 Haha Direct in get it I'm Corbin my eyes itch and you falls on it Juicy today We are reacting to as you remember. Just a couple weeks I guess we did temples, right? Yes, a bunch of these right here. Yes, the one you don't have but yes the mysterious temples. One I'm still kind of confused by, it says the 10 richest temples in India. The 10 richest temples. I don't know what richest what they're talking about in terms of that. I think it's the the riches within it because remember wasn't there one in the mysterious temple? Wasn't there one that was like there was a bunch of gold in it? Harboring gold. Yes. Harboring gold. So like if like the harboring gold. So like the pyramids which everyone has the most jewelage and precious. Jewelage. Yeah, I think that's gem speak for how things are. Everyone, we're gonna give you a value on this temple. What kind of jewelage you got in it? So this one is called the 10 richest temples in India. We'll be the judge of that. We're going to see based on the jewelage. Here we go. 10 richest temples of India. Okay. Number 10. Kashi Vishwanath temple of our Nazi. It's a second computer. It's a freaking computerized. One of the oldest and richest temples of Lord Shiva in India. Kashi Vishwanath temple still stands and glory despite being looted and demolished several times and passed. Okay. With a documented history of over 3,500 years, Varanasi is also the oldest living city in the world. It is estimated that around over 3 million domestic and 200,000 foreign tourists visit this temple annually. Number nine. Samnath temple, Gujarat. Gujarat. It is believed that the moon god, Chandra, created a temple of gold in honor of Lord Shiva here, presently built on the Chalukya style of architecture. Damn. The temple has been destroyed and reconstructed several times by both Islamic and Hindu emperors. The results of a recently conducted survey revealed that the temple has accumulated a wealth of around 17,000 million rupees. Jullet. Number eight. 17,000 million is how much I said. Amrit sir. Officially known as the Armander Sahib, the temple gets visited from over 40,000 people every day. Apart from its splendid exteriors, even the ceiling of this temple has been designed with gold. Despite the fact that the total temple assets remains unknown, experts claim that the golden temple is one of the wealthiest temple in India. Number seven. Oh, good. Vaishnodevi, Jammu and Kashmir. One of the oldest and richest temples in India, the shrine of Mata Vaishnodevi is visited by millions of devotees from across the world. Center of deep rooted religious beliefs of the Hindus, the temple has an annual income of around 5,000 million. Is this series? You're on a million pilgrims visit this temple and it is claimed to be the second most visited temple after Venkateswara temple. Go. Jognath temple in Puri Odisha. Temple number six is the Jognath temple Puri post a popular annual. The temple has been brought 18 times in the path. The temple received donation of around rupees 15,000 to 20,000 with six times more donations and more than 30,000 devotees throng the shrine every day and around 70,000 per day in festive season in 2011. So we have a stat that's nearly 10 years old. Stumbled upon 522 old silver slabs. Great name for a band of octogenarians. Old silver slabs. The old silver slabs. Meniksha another temple. Whoa. The richest temple in Tamil Nadu attracts 15,000 visitors a day apart from devotees. Thousands of tourists also visit this famous shrine to feast their eyes upon this splendid ancient Indian architecture housing. Look at that. I am. It's hard to do that and read the same. Well, you didn't like the voice. 60 million every year is also among the 30 nominees for the new seven wonders of the world. So they're nominating wonders of the world every year. Did they do that? I guess so. This one's in Mumbai. What did they disqualify one and then replace it? This is one of the most famous landmarks of the coastal city of Mumbai city Vinayak witnesses around 25 to 200,000 worshipers visiting the place each day. It provides their devotees options of entering the shrine faster through special paid queues, which also helps in the increase in the temple's income. According to a survey conducted in 2011, the temple earned approximately 490 million rupees in just a single year, of which 450 million were garnered through donations alone. So it's like tithes? I don't know. Yeah, we're offerings. The Baba temple charity Indians irrespective of the region they've had belong to have a strong belief in the miracles of Sai Baba. The temple gets donations with 350 crore each every year. The third richest temple in the country visited by the people of all religions. And what happens with those donations they're put back into the temple? I guess so. In what form? I guess we'll figure out. That's a lot of that's a lot of quiche. That's a lot of cheddar as Jesse would say. A Turamala believed to be the richest temple in the country, but after the reports disclosing the unbelievable amount of assets possessed by our number one, it's gone down to the second position. Dang. The most visited place of worship in the world. Really? Is that all money that they're looking at right there? That's definitely not. Hair. Wow. The temple makes some big mishties. Whoa. Is that a mishtie? Number one. 11 million rupees