Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Deeper in the din with dangerous day. You know, we've
seen stories of crazy wedding demands, bride zilla's, crazy in laws,
couples asking way too much of their guests. A bride
go on viral for sharing his story and how our
aunt and uncle decided not to attend their wedding because
the men were asked to wear a tie. Doesn't seem outrageous,
(00:22):
right even these days. Shared a text where the aunts said,
we will not be there, sorry, way too much. Bride
responded with a link, I've found this for six ninety
nine online. Will you really not come because of a tie?
The aunts said, that's right. This is the United States
of America, not Princess Land. Wow. Something tells me this
bride might have dodged a bullet. Maybe Aunt Zilla. Maybe.
(00:43):
Woman also said that her father's already lent her uncle
a tie. Kind of looking for an excuse, right, kind
of a situation to a bridge too far for their finances,
couldn't afford a six ninety nine tie. Maybe it's wearing it.
This is America. Come on, have we gotten to the
point where we we don't dress up for anything anymore?
A tie at a wedding? I don't think it's too
(01:04):
far in the two You know. Redheads can be the
subject of a lot of jokes, maybe because they stand
out so much, being just two percent of the world's population,
not for long. A Harvard's study nearly sixteen thousand ancient
human remains found that red haired genes are actually spreading,
meaning natural selection has been quietly rooting for redheads the
whole time since the study looked at old remains. It's
(01:26):
not a new shift, but looking at trends over a
large number of years can show how humans evolved slowly
over time. Nobody knows for sure why redheads are becoming
more common. Scientists think that being ginger has been advantageous
for four thousand years, or beneficial or desirable traits to
get a glow could be more random. Those genes might
just be coming along for the ride, which is another
(01:48):
important trait. Some other trends that they notice humans have
evolved greater immunity for male pattern baldness are threatis leprosy,
bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia. Bad news, Silly Act disease, and
Crone's disease have increased improminence, maybe because in the past
that we died a lot younger, possibly maybe probably won't
notice any major shifts in our lifetime, but if you're
(02:09):
going to be ginger next time here redhead joke, you
can smile and say evolution's got your back, or at
least maybe it's got the back of your head. To
it again for another episode of Deeper in the Den
with Dangerous Daved right here.