as a kid but it really prepared me to take care of myself as an adult. I've had to teach these skills to so many people I've lived with and romantic partners I've had. I find it's more prevalent in men. That's just my experience though, not a sweeping generalization.

  • @wetsockfullofhotmeat

    @wetsockfullofhotmeat

    Жыл бұрын

    I remember having this revelation when I met my girlfriend. I was admittedly a bit spoiled and didn't have to do chores until 13, but by 14, I knew how to do laundry, plunge a toilet, wash dishes, cook a basic meal, and all the bare essentials of home hygiene. In comparison, my girlfriend's mother never taught her how to do ANYTHING, much less chores. She did the absolute bare minimum of parenting by keeping her fed with TV dinners and then letting the TV babysit her. The worst part? The moment my gf turned 18, her mom expected her to start doing chores, get her license, and get a full-time job. My girlfriend has basically none of the life skills you need to function alone as an adult because her mom thought that children are just houseplants that need to fed and watered occasionally until they grow into functioning adults.

  • @Robynhoodlum

    @Robynhoodlum

    Жыл бұрын

    @@wetsockfullofhotmeat Interesting. My parents were barely home too but the opposite happened. They specifically taught me how to do everything at a young age so that I could take care of myself. I learned how to cook for myself when I was 6 (microwave only, I couldn't use the stove til I was 12). Cleaning and Laundry by the time I was 12. It wasn't even a free labor thing, I just was in charge of my laundry and my bedroom/bathroom/basement play area. If I needed clean clothes, or wanted a hot meal, I had to do it myself.

  • @donovanyatto9935

    @donovanyatto9935

    4 ай бұрын

    Glad I’m seeing other people who were raised learning how to do these things. I’ve heard stories of college kids who don’t know how to do dishes and it scares me because of how simple it is lol. I still remember my mom teaching me to cook eggs on the stove as soon as I could pull a chair to it and I’ve loved cooking ever since

  • @Harldin
    @Harldin Жыл бұрын

    Love the Uni one, got away with murder in the small town High School where Daddy was King, but once she went out into the real world where Daddy was no-body.

  • @MoonlarkSpirits
    @MoonlarkSpirits Жыл бұрын

    I’m glad my parents have raised me the way they did Before I despised their strictness but now, I’m thankful for it

  • @exponentiallydumb
    @exponentiallydumb Жыл бұрын

    Parents are not always to fault. Some kids are just bad people.

  • @bellaknightR597

    @bellaknightR597

    Жыл бұрын

    Ikr

  • @texasforever7887

    @texasforever7887

    Жыл бұрын

    Its their genetics though unless adopted.

  • @bellaknightR597

    @bellaknightR597

    Жыл бұрын

    @texasforever7887 bad behavior isn't in your genes

  • @texasforever7887

    @texasforever7887

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bellaknightR597 its either nature or nurture. Y'all are saying it has nothing to do with nurture or how they are raised so that leaves nature

  • @bellaknightR597

    @bellaknightR597

    Жыл бұрын

    @texasforever7887 we're talking about spoiled kids not serial killers

  • @TehAnshiTunes
    @TehAnshiTunes Жыл бұрын

    That story about the guy that was "going to be an officer" reminds me of a story my father told me. One of the few war stories hes shared with me. Anyways, on the boat from (?) Vietnam back home, literally everyone got seasick. Everyone. Except him. So, to avoid being the cleaner, he laid in his cot for two days, facing the wall, and pretended to be as ill as everyone else.

  • @mrrios124
    @mrrios124 Жыл бұрын

    About the Todd thing: I don’t think the Father wanted him to be like that, parents can’t control what their kids are hearing und seeing outside of home

  • @AnnoyingBastsardonSteam
    @AnnoyingBastsardonSteam Жыл бұрын

    It's so satisfying to see the snobs getting a wake up call... That won't work

  • @darklightmagus1222
    @darklightmagus1222 Жыл бұрын

    Story 17: The problem is that parents nowadays try to do all the chores themselves instead of teaching their kids how to do them. If you wait until your child is a teen, they will rebel at having to do chores when they have never been made to do so before. Parents need to normalize doing chores as early as possible as part of living at home. You live here, you put in your share of chores. Even as a guest at someone else's home, parents need to be role models and genuinely offer to help with cleaning up the table or do the dishes. Ages 5-9 help with chores alongside the parent. Parents teach their kids how to perform chores as they do them together. Ages 10-14 do chores on their own with minimal supervision. Parents should still monitor their children performing tasks while asking questions to be sure the chores were done correctly or properly. Ages 15 and up, parents should full on stop doing any chores for their children. Remind them that they need to do their own chores but don't force them or punish them if they don't. The punishment for their inactions will be paid on its own. Didn't wash clothes? Guess you'll have to reuse your dirty laundry. Forgot to cook dinner for the family? Well I made food for everyone else but you. You'll still have to make food for yourself. Didn't wash your dishes? I guess you'll have to be the only one eating out of a bowl instead of a plate and using a spoon instead of a fork. Eventually, they will get it. If they are struggling with time management, you can help but only with one or two things every once in a while but not all the chores.

  • @Icalasari

    @Icalasari

    Жыл бұрын

    Spite also works. Learned how to do laundry out of sheer spite towards my dad Him and I have a better relationship now (although I want to smack the borderline Q out of him), but boy did spite help a lot

  • @princessatellaluma

    @princessatellaluma

    Жыл бұрын

    agree with everything here except cooking for the family. most teenagers are just starting out w cooking and dont know how to make large quantities of food and the preferences of the family like a parent would. i think asking them to make their own breakfast and lunch and dinner is more reasonable without making them responsible for feeding their siblings and parents. also making rewards tied to tasks is very useful for responsibility. i dont mean an allowance but reminding a kid that how well they complete and are honest with their chores and other tasks, the more freedom they will be able to have usually helps with making a connection with working hard and getting ahead, which is very useful as you head out into the real world.

