Subtitles section Play video
- [Mark] These guys just broke into my car in San Francisco,
and stole my backpack.
But what they'll soon find out
is that thanks to some high-tech glitter
and fart spray delivery mechanisms,
that's no ordinary backpack.
- [Thief] Ain't nobody (beep) back here, right?
- And this guy's also trying to break into my car,
but what he doesn't realize
is those are bulletproof windows 'cause that's just funny.
(beep)
Every year, 20,000 cars are broken into
in the city of San Francisco,
but who's behind all these break-ins?
Like, is it organized crime, or gangs,
or just random individuals?
And then what happens to all the stuff that they steal?
Well, just like when we used the power of glitter
to infiltrate and shut down
those terrible scam call centers in India,
I'm happy to report that having teamed up
with a veteran investigative reporter,
and gotten our bay car broken into 25 separate occasions
over the past eight months,
we now have a much clearer picture of what's going on,
and even some thoughts on how to stop it.
And as this video is the conclusive finale
to the whole glitter bomb series, this time for reals,
I'm so happy to report that we finally got
some really good reactions to that perfectly harmless,
yet wretchedly abhorrent fart spray,
including one that's not too far off
from Macaulay Caulkin's here.
(Macaulay coughs)
Now, if you haven't seen any
of my other glitter bomb videos,
the 15 second recap is that five years ago,
these two took a package from my porch,
which inspired me to combine my engineering skills
with my Christmas time affinity for Kevin McCallister.
- Yes.
- And that not only led to different versions
of glitter bomb bait packages that would spin,
spray, flash, stick, punch, or fly,
but it eventually led us over to India
where we ended up infiltrating, then shutting down
five of those terrible scam call centers.
But Mark, you object, you said last year
was the final glitter bomb,
and that was true until earlier this year.
I had the unfortunate realization
that glitter and fart spray
hadn't solved all forms of crime worldwide
when my own car was broken into.
I'm missing a window.
Not cool, San Francisco.
Not cool.
That also made me realize
our 11th hour cobbled together car package last year
never got enough footage to uncover
who was actually behind all the San Francisco car break-ins.
So 10 months ago, for one final time,
we completely redesigned the glitter bomb
from the ground up.
Only this time, it would be custom built just for cars.
For starters, instead of using centrifugal force
to fire the glitter, this year we'd be using
900 PSI of compressed gas
because if you take a CO2 bike tire inflator
and attach a pipe to the outlet,
then connect the high torque servo motor
to the opening valve, and then repeat that configuration
and stack them on top of each other,
well then when you load those pipes
with copious amounts of biodegradable glitter and fart spray
and then trigger the servo motors,
that highly compressed CO2 is gonna very quickly
push out anything in the pipe that gets in its way.
At the core, we still have a custom printed circuit board
that will make all the decisions for the device,
in addition to talking to us
via a two-way cellular connection.
Then we slap on a car horn for good measure,
and place that whole compact form factor
into the base of a custom sewn backpack
with external access to the outlet nozzles.
Like in years past, we'll still capture footage
using a pair of phones that get tucked into the sides,
with the added benefit of serving as the backpack GPS
and the speakers for the countdown time.
And once these backpacks are stolen,
they'll of course be on the move all over the place,
and since there's no guarantee we're gonna get 'em back,
for the third year in a row,
we turn to my friends at T-Mobile
to make sure no matter what,
we get the footage from the cloud
given the complete coverage
and crazy speeds of their network
that I've actually gone out and benchmarked myself before.
Finally, we lock up the bottom compartment
to prevent tampering,
then use a rubber stopper glue to a patch
to plug and conceal the outlets.
Then as a decoy to divert suspicion,
we got some clothes and a bunch
of old non-functional laptops to place in each bag.
We also created a second version
with a suitcase form factor and identical guts
in case word got out about the backpacks.
