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Fun
Transcript
00:01These are your teeth.
00:02Well, I mean, they're not your teeth, but you get what I'm saying.
00:05Nowadays we use a toothbrush to clean our teeth, but it wasn't always that way.
00:10The ancient Egyptians used a chewed stick to scrape their teeth,
00:14while the ancient Greeks rubbed their teeth with a rag.
00:19And the Vikings, well, who knows what they used?
00:22And then, only 200 years ago,
00:25an Englishman named William Addis came up with something better.
00:29He drilled holes into a meat bone,
00:32inserted bunches of bristles into them,
00:34and there you go!
00:36The toothbrush!
00:38And here's what I need to tell you all as a Fixie.
00:40That is, as a master repairman.
00:43You need to make sure to brush your teeth often,
00:46especially after eating,
00:47or you'll be getting them repaired often at the dentist.
00:52There are Fixies living in every home,
00:54and the work they have to do can seem endless.
00:57The TV starts acting up,
00:59then the doorbell breaks,
01:00the washing machine stops running,
01:02and then the phone won't ring.
01:04And besides all of that,
01:05there is cleaning and there's oiling.
01:07Like the appliances in the kitchen,
01:09or kids' toys,
01:10and all those other things.
01:12Modern houses are literally stuffed with all sorts of devices.
01:16And that is why the Fixies keep working day in and day out.
01:20Unfortunately, this can make Fixies get carried away by their jobs.
01:24And they can forget about their Fixie relatives and close friends that live in the neighboring houses and apartments.
01:30And that's not right.
01:32Just like humans, Fixies have to remember to go and visit each other more often,
01:36and write each other letters, or at least send their regards.
01:43A Fixie is constantly surrounded by all sorts of danger.
01:47Inside a dark freezer, a Fixie can lose his way and freeze to death.
01:51If he's not paying attention, he can drown inside of a washing machine,
01:55or inside of a dishwasher.
01:57And a careless Fixie is always at risk of getting an electric shock.
02:02Or suppose there's a short circuit inside of an appliance that starts a fire.
02:06If this happens, you need to run away if you want to survive.
02:10And what about humans?
02:12Well, they don't even believe that we Fixies exist at all!
02:15So they can accidentally drop something on top of a Fixie,
02:18or step on one, or kick us across the room!
02:21So if we don't get out of the way in time...
02:25So what I'm saying, Fixies,
02:27you need to be careful out there and pay attention.
02:29So be smart and stay safe, fellow Fixies!
02:35Water flows out of the faucet and flows down into the drain trap,
02:39and after that it goes down to the sewer.
02:42But when you turn off the water, not all of it washes away.
02:45Some of it stays down in the drain trap.
02:48It's made that way so the smell from the sewer won't get back into the house.
02:53A ring is much heavier than water,
02:55so if you happen to drop it down the drain, it won't wash away.
02:59It will stay at the bottom of the drain trap.
03:01The secret numbers and letters that you use to lock something up are called the code or the password.
03:12And to make sure your password's a really good one,
03:15here are some things you should know.
03:17Never choose a password that's really simple for someone else to guess.
03:23Like one with numbers or letters that are all the same, or are all in order.
03:27It's also a bad idea to make a password out of your birth date or name.
03:32It's better to think of a password that's a bit more complicated.
03:36And don't forget your password once you come up with it.
03:39Write down your password on a piece of paper and keep it in a safe place,
03:44but don't show it to anybody else.
03:47And then, if you happen to forget your code or password,
03:50you'll be able to remember it with the help of that piece of paper.
03:57Many people wrongly assume that the only way Fixies could live is by stealing food off of humans' tables.
04:04Or worse yet, by stealing it from their refrigerators.
04:07That's just a lie.
04:08It's not true at all.
04:10Fixies don't eat any kind of human food.
04:12So then where in the world do the Fixies get their energy, you're wondering?
04:16It's very simple.
04:17A Fixie's entire life is connected with devices.
04:21Fixies not only live inside of devices,
04:24but they take care of them and help them live longer.
04:27And in return for their help,
04:28these devices share part of their energy with the Fixies.
