Sous-titres (762)
0:00THIS IS A $1 BILLION rocket ship. A
0:03future technology that will one day take
0:06you all the way to Mars to live in your
0:08brand new home, a $500 million
0:11biosphere. Oh my gosh. And throughout
0:13this video, we'll show you just how epic
0:15the future is about to be.
0:17>> Oh my gosh. You'll see how we're going
0:19to bring extinct species back to life.
0:21This is literally the future. Flying
0:23cars that can take you anywhere.
0:25>> And so much more. No way. All starting
0:28with this $1 light, which when you
0:31combine millions of them can simulate
0:33the future of humanity or Mars. And in
0:36this video, I am excited to show you
0:38guys the most futuristic technology on
0:40the planet. But next, we're going with a
0:42$10,000 technology, Neurolink, which is
0:45a computer chip surgically implanted
0:47into the brain, enabling people like
0:49Nolan here to reconnect to the world.
0:51So, you were paralyzed from the neck
0:53>> Yeah. And for about 8 years, I was
0:55trying to find some purpose in my life.
0:57>> And then you got Neurolink. And what has
1:00>> Anything anyone can do on a computer, I
1:03>> And he literally does it by using only
1:05his brain. You're currently moving that
1:08>> I want to see you send a text with your
1:11>> His hands are paralyzed, but we're going
1:12to film them so you can see they're not
1:13moving. And using the neurons firing in
1:16Nolan's brain, Nurley can translate
1:17those signals into movements. He just
1:20typed hi with his mind. Is this not
1:22crazy to anyone else? But that's not all
1:24he can do. So you just think left and
1:26you're about to turn left.
1:27>> Left, right. Don't die.
1:30>> He absolutely crushed us playing with
1:33>> I never thought would allow me to do
1:37>> And future technology can not only help
1:39the mind, but also the body. For people
1:41like Kai, a 12-year-old born without an
1:44arm and was sadly abandoned on the side
1:46of the road. This is what Kai thinks
1:48he's about to get. This is hard. And he
1:49has no idea he's in a fake doctor's
1:51office and about to get the most
1:52advanced bionic arm on the planet. A
1:54$25,000 bionic ligament straight out of
1:57a superhero movie. Let's surprise him.
2:01>> Do you mind uh telling me a little bit
2:03>> I'm 12. I'm adopted from China. Kai has
2:06no idea. And that's Jimmy. Your mom told
2:08me that you are a big fan of the
2:12>> Yes. And this is the army you were going
2:14to be getting, but I didn't think that
2:16was good enough. So, I got you a
2:21>> This is the most futuristic bionic arm
2:23on the planet. Your mom told me that you
2:25like playing sports. You like being
2:26active, and this should make everything
2:28you want to do much more.
2:33>> The cool part about this arm, too, is
2:35there's sensors in there, and you'll be
2:36able to use the hand without having to
2:38pull on anything. The sensors will be
2:39able to pick up on your nerves.
2:42Isn't that freaking cool? Flex that
2:44worm. Oh, look at that. Here's a piece
2:47of wood. See if you can grab it. There
2:49you go. Is that not freaking crazy? All
2:51right. You want to try shaking my hand?
2:54That's so cool. There we go. Look at
2:57that. And then obviously if you ever
2:58don't want the bees burning, you can
2:59just pop it off. You don't have to keep
3:03>> This is the best day of my life.
3:06>> I've seen so many of your videos where
3:07you help people. I never thought that
3:10>> Here we are. Sure, this bionic arm is
3:12life-changing, but it's nothing compared
3:16flying car. You think that thing will
3:19>> Oh, yeah. If somehow you win, I'll give
3:21you a million dollars.
3:22>> You'll give me a million dollars if I
3:24>> Oh, all right. Well, LET'S GET THIS
3:25GOING. We're going to race to work and
3:27see which is faster, a flying car or a
3:29normal car. All right, let the race
3:35>> HE'S RIGHT NEXT TO YOU.
