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What Would a Trip to the Mariana Trench Be Like? - YouTube
Channel: BRIGHT SIDE
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Ever wanted to take a dive into the deepest
parts of the ocean?
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Well, today youâre gonna have this opportunity!
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Now, how good are you at holding your breath?
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Not that good?
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Well not to worry.
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Hop on board of my submersible craft and join
me in the voyage to the depths!
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Ready?
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Letâs dive!
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Right now, just below the surface, you see
that life is thriving here.
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Fish and marine animals abound, and â hey
there! â swimmers are waving at us.
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But we wonât be staying here for long.
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Buh-bye!
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At 65 ft, thereâs a whole new world opening
before your eyes: shallow coral reefs are
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standing beautifully not far from the shore.
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And hey, there are people here again!
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Itâs scuba divers this time, though.
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Water pressure isnât kind to divers without
special equipment.
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130 ft is the depth where we say goodbye even
to recreational scuba divers â itâs the
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maximum allowed for them.
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Take care, guys!
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200 ft â and hereâs the first orca!
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These whales inhabit the relatively shallow
waters of almost every sea and ocean in the
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world.
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Did you know theyâre the apex predators,
by the way?
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It means they have no natural enemies and
no one can take them down.
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At 230 ft we meet whale sharks â the largest
known fish species, weighing up to 60 tons.
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And theyâre also quite long-livers: well
yeah I guess their livers are long at that,
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but actually itâs about their life expectancy:
they can live about 130 years.
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Now look outside: if you see a scuba diver,
itâs a real pro, because at 330 ft theyâll
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have to be very cautious not to get decompression
sickness.
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It occurs if you rise too quickly to the surface.
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And if youâre lucky, you can also see a
giant Pacific octopus â it dwells in cool
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waters starting this deep and going down as
far as 6,600 ft.
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And now weâre entering the dark part of
the ocean: at 490 ft, just 1% of the light
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from the surface reaches us.
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All the rest is absorbed by water.
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Everything thatâs deeper will get darker
and darker still.
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Oh, look!
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At 660 ft, thereâs a giant oarfish circling
our submersible.
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These creatures are believed to be the source
of all sea serpent sightings, and a lot of
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alliteration!
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Sometimes they swim up to the surface and
freak out sailors and swimmers.
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No wonder: these fish can reach 36 ft in length
â enough to scare the heck out of me, for
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example.
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Okay, now weâre at 980 ft and⊠wait, whatâs
that huge and gangling thing out there?
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Oh, I get it, itâs a Japanese spider crab!
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Why a spider, you ask?
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Well, just look at those legs and the answer
will come to you without further prompts.
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By the way, thereâs almost nothing more
to them than legs: the body of such a crab
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is normally just 1.5 ft across.
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Going deeper now, and at 1,640 ft youâre
going to see the last of the blue whales â no,
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not really the last of them, I mean, thatâs
the deepest they can swim.
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They donât really need to dive that deep
for food, which they have in abundance in
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shallower waters, but they still can.
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I guess itâs just for the sake of showing
how awesome they are.
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After all, theyâre the largest creatures
in the history of Earth â both in the sea
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and on land!
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ShhâŠ
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You hear this?
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These are the sounds fin whales are making
to talk to their friends many miles away.
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They can do this thanks to the SOFAR channel,
or Deep Sea Channel, that generally starts
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at 1,970 ft, but can vary in depth.
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Itâs a layer of water where the speed of
sound is at its minimum, and sound waves can
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go thousands of miles before disappearing.
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At the depth of 2,723 ft we have reached the
point where the Burj Khalifa, the tallest
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building in the world, would not even show
its tip on the surface if it were put underwater.
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Hey letâs try that!
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Now weâre entering the really interesting
part of the ocean, where no sunlight reaches
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us, and strange creatures dwell.
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One of those is the giant squid â yes, that
legendary type.
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It inhabits the depths of 2,950 ft.
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Just imagine the creature with eyes the size
of frisbees!
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Sperm whales hunt down these beasts, but they
certainly can fight back.
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What a sight it would be to see such an encounter!
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And thatâs where pitch darkness finally
falls on us.
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The Midnight Zone.
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The pressure here is so huge that, if you
somehow end up being here without a submersible,
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youâll simply be crushed in a couple of
seconds.
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And that without seeing a thing too.
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Not the best of prospects.
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Anyway, at 3,600 ft, thereâs West Mata â one
of the deepest ocean volcanoes in the world.
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Its last eruption was in 2009, and it was
even filmed by a remotely operated vehicle!
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4,200 ft down below, and we see the ferocious
great white sharks â these ultimate predators
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feel great at such a depth.
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Their eyesight is rather poor, and they navigate
by scent, so they donât really need sunlight
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to hunt down their prey.
