Peanut Butter Catchup Sauce
Source: Click on the link above for more info on today’s episode!  Molly updates us on an interactive wedding, a double-sided squeeze bottle, Weezer, a new Twitter application, and walruses.  Subscribe to our YouTube Channel for more Rocketboom Daily with Molly!  Follow us on Twitter for the latest updates!  Join us on Facebook for behind the …

Click on the link above for more info on today’s episode!  Molly updates us on an interactive wedding, a double-sided squeeze bottle, Weezer, a new Twitter application, and walruses.  Subscribe to our YouTube Channel for more Rocketboom Daily with Molly!  Follow us on Twitter for the latest updates!  Join us on Facebook for behind the scenes pics and videos!  Click here for show credits.


  1. ScottishDuckHunter says:

    Weezer are spending a lot of money to advertise. Shame that as soon as anyone listens to the music they’ll know how shit they are.

  2. TheTeeeekaaaa says:

    just imagine a world where news reads would all read their new like Molly……its my opinion that the news would be like the awesomest show in the WORLD!!!! O_O

    ok can i now get e free Rocketboom T-shirt??? pleas prettyprettyprettyprettyprettyprettyprettyprettyprettypretty PLEAS!!!! ok bye

  3. Probewitch says:

    The Green Tea party. Right ! The world was built on the back of a turtle, so native americian legend says. Nasa is still trying to confirm this.

  4. robs70986987 says:

    I think Weezer’s method of promotion here is really smart and effective, but sadly I am not sure if this album with be nearly as good as their older ones

  5. Hitoritaka says:

    @apehodet They were also on =3, or raywilliamjohnson, w/e…it’s really seeming overdone. No clue why since they’re a pretty good group. wth?

  6. jordanrocks94 says:

    @Probewitch and it’s not called the world it’s called disc world and on the backs of 4 turles and God is called terry pratchet lol XD

  7. marsCubed says:

    Reminds me of marmalade with Marmite on toast.
    Don’t knock it ’til you’ve tried it, goes well with a mug of extra strong tea au-lait.
    Combined with a rainy afternoon and an episode of Dr. Who on the BBC, the UK can be a little niche in the most sophisticated and eclectic corner of food heaven.
    Ty Molly, & you made me hungry now, gonna do a Welsh buck raibit though; melted mature cheddar on soft wholegrain bread toast, with a fried, peppered & Worcestershire sauced egg on the top. mmmmmmm.

  8. elleshellmo says:

    but the word “and” denotes a decimal place, so you should only say “two hundred six,” leaving the vowel “a” out of the word. Sad day.

  9. crayzal says:

    Sorry wouldn’t it be ‘two hundred and sixty’ not ‘two hundred and six’? By which rule is Y not applied?

    and don’t say ‘only’ sometimes Y

  10. TrulyEvilBob says:

    I think Weezer and OK GO should have some sort of fight to the death… probably on an exact replica of the Kirk/Spock fight from Star Trek.

  11. kroz775 says:

    Turtles FTW….i would comment on other topics that were covered in the video, but i have the attention span of a five year ol…oh look, somthing shiny!!

  12. serpentisma says:

    fuck twitter. technology run amuck. anyone who thinks they’re so important to think they need to tell people what they’re doing every minute of every day is to fucking full of themselves, and needs a kick in the ass. sorry, i usually don’t troll around, but twitter really makes my asshole itch. either that or i’m not wiping enough……

  13. JunkmanJim says:

    @CommanderCody99100
    You are correct Commander, 206 is properly written as two hundred six, the “and” is for changing from whole numbers to fractions. 200.6 would be written as two hundred and six tenths, this is also seen in US currency as two hundred and sixty cents. I think Molly needs to be taught a lesson, perhaps a spanking is in order.

  14. JunkmanJim says:

    Oh and by the way, the smallest natural number whose name uses the five vowels a, e, i, o, u (in any order) is 1005 (one thousand five).
    Molly, I am disappoint.

  15. joen0411 says:

    I want that double side ketchup bottle. Who doesn’t like turtles? Saddly, it’s illegal to have them as pets in New Jersey :(

  16. joen0411 says:

    @Jinclops Good point. Now that I think about it, no number has the vowel A in it. Unless one of those really big numbers does. So what is the smallest number to have all the vowels only once?

