by darkmancer218
Tue Jan 02 07:28:57 PST 2007 (21 months ago)
Theres a chance they used stop-motion animation. but since the camera was actually moving the whole time, thats a bit unlikely. :-|
Either way, very nice, ;-)
by Gama Ray
Fri Jan 26 16:21:48 PST 2007 (20 months ago)
I think it has somehting to do with the magnetic property of water as well as the conduction of the water bythe toothpicks. As for the guy who couldent do it, as you can see, the toothpick are broken. Im thmart WEEEEeeee!!!
by MaLamb
Sun Oct 07 13:48:43 PDT 2007 (12 months ago)
This happens because the toothpicks are actually broken in half..not all the way, but just snapped. the broken part of the toothpick reacts to the water. Try it...it works!
Comments (Add Comment)
For those of us with WAY too much time on our hands.
reply8-| Very cool trick! :-) :-) I wonder why this happens. Do you know? 8-| :-)
replyDoesn't work when I try it.
replyWhoa, that was cool. %7C
replyVery Cool. I'll have to try this when I get home. :-)
replyI wonder how anyone would have thought of that!!! 8-| :-) Pretty neat! ;-)
replyNow that is what I call for a new use for pencils :-D
replyThe laws of motion ;-) pretty neat ;-)
replyI wonder how they thought of this!!?? :-) :-) Very cool!! ;-)
replyTheres a chance they used stop-motion animation. but since the camera was actually moving the whole time, thats a bit unlikely. :-| Either way, very nice, ;-)
replyHas anybody tried this?
reply:-O cool
replyThat is so cool :-) going to try that
replyI think it has somehting to do with the magnetic property of water as well as the conduction of the water bythe toothpicks. As for the guy who couldent do it, as you can see, the toothpick are broken. Im thmart WEEEEeeee!!!
replywow. :-O that's cool.
reply:-) :-) :-) :-) :-) That was great!
replyThis happens because the toothpicks are actually broken in half..not all the way, but just snapped. the broken part of the toothpick reacts to the water. Try it...it works!
reply