Every Schaffrillas Last Place Movie Ranked



This is quite possibly the dumbest video idea I’ve ever done, that was my lapse in judgement

Go watch Nem’s video- https://youtu.be/CEsMjINS3kE
And also subscribe to the crab man on the off chance you somehow know who I am but not him- https://www.youtube.com/SchaffrillasProductions

Music Used In Order:
Trophy Gallery – Super Smash Bros Brawl
Holding Out For A Hero (Instrumental) – Shrek 2
Peaceful Days – One Punch Man
Dino Dino Jungle/DK Mountain – Mario Kart Double Dash
Drunken Pipe Bomb – Team Fortress 2
Emerald Heroes – Death Battle
It’s Finn McMissile! – Cars 2
Solid State Invincible – Death Battle
The Days When My Mother Was There – Persona 5
That’s No Moon – Death Battle
Ice Ice Outpost – Mario Kart 8 Deluxe
The Forest Navel – Pikmin
Fist Bump (Instrumental) – Sonic Forces
Colours of the Wind (Instrumental) – Pocahontas
Mementos – Persona 5
CPS2 Originals – Mr Fantastic
Littleroot Town – Pokemon Omega Ruby/Alpha Sapphire
Wii Grumble Volcano – Mario Kart 8 Deluxe
The Grand Finale – Mario and Luigi: Bowser’s Inside Story
GBA Ribbon Road – Mario Kart 8 Deluxe

Timestamps:
0:00 Some last-minute prefacing
1:44 The actual intro
4:33 Number 1
7:02 Number 2
10:01 Number 3
13:37 Number 4
15:32 Number 5
19:22 Number 6
22:13 Number 7
25:24 Number 8
29:19 Number 9
31:57 Number 10
34:35 Number 11
37:50 Number 12
41:44 Number 13
44:52 Number 14
46:05 Number 15
49:57 Number 16
53:53 Outro

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38 thoughts on “Every Schaffrillas Last Place Movie Ranked”

  1. I’m aware Cars 2 isn’t a good movie, but I always enjoy watching it. It’s never boring, and is so balls to wall that I can’t help but be entertained. It’s the only Pixar film that goes insane, and I kinda like it for that.

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  2. 41:37 Okay, let’s start by formulating this problem with all of our assumptions laid out:

    “In a group of 21 people, there are exactly 2 people from the UK. Each person in the group is given a Lego minifigure pack. Each pack contains exactly one of 18 possible characters, where each character has an equal probability of being in the pack. One of these possible characters is Pochahontas. What is the probability that each person in the group from the UK receives a Pocahontas minifigure, while nobody else in the group does?”

    We can start by naming the people in this group. Actually, we can just number them: person #1 to person #21. To keep things simple, we can say that the first two people are the people from the UK, since we can number these people in whatever order we want.

    Now, person #1 has a 1/18 probability of receiving Pochahontas. The same goes for person #2. The probability that both of these people receive Pochahontas is (1/18) * (1/18), or (1/18)^2. You can simplify this to 1/324, but I’ll just leave it as (1/18)^2 for now.

    As for person #3 onward, remember, we want the probability that none of them receive Pochahontas—in other words, how likely it is that they all receive one of the other 17 possible characters. Person #3 has a 17/18 probability of receiving a character other than Pocahontas. Person #4 has the same 17/18 probability. This holds true for each of the 19 people in the group who are not from the UK. (It’s also true for the other 2, but we’re just focusing on the non-UK people right now.) Multiplying all 19 of these 17/18 probabilities together, we get (17/18)^19. This is the probability that all 19 of these people receive a character other than Pochahontas.

    We’re almost done. Now we just have to find the probability that both of the UK people receive Pochahontas and none of the non-UK people don’t. This just means multiplying the two probabilities we’ve found together, giving us (1/18)^2 * (17/18)^19. With that, we have found the probability we were looking for. If you want the approximate value of this, it’s about 1 in 960. (That’s the probability of getting any given starting position in chess960. Holy hell!)

    For those curious, we can also start with the assumption that there are exactly 2 Pochahontas minifigures in the mix from the start. That means that there must be exactly 2 people in the group who receive Pochahontas. So, we just need to find out the probability that of the 21 people in the group, the 2 UK people are chosen to receive Pochahontas.

    The number of ways you can choose 2 people from a group of 21 is called 21 choose 2. For your first choice, where you choose who receives Pochahontas #1, there are 21 possible people to choose; then for your second choice, Pocahontas #2, the remaining number of options is 20. If each Pochahontas minifigure were distinct from each other, then this would give us 21 * 20 = 420 possible ways to choose the 2 people in the group of 21. However, this would be overcounting it, since we don’t care which Pochahontas is given out in what order. To remove the dependence on order, we divide by the number of ways to order the 2 Pochahontas minifigures, which is 2. So we have 420/2 = 210, meaning that 21 choose 2 = 210. Since all the ways of choosing 2 people out of 21 are equally likely, this means that the probability that the two UK people receive the two Pochahontases is 1 in 210.

