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P1ZkN2RnPzg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P1ZkN2RnPzg
2014 Nissan Rogue Active Trace Control
foreign Hi how are you Hi good how are you good what's your name Brian Wilson with product planning hi Brian uh kind of so what are we gonna do here so what we're going to do is experience active Trace control this is one of the standard systems on the new rogue and what the particular portion of what we're going to experience is called active understeer so in this particular scene what we're going to do is have a constant radius turn you're going to experience it first with the system off second with the system on okay Target speed while it's off we'll be doing about 20 miles an hour what I want you to kind of pay attention to is what it is that you are doing to help maintain that turn when you're doing about 20 miles an hour okay let's get the vehicle turned on and these will compare in a real life situation we'll compare to like getting into a long ramp on a highway precisely like if you're getting onto a clover leaf um you know onto a highway precisely okay so so what you're going to do uh go ahead and toggle the uh that system up to driver assistance we'll dive down hit the enter button dive down one more into chassis control it's there one more hit hit the enter button oh I see okay and now you can see we have Trace control and engine brake that you can toggle on and off first time tour we're going to turn the system off the first time yeah you can run the vehicle it's actually default on so the customer would have to choose to turn the system off so now go around and do it like 20 miles we're gonna do it about 20 20 miles and I'll coach you up to your speed you're going to focus on the turn just try and get relatively close to the codes oh okay okay we'll be there about 20 now we're at about 20 right now and this is the system up about 22 and this is system off you can see you know you're kind of moving the steering wheel a little bit Yeah like trying to maintain it trying to maintain position yourself okay so whenever you feel comfortable we can come to a complete stop yeah record we got this and we can turn the system on now you can actually do that while you're driving but yeah purposes of this we're going ahead it'll be pretty difficult time okay so now going like to what four now you'll you'll do this we'll start at uh we'll just Target 20 and I'll tell you if whenever you've gone and closer to the closest I got right sure 26 right now yeah so we want to just kind of you know okay you're at 20 20 21. you can coach it up a little bit faster now you're at 24. it's much more steady precisely basically there before because it's a very rainy day here so maybe the road there's a component to that too right exactly you know so if you get into a situation where you're you're pushing yourself a little too too much into the corner the system is actually still going to work to help you maintain your line yeah so even at 25 miles an hour you're going to notice the system is working very very nicely so you first seen 20 miles an hour with it off second scene felt very comfortable at 25. yeah and uh it's uh you say it's thunder in this uh standard on everything wow that's pretty good and again this in the real life situation this will save you to to like sliding and like this will give you more control exactly this is this is about confidence and inspiration so customer getting onto a clove relief now feels like I can drive like I'm in an Indy car because my vehicle is so stable and like with anything right like there's a learning curve so people who learn get into the car like start to like get introduced to the systems and like get educated absolutely absolutely there's a lot of technology behind a lot of Technology on this vehicle yes what ECT is well thank you very much Brian thank you
Javier Mota
UCj2ZmTR5LgHjRuR8H-WffAw
2013-12-26
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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EPMqNjflbf4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPMqNjflbf4
Unix & Linux: Debian 7.1: duplicity error when using gdocs backend (3 Solutions!!)
[Music] morning youtubers so here it's about 8 am at your place it might be like 2am and you're facing this difficult issue and you just want to get out of the office what are you doing in the office at 2am anyway um this video will try and help you out technically i hope you subscribe to my channel and that you like the video that will really help me and my family out god bless [Music] hmm [Music] [Applause] [Music] ah [Music] [Applause] [Music] so [Music] yep it's click like and subscribe thank you for watching thank you jesus
Roel Van de Paar
UCPF-oYb2-xN5FbCXy0167Gg
2020-11-07
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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101
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Vx8-7WEVk1k
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vx8-7WEVk1k
Mautic Preparing for Enterprise The Good The Bad The Ugly
right welcome back everyone so we have another wonderful session that we are starting right away and this session is being handled by two persons so we have michael walmar and jordan erasmus who will be taking this session and what they'll be talking about is motive preparing for enterprise the good the bad the ugly all right so just a bit of introduction before i they come right on to start the session so both jordan and michael came from the casino industry for many years jordan has run an operation of 27 casinos and michael has previously run caesar's casino three years ago they founded search.media which is an online marketing company focusing on automated marketing today such supports over 50 clients all running on multi some are self-managed some unmanaged services client ranges from b to g b to b b to c and d to c and across all different verticals from insurance true to online cbb business okay all right so um welcome on stage this time is michael and jordan all right michael jardin you're welcome good evening everybody good afternoon good morning wherever you are in the world okay all right great so um you can go ahead to start sharing your presentation and then um you can go on with the um with your presentation this afternoon this evening or this evening yeah at the moment ah thanks very much hello toby all right jordan all right so basically as uh we kindly uh introduced uh we come from quite a high volume uh acquisition conversion retention uh background um in uh primarily direct customer uh industries um as you mentioned uh casino or gaming so very high volume uh quite a psychological product and then going into immediate segmentation from the first touch point um we've had experience building up our own softwares and um have used the mordek platform to then go and launch our basically what you would consider is consulting and then going on to really deep analysis campaigning and segmentation of users in through all different verticals today we'd like you to say that we've touched on you know btg high-risk industries doing mobile alarms and reminders to all the way through to you know the small mom and pop shops selling t-shirts and then right up to again big industry insurance companies um again really focusing on that first touch point and then going down into the retention activities and so on i think at this point i'll let mike take over and let's get straight into the presentation hello uh hi can everyone hear me now give me a thumbs up yeah suddenly good let's go okay great great all right thanks jordan so so today we're going to be speaking mainly about um one of our kind of medium to big size customers it is um one of the largest delivery companies in israel the client approached us about eight eight or nine months ago and requested help in migrating their current marketing automation system uh to more tech and one of the great things actually and you know uh something to add to the community is this client actually found me via the the mortic forum and it has turned out to be a highly highly profitable client um it's actually not the first client that we've picked up in the forum um so you know besides the forum being an amazing place for support that's also a great place to meet new customers and assist and move forward um so today we'll be going into the efforts that it took into facilitating the company's marketing needs based on on more tech so we've kind of broken down the presentation into the good the bad and the ugly um and i think as everybody over here agrees mortic is an amazing piece of software it's got incredible capabilities the fact that it is an open source software has allowed us to develop on top of the software itself and also to actually have a look under the hood when we encounter different obstacles on the way the actual installation procedure of nautic has been very very simple um you know i'm sorry to say that i have yet to to get composer installation working properly myself i've done a few different installations of it and i've been in the in the slack channel um but i'm definitely not a devops person i'm more of a a techie marketing person so it's not my forte and eventually when we do have to move over we'll get our devops to do that as well and the actual migration of data from other systems into motif itself is pretty seamless today um the the there's the import crons and um you know the import of uh files via the actual uh the actual user interface which makes it really really easy so when we took on this client the first thing was actually to you know to take care of the onboarding for the clients and initially we started looking at you know which is the best environment to support the client um the client has around probably 500 000 records in their database they have a high high volume website they have a high volume uh application where people are ordering food online all the time and as such we needed to actually do a little bit of research um we did a lot of research into which is the best systems to use um i'm sure many of you know yosu so he's got some great articles out there on actually fixing up the right hardware that you need eventually we decided to go with the amazon aws with 64 gig ram server and 8 cpus and obviously a very very big hard drive the actual installation process as we all know is really really easy uh importing 500 000 records into the database is also pretty easy unfortunately because of the size of such the file you do need to cut that file up and in order to do that in the most effective way we just wrote a few scripts that would actually cut the file into many many different pieces and ran the mortic import uh console job which did everything for us um within within a few hours actually so you know getting everything up and running was uh was pretty simple the next the next thing that we were faced with was the actual integrations and as i said before the client has a desktop application an android application um and i recommend here a web application that should have been ios and they were looking at delivering communications via email sms and push notifications so you know this is kind of where we we found our first obstacle um the only real plug-in for mobile push notifications today is one signal um it's not the best document to plug in out there uh although it does come native with more tick today and it is only for uh it's not running for firebase so using one signal wasn't really an option for us um the client that we're working with did have a very very uh good development team and together we were actually able to piggyback on the one signal plug-in and there is another plug-in that is developed by guys called i think lead engine and joey passed them on to us that makes a firebase plug-in at the time when we took this plugin on i think they had just developed it and really wasn't working up to scratch i saw a post on the forum about two weeks ago that they've released a new version of this so that might be very very interesting to to everybody else out there that's looking for a firebase integration um so with their development team we were actually able to hack the one signal plug-in and pass information to firebase and actually be able to send out push notifications uh via the normal channels um or the normal campaign inside inside motec um the the next obstacle was actually the uh the client has their own sms gateway which actually connects up to to a number of different sms providers so over here we actually have to go and write our own plugin to this gateway and you know once again because everything is open source and it's very very easy to actually have a look at the at the code out there so we instead of actually writing a new a new plugin altogether we just went and tweaked the twilio plugin and got the sms working and actually got the you know the basic function of the system running so now we had email we had sms and we had push notification our next task was actually getting the api integration multi-rest api is excellent it's very very well documented it's easy to use and getting it installed on any website is seamless there are certain issues that we have faced in the past we didn't face them with this particular client um and there have been issues of anonymous users not converting into known users in the past joey has his magic pixel trick around that um and they are actually we've just encountered other issues with uh with cloudplay that we'll be writing some documentation on in the near future once we actually solve that problem but for this for this particular client it was a simple putting the tracking script on his site and within minutes the database just started filling up with all the anonymous contacts coming in i mean they have a few hundred users probably every few minutes uh their maximum number of orders per minute is something like 32 orders a minute so you can understand that it's very very very high volume it was a lot of strain on the server and um actually a lot of strain on on maltek itself and kind of that's where we move into you know the the bad and the ugly of of what's happening um so the bad mortic for and and once again i'm not a coder i'm not a devops person um so it's just kind of my my view and my um experience running more tech um the from what i understand the the more tech is based on firing events using cron jobs these cron jobs run one after the other by default and this is and this started causing big issues with updating and triggering both campaigns and segments so for example we had segments that had a few hundred thousand users in them and if you were running more tech update multi segments update all the segments that would spend all its time on this specif uh the specific segment and actually wouldn't get to the other segments um and the same the same thing we actually found with uh with campaigns as well when you're updating a campaign or triggering a campaign if you're not actually specifying with the minus i flag then it basically goes uh one after the other and not necessarily going to get to the end and the the segments either didn't get updated or the campaigns didn't get updated correctly and didn't get triggered so we had a lot of learning to do over there um sorry excuse me and um i'm sorry my daughter's just arrived home um so so basically we had we had to kind of overcome this issue of how are we going to actually update segments correctly and how we're going to run campaigns correctly the the other big issue that we ran into is something that a lot of people that are running high volume users is that the database can blow up very very quickly we found this is basically due to audit logs email stats and the page hits table so basically how did we overcome you know these obstacles that we that we faced at the beginning um we started investigating cron jobs i did a lot of research on the forum i spoke with a lot of the uh a lot of the guys out there specifically joey and ruth was it was a great help and what we started doing was we actually started writing up single cron jobs for each for for each segment out there and the way that we did this was we said okay which other segments that need to be updated only once a day so we had a cron job like this for example one basically this is running at one minute past one in the morning every single day and it's only updating the segment number two whereas segment number 13 for example needs to be uh updated every minute so in our actual cron tab we would have a chrome tab with over i don't know probably 50 lines on different segments now this is not the optimal way to do this um and and you know i i keep bringing up joey but he's been a great help and joey actually wrote out a script that if you define your naming scheme in more in the in the segment correctly his script will then go and update it according to the naming script the naming scheme that you put in over there so it's definitely something to look at it was a great resource for us we actually didn't use it with this client itself but we went and we created these um cron jobs manually ourselves the campaign issues was probably our biggest issue that we had over here every single week these people are doing new campaigns they have valentine's day campaign they have pizza day campaign they have all these different campaigns that are not simple campaigns they are um using all three forms of communication so they're using sms they're using push notifications they're using emails there's a lot of conditions inside the campaign as well so the campaigns are are quite intricate and the main issue that we saw over there was that you know if i was once again if i was running just one console job that said multi campaigns update mounted campaigns trigger not everything would work correctly and what we did was we started playing around with okay what happens if i run a specific campaign the same way that i would run a segment so for example i would use minus i and put the the campaign id in over there and then could i do that in parallel with other campaign with other campaigns and would that work and that logic actually worked very very well for us the issue that we that we came into over there was every single week they were writing new campaigns and the client doesn't necessarily want you want to be dependent on you to actually go and say okay you know i've written a new campaign please go make sure that it works so you know we would have to go in have a look at the campaign try understand which are the hours that specific things are being triggered and write out specific jobs for those specific hours um and what we did over there is we started working on a uh on a campaign cron job builder script and it's a work in process um it's something that i do hope to release eventually currently what the what the script does is it looks inside the campaigns table and has a look at all the events and it takes out each event and understands what hour each event is meant to be run at and actually goes and doesn't echo or creates a line of code that we then go and push into the cron job into the quant tab itself so by doing this we were actually able to run simultaneous campaigns that were firing off at the same time and because the server was strong enough it was actually able to to handle all of the uh all of the stress on it um in saying that the server did slow down immensely and what our initial installation was basically a server and database on the same server which is pretty common for motif today however in enterprise it's just not going to really work for you so what we did was we looked at moving to an rds and we managed to get the rds up and running however because of the stress on the on the actual database and the number of records being written and read per second the rds actually didn't really work very very well for us so what we did was we just set up a separate server um we scaled down the app so we we basically used an application server for the more tech files itself and for the cron jobs and we used a separate server and that that application server we actually scaled down that didn't need as much resources and we set up a separate server which was a very very strong server for the database itself once we did that we saw a huge increase in page load time and actually i mean you know as i think ruth said it in her one of her earlier talks today is that you know when you're supporting such huge size databases everything starts coming to a grinding halt inside more tech it's very very difficult to load a page it's difficult to load a contact card to get into the campaigns or look at segments and you know luckily we've seen especially in 4.31 that segments get updated a lot quicker now um and actually moving to a separate server gave a uh i mean the whole team over there felt the difference immediately so pages load a lot lot quicker today um it's much easier to clone campaigns it's much easier to actually go into segments and to basically do to do anything that you want to do that you should be able to do in an automated marketing system itself um some of the some of the ugly stuff um it's you know it's legacy stuff that is out there that you know was built uh i guess a long time ago and you know the the actual code and the idea behind mortic is amazing however you know things have evolved over the past years and as ruth mentioned we don't uh we don't really have that many resources in terms of developers and testers to actually go out and you know fix up these these small things which you know we kind of we kind of see as ugly things um one of them and then i've seen been mentioned quite a bit on the forum itself is the campaign stats and the campaign overview it's not really uh intuitive as to what is going on inside the campaign how many people are at a specific point inside the campaign how many people have received a specific mail or haven't received a specific mailer you kind of have a success and a failure percentage over there um but it wasn't really giving our clients or ourselves enough information to actually report to them and for them to report to their their bosses and say okay listen this is what the campaign is doing this is how many people are inside the campaign this is the success of the campaign etc etc so what we did was we found an amazing piece of uh open source software as well called metabase metabase bi um and we started playing with metabase bi and using metabase we were able to actually visualize the campaigns in an amazing amazing way we were able to see exactly how many sms's were going out what time the sms's were going out um all the push notifications so it gave us a real advantage and provided great added value to the customer and provided the customer that added value to actually generate a proper bi that they could show to the marketing director or to the ceo of exactly what's kind of going on over there um on a side note we also we one of the things that we we kind of found a little bit limiting inside more tick itself was the dashboard um so we kind of found it a bit more challenging to show the kpis that the actual customer wants to see and not really what a technical marketing person wants to see and what we did was we used metabase bi in order to create this dashboard um i did write a post and a full explanation on how to actually integrate metabase bi into your dashboard itself that's a very very simple hack you just need to change a few lines of code like i said i'm not a coder but if you follow my instructions you you can very very easily get your your metabase dashboard up and running um and maybe i will i will see if i can show that i'll show an example of that a little bit later um and the the the other thing that was you know a little bit ugly about about more tech is the actual cleanup of the database itself so mortek has the database cleanup the console command that runs and this will actually let you go and say okay you know delete the audit logs after x amount of time um over here with the specific with this specific client we actually need to keep audit logs for quite a while um as you can imagine you know in such a high volume industry with people getting a lot of pushes and sms's and emails uh they do get the occasional complaint saying hey you're spamming me you're spamming me or i'm suing you and you know as ugly as the audit log table is by getting very very big it has definitely saved the client in terms of being able to see exactly what a specific user has done when he signed up did he go to the unsubscribe page did he unsubscribe or not um so it's kind of got the the good and the bad to it as well um the other things that i mean their database is over 100 i think 150 gigs at the moment and i think a lot of this is attributed to the to the actual stats tables so over here i've just written the mail stats but i have not looked personally at the mobile or the push notification stats in the sms stats but i'm assuming that they're also pretty big but not as big as mail stats as mel stats is actually taking a lot more information on the clicks and on the number of opens and each time somebody opens it as well and the third one is the page hits now there are tutorials out there on the web today on how to go and clean up your mail stats and your page hits via mysql i'm pretty comprehensive inside mysql myself but i have to say that on such a big database what i did was i went and i created a staging environment and i tried to run these scripts and i totally killed the database so it's definitely something to uh to go into cautiously and i would recommend anybody doing any kind of database cleanup to make backups of your database first that's a very very simple command got mysql dumped jesus put it into a into a file and uh and you're good to go generally what i like to do is when i do any anything on more tick itself on the back end or inside the command line i generally uh run my backup scripts uh something that i'll post as well and basically what this does is it will go and it'll make a guitar of all the mortic files it'll make a backup of the database itself i can then go and i can run whatever i want i can break whatever i want and within a few minutes or an hour depending on how big the database is i can get everything up and running again so at this stage i mean i don't know if anybody's got any questions i don't exactly know how the uh the conference works over there but uh if anybody does have questions you're welcome to you know throw them into the chat um if not we i can basically you know just summarize summarize this for us um and you know while i summarize if anybody has anything i see that uh there we go um all right thank you so much thank you so much jordan that was a very brief one and i'm well explanatory hope you can hear me clearly yes yes yes yes all right great great great all right good so uh a couple of questions a couple of questions so i'm going to start by asking how long did it take you to map out the customer requirements so i think it probably took us about to map out the customer requirements probably took us around a month two months to actually to actually map it out correctly and and one of the things you know in terms of now moving away from the technical and more into the actual marketing strategy is that these guys were using a different system at the time and they had absolutely no naming convention over there so they had specific campaigns for example an app welcome campaign or a app registered never purchased campaign um directly after purchase campaign they had all these different campaigns running but they actually had no naming convention and coming up with the strategy around the the naming convention itself was probably took more time to actually think about and implement than anything else um i see over here that we've got a question of how my sql is performing with such data so you know as as i said you know it's we we have i think on the on the database on the database server today we have 64 gigs we have eight cpus and you know in peak in peak times we probably uh are using i would say roughly between 60 to 60 to 90 of all resources um the database is handling very very well besides the fact that uh it gets very very big um it writes a lot of logs mysql writes an enormous amount of logs and this is actually something that uh that can be a little bit uh can give you a heart attack you know all of a sudden you can wake up in the morning and you can log in and all of a sudden you've got no connection and the client is like oh you know what's going on what's going on and i know straight away that the disk is out of space and i go and i have a look at vol log mysql and i'll see 35 gigs of logs written over there and you know just remove that and you're good to go um actually what we did was we we set up a cron tab to to remove the mysql logs once a week once this happened more than once all right so there's a question from robin robin is asking how do you undo the demands of a client demanding physics for an issue and not having an answer and having to rely on the community for solution which can take days a week i think okay so so so you know rob this is this is a great question and you kind of need to know how to mitigate your clients correctly um we actually ran into this into this issue recently where we found that um i don't know who is using dynamic content in emails but we've used it extensively in the past and all of a sudden with multiple we saw that it's not working anymore i put a post on the uh on the forum ruth jumped onto it straight away she checked it she saw it's not working and there is an issue now on uh github that every single day i'm looking at and my client actually texted me today he's like listen what's happening with dynamic content and i said don't worry the developers are working on it that's not an easy fix so you know but i i have enough faith in in the community and i know that this is an integral part actually of of maltic itself that it will be released in the next uh in the next version and if it isn't released and there is a patch out there then um you know it's very easy to go ahead and uh and install the patch i think rob actually showed me how to install patches all right so um michael i'm also say um thank you so much for your contribution to the community also you try as much as possible to also share where you are that others are also needing our houses okay so i have one other question on here talking about just building on the first question i asked you earlier from the point that you map out the customer requirements how long did it take to get the infrastructure set up um so you know i'll answer that that point i'll answer in in two in two parts to get the hardware infrastructure set up and the technical thing set up um you know to get more tick up and and running is is a matter of of hours i mean today we've actually automated the process you know we can get an instance up and running within within a matter of minutes however on such a big client with so many requirements it obviously takes a lot a lot more time and there was a learning curve on the client side in order to be able to integrate the sms gateway and then to actually go and do the development and and the hacking around one signal in firebase so this in itself probably took two months to do um and then we kind of got to the stage where we actually had a functioning system um we had a functioning system it took us another probably three or four months to actually get the marketing strategy put inside more tick itself all the campaigns set up correctly all the emailers all the the the assets and this is just for their for for their you know their customer journey campaigns not even for their promotional campaigns so they have around nine customer journey campaigns today and this in itself took us i would say another three months to actually get into place and to explain to the client the importance of a proper naming convention so you know that you can actually go into they use adjust as their as their tracking system so you can actually going to adjust and you can see exactly which campaigns are running and how those campaigns are running and what's the revenue generated per campaign uh down to the granular level of not just the campaign but either the specific email with this specific sms or the specific um push notification out there so yeah i think i hope that answers the question yeah that did all right thank you so much michael okay all right so one more question building on that is i'm following the getting the infrastructure live how long did it take to get the campaign live after you've been able to figure out the infrastructure then you can pain it's kind of an ongoing thing go for it yeah i'm just going to say it's kind of an ongoing thing um it's uh you set up the initial infrastructure you set up the initial set of campaigns that meets the kpis or at least reaches the benchmarks that they've been running at on whatever software or whatever um combination of software is up until that point uh one thing that's nice about uh malik is that everything sits in one place so you've got all of your landing pages all of your forms all of your nurturing and then emails sms's push notifications pop-ups etc all in one place so once you've actually mapped out all of those campaigns the implementation and the material production and the content et cetera et cetera takes some time to to get done and as mike said it took about uh three months to to get that to completion um but then the real work starts right because then you got to start going in and not only optimizing on the tech stack but also going into the actual campaigns and looking at where you can optimize in terms of whatever the the pain point is whether it is the top level conversion or it's going into their their retention um some of the biggest rate uh increases that we saw in terms of revenue came from churn uh um uh segments and you know that's where you're looking at 30 60 90 days since last purchase or less activity but we were able to break it down into those kind of methodological steps and then go in and i suppose attack or deal with each one as they came up and then it's an ongoing thing as i say um continuing to optimize continuing to measure seeing campaigns um that are working seeing campaigns um that aren't and seeing campaigns that also are uh going into an internet loop um which is another thing that uh that gets uh interesting where you're dealing with such a high volume client um yeah pretty much i think that deals with campaigns uh in terms of time going live mark's brought up the the dashboard implementation that we've uh that we've kind of got to as well uh in terms of an easy way for us to see the the um the system from a top level um obviously this is a dashboard and quite a simple dashboard these go very very deep in terms of what you're able to do once you've got a good um bi on the front of it and i think that's kind of the power that everybody is looking for here is is the ability to initiate all different kinds of campaigns on all different channels okay so we're dealing with mobile web uh we actually have a client today that's dealing with tv as well um and uh you know we're not at the point of kind of native sdks yet um but that's the point that we that we would like to be getting to let's say in hopefully mark five let's see [Music] but uh yeah hope that answers that question all right great great thank you so much for that okay so the the um um the metaphase that you shared is similar to what you just displayed now right one shared on the community forum exactly it actually goes into every one of the tables that are sitting in the database and you can combine different tables based on uh the let's say the different joins that are relevant so it's really nice digging into email stats push stats so we've got a really high volume client i mean you know some mornings we wake up and and are sending out 500 000 push notifications or sms's or emails and combinations thereof okay and those are tied into also multiple reporting systems so where you've got your initial touchpoint as email or sms you want to see how that's translating into the mobile activity and then the pages that are browsed on the mobile and that information are then coming back into the campaign and feeding out into different conditions and decisions um so we're pretty hungry i think in terms of our appetite for what these campaigns can do so a lot of the time yeah you know mike is definitely the more techie of us and as he said he's not even that so techy so the demands in terms of what we place on each other in terms of building a really comprehensive campaigns dealing with um a lot of conditions and decisions and and then actions resulting from that especially where you've got big big big legacy databases um becomes challenging but also fun at the end of the day um and uh i think that's why it's cool to share this kind of thing um it's also kind of like an honest and transparent kind of you know this is what we expected this is what we've got and then this is kind of how we've had to deal with um maneuvering around it um yeah just to just to give you like one one of the you know i know this is a multi-conference but one of the nice things about uh about metabase is that you can actually integrate into one dashboard um data from many different data sources so for example in this client over here we have you know the overview of the data and then we actually able to bring in google analytics as well so there really is a lot of information that you can bring in from google or from any kind of database whatsoever and this really has provided our clients a uh a huge amount of added value this really really cool this is really cool all right thank you so much to michael and jordan and um it's really been an educating session and i'm also i can see more power about metabase so i think it's something i will also go and learn more myself and see i can use it for my projects too all right so um if you need me help hit us up oh okay all right all right great great so michael i i wouldn't know maybe that would be great to talk about maybe i sent him a message and um on on on the forum some few days ago i don't know maybe you got the message ah i actually i think an inbox message yes yes can you send me yes yeah yeah yeah i'll reply to that shortly oh did you reply because i checked yesterday i didn't get no i didn't i did i i didn't reply it's been a public holiday over here over the weekend and uh we've had a bit of a short week so i will get to that though oh no no no problem i think maybe it would be nice maybe if you can discuss this at the moment of lagos that would be nice about metabolism and um sure i think that you know another another um priceless piece of software that we use that has been spoken about on the forum as well is a piece of software called m8n which um helps yeah uh different integrations and and that has yeah i mean they've recently changed their license so it's become a little bit more cumbersome because you have to set up a separate server for each client that's using it but it's a priceless piece of software as well oh great great great great i think i need anything all right i think um i i will link up with you more about this and see how we can take it further after this conference okay so there seems to not be any other questions all right so at the end of um at this junction i would like to thank both jordan and michael for their time and for presenting these um valuable information sharing this with other people i would love to see you more in the forum contributing and helping people answer questions all right so in case you would like to still engage maybe one-on-one with jordan and michael um i believe they will be joining the lounge so just join the table three on the launch that is for room three radar on the launch and then you can be able to interact more with michael and japan great so mike thanks everybody thanks for hosting us over toby and uh thanks everyone for dropping by very nice to see a few people dropping in uh hope you found some value from it and uh you know any questions that you have please uh feel free to shout it'd also be nice to hear what kind of challenges you guys have come into and where we can where we can combine and uh and join forces at least uh overcoming whatever it comes if it comes up next let's say all right perfect thank you so much everyone okay let's look ahead for the next section so we having ak will be talking to us about the multi community i can contribute thank you so much everyone bye for now thanks guys bye bye you
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U.S. Route 411 in Alabama | Wikipedia audio article
u.s. route 411 u.s. 411 is an alternate parallel Highway associated with us 11 u.s. 411 extends for about 313 miles 504 kilometers from us 78 in Leeds Alabama to us 25 West us 70 in Newport Tennessee us 411 travels through northeastern Alabama northwestern Georgia and southeastern Tennessee notable towns and cities along its route include Gadsden Alabama Rome Georgia Cartersville Georgia Maryville Tennessee Sevierville Tennessee and Newport Tennessee us 411 and us 11 never intersect with one another though they come very close in Leeds Alabama Gadsden Alabama and Maryville Tennessee us 411 also spends much of its route close to the interstate highway system interstate 40 I 40 I 75 and I 59 though it never has an interchange with I 59 topic route description most of the terrain through which US 411 passes as rural countryside with no major metropolitan areas directly along its route however it does pass relatively near the major cities of Birmingham Alabama Chattanooga Tennessee in Knoxville Tennessee in Savior County Tennessee south of Knoxville u.s. 411 is used by many tourists as a route to the northern side of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park u.s. for 11 passes approximately 20 miles 32 kilometers north of the National Park but intersects with US 441 which actually goes through this park although u.s. 411 has a south north designation it contains long stretches that are west east and its overall Direction is actually southwest northeast u.s. 411 is generally a two-lane highway through the countryside however it has long been a four-lane divided highway connecting Rome and Cartersville Georgia and it is a multi-lane highway connecting Cartersville with i-75 also for part of its root in the Cartersville area u.s. 411 shares of four-lane divided highway with u.s. 41 furthermore the Tennessee Department of Transportation completed a project to widen the highway to four lanes between Maryville and Ocoee Tennessee topic Alabama us for one one begins at us 78 Parkway Drive in the City of Leeds in far eastern Jefferson County State Route 25 the US highways companion route continues south as assigned highway that briefly follows us 78 east before splitting south toward Harpers Ville u.s. 411 heads north along Tulane ninth Street which has a pair of that grade crossings of Norfolk Southern Railway rail lines the streets name changes to wittmeyer Street which the u.s. highway follows to Asheville Road u.s. 411 follows Asheville Road a two-lane road with center turn lane northeast into st. Clair County where the highway expands to four lanes the u.s. highway meets i-20 at a partial cloverleaf interchange as it leaves the City of Leeds u.s. 411 continues as two-lane Moody Parkway north east through the Cahaba Valley formed by the little Cahaba River between Pine Ridge to the west and Oak Ridge to the east the highway has a brief concurrency with State Route 174 through Oden Ville where the highways pass under a CSX rail line u.s. 411 continues northeast through the Beaver Creek Valley between Pine Ridge and the Beaver Creek Mountains the highway leaves the valley after it joins us 231 Heart of Dixie Highway to pass through Pine Ridge to the city of Asheville the US highways entered town along 5th Street and proceed to the county courthouse where they meet the eastern end of State Route 23 sixth Avenue both highways turn east onto sixth Avenue then us 231 turns north onto Court Street East us 411 leaves Asheville along rainbow Drive which heads northeast between Big Canoe Creek and canoe Creek mountain to the south the US highway crosses the mountain and enters Etowah County where it crosses the Big Canoe Creek branch of Neely Henry Lake u.s. 411 follows the western flank of Dunaway mountain to rainbow City where the route intersects state route 77 Grand Avenue u.s. 4:11 expands to a four-lane divided highway as it enters the city of Gadsden the highway crosses the big Will's Creek branch of mealy Henry Lake and meets the eastern end of I 759 at a partial cloverleaf interchange that freeway continues east as State Route 759 u.s. 411 veers unto Albert Raines Boulevard which follows the right bank of the Coosa River through downtown Gadsden the highway passes by the spirit of American citizenship monument and under Broad Street a CSX rail line in u.s. 278 in u.s. 431 Magan Boulevard which access u.s. 411 via a partial cloverleaf interchange u.s. 411 leaves or will soon exit Gadsden along a newly constructed four-lane divided highway that passes between shinbone Ridge to the west and several loops of the Coosa River the US highway drops to two lanes before it enters Cherokee County then expands again to a four-lane divided highway Weiss Lake Boulevard u.s. 411 curves east along the northern edge of Weiss Lake and intersect state route 68 Industrial Boulevard in the town of Leesburg east of which u.s. 411 and state route 68 crossed the lake an impoundment of the Coosa River shortly after entering the city of Center the US Highway and State Highway turn unto the Clarence a chestnut jr. bypass a four-lane road with center turn lane u.s. 411 business and State Route 25 continue along Main Street into the center of town state route 68 diverges from the US highway at Cedar Bluff Road which carries State Route 283 south west toward downtown state route 283 becomes u.s. 411's companion route on the bypass which next intersects State Route 9 armory Road which intersects state route 68 immediately to the north u.s. 411 drops to two lanes east of State Route nine and curves south to collect the east end of us 411 business Main Street and State Route 25 on the eastern edge of Center us 411 continues east and crosses Cowan Creek before reaching the Alabama Georgia state line and the northern terminus of State Route 25 east of the hamlet of Forney topic Georgia us four one one enters Georgia at the western terminus of its companion state route 53 in the southwestern corner of Floyd County the two-lane highway which is named Gadsden Road has a brief concurrency with State Route 100 which heads north as Foster's Mill Road and south as Mill Street on the west side of the town of Cave Spring u.s. 411 enters town along Alabama Street and leaves to the northeast along Rome Street the u.s. highway continues as cave spring road which crosses Cedar Creek and passes through van's Valley u.s. 411 passes under the West Rome bypass and intersects us 27 and state route 1 Cedartown highway which u.s. 411 joins heading north the four-lane road with center turn lane passes along the west side of lyndale and between Walker mountain and booz mountain on the west and east respectively us 411 and us 27 expand to a divided highway as they enter the city of Rome and then a four-lane freeway as they cross over a Norfolk Southern Railway the freeway has a diamond interchange with Darlington drive an old lyndale Road and a half diamond interchange with maple road immediately to the east of the second interchange US for one one passes through a directional T interchange us 27 SR one sr20 an SR 53 head north toward downtown Rome and us for one one and SR 20 head east immediately to the east of the split the US highway has a partial cloverleaf interchange with State Route 101 Dean Avenue there is no ramp from State Route 101 to westbound u.s. 411 the freeway ends east of State Route 101 u.s. 411 has an intersection with the southern end of State Route 1 loop East Rome bypass before leaving the city limits u.s. 411 heads east along Cartersville highway into Bartow County the four-lane divided highway parallels and then crosses the Etowah River u.s. 411 crosses over an east-west CSX rail immediately before its trumpet interchange with us 41 and State Route 3 Joe Frank Harris Parkway the two US highways head southeast into the city of Cartersville then diverge immediately to the east of a north-south CSX rail line at the boulevards partial cloverleaf interchange with state route 61 Tennessee Street immediately to the north of the interchange state route 20 Canton highway splits east and state route 61 becomes us 411 s companion highway toward Tennessee the US highway heads north as a four lane undivided highway that becomes divided temporarily through the highways partial cloverleaf interchange with i-75 Larry McDonald Memorial Highway us 411 drops to two lanes south of the town of white where the highway begins to closely parallel the north-south CSX rail line the u.s. highway intersects State Route 140 Henry Mac Hill Road in the hamlet of riedel before entering Gordon County u.s. 411 passes through the town of Fairmount as salikus Street the u.s. highway runs concurrently with State Route 53 between Calhoun Street and Fairmount Highway north of the town of Ranger through which the route is named Tennessee highway the highway meets the eastern end of State Route 156 redbud Road u.s. 411 passes through the town of Oakman then diverges from a road called Old Highway 411 crosses to the west side of the railroad intersects State Route 156 Nickelsville Road and enters Murray County the US highway passes to the west of re-regulation reservoir and Carters lake both impoundments of the ku Sawadee River which the highway crosses to the west of the lakes u.s. 411 intersects u.s. 76 and State Route 282 which follow part of Old Highway 4 1 1 before heading east through the cohutta mountains and the US highways begin to run concurrently as a four lane undivided highway along the west flank of Fort Mountain us 411 and us 76 continuous third Avenue through the city of Chatsworth in the center of town the highways intersect Fort Street which carries State Route 2 and State Route 52 east toward fort mountain and state route 52 alternate to the west at the north end of town u.s. 76 and state route 52 leave us 411 along GI Maddox Boulevard the u.s. highway passes along the west flank of campground mountain and has named Hill Street through the town of Eden where the route meets the eastern end of State Route 286 coffee road and drops to two lanes us 411 passes through the town of Crandall crosses to the east side of the railroad and follows the ferry valley to the hamlet of Cisco where State Route 2 splits to the west us 411 crosses over to the west side of the rail line in the hamlet of Tenga immediately before reaching the Georgia Tennessee State Line where state route 61 has its northern terminus topic Tennessee us four one one enters Tennessee at the southern terminus of its companion state route 33 in the southwestern corner of Polk County the highway crosses the Conestoga River in the hamlet of condo saga and meets the eastern end of State Route 3:13 lads Springs Road in old fort u.s. 411 parallels the CSX rail line through the hamlet of Ocoee where the highway expands to four lanes plus a center turn lane and has a partial cloverleaf interchange with u.s. 64 in u.s. 74 sr 40 north of Ocoee u.s. 411 crosses over the railroad and the Ocoee river and passes through the town of benton where the route meets the northern end of state route 314 Parksville road the u.s. highway expands to a divided highway north of the town u.s. 411 intersects and begins to run concurrently with State Route 30 crosses the Hiwassee River and meets the eastern end of State Route 163 in the village of Delano u.s. 411 becomes undivided and crosses over the CSX rail line shortly after entering McMinn County in the town of Etowah the highway follows Tennessee Avenue meets the western end of State Route 310 Mecca Pike and State Route 30 splits west along David M Lillard memorial highway the highway becomes divided once again north of town and continues through farmland and countryside before becoming undivided once again before entering the town of Englewood and goes through town passing just east of the downtown area and intersecting and having a short concurrency with state route 39 Athens Pike Teleco Street u.s. 411 then becomes a divided highway again as it leaves angle wood and enters countryside once again before crossing into Monroe County u.s. 411 continues through countryside before entering the city of Madisonville and becomes undivided for a short distance before having an intersection with its former alignment which travels through downtown old u.s. highway 411 before becoming divided and having a partial clover interchange with state route 68 new highway 68 which provides access to Sweetwater the lost see Teleco plains chera hayla Skyway and the Cherokee National Forest before going along a bypass of downtown as a divided highway passing through a major business district u.s. 411 then has in grade-separated interchanges former alignment Warren Street before becoming undivided before leaving Madisonville and continuing north as a four-lane divided highway through farmland and countryside u.s. 411 then comes to an intersection and becomes concurrent with state route 72 Loudon highway just before entering the town of van or and becoming undivided once again as this time it passes straight through downtown instead of bypassing it it has an intersection State Route 360 which provides access to Fort Loudoun and Fort Loudoun State Park before leaving Vaughn or via crossing a bridge over the little Tennessee River Teleco Lake before state route 72 splits off and goes east following the banks of the lake before becoming divided once again before crossing into Loudoun County it then becomes undivided shortly afterwards though it doesn't pass by any businesses or towns as it stays in farmland as it becomes known as greenback road it then passes just south of the community of greenback and meeting the southern end of State Route 95 which provides access to the community u.s. 411 then continues through countryside and farmland to cross into Blount County u.s. 411 countin used through farmland as an undivided four-lane highway and has an intersection with State Route 336 northeast of the community of linear it then continues through farmland before entering the city of Maryville and becoming concurrent with u.s. 129 SR 115 Calderwood highway provides access to Calderwood talus II and the Tail of the Dragon and passed by a few businesses before really entering the business district at the intersection with State Route 335 William Blount Drive they continued through a major business district before coming to grade-separated interchanges for 11 and us 129 split with us 129 bypassing downtown to enter Alcoa and provide access to Maggie Tyson Airport and Knoxville in u.s. 411 continues north into downtown next to foothills mall u.s. 411 continues into downtown as Broadway Avenue and comes to an intersection with us 321 sr 73 lamar alexander parkway provides access to Walland Townsend where's Valley and Great Smoky Mountains National Park it then has another intersection with State Route 336 before traveling through the center and most historic part of the city before coming to an intersection with state route 35 Hall Road Washington Street with State Route 33 continuing north to Knoxville and u.s. 411 turning right to become concurrent with state route 35 its new companion route it follows Washington Street for a short distance before turning left onto Sevierville Road at an intersection with State Route 447 Washington Street and leaves downtown it then passes by Blount Memorial Hospital before going through some neighborhoods before leaving Maryville and continues as a narrow two-lane highway through countryside and farmland and crosses the Little River in the community of Wildwood it then continues through countryside and farmland passing by for one-one Speedway before crossing into Sevier County u.s. 411 immediately enters the community through large enough to be a medium sized city of seymour and goes through some neighborhoods before coming to an intersection with US 441 sr-71 chapman highway provides access to knoxville and state route 338 boyd's creek highway provides access to kodak and douglas dam with us 411 state route 35 turning right to become concurrent with US 441 state route 71 and continue as an undivided four-lane highway through the heart of Seymour before leaving Seymour and some mountains and becoming narrow and curvy though it maintains four lanes throughout after several miles it then widens out to a four-lane divided highway and stays that until it enters the city of Sevierville where it becomes undivided once again they intersect with old knoxville highway before crossing the pigeon river and entering downtown at the intersection with state route 66 Winfield Dunn Parkway provides access to i-40 which is where u.s. 441 state route 71 splits off as forks of the River Parkway to go to Pigeon Forge Gatlinburg and the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in u.s. 411 state route 35 continues straight into downtown it goes through downtown as main street and has an intersection with State Route 448 North Parkway Parkway before leaving downtown at the crossing of middle Creek where it transitions to Dolly Parton Parkway it continues through a major business district and has an intersection with State Route 449 Veterans Boulevard provides access to Dollywood in Pigeon Forge it then passes by some more businesses before leaving Sevierville and entering the community of Cherokee Hills near the intersection with State Route 416 Pittman Center Road provides access to Pittman Center in Gatlinburg it then has an intersection with State Route 339 long Springs Road provides access to Cosby before leaving Cherokee Hills and narrowing to an improved two-lane highway it then passes through the community of new center before having a sharp switchback and becoming narrow before crossing into Jefferson County after crossing the county line u.s. 411 immediately enters the community of Chestnut Hill and has an intersection with state route 92 next to the bush beam Museum which also right across the road from the Bush brothers and company cannery plant and corporate headquarters u.s. 411 then enters some mountains and becomes curvy for a short distance before widening to a new four-lane divided highway just before crossing into county it continues along the new four-lane highway into the city of Newport and ends at its national northern terminus at an intersection with us 25 West us 70 sr 9 just a short distance away from that routes interchange with i-40 exit 432 a B though exit 432 a has only signed as US 411 on the interstate in both directions with state route 35 turning right to become concurrent with though unsigned that route towards downtown topic major intersections you topic Alabama you topic Georgia you topic Tennessee you topic see also Alabama portal Georgia u.s. state portal Tennessee portal us roads portal
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21ZC9mnz4ik
KEN Online #2: Open Research and Intellectual Property: What are the boundaries of practicality?
[Music] hello everyone welcome let's give it a few minutes while people join I can see the numbers popping up do please feel free to introduce yourselves in the chat perhaps tell us if you're yet a signatory to the knowledge Equity Network declaration somebody's got the hand up that's my colleague Rachel do you want to say anything Rachel or you just putting your hand up is there no chat that might be a problem here okay I'll get going because we haven't got a great deal of time and lots of um speakers to get through and my slides seem to be doing their own thing for some reason so welcome everybody so this is very excited today to have several colleagues from different parts of the world in fact so uh just to introduce myself I'm open research adviser at leads and also senior lead for the knowledge Equity Network for those that aren't familiar with the knowledge Equity Network it's an initiative that seeks to open access to education research and to shift the culture of higher educ ation towards collaboration rather than competition so we're a collaborative community of engaged institutions organizations and individuals across the world and we obviously encourage you to join us if you haven't already done so um and the principles of the Declaration on knowledge equity which uh I'll post a link to in a moment um on which the network was founded set out a way of us working in global partnership towards the United Nations sustainability uh development goals and a fair and better world so that's sort of a bit of a background on the the open on the on the knowledge Equity Network um and today we're going to be hearing from uh Lucy from uh Wikipedia UK uh Jody a colleague of mine from the University of leads who's a uh INR special Collections and uh very excited to introduce as well a couple of colleagues in uba and snea from the center for internet society and Society in India so they're joining us from India where it's half 2 in the afternoon I think um so as I say I'm not going to say much because I want to hand over and listen to our he from our speakers but um just to put this in the broader context of open research in the UK he there's a blog post there that'll share as well that's um discusses you know how strategically important that is in the UK and obviously my day job as open research advisor I deal with sort of Open Access open and fair data and all that side of things and reproducible research Etc in in a university context and I've long been a champion of um Wikipedia as a really important way of um sort of joining the different strands of open research and open education together I posted a quick blog post that you can find there at that bitly link again I'll post that in the chat in a moment so as I say we'll be hearing from several colleagues Wikipedia is a thread that runs through this so we're starting with Lucy um on uh Wikipedia so just a couple of points there about some of the things she'll be talking about but I'll I'll let her pick up on that um and then uh as I say our colleagues Niha and anuba from um India talking about some of the problems posed by copyright research in a global environment and a little bit about the access to knowledge program that they've been working again with Wikimedia I think on there before finally hearing from uh my colleague jod um about openness and special collections especially in terms of risk management and how we can be more radically open in that area but just before I do hand over to Luc I just wanted to draw the parallels really between um the knowledge Equity Network so on the left hand side there you can see um this sort of summary statement from the knowledge Equity network and on the right hand side um a similar statement from the Wikipedia Foundation as I said the link there if you do want to sign up to the decaration is at the bottom um and really just to acknowledge that you know Wikipedia have doing been doing this quite a lot longer than we have um you know and they've got the infrastructure the open infrastructure to sort of facilitate um um open research open education and to bring communities together across the world so I'm very interested to hear from Lucy so without further Ado I shall stop sharing and hand over to you Lucy if that's okay sure thank you um so just bear with me while I uh find my slides oh why have you popped up um I mean you're interesting but oh now we have Spotify this is marvelous sorry folks uh here we go um seamless right so it'd be great if someone just could give me a shout if um that first slide is visible in full screen that's great that's showing great thank you well hi everybody um thank you very much to Nick for that introduction but also I want to take this moment to thank you for the Fantastic work you're doing at the University of Leeds um and as you say you know acting as a real Champion for how working with Wikipedia can be a real enabler um in terms of Open Access and um open data and open research um so Wikipedia UK clues in the name we're the national charity for the global Wikipedia movement um and I am going to talk just a little bit about about that movement um and the the licensing structure that that pins it before getting into some some examples of how people are working with knowledge Equity um so the global movement includes hundreds and thousands of individual volunteer contributors um we also use the word editors um and well over 100 Affiliated organizations um and they either have a geographic Focus like Wikipedia Argentina or Wikipedia Community Ireland um or sometimes a thematic Focus like Wikipedia project wik project medicine art and Fe feminis M or black lunch table all of which are probably quite obvious from from the title and the Wikipedia foundation and Nick shared uh some of their their um sort of aspirations earlier the Wikipedia Foundation is the nonprofit organization based in the United States that hosts Wikipedia and Wikipedia's other free knowledge projects which include Wiki data a free and open knowledge base that can be read and edited by humans and machines and Wikipedia Commons which is the media repository for the movement and which I I think is shortly going to hit its 100 millionth um item so Wikipedia itself exists in over 300 languages it has over 61 million articles and receives around 11 billion views a month um and Wikipedia is built on openly licensed content so most Text on Wikipedia has been shared under the Creative Commons attribution share 4.0 International license more commonly known as ccbsa um and the gnu free documentation license and Wikipedia Commons only accepts free content which are images and other media files that are that aren't subject to copyright restrictions which would pre prevent them from being used by anyone any time and for any purpose um so just as an aside non-commercial licenses are not compatible with any of the Wikipedia projects and that means that they're usually licensed under um the ccbsa 4.0 license or they're in the public domain in both the US and the source country of the work so the way the information is created curated and distributed on Wikipedia and the sister projects with all content freely accessible and freely editable for everyone has been a distinctive feature of the Wikipedia project since English Wikipedia was launched in January 2001 and in and of itself that commitment to equal access and the open licensing infrastructure that that underpins that represents a significant contribution to knowledge Equity indeed Wikipedia's founder Jimmy Wales asked ask us to imagine a world in which every single person on the planet is given free access to the sum of all knowledge however while Open Access is an important component of knowledge Equity is by no means the whole story we need to ensure that Wikipedia is collecting knowledge that fully represents human diversity um and builds services and structures that enable others to do the same as a social movement we focus our efforts on knowledge and communities that have been left out by structures of power and privilege and we work to break down the social political and Technical barriers that prevent people from accessing and contributing to free knowledge so at Wikimedia UK and for many other entities and individuals working on and with Wikipedia addressing bias in Wikipedia's content and the lack of representation amongst its contributors is crucial so I'm sharing here the taxonomy of gaps on Wikipedia which was produced by Miriam readyy and others within the Wikipedia foundation's research team and this breaks that Gap into three different areas as you can I mean I don't expect you to be able to read everything on the outside Circle but that inner circle readers content and contributors so for for existing and potential readers there are issues around access um such as internet connectivity motivation technical skills as well as socio demographic aspects such as gender age education income and so on and for contributors those same facets come into play with well documented gaps relating to gender and also more recent data that shines a light on how poorly represented black and Asian people are among the editing communities in the UK and the US so the taxonomy of gaps it describes the content of Wikipedia as being incomplete by Design as the opportunity to share new information with the world is a major motivating factor among both new and established editors but it does acknowledge that when important information about a topic is absent incomplete biased or otherwise inaccessible to readers that these content gaps can undermine Wikipedia's ability to serve the needs of our Global audience but it is certainly true that Wikipedia's content gaps and in some cases the systemic bias that underpins those gaps act as a motivating force for people to get involved themselves so some examples of this from the UK include the idea Network at St Andrew's University established by Dr Kirsty Ross So idea stands for inclusion diversity ex equity and accessibility and open knowledge in this context with Kirsty working with a young academic ab satar retti and supported by Wikipedia K's program manager in Scotland having run 25 events trained over 250 new editors and overseen edits on Wikipedia that have resulted in nearly three million article views since the launch of the network in April 2021 editing Wikipedia as well as being a form of digital volunteering is also a type of knowledge activism where students and others can act as critical creators of knowledge at the University of the Arts in London we worked with Lucy panar on a year-long succumbent of Wikipedia UK funded by the University's knowledge Exchange program to run the decolonizing Wikipedia Network that started life at the London College of communications which is part of U and was set up by Lucy and the student Chang makers at the college the network supported students and staff to edit Wikipedia through the lenses of anti-racism and decolonization including increasing the visibility and The credibility of underrepresented and marginal figures and topics connected to U's subject disciplines on Wikipedia wikipedians across the world recognize the value of working with Educators and other partners as well as directly with students to develop information literacy skills our projects are designed to enable participants to critically evaluate information and develop a greater understanding of how to assess content and references identify potential bias and understand some of the ethical and political issues associated with the production of knowledge as well as the use of and access to information at the University of Edinburgh where we have a very long-standing wikipedian residence you and mcandre the assistant vice principal Melissa heighton who I'm pretty sure Nick knows uh reflected that the work has embedded information literacy skills in the curriculum an editing Wikipedia enables students to understand sources and copyright and leads to discussions about privilege the privilege and geography of knowledge so I would argue that embedding openness in knowledge production is essential to knowledge equ within another higher education partnership this time at the University of Oxford bodan libraries the wikipedian of residents Dr Martin polter who I know again Nick knows and works with his work was focused on surfacing World histories that were underrepresented on Wikipedia and sharing imagery and other content to which people have previously had very limited access he also worked with researchers at the University to ingest new information into Wiki data the knowledge base I mentioned earlier and he created new visualization tools to bring that data to life and make it accessible and reusable Wikipedia allows researchers to communicate research results and expertise in the place where people the majority of people look for that information which is in the relevant Wikipedia articles engaging with Wikipedia all the other Wikipedia projects and I've mentioned a few but another really important one to note is Wiki journals is one of the most effective ways to share knowledge and to enable research outputs to be used reused remixed and repurposed by other researchers by Educators by translators by data scientists by policy makers by organizations and by individuals at wikim UK our mission is to enable people to engage with open knowledge and access reliable information in order to develop their understanding of the world and make informed decision about issues that affect them so ensuring open access to research is crucial to that mission as well as to our vision of a more informed Democratic and Equitable Society through open knowledge so I'm delighted to have been um able to participate in this morning's webinar really excited to hear the next speakers and look forward to any questions and comments that you might have at the end thank you very much I'm gonna start thanks very much Lucy that was brilliant I'm sorry um about the chat issue which we don't seem able to switch it on during the webinar so apologies about that but please do post any questions in the Q&A or comments in fact um given that we don't have a chat feature um but now I will hand over to S um first I speaking first I think um are you ready s hopefully your Tech still working yes I hope I'm Audible and uh visible hi everyone um right uh thanks thanks so much Nick for the introduction and thanks uh Lucy for that wonderful uh presentation I think um it's a great uh great segue for me into uh I wanted to speak about as part of this um this talk um so I'm a I'm a researcher with the center for internet and Society in India um as the name suggests you know we do um policy and academic research um on the internet digital you know infrastructures um and technology in India and uh in the course of my um time here I've had the opportunity to engage with uh with the wikip media project with the open knowledge movement more broadly so I thought I'd share some Reflections um learnings from that space um and how it may speak to you know a larger sort of topic today which is on um open research um so um at at CIS we have um a program uh called access to knowledge which works very closely with Indian language uh wikip media projects um there are a total of uh 23 Indian languages uh that have Wikipedia projects and the a2k program um has been able to engage with uh several of them uh in in different capacities um and I think easily with about you know 20 of those projects and this is largely in terms of sort of catalyzing the growth of these you know indic language Indian language Wikipedia communities across different projects um you know wikipedias themselves wik data uh Wikipedia s um different you know different projects in these spaces um in 2019 we started a sort of small pilot initiative to do research um with Indian language Wikipedia communities um this was really sort of um motivated by you know lots of different interesting questions that kept coming up uh within the Indian language you know Wikipedia space and also it's its connection to a larger conversation around just the development of Indian language content right and of course increasing sort of digitization digitalization the push for a digital India um as such right and language being such such an important part of that of that discourse and of course definitely um you know open source and open infrastructures open Digital infrastructures forming a key component again in that conversation um so we um over the course of three years we did um several you know interesting project projects I think a total of nine small projects um the idea was really to sort of identify gaps challenges opportunities um with various aspects of content creation participation learning access and Outreach in Indian language wikip media projects and also to develop say you know some sort of recommendations best practices Etc towards addressing some of these challenges and optimizing available resources so um what we came across and I very briefly and we don't have have a lot of time I'll very briefly go through some of these um sort of learnings one is of course um and Lucy sort of spoke about uh some of this in our presentation as well just the sort of content gaps that exist and continue to exist right um so you the area of content in Indian languages that remains unavailable for wider Public Access because of issues of digitization translation awareness implementation of um Open Access policies um the lack technological infrastructural and policy related knowledge that exacerbates disparities in content creation access and use um issues of diversity diversity bias in content um creation and participation so and in the content itself so the work on gender gap for instance is is good sort of is an important reflection really of the content and participation gaps that affect this you picture of knowledge that is produced on open knowledge collaborative platforms um the need for capacity building so really you know areas of training awareness in technological communication um media commun Community Health and policy related issues and of course you know a lot of sort of process related um learnings and challenges um I think the key sort of questions that that you know this whole sort of exercise really um put forth for us I mean the sort of key learnings and takeaways um one is of course what are sort of new forms of content creation and use that are mediated by digital Technologies um what is its sort of relevance and what are um what are the ways in which open knowledge platforms like wikim media can contribute to that uh space can be a part of that space right um what is the understanding of community-driven research because that for us was the most sort of challenging and um interesting I would say part of the whole sort of exercise right so engaging with Indian language communities um what are the methods what are the capacities um how do we encourage use of both traditional and non-traditional methods what are additional forms of capacity building needed for research and documentation um how can learnings be shared um and how replicable are those learnings really across different communities right so when we think about just the larger sort of discourse around open research um how our sort of our learnings from our own context from sort of our own sort of experiences of digital infrastructures really translating across different kinds of geopolitical um linguistic infrastructural context right um and of course how do we locate some of this research in the larger sort of open knowledge movement um what collaboration can be fostered with researchers outside of the Wikipedia communities I think these were sort of the important um questions that came up um so I'll move on to talk about some of the other kind of um questions that have that have um you know emerged for us in the course of our work on um of course with the ATK program but also digital infrastructures more broadly um so I work in an area I've engaged with um this field called digital Humanities um work with digital archives and um there's a very interesting paper by uh Paul author and Arthur and um Lydia uh which is on uh on precisely this topic on advancing open research in the humanities um where they talk about some of its challenges which can be you know um just in terms of the whole publishing ecosystem awareness about Open Access policies um and just the practice of um you know sharing research data tools software Etc right and they also talk about um efforts that can be made in this direction which is collaborations it is and engagement um making Humanities research data tools software materials more findable accessible interoperable uh reusable in Fair ways um and at the same time ensuring sustainable preservation And archiving of research outputs so they particularly point out the emphasis um within this discourse on open research across um you know on uh open science sorry the emphasis on open science um which has a sort of underlying theme of positivism and the need for expanding our um understanding of open research across disciplines so you know here of course I'm talking about the humanities but you know arts and culture um looking at you know different sort of paradigms and epistemologies which are characteristics of um characteristic of these disciplines right so I think these were sort of similar questions that emerged for us from the sort of you know Community focused commun Community facing research and scholarship that we were um seeking to engage with so I think two sort of things that's to doubt for us really one is um just the process of digitization itself and uh challenges related to digitization I think that's that's sort of an ongoing um thematic and ongoing uh challenge really that that we continue to sort of engage with as part of the larger ATK program and um you know the work the work that the program does closely with communities um but also for us at CIS in terms of you know just engaging with the question of digital infrastructure um and producing um you know U online content for instance so um and and for me I think a key part of of this has also been you know just in our engagement with um open access archives and uh you know the Glam sector galleries libraries archives and museums so um the Advent of large scale digitization initiatives and how they sort of remediate cultural experiences um the emergence of new fields of research practice and scholarship which are very premised on the availability of digitized corpora so you open digitized corpora and therefore open data open infrastructures um how do they sort of clash with our existing imagination around digital infrastructure for instance you know the archival imagination is still rooted in very Colonial contexts of administration governance Etc so how do we then look at new kinds of archives that have emerged right so which are open distributed networked collaborative um which derive very much from practices of community-led archiving for instance um this shift you know from archives being a repository space to interpretive space um being sort of particip patri and generative right so I think these are sort of changes in the ecosystem which also very much inform how we think about and how we unpack openness itself and therefore how we imagine um open research so um and of course you know questions of ownership access privacy rights uh these will also continue to evolve and uh something I think my colleague will speak about the next uh session in the next presentation um I'll also then talk briefly about um just moving on to the question of language right so um again um looking at questions of intersectionalities and this is you know coming from again recent work that we've done around um you know sort of a state of uh the internet's languages report that uh we had worked on closely with slective called who's knowledge um so what are sort of disparities in the development of M multilingual content on the internet as a result of its you know imbrication within and perpetuation of systemic inequalities um how are new forms of multilingual content mediated by the internet and disal Technologies what lies behind the content um then looking at this question of multimodality so the internet is still primarily Visual and textual but then what are other forms of multilingual content right so if you look at science if you look at um audio content if you look at um you know emojis um where are where is all of this on the internet what are sort of what is our sort of ecosystem of ownership and control sort of really how is it engaging with the diversity of content that is available right and finally coming to just rethinking our engagement with Open Access itself um is there a need for um wider and more nuanced sort of conceptu ual vocabulary around um Open Access itself right so drawing from legal discourse but also beyond that like for us I mean this was a constant question that came up I think in in our work um in the research projects as well so how do you translate the idea of Open Access across different languages um how do you even translate you just just the words Open Access or um questions coming from archiving and digitization right so how do you translate metadata provenance or any of these terms across U different languages so what sort of how does it move across different uh conceptual registers um of course a better awareness and understanding of ownership and regulation of platforms of policy reform that is taking place in these spaces definitely sort of go hand inand in terms of um thinking about um open research so I think I'll um I'll stop here uh but yeah looking forward to more questions and of course more thoughts in continuing this conversation thank you great s I'll hand straight over to anuba there is a question for you there that you can type an answer to or we'll pick up it up later if we have time but straight over to you anuba thanks Nick um hello everyone I'm anua and I work at the center for internet and Society um I'm a policy researcher and a lawyer by training and over the past couple of years I have been working on um various um initiatives to reform policy and law mostly in the copyright law domain uh to support access to knowledge um to basically support the mission of libraries um archives uh Educators researchers So to that end um of the past two years um CIS has been um a part of a group called The a2k Coalition and and the Coalition has been working extensively with um policy makers both at the national at the international level um with a view to reform copyright law to support the mission of um you know the public in interest institutions I mentioned earlier um we are primarily working um at with uh policy makers who are engaged in negotiations at the world intellectual property organization um on the agenda item right now uh at vipo are uh two um broad um um sort of uh items uh one relates to um a treaty that is being negotiated um for the benefit of broadcasting organizations and the second part relates to limitations and exceptions um within copyright law that would support the mission of um research libraries archives Educators museums um so um just setting the context straight and um today's presentation um will draw from the research and advocacy conducted by the members of this particular Coalition um and there are three pillars on which the Coalition is working um the objective is to really ad want a fair copyright system that um is based on well that respects Universal declaration human rights and the three pillars are education research and cultural heritage within my presentation today I'll be focusing on the text and data mining aspect of doing research um recognizing that it's a fairly modern method of doing research and how it is supported by copyright law um and uh all of my comments are um have been T and articulated by various members of the Coalition as well um so I invite you to um um visit everything that has been published by the members um on a website that um you know the Coalition has put together and I'll share the link to the website at the end of my presentation um so just to sort of summarize uh pull the problem together uh when it comes to copyright copyright poses issues to access dissemination of research as well as collaboration when it comes to doing research so it's not just about being able to read or view an article or data it's also about making copies um so that the article or the data can be processed or sharing copies of these items for private use um including research um copyright laws all over the world and um many powerful stakeholders in the system such as Publishers um often create an enforce restrictive conditions on such uses and this is the problem uh that has been recognized um by policy makers at the world intellectual property organization as well so it is clear that overly restrictive copyright laws impede research um hence we need to design a copyright law that is fit for research which would accommodate uh modern methodologies such as texting data mining um which requires technical uses of whole entire Works um often works that need to be exchanged across borders so just to give everyone a brief understanding of what limitations and exceptions within copyright law really are um in the area of intellectual property law the idea of property rights over knowledge Innovations intellectual Creations um has been balanced against the human right of free speech and expression um in specifically copyright law this right to use knowledge is embodied in legal Provisions known as limitations and exceptions they also go by the terms um Fair dealing and fair use different countries use different terms and and different styles of incorporating this idea in their legislations the problem we face today is that while the internet is global copyright exceptions stop at the border the research technique of text in data mining that has become essential today um which is all about using computational methods to analyze books images databases and other sources um it it is it is it has come to everyone's attention that a lot of copyright legislations do not necessarily support this specific research method um apart from this often the sources um used for text and data mining can be protected by copyright law as well so overall we find that copyright laws are silent on the protection of text and data mining style uses um and the existing research exceptions in the copyright law emerg to be in inadequate um Tom can you pull out the first slide please thank you so this is a slide um that shows the state of copyright exceptions well sorry research exceptions um in various countries today if you look at the countries that are highlighted as green these countries um as per the reading of their copyright legislation carry the most open research exception um by open uh I mean that the law supports all kinds of research uses and is available uh for all users as well between red and yellow um with yellow there might be some limitations on this particular right that is available to researchers and when we look at the countries highlighted red these countries either um these countries um either have a limitation a clear limitation on Research exception um or they might have no research exception um or they only support a quotation style right that is they do not allow the use of entire works for research purposes right so this is the particular issue uh as as as you know as articulated in legal language that uh the Coalition is trying to solve for um there are a couple of roots uh and suggestions that the Coalition has made um so if you look at the policy Solutions uh available um to us to solve this particular issue um we suggest that there are four things that may be explored um one is to request policy makers to think about enabling crossb uses of copyrighted materials for texting data mining um now if you look at uh the maricas treaty that has that was designed at the wo by policy makers for the you know benefit of visually impaired people uh that particular treaty enables crossb exchange of uh adapted works for the benefit of visually impaired people and it's something uh similar to that is what we suggest as well the second thing that policy makers can consider are setting International minimum standards for research so during the negotiations uh you know countries can reach an agreement on a set of international minimum standards for text and data mining research this would ensure that all countries permit TDM research and are aligned on the bare minimum standard as well um the third route that can be explored is developing guidance and soft laws on the right for research um this would help countries evaluate their options for reforming their own copyright laws to protect the right to research finally um nationally policy makers can amend their laws to EXP explicitly permit text in Data Mining and other kinds of research uses and um it should be ensured that the the the Clause is worded in a way that uh you know makes the exception most open and also to ensure that technicalities such as contractual override and technological measures used to protect words do not impede the freedoms enjoyed by this right so um well these are the policy Solutions proposed um within the a2k Coalition um well the members are pursuing various kinds of methods to um ensure uh incorporation of these Solutions um a couple of years back a few members had proposed uh treaty on educational and research activities this was a a civil society proposal uh the treaty would have required that all countries adopt research exceptions including for computational analysis um that apply to users of all protected materials by all users across borders the second method has been to uh create consensus within members of the at2k Coalition and publish statements and letters to policy makers on ongoing NE negotiations at wepo um apart from this um within the Coalition um there are academic members who um regularly um study the negotiations and the proposals being put forth and provide inputs and uh a few Civil Society members that work actively on ensuring that this research and policy work is uh sent across to policy makers and um you know and and there are there is extensive coordination that happens as well um so it's it's really um efforts happening on various fronts and being um you know put together um to sort of mostly affect change at negotiations happening at the world intellectual property organizations apart from that members also look for opportunities um policy Windows being being created in their own countries or at other international law Forum such as um if you know whenever there are free trade agreements being negotiated so that's that's how um we are doing things and Tom could you pull up the next slide please is that going to why oh there we go sorry yes so for everyone present here I would invite you to please take a look at this website um and if you are an institution or you belong to an institution that is interested in joining the Coalition um please let us know um um you you are most welcome to go through the mission and there is some research as well that has been published under the three pillars and I hope that um everyone present here um sort of uh you know finds this particular website useful and of course I look forward to hearing from everyone um on on on it thank you so much thanks very much anuba and uh certainly that Maps picked it already piqu my interest and I see Jerome's was interested in that as well so uh some really interesting food for thought there and a couple of questions for you if you have time but straight up to you Jody um so if you're quick you don't have to rush but if you're quick we time for a few a few questions but yeah um we've still got a fair amount of time for you so over to you I'm just sharing my screen oops can everyone see that yep that's fine great okay so I'm jod double I'm the digital content copyright manager at the University lead so I manage digitization digital preservation copyright and Licensing um for special Collections and also for the University um I also in a prior role managed the research repositories so my entire career at leads and other organizations have been around copyright open research open knowledge and Open Access so I'm very pleased to be part of this this panel and um I've been frantically scribbling notes and we'll be following up on other things too so what I'd like to say at the beginning is I've come to see copyright and IP as an opportunity and not a barrier um on the journey in my own career and trying to help others understand that too for uh a lot of Collections and also students and staff at institutions I think they hear the word copyright and instantly think that they can't do it when in fact um understanding the law and the context can actually help enable you to do this and help to push boundaries and so the other speakers on this panel and it's it's amazing to hear their work so what I'm going to do is talk through the Journey at leads of what we've been going through toward open research because uh in special Collections and galleries we don't necessarily use the word open research or open knowledge but in fact that is what we've been doing since the beginning so when I came to in 2009 um digitization had been undertaken prior through commercial providers or um small scale local digitization and and it was as many institutions did it was it was the easy things of things in the public domain or things that were very low risk and we took a stance to actually establish a studio and bring it all inhouse and what we did for the first couple of years was you know because the collections are extensive um will never be finished we we did all the items that we really thought were easy in the public domain like I said and then we started hitting collections that we needed to take a different approach to and since we were risk averse we decided to flip it and look at what welcome was doing and actually take a risk-managed approach because we wanted to open up the collections we saw there was a research need and we wanted to connect the collections globally so we uh established a risk management approach in 2015 that we're actually going to be reviewing and renewing again and because of that we generated three million images uh also inhouse and through Partnerships with internet archive through the um UK medical Heritage Library and then Co hit and we again had to Pivot and one of the things that came out of ID was that we realized that um access to Arts and Humanities material um was quite difficult so because of that the university generously funded a mass digitization scoping project so we started that in 2022 and the team was amazing they literally surveyed the entirety of special Collections and galleries collections in addition to the main collection to understand what the research potential was where were their copyright and gdpr and data protection issues uh where where were their pockets of content that we knew there was research potential globally but we actually there was no cataloging uh we didn't actually know the scale of it um and verifying what our catalog said against the reality and the stacks so that completed in July and we'll be publishing a report on that at some point when we finalize that and moving into actually active digitization and one of the things almost dropping the word mass digitization because I think that's sort of a barrier to a lot of collections too and calling it sustainable strategic digitization because that is in effect what it is mass digitization can sometimes throw up a barrier where somebody says oh are you done yet with all these collections globally we'll never be done there's always new content being created digitally um and also the capacity in the sector to do this yeah I'll be I'll be long retired and we won't even have scratched the surface some collections when they say what you're done it it's 3% and then something might be added and then also it drop down to two so that's one thing that came out of coid and just being very responsive to that and in terms of digitization and also the university uh when we were talking about infrastructure so I'm glad infrastructure was brought up in the prior talk in order to actually connect our collections globally we need open infrastructures so at leads there's the digital library infrastructure project that started and that is looking at our systems and how we can make the collections open how are they easily reusable how can we capitalize on all the preco experimentation that we were doing on collection in terms of transcription and wikip media and Wiki data and linked data in general we can't do this alone and if we do want to connect our Collections and make them openly accessible we need to capitalize on others so that's just a very high high level overview because I kind of want to get to the questions because that's where the really interesting part is and if anybody wants any of the report reports or any of our um risk management workflows just please get in contact with me and I also want to uh talk to the community in general so that we we build these resources for others to share so looking ahead so we have um sustainable strategic digitization and digital library infrastructure where we're looking at Open Standards we want to collect and connect our collections on Fair principles because they should be findable accessible interoperable and reusable and also standards based so we want to also build on the what happened during the coid period where we were experimenting and we were openly collaborating and we were also doing that prior to that but just making sure that we connect our collections globally we may have a part of a collection and another institution has letters or objects that unite it we can't do it alone um and cultural collections are distributed around the world and with this network and also other networks thinking about how do we work together um and how do we share as a network because that's that's the power of the community so leads just doing one thing alone doesn't mean it actually is holistically better so especially with risk management uh ideally globally people could be feeding into that and so that we can support each other and it also have a local context not everybody's going to have the same appetite for risk but if your institution sees that oh actually it was okay they have these safeguards around it this is what happened they can go to their senior managers and say look this institution is doing this here's a workflow and a strategy uh please support me in this area and and give it a go and uh hopefully the community can support you in that also so between all the organizations and Ken and uh Wikipedia I think we're in a in a good place coming out of coid to take a lot of this activity forward and uh hopefully what we release at leads others can build on also so I was just being quick so we can get to the questions that's great Jody thanks very much um we have got a few minutes for questions and there have been a few that's been been posted there's one for snea um that I think talks to some of the things that you were just talking to as well and I know SN has said that she she wants to answer that live so we'll come to that in a minute but I did just want to pick up first if I could on the question from chadia um about the re reliability and quality of of Wikipedia because I think that's a crucial point and I think it's a bit of misunderstanding about how it actually works as well I've certainly learned a lot around that and I know you've answered it a little Lucy um but just before I hand over to you I mean my my it's Wikipedia is only good as good as its contributors isn't it essentially and it's about the diversity of those that contributor base and I suppose the argument I'm making is you know that's why in my view universities need to engage more with the platform because they have the experts you Google anything where do you land you land on Wikipedia and we have a certain responsibility to make sure it's as accurate as possible and and as well cited as possible but yeah I'll hand over to you on that Luc yeah thanks Nick um I mean as I mentioned there are inbuilt mechanisms um there's a lot of work done by by Bots um on Wikipedia Wikipedia has been using Bots for 20 years um but also human moderators I mean there are I mentioned the hundreds of thousands of contributors but some people contribute by looking out for mistakes for vandalism for errors um correcting things um I mean I know just as a very uh novice editor really that um you know if I if I write something that isn't properly referenced someone will put me up on it and it'll be reverted or um you know I need I need to improve it so there are there are also quality assurance mechanisms and featured articles good article status but having said all of that I I would advise you with any with anything that you're reading whether it's on the Internet or you know in an actual newspaper or a nonfiction book you know check as I'm sure you do you know you need to look behind um to see where that's coming from so I think that it's really vital actually that Wikipedia is trying to um develop those information and medium literacy skills and not just saying here's all this great information um you know for me it is about that Hol holistic offer where um you know we're trying to build and develop the content trying to diversify the content and the contributors trying to increase as a movement trying to increase access around the world that's not so much something that with Community UK is doing but certainly trying to engage people at an early stage we're really Keen to start working more in schools um because you know people navigating the information ecosystem need to be able to question things at the same time as we are continually improving the content you know the reliability and so on oh great thank thank you um do please post any more questions we still have got a few minutes but just to come to this Anonymous attendee I'm not sure who that is perhaps reveal yourself in chat if you would like but um the question about shared digital infrastructure I mean that sort of touches on some of the things that you were talking about Jody um and I suppose I'd be just for my two penth is the fact that you know Wiki media is is a shared digital infrastructure but we need to be able to make sure that the materials that we're generating whether it's research outputs research papers special collections is openly licensed that's the other question in terms of making sure stuff's open your license so that it can then be included on what is already a scalable infrastructure and actually I've spent a lot of time talking to Martin about the fact that you know you might build something for a project that has to be maintained um and then it'll die in you know Jody and I both have that experience and in fact the scalable Global infrastructure that Wikipedia Commons uh provides does actually wi make Commons Oria in general but yeah I don't know um if you'd like to speak to that as well s if you're still there yeah right I'm I'm here yeah absolutely I think um just just sort of to reiterate some of the things that uh Lucy mentioned as well right and J was speaking about I think just scalability is definitely one thing and um you know um when I was thinking about what you just mentioned Nick about um Wikipedia or Wikipedia projects being you know essentially a form of shared open Digital infrastructure and a knowledge infrastructure in that right um also the sort of um there is a certain resistance to engage with it from a pedagogic academic perspective right so I think that uh already poses a kind of significant uh Challenge and I think we do see that with other kinds of open Digital infrastructures as well you know just in terms of uh how much do we engage with um Open Access platforms um in the course of um say classroom education um so I think that definitely poses a challenge in terms of uh developing and scaling up um digital infrastructures the other thing is digital pedagogy um you know what are sort of pedagogic strategies that encourage us to use um you know shared research data how can you sort of optimize our use of uh research data that is available on you know various Open Access knowledge platforms I think that's another um sort of challenge um within the higher education space I think so much of our thinking around open research is still very much structured by existing the existing publishing ecosystem right I see that there's another question there as well um you know uh just just how will sort of um an increased investment in uh open licensing uh change the way that you know we think about management of um you know of research data as such um so I think that's that's a large question and there's there's so much more that needs to go into you know thinking about that I think just the insisting publishing um ecosystem um a sort of consistent challenge has also been publishing for instance in Indian languages right there are very little like the resources that we have to be able to produce more content academic content in Indian languages publishing in Indian languages for instance right it's being done in very specific spaces um so when you think about this and uh we're again thinking largely about textual data about um data of a certain kind um if we think about um you know just the affordances of the internet and the kind of diversity of data that that is now possible Right with with the internet so even if you're looking that within a higher education space um what kind of shared infrastructure can actually account for this kind of multimodality can facilitate sharing can facilitate collaboration and can facilitate thinking about a form of say critical digital pedagogy that you know that really leverages these various affordances right so I think that for me forms like a significant challenge when we're thinking about infrastructure it's it's a challenge and an opportunity I mean I I get very excited thinking about what all can be done um there are limitations but I think thinking about it together definitely sort of helps in addressing some of those thanks n i mean obviously we could talk about this for a lot longer I'll just come to you finally Jody you know any thoughts on that you did mention our digital inform infrastructure transformation project here at leads have you got any additional thoughts just before we wrap up on the infrastructure question no I just I think we have a quite an exciting period coming up where we are looking at link data and and trying to connect everything and yeah connecting it up through pids permanent identifiers and triple if platforms that's that's definitely the future and I I am looking forward to what happens with AI and and what we can do with our collections because I know it's it's causing a lot of fear in a lot of communities but actually it's it's been around a while with other things and transcription it's it's it's managing that fear versus what what you can do so I was just answering the question about um Creative Commons licenses say yeah well that I mean that just on that point because that is a good I don't know if anybody I'm sure Lucy will be and others maybe with the wiki uh women in red project which is trying to improve gender representation on on Wikipedia um and there's a there's a Twitter X um account that's always asking for images of scientists female scientists because they're all copyright University of such and such you know so even something as basic as that just getting an you know a picture of a scientist that's available Open Access can be difficult because it's not openly licensed so that is an issue but obviously we've only just scratched the surface but we have just passed the hour so thank you for everybody for coming and contributing thanks to our speakers we will be publicizing uh more Ken sessions in the next couple of days and love to welcome you again to Future sessions and spread the word please do sign the Declaration um find the Declaration I'll just post the link again there if you haven't already done so um you know this it is just you know there's no commitment well if you on the beh of of an organization um you know if you can get your organization to commit to some of the principles of the Declaration but as IND individual you can sign up to it as well um and uh yeah thank you for coming and please stay in touch get in touch with us again and uh we'll certainly be following up won't we Jodie um with our colleagues from India and working more with Wikipedia so thanks everybody for coming and uh speak to you again soon thank you goodbye
Knowledge Equity Network
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Wives, Be A Pillar Of Support To Your Husbands!