Then the car itself has eight hidden dash cams,
all powered by a 2,000 watt hour
camping battery in the trunk
that also plugs into the backpack with two barrel jacks.
One to keep the entire device
and both phones at 100% charge until stolen,
and the other to serves sort of as a digital trip wire
so the backpack knows exactly when it was stolen
to initiate the stolen bag protocol.
We also served up two more surprises this year
by first creating a bait car
with impossible to break polycarbonate windows,
which is the same stuff bulletproof glass is made of.
That car also has the added benefit
of a microphone in the trunk
for detecting when someone's trying to break the window,
which will of course release the air in this tank,
triggering this pneumatic piston
with a special surprise on the end.
And as a final idea, we took an actual gaming laptop,
removed the extra fan, and in its place,
added a GPS tracker that would continuously stay charged
by using the laptop battery.
That way we'd always know where it was,
even if they wiped the hard drive.
The thought here was to put that laptop in a backpack
to actually get stolen with no glitter involved,
and then with the help of Dan Noyes,
who spent 30 years as the chief investigative journalist
for the San Francisco ABC7 news team,
we could trace the laptop's footsteps
to try and get some answers.
So after a couple of months
of designing, testing, and building,
we put them out in a few different cars, and we waited,
and we didn't have to wait long.
But before I subject you
to gratuitous amounts of broken glass,
I'm gonna start off with a little broken glass of my own.
Three, two, one.
(glass shatters)
Nice shot, Eloise.
I'm Mark Rober, and for over a decade,
I've been making YouTube videos to showcase what it means
to think like an engineer.
But what exactly does that mean?
You ready?
(liquid explodes)
(liquid splatters)
Whoa.
Thoughts?
- Probably less catalyst.
- Good call.
It means you know failure's part of the process.
It's how you learn, and thinking this way
makes you a better soccer player, or piano practicer
because you're resilient and you keep tweaking and trying
until you get it right.
Or, you can just come up with a totally different solution.
(piano playing rapidly)
Because if you think like an engineer,
you think differently,
and that unlocks creative new ways to have fun,
and that's exactly why I created CrunchLabs,
where you get a super fun toy
that gets delivered to your porch every month.
- Thanks, Mark Rober.
- You're gonna love that one, Sarah.
See you next month.
And then you put it together with me
as I teach you all the juicy physics that make 'em work.
So if you wanna train your brain,
to see the world in a whole new light
while having a ton of fun at the same time.
(liquids exploding)
Just go to CrunchLabs.com right now and reserve yours.
You nailed it, Gabe.
Outta the gate, it was pretty clear
if our goal was to find out
who was behind all these car break-ins,
they were gonna do everything in their power
to not be found out.
(glass shatters)
But the advantage of teaming up
with an 18 time Emmy award-winning investigative journalist,
is that when one of our eight cameras
catches these guys nearly causing an accident,
we can play it back so Dan can run their license plate,
which must be precisely why
they'd removed their license plate.
Thankfully, on our third break-in, our luck improved.
And this time, we struck pay dirt
because once Dan ran the license plate,
he made a shocking discovery.
Turns out, this car belonged to a longtime
SF State College professor who also sits on the board
of a prestigious Oakland Charter School,
and so like any good investigative journalist,
Dan found his home address and showed up to confront him,
except he turned out to be a really nice guy who informed us
that his license plate was stolen from his car
a few weeks prior.
And what Dan would eventually learn
on nearly all the other license plates
he would run over the course of our operation,
is that not only do the thieves commonly drive around
with stolen license plates.
- [Thief] We got Georgia plates.
- [Mark] But they tend to steal
from a similar color and model as their own vehicle
to avoid an obvious mismatch.
So the car thieves showed that they could handle our cameras
and investigative techniques, but now the question was
how would they handle a little bit of harmless glitter?
Spoiler alert, not very well.
- [Thief] A safe?
(beep) this ain't no (beep) safe.
This is like a bomb or something.
- [Thief] That looks like a tracker, yo.
