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Hey, everyone! Here's the latest batch of TRY Bloopers, featuring extra funny moments and behind the scenes bits. These ones coming from recent videos linked below. Enjoy!

Irish People Try More Polish Alcohol: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cx758r5xoAA
Irish People Try Nando's PERi-PERi Chicken: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cu9mwZWMlgY
Irish People Try Spicy Alcohol Mixes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=erfIBANZAJk
Irish People Try IHOP For The First Time: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAJI16Mc8jc

- The TRY Team

Files

TRY Bloopers - More Polish Alcohol, Nando's & More!

This is "TRY Bloopers - More Polish Alcohol, Nando's & More!" by The TRY Channel on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who...

Comments

CM Mahony

Looking forward to Paddy and Jaime's future Biology Podcasts!

Courtney Rayle

So, if you want to pass this on to Paddy and Jaime: No, that is not the natural ratio for hens and roosters, but when the chicks are young, the farmers sex them and cull most of the males, since you only need a few of those around (they want the females for egg laying, mostly). Those then get used in various other ways (one I know of is snake/reptile food; farmers sell killed chicks to exotic pet owners). Traditionally, yes, people ate roosters (Coq an Vin, the French dish, originally used roosters that had lived past their prime and so the farmer needed some way to utilize that meat; that’s why it is a slow-cook dish: to tenderize the old, gamy rooster). Since the roosters are only kept around for breeding purposes and producing more chickens and most male chicks are killed early, almost all chicken meat is from hens. The crowing thing for roosters is territorial. Hens can do it too, but it is much rarer because the hens don’t usually defend the territory like the roosters do. Also, rooster can crow at any time they feel they need to tell the world “this is MIIIIIIINE,” not just dawn (which is ANNOYING AS FUCK). Wild chickens actually can get some good distance, flight-wise, but they also naturally live in denser jungle areas in the wild, where being able to quickly escape and then get back to hunting on the ground is the goal, not sustained flight (which is why you don’t see big soaring birds in dense forests). We’ve also bred several domestic varieties to have too much weight and not enough wing muscle (or body capacity for oxygen) to do much more than get a few inches off the ground. Thanks for posting these! I love seeing all the behind the scenes stuff, even if I don’t always comment. 💜 the TRY Channel!