[Music] that's why some sister got to make sure they in the spirit cuz your lord is not going to be always up the a like that tomorrow he can be at the low St it's up to you now to what to uh to uh how you call it to go to the Lord and pray ask the Lord for mercy on your on your husband household I'm telling you because look look at uh what's his name Toby he he went blind his wife wasn't tripping the wife went to find women work he wife want to help him out that's why you got to be as a sister you can't be clueless and don't know what's going on we are War so you got to know what's going on you have to have that sense of urgency
IUIC Chicago
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2024-03-05
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0s6dZPk-8g
HER MAJESTY'S TRICK! Queen's ADMIRABLE TACTIC To SATIRICAL Harry and Meghan
[Music] her majesty's trick the queen has an admirable tactic in handling harry and megan hello and a very warm welcome back to the sussex daily news channel her majesty the queen had invited megan and harry to attend her jubilee celebrations it has been said that the queen killed the couple with kindness the gracious queen is strong and wise and she knows exactly how to handle megan and harry there are no flies on the queen the 96 year old reigning monarch has mobility issues but she has shown that she will never be a pushover she has the unprecedented achievement of having reigned for 70 years she is the regal champion of the world nobody must mess with her majesty the queen conducts business behind closed doors but when we do get to see a rare glimpse of her now she is seen as always clutching her handbag for the world to see it is often wondered what does she put in her handbag no it is not a sandwich possibly more like a brick she may need it for those unforeseen emergencies no one should ever attempt to sumo wrestle with the queen she looks very grand with her walking cane one should never attempt to upset the queen she would sort you out immediately she could even use you as a footstool when she needs to get onto one of her prized horses the queen should never be underestimated she has so much patience and experience she has many strategies and tactics people are fools if they think they can underestimate the 96 year old her mind is still as sharp as ever people who have had first-hand experiences with the queen know that she does not suffer fools gladly we all know that the sussex duo received an icy reception at the trooping of the color the couple seemed trapped in that reception room at the palace but luckily no harsh words were spoken and there was no drama they were bored to tears by the duke of kent who trapped them by the window it seems he wanted to punish the couple by going on and on about the boring story of how he met his wife on an army base megan was obviously desperate to get away from this conversation and so she distracted herself by socializing with the children and telling them to shut up it was a terrible shame that her recording device was not able to pick up on any gossip all she had instead was drivel that she got from the duke what a shame that nothing was usable for netflix harry had looked on in disbelief he was desperate to get away perhaps a quick run for the bathrooms the rest of what happened is well known it was all a bit of a fiasco at saint paul's with a car crash on the steps and of course those ghastly audible boos it was brilliant how everything was organized to keep the couple away from the senior royals it was also impressive that all the royals managed to avoid the couple this meant that poor megan was unable to get anything of importance recorded with her mic one wonders if everybody was careful when they were in the room overlooking the trooping of the colour because the couple could have been trying to record there too i wasn't in the least bit surprised to hear that megan had had a recording device i wasn't surprised either with the rolling down of the window when they tried to get close to the photographers for a picture megan and harry were not going to the jubilee to celebrate the queen's wonderful achievement of 70 years on the throne they were going because netflix had demanded it i was impressed to see how efficiently the royal family had shut this couple down it truly was so beautiful to see it came as such a relief to hear that they would not be at any other events with the couple gone we could continue watching the wonderful festivities in peace and the royal family could finally relax it is known that the couple left in haste even before the jubilee weekend had come to an end they were like thieves in the night and they disappeared into the dark and have not been seen again in public since the lyrics of an elton john song come to mind oh and i can see the heckles waving goodbye lord it looks like heckles must be the tears of joy in my eyes oh god it looks like huckles it must be the clouds in my eyes it must have taken a great deal of work in order to coordinate everything over the jubilee celebrations week to ensure that harry and megan's seclusion was carried off in an effortless way everything had worked out perfectly perhaps it was because of the great cooperation between the royal protection group of the metropolitan police the mi5 and the royal family themselves with her majesty the queen leading all the way from the minute the couple had been picked up at farnborough to the moment they left they had been tracked observed and shepherded everything had worked according to the wishes of her majesty but harry and megan did disobey her majesty on several counts they had been provided with an armored vehicle with special bulletproof windows to ensure their safety which was a primary concern of harry's but on the way to the trooping of the color megan rolled her window down and waved at the crowds megan had put herself and harry at risk just by trying to gain attention this is such hypocrisy harry and megan had both made themselves visible through an open window of the house that was overlooking the horse guards parade but princess anne's grandchildren were also crammed close to the window because they were trying to see the parade harry and megan should have just left these children alone what a cheek it was that they tried to get these children to be quiet so what if the children had been making a noise and having fun it was their special day too but as we all know now harry and megan do not care about anybody other than themselves and you what do you think about this couple please let me know what your opinion is in the comments section below and we can talk about this family if you find that my video is interesting please like it and share it with anyone who you feel may enjoy it too do not miss any new updates from the sussex daily news team by subscribing to our channel now thank you for watching good night and see you tomorrow
Sussex Daily News
UC5cqigDKADkWfilRhR0DLZA
2022-06-23
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
1,142
6,108
Fp5PR057-3g
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fp5PR057-3g
BAD GAME SUNDAY! Presents Aliens: Colonial Marines | S02EP06
hello everybody my name is Sam Kay and welcome back to back games sunday presents aliens colonial marines I think this episode is probably gonna be a little bit longer than last one considering that the last one I actually get to the end of level getting a sitrep Sulaco actual this is winner come in over the locker wax well do you read me goddammit actual right sir we're at the bridge just got here too late son don't bother twirl and all that it's over when L evacuating the Sulaco as well ok bring a 6'5 only for you my gun damn it son don't make us wait for you actually what so we're gonna wait for yes but don't make us wait for you Kilis God who wrote the dialogue to this game a six-year-old like [ __ ] oh god why did I turn sideways whenever I didn't fall over that's the true question how are you still alive why is the ship turning sideways and we're not falling over oh no oh god it's sucking me in oh it's not actually doing that it's just jam I might actually be stuck they start Chuck boring yes that's the beauty of terrible game design you can actually get stuck on points haha it's not funny how are you such a bad voice actor I'm thank you back if every single time I have to restart from that point I'm asking different questions how's that body moving without actually having an actual physics didn't Harry a [ __ ] like Bigfoot like big fat hairy or what it's jet this is a terrible game mechanic now i can make dins in the door that's that's awesome alright guys I'll be right back whenever I get this [ __ ] [ __ ] okay guys i'm back i just had to throw a [ __ ] grenade at it yeah cuz that would totally work in my life anyway let's continue this shitty get she game oh oh no we used to live there we're trying to promote actual backstory but we do shitty job at it oh my god it's so sad to see a shitty backstory that oh hello sexy you're mine yeah wait Oh more thank you Oh armor eat that um okay get that [ __ ] door open always definitely on fire so it's good for being a dick hahaha Oh Oh Eddie like that ass hmm dad Scott oh that sucked hmm get it let me go get my flamethrower there we go shotgun listen fire for you just let them explode explode already I need to get that there we go no oh not me I things funny whenever glass breaks from fire because a heat is used to make glass so stop shooting me won't you shoot at them hey [ __ ] somebody shoot that I is it dig eat that Oh another one shut up oh that was that was oh that was very anticlimactic surface winter do you ever read on the structural integrity of the elevators are unaware the damages are known would not advise yeah would not advise we still go in who's the genius that debt wrote the script 26 year old we praying for this is Daily News universe everything goes wrong in aliens universe oh well okay that's awfully convenient no I'm not go that way and what the [ __ ] am i doing in water Rondon hostels all right now well I'm tracking a [ __ ] laser cutter oh thank you for shooting me as I open up the door you should not have done that sir Oh guru groovy we have a we have aliens now can you stop shooting me oh [ __ ] I used to why you're on fire right Oh I'll take that and that that's almost dead so I'm not going to be using that much longer get out of here damn his hands are pushy OOP Oh 50 50 50 50 movie shut the box heard the automatic CeeLo winter one of my past Roger that it's my pistol where's the bypass it I don't know why I just did that okay there's nobody oh this is totally perfect place to get shot at the camera it's making me motion sick excuse me while I go puke after having that motion sickness I'm not sure how long would you keep the PMC's out of our ship once those mercenaries put us over the ship yeah I'm cooler than you guys I jumped down two things instead of one yes I hear that it looks it looks like a xenomorph play yes I totally heard it because I saw it Oh God Oh No oh hi doo doo doo doo doo holly [ __ ] ah the oh my god it's not like everything else around here is breaking and crashing and exploding now no that's totally that's what happened what's not that that's totally not what's happening right now oh oh no more terrible backstory I feel so bad hi fun chatting I could let them just deal to Xenomorphs all by themselves you know it just because I'm lazy oh but she had to start shooting then she got all of that AI get out of here can't just say I love how the pistols the least advanced weapon in this game like the shotgun as is cool little under like it's some sort of show the rifle sound awesome because they're to rip straight out of the actual aliens moving i just got teleported for i was getting help help i'm getting scrolled um yeah there's rip straight out the actual aleene's movie but this pistol it's just a pistol that's it um I'm guessing I get on this okay I don't get on that oh those door over there oh there's something right there I hope I don't want to go to the door first of course that door doesn't is not accessible all right let's go here you have something weird on your face bro just let me know oh I got blown up dad sucks [ __ ] on top of them the doors have an override went to your arm the emergency on over door but [ __ ] yeah he'll-he'll so if you get oh ok use this week guy so I'm guessing I run up here enough and do something yep Oh oh he said but why would I expect anything more [ __ ] I'd to go the crane [ __ ] some other lazy ass you on the crane Oh naturally I don't get to operate the crane no no I just sit by in a pod [ __ ] is that crane hey dumbass drop it there Oh drop drop in oh yeah that lock 30 FPS though I can tell us walk 30 FPS because it looks like [ __ ] by the way game developers action games should never have a locked frame rate of 30 FPS not even in the cut seats never ever actually games look like crap at 30fps some games look okay 30 FPS but Action Teams definitely died oh that was a short mission oh okay oh I see how it's going to be okay so think everybody so much for watching as usual if you like this video make sure you get a big thumbs up you want to see more make sure to subscribe check out all the awesome games I've played and i'll see you all in the next video bye bye you
Sam KIA
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2015-08-09
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
1,248
6,388
OY9L_tpRhRM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OY9L_tpRhRM
231. True Christmas Card
hydro Japan says today I'll show you how I made this cut or make this cultures and dyes photonic which I got in peterborough air last month these are the sea not these ones just these top ones these are a tonic die what you got and I'll be using them I've already cut it all out I've got all the bits here that I've cut out already so we'll be using them I'll also be using the stumps at night in Bethlehem and I'm just using it for the sentiments blessed said the Christmas wishes and the set this sentiment wish in your season I'll draw it inside to write this card you'll need a card base of eight and a quarter by five and seven eighths scored at 4:01 eight fold it in half the burnish which we've already done a piece of black at five five eighths by three and seven eighths a piece of whites up five and a half by three and three-quarters lies a bit squashed and another piece of white at five and five eighths by three seven eighths this is for the inside which I've already stamped so that will go inside and we're going to stamp on here I've already done the sentiment I did it on this but I don't know if I'm going to use it I might just go with a cut out like that so we'll stamp the sentiment first I'm gonna put this on let's see what I like Oh scissors are uh sticky oh I know what that's wrong I'm making a three-foot Christmas tree out of paper and card else if I can get a picture I'll show you my brother-in-law's got it at the moment he's sticking you see that tree you stuck a wooden dowel in doubt right through the middle of it to keep it straight and stable I've just got to decorate it and I'm cutting out snowflakes to put on it it's from a church in the town my sister lives in I run in a Christmas tree festival and because my sister and I wanna run a paper crafts group in the town we decided to enter it with paper crafting things trees and stuff so that's the tree I've made you never know it might get judged and taught to go away not come back right what was I doing this right for this we need to mark it this is the right one no where's me little bit God got it I just want to mark this the middle top and bottom because I'm going to be put in this stable on there like that and I need to mark it with a pencil just to so I know where to sponge so I don't want sponging in the blue sponge in in the inside I want that to be yellow so what I'm going to do is do the yellow first so with so sup lon it's a scrub paper I am going to just sponge yellow also saffron and between this space don't matter if I go over the edge just go to my cake below only outside of the I was gonna say shed then well it's a no stable I do nicely and then with my night baby I'm just gonna run the edges make it darker yeah and that will go on there like that I sure rub out the pencil mops yes I like that so clean that up afterwards all right and get my rubber I don't think I'll get these marks off because I ain't on top of them you won't see them with the black now we're going to stick that's all like that and that will be trite this I've got one of them stop us from gainer just lovely just sent me a few things in the post like she always does such a generous caring woman Cheers all right place this down like that preferably even that's it I think before going to further make the card up we want to stick it a car together just inside him over here all right now then the Sheep of the Lambs and whatever you want to call them will be glued flat well the pity they didn't put two of these dice and you know the other one facing the other way modulus was turned it round right Mary and Joseph were on dimensionals and so is the manger let's put Mary down first and Joseph and then the manger and I've also got the star that goes on the top of the barn stable or shatters I wanna keep Colin all right now we're going to punch up some silver stars I don't want too many but I don't want to be punching out loads of bits either so we've got finish up some small ones not one do it's really a neat slide just spot a glue Oh Jonathan list operon my select eats forever right that how did I put this on there it went so this is too long obviously waste of a star try this one oh no that's way too long no I have this one but I'm gonna make it a little bit - no keep forgetting I've got this little trimmer that we got in Peterborough none lucky dip bag no we got a lucky dip back and it was 20 pound for the back and what was inside well well worth it we've got this a tote bag everything Mary buy everything Mary lovely flower tote bag a card kit so when you know when they make cards and they use stitching I've got a machine that does that I was a horse down set I've been got it as I put it away some tonic dies not tonic oh my god what's the blue light company called catalase dyes I should really get it all out and show you what we've got so please I've put it all away in this all in different places I need to go looking for all right that is my card for today the skies and less busy because I haven't put any germs on I don't want gems all that because I put the silver stars on it so what do you think I think it could do with germs on it actually looking in the camera this looks bit bare where this looks like more stars let me get my jam box I need out anyway for more cards notes put some gems on good start but it'll upside-down and expect it to stick oh yeah don't be like that card if you do this thumbs up if you like to see more of my cards please subscribe and if you press the bell icon you'll be notified of any more cards I upload which is usually a Monday Wednesday or Friday like a saves thanks for visiting and I hope to see you again sir
Georgie Burns
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2019-11-11
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
1,179
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ga9oD1txEQI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ga9oD1txEQI
CPSC 121 2013W2 Sample Final Exam Questions: #13
welcome to problem 13 of the computer science 121 2013 winter to practice final exam so this is a DFA implementation problem but as we noted when we went through this in the review initially in the intro to this sequence most this is actually not DFA implementation most this looks like pretty straightforward questions about this DFA here so I'm actually not going to do the DFA implementation problem later on I'm not gonna do it at all because I actually already did a DFA implementation problem if you look back at the lab circuit problem in order to solve the last part of that I wrote a new DFA and I implemented that DFA so I'm just gonna briefly go through the outlines of how that implementation would work and I'll leave the rest of that to you as it's no different from what I've already shown here as shown up above that is so what state will this DFA be in after processing the string 1 1 0 1 1 well this this DFA obviously takes ones and zeros as input the states are just numbered I guess so that we can write down what the state is or maybe they mean something but we're not really gonna know we've got the start state over here so we'll just trace this here I'll use green to trace this so we're gonna start in the start state as we usually would and then we're gonna take in the string 1 1 0 1 1 so let's just take those step by step so 1 takes us here 1 and we go around the circle here back to the same spot 0 takes us here 1 takes us here and 1 leaves us here so we'll be in state ok would this DFA still be legal if we change state 0 to be an accepting state well let's go ahead and sketch what that would look like so I'll erase these notes that we made here and sketch in an extra circle here to make this an accepting state and would that be legal sure it would just accept the empty string now and before rejected the empty string so it wouldn't be the same DFA but it would certainly be legal so that's no problem yes let's see if we can get that next question on screen without losing the whole DFA would this DFA still be legal if we eliminated the arc from State v to itself so that's that's this arc up here from state v to itself so we'd erase that'd be a little hard for me to erase that but I can certainly scribble over it here well it's a question of what makes a DFA legal it's got to have an input language with at least one letter in it but it still does have that input language ones and zeros it's got to have a set of states and that state set of states has to have at least one state in it because we need a start state but we've got that it's gotta have a start state we have a start state so we've got most of the things we need but we also need a transition function and the transition function has to be a function so that is for every state and every input it's gotta have an output and now we have a state state v where for both inputs for 0 and for 1 we don't have an output we only need one of those for it not to be legal and both of those well because it doesn't make it anymore not legal but it's definitely not legal so the answer is no this t if it would not be legal if we eliminate that arc so like I said there just has to be one state input combination for which there's no arc for it not to be legal but there's actually two so it's not legal for two reasons okay now implement this DFA is a circuit and what I said before is I'm not going to but what I am gonna do is kind of do the bare-bones of how I would implement this as a circuit so the first thing is you've got to lay out enough D flip-flops to store the states well there's six states here state 0 1 2 3 4 and 5 so how many bits do we need to represent six different values and the answer is we need 3 bits 2 to the 3rd is 8 we don't have 8 states we've got 6 but we have too many for just 2 bits 2 bits would only give us 4 states so you're gonna need 3 bits you're gonna have certain patterns that are never going to come up you'll never get into state 6 you'll never get into state 7 so when you draw your multiplexers your 3 bit multiplexers they don't have to have input lines for states 6 & 7 okay so then you're gonna dry out three D flip-flops you're going to wire them to the clock you're going to wire their outputs their Q values to the Select lines of the multiplexers and then you're just gonna figure out for each state you know for example state 3 you'll have a wire into each of the 3 multiplexers for state 3 it'll be the fourth wire down right because you'll have your multiplexer here and the top wire will be 0 and then 1 2 3 so this wire right here will be the one that you're concerned about when you happen to be thinking of state 3 and you'll just figure out in state 3 if I get a 0 I'm gonna go to this state which in binary is 1 0 1 and if I get a 1 I'm gonna go to this state 0 1 1 so what I can say is the rightmost bit my rightmost D flip-flop or maybe my bottom in my diagram depending on how I draw it that's always going to be a 1 and my middle bit is gonna be the same as the input and my leftmost bit is going to be the negation of the input so if this were the the multiplexer for the middle bit then I would just feed input into it and if this were the multiplexer for the leftmost bit I'd feed the negation of input into it and if this were the multiplexer for the rightmost bit then I would just feed a constant one into it and so now I've solved one of the bits for all three multiplexers sort one of the states for all three multiplexers I'm just gonna do the same thing for all six states and once I've wired that thing up and connected it to all the appropriate places I've got my DFA I should go ahead and have an accepting state too so I'm gonna need to say that the only time that I accept is when a the leftmost bit that is of my state so maybe I'm gonna call this as 0 s1 s2 so when as 0 is true and s1 is false and s2 is true I'm just gonna add those together and that'll be my output my accept state if you like and where will these come from well they'll come from my 3 DFAS they're the Q outputs of my 3 DFAS so at a really high level then that is how we design the DFA but in detail that's going to be left as an exercise so this is scratch Part D and party left as exercise don't write that on your exam either unless you have a smiley face and even if you do have a smiley face don't expect to get marks okay
Steven Wolfman
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2014-04-07
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
1,326
6,388
Ps7SpePSBH4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ps7SpePSBH4
The Fake News Conundrum
long freaking day right what are you wearing there buddy can I should I ask I read an article on the internet that says that if you wear a trench coat and a hat people will be automatically attracted to you and this is exciting because I have like no friends so it means that I have a lot of friends and I know that it's true because I read it on the Internet yeah I don't think he knows what the Internet is no it's not freaking fake it's on the internet it can't possibly be fake this is information I found on the Internet it has to be true what are the validation could you get it's fake I was told it's why
Oocca_Truth
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2018-03-07
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
125
611
XYpFnn3vbiY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XYpFnn3vbiY
Student Perspectives on Equitable and Inclusive Teaching at AU
foreign [Music] at the end of a long week of programming if you've been coming to some of our other events so we really appreciate you joining us um to hear from our Ctrl student Partners so I'll be joined today by Reba Kamaya Allison and Nathaniel who will introduce themselves as it comes time for them to share their work as well as my colleague Gavin Fromme who Allah introduce themselves I love the I love the accent you always put on it's hi my name is Gavin from me but uh I guess you can call me Kevin from a um and I am a graduate student at um Au in the history department but I've been working at Ctrl as a graduate assistant for about four or five years now um with the teaching and learning team and it has been my great pleasure to uh have joined Hannah and the student Partners on this uh pilot version of our student partners program um the student partners that we've had working with us these past few months have done an amazing job of coming together and developing these projects that we are very excited to share with you today um Hannah would you be so kind as to proceed to the next slide so as a form of Welcome we'd like you to post in the chat um what do you hope to gain from hearing student perspectives what brought you here what do you what is it that interests you about a student perspectives as uh as an instructor So Adam it seems is looking forward to gleaning some ideas about how to become a better teacher for students and I think that sentiment is echoed oh now they're coming in fast um yeah it seems a lot of people are interested in becoming uh better instructors for their students um Donna is interested in hearing Stu stories from students um shed wants students to know they care about their input that's a great uh incentive I like that um a lot of uh wanting to hear student perspectives to improve teaching um Brenda providing students what they need and want so Laura says to learn about Equity diversity especially from how students perceive the issues so a lot of a lot of similar sentiments uh going around in the chat a lot of people are interested in getting the student perspective on on teaching and learning so that they can improve their own teaching practices and better serve the needs of students which I think you're in the right place this is going to be a recurring theme throughout much of the presentations today so Hannah if you'd be so kind is to go to the next slide sure and before I do that I did oh yeah I'm going to highlight one comment I noticed I think from Alyssa this idea of we talk a lot at Ctrl about the importance of getting feedback from the students in your courses while you're working with them while you're teaching them but then also this there's a value in hearing from students who are not in your courses and they might be more likely to share openly and honestly and um certainly these student partners are here to um share some open and honest feedback that you might not hear from students who are thinking about you grading them at the end of the semester so absolutely um so with that in mind I'll pass back to Gavin for session guidelines absolutely so for our session today um we'd like you to add questions and ideas into the chat after each presenter there will be time for a brief q a um and we would like you to agree hopefully to be respectful to honor each other and our differences be open-minded we invite rather than dismiss different perspectives engaged we actively participate in a way that works for us growth minded uh growth oriented I should say we seek to learn new ideas not just confirm and active be an active listener we listen to understand and not just to respond so please uh you know uphold those guidelines and you know consider those as a solid guidelines for your course or for for good conversations in general I'd say um and I I will note too that these guidelines um are a I guess a simplified version of the guidelines that when Kamaya Ali knee and Rebo were in my class last fall um that the class came up with as a class community so they're directly as a result of a conversation with those students cooperatively created um so now for the learning outcomes by the end of the session you will be able to identify various challenges and and barriers to equity present at AU you'll be able to apply specific student recommended strategies to improve your teaching as many of you were looking to do and you will be able to reflect on student perspectives or excuse me perceptions of how to create more inclusive and effective teaching and learning environments at AU all of these student uh projects are different from one another in terms of the specific methodologies or the goals but ultimately I think you'll find that a lot of them achieve similar ends in terms of promoting a more respectful environment at AU and a more Equitable learning experience um for today's agenda um Hannah will be providing an overview of the student partners program and uh entered an introduction to the specific student Partners um with all of that will be Allison uh who will be increasing uh inclusivity within stem classes um then Nate will be going into varying means of participation to support all Learners and uh finally Ali and Reba excuse me Ali Kamaya and Reba will be presenting on their project enhancing the education the educator student Dynamic at AU um so with that Hannah would you be so kind as to provide a bit of background about the student partners program sure yeah I just want to go over a very brief context um before we jump into what you're all here for and hear from the students but as Gavin mentioned on the title slide this is a new Initiative for Ctrl um and these students help to Pilot this program as I mentioned they all were in class with me in the fall and we're very um you know willing to kind of engage in this relatively unknown um process in that we we built this program together essentially and now in the fall we'll be bringing in new student Partners from across campus and we'll be doing that continuously so the goals we have for the program are that the student Partners will gain professional skills and Leadership experience increase self-efficacy confidence and employability develop awareness as Learners and generate unique contributions that will benefit The Wider Au Community which may include written resources as all these students have put together and we'll share links to those at the end of the session as well as putting on events like this one um and in line with that ideally instructors staff and administrators will critically reflect on diversities and perspective and personal experiences among students at AU reconceptualized learning and teaching as a collaborative practice in which students insights are valued and applied and then demonstrate transform thinking about teaching by applying students viewpoints and perspectives so I think these goals are aligned with what you all shared in the chat as why you're here so that was great to see um and some more context just to give you an idea of what we all did together as a group um and how this program has functioned and will function going forward so um starting in the beginning of last semester these students work directly with uh the teaching and learning team with Gavin and I and our colleagues to bring their voice in perspective into the conversation about teaching and learning at AU so that looked like a few different things we'd met regularly to talk about topics that were coming up um so for instance what does equity mean to us or how can instructors increase participation what impacts motivation some more specific stuff as the semester unfolded um and that really informed all the programming we were doing at Ctrl and the content we included in some of our workshops and then all these students what they're sharing here with you today is simultaneously worked on their own individual projects based on their interests their passions and what they saw as a need for this campus so with that we'll get started on them sharing these individual projects as the rest of the session will be dedicated to that and as Gavin said each student or each project because kimai and Rebo work collaboratively uh will be presented and then there will be q a after each presenter um so feel free to add thoughts in the chat as you're going um and then we'll open up before once they're done sharing all right Allie hi everyone my name is Ali Sattler my project address increasing inclusivity within stem classrooms and I am majoring in math and secondary education when I was brainstorming potential projects for me to pursue this semester I was immediately drawn to the prevalence of inequities existing throughout stem education due to my underlying interest in pursuing a career in math and education although the topic of inequities existing within stem education is quite vast I decided to focus on three main categories being lectures course resources and assessment with each of these subsections in mind which I will go into more detail within the following slides it becomes clear that there are numerous inequities that continue to persist within some education which I'm hoping to address in combat in my presentation so Hannah could you please move to the next slide so um here's part of the data that I collected which was um predominantly in the form of interviews and I made this infographic which you can see on your screen um so in order to learn more about the inequities that exist within stem education I interviewed some of my peers within various stem Fields as well as read the book stem theme make Dream by Chris emden which addresses many of the inequities that I had noticed prior to these interviews I created an infographic with the same categories that I previously mentioned lectures course resources and assessment in which I present the challenges and solutions within each topic in interviewing my peers I explained the rationale behind my project showed my infographic and asked about their personal experiences in stem courses at AU in doing so these interviews both validated my personal experiences as many of them aligned with my own experiences as well as provided me with insights on experiences outside of my own next slide please okay so more into the data that I collected and mainly with the challenges side of my project um the general inequities that both my interviewees and I noticed were the lecture-centered nature of stem courses the singular um the use of a singular expensive Source oftentimes being a textbook and test being the sole form of assessment oftentimes within stem courses classes are lecture dominant which typically provides little opportunity for students to participate within the subtopic of course resources stem courses often require a singular bulky pricey textbook further such courses are neglecting the addition of a free or reduced option for students to make use of as well as neglecting to include diverse perspectives in contrast with Humanities courses which typically provide numerous supplemental sources focusing on intersectional lenses some courses more often than not omit such diverse materials finally in terms of assessment some courses typically focus on exams which often make up the majority of one's final grade however this becomes a challenge for many students as not all students are good task takers as well as tests becoming a major stressor for students since exams are making up such a substantial portion of one's grade additionally in contrast with Humanities courses a participation grade is often included in the makeup of students final grades which tends to be emitted in stem courses as well next slide please so in order to combat these challenges existing within stem courses there are some key takeaways and solutions that I considered through analyzing both my peers experiences as well as my own in terms of some courses often being lecture dominated the value of Hands-On experiences within the classroom becomes evident whether it be labs and science or in-class practice and math it is important for students to practice the skills they are learning in class while also feeling supported by the professor in addition the lecture dominance of stem courses often causes students to feel as though their voice is not valued that their participation does not matter or that if they ask a question their Professor may think that they are unintelligent with these fears that many students have it becomes increasingly important for professors to set the stage at the beginning of the semester making students feel comfortable participating and asking questions as well as providing more opportunities for students to participate in class whether it be through students explaining a technique to the class or students working in small groups it is important to provide interactive aspects throughout lecture to not only engage students but to also Aid in students comprehension so then in terms of course resources it is important to implement free or reduced course material options as well as represent a variety of perspectives in terms of incorporating free or reduce options some courses can become much more accessible for students if professors make a conscious effort to find resources that are either free or reduced in price as I previously mentioned the lack of diverse perspectives represent in some course resources it becomes increasingly important to implement perspectives of those coming from various communities and backgrounds despite the renowned theorists being substantial contributors to various stem Fields most of these acclaimed theorists are old white men which causes stem subjects to become increasingly exclusive by implementing diverse course resources students are able to see themselves represented within the course materials and thus feel more motivated and capable of being successful in the Gibbon domain and then lastly in terms of assessment a key way to combat the test centeredness of stem courses is to integrate multiple means of assessment and encourage participation as exams are typically a large stressor for students it becomes clear that the use of a singular assessment tool may not always be effective for all students in order to best meet the needs of all students professors can incorporate multiple means of assessment whether that be including projects graded homeworks or smaller quizzes finally to encourage participation it can be effective to incorporate a participation grade into students final grades which will not only serve as an incentive to participate but also cushion students grades and then next slide please so then in terms of like my personal thoughts and takeaways for myself I have truly valued my experience this semester working with Ctrl and being able to create this project with the creation of this project I've gained a greater understanding into the unique challenges that stem students face and further by completing interviews with my peers I was able to both validate my own experiences as well as gain insights into other stem domains that I am not as familiar with however outside of my new understanding stemming directly from this project I have gained a greater sense of agency and urgency particularly in terms of my passion for addressing these systemic inequities within stem education further the work that I have done um has not has also served as a source of self-empowerment since I've been able to research what interests me and have the capability to promote change on campus and Beyond additionally this work has also inspired me to be a better educator and figure out what kind of educator I hope to be and that being said I truly appreciate this opportunity and being able to present my project to you all today so please feel free to ask any questions you may have or learn more about my project on the Ctrl website thank you thank you Allen well um now we'd like to invite you the audience to ask Ali any questions you might have about her project or experience as a student partner and you know to get you started I'll point out that you should please raise your hand use be using the raise hand function and or put questions in the chat um and I'll be the first to ask a question Ally um what did you enjoy about this work and how did thing and how did doing this work inspired you um well I really enjoy this work for many reasons I I really enjoyed our weekly meetings because they kind of um made me think a little bit more about the practices that I was seeing in classes and kind of think about like how that affects different students and just creates different experiences for students um and I think that this work in general just has inspired me to want to make education and specifically stem education more Equitable and especially for someone who hopes to be um a math teacher I really hope to make my math course as inclusive and Equitable as possible all right uh thank you that that sounds like a noble goal we have a question in the chat um Donna asks did you find any Styles or specific instructors in the math stat Department that you would recommend as ideal models um well this is um pretty fresh in my mind and she actually is on the call today um but I had Professor schiffman this past semester um for differential equations and something that I really enjoyed was how we had in class work so and the so the questions were kind of crafted by Professor schiffman um which so they kind of modeled what the exams would look like but also kind of but in smaller doses if that makes sense so it wasn't like as daunting as an exam in itself but um it provided opportunities for students to practice what we had covered in the previous lecture or like two lectures ago um to make sure that you're understanding the material as fast as possible which I thought was really effective and we have another question Amara asks Chris emden's work is phenomenal so I'm curious what connected with you that enabled you to apply his scholarship to stem teaching and math um well I um Hannah actually connected me with his work um she just thought I would find it interesting and I um read the book and I thought it was really interesting as well um because it connected so deeply with what I was um kind of addressing within my project so I thought that it really um like added to what I was bringing forth um because a lot of what he addressed was similar to what I was like seeing within my courses um specifically with um kind of the idea like you can't be what you can't see he mentioned um which I thought was really important to bring forth because I think so often it's really not um talked about that um it's so important to kind of implement um different resources within stem education and honestly all courses in general um in order for all students to see themselves represented whether it be different genderizing Chinese or backgrounds just so all students can feel capable of that success this is less a questioned in a comment but Jody in the chat says Ali I'm excited about these insights and love hearing how you apply this in your own teaching secondary students need stem teachers with this perspective um so I think that's that's very positive um uh I guess if uh we can give folks time to think of more questions but one way to to perhaps consider this would be to ask um uh how Allie do you have any questions for instructors about their teaching practices or do you think they're any particular insights from your project that um that instructors uh might want to know that but you didn't include in your resource um I mean I'm just gonna say adding to that how what advice might you give to those who aren't even teaching stem courses about some of these insights like how do these apply beyond the stem context I mean I think no matter what um domain Professor is in I think it's really important to um consider the balance between lectures within a course and consider um incorporating more time for students to participate because that allows students to engage not only engage with the material but to also better understand the material and I think all courses can um improve by incorporating diverse materials um especially ones that kind of can relate to a variety of students and I also think that all all courses can benefit from various means of assessment just because all students are different and have different needs so we have another question Alyssa in the chat asks do you think the lecture took practice balance can be appropriately addressed by a lab component um I think that definitely um does help for science courses but at the same time I I did take a science class for like my habits of my requirement as well as um during my interviews with um some science students um it's I still was under the impression that um it didn't seem like that the separate lab was enough if that makes sense um just because the lecture is still an hour and 15 minutes long and that not being broken up by something more interactive or asking a question out to the students just to break up that lecture so students can continue to be engaged and make sure that they're staying on top of the material being addressed all right thank you so much Allie yes we're on the same page again thank you yeah and Gavin had put in the chat earlier the link to Ally's um resource but we will also be sharing all of these Resources with you all at the end especially to to be able to zoom in on that great infographic that she created Donna's putting some virtual claps in the chat all right so our our next student partner sharing is Nate so I will hand it over to you Nate to introduce yourself and your project yes hello everyone um first and foremost thank you all for being here my name is Nathaniel Smith I am a sophomore uh studying secondary Ed uh and my focus major is in history um and I also have a minor in literature but today I'll be presenting on of varying means of participation uh to support all Learners and kind of some background on how I came to picking this topic um when we first started working at Ctrl uh we looked through the website on what resources they already had and I saw on their page promoting and accessing participation in the classroom and so I thought to myself about how college classes do that um and I was kind of curious uh and I asked some of my friends I was like you know what type of participation happens in your class and I got a lot of feedback um on it's mainly student to Professor meaning the student will be asked a question they'll answer it and the professor will respond to them and so my goal in this presentation is to think about participation in a more Equitable diverse way changing the dynamic primarily from um lecturers versus facilitators providing suggestions on how to do that um and then highlighting the fact that a professor's response to students when they are participating affects future engagement um so without further Ado next slide so understanding uh Equity of participation and what do I mean when I say this so students learn and engage with information differently we all understand that uh but therefore grading how students participate needs to reflect that so oftentimes it's in class participation that is incorporated into that participation grade but what does that mean what forms of in-class participation are there I found that in my um talking with students which was the way I wanted to go about doing my survey and understanding how different classrooms have participation I found out that there's not often a lot of outside participation meaning like uh discussion boards on canvas or various uh projects implemented to design participation outside of the classroom um and then off of that online participation right it's not just maybe having um a presentation that's collaborative outside of the classroom but as I mentioned um you can have discussion boards uh you can have various things through canvas and tools that the university offers so including and communicating to your students right that we have this variety of participation in the class to engage uh diverse Learners those who may not be as participatory in the classroom or speak up uh communicating this to them uh will first and foremost increase participation um and then if we're limiting uh participation from uh one student uh the goal is just to convey their knowledge um so next slide so consider this this is something I came across when I was doing my research and it really honestly shocked me which is according to education week 70 to 80 of the time in a college class is taken up by professors talking and this just stood out to me um one because that's a drastic change uh from what I believe my education classes and I know that's different uh for each major but that's just something that stood out to me and then this uh 70 80 only leaves 30 of the time for students to actively engage in the material and participate in uh these various ways that I'm going to talk about um so if the idea of learning is to have students hands on with their material and what they're trying to wrap their head around then I think we need to give them the opportunity as I say here to question talk and discuss the topic listening is one facet of learning which is important but what I'm saying in this presentation and my research that I've done is that I think that's only one component and we need to utilize the other ones a lot more so next slide so this this idea of becoming a facilitator versus a lecturer what do I mean by that oftentimes professors are taught uh to lecture and be professors in their subject but not taught how to implement specific educational strategies uh so if we're trying to create a more uh student-centered classroom where professors can observe add-on to facilitate uh student conversation and participation it's critical to implement uh these different forms which I'm going to talk about now which is student to student conversation uh and participation and one way to do that is through a teaching move that I've learned in my education classes um and is on my resource on the website but is this idea of think pair share some of you might have heard of it but breaking students up into groups asking them to think about a topic a question you pose pair up and then share their ideas right and then if we're thinking in the mindset of a professor is supposed to facilitate they can now go around and observe how that participation is happening get a better understanding of how much their students actively know and can regurgitate about the information they're learning um student to content and anticipatory reading guides oftentimes students will have a very long complex chapter that can't always be covered in class right so thinking about how can I engage students outside of class having three or four questions you want them to think about and then ultimately answer when they're reading so that they know what to look for when they're reading and then it kind of guides their mind as they're reading through the chapter for some students who might have trouble comprehending it or or understanding what is the important uh key points I'm supposed to take from this student to self participation or engagement with material is critical um and one concept which I'll talk about later that came up a lot in my interviews with students was this idea of activating prior knowledge um oftentimes in a class right we have this higher level of college thinking and vernacular uh that prevents this um prior knowledge to be you utilized in the classroom so how can we structure scaffold our questions to take information that a student might have learned in high school or even in another habits of mine or course at AU and how can it to apply to this um so that they don't feel as lost and can participate more uh and then student to Professor participation which oftentimes is the most used in classrooms right now um I think a creative way to not just have right a professor ask a question student answers and then it shuts down the conversation have a creative student presentation have multimodal assignments where students present to the class and the professor kind of becomes the student and can add on to what a student is saying or the type of presentation they're doing um so I think all of this is very critical to learning um and this shift of learning uh kind of puts the student in control of what information they're learning uh it will help them retain the same level of information with the professor there to guide the lesson so you're not losing any information by having this shift from lecture to facilitator uh and then students are given the opportunity to critically think and participate more when they're challenged to actively communicate to their other students present uh and be asked questions and be able to engage in the conversation instead of just listen to it so next slide so your response matters I mentioned this earlier but this was one of the most interesting things that I kind of talked to a bunch of students about when I did the interview which was um the response that professors give to students who participate oftentimes in the beginning of the class or the semester will affect the likelihood for other students to engage and answer future questions so as a student I think we often realize this but I got a lot of feedback but from talking with Hannah in our weekly meetings and everyone is that you know professors don't always realize that you know if I maybe been a response from a student and say that's wrong that's not correct which doesn't happen often but even the response that they give students are watching that and if it's if it's maybe not what students are comfortable doing which is if it's a tough question they might not know the answer they don't have that prior knowledge they don't have uh control of the learning that they're less likely to participate in the future and then you're stuck with the same kids oftentimes that happens in classes with these three kids four kids whatever it is are participating and then how do you engage those other students well like I said earlier maybe consider the response you give but also engage in them outside of the classroom it doesn't just have to be participating in the classroom and so I think this this picture here does a great job of saying that teacher directed learning say two of these students right here that you see are participating and the other two are observing they might get shut down but if the teacher and Professor is in the center everyone is kind of facilitating around each other there's not one type of presenter everyone's information uh and and ideas and questions are all like a blend together um kind of ultimately forming every student's idea of the concept A Professor is trying to teach um and so I think this this model of teaching is incredibly important not only for students to participate more but to retain information more uh and just to engage in the classroom and so before I go on to answering your all's questions I would just like to say that when I was going through figuring out what presentation I wanted to give how I wanted to interview students and the questions I wanted to ask um I was struck by the fact that I'm incredibly lucky to be put in this position through Ctrl and being a student partner uh oftentimes in college I feel like the student voice isn't fully heard or told to professors in part because students themselves I know this can check out um but this program I think has just given me the opportunity not only to engage in a you more but also um as Ali said do something that I'm very passionate about and have the ability to research ask questions and make this presentation and hopefully make a change towards this style of teaching and classroom that I think is applicable to any Professor any department and any student um so hopefully you guys enjoyed it and I'll feel free to answer any and all of your questions all right thank you Nate um once more please raise your hand and or put questions in the chat um and we're already getting some so I but first before we get to the audience I want to give you a chance Nate to respond to the same question um what did you enjoy about this work and how uh did doing it inspire you yeah I think the biggest thing that I enjoyed from doing this work uh talking about student participation interviewing my friends is that not only did I feel like I learned a lot but I think just in interviewing my friends they became aware of how much either they didn't participate in class or the forms in which they were only participating in so that was really interesting like during the interviews seeing uh my friends my peers and random students just realizing oh wow maybe I only participate off of another student's response or maybe I only participate off of a question that I feel I know or can answer and I don't push myself to ask these other questions and so from that interview and realizing what they were realizing I kind of took a step back and I was like okay well why is this happening and that's where on the resource I made which is on the Ctrl website I talk about various moves on how to implement ways of part just participating more um and I think it inspired me um in part that I'm realizing this stuff now and having the ability to create this presentation and therefore just more awareness in my own self when I become a teacher to hopefully um like Ali said I think all the students presenting want to implement it in our work some way for me in education when I become a teacher we have we have an optimistic uh question here in the chat uh from Laura who asks based on your survey and your own experiences what do you think the ideal ratio of lecture to discussion should be so obviously it it does depend on somewhat of the material somewhat of the department but I think ultimately I think maybe say one class in a week say you have two classes in a week maybe one class has to be more lecture because you feel the need to tell students the information in the way they do it but that means the next class should probably be like a lot more engaging with that material uh participating uh and communicating about it I think I would like to say 50 50 on uh lecture versus participating and engaging it but I realized that that might not be 50 50 for every class just thinking when you're planning uh your syllabus and I think it does start when you're planning your syllabus on okay I should lecture 50 maybe even 40 percent of the time um and leave the other 50 to 60 percent of the time to have students engage with the material and I think professors often sometimes get caught up on saying I need to lecture you can convey the same amount of information in the way you want it through the various texts and assignments you sign outside of class I think often even when students are participating and if it's in that facilitator role you can still guide like I say and make sure that students are learning and retaining the information you want so I don't think it just has to be lecture so I would say 50 50 ideally um but maybe if that's not realistic UH 60 to 40 but I think that can be spread across like I said the whole semester and it doesn't have to be every single class um but ultimately thinking okay I should have enough classes where students are engaging with the material with the amount that I'm lecturing to them on it um Jody in the chat asks what do you think about electronic response options like polls or digital boards in face-to-face classes um so I I actually haven't had that uh too much but I think I think it works I think it like I said it's all in the way you utilize it and what it is um electronic polls can be very a good way to assess um quickly on how much information students might have or if they might not understand the concept that shows a professor okay I need to do more work outside of class on how to make sure students understand this I think one of the biggest things that you can utilize uh electronic polls through is saying not in a full assessment way where that it'll go into their grade but how much do students actually know if the goal of the course is to get students to understand a concept or realize something right a professor ideally should be checking in throughout the semester both through tests and unofficial polls through this way on how much information do the students know and if they don't know something I think that's a signal of maybe I have a conversation with my class or I step back and say what is it that is confusing them and how can I change my teaching so that they do retain the information if uh another question from Julia who asks sometimes lecture ratio uh depends on how much is expected to be covered should we reduce them uh should we reduce then the amount of information what is your perspective so I I agree on that I think that um like I said it does depend on the class um I can't speak for say you know kogod classes or like a traditional Law class at a school oftentimes there is a lot more information covered and I would agree that um it depends on the class and how much information has to be covered but I think I would also say that if you are covering a lot of information and it is lecture format and you're considering reducing it I don't know how much um that would do I think it would do a lot in the sense that students students if you reduce the workload would probably understand the smaller amount of information they know more in depth and if this is a course where it is adding on to another course maybe it's a prerequisite for something I think that's incredibly vital now this is a broader thinking course where there's some conceptual arguments that if students don't understand it's not going to penalize them later but ideally they should that's a different thing I think you can have more lecture style courses in that way I think it's a tricky answer and there's no right or wrong way to say it but I think it does depend on the class what is the class's goal is it to create them to critically think and think differently in which you can probably lecture as much as you want um because you're just asking them to think differently if they have to apply this information in the future I would say that would uh add more to cutting back on information and really honing in on making sure students learn and comprehend what I'm teaching because I think often students will just leave a classroom and forget it um sometimes because they're not asked to regurgitate it later but other times just because they're there's a sense I think from interviewing students that they will learn the information for a class A semester and it won't be asked for them again so there's no incentive for them to learn it now it's a broader question in conversation but um yeah I do think the ratio depends on the workload and what that work is asking of the students all right we do have a another question from Alyssa but perhaps Nate you could respond to that in the chat because I think we should we're about at the time where we should move on to our third and final um project um which is Kamaya and Rivas would you both be willing to commence with your explanation of your project yes um hello hello uh thank you again for being here with us today my name is Reba I'm a rising Junior and I worked with kamiya if you want to introduce yourself really quickly yeah hi I'm Kamaya I'm a rising senior I'm majoring in Justice and law and minoring in education and I just started on a combination Masters in public administration um so just to get into our project um we called it enhancing the educator student Dynamic at AU and for our project we sought to investigate the educator student Dynamics through examining specifically the student experience so to accomplish this we decided to facilitate a focus group with students enrolled in Dr altheria's calderas edu 437 intro to anti-racist pedagogy class so it was real students here that go to Au and our goal was to really create a space for students that they felt comfortable sharing and authentically speaking and being honest about their experiences we can go to the next slide yeah so in our focus group um we came away with some our three takeaways one being professor approachability and we created some questions to go along with the categories so we have Professor approachability what factors affect how comfortable your students feel approaching you student vulnerability how do we approach students unique needs and understanding the students vulnerabilities and we'll go into each of the subjects and then three Collective accountability how can Educators and students collaborate to cultivate a classroom community and so these are just questions for educators to think about when um going into classroom dynamics so for Professor approachability um we want to be careful about approachability we are at least we wanted to because of how sensitive um the idea of ensuring that someone else like sees you as approachable um and so the Utah State University it described approachability as categorized into friendliness openness accessibility patience and respect we talked about this in our our we put that in our resource but approachability is not something that can be promised to every student but it's something that all Educators should be thinking about and we also want to talk about how like students perceptions and biases can have effects on how they view a professor and so yeah Educators have to create and maintain spaces where students can feel vulnerable and in our night next slide we'll talk about student vulnerability yeah I think it would be helpful just in case people don't have their screen on to read the quotes to read the quote that's there oh yeah sorry um so we just put focus group question codes on each of their slides but it says I have one Professor who I think is so approachable and another who almost made me cry foreign so our next takeaway was student vulnerability um and just to dive a little bit into that we realized through this focus group that it is vital for students to be able to be open to different teaching styles and also be provided with those spaces to share without feelings of invasion so students being vulnerable isn't something that should be required or been done on on like certain times or on your timetable as an educator but on their own terms and they need to provide that space that in which they feel comfortable sharing and student vulnerability comes with Educators validating students needs and accommodations and just to share a quote from our focus group a student shared it felt like they just know everything speaking about their professor and like they expect us to and then I feel like I'm bad I'm confused I'm like they're supposed to be teaching me I think one of the main takeaways from this point was just a lot of frustration which was shared a lot and was like a common theme scene with students that we interviewed but we can go on to the next slide which is Collective yeah Collective accountability um this really gets down to working to establish a strong and ethical classroom community and this needs to be a collaborative effort both between Educators and students this can involve incorporate incorporating students into the course build and that can provide us with a better sense of who the new group is students are not standard you're coming in with new students every year so the same methods might not always work for the same students as we've discussed before and the ultimate goal that we want to achieve is an etiquette of care and respect for both Educators and students and this was another quote shared it was in this class which was the class we interviewed edu437 we got to help make the syllabus and it was really cool so it was really um interesting to hear about how Dr Caldera really went over her syllabus with her students and allowed them to make edits and it really helped contribute to this theme that we wanted to talk about which was Collective accountability and really focusing on that classroom Community we can go to the next slide so just some takeaways that me and Kamaya wanted to share for me I think through this project and just even working with Kamaya working with Hannah and Gavin and with the students I I think I personally gained a deeper understanding of student educated relationships and kind of those Dynamics and it was really rewarding to me to be able to sit down and hear from my peers and also provide a space where they feel validated for their experiences and I think through this investigation we were able to learn and see what a strong and inclusive classroom culture can look like [Music] um yeah and for my takeaways um it was like the first time that I kind of felt like a you change maker type thing so it was a really empowering experience to be kind of student voice on the outside um and I also reignited a passion that I had for advocating for student voice inside the classroom I think as many student organizations as we have on campus sometimes those student organizations aren't really putting or having a seat at the table when it comes to inside the classroom and what's happening involving that and so um it just was a great time and I really enjoyed our Focus Group in providing just a comfortable space for my peers and being able to just like talk out what we feel like some things that could be improved or enhanced at AU all right thank you both for your hard work and putting this project together um you all know the drill at this point please raise your hand and or put questions in the chat um to get us started um I'd like to ask both of you what did you enjoy about this work and how did it inspire you um I can go I think we shared a little bit before in the last slide but personally I think it was nice to really get back to that cycle of learning that can happen and while we did focus on student experience this time it was really nice to hear back and learn from my peers and I feel like we forget that that can happen in the classroom it's Educators and students learning from one another so I really enjoyed that process and like Kamaya shared I think it did reignite like a passion for learning in general for me I think what I enjoyed most was just getting to like sit down and speak with my peers about how they felt their classrooms are going um or yes we talked about our one class that we were in um Dr caldera's class but we got to talk about how we experience similar things in other classrooms and so it kind of felt like oh okay so this isn't just something that like I'm feeling like this is something that we can talk a little bit more about we have a question in the chat from Donna who asks if students and faculty both bring their own particulars to the student-teacher relationship how can a faculty member make the student feel more accepted how can a faculty member make it easier for students to approach them um I think it's a hard thing like we mentioned before like Professor approachability because there's so many ways to do it and also you don't have much time when you're in the classroom to really have the time to create those relationships but I think something that we discussed a lot in our meetings at Ctrl was setting that up kind of the first week of class or syllabus week is making it clear to students that you are a resource to them and that you're open to hearing from them and like you are there to listen to their vulnerabilities like we discussed I think that goes a long way just like even saying that sentence like oh I'm here to listen to you because that's not always a distinction that's made clear and I feel like that can go a long way in encouraging students to come to you and also making them feel accepted because you're opening up a space where you're engaging the student and providing them a space where they feel like they're going to be heard and they're going to be accepted but again it's a very hard task and I think there are multiple ways but I also think when it comes to like strong personalities like this it can be a learning opportunity for the student to understand like in times you can be passionate but sometimes you have to like I guess come to an agreement and understand that the agreement and like each parties are understanding that disagreement is benefiting both parties and so really on explaining to the student why things are the way that they are is a great place to for that student to understand like oh maybe this is something that I agree with or vice versa Laura in the chat asks can you please explain what feelings of invasion are it's not a phrase I've heard before and I'd like to know what it is slash what it means yeah so feelings of invasion are essentially um students are in a place where like they are on their own for the first time and really big things can come up and so as much as or as easy as it could be to like explain that situation to a professor sometimes it's not the first like impression that you want to give to your professor and so that feeling of invasion like I have to tell my professor like all my deepest darkest secrets in order for them to like give me a break on my homework or like situations like that I don't know if Reba wants it yeah I think that was a really good explanation and I think it often especially after the pandemic was something that we experienced I think approaching professors and trying to not come up with excuses but provide explanation for like either our work in the classroom or just like our presence in the classroom can be very difficult and a very vulnerable experience and it's come up a lot during the pandemic so I think it's been very hard for both Educators and students to like try to navigate when to give students a break want to reach out and ask for help so I think that feeling of invasion is a good way to describe that kind of like anxiety that can come with this with approaching this topic but I think Tamara explained it really well and if you you don't mind adding I noticed you have some notes in pull up this slide again and I'm not sure you totally went into but I think are some really important points if you want to share those about not prying on students yeah yeah so um I had just wrote down like making sure that you're not prying on personal lives so for example students income employment relationship status those can just be some like quote unquote triggering issues um however it is encouraged for students to be open about their interests their passions and their Wonders that the class materials can support them and so they are sharing that their passions their interests but they're not necessarily sharing their personal lives I think that's a really really great point I need to think more of that we're often thinking to be approachable and to create this welcoming space that we need to get to know our students but there should be boundaries around that is I think what I'm hearing you say I'm not getting to know your students has its limitations and that there's still um boundaries professional boundaries to maintain all right um are there any other questions that folks have or Reba and Kamaya um if not then you can plea you're welcome to post them into the chat at any time or we might hang around for a bit at the end of this session if uh if anyone has any that come to mind um Hannah would you like to go to the next one ah yes there we are thank you um so in the chat as a final reflection please share what is one way you apply the students perspectives in your teaching I think as people are are thinking on this question chin I'll just put up the next slide and say thank you first and foremost to these amazing students for working with us over this past semester for trusting me um for being so open and willing to try out all these things and build this program together so thank you all very very much um we they will all four of these students will be continuing to work with Ctrl in the fall along with two more students so there will be more resources to come more presentations to come more opportunities to talk and I will drop the link in the chat just to the main page where you can follow the program and access their resources [Music] um yes it's been uh it's been an uh enlightening and um uh thrilling process really to to get to know these students and to and to really see how passionate they are about improving the T the learning the teaching and learning experience of themselves and their peers um I'm very excited to see what projects they have coming up for the fall and um to see where this program goes um and thank you all for joining us I just wrapped up but sugary question okay the presenter imagines the future of higher education what's a major change or aspect you imagine and I guess you could take this in a an optimistic or a pessimistic Direction I can go quickly I was gonna say I really like the phrase that me and Kamaya use which is like the etiquette of care and I think that although sometimes Educators and students can feel like the system is working against you I think it's nice especially like all of you here who like came and took the time out of your busy days to make the effort and learn from students and just like listen I think that is a very important thing to remember and I think in Etiquette of care for yourself like appreciate the effort that you're putting in and I appreciate my fellow student partners and Hannah and Gavin but that's not that's a Cheesy answer but that's what I wanted to say I can add on to that I think like one of the biggest things I feel like I would like to see a change in higher education is um I mean to put it simply and bluntly like I feel like the style of teaching needs to change I heard a quote the other day that like various aspects of our life has like changed and evolved um since our parents were in school and stuff and then you look at a college classroom and oftentimes it's still very similar and I know that's kind of like us cynical way of looking at it but I think that like changing how professors lecture and teach through all of the presentations that we talked about is just better for the students and better for what the goal of that class and broadly an institution should be is to help students uh retain think differently question understand learn um I think that should be addressed and changed in a more student-centered way but yeah I agreed agreed so shed chairs thank you I love the focus on educative care centering student experiences sounds like compassion and vulnerability are Central absolutely I know we're a few minutes before our allotted ending time so if anybody has one last burning question feel free to raise your hand or put it in the chat do you see a hand Breeze yeah Julia yeah yes hi I actually do have a question to all of the students maybe you already thought about it or asked other students and surveyed them it's about projects so I do projects in upper level courses 400 600 and they work very well but whenever I tried projects for example in 300 level courses for some reason I can never figure out how to make it work well and here is a few things that I have been experiencing so the group in the group project you will have some students who would work really hard and then those that I'm sorry for lack of better word slackers and how do you deal with those students is my question what do you think we should do because students those that work hard then would come to me and complain that there are students on a project that don't want to do much work then I'm trying to of course address that and it's not always possible and sometimes it actually doesn't work so I just would like to hear your perspective or maybe you can make another study and then you can tell us what students think about um how to deal with group projects and that's as much as I have I can start um I think this is a I feel like as much as like we're in college like we are really still learning how to be humans and so understanding the base level of like communicating and creating that professional communication between your group Partners is something that some students don't know how to do and so and I don't know how you introduce them or anything but really ensuring that that communication is stick like is being had rather than like oh well I assume that they would like work together well it's never the Assumption and students that you take my courses they know that they do follow up but uh things still do happen and my solution lately was I just removed projects from 300 level courses because I could could not find a solution because you're trying to communicate but I can only go so far students also have to communicate back to me and when that is not possible I simply sometimes don't know what else to do to make them talk right so I can fix whatever issues the group is experiencing I would say and it is a very difficult um problem especially because it's not always going to be like the same group of students I think for me I recently had a group project and the professor had like daily check-ins um so you could try allotting time within your class session if that works to give people time to work in person like really like designating time for them so they don't have to go out of their way to communicate outside of classroom time to try to find time to work on it um I think like Kamaya mentioned before a big thing is like students don't feel that they have like the ability to communicate with their peers so another thing that can like help with that is maybe allowing students to pick their groups I don't I don't know how you assign groups or um trying to facilitate like student interactions like Nate mentioned before like even having like group discussions just getting like students uh acclimated with one another or I'm sorry acquainted with one another so they like get to know each other so they maybe feel more comfortable um and then also an alternative could be giving an option maybe like modifying the project having an option for those who do not want to be in a group making pairs even or allowing students to work by themselves or be able to work in the group like giving them a choice in that so you wouldn't have to completely cut out the project idea because I think projects are and group projects can really be a good alternative and they do help with communication but I understand that it's it can be hard with students especially I feel like after being online it's been hard to like get back into doing group projects I know I have personally struggled a lot with it too if I can just hop on for just one more second about um in response to this question um because we did talk about it in um quite a lot of detail like in um at least a couple of our like weekly meetings um something that we talked about that I thought was really important was kind of how the size of a group plays a big role so kind of because I've had a presentation or a group project that also has a presentation that was um it was like 10 to 15 people in the group which was not productive if you can imagine um so I think just finding that balance is really important and so groups can find like a role for each individual and um so it's not overwhelming for students as well yes thank you everybody and I do will in general I have small groups so that was never an issue having large groups but um like I had I I guess what I'm trying to say is when you see that students some students would like to work on their own I do allow that and when I see that students would like to work maybe with other students later on I also do a lot of that but sometimes what happens is because they want to work now on their own I have to also adjust the projects for them and then the other groups feel they're doing more even though you're trying to explain that you have more members so the this actually still creates tensions and so I think maybe guys if you think about this and then you know uh talk to more students at AU and see their perspectives that would be great to know how to handle this type of situations what works best for you guys yeah I think this is a a huge point that we will probably take with us into the fall and create some resources around but thank you for bringing up that question on that topic I do want to recognize that we are Beyond time so if people are hanging out because they're feeling like we haven't closed the session do feel free to leave if you need to um but I think we could stick around for a few more minutes if there are people who are on the call who still have follow-up questions or um anything else foreign [Music]
CTRLAmerican
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2023-05-22
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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11,164
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4gCsJOzi5iY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gCsJOzi5iY
31.01.2022_10-B_Geography
lifelines of economy lifelines of any of the economy as considered as a means of transport why because through as a means of transport goods and percentages they are transmitted towards the different parts of a country for which as a means of transport are playing as a important role the movement of a goods and services takes place over a la land water and air land water and air which are used to transmitting the goods and passengers in a different parts of a country for which as a means of transport playing as a important rule so that there are the five corresponding means of a transport routes railways pipelines waterways and air waste airways playing as a role in a growth of a means of transport why we call as a means of transport as a lifelines because the role of a wien standard arteries in a human body as to transmit the blood in a different organs such parts of our body where the blood not transmitting not transferred by the veins and arteries such part of a body it stopped its functioning same as the growth of a means of transport they playing as a growth of a economy those parts of a country where goods these are not reaching passengers they can't be also moved under such circumstances that part of a country it can't be as a group their best example now present a scenario as best example north korea is isolated by the rest of the world due to its nuclear program if the goods it will be not available in a country how can a people they will survive how can the people living in that particular country they will survive if number of goods are not available in a economy in economy to completing the needs of people same as the communication are also playing as a important role in a growth of economy to transmitting the information transmit the information for transmitting the information for which as a communication playing as a important role for growth of communication services there are as the postal services postal services and the modern means of communication are used to transmitting the information at a extensive part of a country so our chapter has broadly divided into two parts means of transport transport and communication communication means of transport and communication means of transport broadly categorized into three categories land water air land water air land transport are of their tea farms railways roadways railways roadways and pipeline transportation pipeline transportation pipeline transportation waterways are of its two forms inland waterways to the rivers and international waterways international waterways same as domestic and international airways domestic airways within a country international airways international airways clear international airways communication are of their two types as personal and a mass communication personal communication and mass communication our chapter is at this much very simple chapter means of transport brilliant economy lifelines growth of economy first of all as the root bees the land transportation land transportation roadways india has one of the largest road networks in the world about the 2.3 million kilometers at present roads have been in existence in our in our economy since ancient times and are consistent constantly improving over the years the growing importance of a road transport in india is due to as the various reasons the reasons responsible for the growth of means of transport in india are the first they are the cheapest and easy to construct and maintain roadways are easy to construct roadways are easy to contract to construct in a different types of terrain surfaces areas if you wish to construct as a railways in a mountainous area it's not as a easy task for which as a tunnels has to construct but in relation to the roadways these are easier to construct in a different terrain second it is as a cheap cheapest and the easiest mode of transportation roadways are the cheapest and the easiest mode of transportation third it helps through the door-to-door services roadways help to the door-to-door services fourth one roads are important for transport of goods and passengers for a shorter and medium distances roadways are favorable for a shortest distance and shortest distance for a shorter shorter distance for transmitting as goods and passengers among the places for which as the roadways are favorable roads are provide a quick transport for perishable goods like as a milk vegetables fruits fifth as roads provide as a quick transport for perishable commodities six is roads they connect the fields with the market factories with the farms and it can be as a use as a feeder to other modes of transport and provide a link between the railway stations airways and the waterways port cities port cities we are having as a different types of the roads in our country not in a presence since since medieval age since medieval issue the modern in time there are a different number of rules constructed in india now in present according to the capacity according to the capacity of the transport we can categorize the routes into the six categories first are the express national highways express national highways express national highways express national highways these have been planned to meet the requirements of a fast movements fast movements of traffic in the country and to reduce the time and distance between the cities of india it is a major road development pro project undertaken by the nhai national highways authority of india national highways authority of india responsible for a construction and management offer routes related with the expressways about the 13 thousand one hundred thirteen thousand one hundred kilometers long national highways are constructed to the nhei national highways authority of india national highways authority of india these express highways expressways are also known as a golden quadrilateral roofs golden quadrilateral roots which are interconnecting the all metropolitan series metropolitan cities are connected through as a golden quadrilateral roots earlier these were the six lane roads now as they are transformed into as a eight lane routes eight lane routes eight lane routes expressways are also known as a golden quadrilateral routes which are interconnecting the metropolitan cities which are interconnecting the metro metropolitan cities metropolitan cities under this as a nhai nhai expressways are of the two largest they are having as a two largest route networks in india north south corridor north south south corridor north south corridor which has extends in between alpha shinagatura kumari nagato kanyakumari nagar to kanyakumari it interlinks other as east-west corridor east-west corridor east-west corridor interlink between the interlink between the s-i-l-c-h-a-r the easternmost road [Music] station is the silcher in assam and the western most says o r b a n d e r clear existing next are the national highways next afterwards expressways national highways these are the roads constructed and maintained by the central public works department central public works department cpwd department central public works department responsible for construction and maintenance of a national highways such roads which interconnect one state with national highways interconnect with one state with another and also interlinks the remote areas of a country remove the areas which are located at nearer to the borders or in a in accessible areas of higher ma altitudes marshlands and deserts remote areas of a country remote areas of a country and a state one state with another state is they are connected with the national highways which are constructed and maintained by the cpwd department central public works department there are 96 200 kilometers total length of our national highways which are constitutes a 1.7 percentage of a total road network 96 200 kilometers long national highways constructed in india till that time there are 83 national highways are there 83 national highways national highways from which asda first national highway national highway one is a national highway one is the delhi to amritsar which earlier known as a sheisha surimag during as a mughal age sheisha suri constructed a first metal road of india first metal druid of india from sonargaon presently it's in a bangladesh sonar gown to peshawar sonargaon presently in a bangladesh to the peshawar in pakistan it was the first metal route of india which was constructed around asia 1536 1536 by the sheisha suri sheisha suri that ruler of patna which forced the humayun to leave a country it defeated the humayun clear sheisha suri mag after the independence the length of decrease which they limit as in between our delhi to the amritsar which is now as presently known as the national highway one national highway one the longest national highway in india is a varanasi to the kanyakumari national highway 7 national highway 7 its name as now as in change changed but still in texas national highway of india kanyakumari pradesh but now as presently the data's transition highway 7 these are the change in now change in now in a present society it has interlinked in between alpha fazel katura fazelka but still till the time in our state punjab there are a total number to total number of state and total number of districts under 23 92 are the the seals 86 are accepted seats 86 are the same the seals so district headquarters interlink with the seals blocks and accept the seals through the district highways which are maintained by the zilla parishion zilla parishes are constructed and maintain the district highways next are the village roads fifth type of routes are the village routes village roads are those roads which interlink the villages one village with another and villages towards as the main city villages towards the cities these are the rural routes these connects the villages with neighboring towns and cities neighboring towns and cities these roads are constructed and maintained under the scheme of prathan mantri pradhan mantri grameen sadaq used to construct and maintain the roads in a rural areas which are interconnecting the one village towards another and villages towards the urban areas villages towards the urban areas are interconnected through the village roots afterwards the six category of routes are the border roofs border roofs six category of routes are border routes border routes these are the vital road links along the frontiers of our country these routes are constructed and maintained by the bro border routes organization border routes organization in such after border areas bro it's integrated with the bro integrated with the bsf and the itbf itbpf bsf border security force it bpf as an indo-tibetan border police force these two defense forces defense forces they are supportive for a construction and maintenance of our roads in our border areas border areas itbpf in a indochina border offered german kashmir himachal pradesh uttarakhand sikkim and arunachal pradesh whereas the bsf is supportive for the construction of a roots in a parts of a borders of india shared with the shared with india earth shared with the pakistan and bangladesh india shares the boundary with the pakistan in a jammed kashmir india through asda west bengal meghalaya west bengal meghalaya and tripura and tripura through the such areas such areas tripura imphal manipur these of the areas are those which are interlinked or sheer sasha bounty with the bangladesh in such areas construction of roots by the bro supported by supported by the bsf border security force border security force these are the major classification of the routes on the basis of the capacity or their uses capacity or their uses till there any questions this roads are generally as facing as us some of the problems in india the problems associated with the challenges associated with the road transportation in india road transportation in india road network is inadequate in our country and distribution of roads is not uniform distribution of roots is not as a uniform it means as a total number of roots which are as constructed in our country roots constructed in our country these are not adequately present in all the countries as for the physiographic divisions of india the physical features of a different number of histories the existence of roots as the unequally distributed over a country an distributed over a country that such such type of rules which are widely used for a movement of goods and goods and passengers in a different parts of a country second most of the roots are congested in cities with uh with their bridges and culverts are narrow in most number of cities the types of roots are congested congested and that problem is sorted out with the flyovers bridges are constructed for this but most number of bridges which are constructed across the rivers across the rivers as according to the as according to the burden of a population these are not adequate third half of the roots of our country are the unmettled their use is limited during the rainy season most number of the roads are unmetal which are as highly influence influenced by the weather changes changes in a weather and the seasonal changes fourth has fourth problem associated with the concept with the roads in india as the national highways are they are too inadequate in our country inadequate as per the existing demand national highways are more desirable but they are present as the laser which has which has due to the congested and high density of a population in a certain number of areas fifth roadside amenities and facilities are poor and emergency health services and safety are also poor so they need asda improvements their needs as the improvements roads needs as the improvements now as some modernizations in a field offer rude ways what kind of the modernizations are introduced in a rude ways as first cemented roots cemented roots introduction of cement routes in a road network areas in this process has the india's first cemented road constructed in between alpha nizamuddin delhi to agra which is known as yumna expressway yamuna expressway the first cemented dude the construction of a such road is utilized for a landing of a jet planes jet planes it can be as easily land over a such kind of cemented roads which is now as a part of the modern part of the modern roadway networks second modernization in in a field of roadways as the bot bot bot build operate under transfer build operate and transfer as you learned in your previous classes in a civic section that a government not having as adequate funds due to as a inadequate funds or the deficiency of a capital most number of public facilities given by the government with support of private companies for which the government hired the companies government hire the companies and such companies they construct and maintain the roots in such a was they are collecting as a tool tax this system is known as a bot bot so since road building and maintenance is a huge investment the government has involved a private sector companies to invest develop and maintain certain highways or part of certain highways after the private companies develop the highways they realize their costs and profits over an agreed period and then the roads are transferred to the government as their rightful owners government is responsible for availability of a public facilities but due to asset inadequate funds government hire as a private companies these companies construct and maintain their roots in such events they collect as a tool tax after completion of 10 to 15 years of a 10 year when they are collecting as a tool tax and given as some share of a tax rotax to the government these rights offer roots these are transferable to the government transferable to the government that system is known as a bot bot build operate transfer built by the private companies they are operating for the initial 10 15 years 20 years afterwards such rude rights these are transferable towards the government agencies towards as a government authorities clear these were as the roadways which is considered one of the cheapest modes of transportation next are the railways railways are the cheapest mode of transportation railways are the major means of overland transport in india carrying passengers and passengers and a fright in a large volumes over the length and breadth of our large country serving not only as an integrating force for over 150 years but as the main fight arteries of the country railways are the cheapest mode of transportation cheapest mode of transportation india's first railway line it was established in between offer bombay to the tahani by the britishers in 1853 in 1853 britishers established a first railway line of india to 42 kilometers long distance in between offer bombay to the turning bombay to turning presently the total root length of the railways in india as a 65 0436 kilometers 436 kilometers which has carrying as a 1.6 million tons as an average every day such amount of passengers and a goods dear burden as availed by the railways in a present the indian railways is the asia's largest and world's fourth largest railway system under a single management single management there are more than the 7 000 railway stations are there railway stations and 7 800 locomotives engines 7 800 locomotives 5300 coaches and near leader 2.3 lakh wagons wagons are present in our country indian railways is organized into the 16 zones originally constructed by the british to serve the colonial interest of exporting raw material exporting the raw material towards asda england for which as the key role played by the railways during the tenure of a two world wars railways contributing import the raw material towards the industries and afterwards industries finnish goods exporting towards the port cities for which assad railways played as an important rule the first world war outbreak in 18 and second as 1939 to 45 under this time period the large number of population and goods which were as exported towards as a war front for which as a railways played as an important role so during as a british age such railways were constructed for export offer raw materials and importing them manufactured goods towards as the indian markets the railways were originally built in a three systems three gauge systems these gate systems had a broad gauge system meter gauge system and narrow gauge system broad gate system broad gate system in which the distance between the two railway tracks has a 1.676 kilometers broad gauge broad gauge system second meter gauge [Music] and third narrow gauge narrow gauge 1.676 meters as a distance in between our two railway tracks second as one meter under the meter gauge and narrow gauge asda 0.76 to the 0.61 meters distance in between our two railway tracks so broad gauge system is a use basically for the carrying the materials carrying the materials in a longer distances small guardian for a longer distances as a broad gauge system as used meter gauge basically used for a passenger trains passenger trains and third narrow gauge system used for inner hilly areas where the due to as a loop population pressure as a uh toy trains are built these are the built for it transmitting the people from one place to work there are others from low line areas towards as a level areas in a higher altitudes as for which has narrow gauge system used but due to as a such kind of the variations it's not as an easy task to construct the railways in such densely populated areas densely populated areas like assa mumbai chennai calcutta and delhi to solve the problem of such number of multi-gauge railways now there is a unique gauge system as a modernization introduced in a field of railways modernization as the policy of a uni-gauge system this reduces the inconvenience and cost of transport transshipment of goods and passengers the distribution of a pattern of a railway network in the country has been largely influenced by the administrative economic and physiographic factors the northern plains with their vast stitch vastly stretch having as a dense growth of railways comparatively the mountainous and a plateau region northern great plains of india are favorable for a growth of a more real waste comparatively the hilly regions and plateau regions while the hilly terrain of the himalayan region and eastern part of the country inhabited the building of railway lines because of the sparse population dense forests uneven and rocky terrain and lack of economic activities are influencing as a growth of railways in this region since the independence the passenger and flight traffic on indian railways has increased eightfold with very little increase in the network and only a marginal increase recorded in a marginal increase recorded in a rolling stock materials this has been possible due to the modernization and improvements in design of coaches tracks and signals change of traction from steam to the diesel and electric concentration on train load traffic and improvement in maintenance and operating practices so that's we will continue we will start tomorrow as of what are the problems associated with the railways problems associated with the railways the first problem as associated with the railways atleast movement of our people without any without ticket
Swami Sant Dass Public School Jalandhar IX -X
UC5ZGllbLL7ICIrmtmb0YWJA
2022-01-31
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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3,595
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8TJ-JMK-ZAI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8TJ-JMK-ZAI
Wheat & Barley is live! You Will See The Recompense of the Wicked!👀🔥
today today the Lord is letting us know praise God it is recompense time Hallelujah he's giving out rewards in Jesus mighty name let's go ahead and pray this word forth in the mighty name of Jesus we just thank you oh Father God for this word we thank you for your love Hallelujah we thank you for your hand over our lives we thank you for allowing us to hide in your Shadow we are protected by you oh Father hallelujah thank you for sending your angels ahead of us making a way for us holy spirit hallelujah thank you for being our helper in this time in this hour thank you for speaking up to us and guiding us along the way praise God hallelujah our father you are so good to us Heavenly Father righteous father glorious father Hallelujah you're so good to us how can we even ask for more praise God you are everything we need everything is possible in you Hallelujah we are just so grateful that we've chosen Jesus Christ as our Lord and savior that we are one with Jesus Hallelujah that we are one praise God that we were drawn and we will call and we answer the call and we were obedient praise God hallelujah that we were ready to move in your spirit oh Lord we're just so grateful to be here today to hear what you are saying in this hour to know the times and Seasons praise God to know what's happening every single second oh Father God for you are delivering it oh Father God you are pronouncing it oh Father God through the mouths of your Prophet through the mouths of your teachers through the through the mouths of your preachers for you use your people oh Lord God and we're thankful we're thankful that you're using Us in this season oh Lord God may we be sensitive to your spirit may we have eyes to see and ears to hear oh Lord may we have a heart to receive what you are saying right now in Jesus mighty name may we not get in the way of anything you're doing oh Father God may we not have Stony Hearts oh Lord God but hearts of Flesh oh Father God may we move in your spirit alone Hallelujah may we not be swayed from side to side by any demonic Spirit oh Father God by any ways of the world oh Father God but we will walk the straight and narrow path of Jesus Christ we love you and we honor you Holy Spirit have your way have your way on this platform have your way with the hearts of the people have your way with me Holy Spirit Hallelujah move Hallelujah speak Hallelujah do whatever it is that you want to do on this platform Hallelujah in Jesus mighty name we pray we give it all back to God and I pray that every single person will take this word oh Lord God and bring it back to you and find out hallelujah what it is that they're supposed to do what it is that you're saying to them Lord God Hallelujah to confirm Hallelujah the word of the Lord with you oh father God in Jesus mighty name and I pray against oh Father God anyone who's coming about to try to tear down the kingdom of God to try to toss bricks away Lord God as we are building and as we're interceding oh Father God hallelujah we definitely don't need people coming in trying to take the bricks that we are laying oh father God in your name and tossing them to the side oh Father God to causing people to to wander off causing the one Lord God Hallelujah to be lost we are praying against that nonsense today oh Father God that everyone will walk in your straight alignment in your path your righteousness Your Truth oh father God in Jesus mighty name that they will no longer sow Discord and divide but they will come together as one with your spirit father God in Jesus mighty name we pray amen I pray that you believe it and receiveing and I pray that you join me today in this prayer and that you move in and things of God but the Lord is letting us know about Psalms 91 and8 this is what he brought me to this morning praise God and so I'm just going to tell you what the Lord was telling me so as I'm sitting in the presence of the Lord praise God I was awakened twice the first time I was awakened was around one praise God hallelujah and then the second time Hallelujah was around five praise God and I'm telling you right now Hallelujah that the Lord is speaking in this hour and we need to be obedient to his call and so Psalm 91 and8 says you will only look on with your eyes and see the recompense of the wicked the Lord is letting us know today praise God that he is re rewarding the wicked so the word reward let's not get it confused means to give out something to hand out something without looking for anything in return a reward can be a positive thing and I know a lot of times when people use the word reward it's in a positive way praise God hallelujah but it can also mean praise God hallelujah that righteous justice of God that what you reap you sow hallelujah what you sow you reap praise God hallelujah let me flip that what you've sown you reap in the mighty name of Jesus it also means Hallelujah recompense and so when we think about recompense we think about especially us righteous ones right the ones who are in Christ that's how we get our righteousness um those of us praise God we begin to think about the things that the enemy has taken and so we want our stuff back but we want it brand new we want it in this time praise God the stuff you took from me Hallelujah in 2006 Hallelujah demon devil praise God I want the two 20 2024 version okay praise God I want the 2024 version praise God I don't want the 2006 version of what the enemy took I want the version I want it modernized I want it new praise God do you understand Hallelujah so the Lord is letting us know that recompense is coming Hallelujah in this very hour is happening it's rolling out right before our eyes praise God and it's only a matter of time a matter of days a matter of weeks praise God hallelujah a matter of a few months before you have it in your hand this is 2024 y'all praise God we're not going Beyond 2024 we're talking about What's happen in this season right now the Lord is letting us know praise God hallelujah that you will only look on with your eyes this means that a thousand will fall at your side 10,000 at your right hand but nothing will come near your tent but guess what praise God hallelujah you will also look at what God is doing with the wicked what God is doing praise God God is a god of justice justice is still happening in the land nobody's getting away with anything praise God this is a time now where we're going to see where the wicked they have been storing up Wicked Ways they have been going forth praise God hallelujah not even turning from their wicked Deeds praise God do you understand but God is letting us know today that as he is uh bringing forth his righteous Justice Hallelujah he's giv out a measure according to the Deeds of the people so if you've been sowing Good Deeds meaning that you've been doing the work of the Lord because when we talk about the word good we're talking about God we're talking about Jesus Christ and what is good in him and so when we say we are doing good we're saying praise God we're doing what Jesus Christ did we are a resemblance of Jesus Christ hallelujah we're not talking about the world good because anybody in the world can do good praise God they know how to feed their children good food praise God hallelujah that's good deed they know how to love people they like praise God Hallelujah in their minds that's a good deed but this is not what God says God says praise God pray for your enemies praise God love your enemies Hallelujah that's a good deed why because you don't want your enemy to go to hell praise God hallelujah I don't care what that person has done to you you don't want that person to spend eternity praise God in hell in the uh fire praise God hallelujah you don't want that because because let me tell you this if you've never experienced it if you never witnessed it if you never had an opportunity to visit how in the world are you going to say out of your mouth that somebody deserves to go there praise God nobody wants to go there in the mighty name of Jesus Hallelujah because we're talking about an eternal God who is giving out judgment praise God and so when he says you're going to hell and you're going to be consumed by fire praise God an eternal God hallelujah who I'm telling you right now the presence his very presence when he come upon Earth shakes the Earth praise God you can imagine the type of punishment that he gives so I'm telling you right now we don't want the the righteous loving punishment chastisement of Hell to be Upon Our Lives because we won't get right we need to be moving in the things of God we need to be making Jesus Christ Our Lord and Savior praise God the Lord is bringing forth Hallelujah he is bringing bringing forth recompense so the way that the Lord was unveiling this to me is that many of us we look at recompense and we look at praise God what the enemy has taken from us and we want that back and as I just said praise God I don't want that version back I don't want the 2000 version of what the enemy took from me praise God I need the 2024 version because I'm in 2024 Hallelujah so whatever it is that the enemy took from me praise God during those times I want that back but I want a modernized I want a new praise God hallelujah seven times Hallelujah that much praise God because we know what the enemy has done to us we know who has done it praise God if we have eyes to see and ears to hear praise God we're moving in the things of God we know who took from us we may point to a person but we know a demon was using that person we may Point praise God Hallelujah to a family member but we know that a demon influenced that family member praise God we know who took it so now that we have identified the culprit praise God we go on to the father we begin to pray Hallelujah you know that demon in 1999 took this away from me praise God and we begin to pray Hallelujah and we begin to remind God what was taken in the mighty name of Jesus and that demon has to pay back the enemy has to pay back seven times as much praise God but you better be specific because the Bible teaches us to make it plain Hallelujah to make it simple praise God in the mighty name of Jesus Hallelujah write it out and make it plain what do you want in the mighty name of Jesus you don't want that old stuff back you don't want that old marriage back you don't want those old friends back Hallelujah you want God to bring forth new friends in this time Hallelujah who's helping you in this season with what God God has given you praise God to do right now you don't want those old things back Hallelujah because I'm telling you you start asking for those old things back those old friends and old relationships and those people mindsets haven't changed but you have elevated and you have increased and you have grown so you don't even meet them eye to eye anymore praise God you're not even on the same playing field praise God you're not even on the same plane you're not even on the same post anymore praise God hallelujah you don't even have the same uh uh verbal exchanges anymore y'all don't talk the same y'all don't watch the same movies praise God don't hang out in the same areas don't even shop the same praise God do you understand what I'm saying so you don't want those old things back you want new new new new praise God Hallelujah the Lord brought me to Psalm 91 and he said you will only look on with your eyes this is a season where you're going to see what God is doing to the wicked you don't have to wait any longer praise God this is what the Lord shared with me and let me tell you why he shared it with me because I was going through Warfare Warfare I mean all of us go through Warfare Hallelujah I'm no no not you unique in this praise God all of us go through it whether we have eyes to see it or not and the Lord was letting me know praise God as I was praying unto him and I'm telling y'all I go to my father just as I go to my father just as a child of God and I ask him praise God Lord why does this person keep keep getting the opportunity to do this to me why do you keep having me to go through this father God what is it praise God hallelujah that I need to learn and sometimes it's just toughen up like a father tell a child toughen up praise God hallelujah I need you to be tough in this area I need you to be walk to be able to walk through this fire I need you to be able Hallelujah not to move this mountain but walk right through it I need for you to be able to run up to the giant praise God you know this is what the Lord is showing me in this hour but I do go to him and I ask him why is it that it seems like the enemy is getting away with this praise God hallelujah and this is what he said to me he said you will only look on with your eyes he said you will see because I'm shaking and I'm shifting praise God and you're going to see what what the enemy will receive in this hour and he said a reward now many people here rewarding like how in the world are they going to get rewarded but you're putting a positive connotation to the word reward when you look it up it just means a handing out of something that that where God is not looking for anything in return praise God hallelujah he's handing it out and he's handing it out according to the measure of their deeds so when they are moving and thinking that they're getting away with things praise God they are not that's why they're scared of you when you begin to get on your knees and you begin to pray and you begin to be OB and praise God hallelujah I'm going tell you this Hallelujah I woke up at 1:00 a little after 1 this morning and I heard the Lord very clearly go to your prayer room I didn't know why I was going but I figured I'm getting ready to pray you know what my my thought was Lord I know when I get up I'm going to be fully awakened once I pray how am I going to go back to sleep because I got to get up in the morning praise God how am I going to go back to sleep and he said you'll go back to sleep he said you will you will have a deep sleep praise God hallelujah and I got up and I went and prayed Hallelujah and I I returned to my bed praise God and he says speak in tongues until you fall asleep and that's what I did and before long I was out I was out praise God hallelujah but that's because I'm sensitive to the spirit of God I'm telling you in that prayer right there that prayer canceled a lot of things that prayer canceled a lot of things because the wicked they are Relentless with getting up in the middle of the night getting up at the 12:00 hour praise God and sending fiery darts and fiery uh arrows your way my way praise God this is what they do this is what they do praise God hallelujah and the Lord is letting us know that they will not be doing this any longer why because this is a glorious time for the children of God this is an increased time for the children of God it doesn't mean that we won't encounter things but what it does mean praise God is that we're going to look with our eyes and see the Judgment the righteous judgment praise God of God coming upon the people that includes us too we're not we're not uh eliminated from this equation y'all y'all better hear me he's he's bringing judgment we're not eliminated when I'm speaking this word right here to you I know it sounds good to know that the wicked they're going to get you know uh punished for what they've been doing praise God but the Lord wants us to know Hallelujah that yeah he's bringing forth Justice righteous justice but we're going to receive it too it's a double-edged sword that's what the word it cut them it cuts me it cuts them it cuts me so it cuts them it cuts us praise God hallelujah thank you Holy Spirit and so when we're moving in this we have to keep this in mind so when the Lord is sharing this part and see the recompense of the wicked yes we will get our things back we will get more than what we even thought we will ever have praise God in this new season and we're in it now we don't have to wait y'all we are in the new season now he said now praise God but as we're in this new season we're also going to see the recompense of the wicked they're going to receive also what's rightfully theirs understand they're going to receive what's rightfully theirs y'all all of that Wicked SE and they're going to receive it this is why we have to pray we have to pray for our brothers and sisters we have to pray for those in the world those we work with they don't know they they are blind to the light they're blind lying to God they don't even believe that God is real I sit around people every single day who don't even have a relationship with God and I see the Angels moving all around me praise God hallelujah and they are in the midst and still acting crazy Hallelujah and I'm telling you this right now because this is what's happening in your real the angels are there they are protecting you with the fiery darts and fiery arrows when those people are thought projecting praise God and they are tossing evil thought thoughts your way and all of a sudden you're thinking something that you weren't even thinking you weren't even doing that praise God hallelujah all of a sudden you got a wicked thought a perverse thought that is somebody doing thought projections all of a sudden y'all better hear me praise God those of you who are not guarding let me let me plug this up praise God CU I didn't think I was going to be on here long Hallelujah those of you who are not guarding you are not guarding yourselves what do I mean by that what do I mean by you're not guarding yourself every single day that you get up please put on the full armor of God that's Ephesians 6 girth of Truth you could be around somebody who have lying lips and all of a sudden you you are just slipping up telling lies this is how I know when I'm around people praise God hallelujah because if a thought comes in my head and I know it's unclean I start looking around me praise God hallelujah and I ask the Holy Spirit who is it who is it what where do they carrying praise God because you can walk into somebody else's atmosphere and what how they've been conducting themselves in their atmosphere and you can pick up what's going on praise God with a person I'm telling you this right now Hallelujah and this is not psychic I'm telling you this is not a psychic you know a reading and all of that nonsense praise God I'm I'm tapped into Holy Spirit I'm plugged into Holy Spirit and the way that you get plugged into is to a holy spirit is by reading this Holy Bible that's it praise God and I'm telling you right now he will open your eyes to see a lot of things dealing with people you'll know things about people before they can even open their mouth and tell you because of holy spirit because he's a spirit of Truth and he's going to reveal everything and one thing about Holy Spirit he's not going to let you stumble so you can come in in in close contact with somebody this is what I was telling who was I telling this to praise God hallelujah I think my mom we were talking earlier today praise God hallelujah and I was telling her what God had revealed to me about why why sometimes you get you meet people and you can't even like you can't even commune with them you can't even talk to them praise God because the god in you won't let you come into agreement with what's on that person with those dirty hands and those filthy ways the god in you won't do it so he'll he'll literally he'll literally turn you from those things he'll literally Harden the heart of that person so that person can turn away from you you'll be thinking like wow that person's mean that person whatever that you know no God will not let you stumble he will not allow you to come into commune with that person because he is living in you he is one with you and he does not combine himself with unholiness and uncleanness and found Spirits it's just not God he's pure he will do what he needs to do to make sure that he is pure why because that's just who he is it's his state of being but what does that mean for us if we keep trying to go there if we keep trying to blend in if we keep trying to mesh in we were grieving the Holy Spirit the holy spirit is going to lead y'all better hear me the holy spirit is goingon to pack up like I got to go praise God you keep going over there in this wicked place with these Wicked people doing these wicked things you think I'm just gonna hang out and sit here with you praise God absolutely not Holy Spirit gone y'all better hear me praise God hallelujah this is why you see pastors who've been preaching for a very long time all of a sudden praise God hallelujah and I'm not even going call this pastor name we got to pray for him in the mighty name of Jesus but when they start playing Hallelujah secular music they start playing secular music in the temple in which God told them to go preach the word and I'm talking about Hallelujah the the word of God not taking anything from and not adding to it speaking the full whole you know Living Word of God and you see them doing those things praise God that means holy spirit has left the building holy spirit is not there y'all better examine these things holy spirit is not there there Holy Spirit would not be communing like that Holy Spirit would not be somewhere sitting who who will provoke a man to speak righteousness and be be amongst unrighteousness to be amongst praise God hallelujah twerking and all of this other nonsense Hallelujah to be amongst a a a club Church a church Club whatever praise God hallelujah whatever you want to call it it's just not it's not of God it doesn't even resemble him that's why everybody's like oh what's going on that doesn't even look at preacher right there praise God it doesn't resemble God we know we can discern we know when we open our eyes and see what looks like God and what doesn't either we're going to stand for it or we're not praise God but we cannot move and be like the world there's recompense coming on the wicked and we're going to see it in this hour so a lot of people praise God hallelujah you know they're revealing and they're exposing and they're doing all this praise God hallelujah it's just the time y'all it's time God is behind this God is doing it praise praise God God will use anybody to expose God will use anybody praise God for those who've been sweeping things under the rug because he said what is hidden it will be exposed even in Ezekiel praise God chapter 8 he was opening the wall God all showed him what was in the wall why was God showing him what was in the wall because nothing is hidden to God nothing is hidden to God and these people praise God who's been willingly and I'm not talking about those who had the generation curses upon their lives because their parents did things that they have no idea that they were lost and they that they were bound and that you know they don't have eyes to see they're just they don't know y'all we're not talking about them we're praying for them that God will give them eyes to see and they will be released from these curses and these strongholds praise God that there will be no more for their lives that the blood of Jesus will wash them clean we're talking about the ones who are absolutely doing Wicked they look at you praise God and then in their mind they start to do those thought projections Hallelujah they they look at you praise God and then they start to create these mental images and pictures and next thing you know you're thinking about this person you don't even like that person praise God hallelujah not to say you don't have love for him but I'm just saying praise God you know you don't like him like that but all of a sudden you're thinking about it you like wait a minute praise God hallelujah I know the Devil is a Lie you know this is why we have to know who we are in Christ and we have to know praise God what he is telling