Oh, it's on.
Oh, that's a tracker, T.
Come on, T.
Y'all see that's a tracker.
Throw that (beep) dude.
- [T] I'm trying to, man.
- [Thief] Dumb (beep), throw that (beep) out right here.
- [Automated Voice] Five, four, three, two.
(glass shatters)
- [Mark] Notice how the first thing he does
is check the trunk by pulling down the seat,
trying to unsuccessfully steal our strapped down battery.
This is pretty common for them to do,
and it's why leaving valuables in your trunk
isn't really a great option.
(fart spray whirring)
- [Automated Voice] 14, 13, 12.
- [Mark] In the end, he changes his mind,
not just about our backpack, but our laptop too.
- [Automated Voice] Five, four, three, two.
- [Mark] This next one is truly
one of my favorite reactions ever
because one of the guys proves
there actually is honor among thieves
as he takes the full blame for the fart spray stench.
And I'm just gonna let the tape roll
to give you an exclusive first person viewpoint
of what it's like to ride along
with some of these smash and grab thieves.
- To the next spot.
Keep going. - I'm not going.
- Not yet. To the next.
To that parking lot.
(beep) that, Money.
We got Georgia plates.
I got a route for us, Money.
- [Money] Okay.
- I got a route for us.
- [Money] If you talking about this parking lot.
- Yes, and there's two more and yes,
and there's two more parking lots
going down the street that we gotta hit.
- [Money] I deserve another bag.
Sorry, baby.
(fart spray whooshes)
- [Thief] Ain't nobody (beep) back here, right?
- [Stang] There shouldn't be.
- [Money] I smell it now.
- {Stang] Me too, I'm smelling something.
I claim whatever though.
- [Thief] It smells like (beep) back here.
- [Stang] I claim whatever.
Is there (beep) back there?
- [Money] Go. It don't matter.
Just go.
- [Thief] He can't bip it, he can't bip it.
- [Money] Do the other one.
(glass tapping)
Oh, they got that.
Stay, baby. Stay now.
Shut up. Come on.
- Babe. - Pull up, pull up.
Pull up, pull up in front of them.
- [Money] No, Stang
Look at the (beep) floor.
- [Thief] No!
I got it.
I got it, open the door
Lemme get it, lemme get it.
Will you...
- [Stang] I got it, I got it.
- [Thief] Go in the front, in the front.
No, stay.
- [Stang] Get in the car, you're the driver.
- [Thief] Get in the car, Money.
(alarm blaring)
Get in the front seat.
- [Money] It's okay. Get it.
It's okay.
Why'd you get in the back?
- [Thief] No, let him get in the front.
Let him get in the front so it's quick, bruh.
- [Money] Get in the front.
Open your door.
No, that suitcase not gonna fit through my (beep) yo.
Let's go.
(alarm blaring)
Good luck. Keep searching.
- [Stang] We going back to the cars.
(glitter and fart spray whirring)
- [Money] Hold on, oh you heard that sound?
- [Automated Voice] 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10,
nine, eight, seven, six. - Go! Go!
- [Mark] And we were surprised to learn
that more than half of the steals
weren't from thieves traveling in cars,
but that still leads them
to developing their own strategies.
For example, this guy here has already scoped out
and wants to steal our backpack.
The problem is, all these people over here would see him.
That is unless, he just waits
for the perfectly timed obstruction.
(glass shatters)
This guy not only has
an official construction worker type vest on,
but his technique is to break it on foot.
(glass shatters)
Then walk his newfound treasures back to his car
where he can now discreetly lean in through the window
to see what he got, which probably works out
really well 99% of the time.
But it's hilariously the worst possible strategy
in this case.
(glitter whirring)
- [Automated Voice] 15, 14, 13.
- [Mark] Because in the end, he leaves the backpack behind,
and drives off having stolen
just our fart spray and glitter.