  • @AramatiPaz

    @AramatiPaz

    Жыл бұрын

    I can't fanton how some teens don't know how to make a basic meal for the family, or the groceries. I did all those things at 13.

  • @princessatellaluma

    @princessatellaluma

    Жыл бұрын

    @Null-7 "Mereel" oh i know how to cook. was just talking about the average teen

  • @josiemell1795
    @josiemell1795 Жыл бұрын

    In the car rider line at my school, a really nice sports car pulls up with a dog in the shotgun seat. The kid who was getting picked up was taking his sweet time pointing out the car to anyone who would listen. When he grabbed the car handle the mother drove all the way around the school with him chasing after, we later heard her yelling about him being a brat over HER car that SHE paid for

  • @angelpixiegirl
    @angelpixiegirl Жыл бұрын

    The laundry thing blows my mind. I was doing laundry since I was around 14 or 15. Also when people don't know how to cook as teenagers, I know I'm in the minority on this one but I started making my own lunches at 8 and cooking for myself at around 10 or 11

  • @Robynhoodlum

    @Robynhoodlum

    Жыл бұрын

    same

  • @thomaskernan2638
    @thomaskernan2638 Жыл бұрын

    Man I really like these videos. I’m a deer hunter so I spend a lot of time alone in a deer stand and these stories pass time well. Thanks mainly fact!

  • @danielspoon1234

    @danielspoon1234

    Жыл бұрын

    Wouldn't you get distracted and miss approaching pret

  • @tonyisnotdead

    @tonyisnotdead

    Жыл бұрын

    @@danielspoon1234 i didn't know you needed to look at a video to be able to hear it

  • @Sans_the_skeleton_real

    @Sans_the_skeleton_real

    Жыл бұрын

    @@danielspoon1234 You realize that audio isn’t visual right? You can still listen to something and see a deer to shoot. Plus the person might be listening to them while they aren’t hunting, for example hiking.

  • @pastelroswell

    @pastelroswell

    Жыл бұрын

    Hope you eat them afterwards.

  • @tonyisnotdead

    @tonyisnotdead

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Sans_the_skeleton_real you explained my point, good job

  • @yourlocalanxiety7359
    @yourlocalanxiety7359 Жыл бұрын

    I was at school minding my business when a boy was bragging about his money, but little did he know I was his neighbor, he was saying MY HOUSE was his, and my trucks, SUVs were his, same with my dog (dunno why I guess she just looks expensive) so I walked up to him, and said “What was that about my dog?” And showed him the pictures of her and my house. The look on his face was priceless

  • @ShadowDoggo_Playz
    @ShadowDoggo_Playz Жыл бұрын

    There was a kid in my class who was being absolutely horrible to me and a teacher caught him being rude and he got in so much trouble 😂 spoiled brats are just something else

  • @Robynhoodlum

    @Robynhoodlum

    Жыл бұрын

    I once punched the ahole who was bothering me. I didn't realize the teacher was behind me, but she just said he deserved it and moved on.

  • @smartpanda12
    @smartpanda12 Жыл бұрын

    All the ones on spoiled college kids makes me remember my freshman year college roommate. She was a MASSIVE (B)ITCH. She was that type that blew through her allowance so fast (which was like $1000 a week, for reference I got like $250 every 2 weeks) and when mom or dad wouldn’t give her anymore, she would whine and complain to grandma or auntie until they gave her an extra $1000 😬 She also had multiple boyfriends and would stay up late loudly talking to them on video calls and if they ignored her for a single second, she would whine and cry that they didn’t love her. And she always told each boy they were her “one and only” while I’m just zipping up my bed tent and trying to get some sleep. Also I got injured pretty early in the semester (got rear ended at a red light at 40mph leaving my first (and only) marching band performance at a football game) and while I didn’t break anything, I had major muscle strains (which looming back were also probably some EDS subluxations as well) down my whole back to the point where I could barely leave my bed, I missed so many classes I pretty much flunked the semester. The muscle strains made it near impossible to sing for choir and I had to drop marching band completely bc my director made me keep coming to games even though all I could do was just sit holding my trombone (of course couldn’t hold it up to play it). During all of that she would always claim my side of the room was trashed when it was a few things scattered on the floor and she would (b)itch at me in person and over text that I was lazy and it wasn’t that hard to clean. Once I got a new car, she pretty much used me as a free taxi service (and me being a people pleaser just did it). She did eventually get humbled by her own hit of the real world but even I thought it was a horrible way of it happening. One day she asked me if one of her arms looked more swollen than the other, and it did. She kept saying she thought she just pulled a muscle at the gym but I kept telling her it felt warm and she should probably go to the ER. She said she couldn’t bc her insurance only covered facilities in California (we were in Nevada) so she booked a last minute flight home and I dropped her off at the airport, honestly worried about her (I didn’t like her but I could tell this seemed serious). She was gone for a few weeks and I think finally came back after thanksgiving break. Turns out she had some sort of defect around her collarbone that pressed on some blood vessels and gave her a Axillo-subclavian vein thrombosis (yes I had to look that up). Turns out she was gone for so long bc she pretty much needed surgery as soon as she got home (which the doctors were not happy that she had to fly to get home) and some small things didn’t go right so she needed 2 following surgeries as well. She also had to go on a ton of blood thinners. When she got back to school she had like 2 types of pills and some sort of shot she had to do daily to get her blood thin enough to not cause another clot. I really don’t remember much after this whole ordeal bc like I said it humbled her a lot and while we still didn’t get along very well, she was at least a lot more tolerable. Still was very glad when the end of the school year came and I went home for the summer. Got to back to school the next year and be part of the first year there was an LGBTQ+ special interest floor, honestly the best dorm experience ever