3:36>> HE'S LITERALLY RIGHT.
3:37>> WHAT DID he just peel off into the
3:39ocean? Yeah, he doesn't need roads.
3:41That's cheating. For this to be a true
3:43test, we have to obey all traffic laws.
3:44See, look, we have to stop at a stop
3:46sign. Now, we can go. But with a flying
3:48car, he can just take a straight path.
3:50Which is why for as long as people have
3:52thought about the future, flying cars
3:53have always been at the forefront. Oh,
3:55wait. I can see them. That's it.
3:56>> Wait, HE MIGHT ALREADY BE OVER HALFWAY.
3:59>> OH, we got to hurry.
4:00>> Imagine how much time you could save
4:02every single day if your commute to work
4:04was cut in half because you could fly to
4:05it instead of having to drive to it.
4:07>> I'd save like 1,000 hours a year. Uh,
4:09maybe not a year. I didn't do any math.
4:12flying car doesn't even compare to the
4:15$1 billion rocket ship we'll be seeing
4:17later. This is just the beginning. THIS
4:19THING GOT HERE SO FAST. COME ON THEN.
4:22NO. OH GOD, I FORGOT WE'RE AT A BEACH.
4:25JIMMY'S not catching up to that at all.
4:27>> Jimmy, I think you're cooked for the
4:28>> Yeah. Well, luckily I never said I would
4:30give him a million if he won. He just
4:31said he'd give me a million dollars. Let
4:34me make sure I don't actually run over
4:36someone. Oh, THERE IT IS. HOW LONG HAVE
4:39>> YOU'VE BEEN HERE FOR 10 MINUTES?
4:41>> OH MY GOD. I DON'T KNOW ABOUT YOU GUYS,
4:43but I'm excited to drive one of these
4:45>> And if you're not excited for the future
4:46yet, how about you take this jetpack to
4:49>> For the price of half a million dollar.
4:54This jetack can fly over 80 m an hour.
4:57And with a 3m range, it's easily the
4:59fastest way to get to work. So happy
5:07Glad you can make it.
5:08>> The future of transportation isn't just
5:10in the sky. It's also on the ground. And
5:12for a million dollars, we have the
5:14FASTEST CAR IN THE WORLD. And I'm going
5:16to get in and drive it. Now, not only is
5:18this the fastest car in the world
5:21Oh my gosh, it accelerates so fast. But
5:23it has so much suction that it can drive
5:30>> Oh. All right. OH MY GOD. JIMMY IS
5:33TURNING UPSIDE DOWN RIGHT NOW. THIS IS
5:36absolutely terrifying, but not as
5:37terrifying as being in a normal car.
5:40This is SO CRAZY. HE'S DEFYING GRAVITY
5:42RIGHT NOW. OH, I FEEL ALL THE BLOOD IN
5:44my body rushing to my head. This thing
5:46has two vacuum fans so powerful you can
5:49literally drive it upside down.
5:56Just not very far. And at 10 times the
5:59cost of this car, Mercedes put the
6:01future price tag of this concept car at
6:04>> This is a vision of a futuristic car in
6:07let's say a couple hundred years. It's
6:09also inspired by the universe of
6:11Pandora. It's more like a creature.
6:13>> So if I touch it, it will react to Yes.
6:16>> Wo. What What happens if I pet it?
6:19>> Yeah. You see, he likes it.
6:21>> Um that is uh Okay. Can I take the
6:26>> Let's have some fun. So, all you do is
6:28you just press it forward to go forward.
6:30What is that crazy? And then you pull it
6:32back to stop. And then this top part
6:35twists so you can drive the car
6:38>> These chairs pick up your heartbeat and
6:40all your vitals and then automatically
6:42adjust everything. They will
6:43automatically change the temperature for
6:48>> Wait, so then in theory I can drive it?
6:50>> Yeah, you can drive it. But this car is
6:51worth $10 million, by the way. So
6:53>> it is. And I'm driving with my left hand
6:55>> Okay. Oh my gosh, this is trippy.