Now one thing all the thieves had in common
was how quickly they could break the glass,
which is actually surprisingly difficult to do
if you don't have the right technique
because all car windows are made from tempered glass,
which, by the way, as far as inventions go,
is an incredible feat of engineering
because it not only makes the glass much harder to break,
but if it does break, it shatters into harmless pebbles
that aren't going to leave deep cuts.
The one Achilles heel to tempered glass, however,
is it's extremely vulnerable
to highly concentrated points of stress.
So while this window can easily withstand my soccer ball.
(soccer ball thuds)
Baseball.
(baseball thuds)
And even wrench. (wrench thuds)
If I take a simple spark plug
and harvest just the ceramic insulating part,
the sharp ultra hard aluminum oxide is able to create
a tiny localized stress point on the window,
and that's all it takes.
(glass shatters)
And that's why in every case,
they're using some form of this spark plug in a handle form
where the tip is a really sharp piece of ceramic,
or hardened steel, at which point,
it doesn't take much force at all.
(glass shatters)
And since it's typically so easy for them,
while the pop-up face didn't activate
because of a dead battery issue.
(glass tapping)
It was still really heartwarming to see them
deal with our bulletproof window.
(glass tapping)
When a juicy piece of luggage
was just sitting right in plain sight
only to eventually leave in frustration
totally empty handed.
And to be fair, quite a few of the break-ins
were from individuals it would be a stretch to classify
as seasoned professionals.
For example, this guy tried to use a blowtorch
to break the window, which definitely isn't a thing.
He eventually finds a screwdriver
to snap the edge of the glass,
but then realizes he broke the wrong window,
and the backpack won't fit out.
So he goes to unlock and open the door,
but now he's set off the alarm.
So he has to ride off to avoid suspicion
with mission unaccomplished.
Or there's this guy who spends about an hour
tracking the car, pacing back and forth
to come up with a plan, and work up the courage
to make the steal.
(glass tapping) (glass shatters)
Only to eventually learn this hopeful life lesson
on taking stuff that isn't yours.
(fart spray whirring)
- [Thief] (beep) smell just keeps getting
stronger and stronger.
It's on my hands. Look.
- Now before I end this video,
and the whole glitter bomb series for that matter,
with hands down the best reaction
to the fart spray we've ever got in six years,
I wanna revisit the question Dan and I hoped to answer
through all these break-ins in the first place,
with regards to who's behind these and why.
And I'll start by saying, typically on the news,
you'll see organized groups like this
because that just looks really intimidating,
but that was much more of a rare occurrence
in our experience.
More than 80% of our steals were just individuals
acting on their own.
So like, not some kind of organized gang operation.
And a majority of the 80% that were individuals
honestly didn't seem like they even did this very often.
So then why are they doing it?
Well, as we were trying to figure that out ourselves,
we sort of hit a breakthrough on our GPS tracking laptop
because after it was stolen,
it came to this location for about a half a day.
But then after that, it made its way over
to this neighborhood, and that's where it's been ever since.
But the thing is, Dan recognized that first spot
because he did a news report
more than a month and a half earlier
when he told the story of a video producer
who tracked his stolen gear there
because the thieves knew it was a fencing operation
where they could quickly exchange the gear for money.
- [Reporter] He's on the phone
with the San Francisco police officer
when he sees his camera gear arrive at this location
in the 300 block of Leavenworth.
- And he goes, "Oh yeah, that's a known
major fencing operation.
Everybody in the Bay Area knows
that they can bring their stolen goods
and offload them there."
- And look, there's a whole host of things
that leads to 20,000 cars per year getting broken into
and people taking stuff that isn't theirs,
and some of the core issues down here are super complicated
and require nuance and public policy to address.
But right below people stealing from cars
are these fencing markets.
There's a demand for these stolen goods
so it feels like shutting down these markets,
and not having a place to exchange stolen goods
for money so incredibly easily would go a long ways
to stopping car break-ins.
