In 7 vs. Wild, 14 participants must survive in the wilderness of Canada for two weeks. But before the start, the group had to overcome a challenge that they miserably failed, as Twitch streamer Trymacs revealed now.
What was that challenge?
- It was a classic “Don’t laugh now” challenge.
- As part of the briefing, the 14 participants also took part in a meeting with the First Nations, the indigenous peoples of Canada. There, the participants were to listen to the “holiest song” of the tribe and absolutely must not laugh.
- However, the group apparently failed completely at this, as Trymacs has now revealed.
Trymacs is known for his love of Clash of Clans:
This is what was seen in the video: In “The Behind the Scenes,” the scene is only shown very briefly in the video: An indigenous woman beats on a drum and sings, the participants stand in front of her, and you can see and hear how Affe auf Bike and Hanah Assil have to stifle some giggles.
“No one was allowed to laugh because it was their holiest song”
This is what Trymacs says: The Twitch streamer Trymacs visibly feels uncomfortable about the scene in the reaction video. He notes that a lot was cut out.
Trymacs explains:
Man, so much was cut out. So this is some kind of descent from some holy wolf clan from some region there, who nourished themselves there. Dude, she played the holiest song of the clan, and we were all completely exhausted, we had jet lag, we were in bad shape. And the problem is: No one was allowed to laugh because it was their holiest song.
But… vocally, it was also… not much. And you know how it is when you’re with a lot of colleagues in a situation where you definitely can’t laugh, and then you start laughing just because you shouldn’t laugh.
He then looked at Rumathra and he had to badly stifle his face to not burst out laughing, and next to him, Papaplatte was “breathing heavily.” Trymacs states that it’s not even a song, and it lasted 10 minutes. There was “just nothing happening.”
Trymacs says he apologizes on behalf of the whole group. It was by no means meant to be disrespectful; they did not laugh at the woman, her culture, or her singing.
If the production can’t cut 10 seconds from the video without someone giggling, you wouldn’t want to imagine how the situation unfolded in full length.
More about 7 vs. Wild: