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This video has subtitles. It's good I noticed this early, else it could have messed up the test results when testing electric field modes of EMF meters. So don't make videos over such a table with your EMF meter in electric mode. For EMF sensitives it's good to be aware of this and to not put a laptop on a table with metal in it. ElectroBOOM says things like this can't hurt: • Cooked by a CHARGING CELLPHONE! ElectroBOO... but what ElectroBOOM says has not much meaning to me, because: he doesn't mention us EMF sensitives. Not all people are equal. For us, effects get worse with more exposure to EMF, it's cumulative. Also see my test here: • Are grounding mats safe? -----------------... I also tested touching a cellphone connected to a charger like this and the EMF on my body went up as well, measured with the new Esmog Spion. But we generally react more to the dirty electricity, the higher frequencies. It's often not simply about 50/60Hz. This is why I measured between 2kHz - 100kHz in this table video, because I react very strong to that frequency range. Not all situations are equal. He also did not show the dirty electricity difference on his body in his video I thought, he just showed the standard 50/60Hz which could be the least of our problems, even though he knows higher frequencies hurt more, he tested this himself in another video: • Electricity Pain versus Frequency ElectroBOOM says there is always an electric field on our body. No there isn't. In nature there isn't. He says we are constantly exposed to electric fields so a charging phone is nothing special, that is true, but it's not because people consider being exposed to AC EMF all the time as normal (nowadays) that this was always so. It's not because it's the norm to be in this, that this is healthy, especially long term. Often "normal people" feel better when camping too. People didn't use to live in AC EMFs 24/7. However, he might be right that for normal people using a charging cellphone makes little difference compared to all the rest they are exposed to daily, but for sensitive and EMF sensitive people it can matter a lot, because for us nasty effects become very noticeable over time, because exposure is cumulative, especially touching EMF adds up fast. Other people may only experience very vague effects that they don't correlate with EMF exposure. It often took time for us EMF sensitives to figure out what we reacted to and we often haven't narrowed down yet to what we react to the most, because of very poor studies on us (and because devices emit a mix of EMF) and so EMF meters don't always help with knowing what part of the spectrum we exactly feel. So we need to be very careful with any possible exposure. The old Esmog Spion was the device that made me discover this. The old Esmog Spion made this very obvious and hard to miss while with the other EMF devices this is easier to miss. Esmog Spion: https://www.esmog-shop.com/messtechni... Gigahertz ME3851A: https://gigahertz-solutions.de/Elektr... BK Precision 2709B This is a budget multimeter. Good multimeters cost a lot. Fluke seems to be the best brand, but it is expensive. Also know that a too cheap multimeter won't even be able to measure body voltage. This one does, but I suspect it doesn't give you a complete picture. https://www.bkprecision.com/products/... I used to have a YouTube video doing similar tests with a radio set to AM, but I think some people thought it was fake (it wasn't easy to replicate that particular test so I removed it). The testing methods in this video are more solid demonstrations. Computer model used in this video: Laptop HP G5000 Windows background: Beetle Juice (Michael Keaton) versus The Joker (Heath Ledger) (they look how I feel)