A few days ago I returned to the Hindu refugee camp in northern Delhi with the money that you guys raised for them. I handed over roughly 300,000 Rupees that will be used to bring clean water to the more than 100 people who live there.
I had always been fascinated by the mysterious north eastern region of India and so I took a flight to Imphal the capital of Manipur to explore the city.
In the Indian city of Imphal is a market where only women are allowed to sell their goods. A unique place in India and the wider continent. I headed there to explore and to talk to some of the women vendors who earn a living there.
Whilst in the North Eastern Indian state of Manipur I decided to take a journey to the very edge of the nation to a little known border town called Moreh that has been hacked out of the surrounding jungle just across from Myanmar.
Moreh is a town on the border with Myanmar. A town that is built on the smuggled exotic wood that has been cut from the endangered forests of Myanmar. I went there to have a look around.
Just across from the Indian smuggler's town of Moreh is Myanmar ( Burma ). I decided to walk across the border and see what life was like on the other side. Was it the same? Was it different? Watch and find out.
Ever wanted to try cold noodles for breakfast? No me neither, but I did it so that you don't have to. That's just the kind of guy I am. Check out the slimiest meal in Myanmar and feel lucky you never have to eat it
My journey across Burma continued with a road trip to the mystical Asian city of Mandalay. A city whose name conjures up images of the Orient. But first I had to buy a bus ticket.
Bald you must try Diablo when you are in Burma people said. Diablo is epic others promised me...Well I trust you guys, you watch my videos so you must be guys with refined tastes for the finer things in life. How wrong I was.
The question I am asked most by non Indians who watch my videos is 'Am I not afraid of having something stolen in India?' I tell people that there is nothing to be afraid of but to prove my point I head to the infamous Thieve's market.
Whilst walking through the streets of Old Delhi I discovered a kiosk selling something I never knew existed. It was something that is unique to the country of India 'Bhabhi magazines'. I had to buy myself a copy. Now I want a bhabhi.
Do you complain about the traffic in your country? Well watch this video and you will never complain again. Milk sellers, crazy rickshaws, fake ambulances, pollution, bhabhis, Chinese tourists...It all happens at Delhi's craziest junction.
The Tibetan Colony in northern Delhi is the place to try the foods of Tibet. I went there in search of the infamous spicy Laping noodles. Could I handle the spice? Find out.
Do you like to read books? No me neither. But some old fashioned people do and so on a Sunday afternoon in Delhi I went along to see what these strange people were buying and it was mostly Stormy Daniels and German despots.
In this the first of three short episodes that were filmed within 30 minutes on the same street I ask the question: Is your country this crazy? In the first episode we have street UFC.
Who will defend India's honour and finally defeat Pewdiepie? T Series have not managed it but there is hope: Meet India's future YouTube stars who will one day crush the second most popular vlogger in Brighton.
Can you believe that there are people in the world who have never tried Indian food?. Well I know two of them and so invited two of my Russian friends to try Indian food for the first time.
Wanting to escape Minsk for a bit I took a short trip to a provincial town in Belarus called Bobruisk in search of some of the nation's Soviet past. It didn't take long to find it.
This is part two of my journey to a provincial city in Belarus. In it we have Lenin statues, vodka and a strange pink sausage made of...Well I have no idea. Join me once again on my trip to Bobruisk.
Belarusian cuisine may not be famous but it certainly is good. I was invited by Dua Lipa to try some traditional recipes that fortunately did not include belly buttons. Join me as we try solyanka, vodka, kvass, draniki and perogi.
I wanted to take you on a journey with me in this episode to a village in rural Belarus. So I headed to Gomel and from there took an early morning bus out into the windswept provinces to see what life is like in a Belarus village.
I finally made it to the virtually deserted village of Horoshevka where only a few residents remained and was told that I had taken quite a risk in getting there.
Always wanted to travel to Europe but can't afford it? Well I've discovered a place everyone can afford. Whilst travelling through the provinces of Belarus I stumbled upon a hotel that wouldn't break anyone's budget.
So many vloggers have made the trip to Pripyat to make Chernobyl films that it has become an embarrassing cliche. So I decided to enter the real unexplored Chernobyl zone instead. The one across the border in Belarus. No tour guides here.
I had survived wolf country, radiation and Viktor but now I was being led into the windy swamps of Chechersk as night approached by a gang of tough looking dudes.
Well that is the end of my trip to Belarus ( going back there after one month ), new adventures await in a brand new country next week - Here is a compilation of clips that didn't make the final videos.
Ever been to Ratus in Moldova? Me neither and so I decided to go and investigate the place so you don't have to. On the way I met some great Moldovan people and of course visited some abandoned Soviet buildings.
Look at a map of Europe and you won't see this thin sliver of a country but it's there and so I went to explore. Get ready to visit the country that does not exist...Welcome to Transnistria or as locals call it Pridnestrovie.
Moldova is famous for it's wine but I wanted to try the real stuff, the home-brew that people make so I set off for the villages in search of some wine and drinking partners. I soon found both.
On my last day in Moldova I had invitations to hang out with some different people but there was only one dude I wanted to spend my final hours in the country with and that was my favourite Moldovan of all, the legend of Kishinev himself.
I have always admired the Russian gopnik lifestyle, the beer, the fashion, the freedom and so when my Slavic friend Alina arrived in Minsk I asked her to teach me the ways of the gopnik.
Two months ago on a cold morning I headed into the radioactive Chernobyl forests north of the Belarusian town of Vetka. Now I was back to re-trace the people who had invited me into their home and generously shared their food with me.
Whilst driving the back roads of the Belarus radiation zone an old man flagged me down and before I could say anything he had climbed into the car and started barking instructions.
With only a day left until my time was up in Belarus, I had one final mission to complete. To head back into the radiation zone and find an old friend of ours.
In this film containing three parts we explore a first derelict village, then an abandoned Soviet palace in a remote village and finally Object 1180 which was a Soviet nuclear bunker built in the middle of nowhere.
Travelling on Russian or Belarusian trains isn't like anywhere else. There are things to know and do. Here I'll show you on the Moscow to Grodno train.
When travelling into the centre of Moscow by train early in the morning we did not see a ticket machine. It will be ok we thought, nobody will check our tickets...Wrong.
Want to visit all the former Soviet republics on a scooter and without leaving Moscow? Well I will show you how....Welcome to Stalin's Soviet theme park in the heart of Moscow.
New country time and I chose the former Soviet republic of Georgia. Straggling the Caucasus and hugging the Black Sea, Georgia is an ancient land of wine, incredibly friendly people and abandoned Soviet buildings...Get ready.
Tskaltubo is an abandoned Soviet spa resort nestled up in the sub-tropical hills of Georgia. Off limits to everyone and patrolled by a security team it is not an easy place to gain access to. However I thought it was important.
In an attempt to try something different I wanted to do a one take, zero edit film. Just press record and see what would happen in those 10 mutes or so.
We had travelled up through the hills on an old bus to reach the town go Chiatura which was famous for its Soviet cable cars, something I had always wanted to do.
After the fall of the USSR ancient resentments and rivalries that had been kept in check for 70 years suddenly rose up leading to outbreaks of civil wars in various former Soviet Republics.