  • @Robynhoodlum

    @Robynhoodlum

    Жыл бұрын

    Omg! This! Spoiled roommates are the worst! I lived in a five person house and this dude was 19, had flunked out of basic training (Idk if its a dishonorable discharge or what), and never went to work or paid us for bills or rent. His parents gave him money but he blew it all on weed. Literally, he owed us $300 in electricity alone, his parents sent him the money and he came home the next day with a $300 custom 3ft tall, hand blown glass BONG. His parents finally came over and told him (and us) that he was being cut off. We were already trying to get him kicked out because the lease was not individual so we had to pay his part of the rent. Finally, we found a loophole with our landlord. We all moved home for spring break and we gave permission/ asked them to check on the property while we were gone. He partied so much, we knew they'd catch him red handed. Dude got kicked out and last I heard, he moved in with his 17 yr old "sugar mama" (his words). Second and third set of roommates, I got the out all night drinking, "can you float me rent for a week" "let me call my parents to pay you" set of roommates. Seriously, I had COVID and they wouldn't cancel their massive party during lockdown. It took me a while but I finally refused to accept late payments anymore. The Wifi was in my name, so I'd change the password until I got paid. And it was never a "I can't afford to pay", it was always a "I blew my paycheck on clothes and tequila" Never again. I'll sleep in my car in sub zero weather before having roommates again.

  • @mrcroob8563
    @mrcroob8563 Жыл бұрын

    The teacher publicly shaming his son IS him taking steps to correct it. Youre like "Hey teach your kids to be better, but hey don't teach your son a lesson, that's mean!"

  • @Icalasari
    @Icalasari Жыл бұрын

    Just as a note, like how you can get awesome people despite having crap parents who teach them all sorts of horrible stuff, you can get crap people despite having awesome parents Sometimes, nature is stronger than nurture. It's not common at all, mind, but it does happen

  • @schrodingerscat4737
    @schrodingerscat4737 Жыл бұрын

    Commenting on story 5; can confirm. Was born and raised Mormon (no longer active.) Hard labor was not so much of a requirement, but more of a lifestyle choice. One of the reasons your Mormon crew didn't seem to have an issue clearing a trail, is because it's not their first time doing so. I can't tell you how many boy scout outings consisted of us maintaining or forging new nature preserve trails. I enjoyed it at the time, still respect the life lessons I've learned. But I don't miss it.

  • @tablescissors

    @tablescissors

    Жыл бұрын

    TBH, all the Mormons I met have been real standup people, who all waited to tell me they were Mormon because they were afraid of being shamed.

  • @ihadfunplaying
    @ihadfunplaying Жыл бұрын

    How to teach kids: "remember, people can take their revenge whenever they want and whatever they want"

  • @mmelon_
    @mmelon_ Жыл бұрын

    I know I am spoiled but I do t think I’m a brat. I grew up learning how to be kind to others and respect what people do. The only people I get mad at some days are my parents and people I truly dislike being around.

  • @AramatiPaz

    @AramatiPaz

    Жыл бұрын

    Some people can be beat without being spoiled too. The big problem is people who are both. 😂

  • @razztastic

    @razztastic

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, there's a big difference between spoiled kids who take everything for granted and shove it in people's faces, and spoiled kids who appreciate what they were given. Spoiling isn't necessarily the worst thing you could do as a parent, but in the event a kid does something bad (which won't take more than a few years for them to consciously do something wrong) it's gonna be a lot harder to tell them no and get them to understand why.

  • @Robynhoodlum

    @Robynhoodlum

    Жыл бұрын

    There's a difference between privileged and spoiled. It's all about mindset. A little humility and self awareness goes a long way.

  • @Crazael
    @Crazael Жыл бұрын

    24:41 I don't know about other people, but I feel a bit of sympathy for the kid. He probably didn't intend to break the table. I've gotten pissed off and thrown things too, sometimes. Though usually it's either something that won't break like a pillow, or one of my random LEGO builds that I can easily put back together I watch it shatter against the wall.

  • @revanjagergaming8714
    @revanjagergaming8714 Жыл бұрын

    Yeah man I was doing my own laundry at 13 years old, maybe 12. My mom had taken weekends to teach me how to cook. I knew how to bake an apple pie. I knew how to make pasta. I knew how to grill steaks. I knew how to make killer breakfasts and soups by the time I was 16 years old. I'm a guy and I knew more about cooking than both my wife and her two sisters (who are 10 years plus older by the way) when we met at 17. Like parents teach your children how to be adults before they're dropped on their heads. 😂

  • @revanjagergaming8714

    @revanjagergaming8714

    Жыл бұрын

    @Annistar dude that was my grandpa. The one time I remember Grandma leaving him alone for a week they had to budget him out $200 so that he could eat out for every single meal cuz he couldn't even boil water. Granted my grandma loved cooking and my grandpa was a master mechanic. He could fix anything with pistons but boy he was a dangerous thing in the kitchen.

  • @Robynhoodlum

    @Robynhoodlum

    Жыл бұрын

    @@revanjagergaming8714 My grandma would've precooked all his meals with written instructions for how to heat it up in the microwave!