6:58>> Speaking of trippy, see that drone right
7:01>> That is called wing. THIS IS LITERALLY
7:04THE FUTURE OF DELIVERY. NOW CHECK THIS.
7:06That is crazy. And then it just Let's
7:07go. Super convenient. They can deliver
7:09your packages in minutes. And to put
7:11that to the test, while we were shooting
7:12our next Wilderness Challenge video, I
7:14ordered s'mores ingredients for a
7:16contestant through the Wing app. And
7:17even though they normally deliver to
7:19your doorstep, Wing did a special
7:20delivery for this Wilderness video
7:22faster than any other delivery service
7:24could have. What would have normally
7:26taken hours was just delivered in a
7:28couple minutes to the middle of the
7:30woods. There you go. Everything you need
7:32for s'mores delivered in minutes.
7:33Normally though, Wing delivers to your
7:35doorstep or backyard.
7:36>> What the heck? Flying packages.
7:38>> And this isn't just the future. Wing has
7:40already delivered over 750,000 packages
7:44>> Go to wing.com/mrbeast
7:46to learn more. But for now, we're
7:48heading to our $200 million technology.
7:51WHICH BRINGS US TO UPSIDE FOODS THAT HAS
7:53literally produced hundreds of thousands
7:55of pounds of chicken meat without
7:57killing a single chicken. Which is
7:59incredible because over $220 million
8:02chickens are killed every single day in
8:04order to sustain demands for their meat.
8:06And Upside Foods has spent over $200
8:08million in research and development in
8:10order to create this technology. Let me
8:12show you how we do it. Please do. I
8:13don't understand. When we took cells
8:15from a chicken egg in 2018, we cracked
8:17an egg. We took a small amount of cells
8:19and we froze them in this that goes down
8:21to minus 80. Wow. And you've used those
8:24cells to make hundreds of thousands of
8:26pounds of chicken meat. Step two is we
8:27take those cells, we gently th them out.
8:29Oh my gosh. This is simulating a
8:31chicken's body and the cells are just
8:33>> Once we get enough of them, we move on
8:36to step three. This is protein, fat,
8:38sugar. I'm literally feeding the chicken
8:40cells over there so they can multiply
8:42into chicken meat. That's right. Yes.
8:44And once the chicken feed is in the
8:45container, it moves all the way through
8:47these pipes and through the factory and
8:49eventually ends up in here.
8:51>> You can look through this. You'll see
8:53chicken cells just swimming and swimming
8:56>> Oh my goodness. It's a lot of chicken.
8:58Every 2 seconds, this produces a
9:00chicken's worth of chicken meat.
9:01>> Yeah. Every few seconds. And saving
9:03chicken lives is not the only upside to
9:05upside foods. These chickens don't get
9:07diseases. So, you don't have to worry
9:09about a disease spreading on the farm
9:11and then you eating a sick chicken. And
9:12honestly, it seems too good to be true.
9:14>> Well, let's go and try it.
9:15>> Blaze, I need to try it. I need to see
9:16how this tastes. Now, we're going to put
9:18the meat we just grew to the test. Come
9:20on in. I brought one of the best chefs I
9:22know, Nick Dioani, and he's prepared for
9:25us two chicken sandwiches. One of these
9:27sandwiches, a chicken was killed today
9:29to me. The other, no chickens were
9:32killed and was grown in a lab. Which do
9:34you think we'll like better?
9:35>> I think if I cook it right, you won't be
9:37>> Okay, this is going to be a good test.
9:38He's now giving me one of each chicken
9:40sandwich. So, we're both trying this
9:41one. Here's what it actually is. Me and
9:44>> Cheers it. Here you go.
9:48>> Well, chicken. Chicken. Now we're going
9:51to try this one. This is what it is. We
9:53don't know. Cheers it.
