Next month it will have been 80 years since the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were devastated by nuclear attacks. More than 200,000 people – mostly citizens – would die by the year's end ...
Struggling to fall asleep can be one of the most frustrating things for people to deal with. Nearly half of adults in the United States suffer from some insomnia symptoms, including difficulty falling ...
In a new video by AsapSCIENCE, the science of comedy humor is discussed, including what is statistically the best joke ever. Researchers have found the optimal amount of time between a tragedy and ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. AsapSCIENCE was originally a YouTube channel founded and hosted by Mitchell Moffit and Gregory Brown that focuses on various ...
Google wants to invest $10 million over the next two years in supporting literacy efforts, including media literacy, and is partnering with YouTubers to help teach kids how to spot fake news.
Are YouTube creators entertainers? Are they artists? Celebrities? Five years ago, the answer would’ve been that they were mildly "Internet famous"—that weird kind of fame where a person is known to ...
I'm Burnie from Rooster Teeth. I'm MatPat from Game Theory and Film Theory. We're the Slow Mo Guys. We're here to answer Google questions. We are doing a Google AutoComplete interview. Are YouTubers ...
Whether you fart alone or get caught up in someone else's gas cloud, find out from this AsapScience video if it's possible to escape the signature sulphur scent. Journalist Bonnie Burton writes about ...
In the video version of their song "Science Wars," Mitchell Moffit and Gregory Brown sing a capella about physics, biology, chemistry, and mathematics. Each branch of science gets its own theme, with ...
We've all seen movies and TV shows where people get hypnotized into doing something they might not otherwise do — but does hypnosis really work? In order to separate the fact from the fiction, YouTube ...
AsapScience, a YouTube channel that proffers fun, educational science videos to its over 4.4 million subscribers, is taking some heat. In a video they created about the periodic table, the channel's ...