How One Man Destroyed British Media... (Cool Stuff, I Think) | notcorry

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Published 2022-09-09

All Comments (21)
  • @aster3110
    he seems so kind and the way he so calmly shuts them down while they are being so accusatory and refuses to fold. so much respect to this man.
  • @Abigael_Zed
    I think NotCorry's kinda cool. Thank you for telling me stuff I didn't know!
  • @Lyssa16
    piers morgan annoys me so mucccchhhhh he’s so condescending and rude and so are all journalists honestly they act so rude and always try to make the other person look like the bad guy
  • @danitotd
    Woah, I loved how he handled those interviews. What a legend! Regarding protests, I must say something that it’s not gonna be liked by most I think. Protests are everyone’s right. Protest are necessary. HOWEVER, we must always do something to prevent our protest from harming those who are in a very disadvantaged position. I don’t know how to say it in English, sorry. 😅😅 Anyways, an example is what happens here. There’s a protest in Latinoamérica that stands for women’s rights and gender equality (especially against femicides, which is a huge problem here). The thing is that the people that do the protest are mostly middle to upper class. What happens is that, during the protests, a lot of people paint and make a mess on the streets. The issue is that, the next day, the ones who have to clean the streets are female workers that live in poverty (because they are usually the ones that take those types of jobs). So our protest, which is lead by privileged women, is damaging women in more disadvantaged positions. There’s gotta be another way. That’s why I have mixed feelings about the way the protest is held. I wanna be there but, at the same time, I don’t want to be the cause of a woman having to work 10x more. I been planning to organize a group of us to clean the streets after we do the protest so the next day, those women don’t have to clean our mess. Idk. I just hate that, when we think about groups that are underprivileged, we tend to forget about the most excluded of them all.
  • @idlecorville
    i think this video is cool (like corry)! as an american who is moving to the uk soon for my ma, i enjoy learning about uk politics and this was a great way to learn
  • @dylansuxx
    I have such an internet crush on this guy 😭 smh 😭
  • I recently read the extinction rebellion handbook (This Is Not a Drill) and it explains their strategies and reasoning to protest like that so well. Go read it! :D
  • @emb21982
    Thank you I wish more people were talking about this!
  • @reutartsy
    1:18 that's sounds like something out of a sitcom WTF??????????
  • Piers Morgan and Tucker Carlson are international soul mates. It's a shame they don't run off together, never to be heard from again...
  • @paloma_g
    he seems really cool! also as a brazilian it seems so weird to me that the general public is so against the workers strike fgjfgfj i'm all for strikes that demand more just/better/human conditions etc anyway but like i'm my home country when there's a strike there will be NO trains (or no buses, etc) at all, or only a veeeery few, whereas when i've seen them in Spain or the UK there will still be a lot of train, only with a bit of a reduced service. like i get that impacts the general public's lives for a few days but it's not nearly as much as it could be and also shouldn't we want everyone to have a decent pay??
  • @adamblack1684
    While I agree with the vast majority of what you said, the only thing I'd argue is that strikes and wage increases are inherently bad on the whole during a period of runaway inflation (and you seem to take the opposite view). Not because workers don't deserve better pay and conditions but because raising wages at pace with inflation almost always leads to a negative feedback loop, locking in and making inflation worse. What basically happens is staff (e.g. train driver) wages increase to meet the cost of living, that company (e.g. ScotRail) puts up its prices to cover the increase in cost, the cost of living goes up for other people (e.g. having to pay higher train fares) and then they end up needing a wage increase which puts up prices in their industries, inevitably leading to the same thing happening again and again. But unfortunately, there is no good alternative. What might actually is more targeted, meaningful action from the government, co-operation across the globe to ease the causes of inflation and demonstrations to get the government to do the right thing. But none of that's ever going to happen, so British people are going to have to keep striking until we get something tangible from the government that actually helps the economy and we're going to be trapped in this spiral for a long time.
  • @TheGabygael
    Yes but haven't we always had hot weather tho, john