04:32So there you go!
04:33The Fixies help devices, and devices help the Fixies.
04:37Yes, we Fixies and machines have a symbiotic relationship.
04:41So we don't eat leftovers like cockroaches,
04:44because we're Fixies!
04:46When something is very well made,
04:52then the saying goes that it was made with just a little bit of soul.
04:56In old times craftsmen made things to last,
05:00and in each appliance they would leave just a little piece of their soul.
05:06Those little pieces of their soul would turn into tiny craftsmen called Fixies,
05:11who would then make the appliance their home and take care of it every day.
05:15And that's how the very first Fixies came about.
05:18But as the years have passed, fewer things are being made by hand,
05:22and more and more things are getting made by machines and factories.
05:25That means there are less and less new Fixies coming from human souls.
05:29Luckily, Fixies can fall in love with each other and have their own family,
05:33raising their children and teaching them well,
05:36so they'll grow up to become skillful and honest Master Fixie Repairmen.
05:46Just like the name says, Fixies live to help machines and appliances.
05:51But machines are very big and Fixies are very small,
05:54so they can't get by without tools.
05:57Long ago, Fixies worked with just about anything they could find.
06:01Little feathers, threads, pins,
06:03but now they have backpacks called pack-a-mats.
06:06Inside a pack-a-mat are all sorts of tools.
06:10Just push the button and the pack-a-mat spins around,
06:13quickly shooting at a hook or a magnet or even a parachute.
06:17Every adult Fixie has their own pack-a-mat.
06:20But before children can get them, they have to go to school and study hard,
06:23and then pass an exam before they have the rights of a full-fledged Fixie.
06:27And it's only after all of that that young Fixies get their own pack-a-mats.
06:33Remember, never put any metal objects into a microwave.
06:39If you put forks or spoons in a microwave, you can burn it out.
06:43And then not even a Fixie will be able to fix it.
06:47Even a thin metal border on a plate can cause serious problems.
06:52Also, never warm up food in sealed packages or bottles inside a microwave.
06:57And one last thing, don't even think of cooking eggs in their shells in there.
07:01They'll just explode.
07:07The Fixies may be very small, but they are actually much stronger than humans.
07:13Yes, it's true.
07:15What, you don't believe me?
07:16Well, who's stronger, an elephant or an ant?
07:19You think it's the elephant.
07:21Well, of course, it's so much bigger.
07:23But did you know that one ant can lift up 50 ants its own size?
07:28And an elephant? It can't even hold up one.
07:31So it turns out that for its size, an ant is much stronger than an elephant.
07:36And the same goes for Fixies.
07:38Fixies are incredibly strong for their size.
07:41They can lift things that are a hundred times heavier than they are.
07:45And Fixies can jump 50 times higher than their own height.
07:49If humans were as strong as Fixies are,
07:52they'd be able to lift an automobile all by themselves.
07:58A refrigerator has a pump that pushes a special liquid through a long tube.
08:04Inside the refrigerator, the liquid in the tube wants to turn into a gas.
08:09To do that, it takes the heat from everything inside and that makes the refrigerator cool.
08:15Then the pump sucks in the gas and pushes it out as a hot liquid into the tubes on the back of the refrigerator.
08:21That lets all of the heat collected from the inside escape into the air outside.
08:30An SMS is no different from a letter.
08:33It's only shorter.
08:34People send SMSs through their mobile phones.
08:37And that's why looking inside someone else's phone and reading their SMSs is just as rude as reading someone else's mail.
08:44And that's why when we Fixies work inside of a phone, we always put our headphones on when a call comes in.
08:51So we won't overhear people's private conversations by accident.
08:55It's just the polite thing to do.
08:57The hot air balloon was invented in the 18th century by the Montgolfier brothers from France.
09:06In those days there were no gas burners, so they heated the air inside the balloon by burning straw.
09:12At first there were no passengers on their balloon.
09:16Not counting the Fixies, of course.
09:18I mean, how else could a balloon get up in the air without them?
09:22Unfortunately, the names of the first Fixies who took that flight were not recorded in the annals of history.
09:28Following the Fixies' flight, the next passengers were animals.