us for our lives nobody can come and tell me what God has said said to me praise God and it not line up it better line up praise God hallelujah because what I'm going to do as soon as I get that word because I'm not even going to waste the time as soon as I hear it I'm going to I don't care if I'm standing face to face to the person if the person is talking to me prophesying and saying thus sayith the Lord God said I'mma stand right there and I'm say holy spirit did you say that once I hear that I'm out once I hear that praise God I'm out but if it's something that the holy spirit is saying he's using a woman or man of God to share with me I will receive it but you better believe right there in that moment I'm asking holy spirit cuz I'm not going down any road that I'm not supposed to go down praise God it's just the truth and this is why we need to tap in we need to press in y'all need to be fasting y'all I pray that y'all are fasting but if you're not fasting during this time praise God just go ahead and begin to fast cancel go ahead and begin to fast thank you Holy Spirit uh go ahead begin to fast in this hour you're going to see greater disturbances you're going to see praise God you know people are talking about aliens you're going to see this it's time it's time this is recompense of the wicked you're going to see it with your eyes we're not going to just have it on television where people trying to like you know uh uh uh clear it out blot it out like it's no more No we're going to see this with our eyes and we're just in January praise God we're going to be moving through this year and it's going to be a supernatural year year of spirits Supernatural year of aliens Supernatural year praise God hallelujah of all those demonic things that were hidden that's coming to light and if you don't have any ounce of God in you praise God you better get on covering you better go somewhere praise God and begin to get to know Jesus Christ Hallelujah because that means if you don't have an inkling of God in you you don't really know him like that you don't really spend time with him like that that means you have no power y'all better hear me that means you have no power praise God because the power comes from the Holy Spirit and if you haven't been in training if you haven't been getting up in the middle of the night if you haven't been interceding if he doesn't have you on the wall if you have I'm telling you right now you are lacking power to be able to stand up for you and your family to be able to stand up praise God Hallelujah for yourself Hallelujah even think about at your job or wherever you work praise God or whatever you do you don't have that power to be able to stand firm this is so serious fine you a covering a holy spirit filled Church where the Bible is taught begin to become equipped put on the full armor of God I I was beginning that with the girth of Truth breastplate of righteousness let me tell you what the Lord was teaching me he's always teaching me y'all so I I'll I'll think about something and I'll just start talking to the holy spirit let me tell y'all if y'all don't have the Holy Spirit talking to y'all you know I always talk about this like how he's always communicating with me whether it's in Visions or he's talking or is something he's showing me like go read the Bible go read this this is for you you know whatever it is something on television whatever it is it could be a song that he'll just play it'll just come out of nowhere and I'm like what does this mean praise God so I start listening to the lyrics because I know Holy Spirit don't turn to you done turn on the radio praise God hallelujah you might as well say and so pay attention to what's happening in this season hallelujah hallelujah thank you Jesus I'm trying to pick up where I left off with Holy Spirit getting uh the Holy Spirit talking to you praise God hallelujah engage Holy Spirit that's what I was going to say engage him a lot of people just wait for Holy Spirit to speak the Bible says if you draw near to God he'll draw near to you talk to him just talk to him Holy Spirit what are you doing today Holy Spirit what's up you know Holy Spirit you know how whatever your your relationship is it's not a disrespectful relationship right some people are so like this with with God they're so like you know yes you know so so you know rigid with God but I'm his daughter so I go to God like his daughter praise God because he is my father God is my father so I go and I talk to my father I go I go talk to Papa I go and talk to the king you understand praise God now when I go do I kneel of course of course he's Majesty he's holy of course I'm going to kneel praise God there's sometimes you can't help but Neil you you want to you're going to get on that floor praise God hallelujah whether you do it or he hey you going to find yourself on that floor praise Hallelujah but we need to reverence God as who he is and understand how to approach him when you have a relationship with him understand it's not always uh peaches and cream praise God God will chastise me he will speak very firmly to me he lets me know when he's not playing you know I'll get a firm statement and I already know praise God I can't even listen I got to go ahead and do this ASAP because if I don't do it then that's a problem and I don't know if that's a problem meaning that my life is going to end or that's a problem praise God hallelujah he'll sit me I don't know what that problem is I'm not even willing to try to figure it out because I have the fear of the Lord with me and in me praise God and what does that mean that's the beginning of wisdom to understand that I better do what he said to do the first time I better get I better get it together those of you who are in Ministry and your preaching and you're teaching praise God understand god holds you at a higher uh uh standard than other people he just does he holds you at a higher standard so that means that he will chastise you quicker than he chastised that person on the street just continuously doing wrong he will chastise you first Hallelujah and it will be suddenly because he is using you to help other people he's using you to re in Souls he's using you praise God to speak his holy word so of course if you are a holy vessel speaking the holy word he's going to correct you real quick so you have to just get used to that praise God I pray right now that you believe it and receive it the Lord is speaking he talked about his Fury he talked about America praise God hallelujah and what's coming to America but also for those of us who are in the body of Christ we are protected we don't have to be concerned about those things but we do need to be preparing we need to be putting things up praise God hallelujah you know there could very well Hallelujah I just heard the Holy Spirit say shut down shut down praise God hallelujah so we're facing another shut down praise God and this could be definitely an extended shutdown they've already figured out how the shutdowns go right we were part of those shutdowns praise God a couple of years ago we they know they they've examined it they've looked at the data and saw who was wearing mask and who weren't and who took the shot and who did you know they they know all these different things but what I'm telling you is we need to be prepared we need to be uh sensitive to the spirit of God so that we are good we are good we should never be in a position where God is bringing something forth and you were not warned or you were not told he lets His prophets know first and then we come out and we pour it there are many prophets in the land praise God test the spirit test the spirit Hallelujah that's you're right we are children of God in the body of Christ and even when we take communion it says judge the body rightly why is that important because there are so many people who are in uh uh wolves and sheep clothing pretending to be sheep and they're not so you better test that Spirit praise God when somebody coming and they trying to put that that little Wicked uh uh you know disgusting detestable hand on you praise God you better test that Spirit don't put your hand on me absolutely not and if you have the Holy Spirit the holy spirit will let you know praise God that that person shouldn't be touching you to get away from from that person Hallelujah you may say well that's a human being and we need to pray but if the Lord is telling you to get away from a person praise God there's something going on in Jesus mighty name be blessed in all your ways knowing that the lord loves you I love you praise God and we are in a winning season we are winning praise God we will forever win we're always winning we're on the offense not the defense praise God we never defend anything because God is our defense we are on the offense with the ball praise God forever winning in Jesus name Hallelujah let's pray thank you Father God thank you oh Lord God for this message I pray for every single person who's on the live I pray for every single person oh Father God who will hear this word today may they be blessed Hallelujah and may they walk lowly in your spirit oh Father God understanding that you are Majesty You Are Holy you are righteous oh Lord hallelujah and we receive from you oh Father God that even what you do through us is glor GL ifying you it's all about you you've created God that we are equipped the way that you have ordained for us to be equipped with your very armor that this is a supernatural Spiritual armor that we put on every single day that it truly blocks out what the enemy is doing praise God because we are living in a more spiritual world than physical Earth is spiritual more spiritual than it is physical oh Lord God may we get to the spiritual walk with you may we move in the Supernatural with you oh Father God may we be able to discern things that we've never been able to discern before every single thing lurking in crevices oh father God in Dark Places oh Lord God may we be able to examine our hearts truly oh Father God for any emotions that shouldn't be there oh Lord God for any demonic spirits oh Father God hallelujah who are pulling on our emotions in this hour oh Father God one minute we're up one minute we're down praise God hallelujah as soon as this person come around we can't think oh Father God may we get in control of these emotions through your spirit oh Father God where you said we should have self-control and that is the fruit of the spirit oh Father God I pray for understanding and wisdom for your people every single person who has come into agreement with your word may they have wisdom may they have understanding oh Father God may they move the way that you have called them to move oh Lord God that this is a supernatural walk oh father God in a supernatural talk with your Living Word coming off their lips oh Lord I pray Hallelujah that their covers oh Father God is filled oh Lord God hallelujah and that they have abundance beyond measure oh Lord God that every single uh need that they have whether it's a family member of father or themselves that it is taken care of Lord God the Lord says that the requirement to receive this abundance that the requirement to receive this overflow Hallelujah and this extended level which is a high increase in elevation in God's spirit is for you to become one with Jesus Christ make him your lord and savior today praise God hallelujah and watch what God will do he's going to overtake you and overflow you there's no portion of God no portion of the meal that he has prepared that's left off the table oh Father God the Jesus Christ is bringing up the bridegroom y'all Hallelujah I pray that we are equipped and we are ready that we have our oil ready in Jesus mighty name that we are ready oh Lord God that when you come back no one knows hour or the time but when you split the heavens open and you appear Hallelujah that we are ready oh Father God that we're not scrambling that we are ready that we've been on the post oh Father God doing your work in militant style that we have walked that narrow straight path oh Father God that we will see righteousness Hallelujah right before our eyes that we will glorify you Hallelujah that we will praise you oh Lord God that we will become one with you and we are ready oh Father God to ascend to the higher place of Heaven father God to live forever more in you you in Jesus mighty name Hallelujah I pray that all of us are ready that all of us have our our o praise God hallelujah ready in Jesus mighty name hallelujah thank you Father God may we move in your spirit Lord God may we move in your spirit may we move in your spirit may we move in your spirit may we move in your spirit oh Lord God not of our own not leaning on our own understanding oh Father God hallelujah any wounds that we have in our hearts Lord God may they be uprooted may we move in your spirit oh Father God may we be one with your spirit Purity and righteousness may we move in truth oh Father God hallelujah may we be one with your spirit oh Lord may we be one with your love Hallelujah your your agape love may we be one oh father God in Jesus mighty name may we connect with those Kingdom Builders oh Lord may we connect Hallelujah with those Kingdom prayer warriors oh Lord may we connect in the mighty name of Jesus Hallelujah show us our kingdom family oh Father God show us the ones oh Lord God that we're connected to in the spirit of yours in Jesus mighty name may we not miss them in this hour oh Lord hallelujah May Your Righteous judgment go forth oh Father God may we receive it Hallelujah in the mighty name of Jesus with gladness and joy in our hearts oh Father God knowing that you are a righteous father and you take good care of your children oh Lord God and you will not have us to stumble in Jesus mighty name thank you oh Father God for giving us more than the physical bread on the table to eat oh Lord God but you have given us a spiritual bread forever more that that fills our belly oh Lord God in Jesus mighty name as you have freely gave us this word or father God may we freely give unto others in Jesus name we pray amen hallelujah I pray that you are blessing highly favor I pray Hallelujah that you move in the things of God you know God is filling Us in this hour he has filled our bellies with this praise God go and share the word with somebody pour out the more you pour out praise God I'm going tell you uh something that's a little uh deceptive when it comes to people who receive the word a lot of people will receive the word of God but they don't want to give it to anybody else a lot of people praise God hallelujah you know I've heard people say I found your channel you know but they don't want to share the Channel with anybody because you know it's kind of like their little hiding place I'm just telling y'all praise God I've heard it so many times and I'm thinking Lord you know I know you're going to do it and I know you're going to touch whomever you want to touch but why is this a hiding place you know why why we got to try to keep it praise God hallelujah but understand that God is not that way when he pours into US is for us to pour out why because this is how we stretch in capacity so the more we pour out and give unto others the more he pour in and I'm telling you that's how you grow and that's how you elevate not keeping the things praise God that you have heard and you have been taught and that you've read and you're just holding on to them so tight but you're not teaching anybody else and you're not praying for anybody else and you're not pour you're not watering because when you pour out you're watering somebody and this this is where they don't have to thirst again right so when Jesus was at the well and the Samaritan woman came up and she was coming to the well praise God hallelujah he said you know I have the water The Living Water praise God where you will never thirst again if you knew who you were talking to see when you are a servant of God and you're pouring out to others guess what that means Hallelujah you are the example of Heaven y'all you are the example of Jesus Christ that means you have brought Heaven near the kingdom of God is near so people are able to access bread the living bread they are able to access the Living Water where they will never thirst again and they will continue to come back to you because they want to be filled praise God and that's okay Hallelujah continue to fill them continue to fill them because God is going to give you the food the spiritual food to feed them to set that table so they can get down and eat you know this is what I want y'all to know too praise God hallelujah when we think about communion we think about the cracker we think about the juice right that Cracker represented the body of Christ and then the juice representing his blood right the wine and so but think about this praise God the spiritual communion of it all is when we are disciples in the body of Christ we are literally studying this Bible right we are uh uh taking in words from um spiritual leaders and and you know coverings of our church our pastors and things of that nature and God God is just teaching us when we receive from them we're eating from their table y'all better hear me we're eating from their table they've been filled up by God they're pouring out unto us so we're getting water and we're being fed by them we get full and then we go out and we pour praise God and God will fill us up but this is a spiritual table that has been set so when people receive from you they're eating at your eating from your table this is what I want you to also know it's not necessarily good to eat at everybody's table let me tell you why okay because I know people are like ah but let me tell you why because when you begin to eat from some someone they better be living that lifestyle they better not be lying you're going to know if somebody's lying about you know being a woman of God or being a man of God you're going to know because you're going to start either you're going to elevate and those chains are going to break and you're going to start to move in the things of God you're going to feel the Holy Spirit you're going to feel the presence of the Lord you're going to feel you know if I'm telling you I'm seeing angels and I'm seeing this and I'm seeing that praise God and I begin to pray Hallelujah and I begin to ask the Lord to open your eyes to some of the things that are around you praise God and you begin to experience it I did this with my mom y'all you begin to experience it praise God hallelujah I'm telling you right now you will know if that is a woman of God or if that's a man of God or if they're not because if they're not if they're not Hallelujah you're not going to see elev you're not going to be inspired by the Holy Spirit you're not going to feel anything right if that person isn't for you meaning that they're not your teacher preacher Prophet Etc or they're they're just false they're going to be without a pulse have you ever been to a church and it seems like it's it doesn't have a pulse like where's the life in it praise God hallelujah what am I supposed to be learning you know like you're you're not moved by anything there's no signs Miracles wonders wonders no Deliverance praise God hallelujah nothing Supernatural happen God is a spirit so there's always supposed to be something Supernatural I don't care praise God hallelujah if you grew up in the country just like I did and grew up on the dirt road praise God and went to a little church Hallelujah with four or five people I don't care praise God the presence of the Lord should be there and there should be some breaking of chains Hallelujah people should be delivered in the mighty name of Jesus because wherever a man or woman of God is they carry the spirit of Jesus Christ and whatever Jesus was doing praise God they should be able to do in more because they are saying that they are a disciple they are this and they are that so they are saying to you that they spend time with the Lord not just a day praise God not just two days but they actually have a routine and they spend time with the Lord praise God from morning until night Hallelujah there's a whole routine in this where God is expecting them to show up praise God hallelujah because God loves intimacy I don't know if y'all know that but he is expecting them to show up so when he call at 1:00 in the morning his disciple is going to get up praise God and they're going to go and do what the holy spirit said they're not going to sleep or Slumber because we serve a God who doesn't sleep or slumber and we serve a God who will strengthen Us in all things praise God so even if I wake up tired I know that God is going to strengthen me to get through the day praise God hallelujah understand what I'm saying the person will be able to do what God has said that this person can do I'm not going to be on here calling myself praise God hallelujah a prophet because I saw somebody prophesy no Hallelujah I'm a Seer because I can see that's just what it is hallelujah and when the Lord opens and it's not not me praise God but when the holy spirit opens up your life I can see your life hallelujah it's just what it is praise God this is how the Lord works when he's truly using his vessels to deliver not to use his vessels oh I'm just going to sit in and I'm just going to you know hang out and tell you this and tell you that no people need to be delivered people need to be healed praise God people need to be brought to Christ This is why we're doing these things and this is why he gift us and I'm not the only one with the gift praise God there are many of us hallelujah who are operating in our gifts and there are many of us who have dormant gifts you just haven't stepped into your gift it hasn't been awakened praise God hallelujah it doesn't mean that you don't have a gift it doesn't mean that you're not unique or special to God you just haven't been opened up you haven't been ignited praise God hallelujah you haven't been set off praise God you've been set apart but you you know it's like starting the car the car is there you still got to put in key and turn that ignition before it turns on praise God hallelujah you just need somebody to turn it on and a lot of times it comes through teaching and preaching and someone showing you the things praise God that you need to do behind the scenes in order to really receive from God and all they're doing is setting you up to be in the presence of God God G to do whatever he going to do in that presence praise God once you closed that door in that room in that closet praise God hallelujah once you made yourself available he G to do what he going to do praise God hallelujah he's he's going to Showcase himself that's it but you have to be intentional with that time I'm going to spend time with uh my Lord and Savior I'm going to give my time to God I'm going to spend an hour I'm G to spend two hours praise God hallelujah I'm going to spend my entire Saturday morning I'm G to spend my entire Sunday morning whatever the case may be I'm going to spend praise God the night we we're gonna hang out praise God hallelujah do you know how many lunches I've been on with uh the Holy Spirit do you know how many praise God hallelujah places I've just been and I've just been with the Holy Spirit you know he he he God is a relationship God he loves relationship praise God hallelujah I'm telling you if you truly develop your relationship with God God would be telling you all kinds of stuff that would just be like that's really real lord I thought that was faith I thought that was a myth Lord that you mean to tell me those uh Greek gods they're really real yeah they are praise God hallelujah they're really real praise God in the mighty name of Jesus Hallelujah and they have all of these different um you know and a lot of people think that's out there but it's the truth it's the truth they are they are praise God they're the the um lowercase G Gods they're Wicked praise God they're not of God they're they're what are they they're hybrids you know they're they're they're mixed in listen to what I'm saying we're not even talking about Fallen Angels we're talking about their seed and I'm leave at that all right y'all peace and blessings until next time praise God I pray that you receive what the Lord is saying hallelujah what he's doing take it back to the Lord just pray Hallelujah God will show you so many things praise God don't think that your uh visions and uh your prophetic dreams and what God is showing you in the night that is just a dream put a journal next to your bed write down what God is saying you know these things are important God is always speaking about your life he's always speaking about your life please open up and know that praise God I'll be on tomorrow what tomorrow Friday praise God yes I'll be on tomorrow praise God hallelujah um just prophecy y'all just prophecy Hallelujah and I pray that you are ready to receive what thus sayeth the Lord praise God and we just going to explore this thing praise God hallelujah what does that mean Hallelujah I'm looking for God to take us to places through prophecy there are so many things that uh those you who are prophets who are seers uh that God has just shown me and taught me praise God in navigating the realm of the spirit he told me two years ago he said I'm going to teach you how to navigate this realm praise God and holy spirit has not failed me yet he is not fil me yet I canc see you good assignment in the mighty name of Jesus also y'all pray about where you live um you know I live in the area praise God and there's always movement of demonic spirits but I know it's because of the workings of people who who possibly live in a neighborhood of close by but whenever the word of the Lord is spoken or whenever the light is shining bright in the spirit praise God do you understand Hallelujah they'll come praise God they'll they'll be lurking and trying to uh uh monitor or you know hear and and here's a thing that you can do if you're one of those who are sensitive to uh monitoring Spirits or you're one who's sensitive to uh something being around you and you can't see it go ahead and ask praise God our Father to uh set fire his consuming fire in the atmosphere set fire Hallelujah you can plead the blood of Jesus over your atmosphere praise God at the doorpost you know you can speak these things I know a lot of people use anointing oil but you can speak these things you can speak the blood of Jesus over your door and it's going to go over your door the word is living it's going to go over your door you can speak the blood of Jesus over your windows you can speak the blood of Jesus over yourself and your children and your family just speak it it's living it's going to go out and accomplish praise God this is what we need to be doing this is how we need to be living praise God focusing on the things of God and it just changes your mindset it changes and SW switches you from a physical uh you know practical logical literal mindset and ways of thinking to seeing everything in the spirit because we're living more spiritually and we always have than we are physically the Bible teaches us when God created man he said let us make man in our image Hallelujah what image was that that was the spirit of God the body of man was formed he he formed man praise God hallelujah and what did he form Man Out of the Dust of the earth praise God you think God is made out of the Dust of the earth he's spirit so when he said let's make man in our image he was talking about spirit so we're a spirit first and this body holds the spirit so we need to be trying to figure out what is it that our spirit looks like what is it praise God hallelujah that our spirit has on what is it praise God are we filthy and filthy rags why does the Bible talk about filthy rags because it's talking about what we're wearing Hallelujah we are guard we have garments on in the spiritual real those filthy rags praise God that's dealing with our garments why because that means that they they're immersed we're immersed our spirit in sin we have been sinful beings praise God so we need the blood to wash us clean what do you mean wash us clean like this body clean no that's what you have soap and water for you go get in the shower you go get in the tub and you wash your body clean but the blood of Jesus washes the spirit the blood of Jesus praise God hallelujah renews us renews our mind and our hearts praise God it washes us clean it blocks out all of that filthiness the dirty rat it makes the dirty rat white as snow praise God probably wh than that praise God you know why no that's a that's a Earthly term right Earthly saying praise God but we're talking about a Godly saying a higher higher uh most high praise God so that terminology definitely shifts when we're speaking of heavenly things cuz we can't even describe what's in heaven hallelujah it's just no resemblance he said as it is in heaven it shall be on Earth but we do on Earth with what we got you know we don't have gold roads praise God we have the concrete you know but hey we have roads as it is in heaven it shall be on earth we have roads praise God they're not in go but we hey we we drive and we walk on them and all of that so please be mindful of that praise God in Jesus mighty name I'm getting ready to go y'all peace and blessings until next time love y'all I will be on tomorrow probably same time because I have to catch the Light all right bye
Wheat & Barley Outreach
UCI5pwWM7mRXzwbpUr6ZB9Qg
2024-01-19
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
10,552
53,837
Hyt5JaT_bvs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hyt5JaT_bvs
GIVEAWAY + 70% OFF CODE! Duvolle Spin Brush (Radiance Spin Care System) Review + Skin Care Routine
oh my gosh this feels so good oh I feel like I'm at a spa right now hey how's it going well hello beautiful people of the World Wide Web thank you for coming to my world today to youtube or Instagram or wherever you're watching this my name is Margaux jordan if you don't know how to say it properly but you know how to spell it I am super excited today because I'm gonna be sharing with you my skincare face washing routine so I am in a very giving mood today and I am gonna be doing a huge giveaway that's right I'm gonna be giving away a $100 or almost $100 skincare cleansing system by Duval and let me just show it to you how about we do that this is the Duval radiance spin care system it is an exfoliating system we've got brushes for the body for the face I will be including this in my skincare routine today and from here on out and I'll let you know how it goes as I review it we are gonna hit the bathroom and we're gonna see how this thing really takes off all my makeup and exfoliates my face I'll give you an honest review and I will go through my skin care regime so that you guys know what I do to take care of my face to try to eliminate and alleviate any blemishes wrinkles fine lines dead skin this is definitely gonna be a big help so let's unbox it and see what it's all about hold up before I unbox it I'm gonna tell you how to win one of these in the giveaway so first you need to 1 subscribe to my youtube channel to like this video 3 follow me on instagram and for tag at least let's see yeah 4 friends that's row number 4 tag at least 4 friends in my post that talks about the spin brush giveaway so if you tag your friends and you follow you like you subscribe do all those shenanigans you will be entered and I'll do the drawing a week after I put the post up on Instagram and YouTube so make sure that you follow along because it could you even though it's worth $100 I have a code for you that will give you 70% off so it'll be like 28 $29.00 make sure you use the code Margaux 70 that's ma r GE aux 70 and get 70% off if you want to purchase it so here's a deal growing up I had relatively good skin until I turned about 16 or so and then all of a sudden it was like I had a blemish and a blemish and another blemish and my face was not my face without at least one or two blemishes on it I don't like saying the word pimple well I think the word or acne I don't like any of those words but I've been anyway it really bothered me and it would ruin my self-confidence sometimes if I had a blemish that was really big I would actually stay home from school and ask my mom if I could stay home because I was embarrassed by it so there's nothing to be embarrassed by now that I have grown up in age but um my face still breaks out you know and what I realized is I wasn't using the right products of my face I wasn't taking care of my face I wasn't using things that you know were fragrance free and non kumla genic comedogenic am I saying that right you know what I'm trying to say and so um so anyway so I am really excited to share with you what I do now and at this point I've only got one little pimp alia that is going away it was small to begin with and so um and so yeah and so I think it's really important to have a good skin care routine and we're gonna start with my favorite cleanser this I started using maybe let's see like nine months ago before I was using dial soap and I liked I also because it has an anti bacterial thing about it and it's it doesn't have a lot of ingredients but it would dry my skin out and buy it drying my skin out it made my skin break out so I discovered CeraVe CeraVe this is for normal and see if I can get so narrow focus oh whatever um it's for normal to dry skin it's got ceramides and hyaluronic acid which helps keep these skin plump and supple and we want some plump and supple skin especially as we're getting into our later 20s like I am approaching the 30s you we want to really watch for our fine lines and wrinkles and yeah I'm getting them there they're there they're there and so and so it's important to have a skin care regime that handles them so let's do this spin brush and put my hair out of my face oh I'm losing it I'm losing it first what I'm gonna do is I try the spin brush out with the Lancome cleanser that I have because it foams up really well so I want you to be able to tell how powerful the spin brush is and then I will use my serveed that I usually use with it as well but I just believe you're not gonna be able to see as much of a action without a foaming cleanser so first do the gentle cleansing brush remember it has a cleansing brush it has an exfoliating brush and it has the pumice stone or pumice rock so the brush just clicks right in very easily and let's do it so put the water on oh by the way this is uh this is uh waterproof which is great so you can take it in the shower I mean I wouldn't go crazy I wouldn't like you know drown it in the shower because you don't want to mess it up but um but it is waterproof which is great so I am going to how to do this because see I'm going to put lots soap on it cleanser by the way I got this for free from Ulta for buying some other stuff oldest got some deals okay now like I said I've got a lot of makeup on can you tell okay and so we're cleanse now and see if it all comes off here we go okay oh yeah whoo this feels nice oh wow look at that can you tell can you see what's happening here wait I'm gonna turn it off shake look at all the makeup on the brush can you see hold on look at that okay here we go got it oh this feels so nice oh my gosh I feel good then you get it wet Wow Wow look at that it comes right off oh this is lovely this is lovely oh my gosh this feels so good oh I feel like I'm at a spa right now oh it's like an at-home spa oh yeah this feels fabulous hey hey how's it going and now what we're gonna do I'm really excited about okay so most my makeup is off and now I'm going to use my CeraVe it's not gonna foam up but I will tell you what it feels like so get it wet and let's see the difference between the exfoliating brush versus just the cleansing brush oh yeah oh wow Wow I feel like it's going deep into my pores oh that's nice be careful of your little hairs you don't want to get your hair's caught I'm gonna exfoliate around my eyes my lines between the credits of my face that felt really good I feel a lot smoother okay do Pomeranians spin brush pasta I don't want to put it on my face but I will try it on my arm put a little soap on it water and let's see what it feels like on the arm oh I feel like I'm at a spa right now oh this is so nice Wow and finally they have a body brush for your entire body which is awesome um it just clicks right in again make sure it makes that snap sound here we go wow we are covering a lot of Wow oh my gosh I feel like I'm in an egg beater making mega some dough why would that feels so good oh my gosh oh it was good for me to sleep and you could do this on your entire body I'm gonna actually take it a bit back later and do it there wow this is amazing and I am so excited to use them in the future this is an awesome system don't forget that you can get it one for yourself you can use my code Margeaux 70 that's ma RG EA ux 70 get it for 70% off so it's like usually almost 100 bucks you'll get it for like 20-something and change so get it for yourself treat yourself treat your face exfoliate feel better listen your wrinkles and your fine lines and all the dead skin and and rejuvenate your skin because you deserve it you deserve to be confident and I love this thing I'm so excited so thank you so much Duval for my radiance spin care system this is incredible and I am so excited because it is gonna be part of my daily routine to get all of my makeup off I do so much stuff with makeup this gets it off and it makes my skin it feels so smooth so I am pumped so the Duval radiant spin care system has four deep cleansing brushes including a cleansing brush an exfoliation brush to get deeper into the skin you'd probably use the exfoliation brush maybe once every three or four days and the cleansing brush twice daily and then the pumice which I would have to say is probably a once a week thing because you want to be careful and use it just enough that against the dead skins box came with amazonbasics Gadar Jaffrey's batteries on a side note the box came with amazon basics batteries so even though it requires batteries it came with them which was great especially everything else you buy in this life it's like batteries not included batteries not included but with these the batteries are included and it was such a nice surprise because guys I did not have double-a batteries Thank You Duval hook me up now let's see what we got here got the directions to insert the batteries you just pop off the top and then put them in and it tells you what's uh what's a positive negative etc you go then you would just pop on the brush clicks right in very nice and easy and then it's going yeah there you go very cool
Margeaux Jordan
UCQe-C1AclttiDdVpepza5SA
2020-05-30
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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1,875
9,071
0dbZr7e3PwI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0dbZr7e3PwI
Classic Case of Mia San Mia
[Music] hello my soccer Universe what a while two weeks it was especially in Germany uh and especially in Munich since the last time we talked um first of all the bomb that hits very very quickly where uh Julian nagersman got fired papaya Munich just a few hours and while he was skiing in Austria and there's something with skiing if you're with Bayern you know uh Manuel Neuer then his best friend got fired now Julie nagsmont went skiing in Austria and he got uh the SEC and it was it's still not quite yet the communication was rather rather bad I have to say from uh Bayern it was yeah we were behind nagisman uh who we paid 25 million to Leipzig to have him to give him a long contract um just as a side note up until 11 that evening we were fully behind him until we burned and then you know they already talked about uh who is living close to Munich and they didn't want to miss out on him again with all the jobs opening up everywhere and in the end they went for turkey who was of course happy although he admitted him himself that when they first got the game they thought uh he thought that it will be to start the new season no no this is immediate this is immediate uh which you know he was not immediately on board with but you know after some convincing Thomas is the new coach at Bayern Munich right in front of the classical and the classic event as it always goes in Munich with Dortmund having no prayer whatsoever you can play nice for 10 times then you make a mistake and buy not just ruthless there Mia San Mia it is everything that you want to have about Bayern this happened in these past two two weeks the uh chaos in the dressing room the quick hiring and firing because uh being on a really good course to win three titles uh is not enough you have to do it in style and then of course when there's one Challenger who is leading in the table and um you know without him being great winning easily over towards me so uh that's what happened in the German Bundesliga in Austria we also had a coaching fire uh also ready also a little bit speed it's surprising with Klaus Schmidt stepping in who is kind of the uh savior the uh the the du jour in um Austria and then he usually gets fired very quickly at the beginning of the next season but I'll talk it actually worked this time around as well um the one thing that I have to have to say before we go directly into the Old Source rooms and what's actually quite exciting is that all the big five teams and those are all the five teams that I have back here actually made it for the first time into the championship group uh it's the second time in a row that the both Vienna teams made it but last this season lost missed us and now with all these teams having actually really nice stadiums plus clarkford also playing in a nice day Stadium it actually feels like a proper leak for the first time in a long time and I'm gonna start in this proper league if you like um the relegation around kick it off with loosen up putting heartbreaking a whole lot more travel we already said alter getting a huge win over tyrol which kind of relieves them a teeny bit of relegation travel and Wolfsburg also getting a good start with a one nil over read it is definitely all between heartbreak Alta great going forward however you know now Alaskan for me it was all about yesterday in the early afternoon where Salzburg got a very easy three nil win over Austria clarkford and if you're honest Lusk should have gotten a win in Vienna as well this was one of those games where in the first half you can't control auster Vienna you score two goals which are rightly called or for offside um as much as I hate to say it but they were right the radical you hit the post you create change chances obviously when it was not there they had only uh change agents with uh long range shots which became a thing in the second half actually the game kind of petered out I mean Lusk again a little bit more minor but it kind of was going nowhere until after Corner the commentator says well Austria Vienna only has scored two goals after corner kick and I my first thoughts yeah if they say only two this will make it not three and exactly have corn account comes in it's head headed up at Sears it falls upon it from the edge of the box one times it into the net it's a brilliant goal it's an absolutely brilliant goal um where you cannot do anything but it did not reflect the course of the game at that point and to add insult to injury they all stay uh within three three and a half have half minutes they double the lead through former last player Reinhold who actually got a pretty badly stepped on inadvertently uh before for her that I actually thought that he might have to go out I would have liked to him was a really uh popular player for Lusk now he's got another worldly after a bad pass out from oh uh usakovich and it follows fourth of cement and they can't stop him in another worldly it was just one of the bottom of those but I actually thought I mean we are really better than them why are we two nil down fortunately uh coach Cooper reacts brings a Mustafa for Liberty who has scored the first offside Circle and then uh Nakamura dances through the defense makes it a two one and I thought gay came on and actually then they created many chances uh most of uh especially had two previous one where it's a one-on-one with a goalie a little bit too indecisive um death could have made it tutor or or or or in the 80th a little bit after I could then calm the storm because after the two to one that was really 10 times the last was pressing quite big and then she'll cross over to Fleck and the 90 to get a 2-2 I still maintain it was too little uh this is a game that Lusk should have won it was not a yes you fight back from a two mil down but even failed the tune turning down the win is very much India uh in the evening game the big uh Clash was a little bit delayed because of a medical emergency uh of them within the spectators it started out well when a mega uh in the six minute already scored it made it one nil but he probably should have been sent off just five minutes later because he really he went like the goalie handle hit the ball and he went to him yes he wants to go for the ball but he really hits him with the uh with all on the head he and he and here he eliminated afterwards two two two hours I I probably showed through the fork he only got a yellow card and that's probably one where where this game turned um a rapid actually came back with a brilliant goal from books dollar however danced room just being the better team and they are definitely the second best team and probably the most exciting team to watch in in bozlinger just before they have South Korea makes it uh two one uh that wasn't offside uh uh called but it then um uh stood and then kitesh really just dances after an Omega pass a nicely to the defense and makes it three one and so uh Sturm keep up with Salzburg uh up in in a table and it's pretty much between those two there's no way that Alaska is gonna go back I don't even think it lost can catch drum unless some miracle happens as the winner just moves ahead of the beat uh but I think the battle for third place is very much on on the bottom as we see uh it is now between us to roll uh those are the ones that go for seven at eight which potentially will mean that they could also go into them a playoff eighth is a spot at the moment is very likely to make it to the playoff give him the cup more of that later and altar can now move out and hard pick and read it's really really tight maybe it will go down uh but we gotta see about that uh the model says for now hartberg but let's see how it will go uh uh upcoming round Lusk has a double against Doom guards first we have the semifinal in the cup with rapidian against the lead yeah that will be probably relatively easy for a PDN because we'd never have even gotten a point in Vienna against harpid and then a big one Thursday evening already so sold up against Doom guards and Lusk and then and we'll be going they also meet on Easter Sunday but this time in Lin so it is a double uh that's a pretty big matchup I gotta say also pretty big one in the qualification around our relegation round if you would like uh between lead and hardback and fall back Derby so there's quite some some stuff there uh will be hard tough times for loss I have I have to say cosplaying twice against Durham that will not be easy let's go over to Germany uh where we had egg actually quite some remarkable results uh besides the classic Frankfurt still cannot get it quite going only 1-1 against bochum called me an equalizing just picture people left but they cannot get a result at the moment Freiburg also a little bit going sideways Vincenzo grifa with a free kick yeah one that was slightly deflected uh give subscriber delete F at the half button gun come uh deserve it equalizer for her who get the first point away from home in a long long long time so that that was a remarkable then maybe uh the eye-catching result mines who I'm wearing three nil at Leipzig Leipzig not looking good and Mine mine's really getting it uh it's something going a May challenge for European spot this we have FZ ink Watson in the ninth minute azork and goals schalke fought well valently by the end it was too too little and uh live live in 1566 verse sanded one way and then as Moon makes it a three nil and Leverkusen is the informed team now in the universe is a quite an impressive turnaround only on Berlin against uh Stuttgart Stuttgart actually played quite nicely in the first half however as soon as the Becca makes it one nil this was only going one way and uh parents and harakuchi didn't make it there were rather decisive school and there's probably not quite reflective how the game went uh at this time is still the coach that I'm recording but there's many discussions that he might actually get the SEC however there's a couple on I guess they're waiting for uh that uh but there is real trouble in shortcut Brewing I will be set to see Stuttgart go down again I've also a creative 2-2 against oxburg they're classical it actually started out that uh Dortmund in the first tantam is okay by quite some travel press them high they couldn't get out and then uh alarm ball from upper meccano into nowhere and Cole wants to clear it and Miss hits it or barely hit it or doesn't hit it I still think it's an open mechanical and gold and it rolls into his goal and that shock Dortmund so much that just a few few minutes later uh Muller after the leaked um after Corner Taps it in from close range the defense unsorted and then another five many minutes later Mueller makes it three nil and the game is done uh Dortmund maybe could have well there was a little bit of a comeback chance there but again they missed a chance and come on and 50th makes it four for real yes in return penalty and only a Marlin Golden 90th make the score look nicer but this was pione as Bayern 2 and turkey gets his first win as a Bayern coach and you really think that yeah they're gonna kick on now I think this uh I mean the coaches after uh coach um who has been really good for Dortmund he's allowed to make a mistake but then you have to play the little bit smarter you can of them within 10 10 minutes because see two more in Munich uh and it's same old story same old story in Munich uh when Dortmund are coming they just cannot get anything there actually uh really entertaining first half with current having the majority of chances however there was a clear penalty call for cloud Park in there as well and then the game kind of petered out in the second half and half get a 2-1 win against Bremen also a big one uh there uh I have a feeling that Bremen although still looking kind of safe they might turn to our turn the other way and this is the last on how they got relegated where they looked safe and then it kind of went sideways uh you see it in the table but I'm at 31 points and on the bottom they are picking up slowly points so it's not so um you know it's not so sexy secure although I still would say that it has an outside chance I'm a little bit more worried about Chrome but I think they also will uh stay in current by the way hit with a transfer pen which actually might impact them for a next season up top it's now Bayern head of Thor Dortmund um lean and Leipzig are the ones to schedule for the Champions League Freiburg is still ahead Frankfurt holding on uh Frankfurt is kind of still within Striking Distance but I was looking at Leverkusen and mines to overtake them two wheels because they are definitely informed teams right now uh and then when I look at the expected file for final standings you kind of see uh frankfurt's outside now but again there's the cup which actually might add another Europa League sport and then within the seventh you could go in there but uh it is tight speaking of yes we have the quarterfinals coming up uh foreign that's a pretty tough one then uh Bayern frederberg is already happening on Tuesday uh number against Stuttgart is kind of the outside duel and Leipzig again against Dortmund um when the draw was made this was kind of the standard fixture at the moment it looks like that despite Jordan being hammered by Bayern that Dortmund actually should win this relatively easily so let's see where this is going also give you the next two rounds in the German Bundesliga Leverkusen Franc for this is is a pretty big game in there if I have to say and then there are also a few for relegation probably made the turn around already and if Karen doesn't want to get in there the better get the result in oxburg as well and then you also see the matches for the next round with Frankfurt glutberg kind of sticking out a little bit without being a top game that was it from me from those two leagues uh please let me know what you thought about the half have having this this give me a thumbs up if you enjoyed this video subscribe to my channel see more videos like this I will talk to you soon bye hey there I really hope you enjoyed this video and if you did here are some videos and playlists that you may enjoy too also please consider subscribing to my channel and hitting the little bell icon so that you get notified whenever something happens in my soccer universe and with that have a wonderful day bye [Music]
My Soccer Universe
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2023-04-03
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Corpse scares Pewdiepie & Everyone Simping for Corpse AGAIN
yeah oh there's something happening here oh yeah tons of them hey guys don't fix this don't fix this why not because the challenges that we have to find are tasks that's where the fun is you know what i mean oh i can't [Applause] [Music] it's nice [Music] hey like are we playing normal are we playing the hide and seek thing like what are we doing i don't think it seems okay how does that work hide and go see just do your tasks and then don't die oh and also don't report bodies right yeah no reporting bodies um no button calls basically the goal of the impostor is to kill everyone before they do their tasks and yeah that's about it but they just have a really we know we should know who the imposter is right jack was cheeky foster themselves in the beginning okay okay yeah are you ready cool and the impossible sabotage yep let's go good luck let's go have fun don't die don't get mad oh i'm the imposter okay nice who's imposter hey if i hear peter's voice i'm out of here pj's imposter speed run ah the [ __ ] is that mumbling dude that's just corpse's voice oh my bad just heard grunting oh no that was me that was me nice you guys have this one too nice yeah no i don't i'm just escorting you guys to be honest all right i'll keep grunting let's do this that's like some weird grudge noise oh no he's dead oh that sucks i was doing that to my friends in phasmophobia just go beyond them your voice works perfectly for that your voice goes through characters and walls oh yeah we can't see our tasks [ __ ] uh oh there's something happening here oh yeah tons of them hey guys don't fix this don't fix this why not because the challenges that we have to find are tasks that's where the fun is you know what i mean oh i can't i can't fix it even if i [Applause] [Music] [Laughter] oh my god it wasn't worth it huh it was worth it i didn't die i don't care it's so good okay just scream if you see him okay as you simp i will also die for you thank you i hear dave where's dave dave davis somewhere dave are you out there [Music] [Laughter] oh [ __ ] oh sad so sad without a queen oh [ __ ] i didn't hate i'm failing at this simon says you can do it i believe in you thank you just watch you while you do it that'll help okay uh okay i'm on the last one i'm on the last one see if i can do this okay top left bottom right middle oh so we all have the same pattern i didn't know that no i'm just joking i don't have it i was trying to mess with you oh well it didn't work what up corpsey oh you know just exploring nice that's what about you just looking at the scenery you know of space yeah i didn't actually know you could do this i didn't know you could go this far what the [ __ ] a whole new it's nice it's pretty cool i like it cool whole new dynamic to the game what the [ __ ] they'll never find me here [Music] yeah it's funny damn well done pj good job yeah well done good job pj you did it you get to keep the crap can i polish it for you uh go with me please oh my baby's in your crown oh my gosh okay i'm the imposter no no okay sorry i didn't mean to throw it under the bus i i i i doubled who's impossible [Music] run run run [Music] i heard him where is he please please am i say you got a little heads up okay never run so much in my life my god oh my god he killed no glove i can't believe it all right gotta make sure i check my peripherals i don't remember my number oh jesus okay how are we supposed to leave the cup he can hear us he can hear us or should whisper down what are you waiting for whisper okay hey okay we're good we're good everyone's good that's what you get that's what you did [Music] [Laughter] wait we can't help him now because i don't know i guess i have one more task i think i have an idea i think it was at the bottom back i have an idea okay tell me tell me okay come over here come over here yeah yeah all right yeah okay you stay you stand on my left pewds you'd simply i'm leaving what's my task is i don't remember ah what the [ __ ] was uh there you go is it behind you okay corpse and dave are the ones still alive gotcha i think i'm done i think that was it i wish i could help with this but okay oh what test dude how do i know what i just keep let go i think top right did you go i've i've done these ones i've won them over here uh i'm just going to circle at this point everyone's saying down yeah if so if something glows then you've got it you've got it i don't know what i have left i think i'm done uh i had can we download oh oh maybe office oh there we go this is the last one nice bonus i like that we can yell at them and they can't even hear us it's like we're actual ghosts i know it's so cool this is not vitals oh oh oh oh oh oh oh he's going to win again oh no he's gonna die any new activities any hobbies any sports i should know about marinating him before he kills them you're right actually [Music] yeah we i'm happy to not do the calm meme just once it makes it very difficult i think you're up on mac to volume again you make it it halved my volume i think the program kind of hijacked you can i have lime can you swap i want to have a little yeah i did it again that's weird uh it's like every round it recesses that's tricky for me because i am the lyme boy
MB TV
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2021-04-12
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A Conversation With Jeanine K. Fitzgerald
you know for years and we talk about this a lot with the folks that i'm associated with we talk about a lot for years i've heard people say there's something different about you and i never really understood that and i didn't know if that was positive or whether that was negative i just didn't know what that was about and today i understand when i first started there were a lot of people that said you know your thinking is so different that you'll probably be out of business and i used to in my head think well time will tell but it's not going to deter me i'm still going to continue forward and i i now recognize what's different about me and i think what's different about me is that one i talk about and train about principles and not just technique despite the fact that we all have the background in that technique i talk about things that matter and not matter to me but matter to the person i'm working with i talk about things that meet needs and solve problems rather than talking about what the problem is over and over and blaming somebody for that problem and truly i think one of our statements in education with insight is we are the ultimate empowerment system we over the years it's been so fulfilling to see how you can take a person who is currently living in survival and struggling to get through every day maybe even the next transition and see how they move from that to a a place of stability and then from moving from there to this place of significance feeling like yeah i really do matter i am an important person to somebody and it's that sense of significance that then allows them to move on to the state of success and when you look at that pattern of survival stability significance and success that's the pattern of empowerment and i think that's what we shine at we work hard at it every day whether we're working in the homes in our family coaching model or whether we're working in classrooms or whether we're presenting at a conference or doing a keynote that's what we work at empowering people to their full potential
Brett Fitzgerald
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2013-06-12
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Kenny Atkinson on the Nets proving doubters wrong
the emotions like right now fantastic I mean the guys are obviously happy you know long road um a lot of tough games especially to finish the season but uh I'm just glad in the you know kind of the way we did it you know here against a tough Indiana team on the road on a back to back which we've you know struggled with in in the past so it's a uh uh just a wonderful way to to to to qualify for the playoffs what kind of positive sign is that the guys talking to the guys in the court they had talked a lot about not winning to get help to get in they wanted to do it themselves and accomplish it themselves and to win back to back on the road what does that say and I really felt it that the past two games I mean Milwaukee in tonight there was just another level of focus there was another level of of being locked in and and uh I mean they wanted it so bad that that group in there that and it's just uh I don't know there was an energy there was an extra energy out there that really pushed us push us over the hump these past two games k how would you describe the scene in the locker room after a game such a Monumental moment for you yeah we didn't celebrate like we're winning a championship but pretty happy pretty jubilant and uh uh like I told them you know the old story no one believed you know you could do it no one you know and I think those are the most beautiful Moments in Sports you know winning a championship I've never won an NBA champion C but you know next to that you know kind of proving proving everybody wrong the predictions the uh even their head coach they proved me wrong they're much better than I thought they were going to be and and uh I didn't know that until I until I got to know that group and the group of in there then as the season went on I me this is possible so uh you know just a great group of guys in there earlier in the season when you guys were on the8 game winning streak you said that you felt like the basketball gods were going to reward you guys for playing the right way and do do you feel like now that that's been the case yeah you know every NBA season you go through a tough stretch and and uh we all stuck together and you know from ownership to to Shawn to to uh uh the players and and the staff and and uh went through that rough time and and you know got through the you know got through the the the tunnel and and uh I think that helped us become the team we are today when did you start to think this was feasible I think I think before that road trip you know the West Coast road trip I said you know if we can get uh you know two or three wins on that on that road trip we we'd be in the hunt so that that was the first time uh uh that I thought it was possible where did the belief come from with this group starting early on where did that belief Factor come from starts with those group of vets in there Ed Davis deari uh Jared Dudley I I think they the thrust of that group they they you know I think it irked them that I didn't talk about the playoffs they wanted it really bad and I think I think they helped Elevate the group they helped Elevate me too and uh you know when you got the right characters and the right mix of guys that you know the coaching forget that it's it's really about that in there that that that gets you to the another to another level when did you start talking about the playoffs with that group when did you start talking about it well they started talking about it you know midseason you know I I'd say and I I waited till like I said that last road trip that that West Coast road trip when I felt like okay now you know the media keeps badgering me I got to start talking about it and and uh I relented and and uh uh you know uh just just drilled drilled that it uh it turned out well especially wining here I think you know how difficult it is to win here how much difficult we've had with their physicality and and and uh uh uh just overall strength it was it was a great win for us beat him by like 20 on the boards tonight what did that did that kind of underline the commitment uh to what you wanted and that was it that's what you know stuck out that that you know it's a first time I felt like in this Arena that we had that level of physicality that level of focus that level of uh uh concentration needed to to to beat a beat an excellent team like this and and also for D'Angelo you talk about the veterans but what do you think this means for your point guard your young point guard to get a team to the playoffs yeah I think it's a another star on his on his uh uh resume I I I just think you know uh he's more than just a scorer he's more than just an elite passer you know you're you're your winner to me you wait to make the playoffs you put that on your on your label on your locker you know and it's so hard to make the playoffs we were so far away these past two years so so to make this big jump that was really unexpected and and uh that makes it all all the more uh sweet players talk about all the hours that you put in in the gym watching tape what does this moment mean to you yeah and all the hours they but I collectively it's it's uh uh you know all the the the the video sessions and and the practices and uh we work hard at our crafts so so to be rewarded uh like I said um I'm particularly pleased I I think we put in put in the work and and uh um just just super happy
YESNetwork
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2019-04-07
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Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum
cooper hewitt smithsonian design museum is a design museum located in the upper east side's museum mile in manhattan new york city it is one of 19 museums that fall under the wing of the smithsonian institution and is one of three smithsonian facilities located in new york city the other two being the george gustav high center in bowling green in the archives of american art new york research center in the flatiron district it is the only museum in the united states devoted to historical and contemporary design its collections and exhibitions explore approximately 240 years of design aesthetic and creativity in 1895 the granddaughters of peter cooper sarah cooper hewitt eleanor garnier hewitt and amy hewitt-greene asked the cooper union for a space to create a museum for the arts of decoration the museum would take its inspiration from the musee des arts decoratives paris and would serve as a place for cooper union students and professional designers to study decorative arts collections cooper union's trustees provided the fourth floor of the foundation building it opened in 1897 as the cooper union museum for the arts of decoration the museum was free and open to the public three days a week the three sisters served as directors of the museum until sarah cooper hewitt died in 1930. after her death four directors were appointed to run the museum constance p hair served as chair in 1938 edwin esperdell became the director of the cooper union the museum became his responsibility the board of directors was abolished and an advisory council was established eventually the museum and art school started to distance themselves from one another in regards to programming other departments of the cooper union were making financial demands and the cooper union announced that they would close the museum this led to the museum being closed on july 3 1963. public outcry was strong against the closing a committee to save the cooper union museum was formed by henry francis dupont the american association of museums developed a case study about the future of the museum negotiations then began between the cooper union and the smithsonian institution on october 9 1967 smithsonian secretary s dylan ripley and daniel magan the chair of the board of trustees signed an agreement turning over the collection and library of the museum to the smithsonian on may 14 1968 the new york supreme court approved the agreement and the museum fell under ownership of the smithsonian july 1 1968 it was officially transferred to the smithsonian and the museum was renamed the cooper hewitt museum of design the following year 1969 it was renamed as the cooper-hewitt museum of decorative arts and design in october of that year lisa taylor became the director the museum which was the first smithsonian museum outside of washington d.c moved to its home at the andrew carnegie mansion in 1970. the mansion was renovated and the museum opened to the public on october 7 1976 with the exhibition man transforms a conservation laboratory was opened in july 1978. the samuel h cress foundation funded the lab and it focuses on textile and paper conservation lisa taylor retired in 1987 and in 1988 diane h pilgrim took her place as director that same year the museum's name was changed again to cooper hewitt national design museum pilgrim retired from the museum in 2000 in 2000 paul w thompson became director from 2010 to 2012 bill mogrige a co-founder of ido and designer of the first laptop computer served as cooper hewitt's director on june 17 2014 the museum's name was changed again to cooper hewitt smithsonian design museum a new graphic identity word mark and new website were launched on this day the identity was designed by eddie opera of pentagram the website was developed by matcha labs the museum began preparing for renovations in 2008. the mansion was closed to the public in july 2011 to begin the renovation period during which it held exhibitions at the headquarters of the united nations and on governor's island the museum opened a new online retail shop in 2012. in 2012 the cooper hewitt created an additional space in harlem as an education facility designer taught oldham donated design services for the space 13 design firms were hired to work on the project with total costs for the renovations totaling 91 million in june 2014 the museum changed its name from cooper hewitt national design museum to cooper-hewitt smithsonian design museum on december 12 2014 the cooper hewitt reopened to the public renovations included an emergent room an interactive space that provides visitors digital access to the museum's collection of wallpaper the main exhibition space was expanded and the museum had a custom open source font which remains available for free download and modification designed for its reopening in 2015 the terrace and garden renovations were completed and opened to the public with design led by walter hood in 2016 the museum introduced the use of digital pens for visitors the museum in 1976 entrance to the museum the cooper hewitt is located in the andrew carnegie mansion the georgian style mansion was built over the course of the years 1899-1902 and has 64 rooms the home served as not only the home for andrew carnegie his wife and daughter but also as his office for his philanthropic work after his retirement the mansion was designed by babb cook and willard it was the first private residence in the united states to have a structural steel frame it was the first home in new york to have an otis elevator the elevator is now in the collection of the national museum of american history the home also had central heating and an early form of air conditioning the property has a large private garden in 1974 it was added to the national register of historic places the conservatory which is made of tiffany glass was renovated in 1975. in 1995 the museum closed for a year for a 20 million renovation to connect the three buildings on the property improve accessibility and build a design study center funds for the 1995 renovation project included 13 million dollars from the smithsonian institution and a 2 million donation by agnes bourne an interior designer in 2008 the museum started to undergo renovations the renovation cost 91 million dollars and was the largest in the museum's history partially financed by the museum endowment the museum reopened on december 12 2014. additional renovations were completed in 2015 including the property gardens to celebrate the reopening of the museum the cooper hewitt released a downloadable 3d scan of the building allowing users to explore the mansion from their computer reuse and remix it and print a 3d printer version of the building it was released under a creative common zero license a chair used by abraham lincoln when he visited the cooper union in 1860 this is before it was reupholstered in 1949 the cooper-hewitt collections consist of decorative and design objects the museum's original collection focused on architecture sculpture painted architecture decorative arts woodwork metal work pottery costume musical instruments and furniture upon its opening abram s hewitt's wife sarah amelia hewitt donated a lace collection george hearn donated two fountains worth one thousand dollars and lloyd bryce's wife donated art and objects from the palace of fontainebleau the museum had a metalwork gallery which showcased historic iron grill work and a room devoted to iron work both which no longer are focus rooms the museum has a wide variety of objects in its collection ranging from matchbooks to shopping bags porcelain from the soviet union and the papers of graphic designer tibor kalman the museum holds the world's largest collection of works on paper by hudson river school painter frederick edwin church the museum has held notable objects in its collection such as a chair used by abraham lincoln during a visit to the cooper union and a rolls royce once owned by the beatles the car was donated by john lennon and yoko ono in 1978. in the summer of 1985 the car was auctioned off at sotheby's for two dollars oh nine million museum namesake peter cooper created the first steel chair in the united states one of the chairs resides in the museum collection exhibitions at the cooper hewitt explore the history and culture of design and decorative arts a 1968 exhibition called please be seated focused on contemporary chairs in 1977 approximately a year after the museum reopened palaces for the people was held the exhibit explored a century of resort and motel architecture in the united states in 1979 the museum hosted hundreds of objects on loan from various other smithsonian museums for an exhibit called smithsonian the museum in 1980 showcased the history and culture of the ocean liner in the exhibition the ocean liner speed style symbol later that year the hair exhibit featured over 350 objects about the history of hair styles and electro works covered the history of copy machine art in conjunction with the national endowment of the arts and the national endowment for the humanities the cooper hewitt showcased scandinavian design in 1983 the cooper hewitt was the first museum in the united states to exhibit the amsterdam school the 1967 exhibition treasures from the cooper union the museum also tours exhibits through the smithsonian institution traveling exhibition service the first exhibit they toured was 1978's close observation selected oil sketches by frederick e church in 1993 the cooper hewitt created the exhibition the power of maps which was its first exhibition to be shown on the national mall at the s dillon ripley gallery the exhibit featured upwards of 200 maps from around the world william iii and mary the second of england were the focus of a 1988 exhibition an exhibition featuring 16 th and 17th century decorative arts from berkeley house the jewelry of van cleef and arpels was the focus of an exhibition in 2011. that year artist sonia delaney had a solo show at the museum the cooper hewitt worked with the walker art center in 2012 to develop graphic design now in production which showcases graphic design that has been created since 2000 an additional exhibition was held in 2012 in light of the museum's closing due to renovations at the united nations headquarters called design with the other 90 cities about design and global issues other exhibitions at the museum have included pro for cat silver wallpaper the works of alexander gerard and universal design in 2015 the museum hosted the algorithm auction the world's first auction of computer algorithms in cooper hewitt's face values installation for the london design b and noli 2018 a live facial data became the basis of dynamic graphic images and provocative conversations between humans and machines the exhibition explored alternative uses of technologies that were typically used for security surveillance and behavioral profiling curatode by ellen lupton the installation was awarded with the london design biennale emotional stated medal winner 2018 the museum's national design education center is sponsored by target ongoing programs for preschoolers on up are offered along with summer camps professional development educator resources and even a master's program in 2012 the cooper hewitt started work on a design center in harlem to encourage students and their teachers to think like designers approach the world in a visual way and better understand the role design plays in their everyday lives the center which was designed by todd oldham and sponsored by target provided free workshops and programming the cooper hewitt is home to the national design awards they also support a master's degree program offered in conjunction with parsons school of design in 2006 the cooper hewitt and mayor michael bloomberg declared october 15th to 21st national design week in new york city the week focuses on outreach throughout the city including schools and organizations across the united states the museum is free for the week the museum sponsored a bike rack competition in 2008. the winners of the contest were a part of an exhibition at the museum in july 2009 director paul w thompson left the museum to become the rector of the royal college of art in january 2010 bill mogridge replaced thompson as director mogridge was the first designer to head the museum he remained director until his death in 2012. in 2013 caroline baumann was appointed as director of the museum she remained the director until february 2020 when she was forced to resign after an investigation led by the smithsonian concerning her wedding to her partner john stuart malcolmson on september 17 2018 the museum began a capital campaign in 2006 hoping to raise 79 million dollars for the renovation and 10 million dollars for its endowment the cooper hewitt is the only smithsonian museum to charge an admission fee to visitors the museum receives approximately 500 000 in revenue from admissions thanks for watching
all the knowledge of the universe PRINCIPIA
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2022-01-13
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SIuZOVFIoB8
What the Rich Know about Life Insurance that You Don't
I'll stand in front of an audience and I'll say what would you call something that you put money into and it grows at a really safe predictable compounded rate of return averaging seven to ten percent some years higher some of it averaging seven to ten percent tax free that if you get into any type of a pickle and emergency with an electronic funds transfer or phone call you can access money out of there tax-free ultimately whether you're a business owner or let's say you're a retiree every million you accumulate tax-free now will generate 70 to 100 000 a year of tax-free cash flow into perpetuity through generations to come without completing that Nest day what would you call that and usually somebody on the front row goes a miracle
7 Figure Squad
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2023-05-27
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYmqOlQL4JM
Stop creating boring wavetables, be creative!
hey guys here's a quick idea for some wicked wait table creation stuff grab a bunch of samples and initiate the follow action stuff so double click into one mark them all choose whatever algorithm you want here and your timing and hit play load up your effects play around with the delay timing over here [Applause] ah uh [Music] so yeah that's enough go back up head over to arrangement view and what we're going to do now is we're going to scan through the result and see if we have some nice stuff [Applause] that can work that one can work right and maybe that one uh that one maybe [Music] okay go for that one on windows hit ctrl l to loop it make sure this channel is so load if you have several channels here so it doesn't pick up anything else ctrl shift r to open up the export and export them to a folder which is in your browser just as i have right here and you can start exporting these i'm gonna think too much about it i'm just gonna start with these two for now just to demonstrate the wait to do it um grab wave table eight pitch splice and make sure that you don't have this marked because this will lock the file from being overwritten because what i'm going to do is i'm going to export it again as a wavetable through vital so i'm going to overwrite wavetable 8 over here so just click somewhere else so it's not marked this won't be a problem on mac for mac users because you guys can just drag and drop it into vital within ableton so kudos to you for that um let's just do a quick scan and see how it sounds yeah see it's completely dry so a pretty cool thing so now i'm happy with that export that into my wavetable material folder and it was number eight as you can see here save it we go back into c room as we say in swedish load it and we got the same table over here as well [Music] sounds pretty much identical [Music] and you can further process it whatever you just want to do with it maybe try some kind of i don't know comb filtering [Music] could also remove that and then go into the matrix maybe assign a chaos oscillator to the oscillator a wave table position go in here bpm sync sample and hold oh that's me [Music] uh so yeah you got yourself a cool patch with a completely randomized what i like to call effects tables this is partly how i did my effects tables in my latest psy tables pack if you have checked it out if you haven't i will leave a link in the description um thanks for watching was just a real quick one to give you some inspiration on how you can make your sounds pretty unique using this and try new things thanks for watching
Dadda
UChhbsQ1eIzqj7041gHAh9tA
2021-08-27
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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511
2,589
Sw-SGbVrOFY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sw-SGbVrOFY
Apex Legends: 11500 Apex Coins Giveaway + 2x - 2150 Apex Coins Giveaway
before we get into the video people I am giving away 11,500 Apex coins to be with a Chance of wooden them make sure you are subscribed to this channel have that bowel modification button ticked drop a like on the video leave a comment down below more details on this giveaway are in the video description ok guys so that's basically how I have styled off my apex Elysium video since the game was released now I have received a lot of stick not from everybody but from a lot of people I've received so much hate from people stating that I am faking these giveaways now I can't hold it against anybody because there are so many people out there on YouTube under platform known as YouTube who do fake giveaways for self gain now I won't lie to you guys I am giving away 11,500 apex coins every month to help me on my channel out and it really does help out so yeah I won't lie to you guys it really helps Hannah is the reason I'm doing these giveaways but I am legit giving away 11500 apex coins every single month and hopefully this video will be enough proof for you guys to stick up for me in the comment section when you see people stating that these giveaways are fake because that truly is not the case so what I'm going to do is the we're gonna lock this is obviously I have posted quite a lot of Apex videos and I mean my video manager right here each page is it's got about 30 I think it is for videos on every page and I'm going back to when I first posted in their pics video which is this one right here so it's on page 4 so I'm first gonna do is I'm gonna randomly pick a page between 1 and 4 and we're gonna do this right here now what I will say is now I'm gonna come back to this video tomorrow and I'm gonna pick two random comments from this video and with a message M when you pull out your message under video to hit me up on Twitter and trust me if I pick you spam me on Twitter until I apply and I'm gonna give two people two random people from the comment section on this video there are 2150 apex coins also as well as the 11,500 who I pick at random from the video now the reason I'm doing this is because I just want to give back to you guys because the support and my ethics videos have been absolutely amazing like nothing I've seen really since destiny one so I'm true really truly grateful now what I will also say is if you live outside of the UK I can't give you gift card codes because a UK gift card codes for PlayStation and Xbox don't work outside of the UK so you will have to have a PayPal account so I can PayPal you the money applause now I can't well I can't decide what you spend its money on if I afford a window the 11500 and I'm sending you basically 80 quid you can spend it on whatever you like if you don't want to spend on epics coins you don't have to that's for sure but if you do live in the UK I will be sending you a gift card across so you will have to spend on something on Xbox or Playstation or stream or whatever but if you live outside of the UK you will have to have a PayPal account so I can send you the money across 40 11,500 and for the 2150 as well so yes just hopefully you are aware of that so yeah what let's get into it let's just get into it so between one and four random pick us all there we go page three okay so we go to page three and there's 30 videos on a page we just don't actually double check met internet slow today people in I apologize about that so yeah it's just rubbish oh that 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 and 30 now I have got destiny videos on here and if it doesn't land on a destiny video or an anthem video for that matter I will pick another number because I'm giving away to my apex viewers not my anthem and destiny viewers so yeah so will generate a number right here 23 okay so it's countdown 23 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 okay so 23 and what we will do is we will take the video url for this and we will paste it into a random comment bigger some people think they're so so you've got there and here we're just gonna have to paste this in here now have tested this website it does work great filter duplicate users as well so it's get the amount of comments yeah okay so there's a total of four hundred twenty eight unique commenters on this so the next step now is to start do therefore and pick a random winner okay so that's the start button right there so let's see let's see let's see [Music] okay if you look closely at the world map you'll see that it marks February as a launch of the game and that season one begins unmarked July will actually be season two okay so yeah winner is ta go lucha that's the person so I don't know what this does if I open up did you come to his YouTube channel yes it does so this is a person who has won my 11,500 Apex coins giveaway now this is you hit me up on Twitter now what I say in the start of my videos is I will contact you via direct message or I will contact you via the discussions page on your page or the discussions tab on your page which for a lot of people is not there so I can't contact a lot of people who win so what I'm saying is you hit me up on Twitter ta go watch sure hit me up on Twitter spam me until I see your message and I will die with message you if you live in the UK a gift card code or I will send you a paypal amount of a TI quid whatever is for the eleven thousand five hundred apex coins is sh pan Jess I'm looking at right now my x-box screen so yeah guys this is the winner of my eleven thousand five hundred monthly giveaway APICS coins now if you obviously wanted me with a chance of basically open your chance you need to leave a comment on every single apex legend video I post that's probably your best way and I can't spam because like I said it filters out the duplicate users so yeah just leave one comment on a video and that's the best chance you're gonna get so yeah guys ta go watch share congratulations hit me up on Twitter and I will send you the 11,500 Apex coins and like I said I'm gonna come back to this video tomorrow don't know what time will be tomorrow I'm gonna pick two random people anyway and I'm gonna reply to your comment I probably pin it to the couple of comments it to the top of the comments section sorry so I'll probably you can only pin one so y'all pin one and I reply to another and if I pick you you will have to hit me up on Twitter and yeah I do actually various ways I can pick the winner of these 2,150 apex coins so there's no point trying to be smart and create an account with the same channel name because each channel has a unique identification number and I will be checking that too so yeah like I said come back tomorrow if I've picked you to be a winner or if you get a notification of the reply from me and I'll pitch you hit me up on Twitter guys and I will give you a 2150 Apex coins via a gift card if you live in the UK or send you the 15 pound 16 pound or whatever 20 dollars if you live abroad or whatever but yeah guys this is how I'm gonna do my giveaways every single month just to keep it real just so you guys know I ain't fakin nothing because that's not how I do things and hopefully guys after seeing this video you would change your mind if you did think I am faking giveaways cuz like I said I ain't one of them people never have been never will be a lot of my giveaways in the past have been sponsored giveaways from Activision Bungie respawn Bioware and so forth so yeah I get into so much trouble if I was faking giveaways with these companies anywhere which is just not worth it but your guys I hope you enjoyed the video congratulations if you a winner you come back here and you've been picked to be a winner thanks again for that amazing support longmate continue on my videos to come and hopefully guys I'll see you on that next apex legends a video you
DPJ
UCqheS9rd4_nojHk3H-FR2XQ
2019-03-27
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
1,626
7,893
OtlDlMomfRA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OtlDlMomfRA
FE Plays Hell's Resort (Garry's Mod): I'm sure nothing can go wroAHHHH
[Music] hey folks today we are gonna play Garry's Mod we're gonna do a horror game I went through and I downloaded well install whatever a bunch of um Garry's Mod Workshop horror games now these are really shitty games made by 12 year old kids probably we're gonna try this one I haven't done this one yet it's called hell's resort no episodes oh that's us hopefully you can hear me well I just got a new headset and hopefully this runs well because I've been fucking with my video settings the past few days and I think I finally got it right oh not responding alright here we go welcome to GM hell's resort story you and your friends are on a trip in your car engine stops you go to a resort for shelter at the doors lock behind you and now you must escape your mission is to escape the resort the first objective is to break five crosses and then to escape from the resort rules do not nope clip whatever that is unless you're stuck use crowbar and flashlight only impress to start my pressing start Hey alright here we are that should be Effy's new tagline further entertainment where the fun begins take you some buddies take a screenshot of this right now please right now okay and now add in further entertainment rows get on it how is this a resort by the way you can't even smoke what kind of different reasons where it is let's see if I can just escape it using the door that I know I can't I have a feeling this could turn into just me fashion everything with the crowbar oh let's see if we can go on Fe Rose is greater than breeze all right so I don't know anything about the schema I assume there's gonna be a lot of creepy noises and probably some shit that's gonna pop up in my face spook me and really annoy me I died I thought what happened in here all the boxes flew at me boxes all right so I'm looking for five crosses across all right break the devil's crosses 1 2 3 4 5 so the whole point of this room was to throw a bunch of boxes at me okay this is definitely what key you know this is what Casey's room looks like at home like this is Casey's teen bedroom all this weird shit on the wall we have a spider just oh this is for sure something Casey on this wall yeah that's actually what Casey's mattress apart I've seen Casey's mattress and it looks just like this little Casey mr. C now this is Paul's room this is actually where Paul runs Endon from this is honestly what I picture Paul's room to look like that's Casey's room in this is positive do you remember that screen this is shadows shadows Chris room Paul Zenden headquarters in Casey's room there's angsty teenager some resort we got here it's like Banksy was here oh that's baby Casey Jesus fuck you we had our first demon encounter everybody I saw something right I'm not crazy [Music] that's good this is actually definitely what roses room looks like 100% with the spikes and she definitely has this painting on her floor no doubt about it some more Banksy artwork that seems to be admiral ackbar even Darth Vader's suit wall was here as well okay crosses oh this where I was before right yeah that's why I started okay so I went to rooms one through six we got room seven through nine over there so some sort of probably like that Christ fuck that's that was so loud Devils flower sounds like some sort of weed Igor that Devils flower one out of five four more to go folks get the hell out of this shitty resort that is the same shape of the keypad upstairs that I was smacking Devils flower I don't know what that some boys righteous man whose heart rots itself then he heads west just to find his family killed these symbols I don't know how much puzzly this is maybe South and then West so I have one right here let's go try this I think I maybe have to press these so if it was South and West first South it said so maybe you not maybe South West shit the mouse is really sensitive on this that's my cue missing everything we have to do so let's go check out the rosary skills okay that's actually what Casey looked like during the second round of sausage hm I saw snapchat he looks just like this it was really sad hopefully he's doing better these consoles all right that's it for rims one through six maybe I'll cut the video here I'll probably do that and I'm gonna resume in three two one go 7:39 great
Further Entertainment
UCOxcuNDse2hyB3p6rJF1XQQ
2020-06-17
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
833
4,301
5xPmCUvmQSY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xPmCUvmQSY
Barbary Macaque Soft Pastel Portrait Drawing | Wildlife Artwork
[Music] hello and welcome to another drawing video here on my youtube channel if you are new here my name is shay and i'm a full-time pet and wildlife portrait artist in today's video i'm going to be drawing this witty barbary macaque using soft pastels and pastel pencils i thought it would be fun to film the process and take you through a little time lapse of how i created this drawing here i have lightly sketched out the line work for the piece just by using a light hb pencil on 30 by 40 centimeters white pastelmat paper i actually just traced this line work as drawing it out free hand or using the grid method just takes so much extra time i prefer to just get stuck right into the drawing with my pastels as soon as possible once i have my drawing ready to go i then open the reference image on procreate on my ipad and pick out some of the colors to get a general sense of what soft pastel sticks and pastel pencils i need for the soft pastel sticks i mainly use unison color and schneike and for the pastel pencils i use many different brands i find that each brand has a different experience some are more opaque and some are harder or softer etc here i'm simply collecting various shades of light grays as well as yellows and oranges i'm just trying to find as many similar variations of colors that i can see in the reference photo i may not use all of these colors and i will undoubtedly add more to the mix as i go along i just like to be as organized as possible before starting the piece okay so as you can see i've already began with the eyes i think they are a great place to start with and i always make a huge effort to fill in as much detail as possible the eyes in a portrait are usually what the observer connects with and notices first obviously the larger the size of the paper the easier it's going to be to fill that detail in this particular portrait isn't the largest size measuring at 30 by 40 centimeters some of my large pep commission drawns go all the way up to 95 by 70 centimeters which is a good size for packing in all the detail as you can see i'm starting to map out the various lines and shapes within the face specifically the shadow forming the shape of the nose and the upper mouth skin folds for the skin here i'm using a mixture of light flesh and pink tones as well as purple and blues over time i have found the various strengths of the different brands of pastel pencils such as which work better for certain objectives and so on for example the caron dash pastel pencils are very soft which also makes them very opaque and because of this they are great for adding in the very vibrant details such as highlights in the reflection of the eyes or the final layers of fur now i'm going to move on to adding some of the colored fur around the face and also the light gray area of the body for this i used my soft pastel sticks not applying too much pressure otherwise that would completely fill in the paper with too much pastel making it impossible to lay the final details on top with the pencils to blend the soft pastel out i used a soft sponge tools and i will list all my materials that i use in the description i like to make my drawings look realistic and i think that soft pastels are a perfect medium to do so i personally find them very easy and satisfying to work with if you are new to soft pastels or you're looking to improve your skills with the media i have the full real-time process video for this drawing already available now on my patreon channel as well as this one in particular i have many other soft pastel tutorials and real-time videos over on patreon i really put a lot of effort into making the content on my patreon as useful as possible so if you are looking to gain more knowledge about soft pastels and how to use them please consider having a look on my patreon channel the link for it is in the description for this video i'm now using varying shades of grey pastel pencils to build up the light texture of the fur that we can see here i want to keep everything looking soft and fluffy so i only use a light pressure and i blend that out with my fingers where needed this particular portrait is actually one of three wildlife pieces i have recently drawn out in between the pet portrait commissions i create for my day-to-day job i'm also making fine art prints out of these portrait drawings please let me know if you think a separate video all about the creation of fine art prints would be useful for you i absolutely loved the reference photo for this drawing and the funny facial expressions as soon as i saw it i actually purchased this reference photo on a website called wildlifereferencephotos.com which is a great resource for artists looking for wildlife photo references i think i purchased around five reference photos for only ten dollars which is great it's also really nice to support photographers for their hard work as i work on the head section i begin by mapping out some of the fine dark hairs that i can see for the darkest lines i use the cretacolor black chalk pencil which produces the deepest blacks i can then start filling in the fine orange and yellow lines i just love how vibrant the colors are here it's really important to check the length and direction of your lines make sure you're focusing on those two aspects throughout the portrait to make sure that the fur is accurate as i previously mentioned and as you can see here i'm using the karen dash pastel pencils for the final fur details they are very vibrant and perfect making the fit look healthy and shiny as the drawing comes to an end i can start by drawing out all of the very fine black hairs that i can see all over the face a great tip is to sharpen your pencil to a point and then sand down two opposite sides so that your pastel tip becomes a very thin edge this is perfect for making those fine lines [Music] so thank you so much for stopping by and watching this video i hope you have enjoyed my process of drawing this witty barbary macaque if you did enjoy this video please like and subscribe and i hope to see you in the next one [Music] if you enjoyed this video here on my youtube perhaps you will consider subscribing over on my patreon channel on patreon you will find many of my high quality art tutorials and real-time videos for some of my most realistic and impressive artworks there are videos explaining in detail on how to use soft pastels oil paints and graphite to name a few i will also show you my go-to tools and how to use them all of my content is beginner friendly and is aimed to allow you to create realistic artworks that you're proud of there are three subscription tiers for you to choose from to see what best suits your artistic needs subscriptions are monthly and you can cancel at any time once you subscribe to a tier on patreon you will instantly gain access to all the past lessons i have already published as well as all the exciting future lessons that are to come each post comes with a full list of the materials needed and the tutorials often feature a full list of each individual pencil colors so you know exactly what you need to use throughout being a professional artist and lucky enough to have commission clients from all over the world patreon is the place where i take you through my full creative processes as well as explaining all the techniques thoughts and any tips that i may have for a low monthly fee you will gain access to hundreds of hours of high quality drawn footage so you can see exactly how i achieve realism in my artworks if you would like to see more information on what is available before subscribing to my patreon you may check out the tutorial section on my website at www.shamersart.com both the link to my patreon channel and my website is in the description for this video
Shaymus Art Tutorials
UCY4VyJ8OncywTqOX88PdZpg
2022-05-29
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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1,484
7,837
lIN3GrZfCZs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lIN3GrZfCZs
PASTORS RECEIVE IMPARTATION DURING ONE ON ONE WITH APOSTLE J.B MAKANANISA
oh [Music] nope [Music] let this oil be poured is jesus now that is wow [Music] go and touch that yourself you're a pastor don't touch that you want me to touch go come here come here come come and come see him when he's touching them look at him and the team has a hitting first no look at him this is the people he brought the put your hand say in jesus name in jesus name [Music] [Applause] because praying for you will really pray for the papers because i meet you already god bless you my name is zhang longa the women behind me is my beautiful wife isabelle we from angola we came here to visit our apostle makanisa because we we have many certain challenges in our country so we came here to the impactation so it was beautiful it was faithful now we are happy yeah many many challenges like sickness like power of power of god like so many things we have many things to we need to to open our spiritual eyes and the spiritual minds and we came here for that challenge so that's why we're here yeah i saw today the man of god 1-1 and he confirmed my apostle my ministry apostle he said it an apostle and lucy said that i will i will grow in my ministry and she said that the challenge that i have that i had that just surpassed it and confirm the everything in in my life yeah she she was just sick she's he's feeling bad in his head and his stomach now he he said it's okay now you don't think it's always it's past it it's okay i'm happy i'm so very happy i'm happy and maybe i i will i will come back again and come back i am so happy so happy i encourage another person to come to see a man of god because in way of ministry if he is necessary to [Music] to see the men who have [Music] many experience with the god so we must to visit we imagine to to to take that experience too that's why i call all the members of the board of christ to come here to to visit the apostles and no confidential so
Charis Missionary Church
UCN71WkOojVyW7o6JkK8OGeA
2022-07-07
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
387
1,909
L-LClkKs7ho
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L-LClkKs7ho
MTG Guilds of Ravnica PreRelease Kit | Golgari Boros
Skoosh Skoosh welcome back my ninjas Joey Moss bad boy gaming here pretty cool we got two guilds of ravenica pre-release kits we're gonna crack open Boros and go Gary oh yes the hype is real before we get into that real quick I'm gonna give away this Omni spell adept remember for three you may cast in a sorcery card from your hand without paying its mana cost on the flipside apex a power big old ten drop exile the top seven cards your library and silent of turn you may cast now land cards exiled this way if the spell was cast from your hand add ten men of any one color both of these this nice little combo is gonna go out to one person in order to be eligible all you gotta do is like share this video be subscribed to the channel and comment what is your favorite guild what is your favorite guild that's it that's all I want to know or what's your favorite guild first things first baby let's get into crack and open some goal Gary how is everyone doing this should be fun this should be fun diddly I'm done just slide this puppy out it's good ink so this is what we get life death rebirth noise what is inside of these looks like you got the pro mode showing right there anything else oh I like that spin down give me a 506 I didn't want to sex I was close though get a load of that new spin down dailies pretty cool huh that's sweet there we go focuses on no you spin down alright I'm not gonna see what this is I'm gonna try not to see it I already saw it what is that oh there it is hatchery spider and then a whole bunch of other stuff in there I'm not sure I think that's about your guild we're all learning together right now and then we got a soldier or lifeline token just chillin on top here we were gonna open this and just second I guess that's our promo though and then what comes inside of your who knows they are doing things different huh how about that Gilda wrapping a baby let's creep up inside I think I'm most pumps for go Gary to be honest I think that's I think that's who I'm liking so far it looks powerful Boros looks pretty powerful to Casa miel looks pretty decent honestly the Guild's are all looking pretty solid I wonder if there's any sleepers some cards we all overlooked probably we druggin offs quasi duplicate so if this was my guild was Gul Gary in this one we're not off to a good start now at that guy at least anything else up in here at Sage no we would we be off to a really bad start so far so not good well know why these are right quasi okay well because we're black and green I don't know I just don't know at least we have a mood mark painter there's an I like the artwork on this probably not my favorite from the set but thing it's pretty cool artful takedowns pretty slick bold devious cover-up where's all malucia necrotic wound or uh silent dark glow spore Shama Legion war boss sounds little fool though but unfortunately it is not matching our guild colors at all that could be a problem what do you guys think of this how they're doing it now do you think it was a mistake do you think it was a mistake how they went about this generous stray with doing the these guild kits true fire captain cool I want to get the foils of all these uh duplicate ones here I always say that and I never go and get the actual cards goofy like that venerated alocs it on so so far we for doing Gul Gary we're not doing too hot vigor sport worm there you go at least not to match our guilt and then we get to dimmer guild game the timer guild gate go figure there's our foil pile up there Alf night token I won't have any tokens are gonna be worth anything you think do we think any of the Toki's they're gonna be worth something that is the question probably not but every now and then some of these tokens surprise I'd like that and foiled that looks pretty cool and also yeah don't forget check out they're gonna be a video at the end of this it's a message to the community that I put together and how the community is basically destroying Magic the Gathering yeah yeah you might want to check that one out I think I make some darn good points in it and address some of the situations going on in the community chromatic Lantern yes now that would definitely be a solid pool something you would want and followed up by the go Gary guild gate so that was really good to us Oh only we got the ver Aska that's a person I pulled the emblem though pretty neat Oh take it so the chromatic Lantern really is what aided this along with that guild gate so that's a double plus for me for darn sure open up mr. moss you are struggling today I sure AM I sure AM come on what else Boris a locket notion ring price of fame so that's good we got some removal that's the sots a really good card you wanna get when you're doing these rampaging monuments and annul hide ferox nice all right that would have helped a little bit a little bit a little bit and a dimer guild gate so this would have been not a terrible I wouldn't say it would be terrible what's inside here though I have no idea so you get this little booklet all right like how to construct one of these guys I would assume so those who are unaware real quick you only get 40 cards when you're doing one of these pre-release stacks 1518 creatures are recommended five to eight other spells seventeen lands they recommend that is the recommendation for anyone who's never played in a pre-release I do recommend you go out your LGS this weekend and participate it is a lot of fun to play in these events what are we getting here hatchery spider so that is our foil promo followed by the gull Geary guild gate all right all right here we go a swarm guild mage legit grapping grappling sundew this is all new to me how they're doing this I think it's new to a lot of you - I know they did it a while ago but it's it's been some time I just completely forget Undercity iron Shallah beetle burglar rat the old wild Sara talk it's cool though that I kind of think it's neat they do this I'm not sure if they give all the exact same cards maybe just a promo is different I don't know is there gonna be a rare at the end of this I don't know I think that'd be neat if there was or we just stuck with that one you know Gary good good okay so you just get that one that's it you just get the one foil promo and that goes with your guild and that would be it okay okay this is new to me we're learning as we go onto Boros I'm to Boros I like to spin down those really neat hopefully Boros justice justice here can we get the ilaria am I saying that right Illyria Illyria are you from Illyria we shall see baby baby bear oh darn flipping her upside down let this whole lapse over here douche without looking at it oh there's arena codes in here too let's spin up this little spin down for 16 man never get it right like the bow oh I like that pretty cool alright what's this arena code about here I learn more about the new magic digital game Oh pretty neat pretty neat don't worry that'll already be spent before you even see this so that's cool you get a little arena promo code to review not bad not bad at all alright so Boros let's see what you're packing hopefully some sweet we got two necrotic wound root oh I love you baby I'm gonna make a really nasty deck with you Oh trust me we're gonna get into that oh this is good deafening Clarion to start things off that would be good to go with it and a crawl harpooner sweet so already we are looking better with Boros right now at least it's it's working to our advantage with other rare slot there can we keep it going beamsplitter mage alright our tuner again son do a legion war boss nice this would have been so far it's looking really good too token with it a really really good Boros opening so far so far so good I mean what more could you ask for here well a couple things with delirium Debbi nuts justice strike wow I wish rituals okay so we got a little weak there but that's okay if we're going strictly for Barros colors we should be if we'd open one of these kids that's who we chose yeah this would have been a really really good one for morose oh my gosh oh my gosh we would agree we Wow we will Wow we would have destroyed the entire tournament with this Wow with this one this is nutty we would have just Krunk this game over shake hands good game out the door give me my prize packs I'm leaving here yeah we would have want it real frigging easily Wow whispering snitch play craft oh good for the battle Dream Eater yeah and the power skill getting nice so yeah this one would have been really really solid alright let's see what's up inside here I am Legion war boss Wow we would had two of them oh man we would have annihilated this tournament I'm just saying in front of Annihilator the pre-release Silesian war boss along with chums the raksasa Wow definitely taking him to pound town guys for sure yeah this would have been really good phenomenal alright I appreciate you guys tuning in also we opened a booster box don't forget to check that out as well I already opened up a booster box of Gilda Ravnica go back and check out that other video talking about me addressing the community as always PLA
BadBoyGaming
UCVUe3VO-3FSZmZA-MpAhSiQ
2018-09-27
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
1,808
9,162
cJen6zoQs2U
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJen6zoQs2U
Through the Brazilian Wilderness | Theodore Roosevelt | Exploration, Memoirs | Talkingbook | 3/7
