

The Accounts do not include trade accounts or trade cash card accounts of other brands of the Promoter.

This Promotion is only open to Jewson Trade Account and Jewson Trade Cash Card Account (the “Account(s)”) holders (the “Participants” and each a “Participant”). Registered office: Merchant House, Binley Business Park, Harry Weston Road, Binley, Coventry, CV3 2TT. Promoter: STARK Building Materials UK Limited trading as Jewson. If you're keen to see this scene - and so much more - Behind the Curve is available on Netflix now.Watch Like A Winner 2023 (the "Promotion") Terms & Conditionsġ. "If we dumped what we found right now, it would be bad? It would be bad. "When you've got $20,000 in this freaking gyro. "We don't want to blow this, you know?" Knodel then says to another Flat Earther. You know what they say: If your experiment proves you wrong, just disregard the results! "We obviously were not willing to accept that, and so we started looking for easy to disprove it was actually registering the motion of the Earth." "Now, obviously we were taken aback by that - 'Wow, that's kind of a problem.' "What we found is, when we turned on that gyroscope, we found that we were picking up a drift," Knodel explains. One of those Flat Earthers is Bob Knodel, who hosts a YouTube channel entirely dedicated to the theory and who is one of the team relying on a $20,000 laser gyroscope to prove the Earth doesn't actually rotate. The scene in a new Netflix documentary called Behind the Curve, which follows a group of Flat Earthers, a "small but growing contingent of people who firmly believe in a conspiracy to suppress the truth that the Earth is flat". In what may be one of the most satisfying TV moments we can recall, a group of conspiracy theorists have accidentally spent thousands of dollars to prove that yes, actually, the Earth is round.