  17. WOWJBEOWULF says:

    @system3142 Existentialism is 19th century philosophy movement that says it is up to us to personally make meaning of our lives, despite all of the difficult moments. This focuses upon the personal human behavior versus the objective observations of science. When Molly had peanut butter and ketchup, she was personally making a meaning out of a personal moment, this is Existentialism.

  18. indigobuffalo says:

    It’s not really supposed to be two-hundred and six.

    It should be read: Two-hundred six.

    The first number in English that uses the letter ‘A’ is: One thousand.

  19. iDrifter says:

    Speaking of food, (and we were) my favourite sandwich is peanut butter and onion with a slice of process cheese (the ones that are individual wrapped) and wash that down with a good cool beer. Mmm, mmm. Try it, you’ll be pleasantly surprised.

  20. freesk8 says:

    First the TEA Party movement was fiscal conservatives.
    But then the TEA Party movement was taken over by social conservatives.
    Now the Republican Party has captured the TEA Party movement.
    And so, a grass-roots movement is emasculated.
    Through it all, I remained a fiscally conservative, socially liberal, atheist libertarian.
    Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.

  21. RocketBoobs says:

    Dear Molly RocketBoobs,

    Which is hotter: a squeeze of double RocketBoobs? Or, a nice Walrus and Peanut Butter Sandwich (with katsup) on sliced jalapeño / banana bread?

  22. ELuhn says:

    @grecomic That never worked for me, I always had to push the Descartes button. But now I’ve installed Kierkegaard and it runs fine.

  23. Jourei91 says:

    Funny. Been a few days or something, and I’m still awaiting for that DM…
    Not that I’d be interested in using something else than twitter.com when tweeting through a browser…

  24. VWLPT says:

    @bffzjhcaFOSHO

    From what I remember, she was born in England, moved to Canada and then moved back to England (before going to NYC to work for Rocketboom). Although I could be wrong…

    1:11

    Lmao! XD

  25. Stripdancer100 says:

    Could anyone please tell me what Molly said at 1:20?
    I just couldn’t make it out.
    It begins like “Goldman Sachs” and then totally undistinguishable.

  26. poptya says:

    @JoeDull

    Go Google proper English grammar regarding numbers. The proper way to write out “206″ is “Two-hundred Six” The “and” is a redneck addition and is not necessary.

  27. JoeDull says:

    @poptya Coming from a family of Irish primary school teachers, the correct way of saying numbers (when trying to avoid sounding like an American robot) includes an “and”. Far from being rednecks, we like not to sound pretentious, and the “and” removes the possibility that you are talking about two separate numbers.

  28. ConnectingTheTwins says:

    i was wondering what was up with weezer, they were also in a ray wilaim johnson video and a key of awesome one…. mhmh

  29. GryphonBrokewing says:

    @indigobuffalo
    Apparently, most folks didn’t pay attention in their HS math classes to learn when “and” is stated in a number, it indicates a decimal, so you could have “two hundred and six”, but it would be 200.6, not 206.

  30. daymare10110 says:

    @DefinitelyNotNoah A band from the 90′s that used to be cool, but have sold out since then and became crap. Just like greenday and all those other bands

  31. GmasterRED says:

    @getsuga97
    the other 13,000 people didn’t even see my comment. So of the few that did, most of them liked it.
    YOU stfu.

  32. ImBonkerz100 says:

    @indigobuffalo ummm…..thats what the americans call it.

    in britain, we call it 2 hundred and 6.

    Also, in the video, they say THE ENGLISH NAME, instead of THE AMERICAN NAME

  33. camilok7 says:

    weird writer for this episode….. or weird day for the usual writers… and the shirt looks like a dentist helper’s shirt. but it’s rocketboom, so it’s all awesome anyway

  34. indigobuffalo says:

    @ImBonkerz100 Uh… illiteracy is not unique to the USA. In Canada (and the UK) we use the same grammar for numbers as the USA. In this case, the proper grammatical use of the number 206 is to spell it: Two-hundred six.

    Or, if you are using ‘and’ it is to refer to the use of a decimal (as another poster mentioned) hence Two-hundred and six should be 200.6 .