chapter 4 part 3 of through the brazilian wilderness this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org recording by joelle peebles through the brazilian wilderness by theodore roosevelt chapter four the headwaters of the paraguay part three the junction of the sao lorenzo and the paraguay is a day's journey above karambah from carumba there is a regular service by shallow steamers to cayaba at the head of one fork and to sao luis de caceres at the head of the other the steamers are not powerful and the voyage to each little city takes a week there are other forks that are navigable above caiaba and caceres launches go upstream for several days journey except during the driest parts of the season north of this marshy plain lies the highland the plan alto where the nights are cool and the climate healthy but i wish emphatically to record my view that these marshy plains although hot are also healthy and moreover the mosquitoes in most places are not insufficient numbers to be a serious pest although of course there must be nets for protection against them at night the country is excellently suited for settlement and offers a remarkable field for cattle growing moreover it is a paradise for water birds and for many other kinds of birds and for many mammals it is literally an ideal place in which a field naturalist could spend six months or a year it is readily accessible it offers an almost virgin field for work and the life would be healthy as well as delightfully attractive the man should have a steam launch in it he could with comfort cover all parts of the country from south of carumba to north of caiaba and caseras there would have to be a good deal of collecting although nothing in the nature of butchery should be tolerated for the region has only been superficially worked especially as regards mammals but if the man were only a collector he would leave undone the part of the work best worth doing the region offers extraordinary opportunities for the study of the life histories of birds which because of their size their beauty or their habits are of exceptional interest all kinds of problems would be worked out for example on the morning of the third as we were ascending the paraguay we again and again saw in the trees on the bank big nests of sticks into and out of which parakeets were flying by the dozen some of them had straws or twigs in their bills in some of the big globular nests we could make out several holes of exit or entrance apparently these parakeets were building or remodeling communal nests but whether they had themselves built these nests or had taken old nests and added to or modified them we could not tell there was so much of interest all along the banks that we were continually longing to stop and spend days where we were mixed flocks of scores of cormorants and darters covered certain trees both at sunset and after sunrise although there was no deep forest merely belts or fringes of trees along the river or in patches back of it we frequently saw monkeys in this riverine tree fringe active common monkeys and black howlers of more leisurely gate we saw caimans and capybaras sitting socially near one another on the sandbanks at night we heard the calling of large flights of tree ducks they were now the most common of all the ducks although there were many muscovy ducks also the evenings were pleasant and not hot as we sat on the forward deck there was a waxing moon the screamers were among the most noticeable birds they were noisy they perched in the very tops of the trees not down among the branches and they were not shy they should be carefully protected by law for they readily become tame and then come familiarly around the houses from the steamer we now and then saw beautiful orchids in the trees on the riverbank one afternoon we stopped at the home buildings or headquarters of one of the great outlying ranches of the brazil land and cattle company the far choir syndicate under the management of murdo mckenzie than whom we have in the united states no better citizen or more competent cattlemen on this ranch there are some 70 000 head of stock we were warmly greeted by mclean the head of the ranch and his assistant ramsey an old texan friend among the other assistants all equally cordial were several belgians and frenchmen the hands were paraguayans and brazilians and a few indians a hard bit set each of whom always goes armed and knows how to use his arms for there are constant collisions with cattle thieves from across the bolivian border and the ranch has to protect itself these cow hands vaqueros were of the type with which we were now familiar dark-skinned lean hard-faced men in slouch hats worn shirts trousers and fringed leather aprons with heavy spurs on their bare feet they are wonderful riders and ropers and fear neither man nor beast i noticed one indian vaquero standing in exactly the attitude of a shelluck of the white nile with the soul of one foot against the other leg above the knee this is a region with extraordinary possibilities of cattle raising at this ranch there was a tannery a slaughterhouse a cannery a church buildings of various kinds and all degrees of comfort for the 30 or 40 families who made the place their headquarters and the handsome white two-story big house standing among lemon trees and flamboyance on the river brink there were all kinds of pets around the house the most fascinating was a wee spotted fawn which loved being petted half a dozen curacaos of different species strolled through the rooms there were also parrots of several different species and immediately outside the house four or five herons with unclipped wings which would let us come within a few feet and then fly gracefully off shortly afterward returning to the same spot they included big and little white egrets and also the mob and pearl-colored heron with a partially black head and many colored bill which flies with quick repeated wing flappings instead of the usual slow hair and wing beats in the warehouse were scores of skins of jaguar puma ocelot and jaguarendi and one skin of the big small toothed red wolf these were all brought in by the cowhands and by friendly indians a price being put on each as they destroyed the stock the jaguars occasionally killed horses and full-grown cows but not bulls the pumas killed the calves the others killed an occasional very young calf but ordinarily only sheep little pigs and chickens there was one black jaguar skin melanism is much more common among jaguars than pumas although once miller saw a black puma that had been killed by indians the patterns of the jaguar skins and even more of the ocelot skins showed wide variation no two being alike the pumas were for the most part bright red but some were reddish gray there being much the same dichromatism that i found among their colorado kinsfolk the jaguar undies were dark brownish gray all these animals the spotted jaguars and oscillates the monochrome black jaguars red pumas and dark grey jaguar undies were killed in the same locality with the same environment a glance at the skins and a moment's serious thought would have been enough to show any sincere thinker that in these cats the coloration pattern whether concealing or revealing is of no consequence one way or the other as a survival factor the spotted patterns conferred no benefit as compared with the nearly or quite monochrome blacks reds and dark grays the bodily condition of the various beasts was equally good showing that their success in life that is their ability to catch their prey was unaffected by their several color schemes except white there is no color so conspicuously advertising as black yet the black jaguar had been a fine well-fed powerful beast the spotted patterns in the forests and perhaps even in the marshes which the jaguars so frequently traversed are probably a shade less conspicuous than the monochrome red and gray but the puma and jaguar jaguarundi are just as hard to see and evidently find it just as easy to catch prey as the jaguar and ocelot the little fawn which we saw was spotted the grown deer had lost the spots if the spots do really help to conceal the wear it is evident that the deer has found the original concealing coloration of so little value that it has actually been lost in the course of the development of the species when these big cats and the deer are considered together with the dogs tapers peccaries capybaras and big anteaters which live in the same environment and when we also consider the difference between the young and the adult deer and tapirs both of which when adult have substituted a complete or partial monochrome for the ancestral spots and streaks it is evident that in the present life and in the ancestral development of the big mammals of south america coloration is not and has not been a survival factor any pattern and any color may accompany the persistence and development of the qualities and attributes which are survival factors indeed it seems hard to believe that in their ordinary environment such color schemes as the bright red of the marsh deer the black of the black jaguar and the black with white stripes of the great tamandua are not positive detriments to the wearers yet such is evidently not the case evidently the other factors in species survival are of such overwhelming importance that the coloration becomes negligible from this standpoint whether it be concealing or revealing the cats mold themselves to the ground as they crouch or crawl they take advantage of the tiniest scrap of cover they move with extraordinary stealth and patience the other animals which try to sneak off in such manner as to escape observation approach more or less closely to the ideal which the cats most nearly realize wariness sharp senses the habit of being rigidly motionless when there is the least suspicion of danger and ability to take advantage of cover all count on the bare open treeless plane whether marsh meadow or upland anything above the level of the grass is seen at once a marsh deer out in the open makes no effort to avoid observation its concern is purely to see its foes in time to leave a dangerous neighborhood the deer of the neighboring forest skulk and hide and lie still in dense cover to avoid being seen the white lipped peccaries make no effort to escape observation by being either noiseless or motionless they trust for defense to their gregariousness and truculence the collard peccary also trusts to its strucculence but seeks refuge in a hole where it can face any opponent with its formidable biting apparatus as for the giant tamandua in spite of its fighting prowess i am wholly unable to understand how such a slow and clumsy beast has been able through the ages to exist and thrive surrounded by jaguars and pumas speaking generally the animals that seek to escape observation trust primarily to smell to discover their foes or their prey and see whatever moves and do not see whatever is motionless by the morning of january 5th we had left the marsh region there were low hills here and there and the land was covered with dense forest from time to time we passed little clearings with palm thatched houses we were approaching caseras where the easiest part of our trip would end we had lived in much comfort on the little steamer the food was plentiful and the cooking good at night we slept on deck in cots or hammocks the mosquitoes were rarely troublesome although in the daytime we were sometimes bothered by numbers of biting horse flies the bird life was wonderful one of the characteristic sights we were always seeing was that of a number of heads and necks of cormorants and snake birds without any bodies projecting above water and disappearing as the steamer approached skimmers and thick build turn were plentiful here right in the heart of the continent in addition to the spurred lap wing characteristic and most interesting resident of most of south america we found tiny red-legged plover which also breed and are at home in the tropics the contrast inhabits between closely allied species are wonderful among the plovers and bay snipe there are species that live all the year round in almost the same places in tropical and subtropical lands and other related forms which wander over the whole earth and spend nearly all their time now in the arctic and cold temperate regions of the far north now in the cold temperate regions of the south these latter wide wandering birds of the seashore and the riverbank pass most of their lives in regions of almost perpetual sunlight they spend the breeding season the northern summer in the land of the midnight sun during the long arctic day they then fly for endless distances down across the north temperate zone across the equator through the lands where the days and nights are always of equal length into another hemisphere and spend another summer of long days and long twilights in the far south where the antarctic winds cool them while their nesting home at the other end of the world is shrouded beneath the iron desolation of the polar knight in the late afternoon of the fifth we reached the quaint old-fashioned little town of sao louis de caceres on the outermost fringe of the settled region of the state of mato grosso the last town we should see before reaching the villages of the amazon as we approached we passed half clad black washer women on the river's edge the men with the local band were gathered at the steeply sloping foot of the main street where the steamer came to her moorings groups of women and girls white and brown watched us from the low bluff their skirts and bodices were red blue green of all colors sig had gone ahead with much of the baggage he met us in an improvised motorboat consisting of a dugout to the side of which he had clamped our evinrude motor he was giving several of the local citizens of prominence a ride to their huge enjoyment the streets of the little town were unpaved with narrow brick sidewalks the one-story houses were white or blue with roofs of red tiles and window shutters of latticed woodwork come down from colonial days and tracing back through christian and morse portugal to a remote arab ancestry pretty faces some dark some light looked out from these windows their mothers mothers for generations past must have thus looked out of similar windows in the vanished colonial days but now even here in caceres the spirit of the new brazil is moving a fine new government school has been started and we met its principal an earnest man doing excellent work one of the many teachers who during the last few years have been brought to mato grosso from sao paulo a center of the new educational movement which will do so much for brazil father zom went to spend the night with some french franciscan friars capital fellows i spent the night at the comfortable house of lieutenant lyra a hot weather house with thick walls big doors and an open patio bordered by a gallery lieutenant lyra was to accompany us he was an old companion of colonel rondon's explorations we visited one or two of the stores to make some final purchases and in the evening strolled through the dusky streets and under the trees of the plaza the women and girls sat in groups in the doorways or at the windows and here and there a stringed instrument tinkled in the darkness from caceres onward we were entering the scene of colonel rondon's explorations for some 18 years he was occupied in exploring and in opening telegraph lines through the eastern or north middle part of the great forest state the wilderness state of the mato grosso the great wilderness or as australians would call it the bush then in 1907 he began to penetrate the unknown region lying to the north and west he was the head of the exploring expeditions sent out by the brazilian government to traverse for the first time this unknown land to map for the first time the courses of the rivers which from the same divide run into the upper portions of the tapajos and the madera two of the mighty affluents of the amazon and to build telegraph lines across to the madeira where a line of brazilian settlements connected by steamboat lines and a railroad again occurs three times he penetrated into this absolutely unknown indian haunted wilderness being absent for a year or two at a time and suffering every imaginable hardship before he made his way through to the madera and completed the telegraph line across the officers and men of the brazilian army and the civilian scientists who followed him shared the toil and the credit of the task some of his men died of beriberi some were killed or wounded by the indians he himself almost died of fever again and again his whole party was reduced almost to the last extremity by starvation disease hardship and the over-exhaustion due to wearing fatigues in dealing with the wild naked savages he showed a combination of fearlessness wariness good judgment and resolute patience and kindliness the result was that they ultimately became his firm friends guarded the telegraph lines and helped the few soldiers left at the isolated widely separated little posts he and his assistants explored and mapped for the first time the girowena and the gipphirana two important affluents of the tapahos and the madeira respectively the tapahos and the madeira like the oronoco and rio negro have been highways of travel for a couple of centuries the madura as later the tapajos was the chief means of ingress a century and a half ago to the little portuguese settlements of this far interior region of brazil one of these little towns named matagrosso being the original capital of the province it has long been abandoned by the government and practically so by its inhabitants the ruins of palace fortress and church now rising amid the rank tropical experience of the wild forest the mouths of the main affluents of these highway rivers were as a rule well known but in many cases nothing but the mouth was known the river itself was not known and it was placed on the map by guesswork colonel rondon found for example that the course of the geek piranha was put down on the map two degrees out of its proper place he with his party was the first to find out its sources the first to traverse its upper course the first to map its length he and his assistants performed a similar service for the jeroena discovering the sources discovering and descending some of the branches and for the first time making a trustworthy map of the main river itself until its junction with the tapajos near the watershed between the jeroena and the gi piranha he established his farthest station to the westward named jose bonifacio after one of the chief republican patriots of brazil a couple of days marched north westward from this station he in 1909 came across a part of the stream of a river running northward between the ghee piranha and the giroena he could only guess where it debashed believing it to be into the madeira although it was possible that it entered the ghi purana or the tapahus the region through which it flows was unknown no civilized man having ever penetrated it and as all conjecture as to what the river was as to its length as to its place of entering into some highway river was mere guesswork he had entered it on his sketch maps as the rio de vita the river of doubt among the officers of the brazilian army and the scientific civilians who have accompanied him there have been not only expert cartographers photographers and telegraphists but astronomers geologists botanists and zoologists their reports published in excellent shape by the brazilian government make an invaluable series of volumes reflecting the highest credit on the explorers and on the government itself colonel rondon's own accounts of his explorations of the indian tribes he has visited and of the beautiful and wonderful things he has seen possess a peculiar interest end of chapter 4 of through the brazilian wilderness by theodore roosevelt recording by joelle peebles chapter 5 part 1 of through the brazilian wilderness this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org recording by tom clifton through the brazilian wilderness by theodore roosevelt chapter 5 up the river of tapers part one after leaving caseres we went up the septituba which in the local indian dialect means river of tapers this river is only navigable for boats of size when the water is high it is a swift fairly clear stream rushing down from the plan alto the high uplands through the tropical lowland forest on the right hand or western bank and here and there on the left bank the forest is broken by natural pastures and meadows and at one of these places known as porto campo 60 or 70 miles above the mouth there is a good sized cattle ranch here we halted because the launch and the two branches native trading boats with houses on their decks which it towed could not carry our entire party and outfit accordingly most of the baggage and some of the party were sent ahead to where we would meet our pack train at tape hiropone meanwhile the rest of us made our first camp under tents at puerto campo to wait the return of the boats the tents were placed in line with the tent of colonel rondon and the tent in which kermit and i slept in the middle beside one another in front of these two on tall poles stood the brazilian american flags and at sunrise and sunset the flags were hoisted and hauled down while the trumpet sounded and all of us stood at attention camp was pitched beside the ranch buildings and the trees near the tents grew wonderful violet orchids many birds were around us i saw some of them and sherry and miller many many more they ranged from party-colored macaws green parrots and big gregarious cuckoos down to a brilliant green and chestnut kingfisher five and a quarter inches long and a tiny orange and green mannequin smaller than any bird i have ever seen except a hummer we also saw a bird that really was protectively colored the kind of whipper will which even the sharp-eyed naturalist could only make out because it moved its head we saw orange bellied squirrels with showy orange tails lizards were common we killed our first poisonous snake the second we had seen an evil lance-headed jarakara that was swimming the river we also saw a black and orange harmless snake nearly eight feet long which we are told was akin to the musamarama and various other snakes one day while paddling in a canoe on the river hoping that the dogs might drive a taper to us they drove into the water a couple of small brush deer instead there was no point in shooting them we caught them with ropes thrown over their heads for the naturalists needed them as specimens and all of us needed the meat one of the men was stung by a single big red marabundi wasp for 24 hours he was in great pain and incapacitated for work in the lagoon two of the dogs had the tips of the tails bitten off by piranhas as they swam and the ranch hands told us that in this lagoon one of their hounds had been torn to pieces and completely devoured by the ravenous fish it was a further illustration of the uncertainty of temper and behavior of these ferocious little monsters in other lagoons they had again and again left us and our dogs unmolested they vary locally in aggressiveness just as sharks and crocodiles in different seas and rivers vary on the morning of january 9th we started out for a taper hunt tapers are hunted with canoes as they dwell in thick jungle and take to the water when hounds follow them in this region there were extensive papyrus swamps and big lagoons back from the river and often the tapers fled to these refuge throwing off the hounds in these places it was exceedingly difficult to get them our best chance was to keep to the river and canoes and paddle towards the spot in the direction of which the hounds by the noise seemed to be heading we started in four canoes three of them were indian dugouts very low in the water the fourth was our canadian canoe a beauty light safe roomy made of thin slats of wood and cement covered canvas colonel rondon fiala with his camera and i went in this canoe together with two panelers the paddlers were natives of the poorer class they were good men the bozeman was of nearly pure white blood this tears man was of nearly pure negro blood and was evidently the stronger character and the better men of the two the two other canoes carried a couple of fazenderos ranchmen who had come up from caseras with their dogs these dugouts were manned by indian and half-cast paddlers and the fazenderos who were nearly pure white blood also at times paddled vigorously all were dressed in substantially similar clothes the difference being that those of the camaradas the poorer men or laborers were in tatters in the canoes no man were anything save a shirt trousers and hat defeat being bare on horseback they were long leather leggings which were really simple high rather flexible boots with the soles off their spurs were on the tough bare feet there was every gradation between and among the nearly pure whites negros and indians on the whole there was the most white blood in the upper ranks and the most indian and negro blood among the kamaratas but there were exceptions in both classes and there was no discrimination on account of color all alike were courteous and friendly the hounds were first carried in two of the dugouts and then let loose on the banks we went upstream for a couple of hours against the swift current the paddlers making good headway with their pointed paddles the broad blade of each paddle was tipped with a long point so that it could be thrust into the mud to keep the low dugout against the bank the tropical forest came down almost like a wall the tall trees laced together with vines and the spaces between their trunks filled with a low dense jungle in most places it could only be penetrated by a man with a machete with few exceptions the trees were unknown to me and their native names told me nothing on most of them the foliage was thick among the exceptions were the sick cropius growing by preference on the new formed alluvial soil bear of other trees whose rather scanty leaf bunches were as i was informed the favorite food of sloths we saw one or two squirrels among the trees and a family of monkeys there were a few sandbanks in the river and no waterfowl save an occasional cormorant but as we pushed along near the shore where the branches overhung and dipped in the swirling water we continually roused little flocks of bats they were hanging from the boughs right over the river and when our approach roused them they zigzagged rapidly in front of us for a few rods and then again dove in among the branches at last we landed at a point of ground where there was little jungle and where the forest was composed of palms and was fairly open it was a lovely bit of forest the colonel strolled off in one direction returning an hour later with a squirrel for the naturalists meanwhile fiala and i went through the palm wood to a papyrus swamp many trails led through the woods especially along the borders of the swamp and although the principle makers had evidently been cattle yet there were in them footprints of both taper and deer the taper makes a footprint much like that of a small rhinoceros being one of the odd towed ungulates we could hear the dogs now and then evidently scattered and running on various trails they were a worthless lot of cur hounds they would chase taper or deer or anything else that ran away from them as long as the trail was easy to follow but they were not staunch even after animals that fled and they would have nothing whatever to do with animals that were formidable while standing by the marsh we heard something coming along one of the game pants in a moment a buck of the bigger species of the bush deer appeared a very pretty and graceful creature it stopped and darted back as soon as it saw us giving us no chance for a shot but in another moment we caught glimpses of it running by at full speed back among the palms i covered an opening between two tree trunks by good luck the buck appeared in the right place giving me just time to hold well ahead of him and fire at the report he went down in a heap the umbrella pointed bullet going in at one shoulder and ranging forward breaking the neck the lead-in portion of the bullet in the proper mushroom or umbrella shape stopped under the neck skin on the farthest side it is a very effective bullet miller particularly wish specimens of these various species of bush deer because their mutual relationships have not yet been satisfactorily worked out this was an old buck the antlers were single spikes five or six inches long they were old and white and soon would have been shed in the stomach were the remains of both leaves and grasses but especially the farmer the buck was both a browser and a grazer there were also seeds but no berries or nuts such as i have sometimes found in your stomachs this species which is abundant in this neighborhood is solitary in its habits not going in herds at this time the rut was passed the bucks no longer sought the does the fawns had not been born and the yearlings had left their mothers so that each animal usually went by itself when chased they were very apt to take to the water this instinct of taken to the water by the way is quite explicable as it regards both deer and taper ford affords them refuge against their present-day natural foes but it is a little puzzling to see the jaguar readily climbing trees to escape dogs for ages have passed since there were in this habitat any natural foes from which it needed to seek safety in the trees but it is possible that the habit has been kept alive by seeking refuge in them on occasion from the big peccaries which were among the beasts on which it ordinarily prays we hung the buck in a tree the colonel returned and not long afterward one of the paddlers who had been watching the river called out to us that there was a taper in the water a good distance upstream and that two of the other boats were after it we jumped into the canoe and the two paddlers dug their blades in the water as they drove her against the strong current edging over for the opposite bank the taper was coming downstream at a great rate only its queer head above water while dugouts were closing rapidly on it the paddler is uttering loud cries as the taper turns slightly to one side or the other the long slightly upturned snout and the strongly pronounced arch of the crest along the head and upper neck gave it a mark an unusual aspect i could not shoot for it was directly in the line with one of the pursuing dugouts suddenly it dived the snout being slightly curved downward as it did so there was no trace of it we gazed eagerly in all directions the dugout in front came alongside our canoe and the paddlers rested their paddles ready then we made out the taper clambering up the bank it had dived at right angles to the course it was following and swum under the water to the very edge of the shore rising under the overhanging tree branches at a point where a drinking trail for game led down a break in the bank the branches partially hit it and it was in deep shadow so they did not offer a very good shot my bullet went into its body too far back and the taper disappeared in the forest at a gallop as if unhurt although the bullet really secured it by making it unwilling to trust to its speed and leave the neighborhood of the water three or four the hounds were by this time swimming the river leaving the others yelling on the opposite side and as soon as the swimmers reached the shore they were put on the taper's trail and gallop after it giving tongue in a couple of minutes we saw the taper take to the water far upstream and after it we went as fast as the paddlers could urge us through the water we were not in time to head it but fortunately some of the dogs had come down to the river's edge at the very point where the taper was about to land and turned it back two or three of the dogs were swimming we were more than half the breadth of the river away from the taper and somewhat downstream when it dived it made an astonishingly long swim beneath water this time almost as if it had been a hippopotamus for a pass completely under our canoe and rose between us and the hither bank i shot it the bullet going into its brain while it was 30 or 40 yards from shore it sank at once there was now nothing to do but wait until the body floated i feared that the strong current would roll it downstream over the riverbed but my companions assured me that this was not so and that the body would remain where it was until it rose which would be in about an hour or two they were right except as to the time for over a couple of hours we paddled or anchored ourselves by clutching branches close to the spot or else drifted down a mile and paddled up again near the shore to see if the body had caught anywhere then we crossed the river and had lunch at the lovely natural picnic ground where the big buck was hung up we had barely nearly given up on the taper when it suddenly floated only a few rods from where it had sunk with no little difficulty the big round black body was hoisted into the canoe and we all turned our prows downstream the skies had been lowering for some time and now too late to interfere with the hunt or causes any annoyance a heavy downpour of rain came on and beat upon us little we cared as the canoe raced forward with a taper and a buck lying in the bottom and a dry comfortable camp ahead of us when we reached camp and father zom saw the taper he reminded me of something i had completely forgotten when some six years previously he had spoken to me in the white house about taking this south american trip i had answered that i could not as i intended to go to africa but added that i hope someday to go to south america and that if i did i should try to shoot both a jaguar and a taper as they were the characteristic big game animals of the country well said father zom now you shot them both the storm continued heavy until after sunset then the rain stopped and the full moon broke through the cloud wreck father zom and i walked up and down in the moonlight talking of many things from dante and her own plans for the future to the deeds and the wanderings of the old time spanish conquistadors in their search for the gilded king and to the portuguese adventurers who then divided with them the mastery of the oceans and of the unknown continents beyond this was an attractive and interesting camp in more ways than one the vaqueros with their wives and families were housed on the two sides of the field in which our tents were pitched on one side was a big white-washed tile roofed house in which the foreman dwelt an olive-skinned slightly built watery man with an olive-skinned wife and eight as pretty fair-haired children as one could wish to see he usually went barefoot and his manners were not merely good but distinguished corrals and outbuildings were near this big house on the opposite side of the field stood the row of steep roofed palm thatched huts in which the ordinary cowhans lived with their dusky helpmates and children each night from these palm patch quarters we heard the faint sounds of music that went far back of civilization to a savage ancestry nearby in point of time and otherwise immeasurably remote for through the still hot air under the brilliant moonlight we heard the monotonous throbbing of a tomtom drum and the twanging of some old stringed instrument the small black turkey buzzards here always called crows were as tame as chickens near the big house walking on the ground or perched in the trees beside the corral waiting for the oval of slaughtered cattle two palm trees near our tent were crowded with a long hanging nest of one of the kakik orioles we lived well with plenty of tapered beef which was good and venison of the bush deer which was excellent and as much ordinary beef as we wished and fresh milk too a rarity in this country there were very few mosquitoes and everything was as comfortable as possible the taper i killed was a big one i did not wish to kill another unless of course it became advisable to do so for food whereas i did wish to get some specimens at the big white-lipped peccary the kashata which is pronounced kashada of the brazilians which would make our collection of the big mammals of the brazilian forest almost complete the remaining members of the party killed two or three more tapers one was a bowl bowl grown but very much smaller than the animal i had killed the hunters said that this was a distinct kind the skull and skin were sent back with the other specimens to the american museum where after due examination and comparison its specific identity will be established papers are solitary beasts two are rarely found together except in the case of a cow and a spotted street calf they live in dense cover usually lying down in the daytime and at night coming out to feed and going to the river or some lagoon to bathe and swim from this camp sig took lieutenant lyra back to casares it's something that had been overlooked they went in a rowboat to which the motor had been attached and at night on the way back almost ran over a taper that was swimming but in unfrequented places tapers both feed and bathe during the day the stomach of the one i shot contained big palm nuts they had been swallowed without enough mastication to break the kernel the outer pulp being with the taper prized tapers gallop well and their tough hide and wedge shape enable them to go at speed through very dense cover they try to stamp on and even to bite a foe but are only clumsy fighters the taper is a very archaic type of ungulate not unlike the non-specialized beast of the oglycine from some such ancestral type the highly specialized one-toed modern horse has evolved while during the uncounted ages that saw the horse thus develop the taper has continued substantially unchanged originally the tapers dwelt in the northern hemisphere but there they gradually died out the more specialized horse and even for long ages the rhinoceros persisting after they had vanished and nowadays the surviving tapers are found in malaysia and south america far from their original home the relations of the horse and taper in the paleontological history of south america are very curious both were geologically speaking comparatively recent immigrants and if they came at different dates it is almost certain that the horse came later the horse for an age or two certainly for many hundreds of thousands of years drove greatly and developed not only several different species but even different genera it was much the most highly specialized of the two and in other continental regions where both were found the horse outlasted the taper but in south america the taper outlasted the horse from unknown causes the various genera and species of horses died out while the taper has persisted the highly specialized highly developed beasts which represented such a full evolutionary development died out while they're less specialized from ken's folk which had not developed clung to life and throve and this although the direct reverse was occurring in north america and in the old world it is one of the innumerable and at present insoluble problems in the history of life on our planet end of chapter 5 part 1. chapter 5 part 2 of through the brazilian wilderness this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org recording by tom clifton through the brazilian wilderness by theodore roosevelt chapter five up the river of tapers part two i spent a couple of days of hard work in getting the big white lipped peccaries white lipped being rather a misnomer as the entire under jaw and lower cheek are white they were said to be found on the other side of and some distance back from the river colonel rondon had sent out one of our attendants an old follower of his a full-blooded priestess indian to look for tracks this was an excellent man who dressed and behaved just like the other good men we had and was called antonio parisis he found the tracks of a herd of 30 or 40 kashadas and the following morning we started after them on the first day we killed nothing we were rather too large at party for one or two of the visiting fazenderos came along with their dogs i doubt whether these men very much wished to overtake our game for the big peccary is a murderous foe of dogs and is sometimes dangerous to men one other number frankly refused to come or let his dogs come explaining that the fierce wild swine were very badly brought up a literal translation of his words and that respectable dogs and men ought not to go near them the other fazenderos merely feared for their dogs a groundless fear i believe as i do not think that the dogs could by any exertion have been dragged into dangerous proximity with such foes the ranch foreman benedetto came with us and two or three other camaradas including antonio the priestess indian the horses were swum across the river each being led beside a dugout then we crossed with the dogs our horses were saddled and we started it was a picturesque cavalcade the native hunters of every shade from white to dark copper all were leather leggings that left the soles of the feet bare and on their bare heels were spurs with wheels four inches across they went in single file for no other mode of travel was possible and the two or three leading men kept their machetes out and had to cut every yard of her way while we were in the forest the hunters rode little stallions and their hounds were gilded most of the time we were in forest or swampy jungle part of the time we crossed or skirted marshy plains in one of them a herd of half wild cattle was feeding herons storks ducks and ibises were in these marshes and we saw one flock of lovely roseate spoonbills in one grove the fig trees were killing the palms just as in africa that killed the sandalwood trees in the gloom of this grove there were no flowers no bushes the air was heavy the ground was brown with moldering leaves almost every palm was serving as a prop for a fig tree the fig trees were in every stage of growth the youngest ones merely ran up the palms as vines in the next stage the vine had thickened and was sending out shoots wrapping the palm stem in a deadly hold some of the shoots were thrown around the stem like the tentacles of an immense cuttlefish others looked like claws that were hooked into every crevice and round every projection in the stage beyond this the palm had been killed and its dead carcass appeared between the big winding vine trunks and later the palm had disappeared and the vines had united into a great fig tree water stood in black pools at the foot of the murdered trees and of the trees that had murdered them there was something sinister and evil in the dark stillness of the grove it seemed as if sentient beings had ride themselves round and were strangling other sentient beings we passed through wonderfully beautiful woods of tall palms that will wash a palm will also palm as it should be spelled in english the trunks rose tall and strong and slender and the fronds were branches 20 or 30 feet long with the many long narrow green blades starting out from the midrib at right angles and pairs round the ponds stood stately burity palms rising like huge columns with great branches that look like fans as long stiff blades radiated from the end of the midrib one tree was gorgeous with the brilliant hues of a flock of party colored macaws green parrots flew shrieking overhead now and then we were bitten and stung by the venomous fire ants and ticks crawled upon us once we were assailed by more serious foes in the shape of a nest of mara marabundi wasps not the biggest kind but about the size of our hornets we were at the time passing through dense jungle under tall trees in a spot where the downed timber holes tangled creepers and thorns made the going difficult the leading men were not assailed although they were now and then cutting the trail colonel rhonda and i were in the middle of the column and the swarm attacked us both of us were badly stung on the face neck and hands the colonel even more severely than i was he wheeled and rode to the rear and eye to the front our horses were stung too and we went at a rate that a moment previously i would have deemed impossible over such ground at the close of the day when we were almost back at the river the dogs killed a jaguar kitten there was no trace of the mother some accident must have befallen her and the kitten was trying to shift for herself she was very emaciated in her stomach were the remains of a pigeon and some tendons from the skeleton or dried carcass of some big animal the loathsome bernie flies which deposit eggs in living beings cattle dogs monkeys rodent men had been at it there were seven huge white grubs making big abscess like swellings over its eyes these flies deposit their grubs in men in 1909 on colonel rondon's hardest grip every man of the party had from one to five grubs deposited in them the fly acting with great speed and driving it over positive through clothing the grubs cause torture but a couple of cross cuts with a lancet permit to load some creatures to be squeezed out in these forests the multitude of insects that bite sting devour and prey upon other creatures often with accompaniments of atrocious suffering passes belief the very pathetic myth of beneficent nature could not deceive even the least wise being if he once saw for himself the iron cruelty of life in the tropics of course nature in common parlance a wholly inaccurate term by the way especially when used as if to express a single entity is entirely ruthless no less so as regards types than as regards individuals and entirely indifferent to good or evil and works out for ends or no ends with other disregard of pain and woe the following morning at sunrise we started again this time only colonel rondon and i went with benedetto and antonio the indian we brought along four dogs which it was fondly hoped might chase the kashadas two of them disappeared on the track of the taper and we saw them no more one of the others promptly fled when we came across the tracks of our game and would not even venture after them in our company the remaining one did not actually run away and occasionally gave tongue but could not be persuaded to advance unless there was a man ahead of him however colonel rondon benedetto and antonio formed a trio of hunters who could do fairly well without dogs after four hours of riding benedetto who was in the lead suddenly stopped and pointed downward we were riding along a grassy interval between masses of forest and he had found that fresh track ever heard of big peccaries crossing from left to right there were apparently 30 or 40 in the herd the small peccaries go singly or in small parties and when chase take refuge in holes or hollow logs where they show a valiant fight but the big peccaries go in herds of considerable size and are so truculent that they are reluctant to run and prefer either to move slowly off chattering their tusks congruenting or else actually to charge we're much persecuted the survivors gradually grow more willing to run but their instinct is not to run but to trust through their truculence and their mass action for safety they inflict a fearful bite and frequently kill dogs they often charge the hunters and i have heard of men being badly wounded by them while almost every man who hunts them often is occasionally forced to scramble up a tree to avoid a charge but i have never heard of a man being killed by them they sometimes surround a tree in which the man has taken refuge and keep him up it cherie on one occasion in costa rica was thus kept up a tree for several hours by a great herd of three or four hundred of these peccaries and this although he killed several of them ordinarily however after making their charge they do not turn but pass out of sight their great foe is a jaguar but unless he exercises much caution they will turn the tables on him cherie also in costa rica came upon the body of a jaguar which had evidently been killed by a herd of peccary some 24 hours previously the ground was trampled up by their hooves and the carcass was rent and slit into pieces benedetto as soon as we discovered the tracks slipped off his horse changed his leggings for sandals threw his rifle over his arm and took the trail of the herd followed by the only dog which would accompany him the peccaries had gone into a broad belt of forest with a marsh on the farther side at first antonio led the colonel and me all of us on horseback at a canter around this belt to the marsh side thinking the peccaries had gone almost through it but we could hear nothing the dog only occasionally barked and then not loudly finally we heard a shot then a dutto had found the herd which showed no fear of him he had backed out and fired a signal shot we all three went into the forest on foot towards where the shot had been fired it was dense jungle and stiflingly hot we could not see clearly for more than a few feet or move easily without free use of the machetes soon we heard the ominous groaning of the herd in front of us and almost on each side then benedetto joined us and the dog appeared in the rear we moved slowly forward toward the sound of the fierce moaning grunts which were varied at times by a cast net shattering of the tusks then we dimly made out the dark forms of the peccaries moving very slowly to the left my companions each chose a tree to climb up at need and pointed one out for me i fired at the half seen form of a hog through the vines leaves and branches the colonel fired i fired three more shots at other hogs and the indian also fired the peccaries did not charge walking and trotting with bristles erect groaning and clacking their tusks they disappeared into the jungle we could not see one of them clearly and not one was left dead but a few paces on we came across one of my wounded ones standing at bay by a palm trunk and i killed it forthright the dog would not even trail the wounded ones but here antonio came to the front with eyes almost as quick and sure as those of a wild beast he had watched after every shot and was able to tell the results in each case he said that in addition to the one i had just killed i had wounded two others so seriously that he did not think they would go far and that colonel rondon and he himself had each badly wounded one and moreover he showed the trails each wounded animal had taken the event justified him in a few minutes we found my second one dead then we found antonio's then we found my third one alive and at bay and i killed it with another bullet finally we found the kernels i told him i should ask the authorities of the american museum to mount his and one or two of mine in a group to commemorate our hunting together if we had not used crippling rifles the peccaries might have gotten away for in the dark jungle with the masses of intervening leaves and branches it was impossible to be sure of placing each bullet properly in the half seen moving beast we found where the herd had wallowed in the mud the stomachs of the peccaries we killed contained wild figs palm nuts and bundles of root fibers the dead beasts were covered with ticks they were at least twice the weight of the smaller peccaries on the ride home we saw a buck of the smaller species of bush deer not half the size of the kind i had already shot it was only a patch of red in the bush a good distance off but i was lucky enough to hit it in spite of its small size it was a full-grown male of a species we had not yet obtained the antlers had recently been shed and the new antler growth had just begun a great job brew stork let us ride by him 150 yards off without thinking it worthwhile to take flight this day we saw many of the beautiful violet orchids and in the swamps were multitudes of flowers red yellow lilac of which i did not know the names i alluded above to the queer custom these people in the interior of brazil have of gelding their hunting dogs this absurd habit is doubtless a chief reason why there are so few hounds worth their salt in the more serious kinds of hunting where the quarry is the jaguar or big peccary thus far we have seen but one dog as good as the ordinary cougar hound or bear hound in such packs as those with which i have hunted in the rockies and in the cane breaks of the lower mississippi it can hardly be otherwise when every dog that shows himself worth of anything is promptly put out that category of breeders the theory apparently being that the dog will then last longer all the breeding is from worthless dogs and no dog of proved worth leaves descendants the country along this river is a fine natural cattle country and someday it will surely see a great development it was open to the development by colonel rondon only five or six years ago already an occasional cattle ranch is to be found along the banks when railroads are built into these interior portions of metal grosso the whole region will grow and thrive amazingly and so will the railroads the growth will not be merely material an immense amount will be done in education using the word education in his broadest and most accurate sense as applying to both mind and spirit to both the child and the man colonel rondon is not merely an explorer he has been and is now a leader in the movement for the vital betterment of his people the people of mantle grosso the poorer people of the back country everywhere suffer because of the harsh and improper laws of debt in practice these laws have resulted in establishing a system of payonage such as has grown up here and there in our own nation a radical change is needed in this matter and the colonel is fighting for the change in school matters the colonel has precisely the ideas of our wisest and most advanced men and women in the united states cherie who is not only an exceedingly efficient naturalist and explorer in the tropics but is also a thoroughly good citizen at home is the chairman of the school board in the town of newfane in vermont he and the colonel and kermit and i talked over school matters at length and were in hearty accord as to the vital educational needs of both brazil and the united states the native combining industrial with purely mental training and the need for having the widespread popular education which is and must be supported and paid for by the government made a purely governmental and absolutely non-sectarian function administered by the state alone without interference with nor furtherance of the beliefs of any reputable church the colonel is also head of the indian service of brazil being what corresponds roughly with our commissioner of indian affairs here he is also taking the exact view that is taken in the united states by the staunchest and wisest friends of the indians the indians must be treated with intelligence and sympathetic understanding no less than with justice and firmness and until they become citizens absorbed into the general body politic they must be the wards of the nation and not any private association lay or clerical no matter how well meaning the sepatuba river was scientifically explored and mapped for the first time by colonel rondon in 1908 as head of the brazilian telegraphic commission this was during the second year of his exploration and opening of the unknown northwest wilderness amato grosso most of this wilderness had never previously been trodden by the foot of a civilized man not only were careful maps made and much other scientific work accomplished but posts were established and telegraphed lines constructed when colonel rondon began the work he was a major he was given two promotions to lieutenant colonel and colonel while absent in the wilderness his longest and most important exploring trip and the one fraught with most danger and hardship was begun by him in 1909 on may 3rd the anniversary of the discovery of brazil he left tapiropoen on that day and he reached the madura river on christmas december 25th of the same year having descended the guy piranha the mouth of this river had long been known but its upper course for half its length was absolutely unknown when rhonda descended it among those who took part under him in this piece of exploration were the present captain amlikar and lieutenant lyra and two better or more efficient men for such wilderness work it would be impossible to find they acted as his two chief assistants on our trip in 1909 the party exhausted all their food including even the salt by august for the last four months they lived exclusively on the game they killed on fruits and on wild honey their equipage was what the men could carry on their backs by the time the party reached the martiera they are worn out by fatigue exposure and semi-starvation and their enviable bodies were wracked by fever the work of exploration accomplished by colonel rondon and his associates during these years was as remarkable as and in its results even more important than any similar work undertaken elsewhere on the globe or at about the same time its value was recognized in brazil yet received no recognition by the geographical societies of europe or the united states the work done by the original explorers of such a wilderness necessitates the undergoing of untold hardship and danger their successors even their immediate successors have a relatively easy time soon the road becomes so well beaten that it can be traversed without hardship by any man who does not venture from it although if he goes off into the wilderness for even a day hunting or collecting he will have a slight taste of what his predecessors endured the wilderness explored by colonel rondon is not yet wholly subdued and still holds menace to human life at quesares he received notice of the death of one of his gallant subordinates captain cardozo he died from barry berry far out in the wilderness along our proposed line of march colonel rondon also received news that a boat descending the guy piranha to carry provisions to meet those of our party who were to descend that stream had been upset the provisions lost and three men drowned the risk and hardship are such that the ordinary men the camaradas do not like to go into the wilderness the men who go with the telegraphic commission on the rougher and wilder work are paid seven times as much as they earn in civilization on this trip of ours colonel rondon met with much difficulty and securing someone who could cook he asked the cook on the little steamer knock to go with us but the cook with unaffected horror responded senor i have never done anything to deserve punishment end of chapter five part two chapter 5 part 3 of through the brazilian wilderness this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org recording by tom clifton through the brazilian wilderness by theodore roosevelt chapter 5 up the river of tapers part three five days after leaving us the launch with one of the native trading boats last alongside returned on the 13th we broke camp loaded ourselves and all our belongings on the launch in the houseboat and started upstream for tepiropoen all told there were about 30 men with five dogs in tents bedding and provisions fresh beef growing rapidly less fresh skins all and everything jammed together it rained most of the first day and part of the first night after that the weather was generally overcast and pleasant for traveling but sometimes rain and torrid sunshine alternated the cooking and it was good cooking was done at a funny little open air fireplace with two or three cooking pots placed at the stern of the house boat the fireplace was a platform of earth taken from ant anthills and heaped and spread on the boards of the boat around it the dusky cook worked with philosophic solemnity in rain and shine our attendance friendly souls with skins of every shade and hue slept most of the time curled up among boxes bundles and slabs of beef an enormous land turtle was tethered towards the bow of the houseboat when the men slept too near it it made futile efforts to scramble over them and in return now and then one of them gravely used it for a seat slowly the throbbing engine drove the launch and its unwieldy side partner against the swift current the river had risen we made about a mile and a half an hour ahead of us the brown water stretched in curves between endless walls of dense tropical forest it was like passing through a gigantic greenhouse wawasa and buriti palms sucropias huge figs feathery bamboos strange yellowed stem trees low trees with enormous leaves tall trees with foliage as delicate as lace trees with buttressed trunks trees with bulls rising smooth and straight to lofty heights all woven together by a tangle of vines crowded down to the edge of the river their drooping branches hung down to the water forming a screen through which it was impossible to see the bank and exceedingly difficult to penetrate to the bank rarely one of them showed flowers large white blossoms or small red or yellow blossoms more often the lilac flowers of the begonia vine made large patches of color innumerable ephites covered the limbs and even grow on the roughened trunks we saw little bird life a darter now and then and kingfishes flitting from perch to perch at long intervals we passed a ranch at one the large red tiled whitewashed house stood on a grassy slope behind mango trees the wooden shutters were thrown back from the unglazed windows and the big rooms were utterly bare not a book not an ornament a palm loaded with scores of the pendulous nest of the tropials stood near the door behind were orange trees and coffee plants and nearby fields of bananas rice and tobacco the sallow foreman was courteous and hospitable his dark-skinned women folk kept in the furative background like most of the ranches it was owned by a company with headquarters at caceres the trip was pleasant and interesting although there was not much to do on the boat it was too crowded to move around save with a definite purpose we enjoyed the scenery we talked in english portuguese bad french and broken german some of us wrote fiala made sketches of improved tents hammocks and other field equipment suggested by what he had already seen some of his read books colonel rondon nate trim alert and soldierly studied a standard work on applied geographical astronomy father zom wrote a novel by fogazzaro kermit read kim owens and a couple of brazilian novels ogurrani and innocentia my own reading varied from quentin duard and gibbon to the shannon de roland miller took out his little pet owl moses from the basket in which moses dwelt and gave him food and water moses crooned and chuckled gratefully when he was stroked and tickled late the first evening we moored to the bank by a little fazenda of the poorer type the houses were of palm leaves even the walls were made of the huge fronds or leafy branches of the wawasa palm stuck upright in the ground and the blades plated together some of us went to shore some stayed on the boats there were no mosquitoes the weather was not oppressively hot and we slept well by five o'clock next morning we had each drunk a cup of delicious brazilian coffee and the boats were underway all day we steamed slowly upstream we passed two or three fazendas at one where we halted to get milk the trees were overgrown with pretty little yellow orchids at dark we moored at a spot where there were no branches to prevent or placing boats directly alongside the bank there were hardly any mosquitoes most of the party took their hammocks ashore and the camp was pitched amid singularly beautiful surroundings the trees were rewasa palms some with the fronds cresting very tall trunks some with the fronds seemingly longer rising almost from the ground the fronds were of great length some could not have been less than 50 feet long bushes and tall grass due drenched and glittering with the green of emeralds grew in the open spaces between we left at sunrise the following morning one of the sailors had strayed inland he got turned round and could not find the river and we started before discovering his absence we stopped at once and with much difficulty he forced his way through the vine-laced and thorn-guarded jungle toward the sound of the launch's engines into the bugle which was blown in this gents jungle when the sun is behind clouds a man without a compass who strays a hundred yards from the river may readily become hopelessly lost as we ascended the river the wawasa palms became constantly more numerous at this point for many miles they gave their own character to the forest on the riverbanks everywhere their long curving fronds rose up among other trees and in places their lofty trunks made them hold their heads higher than the other trees but they were never as tall as the giants among the ordinary trees on one towering palm we noticed a mass of beautiful violet orchids growing from the side of the trunk halfway to the top on another big tree not a palm which stood in a little opening that hung well over 100 troops nests besides two or three small ranches we this day passed a large ranch the various houses and sheds all palm thatched stood by the river in a big space of cleared ground dotted with wasa palms a native houseboat was moored by the bank women and children looked from the unglazed windows of the houses men stood in front of them the biggest house was enclosed by a stockade of palm logs thrust and on into the ground cows and oxen graves round about and the carts with solid wheels each wheeled made of a single disc of wood were tilted on their poles we made our noonday halt on an island where very tall trees grow bearing fruits that were pleasant to the taste other trees on the island were covered with rich red and yellow blossoms and masses of delicate blue flowers and of star-shaped white flowers grew underfoot hither and tether across the surface of the river flew swallows with so much white on their plumage that as they flashed in the sun they seemed to have snow white bodies borne by dark wings the current of the river goose swifter there were stretches of broken water that were almost rapids the laboring engine strained and sobbed as with increasing difficulty it urged forward the launch and clubsy consort at nightfall we moored beside the bank where the forest was open enough to permit a comfortable camp that nights the ants ate large holes in miller's mosquito netting and almost devoured his socks and shoelaces at sunrise we again started there were occasional stretches of swift broken water almost rapids in the river everywhere the current was swift and our progress was slow the prancia was towed at the end of a hauser and her crew pulled even thus we only just made the riffle in more than one case two or three times cormorants and snake birds perched on snags in the river on trees alongside it permitted the boat to come within a few yards in one piece of high forest we saw a party of two cons conspicuous even among the treetops because of their huge bills and the leisurely expertness with which they crawled climbed and hopped among the branches we went by several fazendas shortly before noon january 16th we reached cape parapolan the headquarters of the telegraphic commission it was an attractive place on the riverfront and it was gayly bedecked with flags not only those of brazil and the united states but all of the other american republics in her honor there was a large green square with trees standing in the middle of it on one side of this square were the buildings of the telegraphic commission on the other those of a big ranch of which this is the headquarters in addition there were stables sheds outhouses and corrals and there were cultivated fields nearby milk cows beef cattle oxen and mules wandered almost at will there were two or three wagons and carts and attraction automobile used in the construction of the telegraph line but not available in the rainy season at any time of our trip here we were to begin our trip overland on pack mules and pack oxen scores of which have been gathered to meet us several days were needed to apportion the loads and arrange for the several divisions in which it was necessary that so large a party should attempt the long wilderness march through a country where there was not much food for man or beast and where it was always possible to run into a district in which fatal cattle or horse diseases were prevalent fiala with his usual efficiency took charge of handling the outfit of the american portion of the expedition with sig as an active and useful assistant harper who like others worked with wholehearted zeal and cheerfulness also helped him except when he was engaged in helping the naturalists the two ladder cherie and miller had so far done the hardest and the best work of the expedition they had collected about a thousand birds and 250 mammals it was not probable that they would do so well as during the remainder of our trip for we intended thenceforth to halt as little and march as steadily as the country the weather and the condition of remains of transportation permitted i kept continually wishing that they had more time in which to study the absorbingly interesting life histories of the beautiful and wonderful beasts and birds we were all the time seeing every first-rate museum must still employ competent collectors but i think that a museum could now confer a most lasting benefit and can do work and most permanent good by sending out into the immense wilderness where wild nature is at our best trained observers with the gift of recording what they have observed such men should be collectors for collecting is still necessary but they should also and indeed primarily be able themselves to see and to set vividly before the eyes of others the full life histories of the creatures that dwell in the waste spaces of the world at this point both cherie and miller collected a number of mammals and birds which they had not previously obtained whether any were new to science could only be determined after the specimens reached the american museum while making the round of the small mammal traps one morning miller encountered an army of the formidable foraging ants the species was a large black one moving with a well-extended front these ants sometimes called army ants like the driver ants of africa move in big bodies and destroy or make prey of every living thing that is unable or unwilling to get out of their path in time they run fast and everything runs away from their advance insects form their chief prey and the most dangerous and aggressive lower life creatures make astonishingly little resistance to them miller's attention was first attracted to this army of ants by noticing a big centipede nine or ten inches long trying to flee before them a number of ants were biting it and it rised at each bite but it did not try to use its long curved jaws against its assailants on other occasions he saw big scorpions and big hairy spiders trying to escape in the same way and showing the same helpless inability to injure the ravenous foes or to defend themselves the ants climb trees to a great height much higher than most birds nests and at once kill and tear to pieces any fledglings in the nests they reach but they are not as common as some riders seem to imagine days may elapse before their armies are encountered and doubtless most nests are never visited or threatened by them in some instances it seems likely that the birds save themselves and their young in other ways some nests are inaccessible from others it is probable that the parents removed the young miller once in guyana had been watching for some days a nest of ant wrens which contained young going tether one morning he found the tree and the nest itself swarming with foraging ants he at first thought that the fledglings had been devoured but he soon saw the parents only about 30 yards off with food in their beaks they were engaged and entering a dense part of the jungle coming out again without food in their beaks and soon reappearing once more with food miller never found their new nests but their actions left them certain they were feeding their young which they must have themselves removed from the old nest these ant wrens hover in front of and over the columns of foraging ants feeding not only on the other insects aroused by the ants but on the ants themselves this fact has been doubted but miller has shot them with ants in their bills and in their stomachs dragonflies in numbers often hover over the columns darting down at them miller could not be certain he had seen them actually seizing the ants but this was his belief i myself have seen these ants plunder a nest of the dangerous and highly aggressive wasps while the wasps buzzed around in great excitement but seemed unable effectively to retaliate i have also seen them clear a sapling tenanted by their kinsmen to poisonous red ants or fire ants the fire ants fought and i have no doubt injured or killed some of the swarming and active black foes but the latter quickly did away with them i have only come across black foraging ants but there are red species they attack human beings precisely as they attack all animals and precipitate flight is the only resort around our camp here butterflies of gorgeous coloring swarmed and there were many fungi as delicately shaped and tinted as flowers the scents in the woods were wonderful there were many whipper wills or rather brazilian birds related to them they uttered at intervals throughout the night a succession of notes suggesting both those of her whipperweel and those of her big chuck wills widow of the gulf states but not identical with either there were other birds which were nearly akin to familiar birds of the united states a dull colored cat bird a dull colored robin and a sparrow belonging to the same genus as her common song sparrow in a sweetheart sparrow miller had heard this sparrow singing by day and night fourteen thousand feet upon the andes and its song suggested the songs of both our sparrows there were doves and woodpeckers of various species other birds bore no resemblance to any of ours one honeycreeper was a perfect little gem with plumage that was black purple and turquoise and brilliant scarlet feet two of the birds which sheree and miller procured were of extraordinary nesting habits one a nunlet in shape resembles the short-tailed bluebird it is plumbus with a fullvest belly and white-tailed coverts it is a stupid little bird and does not like to fly away even when shot at it catches its prey in ordinary acts like a rather dull flycatcher perching on some dead tree swooping on insects and then returning to its perch and never going to the ground to feed or run about but at nest in burrows which it digs itself one bird usually digging while the other bird perches in a bush nearby sometimes these burrows are inside of a sandbank the sand being so loose that it is a marvel it does not cave in sometimes the burrows are in the level plane running down about three feet and then rising at an angle the nest consists of a few leaves and grasses and the eggs are white the other bird called a nun or wax bill is about the size of a thrush greyish in color with a waxy red bill it also burrows in the level soil the burrow being about five feet long and over the mouth of the burrow it heaps a pile of sticks and leaves at this camp the heat was great from 91 to 104 fahrenheit and air very heavy being saturated with moisture and there were many rainstorms but there were no mosquitoes and were very comfortable thanks to the neighborhood of the ranch we fared sumptuously with plenty of beef chickens and fresh milk two of the brazilian dishes were delicious kana a thick soup of chicken and rice the best soup a hungry man ever tasted and beef chopped in rather small pieces and served with a well-flavored but simple gravy the mule allotted to me as a riding beast was a powerful animal with easy gates the brazilian government had waiting for me a very handsome silver mounted saddle and bridle i was much pleased with both however my exceedingly rough and shabby clothing made it incongruous contrast at forte purpon we broke up our baggage as well as our party we sent forward the canadian canoe which with the motor engine and some kerosene went in a cart drawn by six oxen and a hundred sealed ten cases of provisions each containing rations for a day for six men they had been put up in new york under the special direction of fiala for use when we got where we wished to take a good and varied food and small compass all the skins skulls and alcoholic specimens and all the baggage not absolutely necessary were sent back down the paraguay and to new york in charge of harper the separate baggage trains under the charge of captain amlecar were organized to go in one detachment the main body of the expedition consisting of the american members and of colonel rondon lieutenant lyra and dr kahera with their baggage and provisions formed another detachment end of chapter five chapter six part one of through the brazilian wilderness this is a librivox recording all librivox recording are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org recording by ben wilford through the brazilian wilderness by theodore roosevelt chapter six through the highland wilderness of western brazil part one we were now in the land of the blood-sucking bats the vampire bats that suck the blood of living creatures clinging to or hooving against the shoulder of a horse or cow with a hand or foot of a sleeping man and making a wound from which the blood continues to flow long after the bat's thirst has been satiated at terrapin on there were milk's cattle and one of the cavs turned up one morning weak from loss of blood which was still trickling from a wound forward of the shoulder made by a bat but the bats do little damage in this neighborhood compared to what they do in some other places where not only the mules and cattle but the chickens have to be housed behind bat proof protection at night where the lies may pay the penalty the chief and habitual offenders are various species of rather small bets but it is said that other kinds of brazilian bats seem to have become at least sporadically and locally affected by the evil example and occasionally vary their customary diet by droughts of living blood one of the brazilian members of our party hona the botanist was a zoologist also he informed me that he had known even the big fruit eating bass to take to bloodsucking they did not according to his observations themselves make the original wound but after it had been made by one of the true vampires they would lap the flowing blood and enlarge the wound south america makes up for its lack relatively to africa and india of large man-eating carnivores by the extraordinary ferocity or bloodthirstiness of certain small creatures of which the kins folk elsewhere are harmless it is only here that fish no bigger than trout kill swimmers and bats the size of ordinary footer mice of the northern hemisphere drained the lifeblood of big beasts and the man himself there was not much large mammalian life in the neighborhood kermit hunted industriously and brought in an occasional armadillo kawaii or a goodie for the naturalist miller trapped ranch in a queer possum new to the collection cherry got many birds cherry and miller skinned their species in a little open hut or shed moses the small pet owl sat on a crossbar overhead an interested spectator and chuckled whenever he was petted two wrens who bred just outside the hut were much excited by the presence of moses and paid him visits of noisy unfriendliness the little white-throated sparrows came familiar about the palm cabins and white washed houses and trailed on the roof trees it was a simple song with just a hint of our northern white throat sweet and plentiful melody and of the opening bars of our song sparrows pleasant homely lay it brought back dear memories of glorious april mornings on long island when through the singing of the robin and the song sparrow comes the piercing cadence of the meadowlark and of the far northland woods in june fragrant with the breath of pine and boston fur where sweetheart sparrows sing from wet spruce thickets and rapid brooks rushed under the drenched and swaying alderbells from terrapin on our course laid northward up to and across the plain auto the highland wilderness of brazil from the edges of this highland country which is geologically very ancient the fluids of the amazon to the north and of the plate to the south flow with immense and devious loops and windings two days before we ourselves started with our mule train a train of pack oxen left loaded with provisions tools and other things which we would not need until after a month or six weeks we began our descent into the valley of amazon there were about 70 oxen most of them were well broken but there were about a score which were either not broken at all or else very badly broken these were loaded with much difficulty and bulk like wild broncos again and again they scattered their lows over the corral and over the first part of the road the pac-men however copper colored black and dusky white were not only masters of their art but possessed tempers that could not be ruffled when they showed severity it was because severity was needed and not because they were angry they finally got all their long horned beasts loaded and started on the trail with them on january 21 we ourselves started with the meal train of course as always in such a journey there was some confusion before the men and the animals of the train settled down to the routine performance of duty in addition to the pack animals we all had riding mule the first day we journeyed about 12 miles then crossing the sapadaba and camping beside it below a series of false or rather rapids the country was level it was a great natural pasture covered with a very open forest of low twisted trees bearing a superficial likeness to the cross timbers of texas and oklahoma it is as well fitted for stock raising as oklahoma and there is also much fine agricultural land while the river will ultimately yield electric power it is a fine country for settlement the heat is great at noon but the nights are not uncomfortable we are supposed to be in the middle of the rainy season but hitherto most of the days have been fine varied with showers the astonishing thing was the absence of mosquitoes insect pests that work by day can be stood and especially by settlers because they are far less serious than clearing than in the woods the mosquitoes and other nightfalls offer the really serious and unpleasant problem because they break one's wrists hitherto during our travel upper paraguay and his tributaries in this level marshy tropical regions of western brazil we had practically not been bothered by mosquitoes at all in our home camps out in the woods they were at times a serious nuisance and cherry and miller had been subjected to real torment by them during some of their special expeditions but there were practically none on the ranches and in our camps in the open fields by the river even when marshes were close by i was puzzled and delighted by their absence settlers need not be deterred from coming to this region by the fear of insect foes this does not mean that there are not such foes outside of the clearings and of the beaten tracks of travel of 18 there are ticks poisonous ants wasp of which some species are really serious menaces biting flies and nets i merely mean that unlike so many other tropical regions this particular region is from the standpoint of the settler and the ordinary traveler relatively free from insect pests and a pleasant place of resident the original explorer into and only less degree the hard-working field nationalists or big game hunter had to face these pests just as they have to face countless risk hardships and difficulties this is inherent in their several professions or advocations many regions in the united states where life is now absolutely comfortable and easy going offered most formidable problems to the first explorers a century or two ago we must not fall into the foolish area of thinking that the first explorers need not suffer terrible hardships merely because the ordinary travelers and even the settlers who came after them do not have to endure such danger privations and wearing fatigue although the first among the genuine settlers also have to undergo exceedingly trying experiences the early explorers and venturers made fairly well beaten trails but it is incumbent on them either to boast of their own experiences nor to misjudge the efforts of the pioneers because thanks to these very efforts their own minds fall in pleasant places the ordinary traveler who never goes off the beaten route or who on this beaten route is carried by others without himself doing anything or risking anything does not need to show much more initiative and intelligence than an express package he does nothing others do all the work show all the foresight take all the risk and are entitled to all the credit he and his beliefs are carried in practically the same fashion and for each the achievement stands about on the same plane if this kind of traveler is a writer he can of course do admirable work work of the highest value but the value comes because he is a writer and observer not because of any particular credit that attaches to him as a traveler we all recognize this truth as far as highly civilized regions are concerned when bryce writes of the american commonwealth or lowell of european legislative assemblies our admiration is for the insight and thought of the observer and we are not concerned with his travels when a man travels across arizona in a pullman car we do not think of him as having performed a feat bearing even the most remote resemblance to the feats of the first explorers of those waterless wastes whatever admiration we feel in connection with his trip is reserved for the traffic superintendent engineer fireman and brakeman but as regards the last known continents such as south america we sometimes fail to remember these obvious truths yet there remains plenty of exploring work to be done in south america as hard as dangerous and almost as important as any that has already been done work such as has been recently done or is now being done by men and women such as hazelman farabee and miss sneglish the collecting naturalists who go into the wilds and do first work encounter every kind of risk and undergo every kind of hardship at exertion explorers and naturalists of the right type have opened to them in south america a field of extraordinary attraction and difficulty but to excavate ruins that have already long been known to visit out of the way towns that date from colonial days to diverse old even if uncomfortable routes or travel or to ascend or descend highway rivers like the amazon the paraguay and the lower arenaco all of these exploits are well worth performing but they in no sense represent exploration or adventure and they do not entitle their performer no matter how well he writes and no matter how much of real value he contributes to human knowledge to compare himself in any way with a real wilderness wanderer or to criticize the latter such a performance entails no hardship or difficulty worth heating its value depends purely on observation not on action the man does little he merely records what he sees he is only the man of the beat and rest the true wilderness wonder on the contrary must be a man of actions as well as of observation he must have the heart and the body to do and to endure no less than the eye to see in the brain to note and record let me make it clear that i am not depreciating the excellent work of so many of the men who have not gone off the beaten trails i merely wish to make it plain that this excellent work must not be put in the class with that of the wilderness explorer it is excellent work nevertheless and has its place just as the work of the true explorer has its place both stand in sharpest contrast with the actions of those alleged explorers among whom mr savage landor stands in unpleasant prominence from the sepatuber rapids are of course at the outset lay westward the first days marched away from the river lay through dense tropical forests away from the broad beaten rep every step of a man's progress represented slashing a trail with a machete through the tangle of brushes low trees thorny scrub and interlaced creepers there were palms of new kinds very tall slender straight and graceful with rather short and few fronds the wild plantains or apocavus throng the spaces among the trunks of the tall trees their bowls were short and their broad erect leaves gigantic they bore brilliant red and orange flowers there were trees whose trunks bellied into huge swelling there were towering trees with butcher's trunk whose leaves made a fret work among the sky far overhead gorgeous red and green trogans with long tails perched mostly on the lower branches and uttered a loud thrice-repeated whistle we heard the calling of the false bell bird which is gray instead of white like the true bell birds it keeps among the very top most branches heavy rain fell shortly after we reached our camping place next morning at sunrise we climbed a steep slope to the edge of the parisis plateau at a level of about 2000 feet above the sea we were on the plan alto the highest central plain of brazil the healthy land of dry air of cool nights of clear running brooks the sun was directly behind us when we topped the rise raining in we look back over the vast paraguay marshes simmering in the long morning light then turning again we rode forward casting shadows far before us it was 20 miles to the next water and in hot weather the journey across this waterless shadeless sandy stretch the country is hard on the mules and oxen but on this day the sky speedily grew overcast and a cool wind blew in our faces as we traveled at a quick running walk over the immense rolling plains the ground was sandy it was covered with grass and with a sparse growth of stunted twisted trees never more than a few feet high there were rays ostrich and small pampas deers on this plane the coloration of the rays made it difficult to see them at a distance whereas the bright red coast of the little deer and their uplifted flags as they ran advertise them afar off we also saw the footprints of cougars and of the small tooth big red wolf cookers are the most invertebrate enemies of those small south american deer both those of the open grassy plain and those of the forest it is not nearly as easy to get lost on these open plains as in the dense forest and where there is a long reasonably straight road or river to come back to a man even without a compass is safe but in these thick south american forests especially on cloudy days a compass is an absolute necessity we were struck by the fact that the native hunters and ranchmen on such stage continually lost themselves and if permitted travel from miles to the forest either in circles or in exactly the wrong direction they had no sense of direction as the forest dwelling nadorobo hunters in africa had or as the true forest dwelling indians of south america are said to have on certainly half a dozen occasions our guys went completely astray we had to take man to disregard their assertions and to lead the way a right by soul relies on our encompasses on this cool day we traveled well the area was wonderful the vast open spaces gave a sense of abounding vigor and freedom early in the afternoon we reached the station made by colonel rondon in the course of his first explorations there were several houses with white washed walls stone floors and tile or thatched roofs they stood in a wide gently sloping valley through it ran a rapid brook of cool water in which we enjoyed delightful baths the heavy intensely humid atmosphere of the low marshy plains had gone the air was clear and fresh the sky was brilliant far and wide we looked over a landscape that seemed limitless the breeze that blew in our faces might have come from our own northern plains the midday sun was very hot but it was hard to realize that we were in the torrid zone there were no mosquitoes so that we never put up our nets when we went to bed but wrapped ourselves under blankets and slept soundly through the cool pleasant nights surely in the future this region will be the home of a healthy highly civilized population it is good for cattle raising and the valleys are fitted for agriculture from june to september the nights are often really cold any sound northern race could live here and in such a land with such a climate there would be much joy of living on these planes the telegraphic commission uses motor trucks and these now to relieve the mules and oxen for some of them especially among the oxen already show the effects of the strength traveling in a wild country with a pack train is not easy on pack animals it was strange to see these big motor vans out in the wilderness where there was not a settler not a civilized man except employees of the telegraphic commission they were handled by lieutenant laurie otto who with the lieutenant mello had taken special charge of our transport service both were exceptionally good and competent men the following day we again rode on across to plan alto in the early afternoon in the midst of a downpour of rain we crossed the divide between the basins of the paraguay and the amazon that evening we camped on a brook whose water ultimately ran into the topper house the rain fell throughout the afternoon now lightly now heavily and the meal train did not get up until dark but enough tents and flies were pitched to shelter all of us fires were lit and after a 14 hours fast we feasted royally on beans and rice and pork and beef seeded around ox skin spread upon the ground the sky cleared the stars blaze down through the cool night and wrapped in our blankets we slept soundly warm and comfortable next morning the trail had turned and our course led northward and at times east of north we traversed the same high rolling plains of course grassed and stunted trees kermit riding a big iron math bullheaded white mule rolled off to one side on a hunt and rejoined the line of march carrying two bucks of the little pompous deer or field deer behind this saddle these deer are very pretty and graceful with a tail like that of the colombian black tail standing most of this facing one and the sparse scrub they are hard to make out if seen sideways the reddish of their coats contrast contrasted with the greens and gray of the landscape betrays them and when they bound off the upraised white tail is very conspicuous they carefully avoid the woods in which their cousins the little bush deer are found and go singly or in couples their odor can be made out at quite a distance but it is not ranked they still carry their antlers their venison was delicious we came across many queer insects one red grasshopper when it flew seemed as big as a small sparrow and we passed in some places such multitudes of active little green grasshoppers that they frightened the mules at our camping place we saw an extraordinary colony of spiders it was among some dwarf trees standing a few yards apart from one another by the water when we reached the camping place early in the afternoon the pack train did not get in until nearly sunset just ahead of the rain no spiders were out they were under the leaves of the trees their webs were tenantless and indeed for the most part were broken down but it does they came out from their hiding places two or three hundred of them and all and it once began to repair the old and spin new webs each spun its own circular web and set in the middle and each web was connected on several sites with other web while those nearest the tree were hung to them by spawn ropes so to speak the result was a kind of sheet of web consisting of scores of wheels in each of which the owner and proprietor set and there was half a dozen such sheep each extending between two trees the web could hardly be seen and the effect was of scores of big formal looking spotters poised in midair equidistant from one another between each pair of trees when darkness and rain fell they were still out fixing their webs and pouncing on the occasional insects that blundered into the webs i have no question that they are nocturnal they certainly hide in the daytime and it seems impossible that they come out only for a few minutes at dusk end of chapter 6 part 1.
Priceless Audiobooks
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2019-10-27
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Ubiquitous Meditation Series - Theme 54 #family #business #positivity #motivation #wealth #thankyou
54 ability to love and rejoice his character determines a person's Destiny and the person's character is formed from daily life habits if you do good deeds today be faithful to your work if you work hard to help others today will be filled with joy when today full of pleasure becomes a person's daily life and becomes a habit a suitable personality is formed then the door of a new Destiny will open don't be afraid of unfair criticism no matter how good a hard worker is he is bound to be reviled by a few opponents we must do our best to be consistent and steady until the situation changes believe Heaven helps those who help themselves just do good deeds today and be faithful to your work have a great day
Ubiquitous Happiness Series
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2023-04-21
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Inuit Legends: Qingalik and the Sea (1976, fragment)
[Music] so [Music] it has been good fishing for quingalik these days just a few more catches and he will be ready to go home to his young wife newell before the big spring thaw comes [Music] a good hunter never lets a seal get away [Music] [Applause] [Music] aah [Music] now quinalex should forget about more fishing and hurry home because the ice is beginning to break the arctic spring is here [Music] the fishing was too good to give up [Music] the floating ice pan with trapped quinolith will get smaller and smaller as it drifts to the warmer waters of the open sea quinolek sees that his ice pan is never going to reach the shore as he thinks about his trouble he remembers what his father taught him he can make a boat by filling the skins of the seals he has killed with air
Penguin Video Store
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2021-05-16
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Matthews Astronomer Pedal
[Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] nice Wow this is the astronomer v2 pedal from Matthews and it's a brand that we have been carrying for several months now and I love their pedals this is a reverb pedal that based on modern reverbs it includes the shimmering pitch effect that you can dial in to the amount that you choose here mix knob for dry vs. wet the shimmering effect and the overall decayed length it has also three reverb algorithms in it so you've got one that's based on an echo verb one that is a large hall simulation and one that's a chamber simulation the reverbs in themselves are just fabulous the ability to select either of the three and assign it to a separate Bank so you have the ability to switch between two [Music] two of these algorithms at a time dialing back the shimmer effect on here you can tell we've got nice reverb going on just gorgeous high-definition reverbs in here it also has the ability to connect an expression pedal to it so you can control the length of the reverb tails and also has a jack on the other side that you can use for a remotes foot switch to be able to switch between the two channels or to bypass it and you can run this in either a true bypass mode or a buffered mode it's and plus something I like it's got the input output jacks on the top of the pedal makes for you know really utilizing the real estate on your pedal board well just a great addition in your effects chain and it's under $200 give the guys at more guitars calm a call they are the experts on effects pedals of any kind and they can hook you up with this beautiful 2 channel 3 algorithm reverb pedal the astronomer from Matthews effects give them a call more guitars dot-com see you soon you [Music]
MooreMusicGuitars
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2020-06-10
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Adept Nea - The troubled teenager
cheesy seeing i think [Music] what what the [ __ ] hello everyone welcome back to another youtube video and today we are officially starting our adept series which means we are going to be using nia's three teachable perks which consists of balanced landing streetwise and urban evasion and with that out of the way let's go right into today's video all righty we are on the gas haven hopefully we're gonna get hopefully we're gonna get a good match oh boy and sometime sometimes i have a seizure i'm talking dude yeah hopefully i'm gonna have a good match and you know some content for youtube so hopefully you can try our best again here well let's see what we do so we get let's see the killer oh it's a piggy pog what the [ __ ] okay you're quite weird i'm not gonna lie all right piggy there we go again dude there we go again we are in the chase already she's a mind gamer guys she's a mind gamer now she's gonna go in on now should you be a moonwalker oh [ __ ] let me see what you're doing oh my god these mind gifs are out of this world oh [ __ ] dude oh [ __ ] oh [ __ ] dude she's a newer darn dude why do you now why do you have to know be all right i think she's gonna get a hit here i actually should have not left that area but you know it is what he's i'm gonna scoot up can i make it to the crane i don't think so it's quite far away actually i think actually i think i can make that just barely oh yeah i think i'm making it nice i'm gonna take that balance landing out of the way oh my god dude okay i'm gonna camp this palette actually i think but i think she lost me hey people what the [ __ ] i'm right here i'm right here i'm right here i'm gonna go anywhere did she bloodlusting me on this yep okay now she's bringing the palette oh [ __ ] it's gonna be a tough game oh man she's not gonna respect that oh [ __ ] she didn't dude can i make this though oh my god i make that there's no way oh my god dude oh my god oh my god dude oh my god i actually made that as well oh my god there's no [ __ ] way dude please don't mind game please don't mind game please don't mind game me i'm thrashing the game please now okay i think i'm gonna need to drop this ballot right here oh my god big leave me alone i didn't do anything big we just started the game got that man oh my god dude this piggies don't like you dude speaking like [ __ ] this [ __ ] [ __ ] all right all right all right here's the thing here's the thing i'm gonna pull this she's gonna try to mind game three jen's done pog is a 310 chase already which is very nice i'm gonna fast for this oh my god dude she know likey she definitely got a face capped me here guys you look i feel it i feel the face cam dude oh my god she's definitely not like it that's a fortune chase oh my god oh my god dude oh my god oh my god oh my life dude oh my god this is still on us oh [ __ ] dude this is this is this is quite sad i'm not gonna lie four gems already almost a 5gen chase oh my god dude oh my god oh my god piggy [ __ ] off oh my god dude oh my word she's definitely not liking me guys come on keep on chasing me then come on i'm like that okay she's leaving me okay [Music] oh my god is she coming back all right piggy you want to chase me again oh [ __ ] dude we're not looking good here guys we're not looking good something it's not looking good for us guys it's not looking good she's on us again oh [ __ ] look look we can't be friends all right we can be friends we can be friends we can be friends and see lunch at that oh my god dude [Music] oh my gosh [ __ ] oh no dude no no no no oh my god no she's giving me a party out as well dude there's no way david i believe i believe use the palette yes sir oh my god he's actually going to get me [Music] ggs geez on this one mate i ran into something is she [ __ ] good dude i'm literally have any spaces to dodge anything dude nice i dodge it now there's no [ __ ] foul here there's no way dude all right all right bounce funding incoming oh my god dude okay i can make some distance here we good we gotta be good we're good we're good i think we're fine i don't know if she can hit that to be honest still she's trying still trying to hit me we can go here i'm still okay and she's 110 i don't expect her to know how to hit these yeah she's she's gonna be in a chase with me for some time here she's 110 so yes you missed that so no more bloodlust and we can still keep on looping here it does not just do be trying though she's just trying dude she's trying a bit too much she tried again she missed again dude pog should she do be missing though she do be missing she do be missing she did she don't like me guys do you remember that and what the [ __ ] are we doing i have no idea oh no she know like she leaving yeah she's leaving or should you sing dude what the [ __ ] is going on here she's just so close to me what the [ __ ] i almost healed almost healed up spur uh huntress almost there [ __ ] off for a bit oh my god dude this is gonna be so [ __ ] hard oh my god i can't actually get the seal off oh my god [ __ ] easy dude oh my god she's still on me she's you know like 100 she gonna drop that no she's trying to hit me okay she's trying to guys don't worry don't worry she's a mind gamer she's doing she's the moonwalker as well i'm gonna drop this what the [ __ ] is that respect though nice good try good try andrews good try are you changing loops again should you be on me though predominantly for distance now no no what the [ __ ] are you doing okay she's she do be on me still dude she know likey me we all know that and it's quite a fact that she does not like me at all but you know it is what it is you gotta survive this game we have to dude [Music] she ain't gonna have that she's really trying her level best though [Music] no okay [Music] urban invasion opd [Music] as you [ __ ] miss that oh my god dude [Music] oh my god this guy's this center is actually trash there's no way oh my god actually bullying hunters dude there's no way if we do be back though nice that's quite big darn okay she's up at buckos but it's okay [Music] ggs dude that was a good game [Music] just to find somewhere that finally feels like
Rogue2K
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2020-09-23
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dLq8EytdD10
Interior Editorial Photography Photo Shoot | BTS
one of my interior photography video just skyrocketed so i thought i might do another one why not so if you're new to this channel consider to subscribe because i'm posting videos about photography business tips about photography and much more about photography so stay tuned and subscribe to my channel so you can get notified every time i post a new video now regarding to my photography gear i use my canon eos r as usually and this time i used i think a 16 to 35 which is not my typical wide lens i use 35 millimeter and 24 but because i don't have yet a 24 millimeter i use my 16 to 35 which i just give it to somebody else right now because it's using it on another camera so i use the 16 to 35 as a wide angle and then of course my 35 millimeter 1.4 and my 50 which is my my favorite lens to shoot editorial when it comes to interiors why because it's just not too wide and not too close it's just perfect so you i can move very fast around the room and i can capture all the shots that i need now the way i start shooting uh interiors is first on a tripod of course some of you may hate tripod but i begin to get used to it so i shoot on tripod i use the 1635 around 24 millimeter because i think then it's not too wide and not too close up uh and it will not distort that much and in case it does distort that much then i can straighten in lightroom so there is not a problem so [Music] now after i take multiple shots on different corners of the room i take my 50 and i do close-up or just crops different crops for kind of an editorial look for the magazines and this will this will complete the story because first you have a overall look for the interior for the room or for the house and then you've got some close-up which when you when you put them all together it's going to create a nice nice editorial story [Music] now when it comes to shoot with the 50 millimeter i shoot it handheld and some of you may think this is not the right way but this is my way so i like to shoot handheld uh i'm gonna bump up a little bit my iso between 2000 sometimes and 2500 uh i will try to keep it as low as possible but if it's not possible then i will get to 2 500 and i will should also pretty much wide open between 1.4 and 2.8 just to get that blur background beautiful melted background now you may ask okay but how many photos do you take i usually take like two to three uh positions uh on on a set for example if i crop the couch or a chair or something i take two three angles from above from lower and from side view so i can have more variation now regarding to the light i use neutral light most of the time when i use on a tripod because i use long exposures but sometimes i might use also flash when it's uh too rainy outside like it's here in netherlands i might use flashes put a flash outside uh of course covering uh the flash so it doesn't get wet and so on but yes sometimes i shoot with flashes because i want a certain look i want some light stripes on the floor or some kind of a fresh look and and the flash sometimes can give me a consistent look [Music] so [Music] in terms of my camera settings i keep it very simple i shoot the manual most of the time i shoot between 100 of a second uh to how much i need to close out the shutter but i also shoot from 1.4 until uh 8 f 10 f uh 16 if necessary so um yeah it depends on the situation if you shoot a pretty wide scene and you shoot on a tripod you're going to shoot a pretty uh close-up aperture so yeah this is how i shoot do [Music] do [Music] now the way i edit these images i try to keep it very very clean and simple i use lightroom and because i shoot raw it's very simple to edit in lightroom and i keep my settings very simple and my editing very clean because when you try to show those images in in a photo magazine it needs to looks as real as possible and uh what i do i sometimes i increase my contrast to around 20 to 25 and my blacks to minus 50 minus 20 and of course i do an s curves and some clarity if necessary of course sharpening around 45 and i don't touch other sliders then i adjust all the images in one settings by syncing all and that's it [Music] so shooting interiors is not that hard it's even easier than shooting weddings so i even enjoy it even more now because i shoot less and less weddings i shoot interiors which i am really really enjoying it and uh yeah it's very creative and it's very nice when you see them on a magazine when you go to a store and you see all your photos in the magazine i'm super super excited so guys thank you so much for watching i hope you enjoyed this video and if you did please subscribe to my channel hit the bell notification so you don't miss any of my videos and i will see you in the next one you
D U L G H E N S
UCEGOSawP6ePsMf1PkQP20hQ
2022-03-24
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
974
4,750
-NPvIDx3rCU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NPvIDx3rCU
NRG asked me to help them find the HIDDEN SSL... can we do it?
last week the energy guys asked me to join them to try and find the hidden SSL among the lobby of grand Champs we put the players through a series of challenges and eliminated one player each round until we got down to the last two in a 1v1 where we have to ultimately choose which player is the SSL can we do it let's find out also see if you can figure it out for yourself and be sure to check out the energy rocket League Channel they have a ton more stuff like this but now let's get into the challenge hope you guys enjoy wait they're all using this area are you guys seeing the car already bro this is look at the wheels from player number four look at player one they got Wagon Wheels player five I can't see no he's he's the SSL man you know they can't they can't help themselves I'm just I haven't even I'm just trying to get over these car designs bro wait player they just did like four wall dashes by the way like player three I think earn a player five I don't know three and four look good I'm watching six right now I think I think six okay five is moving fast okay six sucks [Laughter] this dude this dude's a little scared okay never mind he was scared are you okay booms it to the other one uh I don't think it's so funny yeah but everyone can't speed flip so it's all good bro you'll learn one day we're making here second here so so player one try to speed flip right now player one I mean look at the scores right you've got you've got player five and player two at the top of their oh player five dicks and not bad not bad of a touch pass across the top of the net I don't know who saved it but someone definitely saved it watching player two here oh player five humping the post bro I don't even know I don't even know what to listen everyone I've been watching no one has used the right stick until I watched player three but is that like a good or a bad thing though oh that's that's a pretty obsess no one no one uses the right stick unless you know you're doing so yeah so you think about it kind of sucks also like his setup on his air honestly that was a scare if he wasn't scared we would have scored that I think yeah he just like he's his Aerials are kind of trash so you can't tell it's just like of stating facts all right rotate back for his teammate to come in all right rotations are decent open shot oh I was watching four for a second but two just open this to wide openness floor is looking like getting perhaps is a nice has a nice half flip well I mean Grand Champs where they should be able to half live yeah but really they shouldn't though okay A little sets touch oh wait open what's gonna happen wow oh yeah over there what I didn't see it was six player six wait players do they all have the same Banner player three has a GC Banner Ah that's us I think they are I went to three players and they had him bro I I don't know I I don't know all GC that all GC anyway left so the only matters oh there's only one SSL yeah yeah do we eliminate something on this round or is this just like a test or no this is it says we eliminate one person okay I I to me so far player one looks like in the first elimination like a fancy wave death player six is solid he's crazy now player one does it uh he can't he still can't speed flip slide me off I mean I mean speed Loops aren't a big metric like two months ago I know I wouldn't say it's a good metric to like cut someone out because you could go to SSL without learning that I mean all we gotta do is Miss the SSL right we just need to not hit the SSL okay oh bro I I don't know we're trying it oh my God I mean let's let's look at this way which players do you think could be the SSL I don't know it's like five players five the to me it's like player six three and like two look look player three has a GC Banner that could be a bait but I don't think it is yeah yeah well I mean it's like a they all have GC banners though so it's like that's not fair to account for that okay listen to me I'm gonna go I'm gonna stick with my gut and I'm gonna eliminate Blair one so you choose who you want to choose the player one you think is a grand champ yeah yeah mostly you choose somebody and then I'll choose I don't know they're just so many scarabs man like it's uh kind of difficult honestly I'll just go copy my boy yeah I was gonna I was I was gonna say one two so I think we're I think we're on a majority vote here so will they tell us about the SSL no they can't until the end okay so wait so how do you play one player one please eliminate yourself Goodbye Oh is gone okay so before the half blind your goal is to is to go like this yeah so pick up pick up 100 boosts before you start and then jump behind Hatfield like that yeah yeah okay and put it all the way in no bounce yeah no bounce no bounce like I did but can't lie don't get nervous that player too no oh bro got a little nervous he's already strolling he's already trolling I'd be nervously okay wait that's a good start though it's a good setups no bones do be like that new br like the little like the turn that was yeah the initial turn to scoop it up was kind of clean up we'll get 100 booths too just make sure you don't don't throw the one if you just like forgot yeah that's it look how he's confidently dribbling this I can't even lie a little bit off Target but he adjusts it no bounce not great it looked like he was trying to do that bad bro like he like didn't air like I don't know he didn't start he didn't start in line with the goal so I'll give it to him I don't know I think he just I think he just sucks but like you might oh my gosh see I don't know I can't tell though hey player four it could be on purpose but like this is like 120. okay a little bit higher look at that all right I don't know we got too far ahead of the ball you couldn't control it enough so he had them he had to adjust I mean I will say I've had I've had air dribble like that like I don't know what he did adjust he did adjust but it wasn't a comfortable takeoff no yeah already moving around the field much faster than everybody else I will say player three I think moved around a big way kind of slow oh no no way that looks like a genuine mess up that looks like a genuine that looked kind of rough I was gonna say the opposite I felt like that was like they had such a good start and they just kind of threw themselves off I don't know I think to me both of them three and five look like they just suck wait that was all the people you go you can do one more try you do one more try no there's one more player okay last try because you missed you're going for the blue net okay I like that yeah I'm not gonna lie the Scarab is pretty hard five looks worse than three to me because it's really it's like yeah he bounced bro he didn't get the third touch I don't know at least three minutes in the net I wish they were six I still have a feeling he's the SSL I don't know yeah I think five yes so I believe in you I believe in you I believe in you players guys look at this dude oh it's kind of saw this guy doesn't sell okay now this guy's absurd did you guys see that control Off the Wall absurd it's like it looked like a it is it dribble even beforehand that was like the cleanest one these I still think five and six are safe bets not to go for on this round five is like a way the worst but perhaps he was he was oh no guys I I really think that we're overthinking it there's one that looked like kind of bad and the guy who's three and five both look bad I would okay who had a nice one four I don't really remember can I have some input though like I said five five looked the best on the 3v3 we can't just discredit everything I did in the past so I I really don't think five is a good bet just because let's let's not eliminate five because he could have been trying to mess up the air dribble because he did look pretty good in 3v3 okay six had the best air double by far yeah so how about someone who just eliminate someone who's Blended in like they did a normal it's it's three it would be two three or four I'll do three I'll do three three seem like Grand Champion I don't know he just said no four was four was the one who went past the ball though and like yeah he did he dig a past the ball three just sucked five kind of I really want to vote five still no don't do five we're gonna kick ourselves I'm telling you I don't I don't know okay so hold on hold on I kind of want to move my vote to the floor I kind of want to move my foot forward no I'm gonna get rid of five I I vote for between four and five I don't want to be the deciding vote but I I would pick four over five I I'll I'll pick four I'll pick four because like three three I mean that could be five like they they were like obviously a little bit worse than the other so four seemed just like a mid player like okay can I just look at him I mean no he wouldn't be here's a crazy thought right SSL players are pretty pretty set on their custom car designs right they're pretty like plain cars oh look at all the scarves I feel like it was against player five's nature to go anything but dark purple and do nothing to the car I don't know he's got this he's got the Cristiano's on still I don't know I'm just I'm just saying it looks like he got like a sweaty card with that but player four could totally be trolling and trying to hide his identity gibberish nonsense you're on the same team okay well you add an explosion sound effect uh player four can you end up dead just disconnect first what's up guys yeah what's up player two what's your what's your real name player too like my gamer tag or my name your real name Nate and credit card number eight degrees it's gonna be three five seven no okay okay willing to give credit card number uh how many hours do you have on the game um let's see I switched to PC like middle of 2020 and I think combined over Xbox and PC I have around 6 000. okay okay all right uh who are your who are your favorite Pros top three favorite Pros right now uh I'm gonna be honest I'm not too involved in rlcs but I do really enjoy squishy because he's the goat um probably seems like it sounds like a grandpa if I can't I think I think Arsenal Arsenal is pretty funny yeah okay okay okay what about me you know I used to yeah I don't think it said y'all hear something all right what happened uh probably Daniel just because I played them before dude I'm low-key like tripping out right does he sound like chronic if he had like a voice changer a little bit lower like chronic nah no way it doesn't sound a little bit like chronic no no way okay one clown one final question player two what uh what rank are you I am why are you hesitating um because I lost my SSL game play hesitated so much better if it was an actual Grand Champion why wouldn't he know his ring yeah it was his cap there's no way so is he technically an SSL though if he had it before hmm let's interview the other people okay uh News Live player three three five and six hello what's up what's your what's your gamer name gamertag I don't think I can tell you my gamertag Alex where are you from Alex California what city uh La what's your street what's your address how many hours do you have in the game uh across Xbox PS4 and PC about 10 000. dang okay you almost got to be able to sell ten thousand hours like uh because surely if you're not you can definitely stop Flying by then wait are you on are you on Steam are you on Steam yeah how many hours do you have yeah I have like nine thousand what record what are your hours in the past two weeks 40 hours okay okay who are your favorite Pros current Pros are former both goodbye former former Pros leth says and then I'm gonna add one Curt to that and that's Garrett okay um I mean current is Garrett Daniel and then turbo all right so you wouldn't retired he just retired yeah yeah he's still current in my heart okay I can't take that right okay okay okay okay all right you go ahead and head on the back where's player five well as you go back though I have one question for you what's your favorite mechanic probably double foot reset double the elbow flip reset okay this guy's disgusting all right all right where's player five dude hello he's right there stand right here where I am right here I'm here I promise come back come back right here we're back here right here player five um what's your name what's your real human name my human name is Ben Ben hello Ben hello Ben uh Ben I have a question for you what is your level of Education uh Bachelor of Science very nice zero chance he does as well he doesn't have time bro how many hours do you have in the game uh 3 700. okay okay he actually has a life out of it there there are yeah I don't know man I'm still like I'm still questioning it because like it could be a sleeper build man here here's a question ready oh my bad ready wait ready I'm gonna you have you have two seconds to reply to this answer okay okay ready if I press down left on my arrow pads what quick chat comes up down left I don't have downbound so I have no idea all right bro chalk it up bro this guy's definitely I don't even know that is my scoreboard it's no problem it's no problem yeah it's no problem it's no of course it is no this guy no problem is no is this the right and then left and then uh yeah people you will customize them bro like it's uh yeah no one ain't no one as I'm not using all four quick chats I I have a scoreboard on down this guy seems like okay you select you got to use select for your scoreboard yeah you gotta upgrade thank you for the uh tips all right who are you who are your favorite Pros uh So currently probably app Jack Daniel and Justin and then my favorite pass Pros probably flakes okay this this bro is hard because I don't feel like I'm getting that much like I get the hours but like the hours don't really mean anything because you could be trash for ten thousand hours what are your hours last two weeks player five uh fall I do work full-time job so there's that there's no way this guy's exercise you're my favorite Grand champ bro you're for sure Grand champ which player six that guy's guaranteed Grand champ it's his watch versus Dude someone banned player wait player one why is this he's in here still I don't know come on get out of here bro what in the world is gonna do it all right player six what's your human name real human human being name human name is Michael what are the last four digits of your Social uh my last four digits uh they have not arrived yet unfortunately I'm out this round simply because I have 3 700 hours that's crazy uh player five I believe can I say I believe in you man I believe in you oh thanks man player five your cash bro I've only been left them here uh so how many hours do you have players six yeah how many hours you got I have 7.2k yeah yeah I played on Xbox until about like early 21 like February I mean what's the name of this boost but it's Alpha boost I am uh I've been playing the game for a little bit he knows what's what's your favorite uh professional rocket League team player six at the moment probably trk team he's his own team he's he's a one-man Army you said you said Team yeah okay so for team uh give me give me G League keep in mind where you are right now Julie keep in mind keep in mind where you are right now player six is uh that is going to be the Neil Knight and aqua give me g-league this guy's probably I can ask yourself player friends this guy he's like this guy could be the soundtrack could be that slow it's like he's rooting for his SSL friends like you know yeah he's written for his boys like he's just probably a bubble player yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah it's probably like uh some rank B players I'm really I'm really torn between five and six even though five as low it could be sent to me it's six or three well keep in mind right like there's somebody as in person we're eliminating no no that we're keeping if you think about it right if player six is SSL then there is a player out of the players remaining that has 10 000 hours in GC so yeah there's no way that's what I'm saying so well will we keep them in regardless for the testing but for this for this round I know my vote if you guys are ready okay all right you go back there yeah all right uh I'm voting for player five two dude I feel like I have to go player five is it I don't know I'm still between five and six though so like who is the player that who is the guy that acted sucks when I asked him I'll ranky it was three that was two that was two there's two the first guy yeah it was two it was this guy the first guy yeah two two delayed his rank he said Grand Champion three division four and he just lost yeah exactly I feel like this guy's ass I feel like a player two could be so that's why it's like players six and three I think are the most I'm sorry player five I believe in you but it's over love you player five player five you've been illuminated all right so next challenge is a cuckier pinch player two first player two first okay like like he's going from the right side I think it's moving so slow though yeah three tries he didn't get the angular or like the corners dude look at look at the way he's got it at the corner this guy's giving me SL Vibes he's definitely using no he's not getting the coin doesn't know the Cubs pitch you gotta get the question dude look at these waved actions though look at him he it's like I feel like he has Alpha boots on black spot for sure with the bubbles yeah 100 all right let's try let's try let's try yeah he's doing it wrong he's not that far off I've seen people like whether they don't even know anywhere close yeah yeah I mean look dude look I'm spinning around we'll see because remember he said he will he was SSL this decent try on the first one there three players three yeah yes he actually at least got the bench player two looked like good though like they looked like they knew how to do it they just gotten like they're nervous okay this guy that's good form like you know what I mean like he's trying to get it on the corner he's got the right idea and he's definitely got the good angle I even think player two had a pretty good angle on most of them too I don't think he was gonna be that bad also it is the Scarab mind you is it oh okay they both look pretty good let's see if I can play six player six let's see what you can do man he's also flicking his uh rear view uh player six all right that's like a it's like 120 height bro this is giving me Grand Champion I don't know I think it's hard there it seems like oh you look at the wave that's wave dashes are nice Grand Champion SSL is so close though like there's a big range of players yeah maybe like like uh any of these players could be asked to tell with enough time he's doing that like modern wall Dash thing though see this last setup here it's still not using the corner of the car I can't tell this is tough man this is real time to me that I was two and three were nicer than six yeah I I feel like six just how often do you really go for [ __ ] or pitches in a real game though you don't you don't but you still you still should know how to do it all right I don't know this is tough I don't know he's got the nice recoveries though he has an extra coverage three was the only one to actually hit one so I think Fleet three is for sure saying oh man 10 000 hours yeah 10 000 hours of previous SSL he was as I saw you lost it was he being honest player player six is the obvious elimination though oh wait wait well you guys thought he was like the best you guys thought he was like amazing earlier no last one last one well the world for the questions yeah yeah for the questions yeah but even even still I think you guys were like saying six was better than five like yeah things change things change okay I still think the red herring was player five I don't know I'm feeling it are we eliminating yeah um you guys want to go for six well I'm going with player six because player three was only one to hit it and player two said he was SSL before okay The Ultimate Showdown player two versus player three it's the grand finals three the grand [ __ ] final which is right all right they're gonna join right all right let's coordinate who are you guys watching I'm gonna watch three um okay yeah all right run that [ __ ] okay play three two three speed flip from well player three sword of speed flute early Challenge from two okay prioritizes the Boost okay yeah space he takes it oh my God that is an ssle play um he's gonna get pre-gen for sure yeah player through his ass if he did the right thing what are you doing here bro let's watch it back from his I was watching other people oh he had like that didn't commit to the full jump he didn't expect the height on it or he just trolled also one's ranked through completely different too yeah oh the bombs too yeah the bomb smart look at the wave Dash is watch the demo nice nice jump over the bump yeah player two playing wow wait what if we want to squishy oh it leaves the net open though this was too shiny that's crazy player three instant turn for the shot not hesitation that's a good shot that's not the easiest angle either yeah and player three is the one with the the grand champ Banner is that like a meta game yeah he probably just chilling that might be meta gaming this this guy's an SSL So based on what I'm seeing now this is so tough man I'm pretty sure we already eliminated them I'm pretty sure we already eliminated we're watching an even match up I'm still sticking with five man I'm still sticking with five free boost and ball for player he's too clean it really quick anyway wow look at the pancake okay it's very interesting to go for I don't know this could just be like a grant like a grand champion yeah I really think it is like that player three player three is good at the game okay player three is good just take me on in one he did just have 100 boosts and used all of it for one defensive play though so I I don't know like I don't know yeah and then once you get to sell they're different tears left so like right top 100 and then like yeah I don't know I mean it looks like player three I mean out of these two so four player three for sure do we just want to do the first of five goals to like speed this up a little bit or yeah yeah that's fine I just do first to five and then uh I think from here I don't know like player player three is definitely looking like a better player you'll probably eliminate too we could have already messed up we don't know my battery lost already yeah I feel like it's easier to lose oh oh okay go to recovery though that was nice whoa what goes for the bump afterwards but Arrow I feel like the scarabs man the scarabs really scary even when they do something good it looks bad all right so at this point even if we got it wrong we have to eliminate right yeah so at this point we believe player three is the SSO right so we think it's either three or five like a little player that you think yeah it's probably three or five who is the SSO okay well I'm gonna stick with three yeah it'll be the last one standing so you're either gonna eliminate both these and choose somebody else or you're limited to one of these guys we'll just stick with three because I I I I think it's fine but I think these two are more like convinces three so like I forgot what happened with five but like he missed some it was the hour it was a low album it was the air dribbles and the low hours yeah who lost the 1v1 forgot uh a player two lost so yeah well the SFL reveal themselves well right now player three it is me it is almost three we got it yeah yeah yeah yeah we did it let's go yeah I actually did it let's go I might have been five but like this part of me ours were a lot that was the only way
Lethamyr
UCkNYoWK1LqjFhxYI6BM_kOA
2023-05-05
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
4,862
23,930
-LBryOix8-Q
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LBryOix8-Q
IOM Director General's Message on International Day of Family Remittances (French)
i'm honored to be speaking to you on this international day of family remedies migrant remittances are an essential lifeline for millions of migrant families in low and middle income countries last year migrant workers sent 605 billion back to their families and communities this year that figure is expected to grow to 630 billion migrants are essential workers that keep economies running particularly through times of difficulty remittance volumes continue to grow through the cov19 pandemic and remain the largest international financial flow into most developing countries remittances enable migrant families to cover basic needs reduce their vulnerability and build resilience during crises such as climate change or conflict they help families pay for food education housing and health thereby improving their human capital remittance flows also play a catalyst road in the development of local communities this much is recognized in the global compact for safe orderly and regular migration and reinforced member states in the progress declaration from the recent international migration review forum further while paying for essential items and funding human capital development is arguably the most important function of remittances studies also show that around 30 percent or up to 190 billion can be leveraged privately for local investment and development purposes this requires that migrants and their families are digitally included have access to tailored financial products and services and are engaged through appropriate channels and platforms yet the cost of remittances remains stubbornly high in 2021 the average cost for a 200 dollar send was over six percent twice the sustainable development goals target of three percent lowering remittance fees by just two percent points will translate into 12 billion of annual savings for international migrants promoting the digital inclusion of migrants and facilitating their access to tailored financial products and services can leverage remittances for productive use encourage migrant savings and reduce the costs of transferring remittances on this international day of family remittances iom together with the un network on migration call upon stakeholders member states and international organizations to create the conditions that will facilitate the faster cheaper and safer transfer of remittances and to encourage as appropriate opportunities for development-oriented investment by recipients this in turn will empower migrants to become actors for local development you
IOM - UN Migration
UCTPDxhZ5d8nZgZFLTITA5LA
2022-06-16
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
378
2,547
BThMJcNq4F4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BThMJcNq4F4
I filmed myself binge eating
There's so much irony in the fact that I don't know how to film because I feel chubby. Hi guys, what's up? Welcome back to my channel. I'm live-streaming at the moment and this is really weird because there's people watching me. So, this is a video that has been in the works for the last two weeks. So, today's video isn't just about this demon drink. This video is about eating disorders and my struggles and what's been going on the last two weeks and since the last part of this series...thing that's going on on my channel. It's also one of the most requested videos since then...so... yeah. Also, if you're new here, hit the subscribe button. Turn the notifications on too because I have the community tab which is [claps] official creator bitch! This video is like part two in this little mini-series. I filmed a little clip yesterday. There's a few clips from the last week, few weeks. It is kind of what it is. Um, don't know how else to explain it other than that. If you haven't seen part one, I'd recommend going and watching that first, the link will be in the description down below and also on a card thing in either that corner or that corner. I can never remember what side it's gonna be. I think it's that one, pretty sure it's that one...it's probably not that one is it? If you're new here, hit the subscribe button...I've already said that. Link in the bio down below! What's going on guys? Welcome to this episode of the "eating disorder series", I think that's what I'm calling it. It's kind of like a recovery series. Let's be real here, I am recovering from an eating disorder. I've got all my milkshakes over there. We're not drinking a milkshake today. We're eating McDonald's. Um, a bid issue I have with my eating disorder is that I have a tendency to binge eat. With that I mean, I've eaten two tubs of Pringles and I've already had McDonald's once today; I had 9 chicken nuggets and cheese bites and now I'm eating another load of cheese bites and 6 chicken nuggets. That's within about five hours, so I turned my camera on. And, I'll be real, I don't really film me eating...ever. Fun. I also forgot to mention that I have a very unhealthy addiction to caffeine. [music] [bag crashes] Food done. Got McDonald's again! Um...I'm binge eating quiche. I've also got a pack of 12 crisps that I'm very slowly working my way through. Not, not, not good. They're not even like nice crisps either they're literally like fucking smart price. Google haven't paid me yet so I mean...This video is about binge eating and...you know...I [sighs] I can't open the quiche. At the moment I'm going through a bit of a 'I don't want to eat' moment. I'm only eating because I feel like I'm gonna collapse if I don't and I didn't really like A&E very much so... quiche. It's only a tiny one, it's not as bad as it has been. I'm gonna film a bit in a minute about eating disorders, what binge eating actually is and all that fun stuff but first, quiche. I'm gonna stop filming, I don't like seeing myself eating, no, no, no. I'm really tired. I feel really dopey as well today. I'm filming to add into the end of this video, I know there's not a lot of footage and whatever but when I binge eat I don't tend to really want to turn on a camera. I find it harder to film stuff like that than fucking anything else. Eating and food is the one thing I've struggled with for years and it affects me, it's hard. Binge eating is something that I never used to do. I've only actually started doing that the last two years or so, where I'll just buy a fuck ton of snacks and just eat all of them. Like, I can buy like a 12-pack of crisps and it will be gone within that day, like I'll just eat it all and it's so unhealthy. It's ridiculous and I get myself to a point where I'm like 'I'm not eating'. And that's kind of the point I'm at at the moment. Like I've binge ate for a few days, I'm a bit like 'well, I don't want to eat now'. So, um, yeah, that's where I'm at. I am gonna be using the milkshakes again. See, when I binge eat, I don't have the milkshakes at the same time because I don't wanna go and give my body too much of stuff and whatever. And they don't taste very nice either, so I only have them if I'm having a day where I just physically can't eat. And, at the moment, I feel very...and...it's not good. It's really not good. If you are interested in learning more about my story and my journey, hit the subscribe button. And make sure you turn the notifications on so you know whenever I upload a new video. There are currently some polls going on on the page, on my community tab and you can vote on the videos you want to see. All videos will get made eventually and that will be that. If you haven't already, leave a comment down below of how you are doing or if there any things you want me to talk about or show you. Just let me know. The next episode of this, like, series is gonna be the milkshake update and that. Um, binge eating with me, it actually, it affects me quite a lot because I'll binge eat then immediately after it, I'll be like 'I fucking hate myself', like I hate looking in the mirror, I hate the scales, I hate how I look. I don't like myself very much and when I binge eat, it makes me worse, like, it makes me feel even more chubby. At the start of this video, you saw me doing my make-up for a video yesterday and I was like 'I feel chubby, how do I make myself not look chubby?' I don't know, I just feel like that, it's really...it's hard and making a series is very, it's...this is probably one of the hardest series I've ever made on this channel. Mainly because it's a part of recovery that I'm not 100% committed to. Like, I want to be well and I want to be healthy, I just don't want to gain weight and my issue is, I keep dropping weight. Like, a lot. It's just not healthy. It's not good and it's getting dangerous. It's starting to get like...serious. I don't want that. I really don't want it and... There were so many comments on my last video like 'oh, you're just doing it for attention'. I ended-up just deleting them all. They were like 'you're just doing this for attention, why would you want to show this, why do you show your face when you want to throw-up?'. Like the milkshakes made me want to physically throw-up, the taste of them is horrible, like, it's disgusting. And I'm under no obligation to define to people why I share certain parts of my life. I'm choosing to document this because I know that there are other people going through this and I want you to know that recovery isn't picture perfect, it's not easy and that's why I do videos, that's why I make mental health content. If you have any future video ideas you'd like me to make or anything you want to ask, please leave it down below. Like I said, subscribe, hit the notification bell and you can take part in the polls that are going on in the community tab right now. We've got a few polls going on and you get to decide the future videos, which is fun. Follow me on my social media because I post, like, a lot. Like, Twitter is my go-to, I'm on it all the time. I'll catch you guys tomorrow with a new video. Peace.
Diary of Lydia
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2018-11-27
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-DllO-y7DM
UK Lawmakers Agree To Hold Election On Dec 12 | In Bid To Resolve Brexit Paralysis
brexit by moon Dhekelia Shalom allahu la la putana britain prathana Boris Johnson Munda see a nickel carbonyl on of your home Etta calico falling gently December panel de nom understand nickel acapella Ronnie Johnson says nephrotic wanna know House of Commons angle current Cheney Yippity Virgo mundus the endocrine with Rick is to Western I am pillow Enochian gondola gondola Bob p.m. they won't leave AC year away what la major Tito Boris Socratic father on a summer day in Charo House of large Sakura each attorney I'm gonna stay quantum even le Ramudu tabata December no Jenna culinary Chatham idiot told sorry out on the brakes it together good and evil universe Jennifer hoping to work according internet' patello Christmas can't a moon days are with Rica Endicott Nero hisilani Brittani Bodhi Sparta Patel and the qmp Lakota Anglican ichika breaks it Rochelle Oprah Java prime ponder tanuki Boris Comanche Alcazar Lobby Janey Briggs it they submerge at the coast of Brazil topic on diyannika local Connie the Mojave Brian Zeppelin II Boris Johnson Phil furniture
ETV Andhra Pradesh
UCJi8M0hRKjz8SLPvJKEVTOg
2019-10-30
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en
metadata
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178
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M7WCzkXz67U
JS Quick Hits 104 - Errors vs. Exceptions
[Music] this week we're going to answer a question that one of the folks in the close brace slack workspace had what's the difference between errors and exceptions by the way want to come hang out in a slack channel it's open to the public just email contact at closed brace comm asking for an invite anyway the difference between errors and exceptions in JavaScript is nothing there are just two words for the same thing sweet with that answer let's call it a week and I'll see you next time okay sure we can do better than that so what do I mean when I say there's no difference well basically it just means the two terms are synonymous in fact JavaScript has no real concept of an exception all it handles are errors which you can produce like this save that refresh and we get our error message we talked about the error constructor and how it works in j/s quick hits 68 and J's quick hit 69 so if you need a refresher that's the place to check now by convention what I just did was throw an exception what I mean is some developers like to make the distinction between when your code blows up because you did something wrong and when you intentionally throw an error in order to catch on wanted behavior so this is an error we'd save that we will get a big ugly read error because you're trying to change a Const so javascript is going to yell at you you're not generating the error yourself you just wrote broken code so that's an error now this this is an exception save that refresh that helps if you actually format your if statements correctly there we go much better now it makes the most sense obviously if you're setting input via say a webform or something rather than a Const right above a clearly broken piece of code nonetheless what we're doing here is intentionally throwing and handling and error and the intentional part is what makes it an exception this is good to know just so you can better understand what other developers are talking about when you're copying and pasting their code off Stack Overflow I mean chatting with them that's all there is to errors and exceptions for real this time see you next week [Music]
CloseBrace
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2020-01-29
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en
metadata
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UzTL2ycD3x4
The Insane AI Bot That Can Make You Money On Autopilot! #shorts
the world is evolving at an unprecedented pace and what worked yesterday may not be suitable today watch and learn as we guide you on how to use this AI bot to promote various offers and make money online on autopilot to promote various softwares and earn money through affiliate marketing you can use an AI bot called chatsonic to get started visit sendinblue.com and join their affiliate program partner stack is a great platform that offers a variety of software products that you can promote and earn commissions from by promoting software products through an affiliate program you can earn higher commissions generate passive income and have a reliable source of income every month so if you're interested in affiliate marketing consider signing up for the partner stack affiliate program and start promoting software products today hope you found this video informative
AI MONEY MACHINE
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2023-06-20
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en
metadata
en
143
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XNPNMwJexJs
Going Back To Ben Nevis!
