It should be Ivory brand soap. Their soap is whipped with air, which is why it floats in water. When the air pockets heat up, the particles move faster and need to occupy more volume, so the soap puffs up. It’s the same reason why marshmallows fluff up when heated.
You’re most likely right, that’s probably what we had, I remember using Ivory many times as a kid… well, when it wasn’t burnt up in the microwave, anyway.
Sweet Ad
Toally
I agree, because there was slow motion footage of stuff blowing up I will accept this underhanded form of brainwashing.
Great. More anti-microwave hysteria.
Wrong!
It’s anti-idiot hysteria.
(Although the ad itself was almost certainly made under carefully controlled conditions.)
mClOVIN!! yOUR DOING IT WRONG. i AM DISAPOINT. mOTHER OF MICROWAVES.. aNTI-FUNGI CHEEZBRUGER, fREDDY kRUEGER IS CHASING, MY CAT
Thats why I always use a Miele
My oldest brother used to microwave soap, it looked really cool… but it smelled SO BAD! UNIMAGINABLE STINK!
I was trying to figure out whether that was soap at 0:27. That looks so cool!
Nope, not gonna try that at home.
It should be Ivory brand soap. Their soap is whipped with air, which is why it floats in water. When the air pockets heat up, the particles move faster and need to occupy more volume, so the soap puffs up. It’s the same reason why marshmallows fluff up when heated.
You’re most likely right, that’s probably what we had, I remember using Ivory many times as a kid… well, when it wasn’t burnt up in the microwave, anyway.
Next time put the camera inside the microwave, so we don’t have to look through the grid!
…want to see a coconut
Here, this wikipedia article has some pictures of them.
You’re welcome.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coconut
Me too
a coconut that is…
That mellon is gross, yuck.
How did they fit a watermelon into a microwave?!
chuck Norris’s microwave…
This was cool until it became a Moe’s ad…
*_*
i want to see that in real time.
how many microwaves did they sacrifice to make that commercial? O_O
dose any one respect the pouch lol at 0.41