  • @rebeccamiller9310
    @rebeccamiller9310 Жыл бұрын

    OO! for the makeup story, that reminds me of a night I had while working at walmart. Passed 1 isle in electronics to see a woman had opened something like 7 boxes of chargers to find out which one connected properly to her phone and how long they were. I projected authority my bottom of the rung a$$ does not really possess lol and told her she'd have to pay for them all or repackage them all back up the way they go on the shelves. She did comply, but was mumbling about how was she supposed to know without trying them- then she got a bit frustrated when one of them had a more complex folding design and she was having trouble with it. I was so happy to take it from her, meticulously close it and mention how it was unfair for us employees to have to do it every day when customers leave them lying opened, or worse, have to write them off if we can't repackage them. And then I looked her dead in the eye and said "it's not a good argument to say you were trying them out. You don't take a bite out of the food and decide you don't want to buy it after all, right?" Her look of shame had me feeling good that entire month.

  • @Robynhoodlum

    @Robynhoodlum

    Жыл бұрын

    It says on the box what phone it's for!😆

  • @rebeccamiller9310

    @rebeccamiller9310

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Robynhoodlum you'd be amazed how many customers had no idea what kind of phone they had, or the difference between USB-A and USB-C 🤣

  • @whateverabomination

    @whateverabomination

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@rebeccamiller9310 I honestly don't know those things either I just know what shape the port end that goes into the phone is, but like it normally shows you what the end of the cord is on the box too

  • @rebeccamiller9310

    @rebeccamiller9310

    7 ай бұрын

    @@whateverabomination yep! And on the back it tends to describe what phones/devices they are compatible with. Considering that apple is doing away with the lightning cable, thankfully, the most common one will be USB-C(rounded). There might still be USB-A as well(squared), but they seem to be the minority already. The lady I walked up to could have asked me to check what type she needed, since I was the employee in charge of electronics. I could have told her by just looking at her charging port on her phone. She definitely had no intention of buying more than 1 charger, or putting the rest back in their boxes, until I embarrassed her into doing so. I wouldn't have minded if she'd opened just 1 or 2, but she went out of her way to make a mess.

  • @whateverabomination

    @whateverabomination

    7 ай бұрын

    @@rebeccamiller9310 yeah kinda figured she'd be that type to leave her messes for the employees if she was opening the cords packaging tbh. (Boxes tend to have a seal on them here in Canada and if the box gets opened/the seal gets broken they're not allowed to sell them) Me and my family normally either bring the broken charger with us and compare it with the ones on the boxes, or we take pictures of the charger to compare them.

  • @daniel22208bruh
    @daniel22208bruh Жыл бұрын

    Dropped everything so I can watch this

  • @thatkc2023

    @thatkc2023

    Жыл бұрын

    Congratulations on being 8th

  • @grantgilbert2822
    @grantgilbert2822 Жыл бұрын

    A person who knowingly bullies someone with a physical or mental condition have a special place for themselves reserved in Hell.

  • @PapasBlox
    @PapasBlox Жыл бұрын

    I also started doing laundry at a young age. My mom subscribed to the mentality that as soon as her kids could reach the bottom of the washer, they'll learn how to use it.

  • @strangecolouredbird
    @strangecolouredbird Жыл бұрын

    Story 5 dosen't really have any spoiled brats, so I don't see why you included it. Aside from that, thanks for sharing these stories, they are so satisfying.

  • @ryanrios4328
    @ryanrios4328 Жыл бұрын

    The laundry one is somthing i can almost relate. I remember that the first time I did laundry (14 or 15 years old) I did things wrong: My clothes were directly washed and dried but not rinsed and softener was not used, pants were wrongly hanged bent and not extended, luckily when I asked about the separating the clothes it was not necessary everything was color.

  • @Allantitan
    @Allantitan Жыл бұрын

    “Cause if I was there and saw you do that I’d have killed you” sounds like something my family would say if me, my brother or my cousins bullied someone

  • @johansmith4764
    @johansmith4764 Жыл бұрын

    Story 11... I live with autism and I am nerdy just as that kid. I was bullied in school to and one time when I was 13 I lost it on a bully of mine. I punched him in the face and he went down. It was a knock out. The day after he came to school with a big and swollen bruise where I hit him. No adult found out and he never bully me again. He understood that he went to far. He was nice to me after that! I agree to number 15: great dad to teach the kid to be a hard working and honest and a good individual! It is sad that the kid was entitled but it was fixed in time! Thumbs up for the father and I have to give two thumbs up for the kid here. He learned his lesson and turned out great!

  • @gui_ozd1905
    @gui_ozd1905 Жыл бұрын

    « Im old, sue me » 😂😂😂

  • @360entertainment2
    @360entertainment2 Жыл бұрын

    I ended up dating the spoiled brat from my sister’s high school like 5 years after they’d both graduated. In school I guess she was your stereotypical princess who’s parents got her whatever she wanted but towards the end of her freshman year she got knocked up by one of the stupidest people from the school. She had the kid sophomore year and her parents offered to raise the kid so she could focus on school but she used the freedom to keep partying. By the time I’d hooked up with her she’d had a second kid with another dude who’d gotten killed in a drunk driving in a drunk driving incident and was living off an insurance settlement. First month or so was okay but she slowly showed her true colors over the next several months and she was pretty much a still self absorbed wannabe princess who blamed all of her problems like her weight gain on everyone else except herself. Why’d I date her? Well I was in the middle of a downward spiral that saw me lose almost everything and then wasn’t making many smart decisions back then, thankfully I’m in a much better place now.

  • @danielbob2628
    @danielbob2628 Жыл бұрын

    I can never tell when this guy is reading a Redditor's reply and when he's replying to the comment himself.

  • @MatsuyoRific
    @MatsuyoRific Жыл бұрын

    I'd say it's more likely Todd's mom who taught him to act that way. Likely that she pulls the same BS and uses her husband to threaten people.