so in about three weeks only climbing been nervous and this is a mountain in Scotland I've I tried to call me once before in the winter and for those of you who don't know you're not meant to climb been nervous in the winter it's full of ice and snow and rain it's very cold very windy very dangerous anyway I didn't know that so I tried to climb it got about halfway and then was just completely soaked I had track he's on I didn't have waterproof gear my trainers were psyched I was I was in a bad place I had to come back down my knee was playing up and I just hadn't prepared for how big the mountain was and what I would need to do but I'm going back on are we climbing it from top to bottom in a summer which is sort of its own challenge in a way because it's although it's not cold and you're not going to get as wet because it shouldn't be raining it's gonna be hot and you know you're gonna have to deal with the Sun and the dehydration issues as well so I probably need to bring more water and maybe Sun cream and all that sort of stuff this just makes it more challenging to do so I think it's difficult either way but at this time I have to go back because because last time I didn't go all the way up and ever since ever since then since coming back from that trip I've always thought that I should go back and finish what I started and I've always been this way if there's something I can't do I always try and go back to it and try again and you know give it one more go it's the same thing with climbing if I if I go to the climbing wall and I can't do a particular route even if it's gonna tire me out for that day I will always try and finish that route or at least you know keep pushing and keep trying until I know I can't do it without more practice now for been nervous it's not actually that difficult of a climb I mean it's high it's a mountain but it's not as high as all the mountains that you know lots of people climbing regularly but that being said I still need to get in shape for it I need to work on my cardio stamina endurance that sort of thing because usually I just train strength training and that's it but for this it's a bit different it's all about it's all about pacing yourself and actually using your stamina to get yourself up the mountain and then back down again the route I'm actually gonna be going is not the usual route where you go up on a chairlift I believe and then you start from sort of halfway I mean we starting from the very bottom going up about an hour or so of hard he stares and then I'll be at the middle and then I'll carry on so it's gonna be a challenge it's gonna be difficult but I wouldn't do it and hopefully I'll be able to have know how to fly the drone at the top if it's not too windy probably it probably will we do windy but at the very least I can get some good footage and I can say that I finally learned about nervous so so that's what's going on with the fact that's what I'm preparing for can you hear that noise I'm seeing I'm reviewing these sleep headphones on my other channel anyway I'm seeing how long the battery's gonna last because I've heard you can get eight to ten hours so I'm timing it I started this at one o'clock and I'm gonna see how long the battery lock because the battery's tiny on this thing all these lovely batteries charged up trying to do some challenges today around the house with this bad boy red paws are over 11 I'll link in the description this is great if you're a beginner and you want to learn how to fly fpv with the goggles like that day 44 now guys there's the drain that cut my neck yesterday get all these lovely vegetables kale so I guess you could say I like having lentils and beans in pretty much everything I eat that is today's video excited about their nervous I need to train for it and now I'm gonna fly my drone and we're back into the daily videos despite having a couple of days off because of my neck which is still a bit better but you know my neck still hurts I'm just gonna remember that when I fly these things I can't keep leaning in the direction of where they're gonna fly anyway that's it for now guys done
Transcend Travel
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2018-08-02
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
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835
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TgAXKTZBmEg
Sumner Stone and Rob Saunders Luscious, Lascivious, & Literary Letterforms
the way to really experience this material is to see it in person so we encourage you to come to letter form archive and also to come to the book arts department here so as you can see we've already been taking that advice what you see here is from last saturday the extended program in of type of cooper west came for a field trip to Special Collections here they're looking at a rubbing of the trajan inscription on the table which was done by father Edward Kaddish and on the right you can see a detail of that rubbing you want to so I'm very happy to be here with you and kick off this lecture series and this will go on not only the spring but continuing on in the summer and next fall and we hope for a long time after that we have had a similar lecture series through type at cooper at Cooper Union in New York has been very successful and I think it's been going for about five years now so we're going to walk you through some of what for Rob and myself are the highlights of both the collection at the letter form archive and the collections here at the san francisco public library this turned out to be the the idea seemed good but then when we actually got down to trying to choose things we found of course that we like too many things so this is really a very sort of sparse overview of things and some of them are chosen because we have personal connections to them in various ways and interestingly in as we have prepared this thing especially with the cooperation of library we found even more connections that we didn't know about to begin with so you'll hear about some of those as we go along we're going to start with the trajan inscription with this rubbing done by father Edward Katich was donated to the library by Don muy the webbing was done in 1973 Katich actually made a number of trips to Rome to do these rubbings and he is responsible for two books on the trajan inscription and and he did really a a minut an examination of the inscription minut detail these are from the first book that he published and mechanic was a truly renaissance person he not only did he figure out how these letter forms were made on the inscription which nobody really had figured out since the time they were actually made he learned how to write them with a brush how to cut them in stone he then proceeded to do all the production of his own books these are tracings made from one of these rubbings of there are tracings of every letter on the inscription and carriages theory about the way these letter forms were made was rather revolutionary that is nobody had really understood them before he recognized because he was trained as a young man to be a sign painter and show card writer that these letter forms were originally written with a brush before they had been chiseled in stone and it's enormously convincing the way he has reproduced them with the brush this upset a number of people primarily lately the upside of almost everyone in Britain who was concerned with typography and lettering because they didn't know this to begin with and had others sort of half big series about the way these things were made but over the years now I I would say most of them that I know anyway have become converts that is rather undeniable that this is actually the way they were made so seeing this rubbing is a magnificent experience I have to say every time I bring classes too and I did this in New York for the last four years bring people to libraries to see original work it has a kind of a magical effect where you you experience something in a way that you'd you cannot do when it's on screen or when there's an image of it printed with halftone dots in a book and rob was saying when we saw this rubbing on Saturday that every time you see that it renews his this kind of experience and i have to say i have exactly the same reaction it's it's son so i think ultimately that's the reason why we do what we do is that these things do have a certain magic to them and when you see the original things that is that tends to evoke it so there is a good reason for preserving these pieces of paper that we have here at the library and at the letter form archive and it is wonderful to have access to these things online and so on but i have to say from my own experience with not only myself but with two students in the flesh is different so let me just talk about this a bit before he moves on you missed the part about your teacher so what's on the left here is a photograph of Kaddish with Lloyd Reynolds who was the calligraphy teacher at Reed College in Portland Sumner's teacher that Reed College in Portland so that's one more personal connection the letter here is from Alfred sorry from Lloyd Reynolds to Alfred fairbank the the British calligrapher and scholar presenting a copy of the of the Kaddish book of the first katish book the trajan inscription in Rome with the tracings and the photographs and this is in the letter form archive we have Alfred Fairbanks copy of the book and this is Fairbanks reply now both of these letters are in the the pop-up exhibit in the back and you can't see the back of the fairbank letter but the juicy bits are on the front and basically he would have normally written a handwritten letter that's what he always did and and he did many times to Lloyd and his other correspondence but he says in the beginning of this I've typed this letter because I want to keep a record and he goes on to explain why Kaddish is all wrong and it's interesting because the first book which came out in about nineteen sixty the trajan inscription in Rome had very detailed studies of the inscription drawings and photographs and a little book which kind of suggested his theory that they might have been brush written but didn't have the full logical theoretical presentation of that which came later in the second book called origin the seraphs in 1967 so I've always wondered whether fairbank changed his mind when he actually saw origin or if he ever picked up a brush and tried because you know you would know so anyway this is kind of an interesting artifact and it's also a really good example of how the collections of of san francisco public library and letter from archive complement each other because they have a rubbing they have a stone they have a number of other very special Kaddish things we have this a copy of the book with with the correspondence between Reynolds and fairbank we also have Cadiz paleography text from his time in Rome which is completely annotated these are some of the brush letters this is actually in both collections this was a special edition of origin of the seraphs with 50 copies that he wrote the entire brush alphabet by hand partly to prove that it could be done and intentionally with a dry brush so you could see the ductus and and what was going on do you want to see anything about these these letter forms started and about around the time of the death of Julius Caesar maybe the year after 43 bc and they went they were written on up into the second century AD maybe up towards the end with extreme faithfulness that that is the remarkably similar letter forms were made by what something like 20 generations of craftspeople this is one of the longest runs of such things that I know of maybe the longest when you try to do these with a brush it is very humbling they were only a handful of people that I know of who can do a credible job of making these letters with a brush one of them was here very recently and gave a workshop at the archive through a type of Cooper West that's John Stevens and it is comforting to see that somebody can do this besides Katich so these this work of cottage on the inscription inspired a typeface and it was a typeface that I initiated and oversaw the development of was designed by Carol Twombly who did a wonderful job based very directly on on the trajan inscription letters and this typeface has been outrageously successful it's on just an incredible variety of things now you know book jackets but also dog food and you know everything in between so it's been fascinating to watch that proceed this is this is the type so the trajan inscription and the Imperial Roman letter than 200 or so years of the Imperial Rome let are very important because when we come to the Renaissance I believe that the 15th century is an extremely important thing to understand in the history of art letter forms that we are using today and it's one of the things that I emphasize in teaching this course that we are have really just begun at the letter form archive our year-long so-called extended program in typeface design because it's the century in which printing with movable type in Europe began and the century in which the first Roman tag faces were were designed and used the history of how that came about is actually I think still not well enough documented and the standard issue sort of story about it is that simply was copying the forms that came from humanist manuscripts this is sort of true but the humanist manuscripts only started to be written at the beginning of the century and they had a very interesting design problem that was that the Capitals and the lower case were United for the first time in the way that we presently used them before that in the Carolingian period which is what the humanists were copying the things that we call capitals the role played by the Capitals was was actually filled by honcho letterforms so at the beginning of a sentence you would have an uncha letter and that would be followed by these Carolingian minuscule letters so so I only have about 60 70 years of actually using this alphabet and it definitely changed as the manuscript letters changed over the period of between the beginning of the century and and on into the first Roman types in the 14 60s and and one of the problems that was faced was how do you how do you if you recognize that these two alphabets are used together as as a sort of unified whole how do you make them harmonize because they come from two different time periods very far apart they're really two quite different designs in many ways this is the inner otaku macchia paulo philly this is a publication of Aldous manoosh asst it was first printed in 1499 just barely an in kanab ulam and this is a famous piece of all this is typography it's a very odd piece of literature it's written in sort of Italian with some sort of Latin is a shins and a little Greek thrown in and this and that and but it was very popular and it became it lasted on into the 16th century it was republished it was published in France by French printers and so on so it had a lifetime and it was translated into English not very long ago you could get now in English translation with reproductions of these original woodcut illustrations but one of the things that I find fascinating about the the typography in this book is that in some cases and back up to this one those letter forms on the sarcophagus are type those are the Roman capital letters that were cut by Francesco grief over all this and actually I should say one more thing about this before we go forward this this copy of the book is here in in Special Collections it's in the grab horn collection of the history of printing it was Robert grab horns copy but he assembled it from parts and so you can see here that the two gatherings that are next to each other are different trim sizes because they're from different parts and I think it's still missing a few leaves but and there's some water damage here and there but it's it's what he could manage to pull together of the thing and it's a remarkable artifact both because it's the hip Narada macchia but also because it's Robert grab horns copy you can tell especially on on the image that you see at the right the woodcut that you see at the right that some of the capital and there are many there are many illustrations of inscriptions in this book which is interesting also it is fantasy landscapes many of which contain inscriptions and those letter forms are not type those are actually cut in wood and printed with the woodcut so this is an indication of the kind of growing awareness that went on during the Renaissance during the 15th century that the Roman capital letters were the original documents of the Ancients and that they were very important and they came to assume more and more authority as a century wore on and people got better and better at making them and so the fact that they they appear in all of these illustrations is just kind of gives you some of the flavor of the kind of respect that they gained and many of these Renaissance scholars went around hunting for inscriptions on our to record them they made these things called CeeLo gay which were catalogued they were the first of pig resists they made catalogs of these inscriptions and even drawings of them and the way the letter forms actually looked there's some more you can see on the left most we have Greek and that one I actually think that one is um probably also carved if you look at the ATA kak 8080 that t-80 is current kerning type is a thing that you know you can metal type you really want to try to avoid and there's many other instances in here with it's not done so ah so this is this is something from the archive this is actually something that we now have three copies of oddly although two of them are quite damaged and incomplete they came with the the tollon our collection that we acquired last year so this is the the shingle to shrift by yon van de ville de published in Amsterdam in 1605 it's an engraved writing book so van de ville de was the calligrapher who did the the models and then an engraver made copper plates of course in reverse and then they were printed by intaglio to produce the book and our executive director Simran is actually an expert in writing books and she speaks much more eloquently of them than I do but she always makes the point that they're an interesting sort of amalgam of calligraphy and printing and publishing when you think of it you have a writing master making a calligraphic model which is then indirectly printed to teach other people how to write and by this time of the engraved writing books this is about a hundred years after the very first writing books they're pretty much show off pieces in fact the largest word on every page in the van de Velde ax is Valda you can see it in the bottom right there and here are some other example pages these are spectacular works of calligraphy and engraving and printing and I find them particularly fascinating because they're still I think they still have contemporary relevance some of them have such amazing textures and the asymmetry of the layouts is also fascinating it's always been one of my favorite books and it's it's a book that we pull out very very often with visitors because nobody fails to be surprised and delighted by this thing you know they can come looking for mid-century modern design and still be blown away by this or they can come looking for writing books or history of printing or whatever it's just a fabulous thing that's a particularly interesting texture not the most readable again velda is the largest word over there so this one's yours this is I'll just set it up this is this is from the toll in our collection and it's in the archive I think there may also be a copy here at the library this is the bodoni or OTO domenica which is basically the Lord's Prayer in 160 languages want to just mention again that Valerie Lester will be here then a short time to give it's like march 9th I think to give her lecture she has recently published a book which is a biography of bodoni and quite well worth the experience she does a very nice job of presenting the material beautiful images and so on just a couple more words about the writing books the writing books are very interesting because the tradition of letter making for books really gets captured by typography and the typographers the people who design type who cut punches to make type really participated in the medieval tradition of not telling what you did because your competitor might learn about it and compete with you you know whereas the writing masters had quite a completely different agenda which was to tell everybody exactly how it was done and the whole letter making world sort of splits into two parts as the 16th century goes on and then onward from there which is this whole tradition of writing and teaching writing and publishing these manuals and the designing of typefaces metal typefaces and they really come back together up only at the end of the 17th century with the Roman dubois the Roman of the King which we're not going to talk about in this lecture but which is a very seminal event in the history of typography leads up to I think conceptually leads up to these typefaces which were made by giambattista badani bodoni was very very successful in his own time he had kings and queens coming to the little city of Parma to visit him and he he made very grand volumes he made an incredible number of Thai faces which were ultimately published in his manually to a graphical which was published by his wife and by his widow after his death we had we do have actually copies of the manual a as well but this book is one of the last books that he did and it is a tour de force it's just outrageous he learned how to cut these punches for non-latin types because his initial training as a type designer was in working for the propaganda fides in Rome the part of the Catholic Church that publishes literature for everybody throughout the world and of course they had to use lots of different writing systems so that's when he got started so here we have you know i should i should mention the toll in our collection has about 20 or 25 of the propaganda feed a booklets which are quite extraordinary and rare and some and in many cases the the earliest typographic representation of a language we think it's a big deal these days actually they that we're making non-latin typefaces now but javanese some of these are romanization and some are in the native alphabet right chinese Mongolian think about him um I don't think so he wants to zoom in yeah oh it's a PDF can't do it sorry this is all this is the large pair yeah it's the Lord's Prayer many times but no I it's this one is Cyrillic for example and given the scale of it I I understand it's hard to see the details you just have to come over the archive and see the original or take a class where we have on the wall a 4k display that that basically acts like a 40 power microscope so these are some examples of the type foundry ephemera in in the archive collection we have now almost 8,000 pieces between the combined of tollán are and my own previous collection and these are delightful things and it's it's rare to find a large aggregation of them there are a few places in the world that have it but they have basically that we're talking about individual brochures often the first or second release of a typeface and the foundries the designers they put a lot of effort into them special production you see things lots of color or foil stamping you also tend to see more examples in use that is typical in the larger type specimen book so these are three examples of 20th century revivals of bodoni that happened to be in the collection and then a fourth by this guy and team this is a project that began in I think it actually began in nineteen ninety 90 or 91 and took several years to finish and that was to try to reproduce something of the huge variety of typefaces that bodoni made he if you look through the manual you see that for every size he made multiple typefaces and you read in the introduction to the book that he wanted to have the right just the right type face for every book that he published that he printed so I promoted myself to the IDC to to be the art director for this project and we already had two designers who had been recruited to work on it and we began by going to Parma and looking at the mortar the amazing thing is that you know a lot of what bodoni is his whole it's the punches the matrices all his books and so on are still there basically in their original state so what you can see is quite remarkable the museum is is still open it has a new director and all you know you can come to but to valerie's talk and hear much more about it but what we decided to do was to make a small size and a large size and then in between sizes and so we it was it was a very interesting process which used the the computer technique of interpolation in which you can have two versions of something and you make in between like if you have a light one and a bold one you can make in between weights or if you have a blind one and an error one you can make in between widths and so we did that in this project it worked out remarkably well and I think many people have told me that they regard this as the truest reproduction of madonna's types as as a revival interestingly enough the the the ones that have been influential and the Linotype one has been the most influential in this company is very very widely for headlines and newspapers for a long time still is is really a lot more like a dedo than it is like a bodoni and so I think you know our agenda really was to try to recapture some of this feeling of the original the donee this is a piece that's also in the pop-up exhibit one of the things that we have in the archive is a collection of avant-garde typography from the various movements of the early 20th century like Dada futurism constructivism in the Bauhaus this piece is by teo van doesburg the dutch architect and designer it's called makano it was a short-lived periodical this is issue 45 which was actually the last issue of it as is true of many of the avant-garde periodicals they're extremely rare I've been able to find only two others in this country one at MoMA in New York and one at the Getty and and then there's this and I actually this one we shot the entire thing it's not very large so I'll just run through these to give you a sense of what a complete object looks like one of the interesting things about the data typography is that the various orientations and in this piece in particular there is there's type at 45 degrees at 90 180 sideways upside down and a very creative and dynamic use of of type sizes and ornaments this center spread is a sounding poem by kurt schwitters schwitters in windows berg collaborated closely and so it's not surprised to see shutters in Meccano van doesburg collaborated on the first issue of shredders periodical called merits which was the the holland data issue the sounding poetry is really fun and it's actually a common thread throughout the Avant Garde's all of the oven guards had sounding poetry of one kind or another she fit their recordings that you can actually get on CD or find on the Internet of reading his sounding poetry and there are hoot I mean he was he was well course Dada is known for its sense of humor but fitters in particular had I think quite a remarkable sense of humor more sideways stuff and then that's the back cover of the piece so this is 16 pages it's about well it's in the case it's about maybe eight inches tall and just an extraordinary piece of experimental typography this one is also in the archive this is this is a book with a story I found this book in a bookstore in Delaware about 40 years ago and I didn't think much of it at the time I i thought well i found a wonderful rudolph book which I had never seen before it was his first writing manual and then a couple years after that I started working with the negh'var press of Austria and in particular was Michael Neibauer and what I had not realized is that this was his father's copy now Friedrich Naga members of famous calligrapher and in fact the one of the first things I did with Michael was distribute his father's calligraphy book in the US I knew Friedrichs work but I didn't think Fritz was the same as Friedrich so one time Michael came over and I showed him this book and he said wait that's my father's nickname this was my father's book so the following year I went to bed guys aren't to visit Friedrich and he confirmed that indeed it was his book and not only was it his book but he found it and hand-lettered the cover if you look into the history of this book it was never actually published in hardcover only in wrappers so this is a unique copy and then I think you wanted to say something about co cook was a remarkable person in many ways some played somewhat similar role in Germany to the role that Edward Johnson played in England in reviving calligraphy and teaching it he he was not only a calligrapher he also was a printer he cut punches he designed typefaces he like Edward Johnson who also designed typefaces he had workshop he was a very active in the sort of German version of the Arts and Crafts movement he was very fond of william morris and and the english Arts and Crafts movement in fact out apparently he was known to say that he really couldn't believe that William was and wasn't a German so this book i think is quite wonderful it it shows you and his black lighter typefaces are are to me i think in many ways the most appealing of all the black letter work that i have ever seen they just have a certain kind of liveliness to them that is remarkable and here you see these small variations on the letter forms which is a kind of a thing that he you know has in his work that really gives it a certain kind of liveliness that you don't normally see you used to seeing black letter typefaces that look like picket fences but clucks don't look like that they they also cut his own punches cut its own punches so so here is it as a manual which is showing you these little small variations on all of you who are in my class should take note of this some of his formal pieces this is another guard piece this is this is a surrealist piece the cover is by marcel duchamp the the title translates as the 7th face of the die and in fact the text and the illustrations are equally inscrutable rather wild typography here the so it's only the cover that's by dushawn the the layout of the interior pages is by the author George Kanye who was as you'll see quite an experimental typographer and and one of the better-known Surrealists so these these spreads combine typographic collage with photo montage it's quite erotic both in subject matter and imagery and it's it's one of the seminal pieces of surrealist typography and there's also I think a pretty clear sense of humor in this work okay it's off so from lascivious to lucious I guess Herman's off recently passed away there has been a great deal of coverage in the various levels of the media about this I'm very it's wonderful to see that and the outpouring of respect and and the sort of accounting of personal tales about how influential zoff was and people's lives have been very fascinating to read and I think you know we just wanted to again pay homage to him and show a couple of these extraordinary pieces that are here in the library from publication that he did which was engraved by the man who also cut punches for his types August rosenberger and this is a book called Federer and tickle in German pen engraver in English and this is the plate and the print I I have always thought that zoth that the typefaces that Rosenberg cut force temple were had that extra something that when Linotype got ahold of them and made them for the Linotype machine somehow evaporated almost like the difference between seeing things on the screen and seeing things on paper in the flesh so it's wonderful to see these things you can look at them they're right in the case back here and marvelous work this is something that that I chose from the library's collection to talk about because I've always been a fan of this guy's work and we have very little of it so these these are there two or three books here that I'll run through pretty quickly there by hon Schmidt who is a German calligrapher and book designer and book artist there in very small additions typically about 20 copies and I just want to say that it's it's a tribute to the curator emeritus of the Harrison collection who's here tonight Susie Taylor this is one of many examples of her good taste and bringing some amazing contemporary work to this collection and I've been looking for them for years and we can't find them so you have to come here to see him so this one is from I think 1984 I don't know German so I can't tell you what they're about this this is woodcut as is much of his work this is another one from from 1986 and not only are the letter forms amazing but the way that he uses them across and between and around the spreads is quite delightful this is yet another one called nivalis from 1987 and this one is on a Japanese tissue and as you can see on ok so this is the title spread that is on the on the recto the right reading version of the title page the tissue is quite transparent so when you turn the page that's what you get you get the reverse of the title page and the beginning of the text which is actually fading through the tissue letter by letter so this is what it's like to turn the pages ok that's the Schmidt some more lascivious for summoner to talk about CVS yeah so this is a project done by a dutch designer named han Tom beak he he did this originally in 1969 it's any any published a book with these photographs and call it beautiful girls and I'm not going to comment too much on the sort of political issues that didn't his moms but um the one thing that I really was drawn to about these things was the fact that he actually made quite good letter forms and you know this is a tradition of using bodies to make letters that goes way back it goes back to the 15th century there are many many examples of it sometimes the bodies are clothed sometimes they're not and they do other things as well and you know it's a very interesting thing you can you can google you know body letters and see what you get as images if they're very interesting this color version of the book was published in 2011 and it contains now these figures as we call them in typography this is this is a piece from the archive this is a single it's actually a collage by the Chuck artist concrete poet Jerry koler and he has a little bit of surrealism in him but he did virtually everything that he did involve text in one way or another I think you can yeah you can see pretty clearly that the collages is made up of text and he just had an amazing way of abstracting text into textures and form he wrapped these collages around sculpture he did you know original collages and prints like this he also did typewriter art and and concrete poetry and had a long career as an artist and concrete poet so he's always been one of my favorites this is this is the only original piece in the archive but we have a lot of secondary material on him this is again a tribute to Susie this is an envelope addressed to Susie here at the library by Georgia Deaver and Georgia is a San Francisco calligrapher that that passed away a couple years ago sadly quite young but her work was just amazing and her archive is here in the library I had a personal connection to her which is that in the 80s she did work for Naga by request which was our sister company and for alphabet press this was from a series of greeting cards that we did in the US and it's funny because we were in the library and Sumner was actually picking out George's work and he said oh we have to shoot this when I said well I published that so anyway you wanted to talk about Georgia well I Georgia was remarkably prolific she worked on a great deal of great variety of commercial work she clearly liked to doing book jackets I read an interview with her just yesterday in which he talks about that and but she also did you know wine labels she did packaging she did and a huge variety of kinds of commercial work and she did personal work as well which you see a bit of here so you know she had a kind of a freedom in her writing which I think probably is unsurpassed quite quite remarkable and I know that that when I'm sure that when she applied to be a member of the Society of scribes and illuminators and I have a feeling that this might have upset them because none of them can do anything even close to this is true i just want to point out this piece is in the case in back as well and there's another piece of hers that's slightly lascivious and then the last artist that we're going to feature is is Tom ingmire Thomas ingmire he is another San Francisco calligrapher still alive and kicking and doing amazing work and in fact he has an exhibit up currently at the book club of California he also has a piece in our show at the San Francisco Center for the book these pieces are from a collection of broadsides of his that are in the archive the library also has a wonderful collection of his original works manuscript books and and other things and these were done as a kind of a series they were done in mostly in 2013 and mostly with Octavio Paz text I think they're well the one on the right is paused he has such a wonderful sense of dynamic balance and and he's also especially in recent years gotten incredibly creative with his letter forms some of it is quite abstract usually there's a text of one kind or another underlying it but yeah and there we are thank you you
San Francisco Public Library
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2016-05-20
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xc3UHjv6d80
Central Vermont Fiber - Construction Update Webinar 9/21/2022
foreign [Music] situations like that please don't hesitate to uh to stop me so I just wanted touch base about CB fiber most of you know who we are uh we use no Town tax dollars that's that's a critical aspect of us we are also volunteer driven as I'll talk about in a minute but our purpose is to provide a minimum X access to 100 over 100 that means 100 millibits per second down and 100 up uh that that kind of service is rather unique these days uh but the intention is to make CV fiber somewhat future proof by making this this type of service this symmetrical service by making this our minimum and we will build up from there we will also be offering uh 500 one gig and two big uh symmetrical service and having symmetrical Services actually extremely important especially if you're doing anything that transfers pictures uh Zoom meetings you know if you had a gig service you could have multiple Zoom meetings going on at the same time multiple family members you could be doing online classes that would require uploading and downloading it at uh you know while you're in the class uh any kind of medical imagery anything that requires uh imagery to be back and forth on the on the internet uh the higher your service speed the more reliable that's going to be and the the better quality you're going to have so 100 100 is the minimum of what we're what we are going to provide I'm going to talk about some of our some of the big questions today and I'm gonna tell you what I know for sure okay I'm gonna start with who we are talk about when folks are going to start getting high-speed internet from CV fiber and I'm going to talk about what it's going to cost first of all this is the I promise this is the most horrible slide in the deck um but I I wanted those folks that are a part of our team to see that they're recognized even though I'm not going to name everybody but what's really important here is that we are volunteers we are volunteer based and with this with this volunteer base we are we are moving this organization that includes our partnership and our contractors and of course our executive director and treasurer but what's what's really important here is the size of the team the community that we've built with our partners which is which is absolutely amazing and then the fact that this volunteer team is leveraging the work of contractors from multiple disciplines and making sure that everybody has their oars in the water at the same time and we're all working together and and so far that's been that's been happening for us and we're going to continue to work in that way moving with the plan moving forward here is very straightforward it's similar to what we said in the last webinar we are going to design construct we're going to test we're going to go live and we're going to install and we're going to do it in that order I have on the map here are 24 design areas that we call them DA's we are starting up in the 12 o'clock region if you will where the the two DA's the brown and the and and the green d a is where we're going to start and our Our intention is to start construction in the next few weeks we're going to test and go live at the at the turn of the year and we're going to start installations in January I'll go into each of these in a little bit more uh details in a minute but a couple of things I'd like to point out one is that each da is approximately 50 miles of fiber so what we're looking at for this year to construct is a hundred miles of fiber right we're hanging fiber where it doesn't currently exist the other part of this that's important is that it's going to take time building all of these DA's is going to take time we're going to start in in the two DA's that are highlighted within the box and then we're going to go down one side of the clock and the other side of the clock and we're going to be moving as fast as money and and access will allow us to move but consider this a construction crew does about a mile a day those two DA's are are a hundred miles we're hoping to get another 600 miles done next year and then the remainder done in the following year so we're we're moving forward and we're we're we're starting construction this this season uh design has some multiple parts to it uh the data Gathering is iterative we've done quite a lot of data Gathering but there always seems to be a little bit more that's needed we've completed our high level design for the entire network that's done uh we have our our detailed design right now we have eight of those 24 DA's that I have shown are currently in is somewhere in the detailed design phase and the first da where we're going to start construction that that that plan is in final review by the vcbb when that final review is complete that's that final third party review and that's complete the plans for that D.A are ready to go to the contractor so we are here could you please define vcbb for our audience oh yes yes certainly uh the uh Vermont Community Broadband board who oversees the funding that we're using the grant monies that we're using and who is really overseeing this program and designing the thresholds that we need to achieve uh designing in part the standards that we need to achieve and is also verifying they are the last word they are the stewards of the of the grant money that's being spent of course we are also the stewards of the grant money that's being spent but they are the stewards for the entire cud program and so they have hired a contractor that reviews our final detailed design and that's the that's the third party review that's in the in in the bullets here so each da that that we walk through has to go through all of these design processes before we can get to Construction and our construction has multiple components to it uh certainly the most consistent and persistent component are getting the appropriate easements and permits for everywhere we go again we're we're hanging fiber where fiber does not currently exist for the most part um so the the poll attachments need to be set up and we need to get a license for that and there's a fair amount of work that needs to be done to the polls and the era area around the polls in order to accept our fiber uh and then we have certain areas where we're where we're going underground and that has its own its own engineering requirements as well as these bits and permits we have terminals uh throughout our 24 DA's we have a number of terminals that also need easements and permits because that's physical infrastructure that's going to sit on a concrete pad that's going to get electrical power that's going to have backup power in many instances um so so we need easements and permits for that of course we need the materials on hand in order to do the construction and I want to spend a minute here on construction management uh first let me say that this picture those actually are my neighbors that's right across the road we understand the importance of stewardship I'll use that word again of the community that we're hanging our fiber in and as we we move construction Crews through the community we we know where we are we recognize what we're doing our construction management is going to be performed by nrtc they are the same folks that are doing our design work so not only are they doing the design they're going to verify that what has been built matches the requirements of that design and they are going to ensure for us that that work is done safely and appropriately and that we don't run into to the to the the best extent that we can possibly control we don't run into any problems moving through the terrain and moving through people's backyards and moving through their fields and Farms as we hang our fiber we're very conscious of that these really are my neighbors in this picture so it's it's a very important part of construction and construction is not complete without that aspect of it um being performed so let me move on to our to our next slide because then the uh the important thing that we do next is we test and go live and the reason we're testing is because we need to make sure that the network that we provide does what it's supposed to do reliably and to the to the to the full extent of its of its capacity so there are a number of things that we need to do we need a to uh supply network connections we need to tap into the internet we need to tap into our internet service provider but we also need to do that with redundancy meaning that we need to have multiple sources of access to the internet should any single Source uh problematically go down or or have any kind of Hiccup with it we need to make sure that there's instantaneous switching to something that is active and this is built into the network but it it into our Network design but it also needs to be secured through through a multiple access uh avenues that can be switched on and off as needed and that's the the network resiliency then we also need to do our rollout testing to premises uh there's there's something called friendlies these are uh folks that residences that that we will use uh to help us work out the bugs that we especially in our in our early rollouts but I'm sure this is going to happen throughout all of our rollouts we're going to find that there's there needs to be some kind of a tweak that there might be a a connection that's not quite correct these are the things that will will need to find out in our pre-roll out testing and all of this is required to ensure that the the the the product that we're providing when folks do get the chance to subscribe and have installers come to their house that the product that they're getting is going to be a product that they can rely on and that will work as close to 100 of the time as possible uh these installations uh really start with subscriber Outreach folks know that we've been putting out on front porch Forum um and that's probably how you knew to be here but one of the things that folks maybe don't know is that we're getting ready to start up a marketing campaign um I believe this will be a very unique type of marketing campaign considering what we're doing reaching out to the underserved uh in the area that we're reaching out uh but we are hiring a contractor to help us design that campaign we are also doing something that's extremely important through a firm called crowdfiber uh they also work with Waitsfield Telecom um they currently use them for their own uh subscribers and this is this is going to be a portal on our website that will be absolutely seamless to the to the folks that go to our website and that are looking to subscribe and they will they will be able to see where their their address is in the construction schedule they will be able to pick and choose a a type of service that they that they prefer and sign up for it they will be able to schedule uh their installation all through our all through our website um in in in a seamless way that is that is integrated with Waitsfield Telecom who will be actually doing those installations and providing the service for CV fiber so we're going to have this seamless integration that's going to work through our website where folks can track where we are we're going to have a marketing campaign that is going to broadcast uh through various Outlets where we are and which areas are are ready and which areas are going to be ready in the near future uh so that folks can understand where we are this is this is this is all rolling up now with our initial construction starting starting in October so our marketing campaign and our crowd fiber rollout is going to be kind of concurrent with that with that initial initial construction work so that in the what what we're hoping is that come the beginning of the calendar year that we'll be able to start performing installations and that folks will be able to get on the website see see where their where their address is lined up for maybe March or April or February or and then they can sign up for installations right there off of our website so this is not yet live but Our intention is that this will this will be live uh in the beginning of the new year now I've put some dates out there you know we've committed ourselves to an October uh November construction start in those two DA's that that we've identified and I've walked through all of the different things that need to line up in order for that to happen so that we can actually have installations starting in the beginning of the new year uh there's a lot that needs to line up uh there are potentials for delay um I'm not hedging here what I'm what I'm what I'm doing is explaining um we know that there are possibilities for Make Ready delay and we have started very early uh with coordination uh especially with Weck because of the tremendous overlap in the DA's where we're starting with Weck territory and they've they've been extraordinarily helpful in working with us in in getting our DA's cleared so that we can get poll licenses and get fake ready uh online but Advanced coordination is something we're going to continue to do throughout our Construction in process and we're also tentatively going to have to do some alternative design if we get out in the field and find out that make ready is just too much of a burden uh we we may need to go underground we may need to shift around a little bit we need to be flexible in order to do that um many people have heard about supply chain problems and the the delays that come with not being able to get materials and we've been warned from day one that materials are going to be a big problem so what we did was Advance purchase we're talking about doing a hundred miles of construction uh in October November time frame this winter um we've purchased 400 miles of materials now we haven't gotten delivery on 400 miles of materials because some of those lead times are many months but we are also accepting partial delivery so if we've ordered 10 of something but and it takes 10 to do our 400 miles but we only need two of them to do those first 100 miles we're taking partial delivery of two and we're not holding up delivery of the of the entire order for 10 and we've worked this out with our material providers uh in addition we're also working with our uh adjacent cuds to see if it's possible to do some material swapping uh if we're shy an item and one of our neighboring cuds has three extra that they're not going to need for another six months and ours is on order but it's not going to get here for two months and we need it tomorrow we can borrow one and pay it back when we get in kind when we get our piece of material so we're working we're working on these kinds of issues as well so that we can work around the materials delays that we don't know the details of but we're expecting something uh similarly similarly with construction we've been told that it's going to be very difficult to get crews in the field that there's a Manpower shortage and it's going to be hard to have folks available when you need them available uh We've we've started coordination with our contractors we've talked to them early we told them what they want to do they know our plans um we've been we've been told by our contractors that they will work through the winter we've been told that they can have Crews up here um when we need them in this fall and they know when we need them and they know where we need them so we're we're having those discussions now to make sure that we're doing as much Advanced planning as possible uh we also are working in uh deployment flexibility so that we have multiple DA's available at one time to a contractor so that if if for any reason something occurs in one da that's going to stop a contractor from working there they can switch gears move 15 miles and start working continue working on another D.A um because that plan will be ready it'll be in hand and it'll be part of the scope of work so our Our intention here is to give the contractors much flexibility as possible to keep them working because the last thing we want is the contractor to send his Crews away and tell him they'll bring them back when they can so flexibility uh for deployment of contractors is is is really important so you know we know we haven't identified all of the potential risk items there and there are certainly the infamous unknown unknowns that are out there but for the things that we do know about we've we've been trying to be very proactive on our on our risk management um but in the things that I said I was going to talk about early on one of the one of the things was cost so let's let's let's talk about costs and remember that I had mentioned that I will tell you the things that I know for sure so let's talk about where where are where are subscriber fees basically are going to come from which is what they need to pay for uh our design is going to be funded by grants much of our pre-construction I can't say that every last bit of it but much of our pre-construction will be funded by grants the construction itself is in part funded by grants the construction that we're starting uh this fall is going to be a 100 Grant funded eventually the grant money is going to run out rough estimate 50 of our construction uh design pre-construction construction funding 50 of that lot uh is going to be paid for by grants approximately the rest needs to be paid for buy loans we don't know of any other place to get this money even though we are looking for additional grants the grants we've identified so far get us 50 there as an estimate uh so we will need to go and and and and borrow money to continue our construction because we do not want to stop construction once we start in October Our intention is to keep construction workers in the field until we are built out we we're we are not looking to stop construction so we will be getting loans we will be working on loans in 2023 so that we will have those funds available either in the end of 2023 or in the beginning of 2024 to keep construction moving so those loans are going to be need to be paid for by subscription fees installation uh we have grants that are going to installation I want to say right now I want to thank you to all of the towns that have dedicated some of their Town arpa Money some of that grant funding to CV fiber mostly for the purpose of helping support the payment of for installations and we have a total now of 833 thousand dollars from from our member towns that is being matched 100 percent uh to give us 1. 1.6 million dollars that is going to be put towards installations uh based on our Town's uh matching funds and I want to thank everyone that has been working towards doing that that that is an incredible amount of money and it took a wonderful effort to do that and thank you everyone the additional installation fees will need to be paid by subscribers and of course operations and maintenance keeping us going all will need to be paid for by subscribers so we have worked these costs into development of our subscription fees we will be carrying of course no profits uh but we will need to be financially sustainable because we won't be able to provide any services at all at all if we don't exist so Financial stability is going to be key for CV fiber uh but there's there's no profits no shareholders uh just subscribers that that we need to answer to so our subscription fees and as I as I mentioned I will tell you what I know they're still under development they are extremely close to being finalized uh we've been going through third-party verification and as a matter of fact just today we had our maybe third or fourth meeting on third party verification um we've also had a truing up of our financial model based on the bids that we got from our construction contractors so we had we had estimates that were in our financial model now those estimates are being are being trued up by the the uh the actual bids that we got from contractors of course there will be additional uh costs as well but those are in our financial model as contingencies um we are looking to provide the lowest fees possible that provide reliable service that means we we need to cover our maintenance we we need to cover have a have our funds that support the loans that will be required to have funds available we we need to be able to uh address contingencies so we need to be financially viable but whatever those lowest fees are that make us financially viable that is what our fees are going to be we're offering multiple service tiers uh so that folks that that want to get through super fast internet you know the gig and the two gig um they'll be welcome to it it'll be available our minimum service will be 100 over 100 I'll talk about that again in a minute um and of course businesses will we will have custom features for businesses that need more than just fast internet that that need need other types of services that aren't necessarily uh required for residential service so our subscription fees are under development as soon as they are available folks will see them on our crowd fiber site and we will make them available on our website um so we're uh we're not withholding anything at all here it's just that they're under development uh but I do want to talk about digital Equity because digital Equity is something that we firmly believe in here uh our minimum access is 100 over 100 that is a that is a very very fast rate um and that that that uh uh equality over up and down speed provides a level of service that is that is typically not available certainly it's not available uh through DSL it's not available through cable and even even some of the early fiber uh networks as you get up to one gig and two gig having that symmetrical uh isn't a capability so we're we're we're moving forward with giving even the lowest access subscriber uh digital Equity here and we are looking at two initiatives to also provide financial assistance to digital Equity we're working with the equal access to broadband initiative EAB which is uh helping lay out smooth the path to being able to access the government uh programs that are out there we're also working with the affordable connectivity program making that accessible hold probably directly from our website so that folks don't have to hunt for uh whether to find out if they are excess if they have eligibility for these programs what their eligibility is what the requirements are we want to make that as easy as possible and one of the things that we've noticed in talking with other providers is that these programs are very much underutilized their labor-intensive um for the for the provider to uh to work with the the subscribers that need this access but it's it's very very much underly utilized and and we're looking to step that up we're we are going to provide specialized Outreach that has yet to be defined uh but we want to make sure that we don't settle for the industry average uh for Access for bringing access to the to the community that needs financial assistance we're we're uh we're not going to settle for that we're we're going to move beyond that um so that that that really is the uh the the extent of of what I wanted to provide to folks I'm happy to uh answer questions or you know please visit our website visit our website often uh crowdfiber um and we'll be up and running with our website over the next few months we'll are of course going to announce that uh in our regular ways through through uh from Port form and and other outlets uh we will be having another um another one of these webinars in November where hopefully we will be talking about the construction that's ongoing at that time and maybe even walking folks through uh the the uh access on our Internet site we'll see where we are at that time um but I think it's uh it's time for me to stop talking at the moment and uh take any questions that that anybody might have and at the moment um I'm hearing no questions but I I will uh I will wait for anyone who has a question Hey Mimi welcome I I'll go on music and let us know what's on your mind so we have perhaps 350 feet between the phone pole and our home our current electric lines are buried underground there's not a conduit how does that last chunk of distance get taken care of and who pays for it well that's that's that's that's that's a very good question and there are there are a number of variables there some of which would take a field investigation to True up um sometimes when there's conduit there's more than one conduit laid so that there's actually an accessible conduit potentially we have no conduit there's there's no second conduit okay there's no conduit at all there's not a first conduit the electric line is just under the ground oh oh okay that's interesting uh well certainly the fiber needs to be in a conduit so so that that that that that conduit need that conduit needs to be laid it is part of the installation process we have not finalized with the towns how the arpa money would help in in paying for or or supporting not necessarily 100 I don't want to speak for anyone here um but our Our intention is to make installation not be a barrier to entry so we will we will be working with the towns to see how arpa money can be used for that and we we will also be working with uh Waitsfield Telecom who is our installer to figure out the the best ways especially with their experience because they've been doing this for many years the the best ways to uh to get that paid for if if for whatever burden of that falls on the subscriber and and I really don't know how much of that it will be but our our hope is that we'll be able to spend some of those arpa funds to to support just that kind of of installation okay thanks uh now I saw I saw a hand up from uh from Michael Mike Grant my great yes um can you tell me what towns are in the first two DA's where construction is going to start uh I I I can um now but I'm but I'm I'm gonna caveat that by explaining how this works because the the DA's are designated the boundaries of the D.A are totally in engineering construct they are not a town jurisdiction jurisdictional construct so we in our high level design figured out where the best place to put our terminals would be so that the the the the light doesn't lose its power over the distance that it needs to travel and that told us how many terminals we need where they need to be and it also told us the shape of these DA's uh so that we could get our service out to the underserved so there are parts of kallus there are parts of Worcester there are parts of East Montpelier I believe there's a slice of Middlesex uh there may even be a corner of Marshfield so it's and and then in Woodbury as well there's a there's a slice of Woodbury in those first two DA's and then as we move as I said around the clock we're going to continue in that same fashion so it's not like we're going to go Middlesex Moretown Northfield Roxbury it's going to be you know these DA's that have slices of multiple towns which might have Middlesex and Waterbury and Duxbury and on the other side there might be some Cabot and Marshfield and and and and Woodbury so it's it's really an engineering construct not a town by Town construct chunk I I'd like you to move in on this too please yeah uh I just wanted to point out that there is a question in the chat whether you would be willing to put up the da map again please uh and you went on YouTube okay so yes um I am an analog person living in a digital world just to make that clear uh but I I will go back to the slideshow and I will go back to the D.A picture so somebody can take a screenshot of it there you go these are these are our DA's uh represented by the various colors the shapes are really delineated by where the homes are what the Topography is how far the light can travel from its terminal um and and you can actually see how these DA's are built on this slide which is is you know just happens to be a a a a shot of multiple DA's you can see on the lower right hand corner it says ma3 upper right hand corner says mao1 and towards the center it says clo1 this is just a random shot but you can see where we where we go right along the roads and identify the homes with our e911 database um and that's how these DA's are built so these are engineering engineering uh constructs and uh I'll uh I'll take this down now and I'll entertain any other questions or comments um Jerry uh there's a there's a question in chat and I think it's burning on a lot of people's minds here um I will read it uh so I'm not really clear I think this is a very important question who pays to install the fiber from the pole to the home if the homeowner is responsible and there are subsidies who receives the subsidy how is that determined I'm not really clear what the answer is is that because CB fiber isn't sure yet some clarification would be helpful thanks well that's that's that's very good and uh and the you you are correct it's because we have not fully ironed this out yet uh so it will be uh there there will there's there's typically a minimum length where uh the the the the fee is is is a small standard fee uh then there are as as the length say it depends on the amount of work that's required right as as the as the links uh extend the fees typically go up uh we have been working with the towns and their arpa funds uh to work out that those funds could be used to uh support the subscriber in these fees and the payment of these fees and that's we believe that's a very good way to use these funds because you know that money is being used in the town because you know the subscriber lives in the town and we are uh working on an equitable way of doing that which we haven't fully uh designed yet so I so and that's why it's not presented Jerry you mind if I um jump in and offer a little additional please please Chuck yeah so it's it's important to understand that there are numerous variables when it comes to that question there's is your current electricity above ground or below ground is your current electricity if below ground running through a conduit it is there already a second conduit for phone or or something like that that that is running to your house and unfortunately each site is going to be different um so CV fiber will develop a standard policy that says up to a certain distance Pole to house above ground we will we will just include that in the normal installation fee and that will be that will be fine um and then uh below ground tends to be where it gets most expensive and most tricky um and thank you David David Lawrence just posted in the chat uh a link to EC fiber's documentation on on how to connect it's a very good resource I recommend you check it out uh because our policy is probably going to end up fairly similar to that but if you do live in a place where your electricity comes in underground you are also going to have to have your Fiber come in underground and that means you are going to have to lay a conduit now in some places you will be able to get Grant subsidies to cover that cost where towns have agreed to put their arpa money to to that purpose or or there may be some other mechanisms we can tap into in the future but not every town has agreed to do that so this is not going to be universally true and at the the end of the day it is going to fall to subscribers if there are no other sources of funds to be able to do that I know for example at my residence we are unfortunately facing a pretty hefty Bill to install um I are there um other other questions or comments uh Michael Gray um let's see yes um on the website is there um with the map with the DA's is there like a town boundary overlays so that one can get a sense of um the different um DA's and and what parts of what towns they Encompass and could you give me the code numbers for those first two DA's that are going to be where construction will begin so the first two DA's are clos1 and cl O2 and then the the the CL designates the terminal that that's that's being used and there are there are three DA's that go with that terminal uh the the third one is not going to be part of the very initial uh build out that will happen in the spring okay and uh yeah we can see about um we can we can see about having a map of that type that would be very informative I think if you could do that um with just a lair with Town Town boundaries and then uh superimposed on the the D.A uh areas very good point taken uh Emily and John from Middlesex yeah hi thank you um so to kind of follow up on that question one of your slides had the very detailed uh da map with the individual 9-1-1 addresses I think that is is that something you're able to share or is that the thing that you're keeping under locking keys so the private sector competitors don't see that and I think that 15 years we're all just dying to know when we are in the queue you know well so um so yeah we're we're kind of keeping that under lock and key for a number of reasons one is that if it's if if the design isn't finished what you look what you're looking at is in Final so that so that's that's one aspect of that but let me let me give a more General uh a more General description here we are starting this fall at the 12 o'clock position right of of of of our uh District there's the donut hole in the middle that is Berlin Montpellier big part East Montpellier Barry Barrytown that isn't underserved so we're going around that okay parts of Northfield so the the the other towns that make up that make up CV fiber we will be working from 12 o'clock going down both sides of the clock towards nine o'clock towards three o'clock and Our intention is to build as fast and as far as possible so we are hoping to build about 600 miles next construction year if we build if if we build a hundred this year we are hoping to build 500 next year for 600 miles by the end of 2023 and then the residual would be in 2024. if we can speed that up we will speed that up now the way I've described it it sounds very smooth it might get lumpy there may be a problem d a that was originally uh meant to be as the work flowed and we're going to have multiple construction contractors doing this by the way we're not relying on a single contractor so as we're as we're going from down the side there may be a D.A that for whatever reason we either have to skip or we have to leave not fully constructed because of because of whatever problem there might be in that D.A and that might jump another D.A up the up the schedule if you will because the the 600 miles I'm talking about now just lost the D.A will make up for that somewhere else um you it's it's possible it's possible to go faster but the Stars really need to align it's possible to go slower because we run into some kind of issue that either we didn't foresee or we foresaw the problem but just didn't address it appropriately um you know this is this is a this is a real construction project I mean it's a 50 million dollar construction project it takes time uh but we're hoping to have everybody by 2024 um uh eligible eligible available for for service that's our intention verification everybody who is presently underserved and on the power grid uh by 2024. say thank you Chuck please you know uh right absolutely I I get used to talking to the about this to the folks that already you know know the know the jargon so I apologize for that we are talking about the underserved foreign additional additional questions will we be coordinating with CV fiber to move forward with installation after the da construction is finished in our area would that be done through your website what was the beginning of that one chuck could you read that again sure will we be coordinating with CV fiber to move forward with installation after the da construction is finished in our area would that be done through your websites I I built I believe the answer is uh yes here so our Our intention is that you will you will be able to input so so the da the D okay maybe maybe the the the D.A needs to be complete we we talked about uh testing and go live so the da needs to be fully tested on the network side to make sure that the that the network aspect the the hung fiber aspect works and we also need to do the the go live testing aspect where we're working with a handful of of early subscribers friendlies they're known in the industry to make sure that we have all the bugs out of that D.A and that everything is working smoothly going back to Waitsfield Telecom so they can provide the service Our intention is that you would be able to put your address into the website see where you are in that process whether or not construction is even started in your area or whether construction is ongoing and we're starting to take we're starting to uh schedule installations and and uh attentive data when installations are available when when subscriptions can begin in that da that information should be on our website uh as we're as we're moving through the process so we're going to construct a DA we're going to test a DA we're gonna we're gonna make sure that that da has all the redundancy and and all of the features that is it needs to provide a hundred percent of the service and then folks can start subscribing to that D.A while we're building the next one and hopefully while we're building multiple DA's at that time uh well let me take a step back was that did that sufficiently answer that question okay thank you thank you Sean uh Janelle I think you had your hand up there for a minute this is Janelle Smith our executive director yeah and I think you did I I you answered the question Jerry but I wanted to make sure that folks knew that we were working to to get our website up and running through uh crowd fiber so that you will be able to put your specific address on the website and get uh updated through a newsletter that tells you when you can expect service and details about how we're progressing so that is something that we're currently working on um and you will be able to sign up through our through our website so that will help everyone keep informed and also set expectations and as plans might change or pivot it would keep you updated depending on where you are okay Chuck I just saw that you answered that about satellite connections uh that that very good that does not disqualify you um John Walters I I see you have your hand up sir and you are on mute come on there we go um I I think I double clicked it um uh I mentioned this in the chat but I wanted to reiterate it that we do do our best to keep in touch with people who are interested in CV fiber uh we do this primarily in a couple of ways uh right now uh one is regular postings twice a month on front porch Forum so if you're on your community's front porch Forum you will get those updates and we also do have an email list and you can sign up uh no obligation no cost uh on the CD fiber website to get uh to get updates via email that's all thanks John that's that's that's this is a good thing to mention while we have folks attention here thank you uh other questions or comments we will be doing this again in November I I don't have the date off the top of my head I don't know if chuck if you if you have that date no it's I do not maybe it hasn't been uh determined yet John is your hand still up uh not not uh I didn't mean to no okay not intentionally okay very good um okay I'm off okay thanks thanks John uh if there are no more questions uh I just wanna put out multiple things one to everyone for taking the time to to listening to what we have to say here and for having patience with us I I know we all needed this high-speed internet yesterday to say the least so I appreciate your patience with us when we roll it out we want to roll it out once and for all this is going to be a change that's going to enhance generations of vermonters uh so we we're gonna get it right um and I want to thank all of the volunteers and and and everyone that works with us our partners again our contractors thank you all for everything you do for CV fiber it's it's it's a wonderful thing we're doing here uh if there's nothing left Chuck is there anything anything in the chat that's hanging out there that we need to address before we go um there was just a quick question about contacting us I want to point out that on our website we have a forum where you can contact our general inbox for for general questions and you can also contact your town delegates or a specific Community uh sorry a committee within uh within CV fiber so if you want to reach any of those three options you can do that right on our website on our contact form I also want to say CV fiber came into being four and a half years ago it has been a grind to get to this point and a lot of Blood Sweat and Tears poured into it by a lot of volunteers some who are working near full time on this endeavor and and for that I give a lot of thanks uh and we are close people we are we are literally breaking ground within weeks uh and and we'll actually have our first service areas uh within a few months and and uh so you know after a four and a half year slog I know it can be hard to wait that long to to see service at your actual house when when it's your internet you're talking about um but know that we are doing everything we can to bring it to your house as as quickly as we possibly can the the pictures you saw of the fiber um that's our fiber in our yard um and Our intention is to hang it right by your house and we will in time so thank you everybody good night uh really appreciate your attention and we hope to uh see you again soon thank you bye bye All I'm gonna stop the recording and we'll be done [Music] all right [Music]
ORCA Media
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2022-09-28
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dcnItAh9Jq8
Why give fascists free publicity?
[Music] if you're anti-fascist why give fascists free publicity do you know what we used to do when genuine fascists wanted to have a stupid little march or a rally we'd ignore them we'd let them have their stupid little rally we'd let them march through part of a city and then it'd be over nobody felt sorry for them they'd fly their swastikas or they'd fly their confederate flags and sometimes people would watch on the sidelines in disgust but we let them have their freedom of speech and it would be over soon enough the way it is now there could be fewer than a dozen people having a stupid fascist rally or march and it's all over twitter it's all over youtube it's all over media and the only reason why it gets this much publicity is because of all the counter protesters and it's often not peaceful counter protesting when antifa becomes violent towards those they perceive as fascist who aren't always actually fascist but you know oh you're a trump supporter you're a fascist yeah when they become violent towards those people they are violating people's freedom of speech it's as if a number of people don't even understand what the freedom of speech actually is freedom of speech is all about protecting speech you don't like and sure freedom of speech doesn't mean freedom from consequences but when coverage of the counter protests that often become violent are all over the internet they're all over the news people start feeling sorry for the fascists that's just the truth of it now if you come in and say oh well if you feel sorry for the fascists you're a fascist what's wrong with you i mean a few years ago there was this whole let's punch a fascist sort of thing yes let's let's be violent towards someone just because they have a belief you don't like so making people feel sorry for the fascists is helpful yeah how is that productive it doesn't matter how things should be what matters is how things are what matters is that human nature is human nature you know you you can try to label anyone who doesn't agree with the tactics being used as fascist but i mean okay what if they're fascist you've created more fascists is that a good thing isn't your goal to squash fascism isn't that the goal if that's not what you're doing shouldn't you re-examine the way that you're doing things i continually hear we can't let the fascists gain more ground we can't let them spew their hateful agenda without pushback do you all think that giving them free publicity accomplishes that goal do you think it helps quell the fascists message do you really think making people feel sorry for the fascists helps stop the spread of their message why do you insist that we can't let these fascists have their stupid little march or rally if we ignore them and let them have their stupid little rallies or marches we're taking away their power you say well i don't know you're giving them power no you're taking it away if you ignore them you're taking away their power they want to be seen they want to be heard they want to be in the news they want to be all over social media and you're giving them everything they want i wish we could go back to when it was just some tiny blurb in the news oh yeah and some racist had up had their little rally and they'll show a picture for a moment there's not a bunch of people in support they just shows these lonely people having some sort of march now if you've been so radicalized to the point where anyone who isn't fully on the left anyone who disagrees with you on anything is a fascist then yeah there's going to be a problem yeah there's going to be a lot more people that you're going to consider fascist obviously and i don't know what to tell you if that's the way you think i am indeed anti-fascist but i'm not going to label myself as antifa i believe in freedom of speech i believe in speaking against fascist policies that doesn't mean i want to take away people's freedom of speech that doesn't mean i want to give fascists free publicity the age of the internet and people wanting their 15 minutes of fame has certainly messed up our society
Kizzume
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2020-10-20
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRcPkMH0ROM
Trust in TMH: “E’s plan is to kill you.
[Music] first and foremost i would like to give all praises to the most yahawa hashem yahweh hashem dash my double honors to the apostles and elders of great millstone gms who taught me this truth which is the hundred percent truth peace and salutations the hopeful let's spread around four corners of the earth and also the few aqua to us to say listen goodness truth it's the brother yara yaya from the gms italia camp and i just wanted to do this quick one hopefully it's going to be edifying this is the book of psalm chapter nine i'll read from verse nine okay he quotes the lord yahuwah shami al-shah is a refuge for the oppressed a strong old in times of trouble those who know your name trusting you for you yahwah have never forsaken those who seek you so as you can see it is very very explanatory you know the lord is a refuge and and a stronghold for those who are oppressed in times of trouble you know we the sons of israel the so-called negros native americans and latinos are the real sons of israel then you have israelites spread around four corners of the earth you know and most especially in every every situation you find them they're always the oppressed of the society they are the ones under you know so those who call on the name who know the name you know so this is verse 10 say those who know your name trust in you so if you don't have the true name of the most high which is yahawa and if you don't know the true name of his only begotten son who is the mediator in which you can in which who is the mediator on our high priest you know who stands before the most tired hour you know for our causes you know this is yahawashai his true name is yahweh shai his name is not jesus he's not his name is not yahusha his name is not yeshua his name is not jehovah his true name according to the ancient hebrew tongue is yahawa shai you know so we've been promised um that will be will be given um a pure tongue you know not this um corrupted tongue that that's that eso eso is um is already put around you know just to to put around this deception you know according to the book of sephora chapter 3 verse 9 you know we'll be giving a tongue you know to call on the name which is this true name okay the language of canaan which is the last one the ancient paleo-hebrew so you know as you all know what's going on in these times you know i'm speaking from from italy and i just want to give a little update for what's going on you know over here you know things are really getting crazy you know the government keeps standing strong on the decision they've made which it's all done by the spirits to the most ayahuasca in order to bring in this time of jacob's trouble that he has told us right from time that he's going to bring out so now we have the people walking at the ports you know they are all protesting you know so and this is going to also um um this is going also going to cause um food shortages you know so the workers at the port they are they are rioting now okay you have lots of riots in different cities you know in rome in milan you know in trieste in genoa so you know the mustang is really bringing about this this time man is really bringing about this judgment upon this earth you know so we've also been hearing different stories you know most especially i'm on tick tock and on this platform you know you get to see a lot of you know truth coming out you know so we have you know people you know make videos and show you things you know tell you about these lies and how this um vicky vicky wiki juice you know this serpent serum um the injection is killing a lot of people and it's been killing many people here in italy you know i also have a friend you know who we just spoke yesterday and he actually went to pay his house rent and his landlord asked him if he has been juiced up you know and he told his landlord no and the landlord told him that he made a big hero for for being juiced up he said ever since he took the jews he has been feeling sick and he has not been the same you know and this same brother actually you know he has a sister down in nigeria who he spoke to and she told him of incidents that happened to someone they know actually you know he went it took the juice and under two hours this person died there was also a church a local church there in their city you know the pastor actually told the congregation to go get juiced up you know he told the whole congregation to get juiced up and the congregation actually responded back and told him to be an example he should go first to get juiced up this past thought this pastor went forward he got juiced up and he died you know so the most like bringing judgment on these people you know and the most are even showing us you know opening our eyes letting us know that you know this is a a wicked poison man from from satan himself and this is just to you know to get all you kill you off man so you know the wages of sin is death the gift of god you have hashem youngsha is eternal life you know the wages of sin you know this is a sin making curtains under your flesh whatever this man of sin has to offer they are all sinful things offered to different gods that are abominable abominable in the sight of our power yeah how about you so he has nothing good for you you know so jake has been informed jake knows what's going on you know but jake just for a piece of bread is going to give up and go bow to that image and get juiced up and lose his life so what shall he profit a man to get to gain the world and lose his own life so jake needs to wake up and you know jake needs to trust more in the most tight out but show me how shy you know let's let me see if um let me see if i can get some more precepts from this one khan this is the book of this is the book of psalm 18 2 we quote the lord is my rock and my fortress are my deliverer my power my strength and boom i will trust my buckler and i honor my salvation and my higher tower okay this wiki venom is not our salvation okay our jobs are not our salvation thou art my hiding place thou shalt preserve me from trouble thou shalt compass me about with songs of deliverance okay now let me get the book of oh let me get the book over psalm 37 because this is the time in which you really need to know the most tight you how about hashem and how he operates you know you really need to trust in the most i yeah but show me how shy with all your heart if not you can't you can't stand what's about to come in this is i'll read verse 25 it says i have been young and now i'm old yet have i not seen the righteous forsaken nor a seed begging bread [Music] so the most i you know it never leaves the righteous you know those who sincerely seek him call on his true names observe the commandments the best of their ability you know and sets their hearts to the kingdom that is that's coming then you know the muslims never forsaken any know any of these people you know now let me guess always from the same chapter verse um [Music] verse 39 it says but the salvation of the righteous is of the lord yahuwah shemi al-shai he is their strength in the time of trouble and the lord yahweh shemiosha shall help them and deliver them he shall deliver them from the wicked and save them because they trust in him so the most tight yeah how about shame shy will deliver us from all problems that we find ourselves you know the most type yahaba shame you're shy will it will feed us man you know don't be scared of losing your jobs or whatever you know the scripture also let us to know that we shouldn't think of what we shall eat the next day what we shall wear or how we go our going is going to be of and the scripture also tells us that if if there is um if your right hand offends thee your right eye you should cast it away it's better to get into the kingdom of everyone without a member of your body you know in which what it's really going through is telling you if there is anything that is going to you know prevent you from getting into this kingdom beat any family member beat a job beat a career beat whatever you know you should cast it away this is the book of psalm 5015 and call upon me in the day of trouble i will deliver thee and thou shall glorify me so those this is a question to those who don't really have the true names of the muslim yeah about shem shai then well you know people always like to justify themselves they are evil deeds they'll be like well he knows my heart is going to answer me in times of trouble no because if you truly love the most high bashing out shy you've had all the time you need to seek his truth to seek his true name you know and most of y'all bashing me out will be messy foreign to those who accept his true name you know who call upon his true name you know this is an example of you know i have people who have taught this truth here in italy you know they are they are not yet very well you know they haven't grown in this truth they don't go out to do lessons but as soon as i told them the name they stopped calling on cesaro they stopped calling on jc they stopped calling on all other falsely and they started calling on the name of yahuwah but hashem yahweh they pray to the names you know and they start teaching people in their own little circle you know and they start their journey in this truth you know so this is not an excuse you know many people have heard these names and they purposely refuse it because it doesn't sound good to them they are used to calling that jc and all that cracker name you know so hey better you better you better stop knowing the true names that can save you because or when o l breaks loose man there is no time you know this is the book of psalm 77 verse one and two he says to the chief musician to jay jeduttum a sound of asap i cried on to the lord yahweh i cried onto god yahab hashem how shy with my voice even on to yahawa with my voice and it gave air unto me okay this is the book of psalm 108 verse 12 say give us help from trouble for vain is the help of man okay esau has nothing good to offer to you eso has no help to give you okay everything eso has to give you is but debt you know it gives you something in order to exchange for something else you know all he has for you how he prepared for you is debt so you know you're being warned you know don't close them don't don't don't don't close an eye to this truth and don't give a deaf ear to this truth because the truth is out man everyone knows that even even the they know that the mo which is marcos aurelius is the is the potato chips you know the cheap they're going to put into you you know so every no everyone knows what the the mo is you know everyone knows that this um vicky venom what it does is to is to is to prepare your body for for for for marcus aurelius you know so this is to those who have not been following videos because now the elders their posters they can't speak they can't tell you everything you know because videos have been clipped off you know eso is actually censoring the truth doing a lot lately to censor this truth you know so to those who just got into this truth and don't really know all these terms that we're using you know i don't know what to say man so anyway i just wanted to share this short lesson i hope it was edifying i would like to give all praises to the most i yahawah my double honors to the apostles and elders of great millstone gms who taught me this truth peace and salutations to the hope for elect shalom
GMS ITALIA
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2021-10-20
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2qdKQ9CF6Ps
Darren and Friends S7E6 - Mao Mao, At Least Try To Be Good To The Substitute Teacher
tip of the day never litter anything in the beach as well as the ocean try to help clean any trash from the oceans such as the atlantic and the pacific glass bottles metal cans paper of any kind plastic bottles plastic bags plastic straws and other types of trash harm the marine life according to martha kurdick a marine biologist try to help save crabs whales sharks and even different species of fish by pitching in and cleaning our oceans beaches forests and rivers [Music] darn pixlr and friends will continue on even when tails land in gardens and delicious siemens has made the switch from their main channel to avalo breeze animation per ella from k9.5 popular wishes enjoy the show while it lasts [Music] foreign [Music] good morning everybody on behalf of mrs rhys cade i'm your substitute teacher ms little who will teach next semester i don't know where mrs mundy went but your voice sounds like me christina grimmie along with everybody else quiet down you have to raise your hand before you speak like mrs mundy tells me first things first when i call your name say you're here usually i'll do that but instead miss little will take it from here okay mrs risqued now let me call your name and when i say it you say you are here xenon here roy raccoon here mammal what's up leslie that's absolutely not okay you don't talk to a teacher like that that will go into the list of notes to tell the caregiver [Music] a solution is a value we can put in place of a variable such as x that makes the equation true psst xenon let's switch seats so i can sit next to raw aekon no we're going to get in trouble leslie won't find out fine we'll do it anyway you might like to practice solving some animated equations hey roycon did you watch the season five finale of talking tom and friends on youtube hold on a second while i deal with mammal again oh no you again mao mao talking when teaching about equations are you supposed to sit next to roy raccoon well mao mao made me do it it's not my fault it's his xenon get back to your own seat mammal go back to your own seat and don't do that again that's another note added to the list then again could this dice get any worse [Music] there is no one perfect way to solve all equations a useful goal but we often get success when our goal is to end up with x equals something in other words we want to move everything except x or whatever name the variable has over to the right hand side roy raccoon what is three x minus six it's nine yes roy raccoon nine is correct step one start with three x minus six equals nine step two add six to both sides three x equals nine plus six and step three divide by three x equals nine plus six divided by three now we have x equals something and a short calculation reveals that x equals five i want all of you to enter that into your calculators right now come on how come roy raycomb answered the previous question and not me my mom mrs mundy is not here because of her teeth and jaw that are affecting her right now so miss little our substitute teacher is going to do it the way that works for her i came to this class for a reason mrs marie said shish but that's okay you can answer the next question whenever she calls on you like a puzzle in fact solving an equation is just like solving a puzzle and like puzzles there are things we can and cannot do here are some things we can do add or subtract the same value from both sides clear out any fractions by multiplying every term by the bottom parts divide every term by the same non-zero value combine like terms factoring expanding which is the opposite of factoring may also help recognizing a pattern such as the difference of squares and sometimes we can apply a function to both sides for example square both sides here's another example solve square root x divided by two equals three do that problem on your calculators right now a few minutes later step one start with square root x divided by two equals three step two square both sides x divided by two equals thirty-two step three calculate thirty-two equals nine x divided by two equals nine and step four multiply both sides by two and what do you get mal mao mao make a smart decision diamond leaf don't encourage him mammal give me the answer is it x equals 18 x equals 18 is correct now now and the more tricks and techniques you learn the better you will get thanks leslie and lithi and on top of that i'll be good for the rest of the day and won't cause any more trouble even in the rest of my classes i'm impressed mama in that case miss little won't give you another note to add to her care driver notes list on a side note you sure call me as well as the substitute teacher by our first names as well as other staff all around the campus serena murphy and leanne rimes your care drivers who also teach here told me in your conference meeting that you do that all the time see i told you i could answer a math question that's right now now always be good to the substitute teacher darren don't encourage him too sorry and speaking of sorry we are sorry this video is a day or two late but we hope to get back on track tomorrow in other words you've been very patient can't be afraid to leave this out we've got this [Music] right [Music] so [Music] remember to follow your dreams [Music]
Tailslandian Gardens and Elysian Siemens
UCRpuTtRWiHPszYABs1SUu5w
2021-12-14
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
1,017
5,307
H8nJF2kzJxs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8nJF2kzJxs
3 Color Painting Challenge! Owen & Paisley go head to head in a 3 color painting challenge
and we are maybe you should have got my real scissors with the scissors sideways you got a cut this is our sideways there you go and got it box inside of another box that's how they were shipped that's just how they were shipped he's got all bits in there yeah your sister said open it maybe it's one for each of you we're gonna do a three color paint challenge anything's gonna win all right guys we'll be back once we get all set up [Music] what are you guys painting though grab grab the phone grab mommy's phone and show everybody what you're gonna paint there you go yep there you go Oh Paisley one Paisley gets to go first spin it hard what's it landed on cool minute hard red oh that's perfect for his cheeks all right okay blue nope dark blue all right spin again Owen neon blue all right pays go spin one more time last color Green Oh Paisley's got some crazy colors well if you if you land on one that they have already kicked then you spin again yeah orange that's orange you guys got some crazy I know but it's got glitter in it [Music] everybody comment down below who you think is gonna win who do you guys think is gonna win Oh winter Paisley Paisley what if you could you say oh it is very very concentrated don't you peek Peter okay quit picking cheater cheater pumpkin eater yeah we don't have any water to dip it in do we mommy didn't grab any [Music] oh and who do you think is gonna win this challenge you what pace you think you're gonna win you used all three colors yeah where's the red hey we lost okay that's okay hey show me we'll do another challenge show me your guys's pictures bring it over here you go all right so Paisley's looks like an alien there you go he's like forget it [Music] are you fixing it Owen all right he's loose looks like a big giant booger now [Music] all right everybody comment down below who you think won this challenge what are we doing next emojis [Music] get there Owen hurry so this is the deal with Paisley and Owen Owen always picks paper and paisley always pick scissors well in the dark blue oh all right oh it's your turn they're hard glow-in-the-dark yellow all right spin again paste okay I think you spend a little too hard all right go get glitter white your Blues on the floor what'd you get Oh orange Oh spin again paste it was on glitter white again glitter rose on my time Owen Oh spin again ah yellow regular yellow go ahead and move this here all right Owens already starting that backdrop that you picked out Paisley doesn't cover much of you guys you still see the wall okay here pretty soon what are we gonna have down here all right that's gonna be a pretty cool emoji there that is totally not an emoji why does that look like a banana you're trying to make a wet oh you should probably hold on move these oh I just like over here and then the reason why yours keeps falling is because you keep pushing it back there we go alright comment down below who you think is going to win you are not down boy looks like that looks like half banana half chicken yeah you can mix your colors and make different colors yeah you just have to use which emoji are you making pay are you gonna tell your your viewers which one you're making you did peak on yours yeah cheater yeah you're not done that does not look like an emoji it looks like a banana chicken oh my down below if you think that looks like a banana chicken have you ever seen a banana chicken emoji cuz that's what that is [Music] owen does his in like two seconds [Music] what use the blue from the other one that you have he's the other blue yeah sorry guys we're letting Paisley cheat a little bit she got really light colors all right bring it here and let me see it mom gets to pick what you're gonna paint for the next challenge are you super good at making me I mean Bob [Music] black silver oh gosh then again why cuz she landed on the gold the neon going that way alright get to it hey Owen take your time this time okay [Music] Owen it'd probably be better if you had a thicker brush hey white they are cool that I don't like it looks like you oh and I told you to use a bigger brush no idea what he's got going on over there [Music] we've gotta give him pants no you're not so use black that's because you had very light colors use the black [Music] where's his pants and one go ahead you have to do the whole minion what you do the head your brother you don't have white wallah how'd that go again [Music] he's a jail [Music] right to make banana how do minions say bananas you got paint in your hair don't rub it well they're really taking their time on these ones aren't they you cheater she just got purple a jailbird minion or Halloween all right [Music] you [Music]
Siekman
UC2FdRqQOls36asEDuhZOjIA
2019-10-10
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
921
4,714
u4J1WaspkDQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u4J1WaspkDQ
Lenovo Tab P11 + pen + keyboard bundle Unboxing!... Matrixpro Tech Channel
[Music] hello and welcome matrix pro tech channel enjoy the video [Music] use as a gaming tablet or browse with ease and experience less lag via the qualcomm snapdragon 662 octa-core processor with up to 2.0 gigahertz main frequency multitask seamlessly with up to six gigabytes of ram you can also do more while you're away from home as the tap p11 can play for up to 15 hours asterisk on a single charge of the 7 700 milliamp hours battery [Music] with stunning 2k resolution on the 11 inches tddi ips display narrow bezels on all four sides give it a generous 85 percent screen to display ratio and the display is certified to stream netflix in hd you can even watch outdoors on a sunny day thanks to 400 nits brightness on the lcd screen [Music] let dolby atmos drop you right in the middle of a scene or concert hall enjoy cinematic moving audio that flows above and around you for an immersive audio experience reinforced with four speaker stereo sound no matter where the tablet is positioned [Music] one four point pogo pins two keyboard connector slots three usbc 2.0 for microsd card slot five volume up down buttons 6 power button what's in the box one lenovo tab p11 one charger one quick start guide one tool for insert microsd one keyboard one pen [Music] this tablet features an unparalleled capacity for laptop level work thanks to the optional ultra thin keyboard with built-in track pad and shortcut keys for tactile fast and accurate typing sketch paint or jot down notes whenever inspiration strikes with the optional lenovo precision pen 2 featuring 4096 pressure levels tilt detection and 200 hours of pen usage time on one charge [Music] thank you for watching please subscribe channel for new videos [Music] you
Lighting Designer Tools
UC6_8JlvYedQn-9FHFGM-nhg
2022-07-02
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
305
1,735
EqeThNDuyx8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EqeThNDuyx8
Matco Tools: New Streamlight Wedge and Tap And Die Sets Plus Other Cool Tools Often Overlooked
[Music] well i think you did have the gold box sold i've had a couple people interested their credit just hadn't been um just there yet so uh with i mean i've got another box coming but i don't have one at the house right now so it beats having a hole there for now it's nice which now we also had a uh we had our district meeting saturday so we've got some of the meeting product up there um that's what our goal to this week was to show off the meeting product and stuff like that so that's the that's the tools that we're showing this week to everybody which we've had a really good we had the meeting saturday so i didn't really get it until wednesday but yesterday was the first day on the truck with it everybody really liked all the news all the you know meeting products so cool we got the black and blue ratchets uh black and green black and red black and orange everybody really likes that black uh on the on the colored handles so and then we have our extractor sockets was on sale which we all know if we need those we're probably not in a very good mood yeah we had some pliers on sale were those eight to 19 on those yeah i believe so let's see right here yeah am i well yeah there we go yeah that's a six uh holy cow six to nineteen pretty good we had some silver eagle sets on sale which is pretty important because there's a lot of people that think we don't carry these anymore we do i had a guy just last friday say that he wishes we still had him so he'll be real surprised when i show him but uh and then we had i bought these i've never really gave these a shot uh and the reason i didn't i've got the metric one here somewhere too um because i normally carry the big one well i haven't been able to get the big one in a while that's one reason i gave this a shot but also i'm finding more and more people that they don't need both metric and standard is what they say i don't know and and i can see that because i don't think i've really jumped into both sides all the time with mine but i like the fact that it has the ratchet and set uh the handle but it also has uh in a nice little carry case so this is a good can carry it with you especially the ones that's really been interested in it right now is my rotex the ones that have limited space in their truck they said that they can put this and the metric set in there and then it's quick fast and in a hurry so we'll actually open it up and look at this but then we also had our green pliers our four piece pliers on sale and we also have the orange ones in the same style on sale as well so cool be able to offer some people some pretty good deals this upcoming week it was really nice to be able to order something at a meeting and get it that night you know that week that was nice so y'all about cut up on the back water stuff well we were catching up at a pretty good rate we did get told at our meeting that it's business slow back down um they're projecting that it from 30 days from delivery to get to us to go up to like 90. so and i don't know what all product that's on or what all that's on but they are telling us that there will be some more back orders so yeah but i think everybody everywhere is getting tired of going into the grocery store and not having nothing or going in the tool truck not having nothing so i think everybody's trying their best to catch up and do what they can to make it right but true i uh i wanted to give it a try everybody's been asking about i've seen like i've seen a guy had one last week i want to look at those when we're done with that because those are pretty good yeah that's another thing i wanted to show i've been showing it a lot uh i ain't got it down just yet but i'll figure it out but this is this set here i like the fact that it comes with this and the reason i like that is because once you use these a whole lot the numbers are going off anymore and then you're basically taking a bolt over there and trying to figure it out um so i mean i know that don't mean much to some people but it says keep for future rep part number reference i think that's strictly for the tool guy because they know we're going to be looking at it like we'll figure it out but but i always like this i like the fact that it ratchets instead of just being the style that you spend i like the rationing spot because sometimes you don't have very much room right and most of the time the bolt that strips out or that was stripped out when you got it was in the worst possible spot so absolutely and of course they're not gonna fix it they're just gonna you know run it all the way in for you later but and then it comes with a the measure set here this is important too because unless you're really really good at it i can't i can't just look at a bolt and say well that's a blah blah blah so that comes important and i see a lot of or what i used to see i used to see a lot of the new techs they would never use this they would just bring it over here and see which one stick it in which one goes best well you know we're using that because that hole is messed up so but i like it i like how small it is i'll get you an overall normal price for it and then so normally it runs online for 189.95 i'm gonna have it a little cheaper because i bought it out of sale so uh it'll be i think it's gonna go over well like i said i've had a lot of interest in it from my techs that are over the road and stuff like that i have a lot of people that even that work at tractor shops and stuff like that about through that way that wouldn't be smart that uh i've been really interested in it i was trying to see what we had a book for instruction book or something i guess if you're needing that you probably don't need me that's true you ain't found nothing yet just open your car door and i'll start putting stuff in there there you go just back your truck over here and every empty hole you find he'll stick something in it yeah that's what i need to do that's where that get some of that andy money you got to share man come on now all right so this is a cool new product right here streamlight wedge i like the fact of how small it is i know that the little pin lots are just as small but i also like the fact that it has some grip for your hand um i don't see you putting this one in your mouth i know that's the number one go-to on the little round stream lights but and i like the trigger and it does when you hold it it goes to a thousand lumens and when you let off of it it goes back i haven't i haven't read up on it or um even played with it enough to know if you can keep it on the thousand lumens do you know that i don't know like i just seen this guy had one that came here yeah i was like what is that and he said it's the new wedge streamlight cool it stays on at a constant 300 and when you push it forward it's at a thousand which i kind of like because you'll run that battery down a lot quicker on a thousand but when you want a thousand you need to be able to get it right and we've always said there's um well you've always said there's never a slot if it was burning a hole in that carpet over there on the wall it wouldn't be it wouldn't be enough lumens but i also like to switch and the reason i like the switch is because the number one thing they usually go out on the other ones is that push button button and what happens is you end up pushing it and pushing it and pushing it but i've never tied it directly to some people say it's because they put them in their mouth and the water and the moisture i kind of call bull crap on that because usually you can take the spring and pull it back out a little bit and start working for a little while longer and then it keeps doing it and it just gets worse and worse which they do sell end caps for the non-rechargeable but from what i've experienced they don't sell the end caps for the rechargeable which you know i'm not saying that that's the only problem out of them because they do have sometimes that the leds start flickering and stuff like that but it does have a lifetime warranty so i'm not gonna gripe about it but good feel it does have the little strap that goes on it um to keep it where it won't fall off your wrist and stuff like that i guess if you were walking through the woods or something that would be important working on cars i don't well i noticed in the back of it it's got usb c charging yeah which is like that's what everybody should go to and get away from that micro usb or any micro andy the little bd like the samsung charger used to be yeah man those suck so bad yeah well i think everybody should have their own charger anyway and the reason i say that is because just yesterday my phone died and i could not well i say i couldn't apparently i had one um but i i opened like four or five different things just to get the charger out of them and every one of them was different i was come on now i wish everybody would move to that usbc and just leave it the crap alone yeah that's what phones are going to right they're going to that usbc pretty much yeah yeah that's what mine's got so i had one and didn't even realize it but i see like even my new uh ipad pro it's the usbc so yeah that's nice man i like it but here if you put in your hand feel it you don't have to uh you don't have to worry about which way it's flipped or because what kills me about a usb i don't know even like a regular usb you plug it in it won't work flip it over plug it in and it'll work that time i don't know man it's just weird well my kids are hard on chargers anyway but they've seen the seas seem to last a lot longer around my house and the object that they're trying to charge and the main reason is on some of those chargers um especially on the android phone a couple of years ago it had one way to go in and they would always try to shove that thing in the wrong way and end up either a bending a little prong on the charger and i can't tell you how many chargers we got broke because of that but um i like the way it's flat and that way you can lay it down and it don't roll off well that's what i said i i don't know why i like the shape of that flashlight so much but in this situation i don't really care why i like it i just like it it feels good oh i like the like he was saying he liked it in his pocket better it fit in his pocket better you know yeah so if you're into higher pairing knives it reminds me a lot of the micro tech knives specifically the halo which is an out the front knife um just by the way that the body is shaped with especially with like the finger grooves and stuff in it and uh that's really a cool design and because you don't really see a flat knife flat flashlight that you can just slip into your pocket like that well no and i think it's mainly because of the batteries are normally around so they just always made flashlights around but that's not always that's not always the best i mean battery packs in there see andy's like a ninja he's like a knife guy he said they'll never run out of bullets and never jam yeah i might not want to be close enough to have to use a knife well i guess if you're good at throwing them i don't wanna see andy said it'll look like a singer sewing machine gonna hold that when he gets done these holes poking everywhere yeah yeah that'd be leaking like a hand that'd be leaking like a sprinkler well that's some cool tools man this thing is also uh ip7 uh waterproof ipx7 waterproof um i've never been into the whole waterproof thing because it says one meter down i guess that's how i don't know i've never quite studied up on that i understand well what's the prices on those let me look it up and see oh that's bad when he has to go the computer and look it up well i i spit out a price one time to a customer and it was about 45 off and i said yeah i won't do that again so i just always go back and look now you know what i think would help every tool truck in america sell tools what's that because i notice andy's looking at stuff now they should put stickers on here with the prices because like it's a customer yeah now i'm not saying your stuff is too expensive but i've been burnt before on some tool trucks where i'm like oh i want that and you set it up there and when you walk off because you didn't ask the price have you ever been here andy and then you're like holy i had no idea that was any speech like sam picked something up and i saw the price on it let's just say it said 200 bucks and i looked thing up but i take it up to michael and i say how much is that he goes goes well you know normally it's 249 i got on special for 200 bucks you're gonna be like oh there we go and you know even if he's playing psychological tricks on me by telling me it's normally 249 when normally it's actually 179 he marked up to two letters so so you just hit it on the head and not with me playing games that's the main we have the capability it's really aggravating but we have the capability of printing out labels with prices on them but the main reason we don't or i don't i don't know why the others don't but the main reason i don't is because that's exactly right the first thing that's going to happen if somebody looks at something say a set of screwdrivers those things usually show the list for 257 260. you're gonna pick it up and you're gonna go now and walk away but you're never gonna ask me if i got it on sale if it's on a promo if it's a buy one get one it's not gonna be there well the thing is like what i hate doing is like hey man how much are these yeah and then hey man how much are these yeah hey man how much are these you know i mean i do i see both sides but i know if i had a tool truck i put a sticker on there and be like list price 259 put me a slash through it be like you know 200 [Laughter] well and that's the thing i mean it changes so much because macko does different deals and stuff like that but i may try to figure out a way to do that but the main thing is i want the customers asking me you know what's the sales price and stuff like that that way i can try to give them a big deal because like i said a couple videos ago i've got now to where i try to buy most of my inventory on sale that way when because there is times that people come on here and they pick it up and bring it up here and they don't even care what the price is and it's like hey man this is normally this and i'm going to give it to you for this oh wow i saw it online for that and i just i talked myself into buying it finally and i'm like well i'm going to give you a better deal because i bought it on deal well i know the day i rode with uh the mac guy and did the day in the life of the mack tool truck guy there was one shop had like eight people got on a truck at one time and like this guy's like how much is this how much is this another guy how much is this how much is this kind of thing and then finally all of those people got off the truck and uh the last guy he said man i wanted to buy that but i don't you know i didn't want to ask how much it was there's too many people on here and blah blah blah he said well i'll look it up for easter now i'll worry about it next week yeah well and i try to keep that from happening by simply knowing uh what most of my prices are but yeah i understand because i'm the same way i like to know uh when i go into a store how much it is especially if i got to walk all around that store and then back up to the front to price check it or something i'll usually just say screw it and go on so that that i mean i'm going to take that as an idea and see if i can figure out a way i mean i wouldn't price everything but you know a lot of stuff maybe the most commonly asked stuff like that and maybe even find a way to put um you know ask me about the sales price or something on there too that way they can see how much it normally is it's on a sticker there's no way he's just making this up on the top of his head because i do have that sometimes where it's like are you sure it's really on sale it's like yeah it's going to show you on your receipt that you saved this much money well most tool trucks that i've always been on is always like well it's 329 but i got it on special this week for you know it's always that same thing so guys that's been on tool trucks and i know you the same way when you as a techies product yeah i'm sure it's really on sale you know i have felt that way i have everything's always on sale yeah well yeah but and that's the that's the customer relations partner i try to grow with my with my techs i try to make them you know trust me enough and show them that they can trust me enough that they know and most of the time that's what they'll say hey what's this on sale for it's like okay it's on sale for this yeah and they'll bring it up here and they'll buy it and then they'll look at the receipt and go holy crap that thing was normally this it's like yeah i'm glad i asked for the sales prices like well i mean you would have got it either way because i'm not the type of guy and i think a lot of the people that come to the meetup knows that um even if you don't ask for the sales price when you look at your receipt you're gonna see that it's there just because you don't ask for it don't mean i'm not gonna give it to you if i give it to you i'm gonna give it to everybody that picks up that tool right uh unless you're just one of these people that um you have to be a pretty crappy person for me not to give you a deal and i i can honestly say i've never not gave somebody a deal but i mean if you come on that's the way to be yeah i mean if you come on here and was down in everything and told me i was trash and this that another and then ask her price i may not want to sell to you at that point but i haven't ever had that happen this normally online list for 157 but i can honestly say i'll never sell it for that might always be cheaper just because if i can't get them on deal i'm not going to sell for 157 i'm gonna try to get it down closer to the 125 130 range yeah i'd say i'd be like man i just seem to have that 20 20 is that you know yeah for that money and that's what i'm saying i mean every truck is different and i might not i might not be able to do that so you may never see these on the truck but if i can't get it on a good enough deal to where i feel comfortable with you buying it for that price i'm not gonna say thank you for that so there you go i'm gonna try to get it a lot cheaper and there's ways about it so i'm gonna see what i can do and so next week guys we'll see the whole shelf full of those wedges here there'll be 60 of them well you know you see the the um streamlines streamlines back there i mean i said the same thing with them i priced them one time and they were super high and i was like nope and then finally a deal come along where i could sell them cheap cheap enough that i would be happy buying it i said okay that's what i'll do there you go you gotta buy this mini okay [Laughter] well what colors i don't care send me a variety i want every color you got i don't forget where i was going but yeah prices do vary but i know i've said that 100 times prices do vary but it's all about how many you can buy and what your territory will stand right i mean there's guys out there who literally have now a whole truck of nothing but red backs it seems like my territory won't support that i do have a lot coming i do have a lot here now but i wouldn't you know it's i may not be able to get the same deal because i can't purchase that much i also recently found out on our welding helmets i had a guy ask me i'm not a welder by no means i can make it to the sparks and i can grind it down to make it look real pretty but i'm not a welder by no means and never knew that you could get magnifying lenses for those things we do offer magnifying lenses it only fits certain helmets so if you're interested interested in a magnifying lens get weird either there is several different options i think it goes all the way from uh like uh just let me look right quick i know it goes all the way up to two we'll just say that all the way up to two so if that's something you're interested in see if it fits yours and i'm guessing that's for people who wear glasses normally and and don't want to wear their glasses in there i'm not really sure how that works but i always wear mine under it and that never bothered me well and we we have uh we have people that do that too this is what uh one of the ones i ordered look like this is for one of the smaller deals i don't know what the newer ones look like i've got some order for it but i ain't got them but it actually splits it just like the glasses does for your two eyes yeah bifocals yeah and it may just be to give you a better better vision on it i'm not i'm not 100 sure but i thought that was pretty cool and for somebody that welds all the time and is not a grinder like me then they may need that so there you go all right guys like always thanks for hanging out with us today if you liked the video hit that thumbs up check over here for merchandise cool tools and discount codes and down there and if you're not subscribed take your finger and click that button y'all have a great weekend we will catch you later see ya [Music]
Koon Trucking
UCs9tr2w6dulUpnBhiR0nAjQ
2021-08-28
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
4,450
21,329
_KfBqJtIIBA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_KfBqJtIIBA
Fleetwood Town 2-5 Everton | The Final Word
