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Rowett has presented videos on the YouTube channel Grand Illusions since 2008. In each video, he light heartedly demonstrates and reacts to at least one toy, puzzle, or optical illusion which is either part of his collection or will be stocked through an online toy store, run as part of the Grand Illusions brand (to which he is a director).
Toy unboxing is a subgenre of unboxing videos in which children or adults upload videos of themselves unpacking commercial toy products. The videos may feature the toys being played with, assembled and/or reviewed. Children who make this content are known as kid influencers.
Ryan Kaji began making YouTube videos in March 2015 after watching other toy review channels. [13] Kaji's mother decided to quit her job as a high school chemistry teacher to work on the YouTube channel full-time. [5] Before going live on YouTube, the family replaced their real-life surname with the on-screen surname Kaji. [14] [15] [16]
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One astronaut described the toy as "sort of droop[ing]". The video was prepared to stimulate interest in school children about the basic principles of physics and the phenomenon of weightlessness. [34] Several online videos have shown that a Slinky can be mounted on the pole of a bird feeder to deter squirrels from climbing up the pole. [35]
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Gilbert cloud chamber, assembled An alternative view of kit contents. The lab contained a cloud chamber allowing the viewer to watch alpha particles traveling at 12,000 miles per second (19,000,000 m/s), a spinthariscope showing the results of radioactive disintegration on a fluorescent screen, and an electroscope measuring the radioactivity of different substances in the set.
Weebles are a range of children's roly-poly toys that was introduced in 1971 [1] by the US toy company Hasbro and currently marketed under their Playskool brand. They are egg -shaped, so tipping one causes a weight located at the bottom-center to be raised.