  • @BlueNEXUSGaming
    @BlueNEXUSGaming4 ай бұрын

    This was decades ago, me and this other boy were in Pre-K school, and the day was going about as smooth as one would expect in pre-K; nap time, snack time, etc. We had 3 teachers usually, but today we only had 2, so only 1 was available to watch the kids and the other was on Diaper Duty (not every 4-year-old was potty-trained), meaning they did not have anyone to help the normally inattentive adult keep her focus; now in all fairness, she likely had Adult ADHD; but she was usually spot-on when the other adult reminded her how they were on the clock and parents were expecting their children to get watched over like a mamma bear protecting her cubs; this day, she had nobody to remind her, but she never made that mistake again after this event. Now, I was a big child, when I was 2, I was at the top of the growth chart for 3-year-olds, but I was still in a small child body; this other child (let's call him Evil Brat) was playing with this toy HESS Truck I wanted to play with; it carried a little HESS car inside it that could be removed to play with, I asked Evil Brat if I could play with the toy truck, Evil Brat said no; I said okay and patiently played with something else while waiting for my turn to play with the toy. Now, at this point, everything was normal, except the adult had started getting distracted; it happened regularly at this point in her shift, and everything was usually okay even without adult intervention, our class wasn't prone to accidents either, so she got lulled into a false sense of safety; around half an hour later, the Evil Brat with the truck used it like a club to smack the back of my head; the usual routine happens: Child (me) starts crying, Adult (who saw nothing) comes over to comfort the child (talking), she then informs me “You're a big strong boy, you're fine, you don't need an ambulance or hospital visit; you're fine!” I offer a rebuttal of “Are you going to at least take the toy away from him?” to which she responds “Well, I didn't see him do anything bad, so I cannot actually take it away from him.” at which I pointed out “You would have if the other Adult was here today to keep you focused on us.” before I walked away from her, she was surprised I was attentive enough to notice she needed other adults to remind her to stay focused. A few hours pas, and this time I'm watching the Evil Brat with the HESS Truck like a hawk, remaining hyper aware of everything around me; sure enough, as soon as the adult's attention relaxes for one minute, I see this Evil Brat get this grin on his face, the Evil Brat straight up looked evil; sure enough, the Evil Brat stands up, and proceeds to use the HESS Truck like a 2-handed Baseball Bat to surprise attack a random girl who was walking past, completely unprovoked; I saw the entire thing unfold, you know who didn't? The adult who was getting paid to watch over us. At this point, I'm aware of everything in the room; I hear the teacher to comfortingly tell the little girl “Don't worry, the ambulance is already on the way.” as she wiped a tear away from the girl's cheek, even though it was the same Evil Brat doing the same thing the same Evil Brat had done to me, the only difference being it was now against a girl. I wasn't old enough at the time to understand the concept of Gender Discrimination behavior, but I had 2 older half-brothers; so, I understood Favoritism! I knew exactly how to solve this problem, since I knew the Adult wasn't going to punish this Evil Brat for attacking another person a second time; I walked up to the Evil Brat and pointedly said, “I bet you think that's funny, huh?” Dumbfounded, the Evil Brat looks up at me, and after about 10-seconds he starts laughing to my face, at which point I reel back and deck him straight in the face; the Adult did not see any of this transpire, but she heard the Evil Brat start screaming when his nose broke from a single punch. As the Adult hurried over to see what had just transpired, I picked up the HESS Truck I had patiently been waiting hours to play with, and started walking over to the injured girl; in passing, I mentioned to the Adult “Gee, I guess it's a good thing the Ambulance is already on the way, huh?” causing the Adult to stop mid-stride as she just realized what had happened; I proceeded to tell the injured girl “Don't worry, he won't be doing that again, I took the Truck away from him too.” and then I gave her a hug, she thanked me and started to calm down a lot more upon hearing that, and the hug helped too; in the end, the Evil Brat got expelled, his parents were indignant, and I was not punished for breaking the Evil Brat's nose after he had attacked 2 different children unprovoked, there might've even been a camera that had seen everything; no idea if the Adult got reprimanded, but she never let her attention wane the remainder of the year; the girl and I later graduated from Pre-K without additional violent action against either of us. There was another event involving me and a janitor, but that's an entirely different discussion, and the janitor got forced to quit as a result of what happened from what they did with me My life has been one curveball after another.

  • @sirgio5349
    @sirgio5349 Жыл бұрын

    Story 1: My mom spoiled my sister because she couldn’t take her crying and she made deals she kept (that meant she got what she wanted) and also didn’t (saying she couldn’t get something and then gets her something) but my step dad is much different, other than Christmas or her birthday he does not buy her ANYTHING, (obviously good but you get it) not always both parents

  • @jamesbraun9842
    @jamesbraun9842 Жыл бұрын

    My dad and I used to work at a high-end gaming equipment store. (Though was mostly dealing with antique restorations) A lot of rich parents would buy dart boards, pool tables, foosball, air hockey, and shuffle boards and game accessories for their kids for good grades and good behavior etc. One family went all out with it and probably spent close to a hundred thousand on all of those items. (We get invited to his "opening night "along with the rich neighbors and other rich friends). One of the kids thought he was a bad ass because he was beating siblings at 8 ball. Later it's time to make room for the actual players. He gets in on it. First person let's the kid in. Before the start, he says, "we're gonna do this game straight style." (First person to a number of balls). Kid thinks it's easy because there are no stripes or solids. My dad gets up to him. He lets the kid break, than pulls out his cue with solid gold inlay and leather grip. (BRAT says to his dad "Why didn't you get one of those for me" . (Holding a $100 stick). Kid is a good sport at first (gives congratulaty hand shakes says goodgame). Later beaten again and again. After 10 straight losses he says he is taking a break. (On the way there he blames his dad for embarrassing him, his dad tries to cool it down saying "see I can't beat these guys either". Than says his dad rigged it so he'd (the dad) would loose and its not going to make him feel better. He leaves and can hear him breaking stuff on the stairs and kicking holes in the wall. We pretend to hear nothing even though the party is mostly silent listening to him. He than throws his cue stick through the wall. Brats younger sister says "Forget about him he's always like that when he loses)" . (Exactly what we do). Than hear him getting yelled at in the back for embarrassing the family. Nothing will stop him. He smashed a windshield with bottom of cue stick. Dad just says ,"Keep doing that it's coming out of your money". He than hits his dad with the cue stick. Dad takes it and says he's done. Dad gets rid of table and donates it to his school. (It's a private upper class smaller school so everyone knows why the gameroom equipment is there.)

