"How to Drink" on YouTube is hosted by Greg Titan who mixes drinks you can emulate, including CyberPunk legends: Johnny Silverhand, David Martinez, and Jackie Welles.

Greg has done such a good job that CD PROJEKT RED altered the in game appearance of the Johnny Silverhand after his creation.

Check out his list of CyberPunk drinks below.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=STDO68ZCsBM&list=PL0Ve02cCRWLayA40updExvOKlIqdjXwQf

#Games #VideoGames #Steam #CyberPunk #CyberPunk2077 #EdgeRunners #CyberPunkEdgeRunners #Arasaka #CDPROJEKTRED #HowToDrink

Butterbeer from Harry Potter | How to Drink

YouTube

So, lately I've been watching a bunch of #HowToDrink, a show on #YouTube where the host mixes (mostly) alcoholic beverages, as well as describes interesting historical things about the drinks.
As per usual, I watch the show with closed captions on. I think it's mostly auto-generated captions unfortunately.
I've started to notice that it kept censoring 'jigger' or 'jiggers' in it though, which in the show is meant to be a measuring tool, which is pretty clear from the context.
At first I thought it was just the auto-generated captions mishearing the word (though apart from 'frigger', I couldn't really think of what possible 'vulgar' word it could've thought it heard), but it happened so frequently that I decided to look up the word 'jigger' on Wiktionary, and sure enough, under the third #etymology I found a reference to it being a euphemistic slang.
Apparently it can be a reference to either form of genitalia, with it referencing the masculine genital at least being in use since 1931, and the feminine one was quoted in a book from 2002 (though set in 1842).
So, #TheMoreYouKnow. Another example of how #censoring something for possibly being #lewd has resulted in the lewd meaning being looked up where otherwise it had remained hidden.

#TodayILearned #TodayILearnt #TIL #jigger #jiggers

jigger - Wiktionary