welcome to toffee tv it's a different setting uh due to a culvert situation uh not allowed in the studio at the moment so there you go so i'm doing it in a different environment but i am joined by and the el pip is with me uh who himself hasn't been able to get in this video but for what i mean this could be the norm for the next few months couldn't that if you've been in a like i have if you've been in an environment and someone else test positive for coverage you've gotta you've gotta have them ten days away having you so it could be the normal let's get into the actual what we're here for which is of course the football fleet will count to everton five four straight victories forever and it's very on everton like hand yeah and you know not level you know apart from a little brief period in the second half not looking like evan at all really are we very dominant in complete control at times football's you know some truth at times i'll say and yeah it's very positive and you know even me you can be like really over analytical you know i just think it's it's it's great the way it's been called cohesive so quick and obviously carlo after that pre-season's really made a lot of difference to the lads yeah yeah that's what i was thinking about yesterday was someone asked me what to be what is the biggest difference aside from obviously alan the corey and hammers which are i've been huge but i think i think maybe not having loads of preseason games actually might have helped evan because obviously we we're in contact all the time aren't we we speak all the time but we you know win that lock post lockdown once the spares game at the end of any hopes you know the league everyone put the flip flops on didn't he and i think because the games were every three days it was a case to just get this season up the way wasn't it and i think people all come back i think the manager learned some some harsh suits i think about some players in that post lockdown that maybe we haven't seen before lockdown because we if you actually think back chelsea aside we were actually doing all right um and then he's really and david ancelotti and duncan ferguson because i think that please if you were talking last night thing you were saying it isn't just carlo obviously so it's all them he's really put awake and it seems doesn't it on the training ground yeah you know yeah you know you know yeah reports about double sessions a lot of pre-season they seem a lot fitter they seem a lot more do i'd say as well i think i think you know obviously lockdown was one after lockdown seemed a lot more happier i don't know whether it was because they had the break and they're allowed to go away but you know go on holiday some people weren't allowed according to twitter but you know do they have some like you know people that got away from football i think it's in lockdown don't go anywhere and i think it's they all look a little happy they're all smile you don't always keep buff apart from what he's keen everyone seems really happy and i think you can tell the way they're playing the football it's a bit more loose a bit more free i think it was fairly bogged down during lockdown so yeah i think it's a it's a real positive the way they could do not only the culture is common but the football obviously stepped up as well i think also as well just before we get on to the game which is what we're here for of course um i think the fact that when the slate's quite clean um because obviously post locked down one spares it got we knew it was over and it was the case there's no fans in the ground it was all a weird situation so i guess it's difficult to it shouldn't be as fans when we're watching it but for players it's probably difficult to get to that top level it was weird football i didn't want that late to clean and it's you know what we can actually do something everyone's equal again plus the manager with this new ideas plus seeing these players coming it's invigorated everybody else's fans certainly feel it seems to be amongst the fan base everybody's reinvigorated by every excited by what's going on so i think maybe that's been part of it but going on to last night obviously uh i've done a start at 11 that was akin to the one the week before and so when we got the team last night i was a little bit surprised not not so much no well i was surprised i'm surprised that michealism played i was surprised that dominic calvert-lewin played i wasn't surprised jordan pickford played although i didn't put him in my start and 11 because i just thought maybe they'll wanted to get sat at the outdoor but not not that he was to blame for saturday so to speak but it's just trying to get that rhythm and you know pickford was in there and i mean what did you make it what did you make of the fact he started with um dominic and i think you know it says assume that he needs to go and get the job done really i think you know i expect the most keen to start if i'm honest and the fact that he didn't you know maybe needs to step up his left you know step up his level and train whatever you've got you've got to make these players more more hungry but you know me then maybe they think that he can't play twice in a week at the moment obviously he's had a few injuries in the recent past team obviously we are sure to center off but apart from that yeah i think pig for playing i think yeah league one team you're gonna face a lot of crosses i think the idea was gel virginia afterwards a difficult time with red and probably wasn't you know he wanted to rely on someone more solid we'll say you know in pickford but you know and yeah i think it was a happy to see dominic charleston always together you know the pleasure to watch at the moment so you know yeah i think overall it made sense it was just a little bit surprising yeah definitely i mean the whole midfield obviously changed maybe otherwise bernard shakers and fabian delta's first game since february um you know and i what i was impressed with early almost how quickly everything just got into the rhythm and having watched everything many many times like yourself in these carabao cup league cup carling cup milk up what little buds cut whatever you want to call it whatever guys it's under ever normally struggle in these games now okay there's no cloud there so that obviously levels it a bit makes it well it's it's us against you and it's used the better players but that even being said i thought we were a lot more cohesive than we were a week ago against sulfur um and really settled in and got a real control of the game earlier yeah i think that's when we you know really cares it has become quite cohesive quickly i said last night and twitter that for once i've been gathering to playing to their level rather than i think like you said but in the past you think and ever just playing down to the level of opposition is it like 60 70 percent because they think they can get away with it whereas last night spending obviously in the first half it was you know 1800 wasn't they were going full belts you know just complete domination control didn't really get a shot in the first two minutes with complete control almost and it was just a really impressive impressive face after it was nice to see them just get the foot on the board say all right we're going to do what we want here and you know we made them way all over the pitch and i think it was you know it was a good it was an excellent start you know an extra star for something it was really really impressive really actually i have to say yeah i mean i i said to me that's what my dad said it actually we look like a top team playing in the carabao cupboard yeah all the changes and that even whenever a lot of times are made half a dozen changes we've looked disjointed we've looked poor if it's over last night there was a real measure to control and i think i think fabian dell felt that to be fair i mean i'm not as big as but i think he don't you think he'd done enough he'd done well in there i think um i will be started a little bit shakily but then got into the game and i thought he ended up doing well bernard was very good in that first half in particular and we and obviously having the charleston yeah it makes a huge difference because rosie allison's a match winner on his own yes his knees just absolutely brilliant and it was great to see him get off the marking a lovely rainbow hammers rodriguez tight pass wasn't it for the gelatin from banana yeah i think this i think that must be something to do in training because i think we seem to be taking that inside left or right position whipping those balls into the far post you're getting that angle i mean obviously debris it was doing so well last season but that's a cup we've scored a couple like that you know we had a couple of chances like that this season i think it was just a well-weighted movie that did a nice touchdown i've been out once hutch locked up found it worked for charleston it's good to see him off the mark really i think it was a really good well-worked goal i won't have just watched the goals again before and i thought yeah that was a really great ball and it's nice to see like the you know the teamwork in terms of but you know we'll play a nice follow-up we drifted over to the left the other man advantage nothing in bernard and the aches of his face he's gonna do damage from there doesn't he i think you know what with him i've said for ages i think he's a fantastic footballer is he physically good enough for the premier league i don't know he's not he's not gonna i think if he is statue you've gotta be really quick and i don't think he is really but he's not slow but he's not gonna be calm he's not a [ __ ] pastor then go busy but just wonder if there's a if there is a role for it for him inevitably in that kind of position played pushing scene and played there against preston gina played there last week against salford and we've seen him obviously last night against fleetwood and he's done well in all of those three games and i mean what do you think of that with him going in there no when he was at shakhtar in in the other superstitions played like a fluid like three in the 423 moment we're playing now and it really worked for because they're just interchanged and allowed to float across the pitch together and i think when he came to heaven he sort of was more used as an orthodox left wing and he had got some really good games got me wrong but i think in this role and i think say similar to a will be obviously played on the right side did they better in between the lions fans baseball to 10 and i moved the ball about whereas i think when you're playing on the wing it it's enticing areas they're not as effective really they need that the pitch to open up to them i think being up and i was excellent last night in the first afternoon every touch was really classy i think he opened opened his body up he opened the field up heavy little touchy tough around the man he was really impressive in the first half definitely yeah i mean we're just looking at the match that's at the moment uh look at that now obviously evan 70 possession um 21 attempts at goal which means they've now had 85 attempts at goal in four games which is not bad that's nice in it eight on target from that 21. uh fleetwood had seven shots three on target five corners for everton and one for fleetwood and everton committed a false fleetwood committed 12 fouls so obviously very dominant but we'll we'll look at bernard because obviously we've just been speaking about them there uh he had 104 touches let's score the goal obviously one of them shots as well which is good to see because that's one of the criticisms i would say about him as he doesn't shoot enough at times uh on target two of those shots a successful pass of 79 successful long balls four chances created two and the final one is passing accuracy finished with 91 past and accuracy three successful tackles and the three successful tackles yeah two successful dribbles and one and one interception joe's put on the bottom there a new position uh i mean it's not a new position for him because like you said he has popped up there in the past for shakhtar but i mean then their numbers back up basically what what had i yeah that's exactly what you want when you're looking at the numbers you're on validation with your eyes as well you know people obviously say you can't really see you can't rate the game on stats you definitely can't but if the stats reflect what you see on the pitch you know you go okay yeah then that's that's that's what happens and i think with bernard we just thought he was involved in almost everything you know we just found little pockets of space i think which is the key against teams who are playing deep you know you need to find those players who could find those pockets of space and come inside and i think he did that brilliantly he linked up really well with charleston at times as well so give his signature well i think yeah i think overall it was a really great good performance for banana i think but if you can do that in the premier league then he's certainly under the shelter starting because i think the one position the first team apart from maybe the goalkeeper is that is this is the number eight position where gomez is currently occupying that's the and you know him iwobi will be looking at that position they give me and gordon as well of course looking at that position thinking maybe they can squeeze themselves in there yeah definitely i mean we've seen in the first half you had to run done the chop and whip that shot just past the post and it's little things like that i want to shoot more if you're in that position get your shots away uh obviously you know we then scored a brilliant second goal as well and really good play good ball out to the charleston great face such little step over and then great ball in and there will be it's brilliant back here right back to you good luck here exactly yeah charlotte makes it before the keeper's even got a chance to set himself and it's back at the net and it's just a brilliant way of goal wasn't it they'll all keep a spoiled me taking the touch like you could just let it in you know what i mean you don't you don't say try and save shots like that no but it was it was lovely i think that that really highlights what i've been talking about richarlison i can be quite critical of charleston because i think i'm more critical of evidence now but i think he's gone really up a level in terms of his control of the ball when he's dribbling and carrying you know you look at the goal you know he seeks that sort of little rolls into his feet just to take the man away it's just lovely little ball until we'll be in it off he goes on his run i think you can see i i see i talk about the game slowing down for a charleston i think when he used to be dribbling he used to be very frenetic and you know you still sometimes lose the ball i think now he's in much more control you know the game's slowed down he can take that extra touch you can move this man i think i think he's on his way up to that next level where you know he'd be a very special player yeah i think he's fantastic and it was it was brilliant to see him get the goal you know and follow it up with another one because i think even though he's played he's really worked hard in the opening three games and he's being vital he's fighting for everything we do i think the validation when you score and i was thinking last night it was the carabao cup last year that got him up and run on the other at lincoln and then he said i followed that up with a brace against wolves at the weekend didn't he last year so he was up and running it and it it lifts the load he wants to score goals he loves scoring goals and it was great for him to get the chairman yeah he nearly had a third though didn't he well we got to the ball and with the backup it was probably a bit too close to his body with a chance to get a good shot off but you know he could have had a third as well really with his left foot yeah yeah just before half time as well dom done really well pulling away from the defender great face touch with his chest it's it well enough keeper makes a really good shave people will look at that and go should have scored he's got to be safe you know there was one there was about a corner early which got across there that came in the other day and he was going in put it the players back so different knights dom has two goals i think people are quite harsh with dumber times because you know when he misses there's a lot of a lot of you know intense you know examination of why he missed him you know another night he gets two goals yeah i got a really good shave and they keep it it kind of kept it give them at that little glimmer they nicked with chairs our goalkeeper didn't give them it went in tuna last time obviously cruising completely domination yeah you can give a lot of thinking this could be this could be five or six without us even you know breaking sweat here came obviously we made the change then took dominic off at half time and let him have a rest you know we'd seen the one reason why i didn't think he played was because when he came off at the weekend we seen him um with his his thigh strapped off his face he stopped me but he was obviously fine come off he pulled the charleston through the middle and brought something gordon on and golden goddess of it straight away but you know while we're in cruise control maybe not at the same intensity in the second half the way we started but we still think total control we call them jordan pickford they don't don't we and and give them a life i mean for me all i would say is for the goal michael keane gives him another great ball but i still don't understand why he doesn't just let it out and then he can have a go with the center back what was your take on it it's just yeah so i think when we came on the second half the intensity dropped about ten percent and i think and i think that just left to give the door slightly a jar for him to get back in the game i think i think obviously carl used that obviously you know to tighten them up for the next game i think that's a good thing for him but with the goal yeah michael keane with a slow pass back allow players to get on top of bigfoot well he put put into the stand it doesn't matter where you hit it you left that you know he's completely he's kicking and kick his left foot well enough anyway she stays the stand and then he takes the touch to heavy touch and then maybe chatting and they just take place a horrible ball out and then play capitalism and score it's just something jordan pickford doesn't need right we'll get onto the second goal soon but it just certainly doesn't need right now because p there's a lot of pressure on him at the moment and obviously people say we need a goalkeeper it just doesn't help himself with silly decisions like that i think one of the big things i've always said about pickford is the decision-making is still the thing that lets him down most and that was a big decision just what you know just take you know pay your percentages just hit it you just kick away he tries to be clever and it costs us that's bigfoot at the moment unfortunately yeah just really frustrating because if he if he just smashes that out yeah what was that you know and but it's just it's a very verse in in tight games and in premier league when you haven't got a handle on something or if you have got yourself into a two-goal lead and you bottom the game and then he does something like that we know how quickly things saying okay there was no cloud in the stadium last night but had the had to be it would have made it very very of the volume i mean i guess your evidence credits he broke um obviously 99 seconds later or something anthony gordon does well gets down the line cuts it back richie has an air shot but it will be lazy enough to sweep it in and i'm delighted for him to get off the mark for the season as well and another player who scored his first everton goal last season in the cup but yes knocked it in and uh we were three one on uen's flight more like it let's get a measure they can stall again but i mean that was a really good bit of play from anthony gordon wasn't it no yeah i think if you watch gordon when he was you know a bit young he didn't have that yet that yard of paint you know he's got that space step now he can go past players he can buy himself that little room to get the get the pass off and get good ball in exactly what you want the man city type ball back into the center of the box and obviously you've got one man coming at the near post and you have one man following and that's and that's why we scored good to see you you know he's obviously much milan i think he played pretty well last night i think getting a goal you can tell that she beats so happy for him i think he's you know he's obviously you know probably a really nice guy in the dressing room i think yes we wanted that we talked about that we wanted to see players get off the mark charleston bernard will be get those goals and you know and get basically get them be more competitive for those first team spots so yeah it was good to see alex will be scored definitely the other ones at the bar and the fair staff as well yeah yeah weight off shoulders isn't it you know it's plays what i wanted the thing what disappointed me last week against salford was obviously having console again one of three nil and people like have we've won just move on like no or no and i'm not criticizing that what i'm criticizing is the group of players who i felt coming last coming last week and i didn't really like look like the once a day you know what i mean it wasn't they weren't like busting a gut to take their opportunity i'm talking about theo walcott who disappeared i don't know whether he's injured or whatever but he's nowhere to be seen you know last week i don't think someday he was enough for them you know so it was those kind of plays you just like take your opportunity so it was great last night to see bernard and i will be do that you know have a good game even like you say you know delphi i'm not as big as fan by any started the imagination but he'd done enough he done okay put tackles in and i mean i was holding me breath a couple of times and again sliding it thinking yeah office fees well they know and then obviously three one and coastal we then go and job and pickford it up again and it's not i've been one who i've been criticized at times for for defending them and saying look there's a keeper in there you know maybe we've just got to back him in that boat last night just doesn't help himself and that's the first goal was ridiculous the second goal for me was just bad goalkeeping absolutely really poor goalkeeping and his decision-making i mean he comes for the cross to the it gets played i think it's chad evans isn't it on the on the corner of the 6 yard box if you decide to come go and take him out then don't because you won't get a penalty against you if you get there first you can clutter them that's what the goalie's rules are but he realizes i think he he's probably not gonna get there and then he scrambles back so that's okay gets back into the right position but when the lad over there kicks it that's right adam what is he doing why isn't he just standing up or just you know do whatever he's trying to do this like it looks like this spectacular flick over the bar he's never just being beat i mean what was your take on if that was me so i had you know you know i'm looking at the femme pickford so the first two things i noticed were when the ball comes in conquer miss you know misses the runner fine okay it happens dean gets under the ball caught when it's coming down for the over edge pathetic jump but then it's basically straight pick for the thing exactly like you say instead of just trying to catch it or punch it out maybe because it wasn't done wrong for over a kick so close it wasn't like a hundred mile an hour it was a savable receivable and he just tried he's trying to slap it away or he's trying to pop armor over the bottom it's just by i just say it's just bad goal keeping like really is bad goalkeeping and i think you know somehow i've been slightly critical of you you can't be too critical of the done of course but i want to see a good goalkeeper coach you know and kelly's come up with on the 23s but we want to see we need a top-level goal keep a coach advisor you know maybe pickford will never be you know never never get back to you know before we showed it in as alien has ever been created but it's just it's only going one way at the moment it's it's you know we've seen the best and the worst in the season that's hot one game you know people obviously won the game and were quite comfortable but he's made too much when he saves that game then last week i wouldn't say any of the goals particularly his fault maybe he could have been slightly better with dean garner's goal but that was not not really his fault and then tonight this is the pickford from last season where it's just a meltdown and goal and it's i think we made a decency later in the game but you know we need better we just need but we need consistency you know look at chelsea they just can't replace their keeper cost them 70 million maybe maybe we think about something like that well i i just look at the top two at the moment and they both had keepers who were bravo you know he was okay i guess and and obviously liverpool have mingler you who seem to be amazing against evan and darby's um and they got so far up and they both went and got two keepers that um you know and i've gone up on all the level and chelsea like you've just said replaced keppa there's obviously people looking at um the hey now and people are saying well henderson could replace him and you just wonder what you want them now whether i mean when it cuts a carlo's face when it went in you could tell he was just yeah the eyebrow was close to so i don't think he's i don't think he's anyone's fool and i think he'll look a pick for them be thinking maybe now your days aren't but because i what you need to do anything in football is steady goalkeeper you need to keep it ready yeah goals you might be the greatest goalie in the premier league but if he's if he's a good steady keeper you know that you can rely on to win things you need a keeper who's going to win your points win your games pickford did that at tottenham yeah two important saves but he can't do things like this so what he's got to do now is really concentrate and get back to making the correct decision and you know not taking chances and just doing this job so that we never have to speak of him and we're only speaking of i'm saying he was great today made a really good save today you know it's for the defenders as well you need that confidence in your goalkeeping and i think yeah michael caine's not you know not going to be you know scream at him is he and i think that would you like that centre-back who's just going to hold him to account but you know the defenders have got you know passing it back now you're going to be sure that he's going to you know it creates that's that level of doubt which means you pause for a second and i think that's going to be an issue we need a goalkeeper who inspires confidence in the back four you know at the end of the day you know you don't you say you don't win anything with a poor goalkeeper and evan obviously owned the car launched unless you want to win things so yeah it's a big it's a big issue at the moment i'm i still don't think he's improved at all and i think you know if he doesn't improve he's only going to go with joe art way where he's you know ends up under someone's bench when he's 31 32 which is sad to say because when he was younger he was such a talented goalkeeper but he just hasn't gone off those levels that he needed doing the concentration still an issue or the internet well i mean again that's the fun part yeah well that was the good thing that you know obviously for for five or ten minutes it wasn't good because we seemed to lose our weight they got a bit of encouragement started slapping into tackles well we slowly but surely did steady it again and uh obviously tom davis come up and was on the pitch it's probably the best i can see for and i don't know i honestly don't know what we do with them at the moment that i think probably alone away from the club is the best thing for him maybe he needs a fresh pair of eyes on him from a different culture that says listen why are you doing that and why you do or someone where there's no expectation of them where people aren't please judging them but you know what i can't have a goal with anyone who's preaching no no because he's he's done nothing in the last he's done nothing in six seven eight months to prove to anybody that he's going the right way that he needs to be gone no you look at the other players who you know you starting a new season new slate you know bernard and his other chances took his chance skillful great last night he was fine and he took his chance certainly when he on on a saturday you know the players that you know these players have been looking to win the place back and be competitive tom just doesn't look like he's going to do he looks further away of anything than getting this place back and you know when you've been to corey and alan and you just can't see tom ever get the game really and i think uh you know i'm i'm i support tom i think you know don't be wrong i think he hasn't he hasn't gone up the level that we require but i think the fans have been quite pretty harsh on other times but at this point i think it's time that he needs like you say fresh pair of eyes new surroundings just so he doesn't feel as comfortable maybe he does have to work a little bit harder you know things can get comfortable when you've been around forever and i think you know he's i mean he's a great lady you know he really wants to go and try his and you know abroad and stuff like that maybe on loan so hopefully we can find the solution but i think fabian delph looked much more inevitable player last night than tom davis and that's not to say no people don't love death but it gives us something that we don't have at times and i think you'd rather play him in time at the moment um well we did get a fourth goal uh good play anthony gordon good ball by eurobeat on the corner and gordon done well put it in a dangerous zone and bernard finished it's superbly well you know just to put it to bed that that was it it was done then and it was a tremendous strike and again and another player i was delightful to get you know delighted with that he got off the mark last night i think it'll help him confidence-wise as well or it lets someone come and buy one or the other yeah it depends how you view yeah i think you know it certainly shows that you can play there it's an option and see carla what you want is if if it's not working for columbus you want to go look up he's three on the bench you're gonna do it for me and that's what you need in a competitive squad i think a lot of people focus on the first eleven you know obviously shiny new toys in the free but you need eighteen players who are chomping at the bits again on the team at the very least so i think it's good then but i think brah was great last night i think he might well be themselves a lot of favors really with the with the way he played so yeah and a lovely finish i love finishes like that where it rises it's the corner with great finish here brilliant and then obviously we took it but jealous enough to protect them and moist keen come on it's a bit this is it to me it's just not the key situation because everything's pointing to him leaving but we know he's not that's coming but you know what i mean we we play in a league one side he scored last time out um i think he scored in his last three starts but i haven't missed a match that um you know one yeah and then he comes on with for it gets about 16 minutes last night and yeah you know we scored the goal it was good it was a you know brilliant you know we will talk about some concu in a minute we'll actually look at a minute oh yeah without even looking just known someone's doing it it was a nice little finish from boys key and actually he got himself in there obviously didn't smile when he scored fairly enough what you can do but it's the fifth goalie sometimes you don't do your response that in and yeah it's great to see him continue last week's score this week's goal that's really good for him what i mean what's your what's your feelings with what's going on at the minute i think carlos challenged him that's the impression again i think he's basically saying you need to show me that you're gonna be the first cycle off this bench because you know when he starts i think bournemouth at the end of the season we'll throw that one away scored you know finished you know yeah yeah last week he had a couple of chances you know he should have scored obviously you know the header was a bit unlucky but he's just got the one that at the bar but overall is all down performed and this is key so you look at donna carvalho there's absolutely ever he's running the channels he's pressuring people moyes doesn't do that and i think you'll notice the difference i think he's probably a little bit more of a natural finisher than dumb i know obviously the goals don't reflect the but he just is but he just you need it all around game you know we talk about alison's all the time is he's a great natural finisher just needs to do more when he's off the board and i think moyes keen's in a situation where carlos challenged him saying you need to do more and it's up to him to accept that if he's not happy and you don't mean it was like neither i like to put pressure on people by using the press and obviously the story about juventus we'll see whether that's true or not i just can't see evan alone and it doesn't make any sense now fair enough if there's an obligation to buy and ever go out and borrow against that fact maybe maybe be able to do that but i don't know i think he just needs to open his game i don't think he's having you know he's alright and training and he wakes me up tries to be hard i just think he they want more from him i think they want to see him go up that level because otherwise next summer they're gonna be looking for a new strike if he doesn't go up that level and he needs to realize that as well he's the star in the events of this academy it's called forever probably think about i'll be in the fierce team after a couple of months it's not really happened for me and i think it's a good idea to test of him as a character as a player see how it works out really yeah yeah if i mean listen he saw he was on for 13 14 and scored a goal that's all you can do and hopefully he will he will rise to the challenge because there's definitely a player in there it's just like if he isn't scoring what's he doing because he's such isn't great let's be honest he can't play with us back to goal he's accepted he's a second psyche he's someone who's got his best games when he's been in the two and four if he's gonna be used that's the lone striker he's gotta he's gotta get up yeah he's gotta be so otherwise like you say he he will be moved on and we'll have to see where we go with that but it overall a really good win far too outstanding but obviously niels and concor let's have a look at let's have a look at this kid um it's that's here look at this 92 touches one assist uh successful passes 58 six attempted crosses they completed two of those attempted classes uh and she's created three past accuracy 92 percent two successful tackles one successful dribble uh one clearance and joel's put a bargain i don't think there's any doubts he's a bargain at 240 grand does he no it's uh you know i watched him from our saying that you know it did he didn't look as good as someone to be honest you can see the talent as i said at the time and it was physically ready and he could pass her both feet but i think coming to england i think in france that the game's a bit slower a bit more a bit more physical i think at times and i think it just really suited me if i was a fall back on the wing and i'd hate to chase him all game because it's from the first the 90th minute powering down the line he just kept going past people causing problems got a good final but his final ball was good you know he'll get better as well but you know it just can't be hard to stop he's just getting you know evan he's a bit different than dean and nothing in that sense which is a good thing because evan as i've said before like players who can penetrate consistently with charleston's probably the only one with the ballers face i think you've gotten concu in his availability you know he can obviously do that as well i think he just did it over and over and over again and so imagine the right backs about the swan crime [Laughter] i mean obviously the caveats of it is against better premier league players we were rolling at him well yes yes like you said he went to sleep a little bit on their second goal with them did not track on the run but that's stuff that he's got to lay and he's 19 years of age and this is his first real goal of fair 13 footballers and let's be honest we all thought that he'd be training with the first team but playing in the 23s certainly for the first half of the year because we i think we all expected leighton to sign didn't mean for another for another season so and then people were still saying like we need the left backwards coming out for lukadine you know even with this kid where now i think most people will be going don't waste any [ __ ] any money on a left back because we don't need it no i think people are also thinking oh god what are we going to do he wants to leave and sees because he can't get a game and it's a good problem to have though and i think that's the title this is the type of sign and the people want some martial brands to make when he came to the covers fan these gems you then we could develop interface team players and they were wrong it's fairly early these at the moment we'll see how'd you say it okay however fairly promising and you know it's a shame he's not right-footed really isn't it because if he was a right-back would be in business with me really but again he's fantastic he's so excited to watch i love you know swashbuckle the button left back so just go out go out players and get to blind i think he i think you know well as people said it's what the man city thought to be getting the benchmark mandy in a sense the way he plays he's just he was just great last night and again that's two performances on the bounce there but he's been really good and i think he's put himself in the frame obviously for more games as the season goes on oh definitely i'm i'm against freshman we've seen them yeah that day as well you know when i'll become on a black hole at that time but certainly preston he was brilliant he played there so it is really good on it and i also look at it as a situation if carlo ever wanted to play a 4-4-2 for the gate he's a type of player he could play ahead the luca deep because he's he's more like a winger isn't he that's how he plays yeah you could even have luke dean as a left center back in the three and have him as the wing back yeah you could do that it provides us with options which is which is key and i think that with anything i think with the whole team at the moment there's certainly different you know different players you can play in different positions and offer something so it's it's a goal for us obviously this one's way too big but once we reduce the squad numbers i think it's quite a versatile squad which helps us massively definitely that's what you want you want that squad obviously carlo was asked after the game about you know the transfer window still open do you want players you could tell by his face he did 100 he wanted to say yeah i want another three but he said we've got 31 players and we need to get rid of the sun and and that'll be my marcel branson's challenge i wonder for the next 10 days can we move a few of these players out to create that i think they'll get a center back in on loan regardless that's not nothing's dependence on that but if he wants that extra winger or he wants the swashbuckling right back whatever um it's it's gonna be dependence on a shift and three or four players at least at least to be able to create that that room in the budget isn't it yeah you need six minimum got off because that gives you 25 then which is just about manageable let's say but then it's then the two of them are on top of that to create that room and it's the wages really but you know let's be honest enough 89 squad i don't think anyone's probably above maybe on conquering less than 30 grand a week so that's a a lot of money going out the door every week so it's it's imperative obviously it help you know obviously play if you know we you know will be or bernard if they decide that we could do without one of them i think they didn't do themselves any harm last night in terms of the way he played i i think you know then she probably may stay you know and maybe if you could get rid of warcraft and blast as the wings they move on i think that may be the option because i think they're a little more versatile than them super we'll see it's it's a it's definitely i think it's difficult for marcel because i think teams are waiting for the last week of the notice burnley i've got dale stevens who do a quote at 8 million for a couple of years ago they've gone for a million today i think as it comes towards the end of the window now the leverage comes with the buyers then and obviously we'll have to go all right we'll accept a million less and you know we'll maybe give them 20 to the wages but whatever it works out but it'll work out for the buyers better so we'll see hopefully more movement but for carlo how can you keep 31 players happy and how can you keep the spirit uplifted and the momentum going when there's going to be players who are not even in the cu in the ground for the match day we were training with you every week so it is it is imperative that we get rid of five or six players at least i mean you can get just before we finish you can you see going obviously sansa will and then obviously you've got alaska who has got eight months left theo's only got eight months left i don't know where the theo will go but he's only got eight months left and then he'd be looking if you've been deaf i think at long games and although he might he might keep him a long time yeah i'll be he'll do it in delphi'll be the squad player i don't know um i think he'd sell john joe with someone coming for him he didn't do himself anything he was okay but that wasn't a good thing if you look at the other side and you look at the coke who's absolutely flying up and down you look at jon jones all a little bit safe he was efficient but it's playing within yourself and you can't play within yourself at this moment no he he's one who you if obviously he might be looking at shameless cold i'm thinking i can probably get him here if i step up my game and he should have been raiding down that lights and throwing crosses in after crushing and it's it's stopped saying pass it back 15 thousand about it is what it is but it's going to be it is going to be an incessant 11 days i guess um check those engines we can't get rid of him but yeah so but then there's other players isn't that the penningtons and colonel conley and broadhead and all them so we could so you could shave a lot off the wage bill really in this period it's just where that then players take the moves that they should do and whether we can find clubs who want to take that chance on them because obviously not the best market to try and sell players and but if they're good the right price we should be able to shift them it's just obviously i haven't from an accountant perspective needs to get certain amounts in certain players i expect kelpie sigurdsson to stay i think at the start of the summer everyone would have broke the runs and said let's let's move on but i think he's shown off the bench especially in later in games when the game slows down it can be quite effective so if he continues to show that that attitude then yeah he can stay no problem at all i mean they'll think that he got a bit for them oh it's the same with i think outside of 13 14 players i think they take a big game and forward and go i really do think that i think the first 11 a couple of young glad surpass everyone would be you know we went to see moyes key and leave if they came in it just depends really so we'll see how it works up though very very interesting very interesting that's it makes good win gold win next round west america again another another great opportunity to get into the the quarterfinal i think we'll have to pick a stronger team because they will but it's a great opportunity for evan to get into the quarter so there you go that has been the final big thanks to andy for joining me in stranger circumstances there you go uh make sure you give this video a thumbs up subscribe if you haven't and if you want more videos join us over on page and give andy follow on twitter as well at el pavotti ftpl they like you with a swedish left back super like they're gonna be whale class superstars aren't they yeah they there you go thanks very much for joining us see you later
Toffee TV : Everton Fan Channel
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2020-09-24
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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UDGc39aE4AQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UDGc39aE4AQ
AutoHotkey V2 is no longer in Beta❗ Planned to be released in 2022 😲
hey everyone it's Jonas from the automator and we have some exciting news was uh happened to notice something it was funny because um it kind of caught us both off guard we weren't expecting it about version two why don't you show them was as it was pretty yeah so I just entered the help file as usual and I just noticed that here the versioning changed from beta Point 15 which was the last one that I happened to have seen to RC dot one and RC usually in programming what it means is release candidate so this is or what this means is that autohotkey version 2 is already in a state that is about to be released he's just making sure that this is just a candidate he's going to test it a little bit more and from now on there are no more changes to the language so the language is considered stable right the only thing that we're doing right now is checking for bugs any bugs that might show up um are the ones that are going to be now fixed and added to this particular version until it is in a stable release that he said okay I'm gonna release this thing now the funny thing is that I use I'm usually subscribed to the new topics whenever he makes a new change I didn't get a notification I was like that's weird um so what I found out is that he created in the announcements Forum a new thread now this thread is um just for the release candidates now we are in number one and as you can see it's just about fixing stuff and the other part that he will be working on is just the packaging and documentation what that means is packaging is creating the installer right so now our hotkey version 2 is going to have a normal installer as we had before and the documentation is going to be just updated to reflect that we are in version two so now the most important part of this is that the release is planned for later this year so that means that this year we're done we were actually talking about that um I don't know a few months ago at the beginning of this year well it was saying like yeah it was the anniversary of the 19th anniversary for auto hockey right was on the 10th of of this month but actually prior to that at the beginning you were mentioning that I think it was like yes week or gestro somebody said like oh probably uh in the next year or probably this year and we were saying probably at the beginning of next year but here we go he's actually explaining no this year he's going to be releasing version two and if you go to the other hotkey dot com page and you go to downloads you will see that now it says download version 2 RC so but definitely ask this to confirm because I I think even though the the version two will be out and it'll be the official I'm sorry it'll be no it will be the official one well but do you think he's going to take it that way right when it right when it's when it is launched what my understanding is that as soon as it's launched this this other button is going to go so you are not going to be able to download version one from here probably from the older versions section here so it's not that you cannot download it no sorry no no sorry sorry I think the the V1 is going to be removed yeah yeah so this one is gone I I'm 100 sure this one is going to be gone for version one I think is going to be version two is going to be the first button and version one is going to be like a previous version or something like that um but definitely he's definitely um seem to be launching this very soon and not only that I have been speaking uh well you know replying to certain threads recently to him and he definitely matters he he says that he will not be working with B1 so he's definitely saying that um he is just going to be working so here I will not be devoting much time to the V1 Branch so he's definitely what it means is he is going to forget about V1 so now he's he already did I mean that's right no no well he did in the sense that he's not creating new stuff but he has been fixing stuff on it well I mean with a lot of support from other people right I don't yes yes yes but in general he's still adding stuff because when you go to V1 you still see that he released version 35 recently so he is doing that what I'm thinking is that it's gonna get stuck on 35 for a long long time unless yeah again I know there's people like to use wig and other people that we are back porting stuff from V2 to V1 yes you can see them saying hey if they find certain things if it's super simple to do maybe very likely he's going to be adding the the fixes there but uh he's really vocal about he forgot about B1 so that has a very big you know there has a lot of implications for you know Auto hot King genital because yeah right now that means that many people are going to jump ship most of us who have already done that know that there's it is better but now you will start seeing a lot of scripts in the forums develop mainly in V2 and um that means yeah we're going to get more libraries in B2 we're going to get more scripts in V2 and guys just start adding your requires commands all the time right so now you will lead that you will need it because now any person like new people are gonna join the page and download and what they're gonna download is V2 straight from the beginning so yeah you know and actually throughout there I know the other day I was talking to you about it I'm like why isn't the the bitness in part of the required saying and you said he actually responded kind of positively to that idea yeah yeah he did uh very uh recently actually he just said that he will be adding the um the requires command to be it's gonna modify him to be a little bit more flexible is what is going on uh in that means including um stuff that has to do with you know the business and I don't know what else he mentioned the OS would be the only other thing to me that pops in my mind of is there a certain OS that you have to have to run it um I'm not really sure because I don't think it's that you know most things now go back to XP right so he's saying that he's going to be extending the directive to allow the requirements weakness and then he says for V1 only he's gonna allow Unicode and C but the business is for both so you will be able to say 32-bit or 64-bit on both of them but in V1 you will be able to require Unicode around C there is no ANSI for v2 correct no there is no again this is this is one of those Legacy stuff that are going away and uh is very rare to find ansi's strings in major websites anymore everything is utf-8 so right now mostly utf-8 or utf-16 which is Windows so if you can move away from ANSI that would be great unless you have very specific needs there is no need to use that but in V2 you you don't even have that ability you don't even have unseen uh versions of it so again this is great um the these are a lot of great news by the way we have been waiting for B2 for what 10 years now so we are done and right now when you have something that is in release candidate uh status that means that that that's it like that means that's V2 we're just fixing stuff so for sure if you were saying oh no he's better still yeah forget about that he's not bad anymore he's already the the release we're there man there you go across the country to get to the California ocean and we're we're in the parking lot looking out at the ocean we're like yeah we're there yes that is right so morality but and the fact he said this year in what 40 days for the rest of the year less than a year yeah so we're he's again he's done so probably if this is done um he's still talking about v 2.1 so he already has plans for v2 there's a few things that he's going to be doing but he's not going to put them in V2 point zero because he's going to add them to be 2.1 so many other changes are coming but not for v2 point zero so he's just um he said we're good which is great uh I I'm really happy about that I was I just cut it caught me by surprise I was not really expecting that today so uh if you want to learn more about V2 we have quite a few videos on it go to the URL over my head and we have a lot of them some of them are just you know what you need to know when you make the switch some of them are talking about the difference in the objects and how you have a map instead of just the regular object that we're typically used to and guise are drastically different right um but yeah so check out those videos if you like and uh Hey like the video If this you know if you learned that this change is there and that tell me if you guys are surprised I was really surprised to see this and especially him saying this year like that blew my mind that yeah so there you go comment below if you guys think this is really um amazing and if you were expecting it make sure
AUTOHOTKEY Gurus
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2022-11-22
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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metadata
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1,784
8,770
mvBQSPYnTe4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mvBQSPYnTe4
VitalabKZN fertility clinic launch evenings
[Music] in the [Music] so the practice model is quite unique and this is thought to be the reason why we have continues to grown in the success of organization we'll be starting off [Music] so we have to tell treats teach first grade and then assaulted the level we we can stain and ultimately just opera kind of cookie cutter one-size-fits-all you know because each person is devastated of problems and one needs to address that they evil and there's not one quick fix for anybody so through our commitment to quality palliative make research that if you are dying we are recognized as a world leader in [Music]
Vitalab Fertility Clinic - Sandton and Umhlanga
UCFZFjK853tKL-Dbty02mK6A
2019-12-19
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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110
612
0BAuIzLNm9U
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0BAuIzLNm9U
Kirby Crystal Shards Ep.15: Fighting Metal Gear
bye [Music] holy ready for the next one yeah well good herb a bud hi that was quick yeah I told you I two lives that's all we need thank you cuz I'm not gonna [ __ ] up nope at all i needed that green well maybe all there it is serious oh oh you respond yeah that bad grounds mess told me I think it's gonna be something oh yeah just because it's constantly moving oh there was a huh what did we need um I think it's ground and maybe fire or just grounder son maybe just ground cuz it feels orange and brown ish why would you get grounded fire week not it that's obviously not it well I thought that it was just gonna be ground because fire is red it doesn't have any red in it but you can't even mix it and you're gonna be a bike yeah all right Oh King to unity again all right I'm going to try to speedrun this you have a topic you want to you want to talk about maybe well it just like kind of focus in on this okay um let's see let's see recent topics not maramba oh yeah so some some news there what do you guys think one of our most recent video titles Harambee olympics oh yeah you know its way outdated but that's because it's one of those from the vault things like we recorded never got around to actually putting it out there yeah we were like going through a bunch of things like individually so but do you know how like this and we're back we are back in action yeah hell yeah so um this might be I'll you [ __ ] might be really a little bit more personal in needs to be but hmm I'm probably gonna start looking at college again because awesome yeah a lot of a lot of opportunities I've had kind of like went by and I didn't really get a whole lot of uh saying that hmm and you know I did college once and I dropped out I mean that's no secret way I figure it's time to go back I have this fascination for sound design yeah helianthus uh the sound is on studio as good as like aces especially the Foley room are fully or whatever yeah so cool I just want to be a part of like entertainment production but yeah somehow you know I can't animate I can't really draw yeah I can't if I like you sit there and like want to do something but I don't have the motivation to draw oh I guess I get you all my motivation for art kind of died in high school oh yeah like I used to really like it well I had a teacher that this kind of like picked on me a little like too hard whenever her [ __ ] was like nothing better yeah she would never hand out a hundred unless you kissed her ass yeah so I often came out with like 98 like she couldn't describe what the other things I could have done right would be oh no it wasn't about no I needed electric I think you could go back from here maybe but uh just don't throw it away above a pub Rihanna fish oh yeah she I think growing up and realizing or understanding what I do know is that she was just insecure of herself because she was an art school teacher or an art teacher in a shitty high school in the middle of nowhere trying to teach kids he really had no motivation for art he was just terribly funded all that she was doing and working with what she could but she did it in the wrong way well the [ __ ] crystal disappears if you're not in the room with the power up that's [ __ ] Yeah right well would they put the electric right there I don't know what that oh high school art was like kind of insulting because you know I know I did better than some of those people that got hundreds yeah and she said she never felt like you really deserved a hundred because it made other students feel about all that's like [ __ ] that's gonna bring down my grades regardless if you're just going to give me that if it didn't really mean anything me go ahead but bring down like grade point average because you want to be the better person yeah like how many people that had perfect grade point averages and like her class would be the the exception yeah just because they couldn't make that hundred yeah you know it'd be like a 3.9 something instead of a 44 all right and it's like she gave a lot of leeway towards her own personal opinion on things and so much like for me really don't do because it's like everyone has their own style everyone has their own development all that like even if you can't draw for [ __ ] you still have the way of drawing a circle that you always do or something you start from the left or you start from there right yeah like art is for the most part subjective I mean if you're trying to teach a specific you know method or like cranium then I get that you have to have an understanding of it the way you do it doesn't always have to be the same but you have to understand it all the same you know yeah all good they back out [ __ ] you chop them up with your sword in my Swan see you Danny oh my god that upset it's so old mouth yes Oh God we finally made it hell yeah Owen took us 27 minutes because I forgot so yeah I see that timer what do you remember what time we ended the last episode of around 20 minutes okay so we have time enough for this boss hell yeah Oh God oh boy oh boy all over you whoa it's like a powerpuff girls villain it's the snake boss from the Metal Gear snake eater yeah the metal gear you didn't launch for rocket was continuity r speaking of continuity or the lion king oh [ __ ] I should have holy [ __ ] what are you talking about continuity ears everywhere oh it's not to get film in the Disney Lion King movie huh what are you talking about like words their continent yeah continuity errors like everywhere but especially like noticeably in the first scene meal looks like you know where advice cheering the new king and all that Simba's being born yeah all the animals are gathering around if you count the elephants and giraffes in every single scene where it changes the camera angle it'll be like a different number of those animals it's crazy well this sucks actually make it he's gonna back out oh oh that's gonna hurt me oh no yeah well that was kind of colon oh so close okay let's do it again this time I have full health I did I did that with two bars of health yeah hell yeah or two circles you got this no hit run speed run frame perfect oh this is going to take a little while hundred percent never back down never surrender oh that what [ __ ] come on never surrender I should have hit him yes here you go eat to dig oh oh I remember if you get close enough you can actually suck up both rocks really yeah I'll stron do that with the bombs no no that's right yeah I didn't mean it down mm-hmm come on do another Rock Slammy okay Amy jammer lammy the rocks slamming it looks like the background is spray painted a little bit like those airbrush yeah things that you would see it like the mall at the beach hmm River rom be oh god this is the best one of three there was a standalone recently like from undertale who San all Sansa skeleton yeah okay okay I can I could do it I guess what he call design though I really like that oh no I got sniped like whale lobster rocket all that [ __ ] jump oh thought you were gonna go meet again Oh what [ __ ] and where were I throw them what it's not registering that I'm hitting him what the [ __ ] like it had the load after that last one oh there we go there we go there we [ __ ] yo whoo give me that I'd give you that [ __ ] I have ended awesome see look at this we're making some progress yeah oh no oh god is that the last one guys help my home world has crabs okay it has ads all over it it's just a big floating piece of candy and it got three big too close to the ant planet you know like have you seen that ants can like make a raft of themselves no yeah like there's fire incident [ __ ] that will make a raft of themselves and they'll never sink you can even poke them down and they can't really like be submerged [ __ ] aunt yeah oh we're on the last world yeah that's all Sam oh [ __ ] yeah guys I think the next session is going to be the last I mean unless there's some kind of crazy actual feedback from you guys like we're gonna maybe end it off at that last boss yeah all right all well until next time folks we will see you on the next episode of turbo button keep an eye out for not only this but a couple more from the vault things some mario japan that's not quite old enough to be from the vault but it's before magfest that we recorded it eball so it's a little bit older yeah holy world no I wasn't able to save woolly world we're gonna have to redo all the world yeah because it decided to explode into a million pieces when I rendered it like literally there's like a couple hundred thousand files in one folder that all compile up to be one video anyway um yeah I don't know how to say goodbye on the footpath within this video with a nasty dank Jeff and by that I mean to just peanut butter you've been played sucker God see ya you
TurboButtonShow
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2017-03-30
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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1,764
9,017
kTADiVk9WnY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTADiVk9WnY
college diaries I finals week as an art student 🌺 Ringling College of Art and Design
[Music] i'm so tired but that is because it's finals week and i feel like i've been in finals week for this whole month um i've had lack of sleep lack of creativity and that's the part of going to art school but at the end of the day it is important that you love it and i mean i like it and i love it some parts i mostly love it when i love what i'm putting out because there's some stuff that i'm just not proud of and i just want to throw it all in the trash and restart but sometimes that is not an option because it's just going to take you so so long um but i will say i did do that on a project that has that has caused my restless nights but we have a week and two days left and i'm so excited but also really sad because all of my friends are going to leave like they're going to go back to their homes and i'm just going to stay here but you and me we're going to take on summer together so before we eat breakfast i need to do some stuff on the computer oh i like an eyelash give me a second oh yeah i'm gonna do some stuff on the computer first i'm starting a little later than i would have liked to it's 9 17 right now and i wanted to start at nine but when i woke up at 8 30 i was like i really don't want to do anything and i just want to go on my phone and go on tick tock which i normally don't do to do some important papers was due yesterday well before sunday but i didn't read that episode [Music] update i just finished completing all of my important documents and boy was it difficult i have never completed a and i had no idea what anything of that was saying um anyways i also just submitted work that is due later today but we're going to present tomorrow i have a whole presentation that i have to do tomorrow that's 30 minutes with my team for a class and we have been practicing or we just practiced one day and it went well so i really hope it goes smoothly tomorrow i'm also going to practice later my little speech so that i just feel like more comfortable when speaking to the audience um but it is now 10 41 and i am starving so we're gonna make avocado toast with egg and we're also gonna make a smoothie hope it's delicious i like putting mayonnaise and then avocado and then my egg yeah it has no flavor without the mayonnaise but i also don't hate it then i also made a smoothie i love making smoothies my favorite drink is a smoothie so i made a strawberry banana coconut smoothie with chia seeds and so good it's currently 11 12. i need to get ready like soon because i have to leave at 11 50 to go to class for a uiu app which is basically like website and app building it's very interesting [Music] so [Music] we just finished 2d and i'm really happy with how my boards came out next well this friday we're going to do like mini skateboards and i'm so excited yeah now we're off to lunch [Music] we just finished lunch and i made myself a little coffee we're gonna go to our last class which is creative team dynamics and i have a little presentation i'm spilling this do you see that help no i'm good i don't know what to do okay we're doing a presentation and that's kind of like our final but yeah i hope it goes well [Music] we just finished class i was nervous presenting but also the coffee made me jitter so much like i was shaking it was so bad and it also made me want to go pee but i peed before um that's great that's just gonna be the audio in the back it adds what is it it's a texture um but we have a little meeting for our work and then we're gonna go to the art store um angie has never been to the art store and that's like kind of my favorite art store other than like michael's but yeah it's fun in there it also has discounts so we love the discounts [Music] okay [Music] i'm sweating so bad so long a little different but uh i'm so happy that they were giving out free popsicles so i got pineapple mango mixture question mark right oh it's really good we're gonna go my room to angie's room no room oh mail room and then angie's room and we're gonna do some homework well i'm gonna do some homework i don't know about you i might go to the gym i don't know yet she's a fit girl [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] you guys i'm walking to the studio to go do some work and i see my work on the wall oh my god i wish i would have gotten my reaction on camera but that's so sweet i'm so happy that i finally got on the board i always see people like on the wall i just dropped my friends off and now i have to do a whole print which i got everything i got all my supplies all my papers and i really hope this doesn't take me such a long time because i want to go home and take a shower because i am sweating my hair is oily i'm also still shaking from the coffee i had hours ago so i hope the jitters like start calming down because they're getting really annoying [Music] [Applause] [Music] i finally finished i am so sweaty and gross and i have paint all over me good morning guys it's the next day i got ready got dressed and as you can see i'm at target because i need to pick up a fine thin sharpie because the like felt tip part is completely destroyed from the aluminium plate so i need to get another one but it's closed right now until 8. i've been sitting here for like 10 minutes and they're opening up very soon everyone's like out there waiting for the doors to get open yeah i hope i don't arrive late to class oh also i never told you guys what happened yesterday so basically i up my project and i have to do everything today before critique so i hope i finish everything and i get everything accomplished because if i don't it's not gonna be that's not gonna be very good for my grade and this is the last class which is so sad it's gonna be so sad leaving that class i adore that class so much um but thankfully i'm gonna have her next semester so i'm excited for that i just finished with class and everything um i have ink all over my body basically all over my legs all over my arms on my shirt like it's it's really bad um i guess it was like a successful day but i didn't get to finish what i needed to get done and so i wasn't able to present it how i wanted to in critique so i'm going to have to go back again and finish my print so i can submit it i have until tuesday because that's the last day of school and like that's the last day i can turn in stuff i just really wish i could have like checked off lithography from my checklist but i'm not stressed at all no stress what is that i don't know i also really have to pee tomorrow morning is going to be very easy we're just doing like a movie and some breakfast which i'm very happy about that i am going to do some work if i need to but other than that today is body shower because i cannot go to school tomorrow like this and i just said it homework okay what is stressful today was just overall was very stressful just trying to get my print done um i bet like other people are going to be like oh no that's not stressful at all just walking out of my morning class we had like a little like donut party and so i just got some donuts for my friends but since we got out a little earlier i'm gonna go to the library and do some work and then i'm going to meet up with them for lunch [Music] show us your skateboard show us your skateboard yay so i'm currently in 2d and we're making lots and lots of stickers we also made some pins um messed up at first but i finally did it oh hi i made some pins and i'm so excited to put it on my little backpack and then we're also making little mini skateboards that we have to stick on these are my little designs um but a lot of people are having trouble how's the process on making the skateboard on unscrewing i was like good baby there's no problem with the screwdriver screw the screwdriver screw the screwdriver screw her hey guys i haven't been able to catch you up because i've been so busy um so i'm currently back at the studio i am redoing my screen because this one i did backwards and it just doesn't match up with my prints these are how the prints look like and i'm just doing like the background because it does look cool like black and white but i think it will look better with color i don't know i think everything looks better in color it just adds so much more visual interest so that is currently what i'm doing it is 1 30 and i am hoping to be finished at 3 o'clock or 3 30 the latest this project is my final the one that i didn't get to finish on wednesday and then i have to scan oh my god that scared me and then i have to scan all of my projects that i did this semester and upload them on a google drive and then i can check this off my list and let me tell you i am so sleep deprived i've been sleeping so late these past two weeks because like i've just been crunching on projects but we're almost at the finish line today is friday which is like the last day of finals week kind of we still have monday and tuesday and we still have to upload projects so technically i'm not done but we are almost done i just want to take a nap [Music] turned out so cool uh [Music]
Jennifer Villagomez
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2022-06-05
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3YyIUfDxQTw
Willie's Chicken Surprise Marriage Advice
hey this is willing from from real talk with epinoia and go do something different I am damp is out getting her hair done because she does that every other week or so she goes she goes to she goes to the beauty parlor and she just likes being pampered that she could do it herself she's not one of those women who know how to do her own hair she's been doing her own hair for years and years and years and you know every time you see her she looks great but she likes the idea of being pampered and stuff and doesn't know listen understand why I don't go to the barber more often because she has such a great time with the hairdresser today a surprise well it was a surprise I was kidding before it wasn't a surprise it was coming arrived and she's expecting that but what she's not expecting is that for me to have started dinner so I decided that I would start dinner we had so we went to the store last week and brought some Boston chicken drumsticks but gosh and I thought that I would get them started anyway so I made a marinade and I'm gonna wash them Ron and Mary a little bit and then I'm gonna put them on I'm gonna put him on it on a pan and put them in the oven put them in the pan which I've already sprayed now well I'll avoid because I don't want the chicken to be sticking there you go so again we're doing this by myself so you just after a long time just swinging the camera around too fast all right so let me get over to thee hmm so you gotta laugh upon this camera for sure all right here we go you have to excuse my but I want to be able to see there's some chicken in the marinade now what I make my dad I know tacos a little taco sauce and then because I like that vinegar flavor a little balsamic vinegar balsamic vinegar some of this Louisiana Hot Sauce and there's some seasoned salt some some crushed red pepper some salt regular salt and pepper to give it a little flea little flavor a little different flavor in the chicken now I like chicken flavor the flavor of chicken is really good as a matter of fact this even chicken this is even chicken flavored crackers so you get a life but you know that but that that you can already taste good all by yourself so what I'm gonna do now that this has been in here for a little bit which I took these out yesterday out of the freezer and it's been sitting in the refrigerator defrosting let me swing it around to the stove we go all the way to the snow what it's funny a lot of youtubers have this stove Samsung laptops boom I sprayed it down with a little olive oil we're gonna take chicken out a little marinade he's covered really good we got some flakes some survivors a red pepper flakes on it a little bit a few pieces down it wasn't really a big enough container so I'm gonna have to do this in shifts to get all the deliciousness of the chicken fortunately you can still it's not frozen but it's really cold so that's think that's gonna give me a few minutes to do this I don't have to be in an awful lot of hurry don't worry about salmonella poisoning or anything all right I'll get back over there swing the camera back around or my non-food hand all right dump some more of the chicken parts into the marinade so I'm to give him a little a little juicy a little something-something now oh don't cook very often I don't prepare stuff very often I can I don't Debbie's a really smart cook and I'm what I mean by smart cook is that she'll come home from work get out of the car literally get out the car walk into the house walk directly into the kitchen and I guess having her head what she has already and how she's going to use it and then does it doesn't take a lot of I mean a lot of pre-planning and stuff she knows what she has in the house and she comes in and and from the door little stove and then puts together dinner and you can see in 30 years I've not missed many meals at home that's for sure so I just kind of wanted to do a little stop party for today I know it's no special occasion it's just let's let's do this all right so I'm gonna put these on the thing - all right see here I've spread them out a little bit so they don't stick to each other ten pieces I think there are 14 pieces and you're told ya thinking that I might run out of a juice here but I'm not actually perfect didn't give me a little bit too spread over it listen uh we appreciate those of you who have subscribed to the YouTube channel and get notifications we really appreciate it we were talking last night we normally do real talk would definitely will on on Facebook live first on Monday mornings and we're blessed it gets a lot of engagements normally a couple of hundred views each of the each of the programs because a couple of hundred meters and we'd like to have the same sort of engagement here on YouTube but I think we've come to the conclusion that our problem is that we can Facebook no I don't want to say that in a way that alienates all the good people that Monday after Monday but this in February follow us on Facebook I don't want to alienate them in any way hang on I need to wash my hands we're not doing college classes so and there and normally I mean let me get this get this up here that's rough and you know I am normally we don't have things that you need to watch numbers times normally you have an Anderson in the table talking right so I guess visually it isn't so something that you'd want to watch more than one so once you see it on Facebook you probably won't want it again so for those of you youtubers who are up there my guess is that you guys didn't do Facebook live first I guess is that you went YouTube and you went YouTube only so it is our Bowl here in the next year to just make that full transition to take the leap so hopefully that works out for so you can see it looks good just like that looks good we'll see we'll see come come on come on me come on come on me you see see already looks good Haim cook this raw it looks good so good cranked it up let's see if I can figure it out big visit about 365 degrees pop that in there like that nap hey what I'm gonna did now long that's doing this thing in there he'll give you a cup of coffee give me a cup of coffee no normally Justin Wilson would have him with no a cup of wine a couple one so I'm gonna tell you what I'm gonna do I personally don't imbibe get silly don't get silly I'm not somebody who is sending everybody who has a glass of wine to help but if you put but a number of years ago I decided that I would have chosen not to a bar this is gonna be the best works group I have ever seen however we have a neighbor whose mom makes homemade wine I don't know what kind of wine this is so bill evil summer fruit wine label fellow I'm gonna take the the last bit of this as you pour a little wine on it and look extra flavor then I'm gonna baste my chicken in that right there no I don't have any idea you think I've been this before haven't you how can you tell I've never done this before bad just came up this idea on socket ear so I don't know how it's gonna work I think it's gonna work out well you can work on this you have been an interesting blend of flavors that should be delicious and so well let you know in a little bit how that worked out Thanks all right my type that's before I'm gonna be honest with you brothers before and I am try to use another microphone and it fails so what is the who's gonna do what we don't we do I got the food the chicken that we made the chicken out of the oven and and it's fall off the bone it really is and it's and I think it's juicy I'm gonna go ahead and grab a piece here and I'm what I'm not gonna do is do this and shut cuz I cuz frankly I hate that when y'all do that and I really wish up from all y'all that who do YouTube videos that you would not do that cuz it are you MUC bangers please stop that cuz is it for me it's annoying so I'm gonna have a piece and good I put some some red pepper flake to a little thing and it just got a little bit it little bit of Tang nothing real heat it's good I'll put a little wine no one little Justin Wilson not a whole couple line it'll look better one alright so it's got a little bit of a little fruity mr. disken but it's very very tender and it's very very juicy and there you go so that's what I did that's the whole thing it worked out so thanks again for watching Debbie Downer be on Monday on Facebook now we do a Facebook live program on Monday morning about relationships it's at nine o'clock so if you want to but by noon normally I have that show edited and up here on top you're on on YouTube so if you want to watch here that's fine and if you're watching our program on a regular basis on YouTube please do me a favor please subscribe please tell your friends and see if they like it please comment down in the comment section I'll tell you what I'll do I don't have for those of you saw you don't have any measurements for the stuff I use but I will write in the comments section the stuff I use and you can put them in any combination you want I don't care so enjoy it so you can enjoy so again thanks again for tuning in thanks again for watching just like always please subscribe like comment share and just like always go out there and learn something love somebody for goodness sakes y'all take care yourself we'll see you when we see
Deb's Life
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2018-08-19
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SywpGIY8dHM
Annabelle - The DISTURBING REAL Origin Story of The Conjuring Doll : Documentary
this is Annabelle and you might recognize her as the possessed doll from The Conjuring Universe where she terrorizes anyone who crosses her path and I'm sure you lay your head down at night in peace knowing that this is just a movie but is it really just a movie because this is the real Annabelle and not only is she a very real doll but the films were based on actual accounts experienced by Ed and Lorraine Warren and that's right they were real people too but how did the spirit attach itself to it and is it a spirit at all have people actually died because of her to answer that question we need to start right at the beginning with the origin story of the real Annabel as far as my memory serves me I have always loved the conjuring universe and fact it's been at the root of my love for horror and paranormal films but never would I have actually imagined that any of it was based on real life events and yes I know that Hollywood has a tendency to want to dress up things to make it more appealing for film so I don't believe that even if it was real that it went the way the movie portrayed it to be but nonetheless there's people that have come out to say that the events of Annabelle actually did happen just really quickly before we get into this one I did want to mention this is the first paranormal case on this channel so if you like it please let me know leave a comment hit the like just let me know I'll make more so let's figure this out together and do the Deep dive into the rabbit hole in 1970 dedri Bernard celebrated her 25th birthday and received a special gift from her mother it was a raggedy and doll and it was meant to be a fun gift to brighten up the mood in her apartment but the moment that dedri laid eyes on the doll she instantly fell in love with it the next day dedri carefully placed the doll on her bed with its limbs stretched out however within a few days something strange began to happen each morning dri would leave the Raggedy andall seated with its arms and legs extended but every night she would return to find the doll in different positions sometimes with its legs crossed with its hands resting on its lap there were even moments where de would would discover that the doll's arms were pointing outwards as if it was silently indicating something as time went on the doll's Behavior became just more strange it started moving from room to room all on its own at this point in time the entire apartment began to feel uneasy as if this energy was being created by the presence of the Raggedy andall man I got Shivers just talking about this right now 20 years ago I would have not believed a single word of this but I have S and seen things on my own so I'm just getting flashbacks off all of it one evening dedri arrived with her roommate Laura Clifton who was also a training nurse and Laura's fiance Cal Randall and as they opened the door a startling sight greeted them the doll was kneeling on a chair and its large black eyes were fixed upon them surprisingly the doll had moved from its usual spot in ded's bedroom and this Disturbed them because they couldn't explain how the doll got there or how it was in the position that they found it in they decided to reposition the doll in the position they found it in and make it kneel once more however since the rag doll lacked joints it simply just flopped over each time they could only conclude that some unknown Force had kept the doll's limp legs in a kneeling position and from that moment onward the inexplainable occurrences surrounding the doll grew increasingly more bizarre and frequent they started finding random messages on parchment paper around the entire apartment saying help us or help Cal what made this even more strange is that there was no parchment paper physically in the house now suspecting that somebody might have been playing a prank on them and breaking into their house dedri and Laura took preventative measures they left marks around the windows and doors and rearrange Furniture hoping to find some evidence of an intruder however their efforts were were useless because the doll continued teleporting from room to room but nothing else had been touched now they claimed that one day they returned home and found a horrific sight the back of the doll's hands was smeared with something that appeared to be blood and there were three distinct blood stains on the doll's chest naturally this scared them to death so Laura and dedri decided to contact the psychic the psychic had connected with the spirit of a 7-year-old girl who claimed to be in inhibiting the doll the psychic explained that long before the houses were constructed in the area when it was still just grass and Fields the little girl used to play there for countless hours building memories up until her life was abruptly cut short following her passing the spirit of the child used to wander the fields and when the apartments were built the hallways became her new home however the fast pace of Modern Life meant that everyone was too busy at work to play with the little girl this left the little girl without Playmates or friends however fate would take a turn when two young women would move into the apartment bringing along the Raggedy andal finally the spirit had found something to engage with and two young people who are likely to understand and open to playing with her but this is just where it gets flat out strange because through the psychic the spirit made a request she wanted to live inside the doll and to be with dedri and Laura now they they were touched by the story of the little girl so they wholeheartedly agreed welcoming the little girl named Annabelle Higgins into their lives but this only marked the beginning of the true haunting the doll transformed into Annabelle and the two young women started treating her as if she was a real living breathing person she ceased being just a doll and actually became Annabel despite the nurse's intentions Cal Lura fiance held strong beliefs that no good would come of any of this and you know what I simply agree with Cal yes the story of the little girl is sad but I don't want a Living spirit with me I would have done my best just to get rid of her like right away but he viewed the doll as some sort of voodoo doll scheming to deceive and exploit them and frankly I think he was right Annabelle went on to perceive Cal as a threat and in the weeks that followed Cal was tormented by nightmares and a sense of unease and one night when he was half awake he witnessed Annabelle Gliding Over his body and before he could react her hands tightened around his neck as the doll's large black eyes looked into his own as her grip around his neck sought to drain the life out of his body and despite his efforts to push Annabelle away she remained unmoved as if he was trying to push a wall and eventually it seems like Annabelle let him go but this incident wouldn't go forgotten shortly after this incident Cal and Laura found themselves alone in the apartment they started hearing strange noises coming from ded's bedroom Now cal decided to investigate which probably wasn't a good idea the only thing he found was Annabelle who had been thrown onto the floor when he approached the doll he suddenly felt a sharp pain on his chest and realized that he had been clawed there was seven claw marks that had been etched into his chest and when Laura discovered him his shirt was covered in blood it was becoming increasingly obvious that Annabelle's attacks were intensifying putting all their lives at risk now at this point in time the story of Annabelle eventually reached the ears of paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren yes these are the people that are portrayed in The Conjuring movies and they were real people in fact those movies are based on their accounts of the Paranormal after they arrived at the apartment and heard what dedri and Laura had to say the Warren concluded that the strange occurrences were caused by a demonic presence they determined that there was no actual Annabel but rather an evil spirit that had taken advantage of an unsuspecting psychic and dedri and Laura had unknowingly given it permission to inhabit the doll which ultimately gave it permission to cause them harm and according to the Warren if they hadn't intervened the Demonic entity would have like likely killed them within a week or two and recognizing the urgency of the situation Ed reached out to a priest and requested an exorcism of the apartment the priest would end up performing The Exorcism and bless both the apartment dedri Laura and Cal and at ded's request the Warren agreed to take the doll back with them to their own home and while dedri Laura and Cal were now free from Annabel Ed and Lorraine were just at the beginning of their own ordeal Annabelle was placed in the rear seat of the car and it didn't take long for the Warren to sense the presence of the Demonic spirit that was riding with them now despite their car being up toate with maintenance it started stalling and the power steering went even the brakes malfunctioned Ed at one point even claimed that he had lost complete control of the vehicle at times and only by a hair avoided several potentially fatal accidents on the way home and on the third time the car would stall Ed grabbed a vial of holy water from his bed and splashed it on the doll after that the Demonic Spirit stopped bothering them for the remainder of the drive home once they arrived home ed found a spot for Annabelle in a chair next to his desk and the Warren have remembered that the following days the doll exhibited strange Behavior such as levitating and mysteriously appearing in different rooms along the house Lorraine who was alone at home on one occasion even heard growls that echoed through the entire house at one point a priest had had even visited the Warren to discuss the recent encounter with Annabelle now during that conversation the priest picked up the doll and said to her you are just a ragd doll Annabelle and you cannot harm anyone now Ed warned the priest against making statements like that against the doll and as the priest was leaving their home Lorraine urged him to drive carefully as her Clairvoyance had foreseen that he could be in danger unfortunately a few hours later the priest was involved in a car accident that resulted in the vehicle completely being total all because his brakes had strangely failed and over the years that followed more instances of Paranormal Activity were reported to be associated with Annabel including one death in fact the situation became so dangerous that Ed and Lorraine decided to keep Annabelle secured in a glass case with a clear warning do not open under any circumstances and believe me I would not like what the heck is going on with this doll the story of Annabelle has been told by various authors on various occasions most notably Gerald brittle who based his entire book on the Warren's own accounts now despite its claims the story has been widely accepted as being true in 2014 these events even served as an inspiration to the popular prequel to the movie The Conjuring which again I am a huge fan of those movies are awesome I don't care what anybody has to say however when it comes to the concrete evidence supporting the claim that Annabelle was possessed by an inhumane demonic Spirit there is little evidence to be found now aside from the testimonies from the Warren and the Raggedy andal herself that's locked away in a glass case there's very little proof to validate the story at all even confirming the names of those involved in the actual story can be a little challenging as dedri sometimes has been referred to as Donna or Debbie and the initial handling of the case Itself by the Warren has been kind of scrutinized you see during their initial meeting with dedri and the others the Warren collected little to no physical evidence they relied solely on the testimonies that were given and again it could be argued that Lorraine's Clairvoyance allowed her to see and know that the doll was actually possessed but also the validity of her Clairvoyant abilities has also been scrutinized and even though dedri Laura and Cal may have no reason to actually lie the possibility of misinterpretation or misremembering was never considered by the Warren at all they basically just heard the stories and concluded that the doll was possessed now regarding the sense of relief in the apartment after it was exercised by the priest it is possible that it could have been because of the impact that the priest's presence had on religious individuals so maybe dedri Laura and Cal being religious felt because the priest blessed the home the situation was just dealt with there's even individuals that claim that dedri Laura and Cal just don't exist in the first place and even though Ed and Lorraine Warren have always been seen as sincere and compassionate individuals their work and establishment of the New England society for psychic research in 1952 has been met with significant criticism and controversy even at the age of ' 92 Lorraine is still working and occasionally h hting lectures and evening events and yes if the Warren conducted their research honestly and maintained professionalism it would also be unfair to criticize them for making a living but it is also that that has raised questions about their honesty the fact that they're making a living from this the Warren's occult museum is regarded as the oldest and only Museum of its kind drawing attention from around the world and it's undoubtedly their life's work and Annabelle even finds her home there in a glass case but I want to know your thoughts is Annabelle just a well- constructed hoax or is there any truth to the story leave it in the comments below and again I just want to make it clear I'm not siding with people criticizing the war and saying that any of this is fake or the people that say it's real I personally have experienced things and again I can't explain any of it but I know that they happened there was a point in time years ago where I had a roommate one night I had passed out watching TV and surely enough around 3:30 in the morning I woke up to again my TV being turned on again I didn't think much of this because well I fell asleep with it on now as soon as I hit the power button and turned it off I could hear the voice of a girl singing on the other side of my wall she was humming and she was doing this so I naturally did what I think most people would do I texted my roommate now my roommate at the time was a singer so it wasn't uncommon to hear her singing throughout the house it was just weird that it was at 3:30 in the morning so she texted me the next day and asked me what my messages were about at 3:30 in the morning she told me she was not home she went on to tell her then at the time boyfriend about the story and he knew what had happened oddly enough and he told her that he recognized the song and it was that of a little girl that followed him around that had attached herself to him because he was playing Ouija one day I guess he made contact with her but the little girl sings because she calls for her lost dog I don't know what that Spirit was doing at my house but it was there independently without him there but again because of things that have happened to me like this I tend to have some sort of belief for these things but again stop wasting time hit the like the Subscribe and the Bell as it lets me know that you're enjoying the content that I'm making and if you you like True Crime hit this video right here so remember to stay safe and I will see you next time when the lights go out
Lights Out True Crime
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2024-04-06
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pvmdmpHpENM
Jason Grandell (Half Hearted) // Something from Everyone e029
[Music] 2 45 according to this but that's a big zero zero on my brain cool um hell yeah let's do it for real this time episode 29 episode 29 so it's all about Uno all about who knows yes we are here talking about our favorite restaurants today uh I've been trying to intro guests so I'm determined to try starting that's crazy so my God guitars have half-hearted and the worst cornhole partner I've ever had in my whole life dude we don't talk about that it was brutal yesterday so we had a big barbecue yesterday which makes it hilarious to try and do a podcast today as we both drank too much yesterday and hung out with everyone yesterday but here we are dude we're gonna make it happen we're gonna figure it out it's gonna go great dude no problem at all um oh I forgot I keep reading the cats are down here keep seeing you bend over uh so that's the other thing is yeah it's hot as hell down here and last episode I did with values I was sweating we were all sweating so much I felt so bad so I'm trying to cool it down I'll solve that problem in the future but for now we got a Music Theater to talk about or a song to talk about first and we have cornrow talk about first cornhole talk about yeah so I picked you and you said you were trash and I believed you I said it I warned you so that's all that matters and then we beat Dan and Ryan's ass and then we won yeah we beat ass we've won with Wilson I lost beer pong though once oh now we scraped a beer no you're terrible dude no shut the [ __ ] up you don't joke about that it wasn't even beers water pong I mean that's you know how many plays I've been I don't I haven't been anywhere where anyone played beer pong with actual beer yeah but that's like not a thing I don't know if that is a thing that happens anymore when we're talking about winning streaks though it does matter I'm just really can't lift my cheat sheet on the table here that's crazy this is also crazy yo that's this is just the wildest I love the best thing of all time here I love that no dude beer pong matters because in like the terms of a win streak by the 10th game it's way more impressive to keep winning yeah I've never played beer pong that good in my life so yesterday me and Sean were just like on like a I don't even know we were in like a trance like did we we lost a couple times yeah but we won like 15 times something stupid like 13 times I don't remember we lost count I mean as you do yeah cornhole that mathematical ball we sat there and were supportive in spirit and had more fun than everyone else really had to run around and get sweaty and like try 100 if that was that was not needed at all nope I couldn't have physically done that I would have collapsed in my state yesterday yeah we had our seats on the green monster a little Outfield perch um music videos dude yeah we're gonna talk about this whether you want to or not we're going to talk about how far I'll talk about it uh hell yeah make sure these Corner before we dive into stuff for real but yeah July 13th insatiable comes out so they're recording this on Sunday so four days from now uh but I wanted to start with like the early part of this journey so I feel like with you guys all right know for a fact that your songs are always changing to the last minute and then until the day the video releases I'm still like liable to get an updated allegedly this one's done I've heard that before the other one um it's not done but it's always a thing but it's like I think that's a testament to your guys determination to get things right and just to yeah make it the right expression of you guys but that means that this process yeah I'm seeing the last one percent of this process where does this thing start how long ago does insatiable start uh kind of coming into existence is it an old idea is it get polished up like yeah where does this thing I think it's like um what is it now July so I mean it was either end of last year or like early early this year I'm trying to think um probably end the last year um and some songs are like for like the pandemic at least like when we were writing all through that like Sean would usually start the song he would have an idea whether it's I don't know like a loop or something he found and just wrote vocals over and then obviously we can't you know use the loop he would just he would just you know search the internet find something cool be like all right I want to write some stuff over this what a write a course or whatever and then we'd that would just be our starting point and then we'd just go crazy what kind of loop is it is it like a does it sound like half-hearted music or is it like that was more for like the popular [ __ ] yeah like so and like writing that way for like that style of music works really really well for us at least um so now that we're like not really doing that we're kind of just doing like heavier [ __ ] again um it's been a mix like sometimes he still starts it he'll just have a cool idea or he'll have like a synth thing that he'll make and he'll have a verse or a chorus and then I come in and we just mess around and you know [ __ ] around for a couple days and figure it out this one this one was different because I started this one okay which I used to start all of them like a long time ago and we stopped um this one I started I'm trying to think I think there's one other one that I started too in the shower which happens very occasionally but like just the guitar riffs it's only happened two or three times but whenever I have an idea in the shower it gets used that's the that's like the meme interesting like sometimes I'll wake up and I'll have a weird dream and I'll try to do it and that never works but the shower ones I don't know why it's something about the shower Works what that is interesting that we all have I think that's Universal that good ideas happen in the shower I don't quite know why that like that's something to be said about relaxing and soothing and we let our brain like wander I guess yeah but even then it's a spot like the fog the fog um like chorus lead and that song was a shower one is that where the name comes from too yes especially it doesn't but okay we're gonna say it does that's funny uh that one was in the shower and then [ __ ] uh breathing pattern on our album was also in the shower and they both kind of sound like the parts are kind of the same the song Sound drastically different but just the specific part that I wrote in the shower yeah in both of those songs is kind of similar so that's kind of funny so maybe that's a thing too I don't know and I started with just the guitar lead and then you voice memo that like do you guys literally go voice memo that and then bring it to Sean and then you finish the shower do you like have to stop the shower yellow no but I will like I hate honestly [ __ ] hate when it happens because I will have to like like let's say it happens in that first 50 of my shower and I'm a like notoriously slow shower like I just like Daydream and like can't focus and just like lie underwater and think about life that's all just be in there for like [ __ ] 20 minutes yeah um so if I think of it five minutes in I'm pissed because then it's 15 minutes of me being like I can't lose this and I'm just in my either in my head or like humming it I'm just like all right all right cool cool over and over and over again until it's like ingrained and then I get out of the shower drop real quick and then I voice memo it and then I can relax that's funny I I have the same thing with yeah showering specifically and I think that's also why I end up listening to so much like bad rap music is because like what I'm working on all none of it's bad if anyone who you ask everyone else at the party would say it was bad but you and I are on the same page they're wax um but like I think when I'm working on like metal stuff all day it's like if I go listen to that in the car like that pollutes my brain and somehow by going and listening to like rap it allows my brain like stay in this metal yeah conversation on rock metal most same with me like with my [ __ ] like whenever I you know I'll go in phases like honestly for a couple years like I've never not like metal like even when we were doing the pop music [ __ ] like I still love heavy stuff but like I don't know sometimes you just need a break you just need a little break yeah like right now I'm super into heavy music again at this moment um but you know six months ago it was like God I don't want to hear a [ __ ] breakdown ever again would you listen to on the way here uh better lovers better lovers that new band that like every time I die okay I'm familiar with it combo band it's [ __ ] sick hell yeah that's what I listen to on the way here this gizmo has Bluetooth so there's a world where I just pull up my phone right now and go cool let's listen to it right now I don't think that's exactly what's gonna do we just like make eye contact listening to like the breakdown oh yeah you don't have headphones it's just you listening to it and me like that should be you know how like reaction videos got like real big sure that should be like a new like format in person reaction video no but it's still filmed it's like this right you're filming okay and you're listening to it and I have a mic like it's this exact setup okay except you have a screen here that I can't see and you're watching and listening to the song and reacting to it and I can't hear it and I just have to make commentary about your reaction so it's like a reaction video of me reacting to you reacting to the video that could not have been a shower that was a that was a me at 2 30 p.m on Sunday idea 215 to close enough um God no the song started so songs was like the shower and you send it to Sean how does it like build out from there so well this one wasn't a shower song my bad okay insatiable was not a shower song Insatiable was just a random like I don't know me in my room song like one part of it one or two parts we had um then I went to Sean's do you remember what those parts were the chorus of verses like the chorus Rhythm okay and uh that like we got a guest vocalist on this I can hear it oh here on the headphones dude uh the chorus Rhythm and the like the first riff after the first chorus okay once it's out people will be able to no that's interesting those are both like small and subtle segments I was expecting like more prominent pieces or something like I feel like yeah like that that one riff is only in for that one part I mean the chorus rhythm is like you know that's in the song a lot I don't even play it though because it's like I write leads and do all that [ __ ] but like all the I don't know whenever I write something at home that's a lie actually I'm not gonna say that I was gonna say it I like usually think of cooler [ __ ] in the studio which does happen a lot of times but then every once in a while like voodoo the first two riffs of that song which are like in my opinion like the coolest parts of that song are just me at home riffs and I was like I haven't wrote anything this good by myself in a minute because usually I have to go to Sean's and be there and we're just hanging and like our studio is really cool now and like it looks sick and whenever I'm in there I'm just like oh this is cool if I'm in a good mood I just will write cool [ __ ] he just put [ __ ] on Loop he'll leave the room he'll just go eat he'll go eat dinner I'll just be down there by myself and then I'll have to calm back down and be like yo we like we got it let's do it how long are you down there for ah it depends I mean I'll go over like we'll do a song in a day like it doesn't really like it rarely takes us more than a day now honestly like I don't know I hope that just keeps happening like we honestly we took a little break just because all the new songs we're sitting on like we just want to get those done and out because we you know we put out a single every you know two three months but I want to just like get them out yeah I want to you know we don't need any more we have a lot right now I need a break from writing [ __ ] and like a lot of times too we'll will get sidetracked with new songs when the songs that were are done aren't out yet and it's like dude I want to like get these out I want to focus on this I want to mix these get them like finalized but a lot of times we'll have like like we had you know Voodoo and the fog and those done then I go in and we write two more songs and we're like yo these ones are really cool let's let's do these and then we're like we can't forget about these we need to get them done we need to you know we need to get them out uh that's interesting I always think about that with videos of like by the time the video comes out I've so far moved on to the next video that's hard for me to accelerate this what's interesting is like in the music context it's like when the album comes out you're the primary person who has to promote it and you've also already moved on and it's something interesting I don't have to listen to it while I promote it I guess so you have to listen to it when you make the video or maybe you don't I don't know I I do for most of it it's a I've mentally moved on from that project I'm just not mentally interested in like like promoting it it almost feels like a task to be done I I used to and I don't anymore maybe maybe it's just me being like not like a you know 18 year old anymore yeah but like we used to get music videos back and I would watch them 10 times a day for like the whole month leading up to the release and then even once it was out I would still watch it a lot and now I get it back and I watch it as little as I can on purpose yeah like I'll watch it we got to make sure it's still you know we have little edits here and there or the thing we're not going to talk about and uh uh you know we'll have things like that where I have to watch the video and be like okay cool I like this part I don't like this part blah blah blah um and then you know now I'll just kind of leave it once once that's done like I have to upload it like I haven't uploaded intentionally I'm gonna do it like today or tomorrow um but I watch it like once it's uploaded make sure it came out good make sure the quality is all good on YouTube and stuff and I'll watch it again on release day and then once it's out then I'll be like all right this came out cool like I'm gonna watch this a bunch of times it's out interesting I celebrate it like the other like we've done we're not spoiling anything we did more videos too there's another one and I haven't watched that one really in a couple like I watched it a few times when you sent it and then I was like getting mad and like just myself annoyed because there's a newer version of the song that like I just forgot to send you yeah and now they're since then there's been [ __ ] five more new versions because we're not done with it yet but uh it's like just kept pissing me off because I was like [ __ ] this video is like really sick but I don't want to listen to this old mix it like annoys me yep so I don't want to ruin it for myself so I haven't watched it you know what's funny is that my brain works the opposite where I like the old mix because I'm used to it when I get the new mix it like muddies the water and it's like it doesn't really matter to me when it's all said and done so like in that scenario I think I do have an updated mix that I forgot to swap in because I was just working with the old one because it was comfortable to me yeah and then when I get the new one in the middle it's like nah I'll just change it when it's all said and done but it's interesting that we're kind of on opposite sides there but I'm laughing that you're gonna start watching videos muted which is such a funny thing it's like get your music video back in music I never tried that before um I've heard people watching movies like that and I don't know that's [ __ ] weird it seems like a film nerd thing but yeah the argument is that like a movie or any piece of video is 50 50 right tap audio and half video yeah so you watch each piece of it independently and then I get it I just like couldn't do that I don't know I bet for me I bet you would I bet it would acclimate to it I had a off-color joke there I'm trying to try to figure out where the line is here on it's not public no lines uh unfortunately it does have to be um the song starts a couple months ago it starts with your in the bedrooms like [ __ ] six months ago six months six months ago it starts the last time you're on the podcast probably you give or take every six months we do this hell yeah we gotta make that a traditional ritual um one how does it like how do you guys build out songs in there so it starts with this idea is it then going to Sean and from there it just kind of catches fire is there a normal next step of like we have a guitar Melody should we start with building out a drumline and then building up from there like we'll do it part by part for sure okay we'll get like I don't know a riff for the chorus or whatever and then we'll do that whole part usually so we'll I'll have the guitar we'll record the guitar we'll write [ __ ] demo drums to that part we'll write demo base to that part I'll try to write like a lead over that part or something we'll do synth or ah now that we do that that's the one thing we kind of leave for after actually unless we randomly think of something cool and then we'll just go part by part like I'll just have like I'll know what key the song's in and we just have the tempo of it and then it's just literally me like getting drunk and and [ __ ] around with you know just to the click or like looping like looping the second like let's say we have a chorus right we'll just Loop the end of the chorus into clicks for a long time and then Loop it back so I can think of something cool that could come after that that makes sense um you guys are so spoiled or so fortunate to be able to do it all in-house and have Sean like if you were going somewhere yeah it can never happen I would have quit music already if that wasn't is there a case because I can't I don't want to [ __ ] uh I can't deal with that I love being able to just change things my bad I didn't mean to cut you off I love being able to just change things whenever we want we do nothing we make no compromises and we just do it and it sounds good and at least I don't know I think it sounds good but in the musical world and I I think maybe Billy eilish is the example of this yeah like someone who starts a house there's a line where you have to go out right like I mean they still send they do everything themselves I'm pretty sure but they like I don't think they mix it maybe I'm wrong I don't know would you I'm sure they still send it out to some billionaire [ __ ] mixer that's mixed like every you know Sean knows the people's names I don't know the people's names you know whoever mixes like top 40 songs and like you know big big people I'm sure that they're not just like hey mix this tonight in my bedroom put it out on the radio it's gonna get a billion streams tomorrow like I'm sure you know they have their normal people that they send it to and is there a world where you would be comfortable letting someone else mix and match like I said the writing part that you would like be terrified to ever do in the studio or is it like the whole night no I'm not terrified I'm not terrified of anything so they're just a money thing okay I I mean if if we well if I wasn't confident in what we were doing like I know Sean's good and I know that I can hear things and I know that we can everything we put out at least like in the beginning when we first started doing it like I look back at like the the our album mix and I look back at like a couple older things from like a few years ago and I'm like this isn't bad like I remember putting stuff out and people finding out we did it ourselves and them being like yo this is like I wouldn't have guessed that you did this yourself this is really sick yeah but now I look back because you know people don't a normal person doesn't listen to a song and go ah the you know uh you know there's too many just too many high frequencies in the guitars you know I don't like the snare I don't you know the bass is too loud I don't know or whatever most people don't listen to songs like that like you just hear the song and they just take for what it is and they're just like cool that's me yeah yeah uh me it's like [ __ ] I thought this was really sick and then now we've done things in the past few years that are way sicker and now like the the line is like if I have a song that comes like if a band I like puts out a song and I really like the mix like our mix has to be at least as good as that like different like all mixes are different you don't want to sound exactly the same as someone else but just like comparable in terms of like how loud it is like how certain parts hit like levels like tones you know there's just so much that goes into it like I just want [ __ ] to be sick so I feel like even like you're looking back like I think three years ago I think the album's like 2020 right 20 it's like pandemic yeah but we did most of it in 2019 too so it was like so I feel like even if you had gone out to a studio and get it done I feel like four years after that you would still look back and go ah that mix was kind of stinky yeah I mean there's things that we've recorded with other people that are still like that too love everyone that we've recorded with but like just like I don't know time passes and you're like [ __ ] you just change your mind things grow yeah yeah and it's fine I don't think I don't think anything we've ever put out was straight up like bad they wouldn't have made it out yeah no like I don't think anything like is unlistenable yeah because I've definitely worked with some people send me things and I'm just like dude I've tried to be nice to everybody but um it's like dude who makes like who makes this this sounds like you're underwater like this is crazy um so as long as we don't do that and we keep getting better yeah cool awesome love it uh how do you uh we've both worked with a lot of songs and so that means by Nature that half of the songs we you know we like some of them more than others and that's always going to be true and that doesn't mean that the songs we disliked we worked less hard on it's just yeah we have musical taste and I think for me I've always accepted that like whenever I'm working on the song for those two or three weeks it is my favorite song ever like it it has to be it has no other option and then after two or three weeks I can move on from that but like in those two weeks I find myself like convincing myself to fall in love with it but also genuinely falling in love with it because you just end up listening to it so much at all you know it I don't know it inside and out yeah and I connect with a person who wrote it and I try and think of what were they thinking when this came out and how do I make that a thing yeah so hairy yeah every time I met him I'm just like my whole hand is here yeah I love it yeah they're a nightmare to vacuum after but they get the job done yeah um but we've worked with 20 people so like I think that yeah at first it was like I would get the song that didn't wasn't my favorite song in the universe and it was like oh [ __ ] dude like how am I gonna do this yeah and now it's like I feel like I can get just about anything and roll with it because like yeah and make it work I don't care what the thing is I care about the person who did it and as long as I can connect with whatever you were aiming for like who cares where you ended up is that similar with advertising like I don't know how involved you are like with the the actual three minutes of audio versus all the other stuff I'm involved with it for like an hour because I have to like most bands most bands don't have like a lot of Clips like they'll sometimes have one like that they're like director sent them like here's like a social media clip to post when it it comes out um I like to test a lot of stuff so I'll end up making you know four or five different clips of the song so that means I have to go and [ __ ] listen I I just literally use iMovie and like cap cut and like if it ain't broke don't fix it like it's simple stuff but it works like if the video's done well then me using iMovie is not gonna affect it yeah yeah like you know just because I don't have a crazy editing skills I could I could cut a video I could cut 20 seconds of a video Yeah and nowhere to start it and fade it out and that's really all I need and like format it so it like looks nice on the internet and that's how I treat your audio basically yeah I don't need to touch it pop it in boom you're good like that was our [ __ ] to worry about not yours yeah um but yeah I mean other than that like it's really just like I still try to you know I'm I'm way busier now like every time I come on this podcast I feel like I'm busier than I was it's fun six months ago which is sick that's awesome yeah um so I will you know uh I I'm still not picky I don't think I still take like 90 of the stuff that comes to me but now every once in a while like honestly like if someone's just I don't even care if this goes out there if someone if you're just like annoying and or either you're annoying and or your song is just like like there's a there's a limit like I'll work with a song even if I don't like it I've been proved wrong many times there have been songs where that people have sent me that I honestly personally I'm like dude I don't think this is good like almost objectively like even like sometimes I can hear something and be like I don't like it but I can understand why other people like it I get sent some [ __ ] sometimes that I don't know how people like it just that's me and so I've almost said no to things before or just like you know chosen like you know if three bands are hitting me up and I can only fit in two I'll be like oh [ __ ] well hey yo sorry I'm like too busy today maybe we do this next week or or whatever and there's been times where you know I'll do something that I really think is bad and it just does really well and like the band is so stoked and then I'm just like I'm very I'm stoked I'm happy I don't know how I really cool when I was photographing shows and it was mostly from photographing shows of like it was one of the reasons I kind of phased out of that largely of like I felt like the the photos I took were only as good as the person they were of uh and so it was a thing of like if I take a photo of Pierce the Veil it's going to do great but take a photo of my favorite local band it's gonna do bad it doesn't matter where they like doesn't go for like posting yeah oh it doesn't matter anything about the quality of the words in that or anything what I do they could switch venues they could like generally the better bands on the bigger venue and yeah nicer lighting too but even then like it doesn't it doesn't matter yeah your picture of Vic Fuentes is gonna do way better than the pick of [ __ ] yeah like that's not that's not comparable and that was frustrating to me as I was shooting because it was like yeah you're kind of shooting the shooting the roster of six bands and it's like there's one band on here that's just gonna do well yeah socially I feel you and the advice I got was like hey don't un it was don't underestimate the audience that you're not a part of don't necessarily the size of an audience that you're not yeah yeah yeah and that's kind of the same point of your saying of like yeah you're taking songs it's like I don't believe in this but you do and let's see if it works and it exactly wrong uh and it's always struck me as like there's also a lot of times I'm right too and it doesn't do good of course then I get stressed out because then I'm like it's not like with what I do it's not like I do it like like you make a music video right that's your job you make the video you spend time on the video obviously you edit it and then you send it to the band and then that's kind of it and then people like me come in yeah my job is to make a good art yeah you make the art and you send it off and you're good yeah me it's like they're coming to me with that art and I sometimes have to work for six months on that art it just sometimes it's a month sometimes it's two months sometimes it's a [ __ ] year like it just happens usually listen usually the ones that make it six months to a year are things that I actually am like this is cool yeah I like this Um well hey like if I don't like something it's kind of like if someone sends me stuff and I'm like I don't like this do I want to invest myself for a month in this and usually I just do because you just need to but I like to put in a parallel of like any other job if we were teachers whatever the first five years of teaching would be would be like the worst classes and the worst schools yeah like it kind of has to start there and I've I like that parallel in my brain it's comfortable like yeah every song Can't Be My favorite song but that's kind of what would it be in any job ever like if we were kind of spoiled and privileged to think of like we can choose our clients and it's like well hopefully hopefully one day that's the thing at the moment I've thought about that before like if you're a teacher if you're like an elementary school teacher and you get a new class every year like like what if your class sucks yeah and you're just stuck with that class for a year like that sucks and like what if your class the year before was like really sick and like everyone was cool and like nice yeah all the little kids were like oh like that no one was no one was a meanie and then you get a [ __ ] [ __ ] kid and the next one there's and then they're all their [ __ ] friends yep there's all in your class and you have to just deal with it as a as a very experienced camp counselor I'll tell you that any group of 20 kids is just about the same there's gonna be like one or two that's wild it's gonna be one or two sweethearts there's gonna be a lot of kids in the middle and definitely there's a spectrum of Terror and a spectrum of angels on both sides but like I assume in the course of a classroom like yeah I'm sure it happens but my guess would be that for the most part it's what you make of it and if you yeah yeah I I don't know I think the more I do music videos more like oh music videos are the same as everything else everything is all the same yeah and to me in the context of music video it's like if I show up prepare to show with my plan I show up with in the academic sense that's the lesson plan that's doing the the readings like so you know what to talk to the students about or whatever for me it's yeah getting the music video set up getting the day sheet ready so we know what's gonna happen all day and we know that the ideas are gonna work we know the thing is there it's like yeah then that that day goes easy that's a great day yeah my class is good there whereas the same with the teachers like if they show up without any of that work done it's going to be a bad class yeah they're [ __ ] like there's nothing done and I don't know there's been something comforting of like yeah we do weird and crazy jobs but like they're the same as every other job on some level yeah and some yeah in some level unless you're you know I don't know unless you truly have a job where it's like passive income and you don't do [ __ ] [ __ ] somehow I don't know how any of that works but like that's the goal right diverse yeah hey cool sick I don't know how to do that but yeah I wish that'd be cool one day dude I was gonna say sometimes I mean sometimes you can be prepared as as prepared as you want it just sometimes still doesn't but sometimes even when you prepare your best you go ahead and make a decision in the last minute that ruins everything so true on the other insatiable note I didn't ruin anything uh it worked out for the better thankfully yeah but my yeah their story here is yeah the insatiable video is that we are in the planning of the video and we have uh there's two things going on in the video one of them is like a narrative story and then one of them is band performance disorders yeah which we don't do ever too which is another thing that's narrative piece because we never really do that [ __ ] we usually just like yeah cool visuals and like I don't know different concepts but you know it's usually just the band or some weird [ __ ] going on like never like actors same and I feel like actors are hard because there's often like a actually so hard to me because we're so used to seeing Hollywood we've seen so many of the best versions of that that it feels so hard you can't drop some mid can't yeah and the time it takes to create a good storyline is so much more than just showing up in a warehouse and playing the song 10 times like the yeah the amount of thought that had to go into making all those details work we can get into oh [ __ ] it we'll get into it now and go back to the locations after uh the guns part of it is the other huge part of this yeah um and I'm forgetting why I brought this up now um my king yo uh what a wild time dude this is the classic Jay grandell podcast experience this is just this is my perfect Vibe right now I love chaos I'm uh I'm gonna scoot him out of here though I'm sorry Bobby um you can go play somewhere else um I don't know why I was Segway in there but whatever um location so location starts we have um uh we have a location set and it was a great location like my issue is that it reminded me of the last final words yeah uh and help me find the words video is when we did yeah a year ago something two years ago and it's like this white beautiful flowery bright sunny place and like the location we had felt similar to that which my first thought was like [ __ ] I don't want to like step on the same like I as I was writing the treatment I was like oh I'm just writing what we did two years ago this is also this one was like a different vibe too like compared to that song and that was really made sense yeah as I as I worked more on it I was like oh I'm not doing the same treatment it's just like yeah this stream doesn't fit it this song doesn't fit what we're doing here so I have a moment of like [ __ ] I'm a week before the video I'm behind schedule I should have had this done by now and I'm just having because I've been busy with other stuff and so I call a buddy and I'm like dude is there any way I kind of knew this other location existed it's like a yeah I know it's a part of a motorcycle club and they have like a warehouse had eight pictures of before and so I text him and it was this weird thing of like texting him while I'm also talking to you guys about the video and I'm talking to you like yeah things are going great and the next text is like so can I come see that location for this video that I'm shooting uh it's thankful that all worked out and then yeah it's texting you guys and being like please trust me on this and yeah thankful that all worked out uh but it was stress and it was one of those weird like uh the advice that's in my brain is to learn to fail quickly and it was one of those of like my I was really torn on like yeah do I change course and say look I have this better idea let's go with it or do I stay on this and be like no I'm gonna I'm gonna do what I said I was gonna do I'm gonna stick through my word and I've always believed that my word is all I have like as a self-employed person like there is no other entity to back me up like yeah I mean if people start to not trust you or people get annoyed by you or people yeah I don't know if people have an experience with you that they [ __ ] hated yeah and it's like well that person's not gonna come back to me ever again and so if a week before every video I say hey I know we have this location lined up everything happens every time then you're just like [ __ ] dude all these bands are gonna stop coming to me at nightmare yeah it would be a disaster like a disaster for me too but it would that wasn't your fault though it was just you know but it was one of those like internal things like I can't do this always so I have to be very sure that I want to do this if I do it uh in the long drive way of course the harder it gets to make all this thing happen so thankfully worked out but yeah it was a really that was one of those real moments I remember in the moment of like wanting to talk about on the podcast of like I don't know what to do like yeah there's a better plan here but I think I might piss him people off and thankfully everyone was kind and understanding and that went great um but yeah that was a week before the video uh other conversation here is the guns part so we have a narrative scene uh and so we bought airsoft guns uh and I painted them uh another quick Side Stories here is they've been sitting right there for so long I painted them right there uh and so like when Nick came in thankfully Nick was aware of what was happening but when Nick came in he kind of looked and was like dude that's why do you have guns laying around especially him that's so funny yeah it was and there was a couple other people that happened with them these are for your video Yeah thankfully thankfully they were so funny um but dude it was so funny and then yeah I just kept forgetting they were down here because I would paint them in like a week later come back down and put another coat of paint on and so just bring a new person who's ever been to my apartment down here the first thing is just guns laying around the place painted everywhere clearly looking just us um but we had to put a lot of work in figure out like how do we use guns in a way that we can get the the artistic effect we want the robbery the criminal but without violating like the the YouTube monetization and I think the the line of our conversation that kept sticking my brain is like we can't make something that we can't promote oh my God I love this uh like if we if we make this video and it can't go anywhere then we're [ __ ] like we did all this work for nothing and so it's a really weird line of like we know what we want to do but we can't do it within the bounds of what should happen in the world yeah um from the YouTube marketing standpoint where are like the lines of like content so I know we talked about like drug sales we wanted to have like someone passing off drugs outside selling drugs we wanted to have criminals robberies you can just push them yeah no I'm not trying to push him um but uh you're so heavy um but yeah where are the lines on YouTube in terms of I know we went through some of these but yeah in terms of can we sell drugs can we replicate I don't know what you could do anymore okay dude it's like I don't know I had a band that had literally a video that's like it's almost just like it's just weird art and it's like super dark and just black background and nothing in it that is offensive in the slightest and it just like no can't do it sorry I know when we were playing we were talking a lot about like the first 30 seconds of the video or the beginning of the video I mean sometimes bands will send me stuff and I'm like God this is like same [ __ ] like if there's guns or like you know crazy stuff in the video I'm like God they're gonna hate this like I hope this gets through and I hope we can do stuff with it and I mean that's just YouTube if that messes up I just do a bunch of Facebook and Instagram and whatever stuff for it which it's fine like I do that anyways for other things does that like even out like is is losing the YouTube a huge hit it's only a hit for the video like kinda like Spotify stuff that I do isn't on YouTube that's all like Instagram for the most part so it's like it doesn't really [ __ ] with the song itself but the video it's like YouTube ads are like the best for that so I can still run Facebook stuff Instagram stuff for it and it'll it'll do fine but either like you have to put more money into it or like it's kind of up in the air with how that can go um it just depends I just it's just annoying whenever it happens and it's been happening more and more lately for no reason and it's stupid and is a music video with a hundred thousand views more or less valuable than a song with a hundred thousand streams dude I don't even know anymore do you have any sense there are like there are bands that I work with that have I don't know 40 50 000 monthly listeners or more and I feel like they don't even they they don't have like a manager or they don't have a team or they don't like they don't tour like they're they're just like chilling with all these [ __ ] listeners and like I know I know that I'm doing real stuff for them which is you know that's just what I'm doing well I don't know what they did before me I don't know if all the listeners are real like I'm pretty good at like yeah seeing [ __ ] yeah but sometimes it'll be real and I'm like cool this band has like 50k a monthly listeners like that's not insane in the grand scheme of things but like for like a local band like that's [ __ ] sick good for you but I feel like they won't have like anyone who has their back if that makes sense and then I'll see these bands that have like literally like a thousand monthly listeners and they have an agent and they have a manager it's like all this [ __ ] and like over time and it's it's like really just finding people that really believe in what you're doing um matters more than like hey we just got a song and it hit 100 000 streams we're just sick too like that maybe that will getting Milestones like that will help you find you know if there was someone who wants to work with your band and they're like oh I'm unsure I'm unsure you know I don't know if this is my thing or not and then they start seeing posts like that which like oh this is working like things are happening like all right maybe I will do this then that could you know make an impact but I don't think necessarily like it's not as big of a deal as people really make it out to be like a mil a million streams is like three thousand five hundred dollars four thousand dollars maybe yeah like it's not you know yeah you'd have to get a million streams a month just to like yeah you know that's not even West for one person to be like all right I could survive off this and I'm not even like living a crazy life and that's a Million Dreams a month and that's not the band The Producers the yeah and the band's usually like four or five people yep so then it's like oh cool if we wanted to I know you you know there's merch there's the merch makes way more money than anything else but like I'm saying if you wanted to live off of Just streaming like everyone in your one you'd have to have 100 of your streaming royalties which are a whole different conversation uh two you need to you know if you have four people in your band you have to be getting like millions and millions and millions and millions of streams streams a month yeah which is like not realistic unless you're a big band uh so it's like I don't know it's it matters but it also doesn't matter it kind of just you're like your art matters more than anything and like if you do some cool [ __ ] like there's also like if you're trying to do pop music and you have 10 000 monthly listeners like no one [ __ ] cares like who cares yep you know Beyonce has [ __ ] 40 50 million or whatever or or Billy eilish has 40 50 million like those are like pop stars you have 10K like cool sick dudes [ __ ] yeah go play for the [ __ ] Tavern I don't know uh if you're a heavy band you get 10K and you are like interesting and you have something like I don't know that is just catching people's attention and people are sharing your [ __ ] like that is better because it's like all right the ceiling I don't say ceiling because that sounds bad but like the ceiling is lower and you're you know the community is smaller and you're going to have a higher chance of getting noticed off of that than you are if you're like playing Super top 40 like I don't know yeah I don't know what I'm trying to say but you touched on uh streaming royalties uh what's like a normal split I'm assuming you're alluding to like the label takes a percentage of it and you get percentage it's different for everybody but it's like is it normally 50 50 is it normally 90 10 in some favorite of any sense of like what is a if you were to sign a lit contract tomorrow what you might see honestly I don't know I'm not super I mean there are contracts where you're you're an artist and you're getting you are only getting 10 okay there are 50 50 ones too then there are ones where it's like oh um dude I mean I don't know there's so many different options like there are there are even contracts where it's like hey yes you're only getting this percent for now but then once once you recoup you can just have once like once we recoup like you just [ __ ] have it cool it's like there's there's so many different ways to go about it um gotcha and I don't really know I haven't seen enough in like only from what like friends have told us you know I have friends that have signed contracts like that and stuff and you know from what they've told me like everyone's told me different things so I don't really know honestly uh thankfully I have people in my life that I could ask and be like hey is this good or is this trash um and they will be honest with me and I would hope that if it was trash they would be like yeah you shouldn't [ __ ] do this uh I don't know how he solved that problem am I the same thing in context of music videos of like no one really no or just photos like content Creation in general like no one really knows how much each other's charges we don't really know what goes into it I don't really know what my peers send to the band as the final deliverables like there's so many of these like I mean secret things there's been contracts are a similar thing like I don't quite know how we solve that problem with like my brain is like the only way I saw that problem is getting on here and reading out the the invoice for my music videos though yeah that's terrible like it should be private to a certain degree because I feel I don't like talking about money like and it's just I do end up talking about money like a lot in my life yeah but I don't like talking about money I don't really care about you know yeah how much money some how much money this cost how much money this costs how much money this person makes you know I don't really care um it's more so like everyone's different everyone's skill set's different so like just because you know someone is charging a grand or two grand for a music video doesn't mean that they're not better than the guy that's charging 10 grand but it's all different yeah situations but in the context of like the in in that example the 10 grand guy can be predatory in that sense because the other people don't know the other guy's only one grand and in the record exactly and also you're it's like if you have a name behind you too if like you've done big [ __ ] then like you can get away with charging more and yeah like I don't know for me like for my stuff I I all the time think about raising my rates and everything and I get scared too because I'm like [ __ ] I don't want to like because there are bands that come to me that I'm really cool with and friends with but I know that like you know their financial situation isn't the best so it's like dude I don't want to price out this band that's like yeah stoked and none of us are in great Finance like we're all here existing and chilling like yeah I think that's what always get to me is like it's not like uh I always I have that same line of like yeah some like people aren't in the best and it's like no none like I'm not in the like none of us are like it's not you just gotta make it work yeah just like at the end of the day dude though if someone like wants to work either gonna like I don't know like when I say I'm raising my rates I'm talking like a hundred dollars I'm not talking like I'm gonna go from double whatever I'm charging now it's like cool I'm gonna charge like an extra 100 bucks or maybe yeah down the line an extra couple hundred bucks because like that's all I really need to do um but even that like sometimes bands come to me and they're literally it's like they'll even give me an amount that they want to spend and I'll be like dude could you squeeze like 50 more like it would just make my life so much easier I know it seems stupid that it's that little amount of money but just like if you could get another 100 or another 50 bucks like that'd be so sick and most of the time it works out sometimes it's like no dude like we literally only have this amount like like we need to make it work somehow and I have to figure it out but yeah that's a good strategy I always feel bad because like I don't I also don't want to seem desperate for money and it's this weird balance of like I do need to make more money but I don't want to be begging for handouts I don't want to be begging for the last 10 of the paycheck on top because like that's not really what this is about and I've always had the idea like this is about staying alive this is about like survival yes like that's the money in in any industry I guess and particularly in ours like not in the first 10 years like the the money happens when you can get the tenant and still be going and then you have 10 to 20 yeah right yeah and so in in my context of money it's like yeah I don't want a nickel and dime you now and create a bad taste that then puts me out of business in five years so that sounds like balances yeah I don't know I think as soon as you if you just keep good like relationships with people and people don't hate you and I don't know if if most people if your name comes up and most people are like oh that dude's cool then you're good yeah if your name comes up and most people are like [ __ ] that dude then you're not I don't know it's gonna run out at some point maybe it doesn't then good for you I don't I don't know uh that's a great I've always had the line that like ever I work with so many bands that I feel like every time I work with a band I talk [ __ ] about another band you know there's some Clash somewhere sometimes it's valid though sometimes but a lot of times it's not and my my line has been like everyone has a bad story about someone and like I'm sure that probably yeah I believe my heart of heart that I've done good by everyone I've gone out of my way to go good by everyone yeah but I'm sure there's someone who's not talking nicely about me right now and I don't know who that person is I hope I don't find out but like mathematically there must be yeah I don't know and I'm always trying to be aware that when I'm with the band they're talking poorly about the thing it's like this might just be the one person who thinks they're the [ __ ] like they might be a saint except for this one instance where there's some yeah everyone's like everyone can have a bad day yeah like um I don't know for me if I have bad day I don't like take it out on other people or like I try to just keep it to myself as much as possible but you know every once in a while I'll just like like I'll be having a bad day my [ __ ] DMs for people who are lovely people who want to pay me money are going [ __ ] crazy I'm having a bad day and I'm like overwhelmed I'm just like oh I have like a dozen [ __ ] new people that I have to talk to today and I'm not in the mood to talk to people and I just have to like suck it up and just be nice and like hey bro you know I don't know yeah depends you know I don't like making people hate me so I probably not do that yeah I guess yeah then the the don't hate me but also I gotta stand up for myself and balancing those two things yeah um last piece annotation will here Nick and Lily so we had two actors come in uh for the narrative piece that we touched on is like an interesting yeah New Edition uh why did you choose Nick and Lily I feel like they were yeah you pretty quickly were like these are the two people who are gonna do this role yeah I knew we needed a couple and I knew that they needed to like not look whack yeah and they're a couple and they're my friends and they don't look whack they Crush they got they got a bunch of fits yeah they got a bunch of wigs and [ __ ] so I was like this is perfect I was great did I know if they could act honestly [ __ ] no I just Winged It uh when they got here I totally forgot it was until this second when they got here I was chatting with them and I was like oh and Jay mentioned you had acting experience like as it leaves my mouth I didn't say that [ __ ] their face is so blank and I was like oh I'm for sure like that's not true and that's like that's so funny I think yeah yeah so I like I felt bad because there was a moment I assume in their head of like oh [ __ ] we are in over our heads like he thinks we're gonna we know what we're doing yeah um and they killed it they crushed it they're so much fun to work with it was nice to have people on set who were like so excited to do it I think we've all been on set so much that it's refreshing to have someone who's like excited by all this stuff yeah well it's different like I should I don't really know like I said we don't do we've done like a couple little storyline things in the past but it's always friends like we've never had anyone extra in any of our videos that we didn't like know um so I assume it's different if like we were like you know hiring someone that we didn't know to come in and then you know if they do a bad job and it's like [ __ ] like I lost money and we have a shitty video and this sucks and I didn't really like them either as like a person it's like so much easier when it's just like your boy or whatever and you're just like yo want to come through I'll like buy you Sushi and yeah and [ __ ] you get to be in a video and they're just like oh hell yeah I don't know like the tier of actor I've worked I don't know if it works like a professional actor actress yeah uh but there is something really they're like models to me where it's like a good model it's hard to take a bad photo of and it's really like a strange skill set like it makes no sense to me I am good actors are the same thing of like they're on set and the camera turns on and somehow things just work and it's so weird to me that I like it doesn't I don't I get that they are very skilled and I can't articulate what the skill set is that they're so excellent at and it's a really like odd thing to do yeah I mean they're not actors they just figured it out yeah like yeah we weren't doing you know there's honestly only one scene in the video where it was like I was like all right he's gotta do actually does kind of have to like really act on this because a lot of it's just like you know like like breaking into houses with with a [ __ ] gun and like stealing from cars and like driving around but something I've learned the hard way doing music videos of I've tried so many times where someone comes up and it's like we want to tell a breakup story so it starts with this long fight and then we have this argument and I write this long thing out and it's like yeah yeah it's like we can't it can't do that and so as I was writing this one it was like okay how do I design something that is easy to succeed in for them it also translates so easily to camera and yeah the easy step for me there's like we don't need that it's pretty simple I just think I it's not the most [ __ ] crazy storyline in the world like yeah in the grand scheme of things it's very simple like I've seen music videos with like crazy complicated storylines and sometimes they go good sometimes they go bad I'm like I don't know what happened or like whoa that was really cool um this one it's like cool it's like a pretty simple storyline but even if someone somehow doesn't know what's happening the video just looks cool yeah so it's like I don't care it's like sick dude then I appreciate that and that was definitely something that was my goal going yeah it's like this is going to live in Clips this is gonna live in 30 second Clips more than it's gonna live in this full full thing so how do I make sure that those 30 seconds are not lacking without the context of everything else going on in the video I think the TR I think the trailer um like which no one's seen well by the time this comes out yeah we'll have the trailer up I think the trailer you made it like this is a good thing but I think you made it so like it's so sick and I feel like people are gonna think it's like gonna be some like crazy complicated thing which is not yeah but who cares yeah it just looks um you sent me that trailer and I was like yeah this looks like it's gonna be like a I remember it doesn't even look like it's for a music video this looks like a movie [ __ ] trailer I remember being excited about it but I don't know what it is right now so I'm excited to watch it after this and be like yeah what the hell did I make because I remember like I remember finishing real quick and then like sent it and like forgot about it I remember like I remember doing it and being like oh this is sick and like I we had that or I had the idea like a movie poster or just a movie poster role like how do I roll this out like a movie and so I think it follows that train of thought but yeah it's like the specific concept there it came together in like 20 minutes kind of thing of like it just pulled in five sound effects and was like okay here it is got it I think that movie poster thing was like the best promo we've ever had honestly because I've never had I've never had like I just posted it up it did help that it was my birthday I was making a joke for sure on the other day I was like dude I just gotta say it's my birthday every time we make a band Post Yeah because like all my like social it like I'll post I don't know I'll post me I just went on vacation cool all my vacation posts like for me like you know I only have like a thousand followers but like all my vacation posts got mad love I was like dude damn people really like me in the [ __ ] Woods or me at the beach or whatever and then I'll you know in the past it's like cool I'm posting like the artwork for our new new EP or new single it's like yeah dude's sick 20 [ __ ] likes [ __ ] you even though I know a bunch of people like my van it's like they're you know either Instagram doesn't send it out or people just aren't you know just artwork or it's like even promo sometimes or even live photos like so we'll swap every once in a while I posted that one up and it [ __ ] like got mad mad people commenting hit me I got texts about that picture hell yeah people texted me just like yo why does that picture you posted go so [ __ ] hard I was like dude I don't know it just looks sick hell yeah but it's funny we didn't even give you notes on that we took this two seconds we took that in two seconds we weren't even supposed to take it because we had a photographer who was supposed to come and then someone forgot to text them at all I forgore poor Audi shout out I saw her like a week or two after that and she was like yo I didn't know what happened like four times since that [ __ ] day dude you know why I forgot though it's just the location thing yeah I just that [ __ ] me up it was crazy and it was extra money so I was like I think part of me assumed like oh the money that we were gonna pay for a photographer is now going to this new location that we weren't planning on and then also I just forgot so it was like crazy I was like yo Peter can you take a couple pictures of us and we're done it takes 30 seconds it's just the sickest promo codes we've ever had to be fair the advantage that I'd already shot a music video there so I already knew how the space worked yeah go find the one frame from half an hour ago that I already yeah exactly get a single out of it um yeah I'm really stuck on how they came out and stoked to share that with the world um we are getting close to our hour um before we get you out here I want to touch on the the management thing so I know you is it official partnership with SL management Scott Lee's management yeah uh what is the yeah what is your official job title what is your role what are you doing there that's been like a new confusion in my life for not for me but for like other people because I started doing that they asked me in like December um and then I started like actually doing it in January so it's literally all it is is just me doing what I was already doing for bands just on my own which I still do but just for every band on the management gotcha that needs me like I don't work for every single band but like whenever like cool like body snatcher had a merch drop this week so I helped with that or like currents just did a tour and I helped with that or like invents going on tour I'm gonna help with that like so whenever stuff like that comes up and also just like random [ __ ] like like last week was our hey we need to make sure that every band's website has the you know updated tour dates so people [ __ ] can go to the shows and a lot were like not updated so I had to go in and do a bunch of that random stuff it's like cool I went to Gramercy to hang out with currents on tour it was like day two or the tour went like the first couple days and I'm [ __ ] sweating my ass off helping with merch restocks in the middle of the show that I didn't know I was doing but they're just like hey help all hands on like got you all good like so random [ __ ] like I don't know um and then yeah like I said before helping with release stuff and and ads for that and tour stuff which is what I'm already doing so uh you mentioned like merch shops that I hadn't heard you say that before I know it's been like a lot of singles and music videos yeah uh merch has it been like I assume that this branching out of course that makes sense that a management company would benefit from having that spread out has been tough to kind of diversify the things you're working on like our songs and music videos still the easiest compared to merch or whatever other weird stuff you have to promote it's not easy it's not necessarily easier it's more the thing with us is that a lot of I mean all of their bands are solid yeah I should say all of our bands that feels weird But like everyone we work with is like really solid like there's some big bands like if I if a random Band hits me up and they're like a nobody band not trying to sound mean but like you know they're a new band and they're trying to sell a bunch of merch it's not gonna go as well like it's just merch is different than streaming streaming you can throw a song at anybody even if the band is small if someone's like yo this sounds sick they'll listen to it if it's hey we just dropped [ __ ] six new merch items on our fancy store like go buy some [ __ ] like I can do more stuff with that with you know currents or body snatcher or we have like Kublai Khan like big Bands then you know the random band from Idaho yeah that is just starting out and they need you know they're trying to make some money on merch but they only have 200 followers because you can't really sell I mean I shouldn't say you can't but like it's easier to sell merch to your fans than it is to randoms so in some ways it's easier because it's like these merch drops are pretty straightforward just sending merch to their fans hey they have a merch drop if you didn't see it because Instagram said [ __ ] you and only showed your post to a thousand people now we're paying so you see it and so then you know and it goes well you know whenever it's a big band I've done it for a smaller bands before but the the issues we run into are one like not many people on the internet like even even for half-hearted we don't [ __ ] sell [ __ ] online we're like I don't care about saying that either like but compared to like other bands that I see and bands that actually make a living off merch it's like it's laughable so it takes a while to get there yep um so that's the one thing that is an issue because if you're if your fan base is so small you're limited on who you can sell merch to so we could drop a hundred dollars on a merch drop and sometimes you it's losing money sometimes you only sell two shirts sometimes you sell no shirts sometimes you could sell 10 shirts but just depends meanwhile if you put that same hundred dollars into a bigger band's merch drop was like whoa we just sold 100 shirts we just dollar per shirt or less cool um so it's just it's drastically varies in in that sense it's a it's a barrier to entry thing right it's it costs more to buy a teacher than it does to watch a video it costs three minutes your time to watch the video yeah same time and it costs 20 of my dollars that's six of my hours or whatever how many yeah hours that equates to um that's hopefully not six hours of work but whatever the time would be um but it is interesting and it triggers my brainly that's also then why Tick Tock is so successful and getting people to watch music videos right it's like we've shortened the video to a 10 second thing that can be to more people and it's one of those like yeah how do we keep milking that principle and getting more people in and playing this game because like that yeah that is a tried and true strategy that's the the bracelets that were so popular in 2010 like the bracelets are way to get you to you're just spending a dollar like the the bracelets didn't get paid anyone's gas money I'm assuming um compared to t-shirts but like once you are there spending those two dollars you're there I just had to Rack my brain to like think about what you were talking about and I just now like that was like a memory that you just unlocked because I definitely have I'm pretty sure I have like you're talking about the black the two inches yeah yep though dude I forgot about those yeah I definitely have I know I have like a bless the fall one in my house and I know I have I saw him I can't remember the other one uh Chris from like Master Flames posted like a photo of him outside like a U-Haul or some like storage unit like look what I just found and I had the same thing like oh [ __ ] I forgot about this yeah but it struck me as like oh that's a that's it stuck on as a trend but the reason the trend was so successful is because of how valuable that is in selling merch at Warped Tour it's like it's hard to get someone to come up and spend twenty dollars it's easy to come by one dollar and once you're there with your wallet out it's so much easier to buy a t-shirt so it's like how do we keep getting people in the door and keep playing like making things smaller and I guess there's a diminishing return there of like yeah I don't want to just be sending screenshots of the music video out and hoping that that is accessible um yeah I mean sometimes you gotta do what you got to do sometimes yeah like I don't know like the the like live photos thing is like the I mean it's cool but that's like the uh I don't know though I can't think of the word that's like the fallback if like if you don't have anything if your band's not [ __ ] doing anything for two weeks and you don't want to be like [ __ ] I don't want to not post for two weeks let's just post up a couple live photos and figure out captions like that's that's like the cop out but it's cool like you yeah people want to see those too though it's it's better than posting nothing for sure exactly um it's not I'm not saying it's bad to post that but um but it's not video content it's also like if you're a smaller band like us like I don't even like I social media is my literal job and I don't even like our social media like I'm like bad at it like I do the ad stuff's cool but the ad stuff's different that's totally different than like posting every day and like doing all that like I do do that for some pages and and also my own page um but I really sometimes have to Rack my brain like God what am I gonna post like I don't know what to do I don't want to fall off the face either for a month straight sometimes it happens anyways like yeah um the the podcast has been like strangely helpful for me with that it's like it forces me to post something every week and then because Zoe I'm then aware of like if I don't post anything creative my whole page just gonna be me talking to my friend which isn't bad I like that but then it's not a good reputation of what my interests are like your profile and be like well wait is this music video guy or podcast so it's been a great motivation of like keep posting and it's allowed me to it's giving me almost like creative freedom of like I used to be nervous by the post because it's like oh this is going to be my representation for the next week two weeks whatever or it better be the right thing and now it's like no just keep doing stuff out that's actually funny too that for bands I feel like yes you should post definitely also though there's actually two things two thoughts on that one it's big and like alternative music and like Indie music and like that is like bands I'll go and I'll look and I'll find a new band and they're like an ALT band or like an ALT pop band I'm like well this is really sick I'll find their Instagram and they have [ __ ] like six posts and they're all two months apart and they just don't [ __ ] post and they're somehow just [ __ ] gigantic and they just don't give a [ __ ] that's great I love that yeah I wish I could do that um then the other thing is with me personally lately it has been the opposite because I would put I post a lot I like my I don't I don't like Facebook and I use Instagram probably the most so I will you know filter I don't try to my Instagram is pretty personal and like ban [ __ ] but I still filter in the work stuff because I you know a lot of band people follow me on there too so I will post on there but my Facebook is like I don't give a [ __ ] about Facebook so I'm just dedicated that to my job like anything I post on Facebook is either the band or ad [ __ ] or like management [ __ ] like only that like you will struggle to scroll through my thing and find anything else um and lately it has been whenever I post I just get too blown up and which is a good problem to have but now lately like I'm trying to figure out what to do because I have like I could have made five posts this week and I didn't because I don't know what the [ __ ] to do because at this moment it's like overwhelming so I have to like now figure out cool am I gonna only post instead of making four separate posts for these four separate bands that I worked on this week that they all did well I want to post up these results if I do that four different days I'm gonna be spending my entire day like this yeah and be miserable and like yeah could I maybe book out [ __ ] four months of work in advance maybe but that's not really how it works usually it's people like Yo dude my song's coming out tomorrow can you do it and I have 12 people send me that DM and I'm like dude I physically can't do this like yeah that is I would love to be if I could pause time and do this and make a ridiculous amount of money in this in the next 48 hours that'd be so sick but I can't yeah and so some [ __ ] like lately has been kind of like I don't ignore people but like if you don't respond to someone's if you go a few days sometimes without responding someone's DM like the notification goes away so like this month like last month was my most successful month like ever congratulations thank you which I'm not trying to like brag no no I'm just saying I think it's important share Milestones yeah yeah so like last June was like really really really good for me like beat out every other month but [ __ ] did felt like there were definitely things that fell through the cracks like and I don't I I can't think of the specifics I just know it happened because I was talking to so many people and I went on vacation so half of it was like I took a vacation for myself I needed a little break took six days off oh yeah but as much as the vacation was great and I would do it again that [ __ ] week before was hell on Earth and the ever since I've been back like this week was fine but the first couple weeks since I was back yeah all these people because I just let [ __ ] linger for like five days while I was gone I tried to respond to people but I would just be like Yo dude I'll be back this week like hit me up next week and then all those people plus new people are hitting me up and I'm trying to manage everything and then also the [ __ ] I already had booked because I basically booked my whole month out in advance I wanna I wanna try to start doing that too which I don't know how to like yeah it's difficult I'm trying to figure it out so I don't know now it's kind of a [ __ ] show now I'm like all right I'm probably just gonna make one big post every week where I'm like here's some cool [ __ ] I did please don't blow me up I need or if you do blow me up please blow me up for things that are in like four weeks yeah and not yo dude the song is out right now can we get this going and I have to be like dude I don't know what to tell you like I need you need an assistant weeks of time dude no I can't no I I'm like very adamant about not having anyone else relying on me for anything I really need it for scale pretty soon no [ __ ] that I'm not I'm just not gonna do it just not I'm just gonna cap your income with [ __ ] see that then that's the weird thing because then it's like I want to raise my I want I would like to raise my rates that'd be sick making more money is always sick but I also don't want to price out you know a lot of times dude it's like good bands just you know just have don't have the financial situation which I could make exceptions but then it's weird because then it's like I feel bad because like oh I'm charging this band x amount of money meanwhile this other band's coming to me and I'm charging them less just because I like it which in theory makes sense because I want to work on things that I like but it also makes me feel like [ __ ] because I'm like I would be like that's not what I do but if I were to do that I would be like damn like I'm not this playing field is not even right now like and then what are you basing that off of he has a quality music quality the person is yeah yeah I mean I get so messy I don't know yeah I don't I'd rather not do that like yep I'm just trying to keep [ __ ] fair but yeah who knows hell yeah dude well we're at our we're at a good hour did we do um we still haven't talked about how you learned guitar or any getting into music first so funny so at some point that's it's funny like that's been the Crux of most of the episodes on the show we just send a [ __ ] and you've been here three times and we haven't even begun to start figuring that out um something to look forward to so thank you yeah the next podcast is just gonna be [ __ ] like you'll have me back another six months it's just like boring it's just [ __ ] shitty hell yeah it's just me being like so yeah like was in Middle School like please that's what I've been hoping I wanted I played the [ __ ] you know play Guitar Hero and then I and then I was like oh this is even Jack's done with you if my cat came here yo I appreciate you coming through uh insatiable July 13th uh music videos out July 13th on YouTube uh 14 songs streaming everywhere um you should listen to it or else I don't know don't listen to it I'm gonna quit yeah everything um if you're hearing this I guess the trailer is already out the video's not yet out so go watch that I assume it's on your Instagram probably probably somewhere I assume it's probably pretty easy to find yeah I feel like it can't be too hard it'll be it'll be somewhere hell yeah dude uh one where should people find you online and two uh if someone has a song like uh when is like the right time to hit you up so like if if I want you to do a song If I want you to do a song yeah am I hitting you up now to start in three months am I hitting you up now to start next week like yeah where do I find you and then if I want you to like do a song for me I mean if you're what should I what should I plan for bands no I mean newer bands don't know this but most bands distribute their songs and have their release date you know at least one to two months ahead of time okay so if you have that date that's not changing because you distributed your song that's the day it's coming out yeah so as soon as you know that date hit me up and I will make it happen copy um so we're in July so if you have anything coming up before September like don't even bother right now I know I mean I don't have that much for all like oh I have stuff booked in August but it's not crazy okay but like this month is like [ __ ] right now you know what I mean so it's like um it just depends I mean usually two three weeks is like enough time okay like more than enough even even I don't know I still will take on the things that are like yo my shit's coming out in two days can you help me like if I have time if it's possible or if it's real like that's if it is really sick I'll sometimes be like all right I do want to do this like yeah I'll do it hell yeah I don't know uh where's especially for people to contact you or do you hope they reach out uh Instagram's cool Instagram you gotta get an email you gotta separate business I do have a management email but like I don't like to I really only give that out like one I don't like doing this stuff over email all the management stuff is easy to do over email yeah um this is like requires a lot of back and forth and like talking people for a lot of time so I don't like to do it over email just because email is kind of like slow so I would just either someone will DM me on Instagram or DM me on Facebook or Twitter or whatever and then either we'll just talk on there I'll give them my number like I don't really care um I keep things as casual as possible cool Instagram uh at Jason grandell I think hell yeah dude I see what's in the description but cool appreciate you coming through mission accomplished mission accomplished baby any last words for hit the big red button I know you got something good cooking in that dude I don't have anything cooking my brain [Music] all right [Music]