  • @imperialwarden5113
    @imperialwarden51134 ай бұрын

    Nothing humbles that rich entitled kids like a month of hard labor. One kid I worked with at a scout camp complained so much they sent him off do to work on his own. When they went to check on him nothing was done, so they asked what was going on. He said I didn't know what to do so I sat down. He promptly fired. Probably what he was waiting for honestly.

  • @CRUSH40RULES
    @CRUSH40RULES Жыл бұрын

    That was nice of the security gaurd helping out with the laundry. First time doing laundry on your own can be daunting.

  • @leome9603
    @leome9603 Жыл бұрын

    I was never spoiled as a kid i grew up youngest of six with a single mother till i was 8 where my step dad came into the picture, after i learned how to cook, bake, clean, and do laundry. I always THOUGHT i was a pampered kid until i joined the navy, there were guys who had no idea how to fold their clothes and even asked me to make their beds for them, one even demanding someone to iron his underwear. And one quit saying the food was so bad even the rats wouldnt want it(but i would disagree, but I usually got the taco salad)… one quit because he said he was being bullied and forced to workout… dispite it being boot camp… And while not entitled we did have a guy who duped the whole division, he spoke nothing but spanish throughout and anytime the RDCs tried to do the disciplinary workout they had to physically show him what they wanted, and at graduation when i was talking to my chief he just walks up with his folks and in plain english says “Chief i want to thank you for helping me to better my self.” Our little area went silent only to be broken by chief exlaming “YOU SPEAK ENGLISH!?! You…. Fucker…” to this day i chuckle

  • @philippak7726
    @philippak7726 Жыл бұрын

    story 17: I tried to learn how to laundry before I had to live elsewhere but my parents were always vague about it. I got enough of the basics down to not f up the first time I did it, but when I had to live with my aunt for a year (f'd up reasons for it, I wasn't old enough to live alone) I transitioned to fully doing my own laundry. Aunt takes it upon herself to yell at me for "hanging it up wrong" - my crime... pinning my t-shirts by the shoulders rather than the waist, because they can lose their shape.

  • @janetmaffy5375
    @janetmaffy5375 Жыл бұрын

    I agree. I also have to say that one parent sometimes does the spoiling, and the other parent is happy when that child is put in their place and the spoiler has to admit that the child is their fault. I've seen this happen a few times.

  • @aidenmeredith
    @aidenmeredith Жыл бұрын

    I did laundry when I was 8, because the stairs leaning to the basement where the washer and dryer where were pretty bad. Mom had pretty bad knees at that point, so worked out a deal with me that if I did laundry I got to keep any of the money I found in the pockets. One time I found $80 in her pants pocket, and tried to return it cuz I felt bad for pocketing that much money (we weren't devastatingly broke, but single mother, ya know?). She let me keep $20, looked at me for a minute and we went to get Dragon Age: Origins (a game I'd been obsessive over since it came out a month prior) with the rest of the money. Thinking back on it now, I think she set a pretty good president for how would raise any potential kids I have in the future

  • @kathrinsides2838
    @kathrinsides2838 Жыл бұрын

    30K for discretionary spending is just insane. When I was in college, my parents initially sent me $20/week. I also worked multiple jobs every semester to pay for my activities. My parents stopped sending me money, and I paid for my tuition and room & dorm by working as an RA. I was really proud of myself for doing that, and I can’t imagine expecting my parents to send me more money after I had blown a huge chunk of change like it was nothing.

  • @FoxBatinaHat
    @FoxBatinaHat Жыл бұрын

    Peer pressure, modifies and can completely ruin whatever good intentions and parent influence.

  • @tablescissors

    @tablescissors

    Жыл бұрын

    Online influence is playing a huge role in that lately too, along with public schools in general.

  • @Professional_FunHaver
    @Professional_FunHaver Жыл бұрын

    Dude, I would trade my right big toe for a month in the woods. My family bought 11 acres of thick woods in the middle of nowhere. If I could get away from suburban life with a month of supplies (probably just enough to prevent myself from collapsing due to low blood sugar in the morning, maybe some snacks, and an average meal for the evening), a hatchet, my small-caliber gun, and my lighter, I'd be in paradise.

  • @hufthoch4812
    @hufthoch4812 Жыл бұрын

    Hearing this I am really glad that my parents gave me a cooking, cleaning, laundry and repairing my bike crash course the week bevor I went to University

  • @bro216
    @bro216 Жыл бұрын

    Oh my god, I have some some shitstorm for you. This girl, I'm gonna call her Averie, is a daughter of a well-known celebrity. So is her sister. I have something to do with this story as well. I hated her. We all knew she was spoiled and bratty. One day, she went out of her way to distract us, and even hurt us. She did some things as punch us in the face, spray random water bottles at us, and much more. So I was stirred up. I'm popular. I'm not a jerk about it as I think that's immature, and I hate people who are mean because they have cash. I am a soccer kid. We were playing soccer minding our business when this girl starts poking us and kicking us and stuff like that. It got to the point where I was enraged. Like so mad I was red. My face, red. I took the ball, I waited until she was in angle, and I took a shot. The ball was pumped. I took a really hard shot. I did this as she was hurting my friend. The ball curved onto her just as she was laughing at him trying not to cry. The ball curved onto her left eye, and made contact. I laughed so hard and ran so fast you have 0 idea. She was saying mean things as well. She got what she deserved. Amazing. Aftermath: A yelling and a fight.