9:57>> I honestly can't tell. It's actually
9:59scary how similar. I mean, they're both
10:01chicken. No matter what, both of them
10:02taste really good. This one's the
10:06>> That's the cultivated one. I
10:08>> honestly can't tell the difference. What
10:10the heck? And what's crazy is in the
10:11near future, this technology could save
10:13the lives of trillions of chickens and
10:15other animals. Which brings us to
10:17Velaso, the 400 million future tech,
10:20which literally brought the direwolf
10:22back to life and is currently working on
10:23bringing back the woolly mammoth and
10:25dodo bird. This is the founder, and he
10:26is responsible for bringing back from
10:28extinction the animals we're about to
10:30see today. You're going to be one of our
10:31scientists and going the whole process.
10:33You're going to help us do all the steps
10:34to bring back extinct species. I'm not
10:36qualified, but let's do it. Tens of
10:38thousands of years ago, woolly mammoths
10:40ruled the mainland. But after the end of
10:41the ice age, they all went extinct,
10:44leaving behind their DNA in the form of
10:46their fossilized tus. This is a real tus
10:49that's 43,000 years old from Alaska.
10:52>> This might be one of the coolest things
10:53>> It really is. And this is leading to
10:55bringing back the mammoth.
10:56>> How many decades till you're able to
10:58make a woolly mammoth?
10:59>> We will have mammoths this decade.
11:01>> Oh my gosh. And I'm directly helping by
11:03collecting a real mammoth DNA sample.
11:06There you go. Perfect. You nailed it.
11:08This is a piece of a 43,000y old tusk.
11:12And that's just the first step in
11:14bringing an extinct creature to life.
11:16Next, we have to clone the DNA. You're
11:18going to use a laser to actually pierce
11:19into a cell and transfer and clone a
11:22cell. Wait, wait. Let me try the code.
11:28Oh my gosh. If anyone wants to break it,
11:30>> It's definitely not 1 2 3 4. Step once
11:33on that orange pedal.
11:36>> All right. So, now with your right hand,
11:37you're going to move that little pipette
11:39and you're going to go through the hole
11:40that you cut using the laser. You're
11:44>> Surgical precision.
11:47>> And there you go.
11:49>> Yes. You have successfully extracted the
11:52>> Wait, I want to put in a different one.
11:53>> Is he supposed to do that?
11:54>> Yeah, I totally can. I mean, that was
11:56the cloning process.
11:58>> I got it. Don't worry about it. So, then
11:59you just shove it in here.
12:01>> Y too much. Oh. Oh, that's exactly
12:06opposite of what's supposed to happen. I
12:07need some more practice in cloning
12:08animals. But before they can bring a
12:10woolly mammoth back to life, first they
12:12mix its DNA with that of a mouse and
12:14created a woolly mouse. In just a few
12:17years, Colossal will use this same
12:18technology to bring the woolly mammoth
12:20back from extinction.
12:22>> All right, crazy question.
12:26>> Yes, you will be the first person ever
12:28outside of our animal operations team to
12:30touch the mice. Like, I actually have
12:31never even pet the mice. I'm literally
12:33going to hold an animal that until
12:34recently never existed in history. This
12:37is Dale. Dale is so soft.
12:39>> I now have William M DNA. Anyone want to
12:41>> No, no, no. Someone wash his hands.
12:43>> No. Colosso has spent over $400 million
12:45not just bringing back animals, but also
12:48saving them from extinction. We have
12:49over a thousand species already in this
12:52bioalt. There are over a,000 species in
12:55here that could one day go endangered,
12:57and you're just holding on to their DNA
12:59in case you need to bring them back.
13:00Then let me label some of the samples
13:02that could actually be stored for
13:04hundreds of years. This is dozens of
13:07endangered species that I'm going to
13:08slide into here. Close it. Yep.
13:12And those might sit there for years,
13:14decades. But if any of those species go
13:16extinct, you can now pull out blood and
13:19>> and reanimate them and clone them. Yes.
13:20>> How do more people not know about this?