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âI donât see you, but Iâll still eat
you.â
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Brr.
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Also, the leatherback turtles, the largest
turtles in the world, dive at the same depth.
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I wonder if they do it to tease the great
whites?
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See those huge nets?
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Thatâs because weâre now at the depth
of 4,900 ft where the âcatch-allâ fishing
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method is used.
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The nets are here to be dragged along the
ocean floor, catching everything unfortunate
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enough to be caught.
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Iâll let you decide how detrimental this
is to the ocean life here.
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At 6,000 ft, if we were in the Grand Canyon,
weâd be sitting at its lowest and deepest
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point.
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Imagine that all of its crevasses have been
thoroughly filled with water, and youâll
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get the perfect picture.
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Now, if weâre really careful, then at the
depth of 6,600 ft, weâll be able to see
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the black dragonfish â a nightmarish creature
that dwells in the deep and dark parts of
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the ocean.
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And trust me, itâs better off staying right
there!
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It looks like something from a horror movie,
and Iâd rather it never crossed my path.
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At 7,400 ft weâll be saying goodbye to sperm
whales â this is the deepest point they
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can dive, and frankly, they have no real business
at such a depth.
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Maybe they hunt the black dragonfish, of course,
or⊠it hunts them?
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Nah, the difference in size is too big: sperm
whales can reach 62 ft in length, which makes
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them the largest toothed whales in the world.
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Not many creatures can counter that.
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Itâs good that our submersible has a powerful
floodlight â without it, we wouldnât have
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been able to see the astonishing beauty of
the deep-sea coral reefs located at the depth
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of 9,900 ft.
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They can be found in every ocean, and itâs
a pity they canât be seen without special
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deep-sea diving equipment.
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Okay, going deeper still, and at 12,100 ft
we reach the average depth of the World Ocean.
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From now on, the journey into the real depths
begins â the general ocean floor has been
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passed, so now itâs time to delve into the
Abyss.
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I wonât tell you not to be afraid because
the scariest creatures of the deep dwell here,
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below the Midnight Zone.
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And it doesnât end there: the pressure on
the upper limit of the Abyss, at 13,100 ft,
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is like a whole regiment of elephants stomping
on you.
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Not that youâd have the time to feel it,
though.
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At 15,000 ft, the monsters out of your worst
nightmares pop up.
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Anglerfish, for example, will scare the heck
out of anyone â its long and crooked teeth
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along with a growth on its head that lures
the prey are enough to instill fear even in
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the bravest.
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But perhaps even more terrible is the creature
called the black swallower.
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Itâs an eel-like beast that has a very stretchy
stomach, and it can swallow prey thatâs
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twice its size!
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I donât know about you, but Iâd rather
switch off the lights not to see anything
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this deep in the ocean.
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What?
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You want to see it all?
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âŠ.Alright, if you insistâŠ
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Look down below and youâre gonna see the
deepest shipwreck ever found: SS Rio Grande
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in the South Atlantic sunk in 1941 and went
as low as 18,900 ft.
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No wonder it was only found 55 years later!
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And now the deepest and darkest part of the
ocean begins: weâre diving into the Mariana
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trench.
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Officially, it begins at about 19,700 ft deep.
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Itâs both the least explored and the most
fascinating area for the scientists and adventurers
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alike.
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What lies at the bottom of it?
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Well, weâre about to see, but while weâre
not yet there, Iâll show you something else.
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For example, hereâs the deepest fish ever
found: itâs called a snailfish, and it dwells
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at 26,000 ft.
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Its body is translucent, so you can actually
see right through its skin.
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Well, I must say Iâm glad we didnât turn
off the lights, after all â this little
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guy is surprisingly cute for a creature that
can withstand such pressure.
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Going lower and deeper, you wonât see any
other kind of fish or vertebrate animal whatsoever
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â the pressure is just too much for such
creatures.
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But there are shrimps and other invertebrates
â not to mention microbes â that can dwell
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even in the deepest part of the ocean.
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And that part is the Challenger Deep.
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Itâs the bottom of the Mariana trench, and
its depth is 35,853 ft.
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Yes, weâve arrived at the very bottom of
the Earth.
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Few people have been here, and very little
is known about it yet.
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But scientists arenât going to stop, and
thereâs hope weâll soon find out what
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secrets the depths of the ocean hold.
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How about you?
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Would you dare explore the ocean on your own,
if you had a chance?
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Let me know down in the comments!
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Hey, if you learned something new today, then
give this video a like and share it with a
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friend.
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But donât go deep diving just yet!
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We have over 2,000 cool videos for you to
check out.
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Just click on this left or right video and
enjoy!
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Stay on the Bright Side of life!
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