  35. indigobuffalo says:

    @ILovesucksI No, no it isn’t, but again, poor grammar is not unique to the US. I am also not an American, I was born and raised in Canada and we use the same grammar rules as the UK. While it may be colloquial or slang to say Two-hundred and six the PROPER grammatical approach is to say Two-hundred six.

    And furthermore, the script-writers for Molly’s speech ARE Americans, given that the show is filmed in New York city. Hence they should be using American grammatical rules.

  36. Stripdancer100 says:

    Could anyone please tell me what Molly said at 1:20?
    I just couldn’t make it out.
    It begins like “Goldman Sachs” and then totally undistinguishable.
    (I’m not a native speaker).

  37. jaffinnegan says:

    @indigobuffalo In England, we say it with an “And” in it when we get to the hundred’s. So it is Two-Hundred and six!

  38. indigobuffalo says:

    @jaffinnegan Please, please, please tell you do not honestly think that Americans think they speak the language “American”.

  39. indigobuffalo says:

    @jaffinnegan Right, colloquially or slang usage. Like I said, if you go ask a grade school English teacher in the UK, they’ll say it is formally spelled Two-hundred six. Not two-hundred AND six.

    Look, save yourself the trouble before replying. Look into this. You’re like those people who argue to the DEATH that literally cannot be used figuratively.

    You’re wrong. Get over it. Life goes on.

  40. indigobuffalo says:

    @jaffinnegan I hear Canadians say it with and ALL THE TIME too. Does it matter if they’re using it grammatically correctly or not.

    I’m not saying that you cannot physically say it. Two-hundred and six. There, I just did it, but I’m saying that you are not following the proper grammatical rules. Ain’t [sic] that weird.

  41. indigobuffalo says:

    @ImBonkerz100 Gah! Are you people trolling me? Seriously when I say proper grammar, does it sound like use whatever you hear on the street, yo!?

    Seriously. Proper grammar. Proper. As in, the right way to use the grammar. Maybe you think it’s spelled grammer? I don’t know. Whatever the problem is there is something being lost in translation.

  42. FrankAtlasFontaine says:

    @jaffinnegan in england you also say ideer which is incorrect. you do realize that a vast majority of non-southern americans have mastered the english language beyond that of most english people. put simply 206 is not an english problem its a math one, and the fact of the matter is that saying two hundred and six is wrong because the “and” signifies a decimal point which in this case is nonexistent. 20.6 would be a different story.

  43. eyreland says:

    Memolly and all of the Rocketboom staff are far too young to remember the US FDA declaration of Ketchup as being a vegetable … so for anyone over 30 their Catsup humour reference was a missed opportunity.

    Canada, Australia and NZ made no such processed foods declaration.
    I don’t know about the UK and Ireland…

  44. jtcrough says:

    Because two hundred AND six would be written as so: 200.6
    Also, it is either “catsup” or “ketchup”, not “catchup”. And I prefer “ketchup.”

  45. TheBluberryPi says:

    @indigobuffalo I’ve found that if you go to a primary school teacher in the UK, they’ll say it’s with the ‘and’. It’s likely to be regional based though. :)

    Also, I find it funny how people try and tell each other they’re wrong over the internet, or that people thin that those living in England obviously don’t know English. (Although, sometimes I doubt that myself.) Oh, and ‘American’ ISN’T a language, and I’m giggling at that now. I’ve truly given up on the human race as a whole. >.<

  46. indigobuffalo says:

    @TheBluberryPi *sigh* I don’t care about what is used on the street. Regionally blah blah blah. Look, there is this thing called language. And a whole load of nerds with too much time on their hands sat down at some point and said:”Here we proclaim the rules of this language.”

    There are rules. You get it? You can break them. But regardless, they still exist. And my point is, that BY THE F’ING RULES, in all three countries, IT’S TWO-HUNDRED SIX. NO AND.

  47. TheBluberryPi says:

    @indigobuffalo If you didn’t get it, I was agreeing with you, but also saying that many teachers over here say it with the ‘and’. No need to rage at me. I learnt it as two-thousand six.

    But to be fair, you’re stressing over a 3 letter word over the internet.

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