This is also why you see people stealing things
like soap and toiletries from a place like Walgreens.
The thief doesn't need that much soap,
but when he knows he can easily turn it into real money
in less than an hour, you eventually get stores
that look like this, or just permanently
have to shut down altogether.
And I can't imagine I'm telling the city
something they don't already know,
but when you have a public news report about a spot
apparently everyone knows you can go to
to sell stolen items, and then one and a half months later,
my laptop goes to the exact same spot to be sold,
it certainly feels like more could be done here
to remove the incentive for the break-ins
and store thefts to occur in the first place.
And so with that, I'll leave you with this,
and I feel it's very important to point out here
that this fart spray is perfectly harmless to breathe.
It just truly smells really, really bad.
(glass shatters)
Because after breaking not one, but two of our windows,
he yells out a racial slur ostensibly
at an innocent bystander.
- [Thief] Konnichiwa (beep)!
- [Mark] And in the most perfect definition
of instant karma ever, two minutes later,
the dry heaving ensues.
(glitter and fart spray whirring)
- [Thief] Oh, what's that
Dude, I think it's in the suitcase.
- [Thief] Toss it? Toss it?
Toss it?
(thief gagging)
I'ma toss it.
I'm driving.
I'm driving.
(thief gagging)
(case clattering)
- [Automated Voice] Recovery sequence initiated.
- So that's it, my official final wrap on the whole series,
and if you've been keeping score at home,
we've had 167 porch pirates glitter bomb themselves,
as well as 29 car thieves,
we've returned $50,000 to elderly scam victims,
and had five scam call centers shut down
with 53 of those scammers arrested.
So thanks for watching and sharing
these heartwarming videos over the years, and of course,
a final thank you farewell to these two,
without which none of this would've ever happened.
(dramatic operatic music) (people screaming)
(person laughing)
- {Speaker] Whoa!
(dramatic operatic music)
- [Speaker] That (beep).
(dramatic operatic music)
- What came out of it, glitter?
- Yeah.
- Oh my God!
What the (beep)?
- What the (beep)?
- [Speaker] What the (beep)?
- What the (beep)?
(dramatic operatic music)
(person sniffing)
- Oh!
- [Speaker] Ew, I smell it.
- [Speaker] What the (beep) is that smell?
- Smells like (beep).
- All right, we (beep) get it, okay.
Smells like (beep) in here.
(dramatic operatic music) (person laughs)
(alarm blaring) (gunshots popping)
- It's a (beep) scam.
(beep) you, YouTubers.
(children screaming)
- Yes! Look!
- If you want a Christmas morning reaction like that,
well, I got great news for you
'cause they're opening this toy.
It's called the CrunchLabs Build Box,
and it's something I made
to help kids think like an engineer
'cause I myself am an engineer.
I worked at NASA for a bunch of years,
and now I make YouTube videos
to get kids stoked about science
by building ridiculous contraptions,
which is passively watching a YouTube video
only takes you so far.
The real learning occurs in the trenches
when you're engaging all the senses by building alongside me
as I teach you all the juicy physics that make the toy work.
And our secret as to why we've delivered
millions of these boxes already
is 'cause we're real good at hiding the vegetables,
and here's what I mean by that.
87% of kids rated an eight through 10
on a fun scale out of 10, but also,
more than three outta four parents
said their child gained a new passion
around STEM and engineering
after getting the build box.
- Yes.
- On top of that, each month your box has a chance
to contain the platinum ticket, and if yours has it.
(child screaming)
- [Child] What'd you have?
- Well, then you're coming out to CrunchLabs
to build with me and my team for a day.
So if you wanna embark on this monthly journey with me
and get a Christmas morning reaction like this.
- Yes!
- Oh my gosh!
- Crunchlabs!
- Just go to crunchlabs.com,
or use the link in the video description
where we're giving away two months free
as a holiday special.
Thanks for watching.
(graphics pops)