13:22This is crazy. And before I left, I had
13:24a little surprise for them. Can I ask
13:26>> Sure. Try it to me. This is a cake made
13:29of meat. And you have two direwolves
13:31that you brought back from extinction. I
13:33know your direwolves are classified, but
13:34what if I hand you this and you give the
13:38meat cake to the direwolves and film it?
13:40I will totally do that. Okay, I like
13:42that answer. And Ben kept his promise.
13:44You're watching the only two direwolves
13:46in the universe literally resurrected
13:49from the past enjoying a meat cake made
13:51just for them. And apparently the only
13:53difference between saving all animals
13:55and saving all humans is a hund00
13:59Bringing us to this half a billion
14:01dollar biosphere, which is literally the
14:03blueprint for what human life will be
14:05like on other planets. Let's go be
14:07Martians for a day, boys. Woo!
14:09>> Because this exact biosphere could be
14:11our future home on Mars. Surviving there
14:14means it needs to produce its own
14:15oxygen, water, and self-sustaining food
14:18>> Come on in, boys. Make sure you seal the
14:20door behind us. We are now sealed inside
14:22the biosphere, which means we can take
14:24these suits off. Okay. Just gentle on
14:31OKAY. WELL, being an astronaut is way
14:33harder than you think. It's time to
14:35begin our first day as Martians. While
14:38we're not actually on Mars yet, this
14:39biosphere could save humanity if Earth
14:41becomes uninhabitable. This biosphere
14:44has everything needed to sustain human
14:46life. Even a girlfriend for me. It's a
14:48biosphere, not God. can't pull off
14:50miracles. This place also has five
14:52different biomes much like Minecraft.
14:54And I want to take you to one of the
14:55cooler ones, a rainforest. I don't know
14:57if you guys realize, but these plants
14:59have been living in here, some of them,
15:02>> Dude, that's older than
15:03>> No, it's not actually.
15:04>> Oh, it's the same age.
15:05>> Yeah. Now, if we keep walking right over
15:07here, the rainforest can also
15:11>> rain. It's literally raining in here.
15:12>> I told him to only have it rain on the
15:14left side of the biosphere, which is why
15:16I'm dry and you guys are getting wet.
15:17Are you getting a little cold?
15:19>> Well, here. Come on. a non-ring house.
15:20>> It's It literally isn't raining.
15:22>> You know, like those snow globes you get
15:23for Christmas. That's what this
15:24biosphere is. It's your own mini Earth
15:27that you can put on any planet in the
15:28solar system. Like in the real world,
15:30there isn't just rainforest. Now, we're
15:32going to head over to the savannah. The
15:34savannah biome is the ideal climate for
15:36growing food, which is why it's arguably
15:38the most important of the five. These
15:40are ghost peppers, as you can see. Ow.
15:42You want to give it a try?
15:46>> Actually, no. I actually water. I It's a
15:50>> NOLAN, WE DON'T HAVE MUCH WATER ON MARS.
15:52STOP WASTING IT. I hear milk helps. You
15:54want to try our brand new feastless
15:56>> Stop talking. Put it in my mouth.
15:57>> And much like the current state of
15:58Nolan's mouth, we're now in the desert
16:00by All right. Ignore the do not
16:02intercept. Do you feel that wind? Wait,
16:04we're inside. Wind like this is actually
16:05important so the trees strengthen
16:07themselves and stand up. And that is
16:08just one of countless findings that has
16:10come out of this biosphere. It's done
16:11wonders for research. All right,
16:13gentlemen. This right here is a swamp
16:15plant. And the cool part about this,
16:17grab one of these plants. What is this?
16:18This tastes just like a potato chip.
16:21Is that crazy? It's crunchy. Salty.
16:24>> Yeah. On Mars, if you're like boiling
16:25food or whatever, you'd put that in
16:27there and it would make the food salty.
16:28>> What? That's awesome. And that brings us
16:30to our final biome, the ocean. Check it
16:33>> That's a lot of water. That's a beach.
16:35>> A literal beach inside of the biosphere.