Peter J-T
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2023-07-11
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VLABFNdqyI8
Lisa Schweizer 🇩🇪 – 218kg 4th Place – 2021 European Weightlifting Championships – Women's 64 kg
uh but it still makes it more difficult to see yeah the question is i mean respect the uh the religious conventions but does it need to be black which makes it really hard as you say to make a judgment oh no well she lost that early early in the attempt that's a real shame she sat there with it just off balance coming here and this is good for sarah davis [Music] yeah i'll be very interested to see i mean sarah davis at the moment posted 98 kilos might she go up another kilo i i would i i i would guess so i'd guess that maybe a 99 i think she's i think she's looking to surpass what she's done before she's in great shape and better technical shape than i've ever seen her so lisa schweitzer needs to get a sport a score on the board right now i think uh just looking at the scoreboard there's a lot of lifters here with the third attempt at 97 kilos depending on how that goes sarah davis may well come in at 98 to try and guarantee a medal so we'll just have to wait and see yeah follow your thinking get the medal and then progress and particularly if she could do it on a second attempt and she has a hundred kilos now laura natoma by the way the defending champion has put her opening weight up to 101 lisa schweitzer out here also going for 103 kilo increase well done yeah that is a good attempt from lisa schweitzer and it's a four kilo personal best that's awesome lifting from lisa you can see what it means to her this is where the competition hots up when we see the emotion and the passion drifts around her knees jumps back to compensate fights hard at the bottom there's a lift to be proud of it's a great feeling to have 100 overheads so very difficult this is fights on the arms makes it difficult even even even with a white like i think it's still going to be difficult i think um i don't know how they're going to police that rule so 118 kilos if she lifts this to go along with 100 she got in the first half of the competition this will give her the overall lead by a kilo and of course the lead in the cleaning jerk and we're edging very closer very much more closer to the appearance of toma and davis good strong finish my likes visor a lot she's moving very very well technically proficient the germans have a great routine to bring through good technical lifters but she's had some great improvements over the last couple of years and looks like she's made the most of lockdown and covid to be able to just get the hard work done stand strong and like pretty much every german lifter we see the jerk is superb slightly in front if but anything think we're going to see a few more kilos attempted you can see the body diagnostic they haven't been on the stage but there's a jury sitting behind the the you know the three referees when they see that they should be stepping in and you cannot say it's accidental it's absolutely not it's very hard to get the bar oscillating going well so far lisa schweitzer in this 64 kilo championship every mark is a new mark for her in terms of combat no commentators cursed that really that was a three shiloh increase and i thought she was on her way to 121. well the clean is no bother but on the jerk she just pushed herself away from this anzarovan is only a kilo behind and she still has two attempts to come so this is a must make for maybe to be fair an outside chance of a medal again good start well the determination was there desperately disappointing and she's going to be furious with herself yes there's a smile but this might just be the one that got away she's still ahead of the russian at this very moment but the russian still has two lifts to push her out the clean was good and yet again on the jerk pushes herself away leaves the bar out in front so she's got the personal best but she looks as if she's gonna miss out on the medal
World Weightlifting
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2021-05-20
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The true love of God - Bishop Michael Reid
God hates effeminacy not being feminine but effeminacy the effeminate is an affront to God but most people don't understand and I thought it would be good to talk about a thing that really everyone needs they need to know they're loved and God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life and when you talk of love you're not talking of human love human love is basically self-fulfilling selfish self-centered and destructive and most people mistake love for human love and human of in the scripture is a totally different word than God's love which is agape and one of the things that's not understood by most people is that human love is the most destructive force in the world the carnal mind the Bible says is M nity against God it cannot be subject to the law of God it cannot bring a person into life and where you have a carnal mind and a carnal way of thinking and a carnal way of living on a carnal way of loving it is the most self-centered self-indulgent and violent type of love and very destructive and you go to many places and what we have is humanism for thurs God's love a humanistic attitude a humanistic way no man is a man unless he has God's love which changes his image and makes him a partaker of a divine nature that brings with it the true love of God which actually has the attributes that most people would consider women's attributes in other words if a man does not discover what tenderness is if a man can't express tenderness don't ever think that he has the love of God he doesn't if a man can't express compassion and care if a man can't express true paternal instinct then he hasn't got the love of God and when you start looking at people are the bullishness of people you know especially in the olden days you had this idea that somehow men were above women the truth is this the when God made man male and female Mehdi them and he made them in His image the problem was that when they lost the image of God which happen fool man adopted one standard and woman adopted another standard instead of fulfilling the role God intended they had an unregenerate nature and the whole of society and the whole of culture developed a wrong I dear of what a man should be in a woman should be and so we've been struggling with a conflict and the world's values and the world's ideas and when we come to scripture always find that God's wanting to reveal himself but he can only reveal himself through the nature of God and the nature of God is totally different from the nature of man my ways aren't your ways says God my thoughts aren't your thoughts it's different same for a woman and most people never expense love I never engage in true worship nor engage in life in God because they do what Adam and Eve did right at the start as soon as sin came they hid and man locks himself with fear in hiding and when you hide from god you actually destroy yourself you oppose yourself and the Church of Jesus Christ is to set people free the first thing that happens in the Church of Jesus Christ when a person's truly born again is they become open-faced open-faced open-hearted and they learn love is something you love the Brethren because Christ love you if you can't love those whom God has begotten you certainly aren't begotten of god and you start examining people and you look at people and you realize how locked up they are in themselves the worst thing for a man is selfishness self-centeredness how many times I've seen marriages break down and it's the DA of the husband my Bible says that two husbands in Ephesians husbands love your wives as Christ loved the church and gave himself for it we ought to lay down our lives for our wives it says husband's you've got to love your wife you've got to lay down your life so a man God knew was going to take a wrong attitude a mistake totally how it should be in life you know if society is wrong it's the men that are wrong we demand a women that they play a certain role but it's the men that need to wake up and play the right role and of course when you start telling people that the men get kind of defensive you know you get the bullying man who things reasons why should do as he says well that shows is totally unreal and what people don't understand is everyone is fighting a battle inside until they find peace with Christ and the battle causes the manifestation of their lives to be different but the battle is very clear my Bible says the strongholds of Satan are in the mind in the reasonings and imaginations and it's how a person thinks as a man thinketh in his heart so is he and what happens in people's lives is they they get locked up and then what they exhibit on what they show is what they want people to see what they are is something different they're locked in their thoughts they think and they become and their reactions outwardly hide an inward cry for help now they don't express it that way nor do they see it that way but man basically has a need of God there's something inside a man but only the true God can fulfill and so they struggle with themselves they war with themselves their minds fight you know there's a difference between religion and God's love God's love is merciful God's love is full of grace God's love is totally different and most people because they don't understand the cry of a person's heart they're very condemning people react outwardly because of the need that's inside and it's so so ridiculous the violence that you see in people is basically their own ignorance inability to deal with themselves inability to respond to love and in the end they get violent against love because they're driven by a seed within them that's totally destructive and in the end it will destroy them and Jesus Christ came to save he came to heal he came to deliver and we have to understand how God operates how the love of God operates and when you understand the way God is you can respond the only reason a man doesn't respond to the love of God is he just done doesn't understand what is and I thought it'd be good tonight give you a few examples from Scripture because it's easy to come to Scripture and look and see the way it is and the way God is you know God doesn't evaluate the things the way we do I remember when I got converted I'd gone to a meeting to prove that God didn't exist it was a very hard objective to fulfill in fact I failed however you know God met me not because I was seeking whom he seeks me God meets a person not because of them seeking him at all the more violent a person gets against truth the real thing is inside they can't live with themselves it was a man he got so angry because he was like Muhammad except he was a Jew and he got so angry I'm full of hate because he felt that the only way to know God was to know an austere God a severe God and all the time he was like I suppose the man who was given one Talent I would say I know that you're honest or steer Lord and he went and hid his talent his whole view of God was one of severity and a lot of people their idea of God is really one of severity they've got guilt in their life guilt in their hearts they know they're doing wrong and the one thing they don't want to do is be confronted and they don't want to come near to this God who they see as an austere vengeful judgmental God and so they hide and the only way to live with themselves is to be violent against truth they're violent in their minds their violent in their conscience and here was one who got so violent but the only thing he could do was he could think of killing every Christian he could get hold of his name was saul and he went and he demanded letters so that anyone he found who worshipped Christ he could kill him now in our day and age they don't do that they just speak evil and so the violence was inside the man here was a man who had been amongst a crowd and when Stephen the Evangelist was stoned to death he was a deacon in the church was stoned to death he was a man full of the Holy Ghost says his face Shawn like an Angels and the people when they heard him and they heard what he said instead of acknowledging that Christ had come to redeem them they close their ears they gnashed their teeth they ran on him and they killed him the violence was not against Stephen it was against the word that he spoke they didn't want to face their need they didn't want to face what was wrong inside and so the only thing to do is to destroy that which was inside and here's a man face shining like an angel and he said I see heaven open on the son of man standing at the right hand of God and they killed him and you think what logic is it to kill a person who heals the sick delivers the captive has life what spirit is it that is so destructive within a man or woman that will kill the very source of hope would choke out the very one who would help him and so his rage bills his anger builds his mind twisted and he went fuming anything well how can someone few Matt what's good and then we discover the love of God here he was with letters in his hand determinate kill determined to destroy and as he goes down away he gets shocked all of a sudden a great light shines and he hears a voice out of the light and he falls to the ground Saul saw it's hard for you to kick against the pricks it's a hard life when you kick against what's good because of the hatred that's in you it's hard to try and stand that voice inside that tells you what's right and you rise up with violence because you're wrong and here comes the Lord he's same just saw the first thing he says well it's hard for you in it real hard to kill you answer Prix of conscience it's real hard to fight God I'll tell you if you're finding God tonight there's only going to be one loser and it's not going to be God guess who that could be fight they do fight the good fight of faith except they fight the bad fight of unbelief won't yield all says who on Jesus answer on Jesus who now persecutors you know the problems not man the problems not individuals if you want to know who the problem is problems you it's always the individual it's to blame someone else but really the buck stops with you you're the one I'm Jesus whom our persecutors and why would God come to someone so violently against him so violently opposed reveal himself save him forgive him redeem him and bring him to life why would Paul who claimed that he saw God be so violent against the only one who could save him what is it in man's nature sinful nature a woman's sinful nature that will cause the man to be so Val d'Or a woman to be so violent against the only answer to life what logic is there in fighting God you can only enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season and that is a short season Christ came to give us life and life more abundant he came to show the world the nature of the Father the reason that Christ and we talked about the woman's seed that brings Redemption the reason that Christ came he was born of the seed of woman the reason he came was to reveal to mankind the very nature of God and the nature of God is a nature of compassion God sees what man doesn't see God sees the war that goes on inside a person God knows what's really happening inside a person outside you see all sorts of manifestations but the real thing is when a man is locked in sin or when a woman's locked in sin and when the nature conflicts with the nature of God god you're gonna get such a hatred rise up how many times have I heard a woman say my husband says you know I'm self-righteous what really the husband is saying that he is violently against God problem is inside God looks on the inward man how many times I hear someone say well you know I why should I we're free no the real hatred you have is God you hate him you hate his way you hate his life you want to live yours you want to go your way you want to do your thing and it'll kill you I'm amazed how many people rise up with such a violent hatred especially when they don't want to go God's Way boy will they make excuses for their sin boy will they justify what's wrong and that's what Paul was doing religious man justifying everything got letters from the high priest and the Sanhedrin so he could kill anyone who spoke the name Jesus but who was he fighting he was fighting God he was finding life he was finding light why would a man hate God that's a mystery to me a greater mystery to me is what inspires an individual to be violent against God greater mystery to me is why would anyone come to someone who offers you life and life more abundant who offers you a way of out of misery into something of joy and hope why would anyone fight it I mean is sin so precious what is it the ticks in an individual their will so precious their own way so precious they despise the God who came and bled and died to redeem them how can a man or a woman go after their own way and here comes Jesus hey Paul it's hard for you to kick against the pricks boy can you imagine how that stirred him up suddenly is confronted who are you I'm Jesus whom now persecuted you know really in life there's only two powers you're either under the Prince of the power of the air the spirit the works in the children of disobedience or you're in Christ a disobedience of those that choose to go against God and God's principles in God's Way there under the Prince of the power of the air and he's a murderer he's a thief he's a liar it comes to steal to kill and to destroy and if you're under his rule the only thing that's going to happen to you is it going to steal everything from you and every opportunity from you he's in the end going to destroy you and then he's going to kill you and then there's a good shepherd I'm the only thing the Good Shepherd wants to do is give you life a life more abundant and he's come to lay down his life for the Sheep now why would anyone who's sane and in their right mind side with someone who's come to steal everything you have destroy everything in your life and then to kill you at the end what purpose is there in lunacy siding with a devil except that you're Nature's part of his nature as Jesus said you're of your father the devil the works that he does you'll do that's what he told the Pharisees here we have a good shepherd who will lay down his life for the Sheep who's come to give us life and life more abundant who's come to bring hope where there is no hope who's come to bring healing with his disease who's come to bring deliverance where there's bondage and yet people would rather live under the Dominion of the devil and go his way then turn around and say hey time to change why would anyone choose hate rather than love why would anyone choose violence rather than peace why would anyone choose death rather than life and it's not even rational except for the perverted mind and here comes Jesus hey Paul hard for you to kick against the pricks I'm Jesus who now persecutors your real problem is a problem with God that's where it all lies you haven't got a problem with yourself haven't got a problem with people your problems with God and when you stop pointing out the people their problems they always like to blame you know it's my husband it's my wife it's my this you know how could I live with a woman like that how can I live with a man like that hey I tell you your problems with God make no mistake about it you have a problem but you see when you're in Christ and when you've changed from darkness to light and when you've changed from the Prince of the power of the air to the Prince of the power of peace when you come to love and you find that you open up to the love of God everything changes and you begin to realize pool it didn't take him long I mean he went to Damascus they had two began to preach Christ and share that the true Savior after he was healed and the blindness went from him when he went to a street called straight he got straightened out an an and asked him and he said I'm going to show you the things you gotta suffer for my name's sake and then his old life change and he began to preach and it wasn't long before he became a basket case because they had to let him down in a basket over the wall to get away and off he went and you know Christ revealed so much to him but one of the things that Christ revealed to him was love not man's love God's love and you know Paul could say something that's strange he could say you know I nourished you as one you know like a mother and you think just a minute the nature of God new Jerusalem's the mother of us all and without the Compassion's that most people would ascribe to a female without the care and the tenderness which he said he had towards the church and the people of God without the nature of Christ when he looked on the multitude my Bible says he had compassion on them he's so identified he cared he loved people live with fear and perfect love casts out all fear if you're afraid it has torment a lot of people are tormented with their fears but there is no fear in God none at all and life to them is a torment it's great when you come to the peace of God that passeth all understanding but you can find that true love and love is the thing that's so rare I'm talking about God love not human love when you understand how much Christ paid for you how He shed his blood for you how he became sin for you and it becomes so personal and you realize that this God in heaven when we were enemies of God Christ died for us when there was nothing in us that would have responded to love when we would have destroyed it utterly if we could at that point Christ died for us Paul writes and says as enemies of God aliens from the household of faith totally angry and Paul writes that people oppose themselves you end up opposing yourself and if the truth be known your only fight is with yourself you know what's right why do you oppose what's right to do what's wrong in the end you end up fighting yourself that's what Paul was doing on the road to Damascus there was a man full of a war within himself and he thought if he could kill enough Christians he'd stopped the war lunacy but that's the way thought how I find so many people they get themselves stuck because they just don't understand the Compassion's of god how much he loves you know God is a pursuing god I like what Spurgeon said you know in Salvation I did my part in God did his part I ran he followed he pursued till he caught me it's never us when I find someone thinks they were the ones responsible for their salvation I know they're not saved at all when someone tells me oh well I saw God I think poor pathetic person I know that the true salvation comes when God pursues you my god is a god who pursues that's why I like the Hound of heaven why because I believe that's always the way it happens for me I realized that human brain and the human heart cannot conceive of love it's God who does it and when God does it is wonderful when man does it it's awful and I see so many people struggling they get in this war in word war and they get no hope no help what I want to tell you is in everyone's life there always comes a day when light comes and God comes and suddenly there's an intervention that God makes and the only thing you can do is surrender until then it's a tough life it's hard but my when you come to the place where you stop your nonsense it's a wonderful relief for everyone around you as well as you it's a wonderful relief when people stop fighting God and I guess there's only two types of people in the earth those are of their father the devil and those are of God and the people who still have kill who destroy they can't help themselves and they get more violet more destructive until you know it's not much in life that's enjoyable when everything around use desolation when your marriage is desolation when your home's desolation when your children are desolation when everything's messed up isn't about time you said hey there's a problem there's a savior his name is Jesus and now Jesus has come to give us life you know he's and there's something about love you know manhood as in in our society in our culture men have actually lost the ability to love and show affection one of the things is if you truly ball of God if God's really met you for a man to be a man any child were no security you know the children came to Jesus they can run out he wasn't someone the children were afraid of the people were the Pharisees were but the children weren't there was something about Jesus who was acceptable he said suffer the little children had come to me you see a tenderness comes from a spirit and Christ took time for each one you know from morning till night he played with the multitude he just took time today we're so busy so self-absorbed so self-centered so self loving self elevating it's not the image of Christ and God it's the image of greed and selfishness and self-centeredness God one like that morning till night people just came and he healed everyone what a god so women if you're gonna find a man find a man who has tenderness don't ever find a man who's over assertive over demanding I'm full of selfishness cuz it'll destroy you why is the society we're in so broken why children so broken I'll tell you because men are not men anymore it takes real manhood to have tenderness takes real manhood to have care takes real manhood to know how to love it takes manhood to expose yourself so that you can get hurt I'm pre prepare to be her Jesus was so prepared he went to Calvary greater love hath no man than this that he lays down his life for his friend and he laid down his life for us when we were his enemy that's God's love God's nature you
Bishop Michael Reid
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2011-07-20
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4,246
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পাইকারি দামে কিনুন কোরিয়ান কম্বল কালেকশন এবং দাম (falak angel)
yours assalamualaikum i'm association international impala Kinsey elusive tenancy came the we were simple to make a chocolate sheet aluminum evading his told he cannot have already stay at show actually sneak supermarket blog be nice to learn aqua parachute part phone number two shopping for anything tacos and a panther shake it college any another camera the children America to combos Egberts camp we were set accompanied to watch his show is game Qaeda Korean Korean L addictive a gigantic a new mixer shipping Katya beret - of the golden master coloratura - I think in the end both piranha am books for adults is out there double potato Alshon so we want to do the same however mrs. color would move into that particular price tag attached with reverse only shot a hole in a goose under fumble Nene Department our viewers a blue wholesale price Dowager viewers a calm bolt of cuckoo shoulder color tofu veenai selvi flower will addictive our solution signing put this leaf flower below the logical actor we were set up which is seemed a little dick into way to Javier turn ykz poor waiter with keen to try KGB's Volvo waitress Amanda bananabeth I - chub Bendigo Chick Corea you know for a grandpa I don't the collaborative oh no no I don't Iike bodytalk or any present should be a charge with the only key provision for a monocot abacus Annika use for it yeah but she'll get said algebra husband depressed about the book three should only booked a holiday consume the come boldly Anita bar bill we watched a collector Haugesund or a plan that has a flower to do love to let us chat appropriate if you learn Java feel like if you watch a Jenga the couch soon the window color time Adjara hammered we do data jerem our channel adhara shopping fortune of osha mark is honorable common section Hamilton and their shopping goats in the diamond tables and the Grammys are gonna Johnson Marina Chapman Amazon and so Google Books & ebooks and establish a monkey gentleman and a good chef not a bone layer and have him in a double fat Hobbit ever watching ambush for a strategy coming into TT participer she same have it at Michigan you can still connect I know you for example didn't put the only cool look a lot doesn't write a price tag on Thursday I shot a guy depressed about the only shot a garage it price will addictively wholesale price we weren't able to wholesale price by career when a back Sharky through do they need it done she'll get there by a they got have already the carpet to shake it to get to a path of Allah , couldn't even open fire their sake to another is Tokyo Hanukkah semi just at what they achieved you are so not there is Tatiana got Sonic over and a routes him now so the budget itself combo so two bachelorettes you shake it off no Danny you need the carbon through the boxer that works you have Enterprise Server particular Motzkin elsewhere why should take any personal form of the feds oven we were Sam Ashok or Aditya body still shot near shore Patrol a suburban a programmer invaded of James Holloway exactly I wish I felt like Corbin shared Kovan our comments color which is Jonathan armature let emotions subside for an event needs to Nitin video bar Ginobili I Kentucky raghman ala face
Falak Angel
UCfYftRK5-osOM37mtLVtIjg
2018-12-03
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
590
3,229
GOB4o3lsKRY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GOB4o3lsKRY
Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)
[Music] thank you [Music] what's up everybody welcome back to Mad medicine in this video we're going to be discussing major depressive disorder now if you guys don't already know major depressive disorder is a very high yield subject that you should definitely know for the USMLE step one you're going to be tested on it you can guarantee it because it is such a common thing certain certainly something a lot of people suffer from so definitely spend your time with this video and this content now if you guys don't know on our YouTube channel we have a Psychiatry for the US Emily step one playlist where we have videos for everything you may need now don't forget to like comment and subscribe and let's begin our discussion on major depressive disorder in our previous video we discussed an overview of mood disorders and if you guys haven't checked it out go ahead and watch it it's a quick two three sorry it's a quick five minute video where we discuss an overview of what happens in mood disorders now when it comes to major depressive disorder or MDD it is also known as depression it's something that a lot of people people suffer from and it's something that a lot of people go through in life and I'm guaranteeing you at one point in your life you will suffer from some variant of uh depression now for certain people this type of depression becomes a disorder something that affects their ability to live and their ability to cope and it's characterized by several things mainly is characterized by a chronically depressed mood with a lack of Interest patients who suffer from MDD also end up having fatigue and loss of energy and that's one of the two most important things about MDD is that patients will not only have a lack of Interest so have a lack of energy and those two things should put you uh it should clue you into thinking about MDD patients also end up having suicidal thoughts and some of them end up attempting suicide because the depression can be so bad and the three main things you should definitely know you're definitely no one's pretty important is that patients end up having a change in appetite which causes a change in their weight in our previous video we discussed how mood disorders are a physiologic disorder and it is physiologic because the emotions right the emotion of being depressed ends up affecting their appetite and this ends up affecting their weight which is actually physiologic and together these can cause a lot of problems in a patient's body and mind they're very closely intertwined patients also end up having sleep disturbances that's very common and they also end up having psychomotor agitation and or retardation now these three things are very important because it ends up exacerbating the disease from being just an emotional disease where you know they're just feeling a lack lack of energy they feel like they want to commit suicide to a more physiologic disease where they end up losing weight or gaining weight and that has its own issues associated with it they're not sleeping properly and that has its own issues or they're sleeping too much and they may have psychomotor agitation and or retardation now when it comes to MDD there are so many causes of MDD that it doesn't make sense for us to write them out or for you to memorize them just understand that it can be precipitated by a multitude of uh of things and when it comes to major depressive disorder for the US Emily step one you need to understand the clinical symptoms so first of all what ends up happening is that patients end up getting some sort of in insomnia that is very common either they'll have an initial insomnia where they have trouble getting asleep or middle insomnia like they have trouble staying asleep or they have something called terminal insomnia where they wake up later than usual essentially in MDD patients just have insomnia in one way shape or form and then they can also have something called hypersomnia hypersomnia is different it's not having trouble with sleep it's that they're excessively sleeping that's the other end of the spectrum when it comes to sleep for patients who are chronically depressed and these sleeping patterns manifest in several ways patients can have an increase in the total REM sleep they can have increased REM in early on in the Sleep Cycle they can have decreased slow wave sleep and they can also have decreased REM latency and in a different video we talk about what all this means just understand that in MDD when it comes to your sleeping patterns they get really wonky they get really messed up that is very very common other things that can happen when it comes to the clinical symptoms are going to be the psychomotor agitation that we talked about a lot of these patients end up having repetitive motions that they're continuously doing they may be pacing around a lot that may not feel comfortable with what's happening and they may feel a feeling of in inner tension like there's something going on with inside them that shouldn't be there something that they need to fix but they just can't patients may also have something called psychomotor retardation which is the opposite of psychomotor agitation they mean they may feel like everything is slowing down they talk slowly or they start thinking very slowly and that's not normal they may have a very low voice very flat affect like they don't want to really discuss it openly and they may be slow to answer the questions and they often seem like they're not interested they often respond with a few very few words so this is something you know of psychomotor retardation this right here as you can see is psychomotor agitation going over and over in circles now one of the main things when it comes to Psychiatry especially psychologic disorders that we've been discussing over and over again in this in this course so far is that diagnosis is very very important when it comes to Psychiatry for the US Emily step one you have to make sure you understand the diagnostic criterias man that is so important for you to know because a lot of times one or two different diagnostic criterias differences can change the whole course of your disease uh uh not outcome but the disease diagnosis there you go so definitely this is no different this is going to be a very high yield a f uh slide to definitely start this slide for yourself and spend some time with it now in MDD you need to have at least five of the nine symptoms that are that we've discussed for a minimum of two weeks okay two weeks is the the the golden number you need to know for duration and all of these symptoms have to occur without Mania they can't feel Manic and Mania is pretty much when they feel like they have to do a lot of things at once they end up doing everything they can all at once they're just a manic you know that's the only way I can describe it so there are several symptoms that you should know and these are called uh uh sorry these are sleep disturbances like we've been discussing whether in the REM pattern or insomnia hypersomnia they could have a a lack of interest and that's called anhedonia that's definitely something that can happen they could have guilt uh obviously they it has no reason they may not have a reason to feel guilty but they just feel guilty in general patients might have loss of energy and concentration problems they may have changes in their appetite and then psychomotor changes are also something that can happen and then finally one one of the most important thing is that patients who are depressed usually have suicidal thoughts and tendencies like I wrote in red for you guys so you don't forget this this is the single most important factor for predicting suicide is whether or not they have MDD that is very very important that is very very high yield so do not do not do not forget this at all cost Commit This to Memory now if you can see I have uh put all the first letters of you know all these symptoms in red and that's the simple easy memory tool that you can use it's called Sig ecaps now you guys have probably heard this this is throughout the internet we've seen this on many different sites and books Etc uh just memorize this or try in my opinion I never use this memory tool personally I didn't like it because I was like okay I'm gonna forget this with all the other acronyms what I like to think about are when you think about someone who's depressed what's going on and I try to put myself in that situation and that definitely helped me out with all the questions I would count down on my hand do they have at least five symptoms lack of Interest sleep problem concentration eating and then physical problem all those different things if I can count five things that I know are abnormal it usually points me towards MDD now obviously I need to make sure it's happening within the two week time frame that's very important in Psychiatry the timing is very important so five at least five of the nine symptoms for at least two weeks now the treatment for uh major depressive disorder is pretty straightforward it's not it's usually going to be used by uh it's usually going to be first line CBT cognitive behavioral therapy and a class of drug called selective serotonin reuptake Inhibitors or ssris in our in our upcoming videos we're going to be discussing the Psychiatry medications in depth along with the type they are and what they do the mechanism of action and just know that in major depressive disorder you want to allow more serotonin to be within the synaptics in the synapses and within the synaptic cleft so one class you can use are called The Selective serotonin reuptake Inhibitors ssris and I would commit these three drugs to memory right now because it's very important fluoxetine paroxetine and Sertraline these are the first line drugs that are usually used to treat MDD along with cognitive behavioral therap therapy now if that doesn't work obviously the next line would be snris which are serotonin Nore uptake serotonin norepinephrine reuptake Inhibitors as nrisleafaxine Duloxetine and you can also use other drugs like Mirtazapine and bupropion to treat these types of disorders now snris Mirtazapine and bupropion are obviously second line drugs they're usually used to treat refractory or treatment resistant depression that's where they use and if all else fails and this is kind of barbaric in my personal opinion but if all else fails electroconvulsive therapy ECT can definitely be used in treatment resistant patients although I personally have never seen this nor have I heard of any physician who practices this anymore majority of the MDD conditions can be treated right here so so I would highly recommend you try to memorize this slide this is very important especially the names of the drugs for now in our upcoming videos we're going to discuss them in more detail and with that being said thank you so much for watching I hope this cleared up some of the questions you may have or I hope this helped you understand what happens in major depressive disorder think don't forget to like comment and subscribe and when you are done if you guys are interested we have posted our lectures in a podcast format on these streaming services so all the major streaming services have our podcast so just go there search mad medicine and you can listen to the USMLE step one podcast on there and with that being said thank you so much for watching and we'll see you guys back here real soon go ahead and continue on to the next video
Daily Dose of Psychology
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2022-10-06
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
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2,070
11,568
O8rYztg1Roc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O8rYztg1Roc
Real Footage of Unvaulted LTM (Season 4)
*happy kit noise* its still beautiful oi stand still and let me shoot~ HUH?! ROCKET JUMP HEAVY SNIPER TRICKSHOT doom does wait! *kit's demonic laugh* *kit going through shockwave catnip* on sale neow meow neow no. HUH??! *ocean is ocean* alright double barrel *mythical kit noise* NOOOOOOO ITS SHOCKWAVE HAVE SOME DRUM SHOTGUN *angry kit noise* eat this fat combat shotgun *brutus is heavy* *artist gamer photographer warden adventurous girl noise* *oh no kit has the junk rift* well guess i'll die KITkat sent Skye to the cretaceous period KITkat sent Skye to the cretaceous period??? 「MEOWLACTUS」THE DEVOURER OF FLOPPER ON SHOCKWAVE CATNIP h̶̡̢͚̞̱̘͖͗́̌̓̉͗̀̂͘̚͝͝͝ǔ̷̪͎̥͉͇̪̝͉͂̊͋͑̔͂̆̐͑́͠͝ *midas preparing his mini doomsday device* no trumpet WHAT 1v1?! LET ME PREDICT THE STORM CIRCLE FIRST ROCKET JUMP CHARGE SHOTGUN CRITICAL HIT! *midas is fish* oh no the kitten broke the loop *high kit noise* island begone oh no food getting away epic games please vault unvaulted *unvaulted is vaulted* *sad kit noise*
ISPuddy
UCIPPZiuQ8K4fN2-TnZRBKwA
2020-11-21
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
detection
en
158
1,007
BUYoMHUTAAw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BUYoMHUTAAw
140402 Watchful & Still \ \ Thanissaro Bhikkhu \ \ Short Dhamma Talk
your mind's been wandering around this morning give it a chance to settle in stay with a breath breathe in a way that feels nourishing to start out with and then let let the breath find its own Rhythm it feels right for the body course you have to keep on top of it make sure that you don't get into any unskillful breath patterns or patterns that feel good for a while and then are not so good after a while this is a problem with our minds when we're children we learn certain ways of acting and thinking and then as we become adults some of those things still hang on in the mind and yet they're no longer useful it's because we don't look carefully at them so this is what a lot of the meditation is is get putting yourself in a place where you can look carefully at what's going on in the body what's going on in the mind and see if any old habits are no longer useful and using some Ingenuity and figuring out new habits to to take their place so it requires that You Be watchful and well-nourished if you're not well-nourished you get tired of this process so sometimes it just requires being really really still with a breath it's this combination of being still and being watchful both these processes help each other along the more watchful you are about what's going on in the mind the easier it is to grow to grow still and the more Stillness you have then the easier is to watch the mind it's simply a matter of which side you're going to be leaning toward at any one time in the practice sometimes the emphasis is on the doing and sometimes it's just on the watching so have a sense of what you need at any one point things start getting confused okay just sit there and watch for a while and when you clearly see that something should be changed or something should be maintained okay go ahead and do that and these two processes help each other along and John Lee's analogies of a person walking you lean a little bit to the left and a little bit to the right but you need both feet in order to walk properly
Short Dhamma Talks by Thanissaro Bhikkhu
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2015-02-18
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
392
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4EnGQSH-QaE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4EnGQSH-QaE
What Is A Landing Page? #Shorts
if you want to attract email subscribers you have to offer something of real valued people in exchange for your email address now this valuable asset is called a lead magnet to capture your email address you need a landing page landing page or an opt-in page really verbalizes the value of the lead magnet it has one key focus to motivate and convince people that what you have to offer is of greater value than giving you their email address now this might sound silly but most people don't want even more marketers filling up their inbox we have to look on being invited into somebody's email inbox as an honor so our landing page our opt-in page needs to be highly focused and built specifically to convince people that what we are going to get far outweigh is the inconvenience of more emails now once we've convinced them of this we then need the ability to collect and transfer their email address back into our email platform and deliver the lead magnet to them so make sure you hit the subscribe button and give me a like to find out how we do this in my upcoming series on landing pages
Micheal O'Neill - Lead2Launch
UCcxieqOWNygkKooA75HRPQw
2022-03-07
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
203
1,095
Vnq7vt8RK7A
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vnq7vt8RK7A
(NSFW) Me and Chaos read another clopfic
all right first off I would like to stress that we are not becoming a brony Channel even though we reviewed like four Pony things in a row you know what next time let's review something Doctor Who related just just to prove that we're not talking to Brody Channel I don't think it will take that long to find some bad Doctor Who fan fiction at what we'll find the My Immortal of Doctor Who just watch all right so so after we made fun of our friends clubfig someone wanted us to make fun of their friends Club pick and if there's one thing we're good at at Dante rifson that's breaking up friendships so oh yeah usually we wouldn't take a request like this but we read the story and it's so ridiculous that we we both decided we have we have to do this we have to review this this has to be done yeah we only got like five paragraphs in but that was enough all right so let's get this thing started my name is Isaac and I live in a place called West Virginia didn't really need that in a place there I wonder if the author lives in West Virginia a place with a million people and 20 last names okay I'm not sure if that's like per person or in general but either way I think it's a hick joke probably there's more Rusty [ __ ] and mountains than people or houses I'm pretty sure something about that is racist but I'm I can't tell but not where I live I live in one of those developed neighborhoods in West Virginia it's a nice place and the people aren't too pretentious thank you for that but that doesn't mean I have any friends of course nor does it help the fact that I like ponies of course you know if we didn't know this was a clopic going in I wouldn't even connect that to MLP yeah I mean I really like ponies okay now it's getting weird some would call it sentimental love others a freakish Obsession I for one called it the family I wanted but I got [ __ ] over with these peoples yeah that makes weird that this is a clock pick and he considers them his family I guess and apparently like many Bronies I haven't a friend to call my own that is offensive on so many levels we are proving him wrong not on the web or in the Mortal plane I call home his vocabulary is completely unnecessary but I take comfort in my ponies knowing their inability to judge serves wonders for my self-esteem that probably comes from the fact that they're not you know real do I fantasize of ponies why yes I do but hold the laughter for a second I do not Clump in any sense of the word sure you don't while I will glance at the occasional rules 34 for a quick chuckle occasional rule 34. you know just chuckle the word chuckle I mean that's just getting to me here I refuse to clock I don't mind cloppers really I don't not that there's anything wrong of that ever since Seinfeld but there was no way in hell you ever catch me doing something like that ever why because of one simple fact they're too damn cute would I think of Fluttershy I think of the perfect pick-me-up and even better friend but not a [ __ ] buddy wait wait hold on what's a pick-me-up I mean are you is that what you're it's like it's like something a pick-me-up is something that like makes you feel better but I'm talking about the fact that so he fantasizes about them glances at the occasional rule 34 and doesn't mind clappers but he doesn't want us to call him a Clopper well he doesn't want to [ __ ] Fluttershy that's the only specific thing he said so far this guy is showing the closet you know isn't there another word we should do for this like in the stable or something you know I tried to get into dog house to catch on but it never did yeah keep going all right however if you and I disagree I can't say you're in the wrong I can I'm just trying to figure out what that sentence meant if if sleep mode damn it if others wish to do it then it is their own business and I hope it makes them truly happy but sometimes I really must learn to just conform and not be so different wait so does that mean that he's that he should just learn to be a Clapper or you know what this guy's just sounding more and more like Chris Chan the further we get oh God I was just looking for a boyfriend free girl it was a lonely gray day in West Virginia same as most in the dead of winter cold rainy and very icy the bus dropped me off at my stop alone again you know you don't need to keep reminding us that you're alone we got it the first time my house was up on the mountain the bad part being it was a bit of a hike to get up to it and with my large load of homework it was going to be quite the enjoyable experience I could tell thanks God love how you put everything in just the right way to make it impossible you calling me out bro yeah yeah that's God this is the point where we decided we had to review this he has direct communication with God and wait till you see what God is like all right I heard the voice deep and echoing off of some unknown wall in the distance the fourth wall I stopped in my tracks and went deer-eyed what does that even mean I'm sure that metaphor has something to do with him being in West Virginia okay wait is that me okay oh depends am I finally losing my mind or am I talking to God depends how [ __ ] do you want to get this dialogue is just fantastic we are going we're going to lose it every time God talks I mean wow you're not a very nice God are you read the Bible I don't care much for Sinners you know he has a point God is killed quite the few million Sinners then what are you doing with me if anyone go bother my Uncle Joe Bob and Boone Count country he's been huffing glue since 93. I am fairly certain huffing glue is not a sin well I've been very bored lately I hate being bored what the what gee God needs someone to talk to or something I'd be happy to help actually yes I'm gonna make your day pretty wacky from now on what why cause I can what the hell was that even oh god oh geez and with that the infernal Silence of everyday return my long walk still before me and I'm sure we'll get to hear it describe I shivered in fear here it goes something really messed up was gonna happen I didn't know when but it was definitely gonna be Beyond Reason given the circumstances well I'm pretty sure that since you just talked to God nothing else after that can really be Beyond reason I make the trick the same dull trees and brown foliage being apparent and Unchained that word is pronounced foliage shut up I looked about carefully on my journey trying to notice anything that could jump out and wreak havoc on me this guy's vocabulary is very interesting luckily I reached my front door unlocking it without a problem the house seemed innocuous enough every item of notice placed in its correct place nothing stupidly dangerous over here and nothing stupidly dangerous over there I deemed the situation nothing but a simple mental collapse on my part and trust me I've been waiting for that so have we so I simply fell into a comfortable chair in front of my computer and opened the lid I'm assuming it's a laptop to start my ever [ __ ] pursuit of ponies so you just called your own hobby [ __ ] however these supposed [ __ ] with me mentioned by God came about in a very creative way Twilight Sparkle spreading herself to me the image Frozen on my screen first made me want to laugh then vomit then scream that's an interesting that's an interesting series of events that's exactly Sonic's reaction to the pickle isn't it probably I didn't have a breakdown this was real all right so someone changes his desktop background to something obscene clearly this is the work of God he has nothing better to do than to change your screen apparently okay God very funny but can I have my computer back I need to search up more ponies how was that your business are you sassing me perhaps maybe have you relinquish my computer what what what does that even mean he has to what uh I'm trying to deliver these lines well but you're making this very hard writer wait hold on a second wait stupid writer early squish my computer about we try something else I'm pretty sure there's supposed to be a how in front of that all right will it involve me in my fixed computer yes but you must pass my challenge oh no go to your room the challenge will begin when you arrive I really wanted to resist with every fiber of my being accepting this challenge accepting spelled wrong it's the wrong accepting idiot thinking it would definitely spell my Doom well I don't know yeah now this is this is the part where you were incredibly confused go or else I will uh turn you into a transsexual oh [ __ ] wait pre-op or post-op somewhere in between oh [ __ ] not a question I was running to my room faster than all hell up the stairs first door on the right revealed my normal everyday room is he just gonna like give us the blueprints to his house now or something also why does it matter whether it was pre-op or post-op also why was he looking at ponies on a computer that wasn't in his room yeah knee-deep in clothes I need to pick up and Pony merchandise I'm wait that described in this room isn't it yes okay just wanted to make sure nothing seems different dangerous or rule 34 themed probably the worst scenario possible you know I am wondering just how often this guy can work in rule 34 into a sentence also the way that sentence was constructed seems weird so is the worst scenario possible that nothing seemed different or dangerous or the fact that or is it that different and dangerous was the worst scenario maybe he means that if nothing seemed different that means God must have something worse planned um okay right I'm not seeing anything are you still gonna turn me into a in an instant my world turned into black something striking me smartly in the back of the head it remained black for all of five seconds before I very began to remain let me start over it remained black for all of five seconds before I began to regain feeling in my body apparently God's pimp hand is so strong it knocks you out for five seconds oh yeah every joint feel like dry plaster in my limbs ew that's just such a weird metaphor shattering at the slightest movement ow my head's condition resembled that of an overused kickballs you didn't need that apostrophe s there or what's that metaphor okay hold on let's let's go ahead and there are two apostrophe s's he didn't need so I'm gonna go ahead and read it how he typed it my head is condition resemble that of an overused kickball is that's the possessive apostrophe you idiot that's not it I'm just continuing you are wrong the trees above me wouldn't cease they're disorienting spinning okay who is that is that's that's that's I think that's him this guy is not putting dialogue tags on anything so we can't tell who's talking I I think okay I think that's me yeah oh no no wait no that's God because the third line is blasphemy that must be God right yeah but it doesn't make sense if it was God whatever we'll just read it okay I'll just read it yeah there now I'm going back up to the plane of Oblivion Oblivion is overrated blasphemy a tree magically whipped me across the stomach in response apparently God likes the Elder Scrolls all right sorry I just can't deliver do much good delivery on a line like that ah it's just and opinion um I struggled for all of an hour before I finally climbed her to my feet unsteady and wounded damn if that if that hurt him that bad this guy's not gonna last long in the bedroom no he's not especially with a horse a forest why hack my computer with rule 34 then throw me in a forest you know actually the first part of that is a very good point why hack his computer with rule 34. why does God even need to hack a computer bewildered and injured I trudged through the forest blindly the entire thing resembled the forests in West Virginia of course since that's all the author knows about as well as a monkey could make in Fox wait bad analogy you get the idea no we don't I don't know what you're trying to convey right now it is a forest it is green that's it it seems to carry on forever no clearing or hint of differing light other than the Evening Sun set hopefully because otherwise that that's stupid this is incredible just my luck a deity I don't even believe in comes to me me of all people on the [ __ ] planet more gullible what never mind and then throws me in the middle of a damn forest with no hope of finding my way out before dark just my luck I swear the forests dragged on for hours Nightfall now moving in to obscure the landscape [ __ ] I bet if I had to climb to that top of that okay I'm sucking at this I bet if I had to climb to the top of that tree I could see if I could find any civilization okay okay do you blame me now for screwing that sentence up no also that plan would not work it just seemed more performance also the fact that it's night time now the barrel no Evening Sun so we don't know what the hell no no no no no no dragged on for hours Nightfall now moving in okay uh anyways I approached a tree covered in every direction with long thick branches low to the ground for easy access I easily pulled myself up to the halfway point of the tree looking out into a dense dark green what else were you expecting I spin in the tree to view another Direction viewing a clearing of some sort buildings dotting the pasture how is he seeing that if he only climbed up halfway up the tree I don't know I think his definition of halfway is a lot different than ours there's my shot just get in get a phone and leave oh he doesn't have a cell phone I take it of course how convenient of course not what's normally proved to be an easy task climbing the tree seemed to become an absolute chore on the down motion the branches seeming to dodge my feet and smacking my face as I turned my back on them the tree was indeed tall and at the 10 feet Mark a particularly vicious branch swatting my torso out of its Abode onto the rough dark ground okay so unless he pulled that Branch back before it smacked into him this tree is alive I don't think this guy is as good at climbing trees that's leading us to believe yeah man this guy's Gonna Last like 10 seconds in the bedroom with this for eight I mean just trees kicking his ass the visceral sound of my own leg bones snapping became prevalent wait so first off I'm pretty sure I'm pretty sure visceral is the wrong word to use there and second of all is he breaking his legs climbing down a tree he's breaking his legs on Twigs wow the darkness of the forest floor at night eating me up into Eternal obscurity this guy sucks at everything someone needs to steal this guy's thesaurus I mean holy crap it's almost as bad as dark kisses the Amber arms ah [ __ ] hell for a while I could do nothing but roll about the ground in bitter Agony seeing my right shin bent at a horrific horizontal angle what the f how how tough are these Twigs that just like stepping on them broke his leg oh oh but my cries seemed to me not but the black wall of night the god that swallowed up the forest reverberating around the place wait his cries are the black wall of nights both okay slowly but surely I could feel my head become light my pulse slowing down in accordance wait so he's bleeding out because he broke his leg or something I guess so rustling broke the disturbing night air a weak voice Illuminating my heart in its sweetness hey hey hey is any Pony out here hello the voice was soft and subtle so of course we're ruining it of course and equally my new to light ripping the Blackness apart this guy needs to be banned from using adjectives I think this guy just needs to be banned in general yes over here the strength to cry out was taken from within me nothing but absolute crippling pain left to drift away as well leaving me with a powerful sleepy feeling what you couldn't just say he was starting to lose Consciousness no that would be too simple soon enough the Blackness has done its job and swallowed me whole and it's Embrace what does that even mean I think I think he passed out but he might have been like eaten by an octopus I think from what we've seen so far the octopus is more likely oh God all right more and more more Photoshop boys hello hello are you awake as if I the scenario was changed it's hard you know I think we need to just stop right here what do you think do you think people watch us to to see things go smoothly I mean no I'm saying we could but we're not going to but we could and no one would blame us but we could edit out all the things that go wrong but if we did that we wanted to have a channel it wouldn't be as funny either all right the scenario was changed by Wayward blank whatever that means I found myself in the confines of a warm hospitable environment oh my God the soft voice of earlier speaking words like Silk and gospel commanding my attention stop my eyes oh my yeah my eyes Pride themselves open the light about me not hurting my eyes in the least but easing me into the subtle soft Morning Light That streamed in through the tiny window of the room oh God I cannot wait for this guy to start describing the sex apparently it's unvoluntary so I can't wait to see how that goes I don't know he's gonna be like there's not gonna be any dicks it's gonna be like the glowing shaft of love juices or something wait where were we even okay [ __ ] where did we leave Aloft um okay setting reminder okay the setting reminded me oddly enough of Fluttershy's home in the show My Little Pony oh what a shock that came completely out of nowhere the house being warm cozy and oh dear God no okay let's see where this is going yeah its eyes are open but it's not responding it's slowly up here to my left viewing the one thing I know that could possibly do this flutter shy do what take you in or talk to you so well he has no friends so Fluttershy is the old Fluttershy the pony of kindness the person that like in bed and represents kindness is the only being whatsoever that could befriend him I think that's what he means that's sad all right so like any logical insane person this is gonna be good I did the first thing that came to mind to ease the situation maybe not she jumped into the air beating her yellow wings to stay afloat quickly I searched about the room confirming it to be Fluttershy's house she coward in the upper corner of the room eyes wide and breathing heavily I think that okay now that was me that was just me [ __ ] with the narration wait I just oh his name's Isaac whatever I forgot his name wait what does his name have to do with any of this no because I was gonna nothing I just forgot his name jeez I never knew he had a name I just assumed he didn't have a name I'm just I'm in my head he doesn't have a name he's just that [ __ ] from West Virginia okay I'm not sure who's saying that that's um that's the [ __ ] what what is this what is something wrong stay out of my [ __ ] that Line's not in there I mean with this story you wouldn't know she flaps closer holding her Hooves to her mouth I simply stare at her because to be quaint that's that's not a phrase that is the end of the sentence I simply stare at her because to be quaint I'm sitting in a bed being taken care of by a brightly colored winged Pony nonetheless Fluttershy yes he's acting like this is something out of the ordinary I feel like this is something not in every fanfic ever all right all right your cue again yeah hold on Tamara what's wrong I can try and see if I can help you her voice yeah her voice was soft and calm contradicting my loud rough voice ah her eyes mixed with her voice too crazy just like I just imagined like her eyes becoming like liquid and like mixing with sound or something creating some sort of warming feeling in my chest it is called a boner her look was as if she was already using the stairs she was causing me to shrink back into my newfound bed ew it is your name Fluttershy how did you know she came back to the ground moving back away from me to grab to grab the knife voice is gonna kill me it's in quotes but it's supposed to be in his head okay don't be a brony in every other you got the acronym wrong dumbass that's human in equestrian not Equestria in India are you really surprised at this point not really uh let's see by the way this is still his line what the hell it's like a new block this guy does not know how to write dialogue uh you remind me a lot of uh Fluttershy there's another pony named Fluttershy yes um I'm gonna kill her okay they're obviously not a pony where did you come from your office to know some ponies outside of here her voice was beautiful I'm human a horrifically confused cracked her face foreign okay obviously never being aware of such a term okay do you want us to do a new voice no I just I just can't stop okay mentally Advanced Photoshop that's easier I've never heard of humans you from around here I wondered what to tell her I didn't want to pull the same stupid [ __ ] they do in the clock face well you're still pulling stupid [ __ ] but it's definitely not the same stupid [ __ ] and and you would know shut up I'm from um I'm trying them oh okay that wasn't the line that's something that's really Advanced sweater Sorry God how much lemon do you have to summon sorry no milk went down the wrong throats now I'm just gonna do mentally Advanced Photoshop now okay trottingham I haven't read anything in the past well about what what here we go again I haven't read anything in the past while about humans in trottingham oh oh God god get a dyslexia treatment or whatever I wouldn't think I'm not that young what okay I don't even know her ears perked up to the notion of learning about me and something this guy uh let's just keep going does not know how to write okay okay really how old are you what's your name where'd you learn to talk do you have other human friends she and closer or into closer with every word her nose almost pooping mine Boop um is that I I can't tell you that is his name that's him that's his okay um let me run a question Marathon here let me figure out how to say that oh let me run a question Marathon here 17. Isaac I learned to talk through the magic of magic and no I have no friends unless you can see I me and myself what what never mind I hope you guys are reading a lot weird like doing this because well that's going to be like impossible because I'm not doing I'm done with video editing no I mean they can like pull it up in a separate tab or something oh like anyone's gonna do that so they're better so you get a lot you really want them to be able to see all this grammar yes Abomination you would not believe it unless you saw it all right well check the video description there's a link to the story in there no friends how can you have no friends don't you get lonely at night she rubbed her Hooves together nervously what Flappy anonymously close to me okay maybe this is going where I thought it was I backed up in the bed away from her not wanting to solicit something terrible it's the lonely yes but you get used to it I guess oh how awful I can't imagine not having any Pony to care about me she touched a hoof to my chest rubbing my chest gently for Comfort uh I could only stare in blush at her strangely soft touch recoiling only in the slightest here we go here we go guys I appreciate it really but it's not a problem I've gotten used to the fact she only seemed to get somewhat closer her eyes sympathetic and warm with emotion okay now you need to read this in the shed voice anyway well I could be your friend her cheeks exploded with red showing her true fluttershyness she smiled she smiled with her tiny snoot what the sincerity hard not to fall in love with the [ __ ] is a snoot I don't know thanks that mean a lot to me Fluttershy you'd be so kind to take me into your home not knowing anything about me and treat me as your guest I've never come across anybody any Pony like you you know stop expecting you to read that as any bow Pony because that would have been funnier well that's how he writes it but you know I I will give these stories a shot I'll try to convey the mood if if the moment and I'll try to ruin them I was the irrelevant of kindness for a reason she landed on the ground with a soft clap of her Hooves she patted my chest softly through the warm soft covers can I get you anything some soup pillows maybe a little friend to cuddle up to resist it resist asking her [ __ ] learn how to put things in their correct places when it's supposed to be thought yeah we're just guessing Whose Line Is who at this point some some soup sounds just dandy Fluttershy but before you go how long am I gonna be in the bed until I'm finished with you the actual line is won't be too long I promise your leg isn't broken as bad as it looks maybe two days three tops sounds reasonable thank you Fluttershy nobody has nobody's in bed for two or three days it's usually like a week with a broken leg that Oh I thought you were gonna say it was longer and I was gonna make some joke about Fluttershy having some ulterior motive all right here we go oh God okay yeah you got it it's in a scary voice I'll make sure your soup isn't too hot don't want to burn your mouth now she walked off rather slowly okay here we go this is where it begins her hips seem to actually swing as she walked away her eyes met mine for a second with a blush burning her face no no no no no no no no no no no no no no why can't I ever have nice things what the [ __ ] do you consider what I squirmed in the bread trying to make a hasty escape and run for the hills before I do something I regret whoa this guy has no willpower I know you could just I bet like if he gets mugged they don't even have to use like a weapon they could just say let me have your money and he'd just be like fine take it don't hurt me I veered to the side feeling the stabbing pain in my leg before I can even move it well no [ __ ] you know what I haven't it got eaten by a tree I have a theory I bet Fluttershy rigged the tree so that he wouldn't be able to move and she would be able to do whatever she wanted with him explains everything it's all Fluttershy's fault a riggy enough no ripping off sorry that was me the author actually got that right this time ripping off the warm covers I exposed my own injury my leg wasn't bent at the visceral angle it was before again I'm pretty sure visceral isn't the right word to use there but the cast was thin and stained red and gray what the [ __ ] kind of blood does he have there was no hell I was gonna get out the door without her seeing me and I was feeling kind of tired from my arrival you know considering that you have a broken leg I mean I think you should just kind of take what's coming to you it's it's okay situation A being raped by Fluttershy in this scenario situation A is better than trying to leave and getting your leg broken even more it depends on what kind of stuff Fluttershy's into okay he's gonna get out the maze just bite the bullet and avoid that plot like the plague oh God he's actually using that okay for those of you who don't know in which case good plot is a euphemism for ass in Pony dumb yeah I'm not even sure how that came to be but it was a thing it started as a joke where um don't explain it all right that just all right all right all right I won't I won't I shift around in the bed pulling the covers back up to my neck uncomfortably wait a minute these sheets this Frame the window placement oh dear Lord help me what what okay um this is sort of like in the this that anime I watch Detective Conan where he figures out like someone like made this giant Ruby Goldberg machine to kill someone and how he connects the clues it's always like soda tomato fishing line that's it why didn't I see it before this is just like that you wonder why I don't want to get into Detective Conan you need to watch it surroundings confirmed it but my mind wanted to me to deny it she had placed me in her bed no shirt no jacket no pants wait what wait he never mentioned he was he was naked before hold on they're scrolling back up we're trying to we're trying to um she played as her mind games on him okay you know what he didn't mention it no he didn't remember he didn't mention was naked all right all right what the [ __ ] dude come on if she placed me in her bed where did she sleep out in the garden or where Angel makes her sleep or Worse where is she going sleep yeah thoughts race through my mind of the most concerning situations now I don't even think he I don't even think we need to ruin this the mood he ruins it himself with his terrible grammar Hey clubfic unfolding with me is the lead ew I can't have that happen well it's too late now I made a promise to myself right then and there to resist her advances to the death here comes the soup she Flaps in carrying a bowl of steamy red soup yes I think we I think we've been watching too much shed that move I hope you like tomato bisque I made it just for you she lands at my side placing the bowl on my stomach I reached to grab the bowl but she keeps it between her four Hooves and grasps the spoon in her teeth she looks up a spoonful of soup presented to me that's supposed to be open wide but she has something in her mouth okay now for once there's an excuse yeah just once just oh God one time this is gonna get into like I don't know a food feeding fetish or something I'm sure it exists she's gonna orgasm from the soup yes she says burying her teeth with the spoon approaching my face the soup has an aphrodisiac in it oh God oh my leg is broken not my back I guess he's wondering why she's feeding him oh you know that really disturbing story I told you about where Fluttershy like the formula or some [ __ ] like that to turn people into babies it's not you didn't tell me anything about that yeah I did you did it you were creeped out about it someone was I okay I was like I was browsing on TV Tropes and I found the weirdest [ __ ] ever and I sent you to link and you're like wow that's creepy and I guess you forgot okay anyway where where were we um oh my leg is broken on my back blah blah blah she presses on okay here we go Gotta Get the rape voice on her eyes half open with a sultry smile on her face the spoon poked through my lips leaving the delicious soup into my mouth innuendos something must have turned red on my face her eyelids only drooping more and her smile getting bigger you're right that sounded way more Asian than I meant it too what I guess I hum through the silverware as she takes it from my mouth she drops it in the bowl although he smells he spells it bowel licking her lips oh glad to see some pony enjoys my cooking please stop doing what you're doing oh now he has now he has second thoughts all right what do you mean she retracted into her normal nervousness blushing heavily um I seriously don't do ponies I appreciate it but oh wait no she's not doing sultry anymore so I can't do the shed voice I can but I'm not going to but what am I putting you off she struggled to get closer to my face almost knocking over the soup that would have been a burn for sure no no no it's just I don't like ponies like that oh my God how can you be sure have you ever done it with a pony before what no that's not entirely what I meant yes that is entirely what you meant then you can't know you haven't even tried it with Fluttershy of all people you know it would be you know Fluttershy would be the first Pony he comes into especially considering that that's the first Pony he mentions at the beginning of the story oh yeah foreshadowing just trust me Fluttershy I really don't want to be in this position he wants to 69. it's down taking the soup in her Hooves again soup it was barely over a whisper a shy sad defeated whisper [ __ ] that kind of response that drives a person insane with guilt grief grief I got that wrong I love Fluttershy honestly she was always the pony I felt the most for ew she wasn't my favorite Sweetie Belle takes that Accolade okay okay no I I don't even want to think about that she's like eight this better not be foreshadowing I swear there's a later chapter about him and Sweetie Bell picking up I'm gonna like [ __ ] kill someone ah all right oh oh look what the next line is okay the next line is Oh God shouldn't have mentioned that all right so you know what that just confirms us foreshadowing but she was the pony I had the most feelings for and why the [ __ ] did you reject her because you are obviously a Clopper I never spoke a word at school God this guy becomes weirder everywhere everything we'd learned about him and shook like a leaf in any social confrontation that chose to beat me upside the head because you get beaten on a regular basis or something you know like every other flourish I found out there that ever lived or ever will this guy just loves making fun of other people original yeah it was a real good soup she takes the spoon in her teeth again bringing another scoop to my lift lips lips lips yeah lips yeah can I please eat it she stuck the spoon in my mouth regardless of my protests don't want me to feed you Fluttershy shrinkage commenced ew what I really don't I really don't want to start anything I might regret okay I wasn't gonna fight you not fighting me but hear me out I appreciate the just I don't think that's the right word that's the one you look at for not the right word I can't say that enough but I don't like ponies she let out a tense breath from her nose looking down at the dish okay I understand I I guess humans aren't used to ponies I wonder if anyone's going to be of a hero when you're hungry that much probably not before I could say anything she rushed out of the room Fluttershy style feeling like a massive dick for literally doing [ __ ] nothing wow how many sex words I pick up the soup and take spoon Foods spoonfuls of the red delicious liquid a quick glance to the floor saw me a slight puddle what little droplets of clear liquid sitting on the floor and a wet spot on the verge of the sheets costumes it happened oh God that's gross it's good [ __ ] soup I say quietly reassuring myself to this whole facade was just a horrible mistake and three days later I could be sprinting away from here and rid myself of this Pony sexual tension not wanting to guess nonetheless clean it up the fluids on the floor I place the now empty soup bottle on the nightstand and rolled over to face away from it the soft sheets comforting warmth and agonizing leg pain lulled me in some sort of pseudo sleep and Fluttershy's gonna rape him everything became distorted in the room would not cease and it's spinning yeah I'm calling it right now she smokes the soup I called that too my head becoming more like a barbell at the end of my neck what yeah whatever whatever was in my soup wasn't having a good effect on my stamina and before I knew it I was asleep something hurts me as my brain retardedly shut down the fact that I still had a possibly human obsessed Fluttershy in the house and I was just going to sleep right in her house you know he's lucky that Lyra didn't find him first good God there's probably you know I bet that happens later you know probably basically serving myself up on a little silver platter for her weird Pony fantasies you know I never I've never quite heard that used to describe Fluttershy before I told her I didn't like ponies like that so based on Fluttershy friend logic she can't try something yes but this is a clock fix so characters are going to act out of here and she's gonna come in the room like I don't know in latex and a whip or something in a way this is progressing unsure I drift into my surely overpowering sleep okay this here is really long so I'm not going to read it like I'm supposed to I'm just gonna read it really fast and if you can't understand it good Angel bunny please just keep out of mommy's room for just the night Mommy has to do something private Angel get in your bed I mean if you want to sorry to yell please just make this easy on Mommy thank you sweetie foreign would still be here to take care of you in the morning good night angel a soft voice stirred me in my sleep probably just Mom trying to get the dog to sleep again now he's Delirious now great what was in that soup then the soft flapping sound approaches increasing slightly in volume steadily okay now I don't have anything in my house that flaps all my sleeping pills causing those side effects again you take sleeping pills and they cause what the hell got a sleeping pillow taking you know this is all drug High probably that explains all of this he just took PCP or some [ __ ] like that okay now I don't oh blah blah blah okay redette something stirred the covers displacing the warm flying on me before my next thoughts could lazily plop into my head something warm and soft swarmed against me moving up my legs torso and then stopping at my chest too soft fuzz gently hugged against my neck what silky strands of what seemed like hair worked on do my arm slight drafts of warm air pushed against my neck in what seemed like breaths fuzzy something's getting a grip around my arms and meeting on my back he's bigger than he seems warmer too I'm awake with that a terrific screaming noise rip the quiet air wide open scaring the absolute [ __ ] out of me and sending Fluttershy and a flapping frenzy in midair oh my gosh sorry sorry sorry she's stuttered as I got my bearings in the almost pitch black room the air from her wings cooling my face no she must not be that far in midair if he can like feel yeah okay I'm so sorry I thought you would get cold and the couch wasn't very comfortable sleep on and I really think you're well now Fluttershy let's just calm down here but you said you didn't like ponies like that and I thought if I could just wake up really early and you're really soft and warm oh shy don't worry about it okay if we just drop it now promise to never bring it up again and I forgive you don't tear yourself up I'll I'll sleep on the couch is that uncomfortable yeah this guy has a lot more willpower than I thought he would I'll watch it'll Fade with like in the next paragraph yeah probably but that's just it Isaac I need to she's in heat I'm calling it right now she's in heat she trailed off of an inaudible sentence forming in the air Fluttershy is there something we need to talk about she swarmed about in the air uncomfortably rubbing her Hooves together maybe we should talk about it over some midnight snacks and I need to readjust the mood or something like that she gathered some of her animal friends beavers in particular to help carry me out into the living room the Beavers nicely seated me in a chair according to Fluttershy's order while she brought out some small scones and some milk in a glass she spiked everything in that sense I I just I just can't believe what I'm reading I know both items were set gently before me as she took her own seat not looking anywhere near me Isaac okay so I guess if you're not willing to let this go you might as well explain yourself I've barely been here 24 hours and it seems you want to have intimate relations with me shuffled around nervously signaling the animals to hurry off I really do be honest now why is this well when I brought you into the house yesterday you were pretty badly hurt you're just so helpless and vulnerable I feel terrible about what I did oh she did rig the tree how you saved my life Fluttershy if anything I owe you with that's the thing when you were unconscious huh hi come on now no one ever got hurt from telling the truth yes they did I placed a reassuring hand on her shoulder a blush forming on her cheeks hey took advantage of you these don't hate me please I'm so sorry took advantage of me what do you mean so wait she bit her lips shuffling in her seat wait okay let's save her let's save her questions until after the next paragraph okay I put your thing in my mouth all right I'm immediately something in the back of my head started screaming and Terror and disgust wanting to throw out any humanity and just get out of here but he was he what is he referring to himself in the third person I guess he is but he was far overshadowed by my sympathetic NPR side I don't know what that stands for um it's I think it's some radio program neurotic People's Republic national public Republicans yes I don't know go to her comfort her in her time of need I hate both these guys that that's a line in the story not us even though that's what we're thinking too um oh okay okay that's Isaac's line it's so hard to figure this out that's that's not so bad you know for somebody who's not a clobber it seems to be taking this pretty well I mean at least he told me right well um that's not all I did say what now what hey man held it in there for a bit longer than I should have this is a that's his thoughts okay Lee why aren't you leaving wait what are you doing I'm not angry Fluttershy it's only natural to have these arches no it's not for some reason for some reason when you've read that line it reminded me of the It's Not Easy Being Cheesy from the Cheetos commercials never heard them in my life but maybe they'd be best spent on a nice stallion you know one of your own species this is his thoughts again oh okay no comforting leads to [ __ ] don't you read Club fix believe me when I say I can't I really can't be bothered by that considering what you've done for me I don't know raping is kind of bigger than forget it she cracked a tiny smile putting a hoof to my hand and staring into my eyes with her half-closed ones no Pony has ever tried to comfort me like that or has ever thanked me this much Fluttershy there's no need to worry you need to stop we all right now Isaac we all get urges and if things like this come up once in a while well it's still not a good idea but if we can atone for it I I guess it's not valid any longer she stared intently in my eyes smiling happily and breathing gently I attempted to pull my hand away but pressure from her hoof almost nailed it in place yeah I think I'm in love with you Isaac [ __ ] what you she said softly barely enough to hit my ears her hoof rubbed my hand as the other came up over the table to Chuck touch my cheek how are they sitting honestly I was too stunned to try to evade or hoofs advances I think Fluttershy has to be sitting like Lyra does in order for this to happen or she's floating or both what I think I love you love has been like a marriage or that weird love where all they do is run what the [ __ ] do you think it is fine I can go either way God she hovered in her position for a second my uh wide my wide eyes deer in the headlight stairs still meeting her I'm gonna [ __ ] your brain downstairs wow all right that's there I have no response to that honestly that's actually a line in the story not well to be fair it does describe the situation right now here we go suddenly she climbed onto the table with all four legs and looked down on me her eyes pleading with all their fluttershyness her nose officially booped mine in the most uncomfortably Pony related moments of my life oh that's you please just once tonight I promise to never bring it up again or tiny pony it'll be our little secret please she breathed heavily in fear the close contact of our noses is becoming Tighter and Tighter until I couldn't even begin to breathe through my nose oh so that's her plan she's gonna suffocate him until he not gets knocked out again and then do him several conflicts tore through me I had no intention of coming into her home and acting like an ass but at the same time I have my morals God damn it whatever demon possessed me possessed me at the time drove me to this conclusion regret pervading my thoughts before I could even say it you know God is a dick just once [ __ ] I think I was whatever just once all right but just once tonight for you you know he's laid it on a bit too thick for someone who doesn't want to run her yeah her blush spread to her nose that sounds very uncomfortable The Burning Heart appendage taking the Leer to one side to make room for her next action what she came in for a kiss not a tongue filled kiss but a simply a nervous timid Pleasant kiss I defiantly was not expecting such but when trying to recoil her arms imprisoned my head in a death grip and then she broke his neck she moaned into my mouth the vibrations running down my neck and jaw what as I swarmed under the odd sensation what I think she's vomiting into her mouth her little butter colored body pushed my chair back I thought he was on the couch seating her rump in my lap my hands being vacated from the table see I told you when he started subscribing to sex it's gonna be happening I let them float into air as her administrations is that even a word her mouth gnomed on my lips you know he so apparently being into archaic English and [ __ ] here he's sitting on the table and she's sitting on him and he just kind of has his hands hovering around her just kind of up there somewhere I don't know he has his hands up like she has a gun pointed out the intensity of the kiss uh administrations okay a mouth gnomed okay um okay the intensity of the kiss picking up as her tongue plunged into my mouth I think that word is supposed to be named a Cascade of our own saliva rushing into my mouth you know P you know when you're when you're about to sell when you're about to vomit you start salivating more so I think you were right in that she's about like to vomit okay this next part oh God The Taste does nothing like they'd have you to believe in those fix if anything it tastes kind of bad if you're not really into it like a watery makes a spit it tastes like spit no [ __ ] you know tanks like spit I was right we don't even need to ruin the mood he does it for us for Fluttershy however this wasn't enough she pulled her head back licking my lips over her own spittle you know if anybody was ever into this that would be a boner killer right there uh also who the [ __ ] line is that I don't know thank you I promise I would disappoint I don't I don't even know I think that's God probably not my concern I don't know I guess that's Isaac my wide-eyed look didn't see Scott it causing her to giggle a little my arms are getting tired floating in midair out of complete surprise his arms have been admitted of her back oh that's like yeah yeah I'm sorry I can barely keep up character in The narration when this shit's going on if I know I'm going to [ __ ] her might as well put some effort into it okay yeah this guy's a club he has a point though her wings twitched under my hands slowly opening up and pushing against my hands wait so he put his hands on her back or her wings oh it's like us oh you know about Pegasus wings don't you wait what just keep touching them it feels amazing she pressed her forehead to mine sign contentally as her wings dragged my hands upward with them no erection yet thank God something wet and hot dribbled fluid on my exposed thighs soaking the lower part of my underwear ew oh that's her are you sure I'm pretty sure I have no idea you just don't want to read that line like that do you no good I can't do anything excited I'm sorry I'm going into like Yoda territory right now a lump in my throat wanted to jump out and induce vomit adorable soft head rubbed against my face in some sort of repressed passion as as she moved her arms to my neck and rubbed her Fluttershy Parts he is the most conflicted Clopper ever you know nothing breaks the mood like Fluttershy Parts on my naked thigh um okay yeah you read that I don't care it's gonna be funny if you read it you're getting me really high sorry I can't do the voice anymore it's too much she pressed her lips into mine once again her tongue played with my relatively inactive one in our mouth I can't I can't even I can't even keep up the rape voice it's too much of a turn off draw drool seeped out from between our lips Fluttershy giggling girlishly in my mouth it just sounds so awkward my hands went back down to her wings base simply resting on them with such movement and contact she squeaked into my mouth biting a little on my lip um I I okay I guess that's her I am trying to prepare myself here you go on I can just read some of our lines if you want please rub my wings your hooves are amazing oh God her marehood leaked more fluids onto my leg some dripping onto the floor with a tiny plap ew okay the animals were now in hiding some peeking another's now screwing away into little holes about the house I guess this happens often then not to mention he uses the wrong peaking so that kind of implies some of the animals might be jacking off hands gripped her ring sorry it started over my hands gripped her wings reluctantly giving them a very slight squeeze she squealed in appreciation happily dumping more of her juice onto my good underwear and thigh God like good underwear to die oh God should we take this into the bedroom she has distilled free tone her marehead mayor Hood twitching against my thigh disgustingly God make up your mind you want us to be born or what I wanted only to prolong this ew or if available drop the idea entirely you know those are completely opposed but I suck at being confrontational at least a Fluttershy you just suck it in general uh why not she's squeed happily tightening her grip around my neck carry me her hind legs twitched and kicked in excitement what the [ __ ] is she having a seizure or something I should that cause an orgasm her wings flapping at the tips my hand slowly slowly moved down to her rear intertwining my fingers to make her a little seat quickly she lifted herself up and sat back down into my hands the soft warm flesh molding to the shape of my pants what wow she must be fat her plot was surprisingly bigger than it oh God yes that is line and just just to confirm that I'll read it in the right place her plot was surprisingly bigger than it seemed not chubby by any means but healthier than say Rainbow Dash or Applejack how he would know this is entirely Beyond me I guess it only served the logic she's a vet not a why am I putting so much thought into this you are a conflicted Clopper that's why I stood up on one leg painfully limping back to the room shakily oh my forgot about your leg I got so into the moment and let me get the Believers on purpose you know you know alone it's just that that is enough of a turn off let alone the rest of this no no it's fine I can I can try to carry you three yards to the bed I took the pain as punishment for doing this somewhat feeling like I paid for my foolishness could have just told her no could have just left could have just gone to church and not piss off God this is the first time God's been mentioned in like pages but my thoughts were interrupted by for her flopping into the bed nervously patting the area next to her that's you oh I zoned out for a second um lay down on your back don't want to hurt that leg now no Isaac think about it you have a mom stop getting in a bed what what's that have to do with anything I crawl over the footboard dragging my stiff leg over it and taking position next to just she stares at my almost naked body rubbing it with a surprisingly soft hoof I'm not fat nor am I well built if anything I'm kind of a stick my arms are underdeveloped compared to my large track legs not very attractive to humans all right did you eat well where you came from your ribs are showing Through Your Skin no I I'm just built like that hahaha you've got a pretty body Isaac she trailed off looking at my underwear her ears perking up I don't know what that is she touched a hoof to my crotch my back stiffening abruptly oh my are you that sensitive well maybe I don't club or masturbate at all oh yeah right yeah sure you don't just look at the occasional rule 34 for a laugh really I think I'd go crazy if I didn't go crazy if I didn't pleasure myself at least once a month so that means you've got a lot in store for me oh my God I don't even want to think about how this guy's how this guy would write Rainbow Dash or anything I mean how the ones people how's the ones who actually do have any any Canon abilities and be rapists I mean damn well Fluttershy does have a massive amount of porn in her basement probably holding back my disgust you know he just has those like holding back my disgusting there and then he just totally like seduces her I know one of my hands idiotically finds her plot with a light squeeze I swear to God he is he just needs to accept what he is that would make the rest of this so much easier to get through that's your line no that's yours are you sure oh yeah I didn't know it no it's not it's your line it's all all right it's all yours if you want it oh I intend to really make this one time count I haven't done this in a while oh God she gripped the waistband in her teeth skillfully pulling it down just enough to update iTunes yeah guess what just happened skillfully pulling it down just enough to not be within her line of activity you know how does she oh God how does she pull it down skillfully if like ponies don't wear underwear she's done this before Oh God she struck a deal of God she's the Lyra of this [ __ ] story obviously that isn't even Up For Debate her eyes bulged at the appearance of my limp member her mouth visibly watering it's yeah man the amount of turn offs in this you couldn't still live we'll have to fix that excuse me chaos just left chaos has left the room but luckily there's a ton of narration left so I'll read that she pressed her nose against the shaft taking the scent as well as licking it rather gently nope can't do it immediately I wanted to pull her off and make it stop not wanting to be blown by a horse but as much as I hate to admit Photoshop has a really soft tongue chaos is currently very frustrated outside the room her movements continued her nose pressed against the hardening shaft of her tongue lovingly licking my length as her head moved up and down to cover the whole thing all right I'm back they didn't miss any of it thanks to me sadly my boner overpowered any reason or logic as it normally does what does he do this often well how would he know if he doesn't masturbate or cloth much too her content my member twitched under her nose pushing against her face oh God that next line I am done with the flutter [ __ ] voice what are you gonna do now just do you want me to read her a little bit I'm just gonna do it whatever voice I got it I've got it this is perfect um that didn't take long it's just delicious as the first the first time let me tell you it takes a lot to make chaos get out and throw boys her voice was becoming lowering toad the darkness obscuring most of her face her tail flickered about the very end brushing up against my nose wait so is her ass in his face I guess it is the bass curled around my wrist what is even going on bullying slightly towards her dripping marehood I reached over with a free hand hand number five to turn on the lamp okay if I was gonna do this I was at least gonna try to do it well and for that I needed light why what the amber light illuminated a small room her mayor Hood shining in the thin light look what you see her her round cheeks Ripple that she shivered in happiness hair Sonic shoes her flank hole and mayor Hood revealed to me with no sense of shame or moderation well no dog I I couldn't in any sense verbally Express yes because he totally isn't a Clapper so I simply lied through a nod oh God Fluttershy foreplay this is this is this is something what happened why don't I bring it over there for you I imagine one the son of June Rose two I imagine that's a lot like this she stood up into bed straddling my face with her hind legs some of her juices dripped from her onto my face I resisted wiping them off because that would be sanitary this next line is the best line so far oh God and I oh I have to start reading the foreplay now God damn it all right you ready for some Fluttershy no I grumbled under my breath she shook her Applause I would just say ass for crepe's sake slightly in the air her legs shaking in anticipation good God he hasn't even done anything yet my face turning a putrid shade of green okay here's the obligatory this is making me sick claws I not again opening my mouth with a mock smile she sat on my face slowly shaking and shifting slightly to work my deeper in what all my air was almost entirely cut off the only air coming from between her folds reeking of her area you know there is no way anyone could get off to this that night that next paragraph I know I am I give thumbs up just just picturing this pain on her face she hasn't responsible and he's give me the thumbs up oh my God it got in my mouth that's coming up I man up and stick out my tongue finding her blistering Marathon ew oh my God I got in my mouth that is that is without a doubt a DOT move reference dot mauve reference that's not yes it is I'll I'll prove it to you later okay all right gotta get out the special voice for this her juices percolated down into my mouth The Taste actually not bad you are a Clopper not good sir not like candy but sweet and salty ew using this as some small motivation I drove on licking between her cheeks she resumed her nuzzle and lick treatment of my member wait oh she I thought she was sitting on oh my God they are really they are I think this is like 69 but I'm not entirely sure okay oh okay uh where uh um where was a humming and giggling okay now I'm just gonna start from the beginning of the sentence she resumed her muzzle and lick treatment of my member humming and giggling at my licks eventually she wrapped the head of it in her tongue and pulled it into her mouth her soft warm wet mouth sucked on it lovingly moaning around it Harmony sent vibrations of sick pleasure down my spine causing me to shudder under her suffocating plot her tail flicked about wildly her wings beating cool hair about the place she shivered and fluctu fluctuated from my efforts per sucking incrementally becoming stronger and stronger my tongue was getting incredibly absorbed having to work between her cheeks and folds to really Couture she popped me out of her mouth looking back at me well that was sudden okay three things one one air wings are flapping so there she's sitting on him there's 69ing and she's flying that's physically impossible two why doesn't he just like imagine she's a human or something like that if this like disgusts him so much you know as I said before like they say in Russia if you're being raped just trying to lie back and enjoy it and it's three just know okay that that's your line you have to read this please I want you inside of me she rips herself from my mouth the fresh air well appreciated as I Gaston clawed for it okay the happiness did not last long however her quick turn about positioning her plot over my hip um oh no that's someone maybe her she came down and rubbed her wetness over my member moaning and licking my neck in hot sweat passion her lips bucked against mine squeezing our genitals together wow I'm surprised he actually used like a normal word for that yeah in this tight Embrace she wouldn't break her hips came up giving me room to put it in God damn how much longer oh oh okay it's actually it's not that much longer it's almost done yay awesome don't be shy I'm ready and that's the problem I muttered under my breath reluctant reluctantly grabbing myself and standing it up to touch her opening the feeling of my member on her marriage immediately brought some sort of humanity to me realizing in a literal sense how [ __ ] dumb this was so is he just like describing me this now I don't know even if I wanted to stop she wouldn't have had it she quickly crushed my hips with her burying me in her she squealed in happiness nuzzling my chest still smaller than a stallion seriously knowingness I want to off myself she began to bounce up and down on me almost feeling nothing down there because of the absurdity of the moment Fluttershy however seemed to be having a ball of her own accord moaning and smiling the whole way down what so bad was my need to stop it could only match the stabbing pain in my leg thank you nothing except the waste was getting anything but a wiggle while Fluttershy had herself a hoot so is he like not didn't join us I don't know all right here we go you're lying again I wasn't doing anything but whatever it's almost over she came down particularly hard to start in time feeling like my leg was shuttering again while she happily squealed and the throes of love making her juices squirting out from between our contact yeah oh [ __ ] oh that's definitely sweet yeah Celestia I heard that Celestia approves she collapsed onto me sign happily and drooling onto my chest she held herself in place keeping me inside as I tried oh so hard to change the fact you're amazing Isaac I love you she kissed my neck sweetly laying the side of her head on the spot what a second oh someone might be at the door okay as you can understand we're a bit paranoid about someone hearing this yeah okay Sheila kissed it's my next weekly laying the side of her head on the spot I myself was recovering from mental trauma while she pulled the covers over us the wet spot's impossible to Taj her wings splayed out and embraced me with her arms as she cooled to herself and drifted off to sleep when I was finally able to accept wrong except by the way the fact I was able that I was going to hell and just flourish alive despite that God brought you here I realized her hold on me was tight enough to probably affixiate a small child oh God I squirmed around trying to break free God I really don't want to see how this guy writes like Rainbow Dash or something or this is going to be horrible you know nowhere in these past you care paragraphs did I mention that he orgasms so yeah it still has a boner throughout all this but the amount it would take to break free would be enough to wake her we needed any chance of my Escape would be eradicated completely wait it out my leg will hear when to heal in two days maybe I can make it far enough in one terrible ideas are terrible ideas but after what I had gone through it seemed like an easy task to Simply undertake that that no no grammar no with a shattered mind and a set plan I drifted off to an unsteady sleep polo size warm breath and body lowly me like a baby in a cradle he's done authors know my friend Jack and I jack is the guy that requested this run it what the [ __ ] Jack come on my friend Jack and I tossed this idea around for some time before actually working on it was fun coming up but what happens and I have to say there's going to be more coming soon [ __ ] you this was the Horizon this is this is actually one of the most ridiculous things I've read I'm not saying a lot the uh the thesaurus abuse at the beginning I'm I'm actually surprised that the word that we didn't start getting like 18 syllable words when they were having sex yeah seriously I mean the languages became simpler when they had sex not to mention this guy this character is so a Clopper and it's so you I mean all it's West Virginia [ __ ] I mean no one mentions a state that much unless they're from it unless you're us and you just like to troll people call away Colorado now you now you can narrow it down we are somewhere that isn't Colorado anyway um if you somehow made it through all of this good God I feel sorry for you seriously uh yeah I hope you somehow enjoyed any of it all right all right next stop next time we're reviewing a doctor who thing I'll find something yeah yeah all right bye
TanteiSakana
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2013-08-25
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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12,501
64,392
UDtWm30fIZQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UDtWm30fIZQ
Giovanni Sordo 2016 Barolo Crus Bracket 3 The Bold Parussi, Perno & Gabutti
[Applause] [Music] like I said welcome back to the last bracket of the eight crews of Sordo for 2016 we decided to move Peru C over with Pernod and good booty singing it sat in the inner sort of the cap of being in the bold and takes them together again so interesting contrast and comparison for us to that so we talked a little bit about Brucie before being in custody only for letter to the north of the village and and close to the border with Sarah long ago we have two other communes two other wines here so her no come on Forte puno from lower mon forte so so it's one of its one of those three large crew of mole foot which is bushier in the north and then Genest row the great gene estra and Pernod all 3 identifiably more fort but all all three with different characteristics the Pernod is well as a wine like given the size of the the commune and you know that dozen or so people that produce one there's almost none seen in Australia yeah and it is you know it is one of the great wines of Barolo you know I'm not saying it's top ten it might be eleven and a half you know if such as it's just so fascinating and I've got to say having tasted these seven or eight times now since this set arrived it's probably my favorite wine at the moment because of just it's just in return for a pretty ferocious tenon regime and that's Montfort you know it's at their hard going for for the novices but that's but that's the same tenon is what some people want more of but it you know it can be hard going and it it suggests to a lot of people that the wines are balanced but it's not it that you never get us how you hardly get a scene with small fort tenon comes with the territory but what it gives you in in as a as a reward is definitely the most works a complex but the most complexities bit like shadow nerf tip up you can almost guarantee they have 12 to 14 as many aromatics as they've got components mole fort has out of Nebbiolo can give you somewhere around 10 11 12 you know aromatics cigar box for example or sandalwood you know the the the the perfume would underlie of a great great perfume it has a mint Foley sort of character it's in this case it's it's it's smells like a herb they call balsamico catmint I suppose or a sage cap mint is something that we'd relate to and n month four is the only one that usually shows that menthol you see occasionally in other wines but yes it has lieutenant but he's very good tenor and it's layered it's almost got a nuttiness to their tenant then it eats just immediately reminded me of the 2010 reserve a buck right 10 and because right tenants but when you get that extra half a dozen years of age on them thanks often out a little bit and the flavors meld build a little bit of extra generosity comes it's already generous yeah this is nice and it they come together so beautifully this the extra secondaries layer in its that's where I see that one going what that 2010 reserver / no reserve oh it's it's it's looking very good yeah this yeah exactly a great warrant expands on its base yeah over time and really good wines get shown up by their age they contract you know they're there this will no doubt you know just just keep expanding for a number of years sure you know I thought you'd like it so your booty's in an interesting one also capilano sueño kabuki in Serralunga so that's a that's a pretty big name and yeah it's the standard of the being young is that a lot of people haven't heard of kabuki before but no Jesus jeez it's a vignette it has it has life and elegance to it and and this this one this year this year has extra dimension of that those smoky graphite II that she'll is almost glassy this year and it tells me it's a class a year of almost endless depth I think this will be many people will regard this is the best wine of the lineup over time I just I've seen it a few times everything about it its its fascination its it's proven layers the power in the mouth but the elegance and the length of flavor will mark it as potentially a great one of the vintage and that's I'm careful about using that word greatness yeah because and about wines that I'm associated with just go easy but I think this one might be a great yep yep well information that wine what I'm saying here is definition beautiful definition the line and length beautiful flowers there's a fifth occasion in there and they're Tenon's over the Tenon's of montfort which which which are a bit more robust yeah well thank I mean where else could this come from this is Sarah longer and it's white people it's what people are paying big money over there for the acreage and that's why a lot of people this is their foremost community you know whether it's Vinny Arianda or charity or bloomin lots of eat or or francha you know it is or jackals as a rakia called you know have a letter the great of the great wines when you look at the maps in the definition that has been given to the crews in Sri Lanka Sarah longer along with Castle you and Fletcher have to be the two most defined in terms of allocation to individual crews yeah I think of work that's been put into there there's been put into it for a reason there - certainly - great communes this year's good booty is definitely something special yeah it is it has everything he has a it is a very very complete line yeah I am yes porcini mushroom or base stock smoke a good cigar there's a bit of a little little bit of cherry cola say no say it's the layering the complexity of that wine still the incredible core of fruit there's so much energies that wants so much lovely lovely perfume it's not ponderous it's it's it's elegant it's not is super refined beautiful beautiful one which means we have to have a quick scratch st of accuracy in Sandwich I think it's the basket of flowers see it it echoes the previous bracket you know the basket of flowers probably a little fresher than fresher flowers and the other wines that might be the essential difference you can actually smell new fresh fresh things about it the fruitiness and flowers but the tenants the tenants by comparison are wimpy compared to the the the the the chalky green Twiggy Tenon's of the Montfort and the Pernod and the what I call black tea Tenon's yeah lapsang souchong or some woman think the black tea Tenon's well I think if I was to sum up everything that we're saying today we have seen what I was expecting to see I was hoping to see it based on what I've seen from 2060 barbaresco 2016 lani nebulos and sort of knowledge of where that vintage it's gone and it's come through in spades in this in this in this year with we we've got that extra bit of energy we've got that extra length of and depth of flavor and aroma but that freshness and that environments and that energy and there's all this sense it's that extra bit of definition in the aromas the flavors and the tannins that adds a degree of sophistication this is undoubtedly a great set of wine and one I think if we do that exercise and even if if we managed it up once every company comes in and have a look at the bracket you get so much from it yeah it's a wonderful one has it Alliance yes I made when I tasted these on my own I did make more notes I've noticed on I made about a as much as a page more notes and I normally do yeah you know there's Auto suggestion that I've convinced myself cause it's 16 but no doubt just the things you need to write about them to you need to talk about it tells you that you've got a you've got a high percentage that's every bit there is there is a very very special yeah that's mine so look I hope you enjoyed our little exploration of Barolo first batch of 2016 through this through the system bloody wonderful wines we do have élisa élisa yeah elisa sorted all the young dynamo partner of joe little sorted or coming back to the markets I think Australia has some attractions you know it's it's a fun it's a fun place and you know people people have fun as they're they're talking about at talking about serious wine so she reckons that's not a bad combination yes it's coming back in May and so we can organize a bunch of dinner this day will hopefully be able to make it to a couple of them more spend some time with her we'll look through 16s maybe a couple of Bank vintages and you'll have an opportunity to see them so great to see these thanks for if writing these over for us to have a look at so yep shout out if you got any questions inquiries and we'll be happy to happy to help you out David thanks so much again my goodness again someday yeah an excellent experience thanks man alrighty Beauty we'll see you next time guys
Wine Decoded
UCFPUmhwagkZBO51LzsCu7jw
2020-03-04
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
1,675
8,638
pCFg3k-uNT4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCFg3k-uNT4
#076 Developing Rural Flourishing Social Enterprise (Norris & Telfer)
