@LN_P

I watch NileRed to learn, I watch NileBlue for warcrimes

@GenosetScentia

100% some farmers sprayed bird stop on their apple trees and noticed it tasted like grape. That percentage on both the patent and bird stop is too suspicious.

@danilooliveira6580

that 26.4% on both the paper and the bird stop is highly suspicious. something tells me that is exactly how they made it.

@spiceyslicey

I love it when I accidentally hit a NileBlue while binging NileRed and don't immediately notice, it's like having afternoon tea with Dr Jekyll and suddenly Mr Hyde appears and starts pouring us shots of grapple schnapps and redbull.

@boatingboy1011

I bet a bird hasn’t even landed on you since you filmed this!

@whatthemake

I love that the label says "if swallowed contact poison control immediate". Proceeds to taste spoonful of it.

@faraday9234

We can now confirm with %99.99 accuraccy that NileBlue IS NOT in fact a bird.

@HerkusM

"if it's good for a bird it's probably good for us too right?" - NileBlue's final words

@PhantomSavage

When I first started the video and I saw the bird stop, I went
"Ah cool, so he's going to separate out the Methyl Anthranilate from the bird stop before diluting it."
Then the video went on.
"... he's going to separate out the Methyl Anthranilate from the poison, right?"
He did not, in fact, separate the Methyl Anthranilate. 

Homeboy just dunked an apple in 73.6% mystery chemicals and ate it.

@anthraxcrab2222

I don’t know why I just love the idea that this company was dipping apples in industrial grade bird repellent to give them a grape flavor

@octavianova1300

that specific number being exactly the same CAN'T  be a coincidence they literally used that exact bird repellant to commercially produce grapples didn't they

@SecretSunglasses

i remember watching a Vice piece about this years ago, it seemed like the company was doing quite well at the time and didn't seem to be happy that people were suggesting that they were just soaking apples in bird repellent when they were definitely just soaking apples in bird repellent

@ColCoal

Was expecting a cool video about breeding apples to get them to taste like grapes.
Got two kids in the high school chem lab eating bird deterant.

@personisme3556

"If swallowed call a poison control centre"
A bit too late for that.

@braydenhenry8839

One day nile is gonna create a horror beyond human comprehension

@ashtoneventual3467

I had this as a kid, and I remember being disappointed that it tasted like grape candy instead of actual grape. And now NileBlue has blessed me with the reason why

@failgamerful

The oddly specific 26.4% tells me that the bird stop is actually the main component for infusing the apple.

@gavinhicks7621

They used bird repellent too. If you look in the left column on the paper at 1:30 around the 25 mark it says that they used a 26.4% mixture manufactured by Bird-X and sold under the name Bird Shield. This is probably exactly how they made the Grāpples😂

@teamcyeborg

"If it's good for birds, it should be good for us, right?"
I now see why he saw fit to eat pure capsaicin, clearly Nile has the digestive system of a bird. It's amazing the BirdStop didn't Stop him.

@Interistic

Seeing an apple in the fridge when NileBlue is around that has the sign saying "DO NOT EAT" has to be one of the scariest things you could see.