
Fair warning: This clip is from Steve Berke Comedy (whose most recent efforts include a Macklemore parody song about pot and a Taylor Swift parody song about premature ejaculation), so there’s a chance the entire thing is bogus and nobody should be impressed. Should the second half of that sentence turn out to be untrue, holy shit here’s a guy juggling and solving a Rubik’s Cube at the same time.
It helps that the clip originated at Humans At Stanford, a juggler-themed Tumblr-esque thing, and was just co-opted a la EBaum’s World so the Steve Berke Comedy network (or whatever) could get traffic. Mission accomplished, dude, because a guy who can solve a Rubik’s Cube in the middle of a juggling routine deserves to be lauded and applauded by the entire world. I can’t do either of these things. Well, I can juggle a little, but it ends with people rolling their eyes at me because the only juggling of note in the world involves chainsaws and fire and me f**king around with a couple of lemons when I’m supposed to be working is not that.
Video is below. Enjoy, and don’t try this at home. You risk a heinous stickerburn.
Amazing. Now let’s see him set the Rubik’s Cube on fire and try it that way.


Jesus. I can’t even turn a rubiks cube unless I use both hands, and even then I struggle with it. let alone actually solve the thing or juggle. FML.
I’m 98% sure this video is legit. Most Rubix Cube Solving videos involve just mixing up a fresh cube then playing the video in reverse, but these people are talking throughout and there are forward-moving people in the background. Insane.
I don’t know for sure, but that sounds like horse shit.
No offense.
They’re actually talking gibberish but when it’s played backwards, it sounds like normal English.
Keep policing the Rubix cube videos of the interwebs, Godamilk. God bless you.
Pretty sure this is in front of the Stanford Bookstore. Doesn’t seem so implausible anymore.
Whoops: Stroud writes “clip originated at Humans at Stanford” and I should learn to read things first.
FAKE. Look at 1:24. He has a very unsolved puzzle in his right hand. The camera zooms in so you can’t see the other hand, and suddenly a completed puzzle is in his left after the toss. You can’t do more than 1 or 2 moves per toss.