Life 101: What Not To Do When Dealing With A Fire

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Are you a Twitch Streamer who doesn't know what to do when you almost set your house on fire while cooking? Not to fear, Matt Walsh is here!

#TheMattWalshShow #News #Politics #DailyWire
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This happened to me. I immediately went into training and did the stop drop and roll for over a minute. The pan however, was still on fire on the stove and the safety tip of stop drop and roll didn't help at all.

alexeiutgoff
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Matt. 40% of my body is covered in third degree burns because this happend to the woman down stairs and she covered the fire in water and caught the whole house on fire. I was 4 and as I was running out the front door she threw the pan and it hit me in the back and melted my back shoulders and left arm causing deep 2 and 3 degree burns. The doctor said I was probably gonna die. I'm still here. Thank the good lord

caven
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There is no legitimate reason why anyone, man or woman, cannot learn to cook a decent meal for yourself today. Here on YouTube there are literally hundreds of videos on how to make anything, and that's just one resource.

tcgtpl
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1:56 this is a real life demonstration of how a Sim reacts to a kitchen fire. I’ve never seen a more accurate real world to Sim recreation in my life.

caitlynmarie
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And she was yelling for help as if her subscribers could jump through the monitor.. imagine being over 10 years of age and not knowing fire needs oxygen.

Vltron
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When I was in junior high, all students took Home Ed one semester, and Industrial Arts the next. Home Ec was divided between kitchen stuff and learning how to sew. I was pretty much the only student who already knew how to cook, but it was the first time I'd ever seen actual measuring spoons before. My mother always just used the cutlery. I really appreciated learning how to read a pattern's package, choose the right fabrics and notions, read the pattern itself, all the way through to finished, useful items. Industrial Arts was divided between two shops; in one, we got to work on engines, starting with lawn mowers, and basic electrical. The other shop was woodwork and metal working. There was also the classroom where we did drafting, screen printing and used a printing press, old style, making our "business cards" by blocking the letters into the frame for the press.

Obviously, some of what we learned isn't particularly relevant anymore, but they could be modernized easily enough.

AMKB
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Nah, that's just how a strong and independent woman deal with a fire.

kay_
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In Armenia we had a class called “Work” where we did gardening, planted food and trees and watched them grow through the year while learning about every detail like the warms, the soil, etc.. Woodworking, house choirs, land upkeep and so on were also a part of it. Then we had to clean the classroom every day on rotation. We’d publicly shame those who were sloppy or lazy with their work. Students didn’t have a choice what to study. The curriculum was set to include math, physics, biology, chemistry, our history, world history, art, work, foreign language, geography, literature and PE. Every year we had to take those same topics and advance in them. The test of our knowledge, whether we learned or understood it, was in a format of public speaking. And since people knew each other, not being able to speak to the topic was highly shameful as that would impact not only you but also the family honor and reputation. Also, in biology, they skipped over sex/reproduction (and since I was a teenager, I didn’t care to study any more than I have to), so I was 18 and still thinking if I kiss a boy I’ll get pregnant since in movies people would kiss, then it would cut to a woman carrying a child. I’m really not upset about that at all.

NanulSavage
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Ex-neighbor did SAME thing u see here but she was 13 & ran out of house leaving doors open ... my *15* yr old stopped the fire & called 911. Girl Scouts *were* awesome.

emmapeel
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"The focus now is to make kids ready for college, not for life." I can't express how so profoundly true this is. Kids in late elementary and middle school are already talking about what careers they may go into and what college they want to go to without even knowing basic and fundamental life skills. I am now a freshmen in highschool and just now have I been able to take a class that teaches everyday skills such as budgeting, insurance, taxes, how to get a job, etc. The worst part is that many people, especially those with high GPAs are pressured into going to college without knowing what career they want to take yet (like me) and also because they feel obligated to. Students nowadays are taught that higher education is almost a necessity to make a good living and be successful.

areshorror
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I love how she just looks at the camera repeatedly like she’s excepting someone to materialize and help her.

jeremiahmoye
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Oxygen, Heat and Fuel, that's the triangle you need to remember for a fire to exist; if you take out *ANYONE* of the 3 then fire is extinguished.
For example, when the fire is relatively small (i.e. surface radius less than a foot) you can try covering the fire to deprive it from *oxygen* : in the video she could easily close the pan with another pan or dish to effectively prevent the oxygen to feed the combustion (if the fire is on the floor then you cover it with a blanket and you'll extinguish it too).
Water: only useful when a) there is NO ELECTRICITY NEAR THE FIRE b) no hot oil or other chemicals (like acide for example) than can react badly to water; water can extinguish fire only by taking out *heat*, but you need a good amount of water directed towards the base of the fire to succesfully cool it enough to extinguish.
Lastly, you can't easily take out the *fuel* in this case (being the oil or the fat or whatever catched fire in that hellish dish), but in refineries they have valves all over the piping to close entire sections to keep the eventual combustion deprived from fuel

alerey
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Huh. A worse cook than me... I'm actually impressed. Never burnt my kitchen down.

lordvishnu
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Also very important:
In a crisis, keep calm and solve the problem.
Selfcontrol!!!!
Afterwards you can let your emotions go.

ankavoskuilen
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You know of schools taught something other than Gender identity, this girl might have been able to cope 🤣🤣

FantasyVisuals
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Ladies, I’d say 90% of stove top meals are cooked at medium or medium high. The high setting is only to heat up the pan. If you want your meat seared, you keep it on high and lightly press on the meat only for a few seconds, then immediately adjust the heat to a lower setting. Cooking is almost never done at a high setting…

basedshaman
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This is basic knowledge and it's a shame that there are full grown adults that don't know this

NotKerro
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An oven is a metal box meant to get really hot. If you’re panicking put it into the oven and regroup…just be careful when opening the door again.

Writerx
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I learned this in elementary school when the fireman came to teach us stop drop & roll. I caused one grease fire in my life when I was 17 & knew what to do because he talked about what to do with other fires. I was cooking hamburger at full blast & I didn't panic even though my heart was pounding. Unfortunately, I didn't learn this from my mom but I did learn it at school. I could have been taught how to prevent it by either but at least I was taught what to do if it happened.

lisapop
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When I was in high school I hated going to Home Ec class, but now as an adult I can say a lot of what I learned there has been of great value. It's shocking to me to see ppl now who don't know the first thing about the basic household fundamentals that were taught in that class.

OneMeanArtist