  • @sergiom3988
    @sergiom3988 Жыл бұрын

    1:23 I AM SICK OF PARENT-BLAMING Sure, bad parenting= bad kids, but the reverse is not always true. Sometimes, a kid is just "born that way", and no amount of good parenting can fix his behaviour.

  • @vashmatrix5769
    @vashmatrix5769 Жыл бұрын

    Here's the thing, Todd was raised by his single mom & his dad barely gets to be involved in his life.

  • @jojo_rose341
    @jojo_rose3413 ай бұрын

    lmao the laundry thing got me 😂 I was doing about half of my familys laundry including my own by my early teen years, im sure theres plenty of ppl who had to do it earlier but its crazy to think of ppl who become adults and have never done their own chores

  • @nightstar5251
    @nightstar5251 Жыл бұрын

    My parents are protective of me and are very angry that a kid at my school intentionally kicked a volleyball at my head. They also have me watch my younger siblings whenever they have to leave the house for long periods of time and there’s no one else too watch us. I help my dad do dishes and I let the dog outside when she wants to run around or has to go to the bathroom. I try to keep my room as clean as I can, and they also went through the trouble of getting locks for the fridge and freezer instead of just letting me eat all of the ice cream whenever I want. They make sure that i’m aware of the consequences of my actions, and make me turn in my phone every night instead of letting me stay up all night. Both of my parents have had bad experiences with alcohol, so neither of them drink, (and anyways my mom hates how alcohol tastes and my dad got kicked out of her sorority for refusing to drink and break other rules with them), and they both are super supportive of the LGBTQIA+ community, as well as being apart of it themselves. Overall, i’d say they’re pretty great parents.

  • @sakipetal4382
    @sakipetal4382 Жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately, I have a mom that thinks it ok to open a foundation liquid bottle and test it on their hand before buying to "match their skin color" this was in a Walgreens btw and it wasn't even a tester. thankfully for me i not only felt uncomfortable doing that but I as an adult just choose not to wear makeup cuz its a pain to take it all off at the end of the day. either way i don't get why people think its "ok" to open products that others would use if they didnt' take it.

  • @silviac221
    @silviac221 Жыл бұрын

    I live in a flat on the first floor. Once, when the flat below mine was empty, a young couple who live close to my building contacted me because their cat was trapped in the garden of that apartment. They wanted to find someone who could open the door to rescue their cat. The owner happened to be away on holiday, so my neighbour decided to jump into the garden. His girlfriend told him that it was too dangerous because the wall was very high. Besides, there was an easy solution: borrowing a long ladder from another neighbour. But no, this guy jumped anyway and then he couldn't climb back up with the cat, so he was furious. We did have to get the neighbour's ladder in the end. I never heard about that incident again until one month later, when he had to be operated on because he had broken a kneecap that day. He's in his thirties, but to me he counts as a brat.

  • @johneddiecox741
    @johneddiecox7418 ай бұрын

    What is it with people and not knowing how to do laundry? I lived at a blind school for a few years, and it was a requirement that once you were on the older floor you had to do your own laundry. For context you were transferred to the older floor once you reached middle school. You were also required to pick up after yourself, and do all the other stuff that you will have to do in college, except for pay for food. I will say while the dormitory staff did treat us horribly a lot of the times, not going into those stories, we at least learned some degree of independence even before our sighted peers.

  • @-spirit-1020
    @-spirit-1020 Жыл бұрын

    the thing about laundry being a hurtle for some college kids hocked me because i started doing laundry for pretty much my entire 6 person family at like, 9, but then again, my parents were pretty strict and i had chores at like 8, idk if that’s normal or not anymore

  • @AramatiPaz

    @AramatiPaz

    Жыл бұрын

    I started doing laundry since I was big enough tog et the lcotjer from it (in the country the machines open up not front). Our machine didn't had timer or spinner. So I had to time for the wash process by looking at the clock (no alarm). Carry all to the spin machine that also didn't had a timer. Hanging was a pain until I started to get height.

  • @BackYardsFights
    @BackYardsFights Жыл бұрын

    I don’t know about the first dad maybe he didn’t raise his kid bad and the kid got that mindset on his own like a pastors kid ya knoe

  • @mflo1266
    @mflo12663 ай бұрын

    “$40 can feed you for an entire week if you grocery shop” I wish dude…

  • @labyrinthgirl17
    @labyrinthgirl174 ай бұрын

    I've had to open candy bars before because my sugar tanked and I needed something in my system asap, but I always had the wrapper and paid for it afterwards. The idea of opening and testing make-up, and then thinking that she only had to pay for the one she wanted is both infuriating and kind of funny.

  • @ralseidemurrer
    @ralseidemurrer Жыл бұрын

    When I hear about people that don't know how to do laundry I'm like " How do you not know how to do laundry? I've been doing it sense I was 8."

  • @dutchvanderlinde9400

    @dutchvanderlinde9400

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here😂

  • @sysyteplus2622

    @sysyteplus2622

    Жыл бұрын

    probably was doing chores instead of studying, can't even spell 'since'

  • @princessatellaluma

    @princessatellaluma

    Жыл бұрын

    like the name and icon

  • @euphisa8127

    @euphisa8127

    Жыл бұрын

    Well if you'd like, I can tell you why I don't know how to do the laundry. Growing up, I've always had maids do the chores. It is common for households to have maids in my country. So since I have maids to do the laundry, I never needed to learn to do it myself.