    Alright, that about does it for what I wanted to talk about. To me, probability and combinatorics are really interesting topics—well, I guess most things involving math are interesting to me, and probability and combinatorics have a pretty average ranking in that list. I’m kinda disappointed that I didn’t end up getting a good opportunity to talk about Bernoulli trials here (named for Jacob Bernoulli, uncle of Daniel Bernoulli, inventor of Bernoulli’s principle, the namesake of Franceso Bernoulli), but at least I saved myself a bit of work. Anyway, thanks for reading!

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  3. 48:25 This is an understandably common mistake. 2007 was actually the year when Illumination was founded, upon which approximately 2.3% of members of the Christian faith simultaneously experienced a searing prophetic vision of a horrific Easter-themed film whose release would spell the gradual and painful demise of humanity. Hop itself was released in 2011.

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  4. That Tim Hill ranking is sounding mighty appetizing, not gonna lie. I'd definitely give it a watch.

    Also, I am so hyped for Schaff's version of this video. I cannot get enough of him ranting about things he despises to the core.

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  5. Every single movie ranking (SPOILERS)

    1: Bottle Rocket
    2: Dinosaur
    3: Brave
    4: Tenet
    5: Cars 2
    6: Happy Feet 2
    7: Ralph Breaks the Internet
    8: Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker
    9: Ice Age: Collision Course
    10: Always
    11: Turbo
    12: Pocahontas
    13: The Hunchback of Notre Dame II
    14: Earwig and the Witch
    15: Hop
    16: Surf's Up 2: Wavemania

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  6. 19:18 I think you doing an another Pixar ranking but only 2010s film will been alright idea to do or just a cars analysis video all of the films like other reviewers like Unlucky Tug imo

    Anyway nice weird coincidence ranking of the funny crab man least favorite/worst movies, tbh I think got into Schaffrillas through your 10 favorite channels feature tab on your channel & I been fan of his content ever since his Pixar ranking so thank for that & I did like at you & Nemesis did post same type video on same today again ever since like yours guys reviews on first half of season 9 of db I think? And nice doing something different then db. Once again nice video & can’t wait what new content videos you cooking next.

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  7. As far as finding an excuse to talk about Cars 3, one idea I have (albiet one that'll require a lot more effort than usual) is ranking every mainstream animated movie franchise with 3 movies or more. More so based on how much you love and care about the franchise than averaging the quality of each movie. It's something I'm currently working on as a small side project for myself, which includes Disney’s Winnie the Pooh, Pixar’s Toy Story and Cars, Blue Sky’s Ice Age, Sony Animation’s Hotel Transylvania, Illumnination’s Despicable Me, and Dreamwork’s Shrek, Madagascar, Kung Fu Panda, How to Train your Dragon, and Trolls. That's a lineup that contains the most tolerable selection of movies, and let's be real Disney is going to add more such as Frozen and Moana, but if you REALLY want to torture yourself you can add series like Swan Princess, Open Season, or Land Before Time. Or worse yet, the several Disney movies that got 3 or more Direct to DVD sequels.
    Again though, that's just a way to get to talk about Cars 3 in depth, so it'll be up to you.

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  8. To some of us older fans of Star Wars, who were invested in the expanded universe content in the early and mid 1990s, Palpatine's return wasn't such a big leap–in the graphic novel Dark Empire, Palpatine DID return and even succeeded in turning Luke to the dark side (somewhat willingly, if I remember correctly (I haven't read Dark Empire in at least 25 years, so my recollections may be off) as Luke wanted to understand why Vader turned, as that was still untold at the time; Leia had awakened to some of her powers by that time and succeeded in turning Luke back to the light side before he committed any atrocities). He used cloning technology to return, which the movie for some reason feels the need to hilariously underexplain. As an aside, I'm still underwhelmed by the depiction of the canon Clone Wars vs. what was hinted at prior to the prequel trilogy. For one, it's plural, indicating something even more complex and far reaching than even the Clone Wars series depicted, and second, if we named real wars based on the combatants on one side of the conflict, they'd be called, for example, the White Racist War or the Goosestepper War or the Emu War. I mean, can you imagine a war called the Emu War, how embarrassing would that be for the human combatants? You'd never be able to live that down as a country, right? Like, you might be tempted to represent your entire country to the rest of the world as anthropomorphic dogs or something just to get over the embarrassment. Emu War, hahahaha!

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