16:37Now that we have everything we need to
16:38survive the rest of our lives here, it's
16:40say we have a Martian dinner minus the
16:42>> with extra ghost pepper. Let's do it.
16:44This is a vertical garden which can grow
16:47the same amount of food as 2 and 1/2
16:49acres of farmland. Just 20 years ago, if
16:51you wanted to turn this vertical garden
16:53into a business, it would have been
16:54nearly impossible. But thanks to
16:56Shopify, it's never been easier to bring
16:58your business to life. Just like the
17:00technology in this video is changing the
17:02world. Shopify changed the world of
17:04starting a business, making it easier
17:06than ever. Every 26 seconds, there's a
17:08sale made on Shopify.
17:09>> Oh, do you want some lemons?
17:10>> Yes, please. Shopify's new tool,
17:12Sidekick, is basically like an AI
17:14co-founder for your business and can
17:16help with websites. Set up marketing
17:17plans and routine tasks to save you
17:20time. It's pretty awesome. Ghost pepper
17:22>> No, this one's small.
17:23>> No, it's in the basket.
17:24>> And since we can't solely rely on lemons
17:26and ghost peppers, you know, one thing
17:27Mars could have cultivated chicken from
17:29Upside Foods. This chicken that doesn't
17:32kill chickens or this biosphere. All the
17:34things you see in this video were once
17:35an idea in someone's mind. Thanks to
17:37Shopify, you too can play a part in
17:39shaping the future. Whatever ideas you
17:41have in your mind, you can bring to
17:43life. All you have to do is scan the QR
17:44code or go to shopify.com/mrpiece
17:46to turn your dream into an actual
17:48business. You could literally do it
17:49today before you go to bed. It's kind of
17:51wild that this is all futuristic tech,
17:53but it's not that far away. Like, if a
17:55woman ever talks to Nolan and he has a
17:57kid, there's a reality where that kid
17:59grows up on Mars one day. Everything in
18:01this video is in reach.
18:02>> Well, minus you having a kid pirate. All
18:04this stuff you see here doesn't just
18:05magically teleport to Mars. It needs a
18:08rocket ship to take it there. And as of
18:09now, that rocket ship is Starship, the 1
18:12billion dollar futuristic tech made
18:14possible by SpaceX, who invited me here
18:16to see their plans to launch thousands
18:18of Starships to Mars, making humanity a
18:21multilanetary species.
18:25Starship is made here in one of the
18:27largest buildings on the planet. Why do
18:29they need such a large building?
18:30>> Well, basically raw materials come in
18:32one end and the literal rocket ships go
18:35>> Yeah. Like I mean, bro, there's rocket
18:37ship pieces everywhere. And we have the
18:38vice president of Starship to show us
18:40how the technology they're developing
18:42here will define humanity's future.
18:44>> This is the inside of Starship.
18:46>> In a few years, we'll be sending people
18:48to the moon and shortly after to Mars.
18:50>> Can we buy tickets to Mars?
18:51>> Yeah, let's talk about it later. Tibes.
18:53>> And you want to be able to send
18:55thousands of starships at a time?
18:56>> Thousands of starships.
18:57>> And each starship could hold 100 people.
18:59>> Oh my gosh, bro. The future is crazy.
19:02I'm so excited. While I was being shown
19:04around arguably the coolest thing
19:06humanity's ever built, I want to ask
19:08some hard-hitting questions. Has
19:10Starship ever encountered an
19:12unidentified object up in space?
19:14>> Not yet. That we can talk about.
19:16>> Would the answer be different if I asked
19:20>> Anyways, let's keep going. It's crazy
19:22how normal everyone is in here. Like,
19:24they're all working really hard, but I
19:26think they might be numb to the fact
19:27that they're building rockets. This is
19:28crazy. Do you guys realize you're
19:30working on a rocket ship, right?
19:32>> Isn't that freaking crazy? Yeah,
19:33>> I'd be terrified if they didn't realize
19:35>> And the rockets that these two are
19:37building are fully reusable Starships.