09:31A ram, a rooster, and a duck.
09:34And it was not until those three safely landed after flying a full four kilometers
09:39that humans dared to fly in hot air balloons themselves.
09:43Ever since their invention, hot air balloons have also gone by another name, Montgolfiers!
09:51Inside of an electric kettle, there's a heater hidden underneath its bottom.
09:56When you turn on the kettle, the heater warms up the water until it boils.
10:00And the boiling water gives off steam that heats up a special metal plate at the top of the kettle.
10:06The heat causes the metal plate to bend and that turns off the switch.
10:11So you could say that an electric kettle feels when the water is boiling.
10:21Of course, young Fixies go to school just like human kids.
10:25But their parents teach them a lot of important lessons too.
10:29Fixie parents take their kids on tours of all sorts of different devices
10:34and teach them what Fixies can do to keep them working properly.
10:39They like to show them how the computers or televisions or gaming systems work,
10:45or any one of the many appliances they take care of inside of the kitchen, like the stove.
10:51Every once in a while a new device appears in the house,
10:54something that the Fixies have never dealt with before.
10:58To learn how this new thing works, the Fixies gather together
11:02and read the instructions that the humans keep printing up,
11:06but almost never seem to take the time to read for themselves!
11:12A simple code lock is built with a few disks that have numbers on them.
11:17In the center of each disk is a hole with a notch.
11:21When all of the disks are turned so their notches line up in a straight row,
11:25the lock's pin can slide out freely.
11:33And to get the notches to line up,
11:35just turn the disks to the lock's code and the lock will open!
11:40It's that simple!
11:44A lever works the same way that a seesaw does,
11:47with a board resting on top of a piece called the fulcrum.
11:51But with a lever, one side is longer than the other.
11:54And that's the secret to its power!
11:57With a lever's help, it's possible to lift any weight.
12:00All you need to do is get the short arm of the lever under the load
12:03and push down on the long arm.
12:05And the longer the arm, the more weight you can lift.
12:09And that's how a lever makes people stronger!
12:12If we take a look at a digital disk through a powerful microscope,
12:19we can see rows of tiny valleys of different lengths.
12:22These valleys are actually a code for the cartoons, games,
12:26or music recorded onto the disk.
12:28Inside a disk player, a laser beam reads the code
12:32and helps turn it back into pictures and sounds.
12:35But if you scratch the disk or smudge the disk with dirty fingers,
12:38the laser can't read it and the disk won't play.
12:41That's why you need to keep disks clean and stored in cases.
12:48Inside of most remote controls,
12:50there's a special type of light bulb called a light-emitting diode,
12:53or LED for short.
12:55When we press a button,
12:57the LED sends an invisible infrared ray.
13:01And in the TV, there is a receiver for these invisible rays.
13:04The TV understands the command that comes from the remote control
13:08and carries it out.
13:09Like changing the channel or the volume.
13:19If you want to see infrared rays,
13:21all you have to do is look through a digital camera.
13:23Try it for yourself!
13:25Turn on the camera on a mobile telephone.
13:28Now go ahead and press any button on the remote control
13:31and point the camera toward the front of it.
13:33You'll see a bright dot on the screen of the camera.
13:36That's the light-emitting diode working.
13:38It's letting off a special light that can't be seen by the naked eye.
13:43It's also possible to point the remote control at a mirror.
13:46And then through the camera,
13:48you can see how the light-emitting diode turns itself on.
13:52So what that means is that invisible rays bounce off of a mirror
13:56in the same way that regular light does.
13:59So you can control the TV by bouncing the light from a remote control off of a mirror.
14:04You don't believe me?
14:05Then go ahead and try it yourself!
14:09If an object is lighter than water, it floats up to the surface.
14:13And in the same way, if something is lighter than air, it floats upward.
14:18Did you know that hot air is lighter than cold air?
14:21Well, it is!
14:22And that means if you warm up the air in a balloon, it will float up.
14:27Hot air balloons use special gas burners to heat up the air inside of them,
14:31so they will get lighter.
14:33And the bigger the balloon, the more people it can take up into the air.
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