annually. This is in Kerala. Whoa. Wow. The richest Hindu temple in the world after its secret chambers were ordered opened by the Supreme Court of India. The amount of wealth found inside astounded the entire world. The treasure that was found was reported to include antique gold ornaments, golden crowns, golden bosa full of diamonds. Recently, treasures worth 22 billion were found in it. That looks like the treasure stack in Pirates of the Caribbean and Disneyland. Holy cow. Times current market price, not to mention. Oh, wait a minute. Hey. Is that a door? That's the vault. There's probably more in that other vault. So that's the same. That's the same place with a vault that hasn't been opened yet. They're like, well, we have enough here. Well, you get Geraldo Rivera over there. Open up that secret vault. There'll be nothing in it. Why, since India ordered it opened, why not order all of them? I think because we remember that last one, they said there's been bad juju. There's been people who've died when they've tried to open that up. So they've been like, we're not going to mess with that. Well, it's like in Indiana Jones, when you look at the art in the Covenant. Yep. That's exactly what happened. It's exactly what happens. It could be. Would you mess with that? Yes, you would, wouldn't you? Just to see what happens. What's going on? There you go, India. You need that opened up? Higher Corbin miles. What's the worst that could happen? My face melts off. I didn't know there were so many riches things. I will say that this video was awful. I think they all garnered from your reaction that you thought it was awful. Yes. Which is why I turned it off and made you work. I venture to say it's one of the most awfulest ones we've done. Most awfulest. Most awfulest. Must stop the please. Yeah, see how that worked. Shut up. I'm hungry. But the, that last one specifically, holy cow, because it was saying there was one that was worth like $145 million or something like that, just one statue. There's $22 billion worth of assets in those temples that were open. Which is impressive because the last one, it was mostly all assets. And they seemed the other ones were a lot of donations. Why do I feel like that's something, if the office was still on TV, Dwight would be completely fixated on the day. He's going to India just to have one of those things in his possession so he could be set for life. Fact. Yeah. Fact. I will go to India and I am going to get one of those artifacts and then I will be set for life. Fact. That's the reason you weren't an office writer. That's true. But yeah, because I am wondering, because it did include, I don't know if you call them in the Hindu religion or whatever religion it is. Well, that last one was a Hindu temple. But no, I'm saying the donations. Oh, right. I don't know if they could call them offerings. The only thing we know of is the Christian in tithes and offerings. Religion. Right. Yeah. So it's you got, you get your tithes and your offerings that you give to the church. Which if you don't know what a tithe is, tithe means 10%. And so 10% of all earnings would be given to the church for the continuing support of ministry and stuff that's done within the church and then there's offerings on top of the tithe. So I'm guessing it's similar to that? Yeah, probably. Probably. I don't know if it's definitively a tithe where it's 10%. I think it's just come and bring an offering. Yeah. Which, but usually churches don't equate that to their earnings. I feel like you don't see that. Even though you could you know which churches are the richest churches. Well, the reputable ones will have open books near the US. The reputable ones will have their books open and anybody could go and look at what they make and where they put their money. Just like because they're non-profits, just like any non-profit, the books have to be opened and you have to see and show this is what we do with our money. And reputable places will put, like I know a few, they'll put like 75% of their total income. Some of them throw it right back into mission field stuff where there's physicians out helping sick people and helping with places that need adoption and doing medical ministries and things of that nature. And they'll keep a small percentage for their staff and keep their staff small. And then there's other churches that are just frivolously thrown it out there. But you could, you should be able to check all of them and see what they're spending it on. So I'm wondering if it's similar to that? Yeah, well they obviously know the value. So they clearly have to have people giving an accounting of what's coming in. I'd love to know how that's, like I know how that works in the United States with a non-profit. I don't know how that would work in India if that's considered income for them. I'd assume it's similar. I would assume it's a non-profit kind of thing. But yeah, that was really interesting. Also the, not the video, but the temples themselves. Yeah, exactly. But the, because they're so freaking old. And like, I don't know if you saw a lot of them. Like, because there was one that the colorful one, like it had ridiculously ingrained. I saw it for a split second. Statues just all over. Yeah. Kind of like your mom. Got a bunch in the face. And then there's a bunch that were just, just covered in gold.