The Mandela Effect Iceberg Explained

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Published 2021-08-24
The Mandela Effect Iceberg Explained, I found a pretty good iceberg surrounding the Mandela Effect Theory. Part 2:    • The Mandela Effect Iceberg Explained 2  
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MUSIC:

Anxiety - Madness Paranoia by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/...

Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-...

Artist: incompetech.com/

Song - Darkest Child A - Kevin MacLeod
Song - On the Island - Godmode
Song - Lands Unknown - Futuremono
Song - Two Moons - Bobby Richards
Song - Glacier - Patrick Patrikios
Song - Feels - Patrick Patrikios
Song - Secret Job - Godmode

Timestamps:

Intro: (0:00)
The Surface Level: (1:04)
The Shallow Waters: (4:50)
The Depths: (10:41)
The Abyss: (16:12)

All Comments (21)
  • The true spooky thing about the Mandela effect is that is shows us how easily memory can be manipulated through the power of suggestion.
  • @1810jeff
    The ratatouille scene isn't out of the ordinary since the opening scene is him getting shot at with a shotgun and mustard gas
  • As a kid I remember asking what's so special about Mona Lisa and someone told me that no one is sure if she's smiling or not and I starred at a picture of her painting trying to figure it out myself but couldn't decide, now she is smiling without a doubt. I also remember picking up a fruit of the loom piece of clothing to look at the cornucopia asking myself who the hell serves fruit like that lol
  • @cait.tama1
    I find it hard to believe that people were surprised there was a couple fighting with a gun in Ratatouille when the old lady in the beginning of the movie literally tried to kill all the rats with a shotgun lol
  • @Ryan-iv5fr
    That spongebob one with squidward turning into a snail had me so worked up. I vividly remember his eyes changing and him meowing. I must be delusional
  • @pageturner2958
    It may be weird, but I feel a few some of these are easily explained with a "We never pay attention to these things, so our brains fill it in in the most logical way, which is why I some of us don't have it, as some people will notice these things."
  • The mandela effect is almost always about adding something. A monocle, a nose ring, sunglasses, a letter. It's our mind filling in what it thinks should be there. If it was colliding realities there would be an equal number of missing things to added things but that's not the case.
  • @tehangrybird345
    Honestly, the entire episode of I Was A Teenage Gary just felt like a massive fever dream, and that’s not just because of the “deleted scene”
  • @hoboz777
    the fruit of the loom logo had to cornucopia when i was younger because i remember my teacher specifically referencing that logo when teaching us what a cornucopia was
  • @hutinthecut
    Your "Queen - We are the Champions" segment is tricky, because the first two times you hear the chorus in the song he definitely does sing "Of the World!" And this is what pop culture is referencing. He just doesn't end the song with this line. The "Of the world" lyric is definitely present in the song.
  • The Fruit of the Loom cornucopia is the freakiest one for me because I vividly remember seeing it on the packaging as a kid and it looks so off without it, the others are definitely just faulty memory or the brain filling in blanks
  • @MAAH1776
    I’m pretty sure I know why people are confused with the pillsbury doughboy, it’s because of he ghostbusters, let me explain. In the ghostbusters movie a major antagonist, the state puff marshmallow man, look pretty similar to the pillsbury doughboy, with a white and puffy body and a are mascot of a food company. So how does this connect? Well the state puff marshmallow man had a blue collar around his neck similar to pillsbury’s scarf and since they have a similar appearance they might’ve got people mixed up.
  • Why is seeing the scarecrow walking around with a gun hilarious to me? 😅
  • @getsu0
    i remember when i was younger i thought mona lisa looked very sad, but then i kept hearing people refer to her smile and I was confused by what they meant because it wasn't a smile. after looking at it enough times i got the impression that the smile was the strongest part of the piece, how it's so subtle that you can deny it's there yet recognize it as a smile and have it be so potently uncanny that it being a smile is the most prominent thing ab the whole picture.
  • C-3PO’s actor actually explained the silver leg. I guess a lot of scenes, specifically on Tatooine, the leg looks gold because of the backgrounds and sets reflecting off of it.
  • @rando843
    That Mona Lisa one is baffling. All the time when growing up every discussion I heard about the Mona Lisa talked about her smile and how that is like the biggest and most important part of the painting, unreal to me how some can't even remember it lmao.
  • @MtnDolittle
    I watched Ratatouille several times since I was a kid, and I always remember that angry french couple since first viewing. Some people not remembering it were probably more familiar with the censored versions where it was edited out.
  • The fruit of the loom one really gets me because I even vividly remember a commercial for when I was a kid that came out around thanksgivings one year where it was a bunch of pilgrims getting ready for a big feast and one of them was a dude with long brown hair, playing a guitar or something but everyone like thought he was annoying and also there was a cornucopia in the background that like turned into the fruit of the loom logo.