John Kramer vs. Mark Rober ft. VariousVoicesVA & NARWAL573 ERBofHousery Season 7

Описание к видео John Kramer vs. Mark Rober ft. VariousVoicesVA & NARWAL573 ERBofHousery Season 7

VariousVoicesVA as John Kramer
https://youtube.com/@cursedwithglorio...

NARWAL573 as Mark Rober
https://youtube.com/@NARWAL573?si=PqL...

Crew
Beat by Trunxks beatz
Mixed by WeThink
Edited by Trav Shark
Written by Trav Shark
Additional writing by NARWHAL573 & Dcorerapbattles
Art by Trav Shark
Additional art by Dcorerapbattles
Backgrounds by Trav Shark
Thumbnail by PhantomEPRB

Bio:
John Kramer (also known as "The Jigsaw Killer" or simply "Jigsaw") is a fictional character and the main antagonist of the Saw franchise. Jigsaw made his debut in the first film of the series, Saw, and appears in all subsequent sequels, with the exception of Spiral, in which he is only mentioned and featured in photographs.[1] He is portrayed by American actor Tobin Bell.
Jigsaw first appears in the 2004 film Saw. In the series' narrative, John is a former civil engineer dying from an inoperable frontal lobe tumor. After a suicide attempt, John becomes more valuing of life and becomes obsessed with forcing people into deadly scenarios, which he refers to as "games" or "tests". The victims are forced to inflict pain, or mental suffering, upon themselves or others in order to escape a locked room or building. The tests are typically symbolic of what Jigsaw perceives as a flaw in each person's moral character or life. He cuts the shape of a puzzle piece from the remains of people who fail to survive his "tests", hence the nickname
Jigsaw Killer. In Saw II, John says that the puzzle piece is meant to symbolize that the subject "was missing a vital piece of the human puzzle: the survival instinct".
The Jigsaw Killer's identity remains uncertain until the end of the first film. It is ultimately revealed that John has been posing as a corpse on the floor of a bathroom where one of his tests is taking place.

Mark Rober (born March 11, 1980[4][5][6]) is an American YouTuber, engineer, inventor, and educator. He is known for his YouTube videos on popular science and do-it-yourself gadgets. Before he became a YouTuber, Rober was an engineer with NASA for nine years, where he spent seven years working on the Curiosity rover at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. He later worked for four years at Apple Inc. as a product designer in their Special Projects Group, where he authored patents involving virtual reality in self-driving cars.
Rober was raised in Brea, California, the youngest of three siblings. He graduated from Brea Olinda High School in 1998.[7][8] He became interested in engineering at a young age, making a pair of goggles that helped avoid eye irritation while cutting onions.[6] Rober earned a mechanical engineering degree from Brigham Young University as well as a master's degree from the University of Southern California.[9]
Rober joined NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in 2004.[10] He worked there for nine years, seven of which were spent working on the Curiosity rover, which is now on Mars.[9] He designed and delivered hardware on several JPL missions, including AMT, GRAIL, SMAP, and Mars Science Laboratory.[11] While at NASA, Rober was one of the primary architects for "JPL Wired", which was a comprehensive knowledge capture wiki.[11] He published a case study about applying wiki technology in a high-tech organization to develop an "Intrapedia" for the capture of corporate knowledge.[12]
While at NASA, Rober began making viral videos.[6] His videos cover a wide variety of topics, sparking ideas for April Fools' Day pranks[13][14] and teaching about beating an escape room and filming primates in zoos non-invasively.[6] He also advocates for science in many of his videos.[15][16][17]
In October 2011, Rober recorded his first YouTube video. It shows a Halloween costume that used two iPads to create the illusion of seeing through his body.[18] His video of the "gaping hole in torso" costume went viral, receiving 1.5 million views in one day.[19][20] The following year, Rober launched Digital Dudz, an online Halloween costume company that specializes in Halloween costumes based on the same concept as the video (to which Rober holds the patent). The company took in $250,000 in revenue in its first three weeks of operations, and by 2013 his app-integrated costumes were sold in retail stores such as Party City.[18][21][22] The costumes were widely featured on news channels such as CBS News, CNN, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Fox, Yahoo! News, Discovery Channel, The Today Show and GMA.[23] He sold the company to UK-based costume company Morphsuits in 2013.[21]

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