19:39And when they reenter Earth's
19:40atmosphere, they endure temperatures
19:42hotter than molten lava. So, the SpaceX
19:44team engineered a custom heat shield
19:47>> We've been talking a little bit about
19:48heat shield tiles. And here we have one
19:50for you to hold. What do you think?
19:51>> So, this is the heat shield tile.
19:53>> This is a real heat shield tile.
19:54>> This is very light. Wait, hold that.
19:56>> Because there's 18,000 of them.
19:58>> How hot can this get?
19:59>> It can get so hot that a blowtorrch
20:01can't get through it. What if I put my
20:03hand here, we put this here, and then
20:05you blow torch this?
20:06>> I'll blow torch it.
20:07>> Really? You have that much faith?
20:08>> I have that much faith.
20:09>> Let's test it. Someone give me a blow
20:10torch. I'm not sure I signed a waiver.
20:12>> No waiver required.
20:13>> Oh, of course the blowtorrch looks like
20:14Starship. I love how committed this
20:16company is. For reference, so you can
20:19Look at that. Oh, you should.
20:22>> I'll hold it. Wait, wait. Don't Don't
20:24burn my head. Of course.
20:27Wow. It's turning orange. This is over
20:302,000° and I feel nothing on my hand.
20:33Science is cool. What happens if I touch
20:36>> It probably won't burn you, but it it it
20:38>> He's like, "What an idiot." SpaceX is
20:41building hundreds of Starships all at
20:43the same time. You guys are churning out
20:45rockets like there are cars.
20:47>> Exactly. This is basically a car line
20:49that builds rockets.
20:50>> I was then granted access to do
20:52something that is normally off limits
20:54>> This is a flap, so it's getting all the
20:57>> Can I put one on?
20:58>> Let me ask. We don't want the rocket to
21:01>> I mean, we've never had someone install
21:03flight hardware who's not trained for
21:06>> So, what we got here is a heat shield
21:07tile. We put this on. Then, we fold the
21:10edges up and we snap the tile in.
21:12>> And we're going to let you do that.
21:14>> But you can only do this once. And we
21:17>> So, if you mess it up, we have to
21:18destroy it to get it out.
21:20>> Yeah. So, no pressure.
21:21>> That feels like a lot of work.
21:22>> Let's do it. I'm a rocket engineer.
21:24>> Yeah. This will fly to space if you do
21:25it right. And if you don't,
21:27>> you'll have to pull it off.
21:29>> Uh, it's definitely
21:30>> No, wrong. Maybe it does take rocket
21:32>> So, now you can push it.
21:37>> Now I'm signing the tile.
21:40>> MB Mr. Beast, if whatever reason this
21:43tile causes the rocket to blow up,
21:45everything you're watching right now is
21:46AI, it's not real. You can't prove this
21:48>> Well, I'm an eyewitness.
21:50>> You're also AI. And the case said this
21:53wasn't as massive as this billion dollar
21:55rocket factory is. It's still not big
21:57enough for the final step of building
21:59starships. THIS IS HOW LARGE STARSHIP is
22:02once it's fully put together. Everything
22:04we just showed you. The camera doesn't
22:07do it justice. This thing is massive.
22:10There's a good chance you'll be able to
22:12fly on this one day and go to a
22:14different planet. Crazy. And at the end
22:17of our Starbase tour, they took us to
22:19see all the other starships just waiting
22:21to go to space around the Starbase
22:22campus. Social media and the news can
22:25make the future seem so negative and
22:27dire. But honestly, what I saw in this
22:29video gave me hope. From the insane of
22:31biotech developed to give people with
22:33disabilities a new chance at life to
22:36cars that literally fly in the air,
22:39redefining how we move around the world
22:41to the DNA technologies saving animals
22:44from suffering as well as from
22:46extinction. Learning to live on other
22:48planets and how to get there. Pushing
22:50humanity beyond Earth to worlds we once
22:53thought unreachable. And if you ask me,
22:56that's a pretty exciting future.