The Last 60 Minutes Before Asteroid Impacts with Earth

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Published 2022-07-31
T-minus 60 minutes until impact. Don't miss today's insane new video that counts down the final minutes before an asteroid collides with Earth. What will happen to our planet? Watch and find out!

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All Comments (21)
  • 1 hour after impact : his phones rings... "You're still coming into work though, right?"
  • @bonzopookie4579
    I am never again lending out my portable grill to my neighbor
  • So the morale of the story is, there's no point building a shelter. You're gonna die in the end anyway
  • @beskararmor7966
    Always pray your at ground zero for any event that leads to these outcomes. No matter what the movies or games want to betray there's nothing cool or thrilling trying to survive in a dying world. Just lots of pain and suffering.
  • @vash3860
    2:50 Carol doesn't reply. She returns to the surface, locates the ventilation pipe for the shelter, places a hose into it, and turns on the faucet.
  • I love this type of format. Need episode 2 from this and the nuclear war survivors.
  • @faronrich9381
    In the 60s, my dad worked in the nuclear weapons industry, so my brother asked him what we should do in case of a nuclear war? And honest to God, from behind his newspaper, he said, "Hope you die first." I guess that applies to any worldwide catastrophe (Somebody's dad had to work in the weapons of mass destruction industry)
  • I've been a soldier for 12 years and I've seen some horrible things justified but having to harm a completely innocent person in any way it's something you never really get over this story was very well done because I was completely invested and I wish it would have been a complete story for the family
  • Very well done- answers the question: ‘Why would I want to survive this?’
  • @Warshuk
    " Trust takes years to build, seconds to breaks and forever to repair" That's an amazing quote right there 🥰.
  • The worst part is knowing that there is basically nothing we could do to prevent/avoid this scenario.
  • @irgordon
    If you build a bunker, you absolutely need replacement supplies for the filtration systems and spare parts… water is definitely important but even supposing you had 100 gallons you’d still eventually run out… so dehydration and lack of food would eventually claim everyone.
  • That's just deep. You can genuinely visualise what's happening just from listening just from the level of detail included. Well done! Definitely one of my favourite videos so far
  • @Randy.E.R
    I remember when I was a kid I used to imagine being the last person alive, all the things I would do; drive the fastest car in the world, take all the money from all the banks, live in a different mansion every night. When you're a kid you don't realize all of that would be pointless since there is no one to impress. I also never considered why I was the last person alive and where the 7 billion corpses are. Earth would kind of smell foul. 50+ years later I am quite the opposite. If an asteroid or nuke is coming this way I hope it lands on my head.
  • The goodbye on the radio hit me like a ton of bricks. “If we survive, let’s forget what made our world evil & remember what made us great.”
  • @jmarcguy
    I’m gonna use my last minutes to appreciate the content this man provided me. Thank you info man. We had a good run bruh
  • Depending how large and the composition of the asteroid would determine the effects of impact beyond the initial hit. For the Dinosaurs, most died from starvation after the impact, not the impact itself. While it was a massive extinction event, not all animals went extinct - not even all dinos (those are the birds we have today). Depending how much advanced notice we managed to get, we might be able mount a reasonable response (deflection?). The asteroid featured here is said to be the size of Rhode Island (36x47 miles), but the dino killer was "only" 6-8 miles in diameter. However, that large size actually works to our advantage - unless it comes in directly from the direction of the sun (sorta a blind spot), we should be able to see it coming years in advance. Hopefully, we'll never have to test that theory.
  • @TheGreyParse
    Honestly, as horrible as it sounds, 'the easy way out' would've been the most humane choice. Considering what's left, those that died at impact were the lucky ones. Sparing your family only to watch them slowly succumb to starvation and/or sickness just seems cruel.
  • @ckmoore101
    So, the take home here, is don't worry about global warming.