  • @JAYDOG1337A
    @JAYDOG1337A Жыл бұрын

    Just because he's rich doesn't mean the dad in the first story was a bad dad, sometimes kids are just assholes.

  • @mmelon_
    @mmelon_ Жыл бұрын

    Story 12’s guy in the yearbook quote: “You know my dad, right?” Guy next to him in the yearbook: “No and why are you here?”

  • @-ayay-97
    @-ayay-9713 сағат бұрын

    That fact that I'm not even a teen and I know how to cook, clean, do laundry and manage my money, INCULDING INVEATING. Not even forced to do any of this stuff, I just do.

  • @graysonoliver2632
    @graysonoliver2632 Жыл бұрын

    Some people are just not good people. My sister in law is a 15 year old demon. I've been in her life for 12 years now and her GOOD parents try everything. She just sucks.

  • @mark9960
    @mark9960 Жыл бұрын

    Bruh it's not always the parents fault. Heck I've met some compete a-holes in school that had some of the nicest parents.

  • @SleepyFunkin
    @SleepyFunkin Жыл бұрын

    story 1- the real world wasn't the only thing that hit todd lmao

  • @TescoTuber
    @TescoTuber Жыл бұрын

    Spoil your kids since you never had what you wanted but discipline them too They gotta learn the real world.

  • @michellemybelle1231
    @michellemybelle1231 Жыл бұрын

    My favorite response to “do you know who my dad is?”….. “no, but does your mother?” Is it rude? Yeah. Does it shut them up? Also yeah lol

  • @Only1199
    @Only1199 Жыл бұрын

    Mainly How do we know it was dad's fault Todd ended up the way he was and not say his mother who encouraged him to be a brat, especially behind his dad's back?

  • @sysyteplus2622

    @sysyteplus2622

    Жыл бұрын

    we don't. literally anything can cause a child to come out stale

  • @Only1199

    @Only1199

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sysyteplus2622 Mainly seems to think it’s the dads fault

  • @neko6803
    @neko68032 ай бұрын

    18:00 i am perfectly certain that the Prof shamed him EXACTLY to teach him a lesson about not hiding behind one's parents success.

  • @user-kn7rx3rm2u
    @user-kn7rx3rm2u Жыл бұрын

    I started doing my laundry (with my parents but I did most of it) WHEN I WAS 7! Learning when you are a teenager is foreign to me lol

  • @DarthCrax
    @DarthCrax Жыл бұрын

    End of story 9. I knew a guy in high school that know who he was and was comfortable enough with his homosexuality that anyone who talked to him kind of instinctual knew as well. Didn't even have to think about it. Once you were asked, it was like Oh X,? Yeah he's gay, and? It was just so easily a part of who he was that no one thought anything different. Except his father. That was sad. ,idk how his dad ever took it but he was terrified to tell him

  • @fearlessfailure2848

    @fearlessfailure2848

    Жыл бұрын

    Scuh a sad situation for the kid. I hate that people can treat their family members so horribly because of something they cannot control because some 2000 year old fairytale stated that it was "bad".

  • @certs743
    @certs743 Жыл бұрын

    I got this one from a coworker. In school he used to play football. Their team uniforms were white with some coloured numbers. This will be relevant later. Apparently none of them knew how to do their own laundry or just could not be bothered and figured being the football stars that they should not have to anyway. Their girlfriends apparently got stuck with that unpleasant chore. Well apparently they were also kind of assholes to their girlfriends and they decided to teach them a lesson. The girlfriends conspired together and with a a handful of bright red articles of clothing in hand they did the laundry. The football jerks ended up having to play the rest of the season in pink uniforms. Apparently after that they were nicer and more respectful to their girlfriends at least after the fallout of that.

  • @Robynhoodlum

    @Robynhoodlum

    Жыл бұрын

    Why did the girlfriends even do the laundry in the first place? If anyone asked me to wash their stinky uniform, I'd march them down to the machine and show them how to do it themselves. Growing up, everyone did their own laundry and cleaned after themselves. Unless you are physically incapable, we will split the chores equally.

  • @certs743

    @certs743

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Robynhoodlum Can't say I disagree with you. Seems it was mostly about the petty revenge of making them play an entire season in public in pink. Apparently it worked. They did their own laundry and treated their partners right after that debacle.

  • @mosin_boi
    @mosin_boi Жыл бұрын

    My little brother was often picked on at school. I am his big brother but was also a very meek kid. Not so for my big brother who when he found out said "heu, we walk back from school today. I'm going to teach you the most important lesson". We waited at the door and met my little brother crying and we knew who did this. We confronted his bullt (2 grades above my younger brother) and my big brother got in the first hit. Bully changed drastically, more than a rearranged face.

  • @Beqeeangel
    @Beqeeangel Жыл бұрын

    I started doing my own laundry in seventh grade cause all growing up I hated that my mom mixed my clothes with my brothers’, and then one day I watched her load the washer and saw how ridiculously easy it was. To this day, more than ten years later, she’s NOT allowed to touch my laundry. Not even when I lived with my parents for two years during the pandemic

  • @Shadow_Microwaive
    @Shadow_Microwaive Жыл бұрын

    As a spoils brat I don’t act like those kids, I’m great full for what get

  • @vividsftw67

    @vividsftw67

    Жыл бұрын

    Not spoiled then

  • @Shadow_Microwaive

    @Shadow_Microwaive

    Жыл бұрын

    @@vividsftw67 well I am and my room shows

  • @icetweiz

    @icetweiz

    Жыл бұрын

    I think you're the term called "spoiled sweet" Despite being given by your parents with anything you want. You still care for others and not entitled

  • @Icalasari

    @Icalasari

    Жыл бұрын

    Not a brat. A brat is inherently nasty. Spoiled, sure. Brat, no