CREID
Member
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vh4uP5uvdH0
[yt]Vh4uP5uvdH0[/yt]
[yt]Vh4uP5uvdH0[/yt]
Don't watch!For sure a talented turner, but such idiotic videos are the reason I stopped following him. One, I completely fail to see what is learned from these "experiments". Two, I find repugnant to waste food like that (for what I assume must be "entertainment purposes") when 25,000 human beings die of hunger EVERY DAY.
My 2 cents
For sure a talented turner, but such idiotic videos are the reason I stopped following him. One, I completely fail to see what is learned from these "experiments". Two, I find repugnant to waste food like that (for what I assume must be "entertainment purposes") when 25,000 human beings die of hunger EVERY DAY.
My 2 cents
For sure a talented turner, but such idiotic videos are the reason I stopped following him. One, I completely fail to see what is learned from these "experiments". Two, I find repugnant to waste food like that (for what I assume must be "entertainment purposes") when 25,000 human beings die of hunger EVERY DAY.
My 2 cents
Ever carve a pumpkin? That tradition wastes a heck of a lot more edible food than a PBS show that rarely shows food...
That being said, I agree completely with the idea of limiting food waste...but one box of spaghetti isn't the end of the world.
For sure a talented turner, but such idiotic videos are the reason I stopped following him. One, I completely fail to see what is learned from these "experiments". Two, I find repugnant to waste food like that (for what I assume must be "entertainment purposes") when 25,000 human beings die of hunger EVERY DAY.
My 2 cents
Ever carve a pumpkin? That tradition wastes a heck of a lot more edible food than a PBS show that rarely shows food...
That being said, I agree completely with the idea of limiting food waste...but one box of spaghetti isn't the end of the world.
Don't watchFor sure a talented turner, but such idiotic videos are the reason I stopped following him. One, I completely fail to see what is learned from these "experiments". Two, I find repugnant to waste food like that (for what I assume must be "entertainment purposes") when 25,000 human beings die of hunger EVERY DAY.
My 2 cents
Ever carve a pumpkin? That tradition wastes a heck of a lot more edible food than a PBS show that rarely shows food...
That being said, I agree completely with the idea of limiting food waste...but one box of spaghetti isn't the end of the world.
Carving a Pumpkin is a choice you decide on your own. Seeing a video of some guy spinning a bag of spaghetti to make a point in my thought process is ...stupid. Wasting any kind of edible food, no matter what the food group, is in my honest opinion not right. I spent a year in a country so far removed from what we have here that the simple act of throwing food away was beyond belief. Maybe more people need to see starving kids up close and personal to see what wasting any type of food creates. I'm not a liberal person, but I've seen it up close and personal and it still brings strong emotions from me when I see kids starving, even in this great country. So wasting food really gets under my skin. Again, this is just my opinion.
Don't watchI surely have never carved a pumpkin, not missing it one bit. This is surely not the place to have a discussion about such topic (ya know, just don't watch ) so I won't elaborate further.
And sure, one box of spaghetti isn't much, at least from our "developed country" perspective. What bothers me the most is the rationale or lack thereof behind the idea of such demonstration.
For sure a talented turner, but such idiotic videos are the reason I stopped following him. One, I completely fail to see what is learned from these "experiments". Two, I find repugnant to waste food like that (for what I assume must be "entertainment purposes") when 25,000 human beings die of hunger EVERY DAY.
My 2 cents
Ever carve a pumpkin? That tradition wastes a heck of a lot more edible food than a PBS show that rarely shows food...
That being said, I agree completely with the idea of limiting food waste...but one box of spaghetti isn't the end of the world.
Not sure the PBS show is on anymore. I think it was done in partnership or something with a university. At least I haven't seen it, just the youtube videos every month.He has a good PBS show on turning - my station dropped it, and I haven't watched it in years!