Zoot Suit Counterculture, Sea Snail Trapdoors, and More | A Wikipedia Clickhole

4 years ago
11

🖱In this Wikipedia clickhole, we'll start with sea snails and their little trap door closures and end at the 1940s Mexican American Pachuca subculture. En route, we'll learn about crazy Swiss history, assassination by guy in bear suit, a strange language, and how John Lennon took a calligraphy class.

👍 Please like or subscribe if you enjoyed!
Leave a suggestion in the comments for next Clickhole Wednesday's starting point.

------------------
🗓 Itinerary
------------------
00:00 Welcome to Clickhole Wednesday!
00:36 Ranularia monilifera
01:02 Sea snail
01:32 Operculum, a trap door for sea snals
03:15 Friedrich Ratzel
05:01 Rapperswil, Switzerland
06:01 Helvetic Republic (nothing to do with the font)
06:59 Romansh language
09:44 Canton of Grisons
09:59 Jorg Jenatsch
12:56 Bundner Wirren
13:07 Lake Como
13:53 Julian Lennon
15:05 Cynthia Lennon
16:46 Gangster’s moll
17:14 Pachuco
17:42 Pachucas
19:57 Conclusion and summary

------------------
♥️ Follow Poobette on social media
------------------
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/poobettetv
Twitter: https://twitter.com/poobette
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/poobettetv
Website: http://poobette.com/

------------------
🎵 Music (all licensed through Epidemic Sound)
------------------
Intro and outro music: Kendwa by Jones Meadow
Background music: Earl Grey (Dylan Sitts); Nothing Too Serious (Matt Large); The Days of Old (Matt Large); 368 (Jobii); Jacuzzi (Jobii); Believe Me When I Say It (Matt Large); NEAR (SINY); Corn Candy (Guustaav); Dusty Conscience (Matt Large); Waiting For Summer (Matt Large)

------------------
🎨 Resources
------------------
Select images and other content licensed through Envato Elements, Pexels, Wikimedia Commons, and Pixabay. Memes are... well, memes.

------------------
❤️ Special Thanks
------------------
Big thanks to Wikipedia for the articles from which to make content. This video would be quite literally nowhere without it.

Loading comments...