left okay so i can record eh which is a good thing it starts recording okay but rather it's just letting you know that you've recorded it um and and our normal process for those of you who this is your first meeting we have a number of people who have not attended uh before either in person or online is we have an online attendance list which nicole has been gathering from the award by the skype via the chat uh so if you haven't yet put in your name and your affiliation please do so now and she will then update the wiki page for this meeting and she'll share again the link to that wiki page in the chat for a few minutes unfortunately zoom does not share the chat with new people when they join so you know repeat some information um so we do that's how we do attendance so we don't spend time introducing each other hopefully if you want to find out about each other you can go to the linkedin group and look each other up to get background information but we do encourage you to talk to each other offline and between meetings and many of us are engaged with members on various projects and uh i'll mention a couple of those in the introductory presentation at the moment um then what will happen is i will have a few slides to kind of introduce the group and to set the scene in general terms then i hand over to our speaker this month uh this month it's uh some uh members who are based out of georgian college which is north of toronto and they will introduce themselves and present their uh very interesting work on flourishing uh and how they're bringing that concept which relates very strongly to smart sustainability uh into the world uh and they will let us know how they should handle questions uh as we go through and then uh at the end i'll have a few closing remarks so we'll we we do wrap up on time at six o'clock so we just need a couple of minutes at the end uh we need to hold back for that final closing uh and for those of you who are in the room and uh those of you who might be in the room in the future if you have a habit to go for a beer or drinks uh afterwards uh or even dinner um and to continue the discussions for those of you those of you who are here physically and obviously if any of you are there as groups online from various places around the world uh you feel free to follow this pattern wherever you are in the world okay so with those remarks i think i shall i shall now start so uh nicole would you like to um uh start the recording or you were recording you are recording okay uh so welcome everybody uh to the 76th monthly meeting of the strong sustainable business model group the start of our sixth year sunrise or is it seventh seventh year yes 2012 we started uh and um we have an exciting lineup of speakers already scheduled for the first few months of this year and some space later this year so if you're interested in speaking don't be shy of contact uh community animator nicole norris who is also represented this month um to let them know what your ideas are so we are recording this meeting uh if you don't we should be recorded i'm afraid so i have a few words of introduction uh and then i'm going to hand over from georgia college so i this is the strong sustainable business model group and we're here as a group to explore how to enable entrepreneurs and savage businesses to realize enterprise that choose flourishing as their goal and that's the work we've been doing since 2012 and it's a bunch of places you can find us in online on the screen right now this presentation by the way will be shared along with the presentation from the speakers and the recording of the presentation today in our google drive and that link will be shared by the linkedin group after this presentation is over so uh as many of you know here in canada we had a future reconciliation process now uh to uh deal with the reality of that situation between the people who settled canada more recently and those who have been here for much longer and uh part of that the recommendations from that through the reconciliation process was that we should acknowledge the land on which we are gathered here today from a canadian perspective and obviously we're a global community we have people here from uh at least uh two continents and possibly three uh today and so we've generalized that acknowledgement uh to be applicable to a global community such as so we'd like to acknowledge that wherever we are today land on which we're privileged to be this land the nearby lake city has supported some thousands of years in its rich history knowledge and tradition and we're privileged to be the beneficiaries and the stewards of all that on behalf of the seven generations to come and beyond and we invite you to consider in your place and respect people's indigenous to your place including many of you yourselves today at each in each place around the world is increasingly home to people from across the world and we're each grateful to have the opportunity to be where we are today that's a social recognition of where we are the geographical nature of place the other recognition we should make is a biophysical one uh since we're thinking about strong sustainability which includes all three uh so this is a photograph of where we are we're actually not in the top of this building we're down below uh the far side of the brickwork there that you can just about see uh that's where the meeting room is that we're gathered in so uh but consider this from your own perspective do you know where you are in terms of the watershed that you're in nicole what watershed are you in barrow ontario 150 kilometers northwest that is an excellent question and i'm gonna send that over to our water expert who just happens to be on the call lindsay well we're i'm joining you from aurelia ontario today and that is um the unseated anishinabek and huronwendot territory which is on the edge of uh well i'm actually on the ledge of lakes of of lake simcoe and the black river watershed and nicole would be squarely in the lake simcoe watershed perfect okay thank you very much that's that's an excellent response and i invite other people to use that as a model for your response here in toronto car is uh on the edge of a creek known as russell creek which known by the settlements of the roster and that's something that they that they would bury uh because of pollution to become a sewer in the mid 1870s years ago now and i've been looking for the indigenous name and i know lindsay you you have the integers but i i don't have the indigenous russell creek so if anybody can tell me that i would love to know uh and of course uh the delivery of this session is interdependent in important ways on the place and if you visit the bathroom and you'll immediately experience the ecosystem service benefits of the watershed which you are because that's one of the ways in which your waste gets moved away from you into the environment and so for those of you who are using the flourishing business canvas which is one of the tools developed by members of this group uh to describe business models that are that have the possibility for flourishing for strong sustainability uh you can think about aspects of how your business relates to things like services and the ecosystem services so the group today uh as of a few minutes ago i think with 1471 people so we grew about 20 people since our last meeting and which is pretty amazing considering we're doing no advertising so people are finding us so we're not that easy to find and we remain we make this claim that we are the first and possibly the only group taking action to undertake enterprise strategy to do organizational design action research from what we might call a micro ecological economic perspective so an organizational perspective not a macro economic perspective and we are definitely ecological economists where the science uh strong sustainability comes from uh we are also the only group we know about is doing this organizational work using a systemic design approach so yes we like systems thinking yes we like designing better we like systemic design thinking what we're trying to do in all the work that we do and we do this with a strong normative purpose we have a definition of purpose a why of enabling the possibility for human and other life to flourish on this planet for seven generations and beyond which is an idea that comes from professor john aaron feldt uh we get you so if you're doing work in this space uh welcome uh and uh what we're trying to do what all of you as members are doing are trying to put into practice and interaction research the latest thinking the latest ideas for those of you connected to ocad what we're trying to do is to put into practice what is being taught to the masters of design strategic foresight innovation students such as nicole who's now our first and what we offer is an opportunity a global network of possibilities for your education research employment and increasingly we're starting to get this getting stories from our members about how the room is benefiting them uh and how the projects of the group are benefiting them and enabling prosperity um so the group's goals a community of innovation practice for a knowledge mobilization initiative uh we're self-organized this is currently a entirely volunteer endeavor we have um five streams of interest which are listed in our wiki at the url at the bottom there and we are part of a growing planetary movement so on this chart these i thought these uh logos are things that members have done things that members have done together things that members are enabling and encouraging and supporting in all kinds of different ways and what marks these icons out from perhaps any other group of things that you might call sustainable business is these people are all very aware of the need to apply directly to science that is behind the definition of sustainability that we are doing if we're trying to create businesses that really are going to enable a better future for us or we need to pay attention to what the science has to say um and of course we're in sync with the idea of the sustainable development goals but we go beyond sustainable goals as you all know the sdgs approved in 2015 are an amazing gift from humanity to humanity um and first time we've ever had as a species a single set of goals globally but unfortunately they are also a political compromise so if you take um goals where i always forget which number it is it is goal number eight decent work in economic growth of course unending economic growth is not scientifically feasible on a finite planet so there are inherent contradictions and limitations so uh we have some people in the group who are thinking about what do we do after the sdgs the end of 2013 that's the idea of the united nations flourishing goals which everybody is interested in talking about um as i mentioned our members are collaborating on a number of projects one is the flourishing enterprise innovation toolkit project that's the one that really started the entire group that's why i'm the convener for uh we also have uh the aim to flourish project which is looking at education and flourishing we had a presentation from fair summer uh last year sometime on that reporting 3.0 is another project focused on reporting uh and all the things around reporting for strongly sustainable possibilities to be things possible uh the future fit business benchmark is another one that's looking at measurement uh how do we how would you tell a truly sustainable strongly sustainable flourishing ago and he's organization now some good traction uh we also have the lead flourishing uh startups project uh which is part of a wider initiative looking at methods how do we actually help organizations uh become strongly sustainable and start strongly sustainable and then we have the refocus project which is looking at how do we manage those transformations uh how do we help organizations adopt strongly sustainable strategies whether through their sustainability office or from senior management down and we're looking at starting other initiatives we've got some interest in starting one of product design uh how do we backcast strongly sustainable products one on software and others and we we encourage our members to talk to each other um how can we work together on these these projects are all international and so distance and location are not barriers and there's some news about evolution that i will talk about at the very end of the um the other thing that we do is we sustain a connection to the community with others doing work the first of these is the business models conference the that's actually the fourth one is in june this year in berlin and the date is actually july the first second and third so we need to fix that on this slide nicole um stephen davies myself uh led by maya hospital and others are leading a track uh at this conference on open innovation or strong sustainable flourishing business uh that call is now open until the end of this month i remember correctly and there are many other tracks that uh new business models you can say certainly include strongly sustainable also can be weakly sustainable as well but uh does include strongly sustainable and that conference this year has been convened by one of our also very early members uh professor florian lunetta freud who's based in berlin assistant systemic design uh this is the conference of the methodological people uh in any field thinking about how to integrate systems thinking of designing so we're taking the methodological work the epistemological work that this community is doing and applying it specifically in the organizational context uh we need to update this one as well the eighth rsd conference will be in chicago this year in october and then we'll get the dates added to that for the next month uh we also are working with the reporting 3.0 community their conference this year is going to be in rotterdam and the dates of that are june the 18th and 19th we'll update the slide to include that so as many of us will be at that conference as well uh so if you're in europe that's a good place to meet us uh and then if you want a sort of academic perspective on the whole field of strongly but sustainable and strongly sustainable business model research uh this paper by foreign and christoph is a really good place to start we also have a blog which is maintained by florian which is a blog.ssbmg.com also strongly sustainable sustainable businessmodel.org that's a good place to keep in touch with some of the latest research in this field weak and strongly sustainable and lastly we we have the two founding members of the global be academic community who are members of this community and we do work with them uh as possible and many of us here are either in in the b lab organization in uh part of that structure or uh are running certified defaults or founded incorporated people benefit corporations so lots of connections with people movement another connection point is the academies of sustainable innovation uh this is an initiative by uh dr david wheeler uh and it's canadian focus uh looking to train hundreds of thousands of people thinking around strongly sustainable business and all the things necessary over the coming few years um i won't go into detail on this one this is some of the the key tools and methods that have been developed and they're currently in use and testing by this community um won't cover this one either and we do then have these monthly meetings the purpose of the monthly meetings is to share between the members everything that we're all doing in this field uh so these are a few of the past ones on our wiki you will find every single week that we've had listed since the very beginning and you will find the links to almost all presentations and the last nearly three years we've been recording the meetings so you'll find meeting recordings of all of those meetings as well so we're building up quite a a collection of good material if you're a researcher if you're a student uh if you're just interested so uh we are ready for people to engage we've got a list of research ideas which members have suggested and if you have an idea for research you think needs to be done in this space please suggest the wiki uh if you want to know how to do that you can talk with our community animator nicole norris who's on the call today and uh you've also got the opportunity to engage with other members uh on a huge variety of subjects basically we have the world's leading thinkers on all the topics around all the angles on strongly sustainable business in this community so really a powerful opportunity for you to engage and share and contribute we're also still looking for help we're looking for volunteers to advance our work so i won't go through details of this but if you're interested uh please contact myself uh or nicole norris who's as i said today so moving on to today's meeting um and uh this is as i said at the same time and i'd like to introduce nicole norris and lindsey telfer nicole in addition to being a student here at ocad and our community animator is also works at the center for change making and social innovation at georgian college georgian college is a vocational institution about 125 kilometers 150 kilometers uh north of toronto uh with locations uh in i think five campuses if i'm remembering correctly one of which is in mary one of which is in aurelia and so with that said i will hand over to nicole and lindsay hi everyone thank you anthony um we're just going to flip over here okay i'll share our screen with you guys all right everybody see this okay yes fantastic all right um as you know uh as uh anthony was talking uh i'd like to sum it up that the stuffy we were talking about is this stuff matters um so i'm going to uh just talk to you a little bit about this and then i'm going to introduce our talk today um so thank you for the opportunity as anthony mentioned this is um almost grad work that you're seeing uh this is the work uh this is some independent study work that was done uh to develop um a curriculum to teach the flourishing business model canvas to a rural uh sort of area anyways um but basically so this is how we sort of start off um our conversation about how we introduce flourishing uh to our community and uh i'm gonna start here and then i'm gonna make introductions and lindsey can jump on and we can talk a little bit about this but as you know um this stuff matters and i'm just trying to get this to work here um so we asked the question do you think this matters this idea that we have connection or what about this we asked this question to a lot of our uh students and and people working with us does this matter this idea that we have democracy or this this idea that you know our communities are local and as much as there's globalization going on uh we a lot of times have to really look at you know what are some of the effects that happen when we talk about uh systems and systemic choices and the other great thing about this about what we really like about the flourishing concept is this and we ask this to our students a lot of the times too is does this ladybug matter and it's interesting to hear their responses from everything from yeah of course to you know and they just sort of like huh but then the best part about this is we asked them does this matter and i think this is what um sort of compels a lot of us is this idea like we say is this is our home and we don't have anywhere else to go so this is how we introduce a lot of this concept of flourishing to our students because then we say we believe this stuff matters too and we're senko we're the center for social enterprise network of central ontario and what we'd like to share with you today is more of a practical approach of how we took a look at the flourishing business model canvas and this journey started to go on here uh regarding how are we going to use this canvas to develop an ecosystem so first of all i want to introduce myself my name is nicole norris i work for the center of change-making and health and innovation at georgian college am a facilitator in two areas there i wear two hats there one i facilitate with senko um on this curriculum that we're about to to talk to you about today but i also work with frontline with students and something called the community impact lab where we work with our students to ask them to look at a wicked problem and ask if collectively together we can hack it um so we use a lot of innovation thinking we use a lot of systemic design methodologies and we use design thinking to look at some of these problems and hopefully create change makers so that's me my background actually too as well has been before i came into academia i spent 20 years in the corporate world in product development product divine so i was one of those people that put another product on the shelf at the walmarts of the worlds um and if you can also believe it i spent about two years in nascar so i've got a sort of a sword history as to how i'm now sitting here talking about flourishing um that being said i'd like to introduce you to lindsay telford lindsay is my partner and co-facilitator and co-designer in this series and lindsey will tell you a little bit about her background and then um the other thing i'd like to acknowledge as well too we can't get to this work without a lot of support particularly from our faculty at ocad and particularly from our ecosystem here at georgian but i would like to acknowledge that dr peter jones was our facilitator in some of this research and an immense support to this he's on the line today as well so i wanted to acknowledge that as well as kathy lange and mary ferguson who were our advisors um as well in this project so lindsay over to you and introductions hi everyone it's great to be here um and great to virtually see you all um as i said earlier i'm joining you from aurelia ontario um and i come with uh i guess i come to this conversation with several decades of experience in non-profit management uh and coming at the social enterprise lens from uh a non-profit world and charitable lens and uh working and for the last eight years i've actually been working on a national initiative called the canadian fresh water alliance where we support the um the development of a united and uh supported uh constituency of freshwater champions to ensure that our waters are in good health but i come at that lens very much from a capacity building standpoint and as as my work in the nonprofit world has evolved over the years i think one of the challenges we continuously create is how a nonprofit world undervalues its services and um in our communities and and into our world and so i came at the conversation of social enterprise really from that from from that lens and how can we as charities um nonprofit champions of change uh really um more effectively value um the work that we do in the contribution that that makes to a flourishing community um and and so i started exploring business model canvases through that work and how we can support non-profit communities to um to to to flourish as well within within their efforts um and a couple years ago uh um things began to engage with the with georgian college um that began with the henry bernick entrepreneurship center where i still act as a social enterprise mentor and and then shortly thereafter with the social enterprise network of central ontario and the center for change-making and social innovation so this has really become a hub in georgian college and really linking some of the traditional business uh planning and development um through the henry bernick center um with the social enterprise network in the center for social innovation so bringing all of those worlds together as well as the non-profit world which which i stem from uh has been an exciting and exciting time and and we're excited to share with you the methodology behind some of the workshop series that we've been developing using flourishing really as our centerpiece and maybe i'll also say in there that i have been um using flourishing with my social enterprise clients through georgian both through the henry bernick center and through sunco uh to explore and deepen the understanding of the social enterprises that my clients are looking to launch yeah so that's the adventure we're about to go on tonight with everybody um and we'll talk a little bit about how did georgian end up with flourishing um as well to answer your question anthony um so in terms of our overview tonight this is what we wanted to do we wanted to talk to you about the introduction to senko which again stands for the social enterprise network of central ontario um being uh at georgian and academia we have a lot of acronyms um i remember when i got hired at georgian for the first time i didn't actually even know if i had an offer because there were so many acronyms in my offer letter um i always thought that was kind of funny um but uh yeah so then our approach as when they talked about the design process that we went through um and this was sort of helped in a large part uh by the work with peter um and his brilliance um the framework to the curriculum and what we've learned to date so uh what you're looking at is actually something that was designed uh over the summer of 2018 and is currently in we're about halfway through this this curriculum so we do have some initial insights and in fact uh next uh tomorrow night we start our our series uh we start our next series in this so um let's talk a little bit about what this is so what is senko well senko is essentially um it's at the center for change-making social innovation at georgian college it is uh an initiative of the center um so it inspires connects and equips those looking to engage in social enterprise to face cultural environmental and social challenges in our region and as you can see here on the right i think i got that right this is our region uh it's uh sort of at the bottom of georgian bay and sort of nestled between lake cinco for those of you who might cottage up here uh this is um this is our this is our uh crib or our our zone um you know we and these are the seven campuses that you see here um that georgian so georgian does have seven campuses across this region our you know our most southern is orangeville our our furthest here is um bracebridge um and of course there's various programs across these um the community impact lab where i facilitate in is in irelia but our hub is the main campus in barrie so uh pretty straightforward um the other thing to note is how did georgian college end up in this flourishing world well uh in 2018 uh last year georgian was indoctrinated into the ashoka u changemaker campus world we are the first canadian college to get this designation this was led by our director susie edison tour who had the vision to recognize that you know business and community had to work together and it was only natural as we were sort of building out senko the vision for for this entity um that we started to uh examine you know what sort of um business model canvas or what sort of social enterprises we wanted to look at so uh you know ellie who is our program manager at cenco had been speaking with pillar and said the flourishing business model canvas was the way to go uh at that point in time uh we we didn't really understand sort of what flourishing was but one of the great things about it was we were about to go on this journey and and part of this is what you're about to see is our journey into flourishing and not what we sort of have decided to work through on this so uh oh dear uh senko's theory of change uh so you see it's already a shift disturber right there it's gone around here uh so this is essentially in a nutshell senko's theory of change why this is important for this conversation this evening is because you're going to see uh what lindsay and i had to sort of work within in terms of you know sort of looking at the flourishing business model canvas identifying the ecosystem that we were going into and the obviously the benchmarks and the kpis that we were to to to build this to because here's the thing uh the reason why this exists is because we uh senko was awarded um 650 000 um in grants to help develop a rural social enterprise in our area so um when you think of central ontario um you know the concept of central ontario being sort of north of you know sort of durham and highway 7 um and into sort of up into muskoka that's really sort of in a provincial context it sort of comes across that band um and uh and a lot of times we get lumped into a lot of the toronto conversation and what we recognize is that while well well that's very important there are some complexities in our area where we're not completely uh urban and we're not completely rural but we're more rural than we are urban and um lindsay can attest to some of this um in terms of some of the work she does uh in her organization with the canadian freshwater alliance and uh they they require sort of a um an ability to to be a little bit more ambidextrous in our thinking around this so essentially uh suncoast theory of change was to see stemming from georgian being the hub for that was looking at both individuals and organizations that were looking at uh revenue diversification right through to social purpose um to the community and how are we connecting people in the community to some of these um you know purchasing ideas of social enterprise lindsey do you want to add anything to this through your change um as well i did a belabor no i i i think that i think that you've covered it well nicole i think that um what what i would probably just re-emphasize is the focus of exploring how we achieve this type of systemic change within uh you know a relatively spread out rural community um with with uh not intense population um development yet it's it's encroaching on us so that leads us to this conversation about flourishing as we were looking to build out this ecosystem um we actually were we actually kind of had we ended up with a sort of um curriculum crush on this little chart here um this idea that um the conversation between weak and and strongly sustainable so you have to understand sort of coming into our area um there's a lot of manufacturing there's a lot of small to medium-sized enterprise um and there's a lot of um there's been a lot of change that has happened in sort of the berry area barry was once known as a very strong manufacturing area um it's a very big strong conservative uh in terms politically it's it's a conservative stronghold it's been conservative probably as long as i've been alive which is a long time now um so you've got to understand that sort of bringing this conversation to the fold um it's particularly even when we were talking with our non-profit uh partners was this idea that they didn't really understand what it meant to sort of develop a flourishing or a holistic vision um around their business model i mean they really still saw themselves as you know sort of doing the work but you know trying to figure out well i have to make money but that's sort of contra to my mission so we found that we have a lot of those conversations about pushing them to sort of saying you know okay here's this idea of the of the profit norm of bolt-on that you're trying to build into your to your organizations but you know really where we're going is over here and flourishing and um you know and and i sort of love this this opening that uh anthony was uh and peter had um in in in their paper was this idea the definition of a strong stimulus firm we define if it were to exist which i love that bracket if it were to exist an organization that only uh enabled strongly sustainable outcomes as one that creates positive environmental social and economic value through its value network thereby sustaining the possibility that human and other life can flourish on this planet forever and i think uh for us as we were sort of investigating that from an academic institution but also really understanding like we have to be able to to break this down to individuals who are just like you know we just need revenue diversification you know just talk to us about revenue diversification um our organizations need this and lindsay maybe you can speak to that a little bit more because you're a little bit more front line and sort of the mentorship of some of these things that we were starting to overcome as we started to talk about what is flourishing and what is sustainability um and and this really drove us to talk about how are we gonna how are we gonna teach this or how are we gonna break this down uh for our community to really understand and make an impact in the ecosystem so one of the things that uh that we continue to find with our students our clients the social enterprise community or the business startup community in our areas they come at us with very specific interests like i think nicole referenced and in many cases in the charitable world it's we need revenue diversification um or in the corporate startup world it is um it is really about um you know i have this great prop you know i have this great product or idea that we want to bring to market and so we were started to play around with how we could start to introduce concepts of the strongly sustainable business uh into these conversations to challenge some of these groups organizations entities to really think about a bigger picture and um again as i think nicole spoke of earlier we we sort of landed on flourishing and some of the questions that are exposed when using the flourishing business model canvas to really start to to expose um some of that some of that thinking and and challenge our enterprises to really contextualize themselves and their and their enterprise within our broader community within this region um i would say that a vast majority of them are really excited about that potential um and and then i think as we as we'll show through some of our methodology we're starting to explore how we um how we continue the journey with those who are kind of like actually we're really only interested in revenue diversification or really i'm not interested in thinking about my enterprise within a broader community makeup and how can we keep um keep that conversation alive for some of those participants bring them along in a journey um and or let them let them go um as the case may be in in some circumstances so so yeah so so so about and that's a key point that we recognize that you know if we're going to throw the modeling tool up a couple things that are going to happen um one this is going to become the dna of our ecosystem and while that seems sort of okay well yeah if that's the tool you're going to use to build these businesses and you're supposed to reach 7 000 individuals and we have to have sort of you know x amount of social enterprises by 2020 you know the question starts to become now it becomes a system conversation because not only are we having these conversations about flourishing and sort of they're going through the workshops and summer may or may not end up going through the entire workshop and building out the model this idea that we've started this conversation about flourishing uh we started to really think deeply about that and and the dna that that's really going to start to put into to the ecosystem um you know and this idea that you know the biggest idea for us was this conversation about you know in business we talk about stakeholders and stuff but really now if we're having the conversation about flourishing we're talking about ecosystem actors and this was sort of one of the biggest takeaways that we did was you know sort of language and and and i think you know lean for flourishing really started to you know and and what was so great about the work that on dean was showing with us is that idea that you know there has to be built a competency for flourishing um and i think we intuitively kind of you know sort of said okay and then you know lean for flourine has really built that out so we sort of stumbled on upon this in some weird way and um what's great about connecting with this community and sort of working with is saying like we're uncovering some of these same things um and and shifting language uh particularly in this area has been and even at georgian when we talk about change-making and social innovation is a huge topic um in order to have and and we recognize that this was going to be a big key in this because 70 social enterprises accelerated by 2020 our awareness of impact is that if we're using the flourishing business model canvas to build social enterprise we'll have ripple effects to our region in terms of people planet and profit because they will be built as flourishing social enterprises and then we'll be influencering a region through strongly sustainable firms to build a russian uh flourishing role ecology um which then as peter as he was working with us on this identified you know this is where the conversations eventually down the road of a policy canvas start to come in so so that we had this sort of huge journey as we sort of explored through this when really you know um ultimately uh what we were asked to do was create a sessional uh social enterprise sessional framework but we realized it wasn't going to be just like okay here's uh you know here's the flourishing business model canvas and let's carve it up and this is what stakeholders are and this is like that conversation we recognized we were we were we weren't going to be integris um to not only the tool we were using to the concept of flourishing to the to the academic research that was being done and also to like the people in our region um in the ecosystems in our region um you know if we truly are a social purpose business i think we have to we had to we had to really ask the question of how we had to broaden that conversation about who's included in that that purpose and who's social um and recognize that there's not so many delineations as there are overlaps so just before you go um well one question uh i'm really curious about when you so so if you go back to your theory of change really there's actually there's now another part to the right of social media i'm back oh my god sorry how do i get back um okay okay sorry i just apparently i'm arrow um arrow and confident at the moment so if you go back to the theory of change a second if you can yeah let me just uh come on arrows sorry um here why isn't this uh wasn't this moving back nope nope that's forward okay okay so this is okay well just imagine it so on the fear of change you you the right hand side the the the ultimate thing that that fear of change said was you're trying to get to creating social enterprises georgian enabling that with community and with others to create those social enterprises but and then i think what i've learned for you to say i just want to confirm this that the that now in fact there's a step beyond that because actually you're seeing that creating social enterprises isn't your ultimate purpose your ultimate purpose is actually ensuring that those social enterprises are going to contribute to a flourishing community economically socially and environmentally it's also i should say socially and economically um is that correct but that's what that is presenting this today you might update this slide to include that on the right hand side right so when we show your map so we have a big map we're going to show you today too which actually encompasses this so this is sort of the setup so but you're absolutely right anthony this is these are the realizations um that we were starting to come into was just this idea that you know like we have to take it we have to be accountable um for some of the tools and methodologies that we're going to be using and how might that affect down the road and it's all fine and well and daily to fill build a flourishing enterprise but if you send them into a non-flourishing ecosystem economically or politically like how are we doing justice to the traction of the flourishing conversation um so it just it just kind of started to unravel all these conversations that we ended up in and and you're right like i think it was really the conversation was you know we have to kind of put we kind of have to be who we say we're going to be and if we're going to put a theory of change out there where we're going to enable and equip aspire and sustainable that's not a that's not a that's not a you know here's how you build your social enterprise that's an ecosystem conversation right sorry let me add a follow-up and then lisa i am very interested in your response as well um the follow-up is what has been the reaction of georgian college's stakeholders to this and the reason i'm asking the question is we've got quite a few members across canada and elsewhere who've attempted to do what you've done um have when they've when they've shared it with their stakeholders they've not got support from their stakeholders but you seem to have managed to get support from from georgian college's internal management and also from people like ashoka who theoretically ought to be interested in this but historically when we've had other people try this it hasn't worked uh and others as well so i'm really curious to hear lindsay your perspective on both of them well i might let nicole jump in on the on the georgian stakeholders i have the benefit of not being as embedded within um the georgian infrastructure as as nicole but i did want to jump in and provide the an example that i think might um display how this is starting to play out and we're in the very early phases of this so um so i i think we'll have much more to share in a couple of years when we have a few years under our belt but you know one example of how this is um is uh exploding let's say with um with one client that i've been working with and that's a client who is starting has been running a kombucha company in collingwood and she ferments her own drinks and has has been building quite a client base and through using the the flourishing canvas and starting to think about her ecosystem she is really wanting to prioritize the sourcing of her ingredients from local sources though she's having some trouble um finding loca enough local honey or enough local blueberries or you know enough local uh lavender other other products that she uses within the kombucha varieties and so now all of a sudden we've started um dialogues with producers in the region to talk about how we can sustainably develop some of these products so that we can source the ingredients from local providers using sustainable methods of production and so all of a sudden what was one social enterprise wanting to start a kombucha company has evolved into a social enterprise landscape because we need the other providers to feed into the one social enterprise um now that's very early stages and so she's talking about okay well what are some interim measures can i get you know organic local or wild blueberries from you know a neighboring bioregion in the interim while we're building up um a product but we're you know so we're exploring some of those complexities of what do you do when your local ecosystem just can't immediately provide for you um but it is it's so it's such an interesting case study and um and how just the startup of one social enterprise can really blossom a whole community conversation and now now back to your question on stakehold on stakeholders i think maybe because we are in the early phase um you know i i and there's been some excitement around it i i think that there's a willingness to embrace and and then i also think and and i suspect nicole will um give a shout out to susie addison tour who really has been as a as a leader in georgian um really putting her support behind this initiative and and being really uh successful at garnering the support of others yeah so susie our director uh has been amazing at this this is essentially in a lot of ways her vision um susie was pivotal in bringing ashoka to georgian uh which earned us a lot of credibility because what the ashoka designation did is in order to get that designation ashoka examines the institutions from a systemic level so it's so you can apply to be an ashoka change maker campus but it's a two-year process in which an audit you go through and so as part of that designation um you also have to provide to ashoka what are your plans in terms of systemic change making um and again this brings in the flourishing conversation was so if that's a showcase decision to change making one of the questions that we were asking here is you know what is what does that mean for our reasons so what's our flavor of change making and how are we going to approach change making from our perspective having the unique diversity of being in a rural region um and you know sort of having that deep uh reliance on our supply chain to um you know our watersheds our agricultural uh even our transportation systems uh and roads here um so you know sort of just the geography alone defines a little bit of that and georgian recognizes that in a lot of ways because it's you know it's it's dappled throughout the region and georgian also recognizes too that you know as a contributing member just by the nature of being a college you know a college's connection to the community is essentially mandated in its sort of dna you know the whole reason for the college uh system in canada was that applied knowledge so we're measured on many things around how do the things that we are doing how are they actually contributing and putting applied knowledge back into the communities particularly in workforce development particularly um in economic development so i think for us um in terms of stakeholders at georgian the idea of social enterprise is is just part of the agenda like i just think it's for them and again susie's ability to host conversations and bring people together and really have that within the organization so maybe someday she'll sit down and write a book about how she did that because i think we would all benefit in a lot of ways so um sorry that was a little bit of a hopefully that answered some questions um and uh and anyways uh cool are there any other questions that anybody has uh nope okay cool so so i just want to get into the brass tacks hopefully everybody is still awake uh uh okay um so here's the brass tacks of what we had to do uh based upon this grant that we have received and what we were asked to do was to design and build a multiple stakeholder workshop sessions that would run as a series each semester as you know we are academic institutions so we speak in semesters even though our community may not um but that's another conversation we've been having and we had to use our partner existing research such as the flourishing business model canvas and courses from the social enterprise institute i'm not sure if anybody is familiar with the social enterprise institute uh but they are an online learning platform they have a lot of great courses and we've been using it and then nicole and lindsay got into the mix because that's just what we do and we wanted to make the best client social enterprise build out experience and offer an approach no one else currently has um so that was the nicole and lindsay secret sauce and uh both uh myself and lindsay i think are a little bit on the perfectionist side and if you're going to put us on a project you just got to get ready for the ride so so that led us to this um this is kind of uh one of our preliminary conversations about what would a curriculum look like so this was many of many whiteboards this whiteboard got very busy it got even more busier after that um and maybe peter uh if he if he's still uh here he he would be excited to know that we actually used one of his lectures and his learnings to sort of fill this out so this is the preliminary curriculum that led us to essentially identify the sessional foundation for the framework so we identified everson and dubberly's service design process because we recognize that what we were building out in terms of pulling apart the business model canvas but more importantly pulling apart flourishing in its sort of context was really indicative of this service delivery framework and we after sort of we uh after spending a lot of time doing that we sort of did our lit review and we recognized that really this was a service uh to our um this was a service to our ecosystem that we were providing and if we treated it as such perhaps as opposed to building up product offerings in terms of a workshop we were actually building out service offerings and that's sort of how we started to do it and as you can see here we embedded sort of an action research oriented for the participants it um we took a lot of time to build on reflection and it allows us to leverage design thinking methods and processes and also integrate the feasibility via the failure process um for lindsey and i this was a really big topic of conversation was how do we build the ability to allow our participants as they're exploring flourishing and building up their business model the ability in space to fail we call it the honesty loop originally where this idea that as we're working with our participants that we could get brutally honest with them in terms of the viability and feasibility conversation which is currently what we're working on right now and we can speak a little bit more to that in a minute um but what we want to do now is we want to walk you through our map so this might be interesting for you guys um so our curriculum was actually built out into a gigamap so for those of you who may or may not be familiar with some of the work that ocad does in terms of its curriculum for the strategic foresight and innovation program um jeremy bose and peter jones have done a lot of work with this concept of visualization through gigamaps and and systems maps or synthesis maps um they've actually published and i can actually provide that link as well later particularly to xeji an excellent article about how this is starting to inform complex systems and how to illustrate that so we're going to take you on a little adventure now so i'm just going to unshare my screen for a sec i'm just going to get out of this and i'm going to pull this up is everybody still still good all right this this is the ride so get ready okay so i'm gonna so here we go um full screen mode so this is really the this is really the conversation we've been talking to you about um in terms of uh the powerpoint presentation so if people want to noodle into this this is on the google drive right now um and if you want me to go in a little bit closer to this please let me know just basically saying cool zoom in um we're just going to free flow this a little bit if that's okay with everybody but this essentially so if i zoom out uh or try to zoom out um it's not really there that's why so here is the map in its entirety uh basically if you're reading left to right you see the theory of change uh sorry on the left sorry left yeah on the left i'm really bad with left and right i apologize on the left here we start with the theory of change and this sort of documents all the way through um all the way through right through to sort of a panorky understanding of the ecosystem and the policy canvas um you know and sort of in the middle is the curriculum and how that flows and works and some of the loops um and then on the bottom is some of the sessional framework that we've been building out this map i would say right now is about because we're in the process of sort of testing and building this as we go along this map is probably about i would say 75 complete um we're just moving into the blue zone at the bottom here in terms of our workshops so uh let's uh let's take a look so as you mentioned before uh this is the sessional uh framework so senko's theory change uh has is sort of is how we start this map uh we identify uh we identify this and we've talked a little bit about this um this is just a little bit more of a breakout in terms of uh where senko sees itself essentially applying itself and how it's working in sort of this divergence to convergence and where these sessional frameworks are fitting in um and sort of the prepared and equipped uh aspect of the theory of change again um you can read there's actually the theory senko's theory changes actually on the google drive as well so if you want to spend some time as well afterwards and and read a little bit more we've put all that information up for you uh to really take a look at um the other thing too is so where did we start um and maybe lindsay you can speak to this part about it because i think this was really our biggest starting point in terms of what we identified as to you know okay how are we going to build this um so maybe means you can talk to some of the mental models and where we started because we believe this was sort of key in informing our entire build um and i'm going to let lindsay talk a little bit about this because lindsay's connection front line is a little bit deeper than mine and she can speak to some of how we ended up with these mental models yeah so one of the places we started was was developing these mental models which were really personas in many respects of many of the clients that i had been starting to see and see trends in um through my work with the henry bernick entrepreneurship center and um and senco and and so we grouped those personas those mental models into um the the five categories that you see here i would probably say that this isn't necessarily exhaustive in fact i don't think it's exhaustive but i think it it it showed uh five key trends that we were seeing and the questions that people were asking and why they were coming to um georgian for um mentorship coaching support and their social enterprise startups um first and foremost it was legal questions they needed they wanted to know the the legal specifics of starting a social enterprise um how do you incorporate uh do you incorporate it as a business or a not-for-profit and or a co-op and what do any of those models mean we had people coming wondering if they actually have what it takes to start a social enterprise some of them weren't wondering that but i think it's a good question for them to um to reflect and consider um many of them were just looking for resources they wanted funding they wanted to know if i had the magic money tree in my backyard that i could fund their social enterprise many of them were looking for business model designs and some of them were just looking to build up their own skills around starting social enterprise and so there were these different mental models that we were seeing very common trends in and so we took those mental models and and as we'll explore through the next phase worked them through some loops of how can we design the series so that people will get some of the practical tools that they're looking for but that through getting those practical tools we can kind of blow their mind open to other concepts that are um critical for them and to think about and and and venturing down this path of the social enterprise startup right so and so we we we thought this was really important um because we needed to you know sort of start where people were at and recognize that not everybody was coming into this build uh from the same uh perspective and we were about to to sort of like as we mentioned before we were about to sort of shock their world with this canvas um and the other question was is so when do we get them to the canvas when do we introduce the canvas to them and how do we steep them into this concept of flourishing through to actually building into something that is sort of viable feasible and desirable um um with this so so all these crazy things that you're seeing on here was this idea that um first of all if from my experience up and uh working with the students was really had a really great um rich sort of insights as to how to work um collaboratively to to alongside and sort of um you know the design thinking sort of you know show not tell um so we decided to instead of making it a classroom where you came in and sat what we would do is we would we would use the social uh enterprise institute's curriculum and we would align um with the legal the self-efficacy the mental models we would align these are what these dots are that sort of go around i don't know if anybody can see my pointer um i don't know if that's the case oh yeah you can okay cool so here um uh we align the the anywhere so basically curriculum so information and we sort of surrounded them with this idea that you know at this stage people would be seeking and so we would we would surround these collabs so the sessional framework where we brought everybody together to do the work instead of asking them to sort of sit through and give the lecture we would actually have a maker space and so the idea would be is we would work through and then what we would require them to do is on their own time uh work through the curriculum um and what we were finding was so the first the first stage in this was this concept of what we called series one and in series one this as you can see here at the bottom this is sort of the action uh research sort of reflection stage that we would take them through in terms of just the framework um and it would it and and we would then evaluate um you know sort of seeking articulating and feasibility and so each one of these would be sort of a weekly session that would be four hours and in those four hours these would sort of be the zones that we would work through so we talk about frame prototype activity evaluate and the ability to reflect but in this idea back up here was we would take them through these loops and these spiraling loops where they would continually iterate you know just sort of in the design thinking methodology they would sort of start to iterate really be part of that um and then we called this what we did what we started to do was call this thing the honesty loop um and the honesty loop was really about let's really get honest about this thing you want to build or this idea that you have and one of the things that um i've known for is the brutally honest conversation of okay the only person that's going to be more in love with your idea or or your vision is going to be you tomorrow so how do we get really honest about what you're building here and aligning it to the strong sustainability and the flourishing because we're taking it pretty seriously that you're going to you're going to contribute to the ecosystem in some way which leads us to this idea and so this was just sort of our sort of work through of you know ida defining failure feasibility measure to sustainability yes no but the most important part of this uh this thing that we're talking about is this guy right here this thing called the drop zone and lindsay why don't you talk a little bit about this because this was sort of you know we both agreed that this is really really important uh in this process is that we identified as we move through this and we were sort of contextualizing a bit more like a movement framework is it's all fun and well in danny if we've got the people in the program but what we really want to do is we want to talk more about the people that fall out of the program and if this is truly an ecosystem conversation what happens to those people that don't stay in this curriculum or don't stay in the session what do we do with them now so part of this whole sort of crazy ass graph we've gone through and these feedback loops and all this kind of stuff was what happens to those who don't make it through this what happens then where do these people go because you know that's an opportunity lost to bring flourishing in in another context so again i'll pop this over to lindsay so lindsay why don't you talk a little bit about this because you're the you know you're sort of this expert in in this area in terms of you know your ability to sort of uh mobilize and and bring people together so nicole you are you talk when you say drop zone you're thinking as in parachute parachute drop zone like they drop off they they we lose them right because are you planning to pack a parachute for them i mean that's not not what typically happens in entrepreneurial programs like this right if you fail you get pushed out the door without a parachute yeah so no it's true it's true so this is what we so this is what we decided and this is really where georgian can really contribute to this conversation of let's okay so so what you don't want to build a flourishing enterprise great no problem here's your parachute we're going to shove you over here and we'll show you a little bit deeper so so so lizzy why don't you talk about this and i'm going to get this map to kind of expand a bit and then talk about what happens in the drop zone so there i i guess there was two kind of realisms that we were trying to uh we were challenging ourselves to think about and one was these are workshop series right so we just finished a a three part two three-part workshop series for um the sort of the the series one uh and we're going into series two and so it's a natural drop zone we're gonna lose people that we're gonna have people who came to series one who aren't gonna come to series two and subsequently we're gonna have people from series two who aren't gonna come to series three now interestingly enough we have um an eighty percent return right i think from series one to series two happening so we're we're holding people pretty good um but what do we do with those people who fall off um and i think that it's and that's what we were calling the drop zone there's gonna be various reasons why they're gonna drop out one might be they're um they're not buying the the methodology or approach and so do we have a place for those people to go um maybe they're not ready to embrace the flourishing concept you know let's be honest some people aren't going to be ready to embrace it um and so then we were like are there places where we can where we can refer these people so that they don't get dropped completely um and you know one place that we can refer them to within georgian's landscape is the henry burnick entrepreneurship center which does run very similar series to what we're running within a very traditional business approach um so i shouldn't say similar they run sir they run a business development series uh within a very traditional business approach now interestingly enough i have been starting to go and talk to that series about social enterprise and flourishing social enterprise development and i'm getting a lot of pick up in those series as well so i think we might start to see some of some of them come our way as well but there is a place where they can go where they can get a very traditional business approach that we're still infiltrating and challenging them to to think in a broader term um so that's one place that they can go and and another place might be another thing that might happen is in our in our ideation and prototyping series maybe they'll actually find that their business idea isn't gonna flourish um and so it was an important it was an important component that we really wanted to work into this does every idea have to manifest itself into a um an acting social enterprise and and we both came from the idea no or the answer no and in fact par it is incumbent upon us in teaching a flourishing approach to actually challenge people if we don't actually think their idea is going to flourish and this is hard i think within a a business startup social enterprise support world because we want everybody to succeed right we want everyone to succeed in their ideas um but let's be honest some might not actually some some won't succeed and they won't succeed for various reasons and one of those reasons is they didn't prove there's nothing it's not feasible yeah and so as we work through that we wanted to really embed those drop zones to challenge ourselves as instructors facilitators coaches mentors um to be honest about that and that's the other reason why the honesty loop came into play and the others was to challenge our clients to be honest um with the uh applicability the the um the the realism the feasibility of their studies or their enterprise ideas and also you got to understand too like the majority of people that are coming into our workshops they're not um like the typical entrepreneur that's coming in it's not the tech company that's like you know i've got the next best app or i've got the next best you know widget the the people that are coming in are non-profits that need revenue diversification there may be people who you know they they they're passionate like we've had one person come in and you know like they want to tackle the plastic economy it's like nobody in the household should be using plastic pieces so i'm designing these you know different ways in which we can use like wrap and fabric and stuff right um to a landscape company who is like recognizing that you know what we're not just a landscaper we're at the point of contact where we could actually protect watersheds along our you know high-end luxury customers that you know border on the lake um but all these people like you say like you know some of them might have a social enterprise maybe they have a program that could go into an existing not-for-profit you know so we really had to really be cognizant of that because there's a place for like if we if we take the true flourishing concept there's a place for everybody in the ecosystem but then isn't it our responsibility to help navigate that a little bit and and so on this map when you see this arrow to the drop zone this actually is a really cool sort of little chart thing that we sort of um uh innovation hub in ottawa gave to us and said well this is how we and they've they've uncovered some of these same things where you know where do people go like they might not be ready for a social enterprise and maybe that maybe what we need to do is create this little chart that when the intake people are talking to them you know they can point to where they need to go and we were like that's awesome in the area i'm like that would be something that we would then our drop zones would want to inform so instead of saying it's social enterprise support guide ottawa we would eventually have a social enterprise support you know sort of uh you know the region of central ontario and sort of starting to build that out but we don't know that yet because we haven't pushed enough these through senko to say here's where all the drop zones so these i these purple things that we have on our chart here are just identifications of where we think drop zones might happen and then in that drop zone what do you think what where do you think we need to push them in terms of of the sort of the flourishing ecosystem so these are some of the things as we move sort of closer to the the right side of the map these are sort of things we're not we're just kind of in theory right now and as you can see here in our drop zones we sort of identified the movement pyramid that the movement framework where you know like in terms of our drop zones will we be able to identify people who don't make it through the program um you know like how are they like we have a social enterprise 101 we have series 2 you know series 1 series 2 series three applying for ending and launching and leading so there's some areas in here where we're really starting to to explore and build out but ultimately the end goal is if to build this new mental model of any people that have come through our series or worked with us is the new mental model of the flourishing social entrepreneur right so it's not just the social entrepreneur but it's the flourishing social entrepreneur and these were some of the things where we talked about you'll see these little purple things where we talk about resiliency loops where we're starting to say like okay so where do drop zones happens but where are there opportunities where we can build ecosystem resiliency you know and so where are these sort of these pivotal points and this is what this map was trying to figure out for us was you know where are all these things where all these potential of these things um happening and then as we push into the ecosystem the ecosystem conversation here where we've we started to explore panicky loops where you know we've got individuals and orgs that then shift into to networks and communities right that are leveraging their social enterprises right through into sort of the flourishing ecosystem and economic development so local economies and then what does that do now to our you know our members of municipal government and policy makers like holy crap we've got all these people out here trying to talk about um you know flourishing and strong sustainability but you know our our policies and our ways and our bylaws are not aligning with that so now what do we do um so you know this is sort of we see that as we go through this over the next two to three years these are some of the conversations where you know maybe georgian in terms of workforce development and economic development starts to have to you know sort of look at the curriculum look at their relationship in in the community and take responsibility for the fact that we're pushing these people and these students and these organizations into our ecosystem so how now are we going to be supporting that um when we have a conversation with the mayors and the township uh you know local officials and our mpps um um so those are some of the conversations that we had and this is what this map and sort of how that informs some of the things we're doing um so lindsey is there anything you want to add to that uh or good questions hello so so nicole i'm i'm curious having having heard this story now for the first time end to end i've heard pieces of it before but this is a fantastic uh summary as is you know at the whole point of the giga map so it's another proof point that the approach works uh from peter's perspective so i'm what i'm curious about is so why are you still using the term social enterprise uh that's a really interesting question that you have asked um uh i i mean so so so from from some of the conversations we've had in this community over the last seven years you know all enterprises are social because they're made by people so they have to be social right fundamental um and um so a social enterprise is not anything special which is the reason why everybody has such a hard time defining what a social enterprise is because they will immediately run into this problem but actually a social enterprise isn't different from any other enterprise right most respects so i i think it boils down to rhetoric to be honest um in terms of um you know when you talk about innovation or you talk about business or you talk about these worlds that you know like you got to remember um i think it really just is about terminology and and what people know so right now like for instance in georgian um if i've got two streams of choices to build my business i can go to the henry burnick entrepreneurship center and build a you know an enter like and be an entrepreneur um or i can go to senko right now and i can build a social purpose so i i think it's more a delineation rather than um you know from almost more of a a navigation or a way finding for the for the end users as opposed to and also yourself it causes you to self-select people who are more likely to respond positively to the ideas to the mental models that you're trying to promote right because these mental models are different from the mental models that they encounter in the traditional entrepreneurship program absolutely and you know like heidi neck you know like some of her work where she talks about this idea of the entrepreneurship mental model um you know sort of cognitive ambidexterity right um you know when we think about it though it's like yeah like that it doesn't really matter whether you're building a social purpose business in quotations or not the meant that that idea of being able to sort of conceptualize and flip between sort of creation and prediction logic is super important um in anything you do whether you're an entrepreneur or entrepreneur right um but i think as as we go along and i think i think it's really more about the the history of how business is taught to be honest right and how like you know these conversations have to sort of be put over into these new categories if to be honest more than anything so that people can contextualize it right and i might just say that i i i think and and i'm just sort of speculating i think on an answer to this entity but i i think that we're probably using that terminology to try to create this space for us to have these conversations um because i suspect no i you know i i do work with the henry burnham entrepreneurship center i think they're great they're lots of they're great intelligent smart business people who have not yet embraced i i think what is our future way of organizing business in our communities i think it needs to be to be blunt um and i think that you know if i were to develop a theory of change for our business at georgian over the long term i think at some point the henry burnick entrepreneurship center and and senco are going to have to merge because the reality is that's the way that business is going in the future i i that being said i don't think it's where we're at now um and so there was a need for us to create the space to have these conversations um in the way that we wanted to have those conversations and not to be maybe continuously um trying to work them into the the traditional entrepreneurship center and that being said i'm i work at the at the traditional entrepreneurship center as well and there is an increasing uh resonance on these ideas and concepts and so i think that we have to continue to marry um that that approach as we work through this over time and that's why i think it was so important for us to identify in a lot of ways that this was more of a conversation about a movement like how do you weave these ideas together in a way that you know you get your early adopters on board you get your extreme users on board and then you know when we get to the chasm where we have to sort of get critical mass you know that that that that jump is sort of it's okay do what i mean like it's not a threat it's non-threatening and it and and it recognizes that you know like like lindsay said like we need the smarts and the intelligence of of that you know sort of business think right but not necessarily and and we need that understanding of the sort of the that that more forward-looking under conclusion and the fact that you know alone you know they're strong but together they're even stronger right like the hybridization of this um creates even greater capacity um and and you just sort of being in the practicalness of it and also being in the georgian ecosystem you know there is a lot of conversation around like the silos right and how do we cross the silos like that's that transdisciplinary conversation you know that sort of is the foundation for the sfi program um and i and i just think you know we you know it's it's it's a question where i think it's just about having a lot of conversations and i think that's why you know our director has been so successful is really understanding you know sort of that appreciative inquiry and understanding and recognizing where people are at and then moving from there um so you know so i think for us just recognizing we're getting towards the end and bob is curious to see what you've got to say about the canvas so am i and andrew had a point he just wanted to make yep sure just a great response to the question about social enterprise and we sounded up meeting people where they are i think that's just so practical i mean i think we all have to recognize that we can't be doctrinaire about some of the stuff and we have to just move forward and use the tools and the things that people understand yeah yeah and i also i want to commend you guys because and i think it's probably with you partly because you are a vocationally oriented college rather than a a full-blown academic university um that you're having conversations that we're not hearing people have right that you know we've been saying some of these things to people but i think you're one of the first that we've heard say this to us um proactively where you've done the thinking independently and and and it's it's very aligned with what we've been saying thinking and practicing so it's it's it's fantastic uh you know as a hypothesis validation when you find somebody else who's independently come up with the same idea you have it's it's a it's a great validation so yeah we're we totally get the journey that you're you're on and where you are and meet us out and also meet you where you are so uh onto the canvas uh bob's keen to see what you've been up to um so lindsay do you want to take some of that because you're a little bit more boots on the street there um i'm a little bit more high level on it well and again i will just and miami okay um i'll just maybe say that we're in the very early stages of exploring the applicability of the of the canvas with our clients um a couple of things that we have found and i and i think this echo some of what you've already heard already is that um clients certainly need um to be coached through the canvas um i've had a couple of people attempt to do some of the brainstorming on their own and when we come and sit down i i sort of explode some of their brainstorming um and and so i do think that we you know that we're still at a stage where there is quite a bit of coaching involved in working through um i think the intricacies of of the canvas that being said i've had many you know i've had a handful of my clients say it really helped them think about and contextualize their thinking of how their enterprise fits within the broader community which i think is awesome because that's one of its its primary goals um and you know and i think we'll see as we get more case studies um how it works from us as a sort of a a business conceptualization tool to implementation tool and and that's kind of where i'm at right now with a few of my clients who have gone through the the sort of the this kind of conceptualization feasibility phase and are really starting to look at launch and i'm really curious to see how you can take the canvas as that sort of intro tool um and and use it as a as a tool to guide implementation and ongoing implementation no i'll be really curious as to how that works and also the metrics that they uh come in with and leave with that would help them reinforce the fact that uh some of the things that they were trying to do to become more flourishing yeah their enterprise and their connections to the community with each other are going in the right direction so what are the indicators that they would normally use or you would use to be able to assess how flourishing they are and opportunities for them to become more flourishing absolutely and i think one of the things that it triggers for me and nicole something for us to keep in mind as well is um to actually to make sure that we're embedding the systems to proactively track some of those clients something that i know happens in our world and i've seen it already in in my and my hvac the henry bernick center world is um you know clients disappear and do we actually follow up with them to find out where you know three years four years five years later where are they at how you know and um and how have they um flourished or not or not and and why and and i think setting up some of those systems right from the beginning can really help us um embed and ingrain them as we're building out the program over time some of that built into the funding that you received or is there and it probably is within the show it definitely is within the short term but i'm sort of thinking more long term right so we report on our funding in another year so i think it was two year funding um two-year funding isn't really going to give us the benchmarks over time um on on the applicability and implementation of the tool it's very interesting to note that one of the things that alex austin alvar who did the original work on the business model ontology said in his ph 2004 was that longitudinal research about the effectiveness of design-based approaches in terms of do they actually create businesses that last longer or have you know higher outcomes and obviously he was thinking about profit and did they generate those more reliably um needs to be done and peter and i repeated that call for longitudinal research in our 2015-16 paper in in the journal in the organization and environment because that research has not been done even even in the conventional business design world it has not been done so yes so i i also applaud you lindsay for thinking about this topic and it's uh if you can be gathering data um to enable some researchers in a few years from now to be able to do that longitudinal analysis or engage with them now to ensure you're capturing the right data that would be as far as i know globally leading work nobody else has done that well we'll get on it yeah so so so yeah just to echo that i think in this area of the map i think in some way we were trying to it's a very nascent sort of tacit uh uh responding to that um because um i know right now in terms of like some so we're working also too with um external advisors at the senko level like we're just talking about the the framework right now this is just the sessional um this is just a sectional series right senko also has also other pillars that it's under that it's also measuring but in terms of you know how does this sessional framework your right lead to the development of the flourishing ecosystem i think right now um like like lindsay and we you know we've had a lot of conversations about that and and sort of i think the map was a way to start to look and say like you know that's where the drop zone and the resiliency identified but i think there's some deeper work that needs to be done on where we put those benchmarks and that is actually a very good call to future fit uh benchmarks um as well so the other another question relates to where are you in terms of operationalizing this so am i correct correcting saying you you've currently actually delivered only series one once that's twice we've delivered it twice twice okay so and so what's the plan for for taking cohorts through or sorry fourth series i can't quite see that there's three series so our second series so the so the first series was ideation and feasibility and essentially that series was about um taking the elements of the flourishing business model canvas and pulling them out of the canvas and ideating on them separately our next series that starts tomorrow is the actual introduction to the flourishing business model canvas um and sort of working through the canvas and now patching it together so that we can sort of start to get them into a stage where um we can start to get them to go out and prototype and test and so at that point after they've sort of built their canvas they can actually apply to senko for attraction grant and the traction grant is designed to go and test something that they've identified in the model that they need and so that's again another great thing about the georgian ecosystem by working with it is the ability as part of our funding was to create traction grants so that people could go and test and we could start to benchmark right um on some of those kind of things so that then we could push them into scale and measure uh from the individual business side um so and that will happen so the series three will happen later into what uh lindsay that's coming in march april kind of thing because we're uh january february for the the business model and then the scale and measure series will be a little bit later than that um because one of the other things we want to do is we wanted to give a lot of space uh between these that was weird okay anyways um that's not coming for me okay that was me sorry sorry anyway so uh respectfully of time um uh so i don't know if there was there any more questions or or um i don't know if that's exactly what you guys were expecting to see tonight um but well i i think uh my my this has been a fantastic introduction uh and a very powerful introduction to uh some really deep thinking that you guys have done and some really exciting plans and some early results that you've already developed um and i think if i've understood it you've only been doing this thinking for about a year a little over a year maybe um so i i think it's really obvious you've done a lot of thinking and you've come a long way in terms of operationalizing that and you've got some really exciting early results so i i think you should invite yourself back nicole to present again uh later on this year uh or uh early next year uh when you you've got you've taken people through the full full process yeah and i know for example our colleagues in sweden in the region of holland in the western sweden that they they are in a geographical place and a social uh business environment that is very very similar to the region that georgian is operating and they are doing some work which is um both both very similar in some respects and very different in other respects but i think there's lots of potential for some collaborative discussion so uh since i'm an adjunct prof there now as well i can kind of speak on their behalf a little bit but i know that they're really they're going to be really interested uh we met with their economic development people when i was there in november uh so i think i think that's that's a key point of collaboration potentially between members of this community uh that could be of value to both uh both parts and if other people are aware of other communities that have a similar um sit are in a similar situation uh then uh please reach out to nicole and lindsay and start those conversations yeah and i just want to add one more thing i mean as the community if anybody sees an opportunity where like you can say like hey have you guys thought about this or you know or looking at it and say like you guys should be measuring this like we're opening this up for open conversation um you know both lindsey and i live in this community we've grown i've grown up in this community um and i think for us we care very deeply about what happens to our children in this community um we're both moms too so i always bring that in as a conversation um so we really care um and and the great thing about this community has been the response to helping us um and really looking at making i mean we really we really care about our region we live in so if you guys have any feedback in terms of how we can improve that or how that might happen we'd be open to hearing it as well okay so the only comments i just wanted to make very very quickly at the end i mentioned at the end of last month um we are now starting to finally take some action towards uh evolving this community from its volunteer status into what we've been talking about as a a global flourishing enterprise institute a network of nodes the i've been talking to many of you about founding notes in your places um and so we're actively looking for the first uh nodes to come together to sign up for a memorandum of exploration to figure out in practice what that could look like for the founding we would hope for at least two but maybe as many as four founding nodes uh so the the organization that's going to be hosting that work is uh at wilfrid laurier university which is uh 150 kilometers or so west of toronto we've got a working session with them later on this month and so i would just put it out there to any of you if you're interested in potentially talking about this further please contact nicole in her role as a community animator she can share with you the materials that we've got so far um and obviously we're looking to make sure that there are nodes in multiple geographies you know this idea of there are different biomes for business and george and i know you've expressed some interest in in this idea so uh welcome your engagement through nicole in in that process um the final thing i just wanted to mention is next month's presentation a very different topic we have eric faff combs who's a recent graduate of an mba program in the netherlands whose research was on what are useful business models and business modeling tools and business modeling concepts uh in the renewable energy space particularly and uh again from an innovation cluster perspective so he was working with the dutch innovation agency tno and their renewable energy specific group hessie and so he's going to be presenting a summary of his research on that topic next month and eric if you want to wait for everybody this is eric and so looking forward to that very much so as usual put it in your calendars as a recurring appointment choose the second tutorial each month uh for those of you not too close to the international dateline as i've discovered uh sometimes it ends up being the first tuesday of the month or the thursday first tuesday of the month in those cases but for most people it's the second tuesday of the month it's 4 30 p.m eastern standard time uh which is utc plus five uh and uh looking forward to seeing everybody and i think the date as i was finding out earlier is february the what do you say i mean i'm going to get this wrong it is february the 12th for those of you who need questions so thank you everybody thank you again to nicole and lindsey for a great presentation uh recording will be up nicole tomorrow uh yep i will process it and we'll have it up tomorrow for you and the link to that uh specific folder for this month will be posted as a comment in the linkedin group under this month's presentation uh which hopefully you can still find given how badly if linkedin has messed up everything and their group socialities so with that have a good evening everybody have a good day for those of you who are tomorrow already and have a good evening or night for those of you about to go today thanks everyone
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2021-04-23
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Structuralism | Wikipedia audio article
in sociology anthropology and linguistics structuralism as the methodology that implies elements of human culture must be understood by way of their relationship to a broader overarching system or structure it works to uncover the structures that underlie all the things that humans do think perceive and feel alternatively as summarized by philosophers Simon Blackburn structuralism as the belief that phenomena of human life is not intelligible except through their interrelations these relations constitute a structure and behind local variations in the surface phenomena there are constant laws of abstract culture structuralism in Europe developed in the early 1900's in the structural linguistics of ferdinand de saussure in the subsequent prague moscow in copenhagen schools of linguistics in the late 1950s and early 1960s when structural linguistics was facing serious challenges from the likes of Noam Chomsky and thus fading an importance an array of scholars in the humanities borrowed so sirs concepts for use in their respective fields of study French anthropologist Claude lévi-strauss was arguably the first such scholar sparking a widespread interest in structuralism the structuralist mode of reasoning has been applied in a diverse range of fields including anthropology sociology psychology literary criticism economics and architecture the most prominent thinkers associated with structuralism include claude lévi-strauss linguist roman jakobson and psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan as an intellectual movement structuralism was initially presumed to be the heir apparent to existentialism however by the late 1960s many of structuralism basic tenets came under attack from a new wave of predominantly French intellectuals such as the philosopher and historian Michel Foucault the philosopher Jacques Derrida the Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser and the literary critic Rowland Bart's though elements of their work necessarily relate to structuralism and are informed by it these theorists have generally been referred to as post structuralist in the nineteen structuralism was criticized for its rigidity in a historicism despite this many of structuralism proponents such as Lacan continue to assert an influence on continental philosophy and many of the fundamental assumptions of some of structuralism post-structuralism of structuralism topic overview the term structuralism is a related term that describes a particular philosophical literary movement or moment the term appeared in the works of French anthropologist Claude lévi-strauss and gave rise in France to the structuralist movement which influenced the thinking of other writers such as Louis Althusser the psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan as well as the structural marxism of nikos Poole once's most of whom disavowed themselves as being a part of this movement the origins of structuralism connect with the work of Ferdinand de Saussure on linguistics along with the linguistics of the prague and moscow schools in brief so sir structural linguistics propounded three related concepts so sir argued for a distinction between long and idealized abstraction of language and parole language is actually used in daily life he argued that the sign was composed of both a signified an abstract concept or idea and a signifier the perceived sound visual image because different languages have different words to describe the same objects or concepts there is no intrinsic reason why a specific sign is used to express a given signifier it is thus arbitrary signs thus gain their meaning from their relationships and contrasts with other signs as he wrote in language there are only differences without positive terms proponents of structuralism would argue that a specific domain of culture may be understood by means of a structure modelled on language that is distinct both from the organization's of reality and those of ideas or the imagination the third order in Lacan psychoanalytic theory for example the structural order of the symbolic is distinguished both from the real and the imaginary similarly in althusser's marxist theory the structural order of the capitalist mode of production is distinct both from the actual real agents involved in its relations and from the ideological forms in which those relations are understood blending Freud and so sir the post-structuralist jacques lacan applied structuralism to psychoanalysis and in a different way Jean Piaget applied structuralism to the study of psychology but Jean Piaget who would better define himself as constructivist consider structuralism as a method and not a doctrine because for him there exists no structure without a construction abstract or genetic although the French theorist Louis Althusser is often associated with a brand of structural social analysis which helped give rise to structural marxism such Association was contested by Althusser himself in the Italian forward to the second edition of reading capital in this forward Althusser states the following despite the precautions we took to distinguish ourselves from the structuralist ideology despite the decisive intervention of categories foreign to structuralism the terminology we employed was too close in many respects to the structuralist terminology not to give rise to an ambiguity with a very few exceptions our interpretation of Marx has generally been recognized and judged in homage to the current fashion as structuralist we believe that despite the terminological ambiguity the profound tendency of our texts was not attached to the structuralist ideology in a later development feminist theorist Allison acid er enumerated for ideas that she says are common to the various forms of structuralism first that a structure determines the position of each element of a whole second that every system has a structure third structural laws deal with coexistence rather than change fourth structures are the real things that lie beneath the surface or the appearance of meaning topic in linguistics in course in general linguistics the analysis focuses not on the use of language called parole or speech but rather on the underlying system of language called long this approach examines how the elements of language relate to each other in the present synchronically rather than dire chronically so sir argued that linguistic signs were composed of two parts a signifier the sound pattern of a word either in mental projection as when one silently recites lines from signage a poem to oneself or in actual any kind of text physical realization as part of a speech act aa signified the concept or meaning of the word this was quite different from previous approaches that focused on the relationship between words and the things in the world that they designate other key notions in structural linguistics include paradigm centum and value though these notions were not fully developed in so sir's thought a structural idealism is a class of linguistic units lexemes morphemes or even constructions that are possible in a certain position in a given linguistic environment such as a given sentence which is called the Sin Tam the different functional role of each of these members of the paradigm is called value Villere in French so sirs course influenced many linguists between World War one and World War two in the United States for instance leonard bloomfield developed his own version of structural linguistics as did louis hjelmslev in denmark and alf Sommerfeld in norway in france antoine may a and émile benveniste continued Saussure's project and members of the prague school of linguistics such as roman jakob sinned and nikolai true Betts COI conducted research that would be greatly influential however by the 1950s so sirs linguistic concepts were under heavy criticism and were soon largely abandoned by practicing linguists so sirs views are not held so far as I know by modern linguists only by literary critics in the occasional philosopher strict adherence to so sir has elicited wrong film in literary theory on a grand scale one can find dozens of books of literary theory bogged down in signifiers and signified but only a handful that referred to Chomsky the clearest and most important example of prague school structuralism lies in phonemic s' rather than simply compiling a list of which sounds occur in a language the prague school sought to examine how they were related they determined that the inventory of sounds in a language could be analyzed in terms of a series of contrasts thus in English the sounds P and B represent distinct phonemes because there are cases minimal pairs where the contrast between the two is the only difference between two distinct words eg Pat and bat analyzing sounds in terms of contrastive features also opens up comparative scope it makes clear for instance that the difficulty japanese speakers have differentiating R and L in English as because these sounds are not contrastive in Japanese phonology would become the paradigm attic basis for structuralism in a number of different fields topic in anthropology according to structural theory in anthropology and social anthropology meaning is produced and reproduced within a culture through various practices phenomena and activities that service systems of signification a structuralist approach may study activities as diverse as food preparation and serving rituals religious rites games literary and non-literary texts and other forms of entertainment to discover the deep structures by which meaning is produced and reproduced within the culture for example Levy Strauss analyzed in the 1950s cultural phenomena including mythology kinship the alliance theory and the incest taboo and food preparation in addition to these studies he produced more linguistically focused writings in which he applied so sirs distinction between long and parole in his search for the fundamental structures of the human mind arguing that the structures that form the deep grammar of society originate in the mind and operate in people unconsciously levy Strauss took inspiration from mathematics another concept used in structural anthropology came from the prague school of linguistics where Roman Jakobson and others analyzed sounds based on the presence or absence of certain features such as voiceless versus voiced levy Strauss included this in his conceptualization of the universal structures of the mind which he held to operate based on pairs of binary opposition's such as hot cold male-female culture nature cooked raw or marriage' bolused Ubud women a third influence came from marcel mauss 1872 to 1950 who had written on gift exchange systems based on moss for instance Levy Strauss argued that kinship systems are based on the exchange of women between groups a position known as alliance theory as opposed to the descent based theory described by Edward Evans Pritchard and meyer fortes while replacing Marcel Mauss at his Ecole Prix des hoaxes etudes chair Levy Strauss writing became widely popular in the 1960s and 1970s and gave rise to the term structuralism itself in Britain authors such as Rodney me demand Edmund leach were highly influenced by structuralism authors such as Maurice Goodell your'e and Emmanuel turay combined Marxism with structural anthropology in France in the United States authors such as Marshall Sahlins and James Boone built on structuralism to provide their own analysis of human society structural anthropology fell out of favor in the early 1980s for a number of reasons Dondre day suggests that this was because it made unverifiable assumptions about the universal structures of the human mind authors such as Eric wolf argued that political economy and colonialism should be at the forefront of anthropology more generally criticisms of structuralism by Pierre Bourdieu led to a concern with how cultural and social structures were changed by human agency and practice a trend which sherry Ortner has referred to as practice theory some anthropological theorists however while finding considerable fault with levy Strauss's version of structuralism did not turn away from a fundamental structural basis for human culture the biogenetic structuralism group for instance argued that some kind of structural foundation for culture must exist because all humans inherit the same system of brain structures they proposed a kind of neuro anthropology which would lay the foundations for a more complete scientific account of cultural similarity and variation by requiring an integration of cultural anthropology and neuroscience a program that theorists such as Victor Turner also embraced topic in literary theory and criticism in literary theory structuralist criticism relates literary texts to a larger structure which may be a particular genre a range of intertextual connections a model of a universal narrative structure or a system of recurrent patterns or motifs structuralism argues that there must be a structure in every text which explains why it is easier for experienced readers than for non experienced readers to interpret a text hence everything that is written seems to be governed by specific rules or a grammar of literature that one learns in educational institutions and that are to be unmasked a potential problem of structuralist interpretation is that it can be highly reductive as scholar catherine bells ii puts it the structuralist danger of collapsing all difference an example of such a reading might be if a student concludes the authors of West Side Story did not write anything really new because their work has the same structure as Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet in both texts a girl and a boy fall in love formula with a symbolic operator between them would be boy plus girl despite the fact that they belong to two groups that hate each other boys group girls group or opposing forces and conflict is resolved by their death structuralist readings focus on how the structures of the single text resolve inherent narrative tensions if a structuralist reading focuses on multiple texts there must be some way in which those texts unify themselves into a coherent system the versatility of structuralism as such that a literary critic could make the same claim about a story of two friendly families boys family plus girls family that arranged a marriage between their children despite the fact that the children hate each other boy girl and then the children commit suicide to escape the arranged marriage the justification is that the second-story structure as an inversion of the first storey structure the relationship between the values of love and the two pairs of parties involved have been reversed structural istic literary criticism argues that the literary banter of a text can lie only in new structure rather than in the specifics of character development and voice in which that structure is expressed literary structuralism often follows the lead of Vladimir Propp Algirdas Julian grimace and Claude lévi-strauss in seeking out basic deep elements in stories myths and more recently anecdotes which are combined in various ways to produce the many versions of the Earth's story or myth there is considerable similarity between structural literary theory and Northrop Fry's archetypal criticism which is also indebted to the anthropological study of myths some critics have also tried to apply the theory to individual works but the effort to find unique structures in individual literary works runs counter to the structuralist program and has an affinity with new criticism topic history and background you throughout the 1940s and 1950s existentialism such as that propounded by jean-paul Sartre was the dominant European intellectual movement structuralism rose to prominence in France in the wake of existentialism particularly in the 1960s the initial popularity of structuralism in France led to its spread across the globe structuralism rejected the concept of human freedom and choice and focused instead on the way that human experience and thus behavior is determined by various structures the most important initial work on this score was Claude lévi-strauss his 1949 volume the elementary structures of kinship Levy Straus had known Jakob sin during their time together at the new school in New York during World War two and was influenced by both Jakob sin structuralism as well as the American Anthropological tradition in elementary structures he examined kinship systems from a structural point of view and demonstrated how apparently different social organizations were in fact different permutations of a few basic kinship structures in the late 1950s he published structural anthropology a collection of essays outlining his program for structuralism by the early 1960s structuralism as a movement was coming into its own and some believed that it offered a single unified approach to human life that would embrace all disciplines rolling Bart's and Jacques Derrida focused on how structuralism could be applied to literature the so-called Gang of Four of structuralism was levy Strauss Lacan Bart's and Foucault topic interpretations and general criticisms you structuralism is less popular today than other approaches such as post structuralism and deconstruction structuralism has often been criticized for being a historical and for favoring deterministic structural forces over the ability of people to act as the political turbulence of the 1960's and 1970's and particularly the student uprisings of May 1968 began affecting academia issues of power and political struggle moved to the center of people's attention in the 1980's deconstruction and its emphasis on the fundamental ambiguity of language rather than its crystal and logical structure became popular by the end of the century structuralism was seen as an historically important school of thought but the movements that it spawned rather than structuralism itself commanded attention several social thinkers and academics have strongly criticized structuralism or even dismissed it in toto the French hermeneutic philosopher paul ricoeur 1969 criticized Levy Strauss for constantly overstepping the limits of validity of the structuralist approach ending up in what Ricker described as a kantianism without a transcendental subject anthropologist adam cooper 1973 argued that structuralism came to have something of the momentum of a millennial movement and some of its adherents felt that they formed a secret society of the seeing in a world of the blind conversion was not just a matter of accepting a new paradigm it was almost a question of salvation Philip Noel Pettit 1975 called for an abandoning of the positivist dream which levy Strauss dreamed for simi ology arguing that simi ology is not to be placed among the Natural Sciences cornelius castoriadis 1975 criticized structuralism as failing to explain symbolic mediation in the social world he viewed structuralism as a variation on the loge assists theme and he argued that contrary to what structuralist advocate language and symbolic systems in general cannot be reduced to logical organizations on the basis of the binary logic of opposition's critical theorist Jurgen Habermas 1985 accused structuralist such as Foucault a being positivists he remarked that while Foucault is not an ordinary positivist he nevertheless paradoxically uses the tools of science to criticize science see performative contradiction and Foucault habermas debate sociologist Anthony Giddens 1993 is another notable critic while Giddings draws on a range of structuralist themes in his theorizing he dismisses the structuralist view that the reproduction of social systems is merely a mechanical outcome topic see also anta humanism engaged theory genetic structuralism Russian formalism structuralist film Theory structuration theory topic notes you topic further reading anger Muller J 2015 why there is no post-structuralism in France the making of an intellectual generation London Bloomsbury Elizabeth Rudy nesco philosophy in turbulent times Kang will hem Sartre Foucault althusser Deleuze Derrida Columbia University Press New York 2008 topic primary sources course in general linguistics ferdinand de saussure essays de linguistique general roman jakob s'en the elementary structures of kinship claude lévi-strauss structural anthropology claude lévi-strauss mythologic s-- claude lévi-strauss the seminars of Jacques Lacan Jacques Lacan reading capital Louis Althusser s:z rollin Bart's the order of things michel foucault a quark and a 'unless structural yzma giles Deleuze in peace to ardilla philosophy i days doctrines vol 8 let xxe siècle Pichette paris 1973 PP 299 to 335 edited by francois Chatelet claude lévi-strauss the father of modern anthropology patrick Wilkin
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ANGELS & DEMONS: Do They Exist? – Rabbi Eliezer Breitowitz – Jews for Judaism (Angel Devil Satan)
[Music] so i don't want to give anybody the false impression that i am an angel or that i'm acquainted with angels and that i'm speaking from personal experience i'm going to share with you some ideas from the torah and from rabbinical literature and then you'll have to ask yourselves if you've ever encountered a real angel the fact that angels exist is a well-established fact in the bible there are certain prophetic works such as the book of isaiah yeshaya the book of yahushua ezekiel the book of zechariah the book of dorneil which speak about angels describe angels they are depicted as being clothed in white having wings being able to fly and even in the hummish even in the five books of moses we have stories that make reference to angels abraham our patriarch is visited by three very suspicious people and according to abundant tradition and this is borne out by the continuation of the story these in fact were angels the patriarch jacob battles and enigmatic man according to benin tradition that was an angel what is an angel let's use the hebrew word amalah what is a mala maimonides writes that the word malach means a messenger or an agent sometimes it can be applied to a human being if i send someone to buy something in the store i could say that he is a malek but generally the term is reserved for god's messengers god's agents people that act on behalf of god and do his bidding well do they wear white do they have wings do they fly what is the essence of an angel so maimonides the random as you know was a rationalist and he gives us a very rational explanation for a non-rational phenomenon and he begins as follows if you're familiar with aristotelian thought you know that every object in the world is comprised of two aspects there is substance the material out of which the thing is made if it's a wooden table so the substance is wood and form form doesn't only mean the shape of a thing form is the distinct set of characteristics that make the thing what it is that's form everything has substance and form if you take a wooden table and you disassemble it and put the pieces together to form a chair there's been a change of form but the substance has remained constant it is the same would so maimonides writes that there are three types of things in the world there are the physical objects with which we're familiar which have substance and form but the form can change so for example if i eat a carrot and the fiber and the nutrients in the carrot become absorbed in my body so the substance is a constant conservation of matter but the form has changed it previously was a carrot now it has become part of a human being so those are the typical objects that we find in everyday life the substance is a constant the form changes and then maimonides says there are other things which also have substance and form but here the form does not change and this is really a vestige of ancient science that believed that everything which is in the distant heavens beyond the moon is a fundamentally different type of matter so when you contemplate the stars and the constellations these have substance and form but the form is unchanging these are eternal these are constant but nowadays by the way we don't believe that because we believe that the stars and the galaxies and comets and so on and so forth are made of the same stuff that earth is made of the same chemical elements but this only was proven believe it or not in the late 1800s with the invention of the spectrometer that was the only way we could determine that a distant star which may be light years away from earth is really made of the same material that we find on this planet but uh for most of human history it was believed that the heavens were comprised of a different type of matter and maimonides echoing that says that the heavenly host has substance and form but the form is eternal the form is unchanging and then he says there's a third category of essentially spiritual beings which have form but not substance now this is a hard thing for us to wrap our heads around what would that mean for something to have form to have characteristics but not any material substance but there are such things and the modernity says angels fall into that category they have form which means they have defining characteristics but they do not have material substance it is a totally spiritual non-physical being now because of this maimonides takes a very interesting position he says there really is no way to see an angel not because angels are transparent but because there's really nothing to see they have no physical material substance so an angel can't be seen the only people that can see angels are people who are having a prophetic experience a navi a prophet in this prophetic vision can behold angels and that's why in the prophetic works as we said in isaiah and ezekiel and so on and so forth we find angels seen but a human being cannot see an angel with eyes of flesh an angel cannot be seen again not because the angel is transparent not because the angel doesn't reflect light it's because there is no material substance to be seen now this happens to be a very problematic position really on two counts number one if angels in fact don't have material substance so what is the meaning of these prophetic visions why are angels depicted as wearing white and having wings and flying if that doesn't correspond to the reality so to this maimonides gives it a answer and he says that these attributes of the angel the way he's dressed or i guess she's dressed and the wings and the flying really symbolize an aspect of what it means to be a male a malach is god's agent god's messenger it does god's bidding without hesitation without delay it doesn't have to overcome inertia and when we think of flying having wings that means that there's no resistance if you have to go from here to there so uh before airplanes were invented if you had to take a horse and wagon where you had to take a boat takes time there's a delay if you could flap your wings and fly that would symbolize doing it swiftly without any delay and that's how angels are depicted angels are depicted as being able to do god's will without hesitation without delay nothing constrains them nothing holds them back because they are god's agents they are holy they are pure and of course that is symbolized by the color white so reminded he says that all these prophetic visions do not correspond to a reality but they are symbolic and convey some idea about what amalek what an angel does now another problem is that there are biblical accounts of people who interact with angels so for example let's go back to the story of abraham these three people come to his house and he hands them sit under the tree and he serves them a lavish meal and at least they appear to be eating now this happened does that happen is this all a dream a prophetic experience that abraham had or did he actually serve this meal okay maybe you could read that story one way or the other but let's go to another story jacob fighting with the angel was that a dream well we find that he was injured in the process he walked away with an injury that took a long time to heal could that have been a dream so the rambam asks these questions and he takes a slightly different opinion on this question he says that angels can take on bodily form they can be seen with human eyes and that explains all these stories but this is the position that maimonides took now there's a very basic question we have to ask ourselves which is why does god choose to use angels because we know that one of the fundamental elements of our definition of god is the idea that god is omnipotent omnipotent means he's all-powerful there are no limits no constraints god himself can manage the world and every detail of the world perfectly he doesn't need help he doesn't need employees he does need assistance he doesn't need messenger people so why does god choose to operate through the medium of angels of course god runs the world we understand that but he doesn't need anybody to help him in doing that because why do we have these depictions of angels and by the way these depictions of angels some of them are fabulous we see rivers of angels thousands and thousands and thousands in the book of daniel there's a description of aleph alfin isham shunai millions of servants why does god need all this help so i think that there are several answers to this question one the zohar gives and the zohar says that the reason god chooses to operate through angels is to impress us that we should have an impression of god's majesty because imagine if you were going to visit a very important person a king president and you'd come to his palace and knock on the door and the king himself opens the door there's no guards no staff no crew he's managing the whole place he invites you in you look around the place is deserted nobody is there so you wouldn't be faulted if you ask yourself what kind of king is this guy doesn't have a staff no cabinet no army nobody nothing so if we would see the reality of god running the world himself that wouldn't be very impressive and god speaks to us in familiar ways he wants us to understand him where we're coming from so therefore god in a sense says the tsar puts on a masquerade he acts as if he is a human king with an army and with a staff and with guards and with an entourage so that we should be impressed now of course this big is the question but who gets to see these armies we don't see angels perhaps the great prophets isaiah ezekiel they saw the angels in their prophetic visions but how are we going to be impressed so it reminds me of a joke so i'm a joke it's a true story and since you've been so attentive until this point i'm going to give you a little reward an amusing story there was a rabbi who had a very very long beard a very very long beard down to his waist and someone came to him and said rabbi you have such a long beard tell me why do you wear a necktie so he says no one can see you're wearing a necktie you have a long beard why do you wear the tie so the batman said well how do you know why we wear a necktie so he says well i peeked behind says that's why i wear the necktie it's true most of us will never see an angel that's true but there are a few people a few select people who will see angels and they'll report this and these are the great prophets as we said the prophet isaiah and the prophet ezekiel they had visions and they recorded these visions in their prophetic works and that's why god does it because god knew that they would see it they'd be impressed by it they would record it and for posterity we would have these accounts and we would be dazzled by this array of power and majesty number two we know that this world i'm going to talk about this a little bit later today this world poses challenges for us the next world the olam haba this is the world of reward of recompense this is the world of challenge the world of testing and there are a lot of tests of different types of tests small tests big tests so for example you go to the store and you want to buy yourself a candy bar and there are two possibilities one of them has a kosher endorsement so that you know that's okay the other one which looks a lot better a lot tastier doesn't have the kosher endorsement that's a big test will i buy and eat the kosher one will i buy and eat the non-kosher one that's a big test but there are bigger tests than that and one of the biggest tests a test that thank god is not as common today as it once was is the test of faith are we going to believe in god as classically defined or are we going to fall into the trap of heresy and by the way this is an area in which jews and judaism plays a major role in helping people pass that test because there are challenges even today but once upon a time they were even greater and there were people that said like this if god has servants perhaps we should worship those this would be a way of endearing ourselves to god by giving honor to his servants and this man that he says by the way is how idolatry got off the ground you see if you speak to a historian of religion today he will tell you that monotheism is a evolutionary development that the world originally was pagan and polytheistic and somehow belief became more refined and evolved in a positive way it arrived at monotheism but in the biblical account it's the opposite the first human beings adam and eve were monotheists they had direct experience of god god spoke to them so polytheism idolatry is a reverse evolution it's a regression it's a decline how did that happen so romanity says the great error the great theological error which led to polytheism was the worship of subordinate beings people said well god is on tap he's on top of the hierarchy but below him there are the sun the moon the stars the planets and these are his servants so perhaps it will be a valid form of worship to bow to them build temples to them sacrifice to them as a way of endearing ourselves to to god when god made the world obviously a world needs a sun needs a moon needs stars but part of the intent may have been to pose this challenge because that is the entire scheme behind this world this is a world of testing this is a world of temptation this is a world of challenge and part of the challenge is to have all these things to test us as to whether we will fall into the trap of serving them or not and it may be that this is another reason why there are angels we're not meant to worship an angel the worship of an angel is actual idolatry this is something which is very very important to understand jews do not worship subordinate beings but contrast to the catholic church say which venerates human saints let alone angels because we practice a pure monotheism in which only god and god alone is worshipped but the existence of angels may be necessary to pose this test of faith which is part of a god scheme for this world but i think that the really correct answer to this question is that there's another issue here that underlies everything i'll give you an example let's say you have some business with the government some problem there's a pothole in the street in front of your house and you want the government to attend to this problem so you go to city hall and you speak to some low-level bureaucrat who may be able to address the issue may not be able to address the issue and uh you ask can i speak to your supervisor is anybody above you maybe someone i can deal with who is empowered to solve my problem and this low-level bureaucrat who was very very zealous in guarding his prerogative says i'm sorry there's no one else you can see this is my department i'm in charge there's nobody above me i am the minister of potholes for this neighborhood that's it but if you are a little more influential let's say you are a major donor to one of the political parties you can bypass the lower level and you can be heard at the higher levels maybe the mayor himself may be the governor or as you would say the premier forgive me i'm from the states and if you're really important you probably can call the prime minister who will then make another phone call to somebody farther down the food chain and say listen this guy needs his pothole repaired he'll make sure it happens the idea of a heavenly court in which there are layers and layers and layers of bureaucracy if you will creates the potential for people being close or being distant from the tap to illustrate the talmud says an amazing thing the talmud says that if a person lives in the land of israel it's as if he has a god and if a person lives outside the land of israel it's as if he has no god very cryptic statement explains it in this way he says you know god runs the world every land is under the control of a guardian angel so ontario has the guardian angel of ontario and quebec has the guardian angel of quebec and saskatchewan has its own and british colombia has its own even pei has its own every region has its own guardian angel there's one place in the world where there's no guardian angel it's under god's direct control that's the land of israel that's central to god's plan if you live in israel to the extent that god controls aerys israel the land of israel you are subject to his exclusive control that's called having a god if you live outside you're under the control of these guardian angels so to the extent that's so it's a bit less there's someone in the lands says the nations the people also are that way the people of the classical 70 nations also have 70 guardian angels each one is subject to the control of its angel the jewish people because of their central role they are under god's direct control and this difference whether there's an angel who oversees you or whether you are directly under god's control that is a demonstration of intimacy of closeness and that's what the whole system is about if a person raises himself to a higher level of faith of belief of religious practice of spirituality he becomes closer what does it mean to become closer your relationship becomes more personal more intimate so yes there are people who are insulated from the tap by layers and layers and layers of angels as the prophets saw and then there are people who can elevate themselves and bring themselves to a intimate connection with god bypassing all those angels and that's why the system was set up the system was set up to impress upon us this idea that it is within our power to remain distant or to become close now until now we're talking about angels let's change the topic a little bit and talk about demons there are two terms that the town would uses for these destructive beings sometimes they're called shadim and sometimes they're called masikhim a magic implies something destructive to be magic means to destroy now in our culture it's informed a little by yiddish if you have a three-year-old let's say who gets into everything so what do you call him he's a little magic you wonder where does that expression come from obviously he's a human being but he's analogous to one of these destructive forces the talmud says very interesting things about them it says that every person every human being has ten thousand of them on his right side and a thousand of them on his left side you cannot escape them everybody confronts them and the talmud says that there are all sorts of things that go wrong in life and you can blame the music so for example the talmud says there was an annual lecture called the the kala this was a gathering everyone gathered to hear the words of the sages and there was a lot of pushing and shoving people were joking for position for the better places the better seats and yet despite all the pushing and shoving if you'd look around you would see there's plenty of room so you have to wonder why is everybody pushing there's so much room here that the answer is because the music were there and they're shoving people around the talmud says rabbi's clothing brandeis clothing should last forever they don't work clothing shouldn't wear out it somehow it gets worn out so the talmud says why is that that's because these uh mazikian the ten thousand on the right and thousands on the left are rubbing against you so your clothes become worn out the uh the talmud says that a lot of aches and pains are caused by the music if your knees feel weak that could be the music attacking you and the talmud talks about how you can see them how you can detect them without seeing them it's a fabulous thing so what are they what are these in english we call them demons what are demons so there's a very interesting text in the talmud if you look on the handout number three on the handout says that there are six ways that we define these music and we define these demons in three ways they are like human beings and in three ways they're like angels so it says it's fallows they have wings like angels they fly like angels and they know the future like angels now the talmud says they don't really know the future they eavesdrop you know they hang out by the heavenly court me rehab parkwood on the other side of the partition they overhear what was the creed so they have some idea about the future they don't really know but they pick up the hints so those are the ways in which they're like angels how are they like human beings they eat and drink they reproduce and they die and they die so we already understand that these demons are not simply angels with a destructive mission they are fundamentally different there's something different about them they are not angels in certain respects are like angels but in certain respects to elect human beings so the rambam the commanders says a very interesting thing an astounding thing and for this we also have to have a little bit of ancient science the ancients believed that everything is comprised of four elements the heaviest is earth then water then air and then fire these are the four elements that comprise everything and everything and every human being is a mixture of these four elements and that's why there are some people who have very fiery personalities in their blend they may have a little extra fire then there are some people who are kind of sluggish and slow maybe in their blend there's a little extra earth but this is what everything is made up these four elements says the ramban angels as we said have no substance but say them have substance but they are comprised of the two lightest elements they are made only of fire and air there is no water and there is no earth in their composition they are comprised only of the lightest elements of fire and air now because they have substance this is why they die and this is another bit of restilian science the restilians believe that physical objects ultimately degenerate and break down and this is inescapable no physical thing can survive forever there is inevitability towards breaking down decomposing et cetera and that's what death is death is when the body breaks down so since the music him since the music him have physical substance albeit they're comprised of the lighter elements so they break down which means they die because they die they have to reproduce because if they would not reproduce that would be it after one generation they'd be extinct so therefore they die and they reproduce because their physical substance they have to be nourished therefore they eat as well these are the three aspects in which nazim demons resemble human beings as opposed to angels angels don't have to eat because they are spiritual they have no substance they don't have to reproduce because they are eternal and of course they don't die and so you might wonder so why is this why did god create this half breed called a massic i think the answer is very simple because god wants to teach us an important thing that yes the world requires a little evil doing too the world wouldn't work if everything was perfect and optimal but god wants to disassociate himself from that evil and therefore he says that the agents of good they will share my spiritual characteristic of being without body or form says those forces which are necessary because the world must have destructive forces those will be relegated to a lower class they will have substance albeit from the lighter elements which of course enable them to fly and act swiftly but they are not spiritual beings like god and the angels now time is short but i do want to tackle one other point which i think is very important which is the idea of the satan the satan one very very well-known angel in christian thought the satan is an angel who has rebelled against the authority of god he has defied god and he battles god and this of course is rooted in a borrowing from the persian zero-astrian religion in which it was perceived that there were forces of good and evil at as with each other contending with each other so we're taking this into christianity the saturn was understood as being in a state of rebellion against god now of course this presupposes that angels have free will and angels could rebel against god maimonides by the way is emphatic on this point he says that an angel does not have free will an angel is an embodiment of the divine will and he can't defy the divine will by the way the talmud says in the tract in khalid that angels are created whenever god speaks bidvar the verse says by the word of god heavens were created and by the breath of his mouth called spam all their hosts the talmud says this angels come from whenever god speaks an angel is created which means this that the angel is the embodiment of the divine will and when god expresses that will which we metaphorically call speech the angel is created so if the angel does nothing more nothing less than embodiment of the divine will the idea of an angel rebelling against god says our manatees is inconceivable i there are stories in the town wood where we seem to get the impression that angels do exercise free will this is a topic which is discussed if i'm invited back maybe we'll take an hour just to talk about that question but the satan is a unique being the saturn is mentioned in several places in the bible the most noteworthy place is in the book of job the book of eof where the satan is depicted as an accuser god speaks about the very righteous job eo great sadness very pious individual god-fearing and the satan says you think he's so god-fearing he says test him hurt him injure him and let's see what he does then so he's the accuser he's the adversary but the talmud says even more than that you ever read or see this depiction of a small town in the south where the same person is the police officer who arrests you for speeding he hauls you in before the judge he's the judge and he convicts you and then he's also the jailer and he oversees your sentence that's what the supplement is the talmud says it's on the sheet number five that he descends to this world and misleads a person with a sinning so the satan is really the yetzer hara he is the evil inclination that tempts us and seduces us he then ascends to heaven levels accusations against the very sinner and inflames god's anger so sutton is now the sought on the accuser and on top of that he's the angel of death he is the malacha and he carries out the sentence it's all the same angel the same being no sounds pretty bad but we have to understand from a jewish perspective everything has a purpose the verse in isaiah says number six in the sheet i form light and create darkness i make peace and create evil i the lord do all these things because we don't see evil as a counterforce to god god created the world and we'll talk about this later today we'll talk at the end days god created the world for us to exercise our free will to be tested and to thereby earn our eternal bliss in the world to come there has to be evil in the world if there was no potential for evil in the world there would be no free will and no opportunity to earn our eternal bliss and therefore that satan that satan who tempts us who accuses us and who carries out the sentence is necessary and he also was created by god and is doing god's will now the hour is late i'm going to share with you a fabulous thought from the hasidic world and we'll end with that and we have time we'll take a couple of questions we mentioned that story of jacob wrestling with that man jacob was going to face a very very frightful encounter with his brother esau asap the next day and he was taking precautions and he arranged the positions for his entourage and family and at one point he is left alone and this man which according to a new petition was an angel comes and wrestles with him in a higher night jacob is victorious over the angel the angel confers upon him his new name israel israel as a reward now in the story it says that the the angel said let me go let me go release me so jacob says i'm not gonna let you go i'm not going to let you go until you bless me and that's when the angel gives him the new name of israel that's the blessing so the question is why did the angel want to leave why did he want to leave so the med rich says an amazing thing the measure says that every angel is given an opportunity to sing before god to sing the praises of god one time in its life if the angel could live for thousands and thousands of years he has one opportunity one golden opportunity so the angel is in uh the hold of yaakov avinu yaka won't let him go and the angel tells him my time to sing the praises of god has come you have to let me go my appointment has come so jacob gets his blessing let's the angel go so the question is this is an amazing amazing amazing coincidence you think about it for a second that an angel can live for a thousand essentially eternal and he has one opportunity to sing the praise of god and it just happens to be at the moment that jacob has him in the headlock like isn't that an amazing coincidence of all the times just that moment was his time so one of the great hasidic masters the maggot of kashmits says the meaning of the story is as follows who was this angel so the medrish tells us that this angel the guardian angel of asov is identified as the sultan this is that angel who is the evil urge who is the accuser who is the angel of death who also happens to be the guardian angel of jacob's evil brother esau and this battle was really symbolic of the battle that jacob jake was a great pious individual but everybody has an evil urge everyone has a yates or horror so to speak and uh jakov had to battle it too everybody has to battle it yaakov's victory in this battle was symbolic of the fact that yaakov in his very very difficult life was successful in that battle most of us i would say that our records are uh not 100 no maybe 55 65 maybe 75 now you good people who came to a lecture on a legal holiday will give you a 90 percent even but nobody's perfect yaakov avinu was as perfect jacob or patriarch was as perfect as a human being could be this was a total victory over this evil angel says the maggot of cousins every angel has an opportunity to sing god's praise when when when does the angel get his turn so he offers a very reasonable conjecture the angel gets his opportunity when he's finished his job an angel was sent to this world for a purpose when he finishes his job that's when he's given the opportunity to sing the praise of god the satan the evil urge the angel of death when is his job finished when is he a success so it's an important thing to understand when he tempts us and we fail that is his failure too he wasn't sent to this world to tempt us that we should fail he was sent to this world to tempt us that we should earn our bliss by overcoming the temptation the success of the satan the success of the satan is when we resist when we exact a victory over him if we fail then he's failed he hasn't accomplished what he was meant to accomplish if we succeed and we resist and overcome temptation and do the right thing then the satan will have achieved his real purpose and therefore yaakov avinu jacob our patriarch who was victorious over this angel over this evil angel to a greater extent than anyone else ever had done and yaakov had him in that headlock that was the moment where the saturn was given the opportunity to sing god's praise that's when the saturn did his job it's an amazing thing this is not an angel who stands in defiance of god this is not an angel who rebels against god this is an angel who was given a very very uncomfortable distasteful mission which is to create the opportunity for us to do the right thing by overcoming the temptation to do the wrong thing and when we are successful he is successful this is where we part ways with christianity we are a pure monotheistic religion there is no force that stands in opposition to god there is no force that defies god even this seemingly evil angel the sutton the eight sahara the malacha the accuser the one who tempts the angel of death is doing god's work in this world if we respond appropriately so these are a few comments and angels and demons i hope it was helpful and i hope that you'll keep your eyes open to see if you encounter any of these angels and hopefully you will hopefully the angels of god sends to protect you will guide you through the course of life [Music] so [Music] you
Jews for Judaism
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2020-08-02
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metadata
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6,143
32,610
2oYTP9z5M-c
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2oYTP9z5M-c
Adventures In Second Life - D.P. YUMYUM - Ooooh Two? Wow!
we're here at yum yum and we've got a unisex hair which you can see on the sign here next to the ladies uh i reckon it would work no matter whether you've got sort of an anime character or just a normal character and you like to have your uh your hair over your face fringe whatever you want to call it uh this one i believe you get the one star but i'll let the ladies go into more detail but there's also group gifts here as well you'll notice like an echo fill so ladies would you want to explain exactly what we're getting here we are getting the option is you get the lovely brown which is 50 linden and then or if you want the full fat pack if that is 300 linden which is right next to it and it is a you know double paradox dp yum yum special gift a special sale and the cool thing is if you want to have the little ears to go with it not little ears the ears to go with it you can get the group gift if you are active in the double paradox group at the time and i believe that membership in double paradox is free it is free can you show those ears the free gift up there yeah i'm going to do a close-up but guess what that's not all for 50 linden friday nope nope it's not i know you're excited look look look there's your little group gift and then up above that there is another offering that's halloweeny for yum yum we have the ghost s07 and rigged mesh hair and it's got some leaves and look at the little kitty look it's got a kitty kitty kitty kitty always waiting to do that yeah if you if you want a cat in your head there you go but that's really cool for halloween or just everyday wear it just depends on you know what your style is i guess if you're a crazy cat lady wear it with pride is that a hint is that a dare a category that's very clever very very clever it is yum yum yum yum yum yum has good hair okay let's take a look and see this oh look at that look at that hair [Music] it is cute actually look at that i kind of like it i love the little pumpkin at the top i even like the devil hey maybe you could wear that for the demo party that is kind of cool looking i like a little and it has little strands that say demo that's cute that's that's a cute demo so it comes it comes without the leaves and without the cat or with the leaves and with the cat oh okay cool i i think i think that's i think that's a that's a buy for me because it comes in my color yeah it's kind of got the little purple going on in the demo i don't know i might be able to pull that one off maybe keith you might be able to pull that off would you like to win what i look like in the mornings with the cat you know with the cat i don't even mind it's next doors wake up with my hand you know okay okay dig this [Music] are we changing our demos we're swapping out hair at the moment oh this is just the hair's got this just the hair open this is just a hair opener this is the hair the actual hair oh there it is there it is for a minute we were just sporting the cat in the leaves see i am not shy i will go bald for you guys just to make sure you enjoy and see the product for what it is you are brave you are brave so kitty brave zone look at that oh it's really nice detail on this it is i have a little black cat so it reminds me of my cat it is take it with you wherever you go all right so looks like yum yum has another winner yeah i like this hair i like this hair i i mean i are i didn't even stick with the demo i actually bought it and put it on for you guys that's how much i like this we like decision making you're so decisive that's excellent i'm committed i'm fully committed fully committed all right good job yum yum we like it we like it yay next stop
Adventures ❤ SL
UCoFcwN7-wayFpKhmiXbAK9w
2020-09-18
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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metadata
en
780
3,680
mZp-lF0F-uw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZp-lF0F-uw
I refuse to open bag for Air Force; they react politely (First Amendment audit, fourth amendment)
oh you want you want to look inside it but have me open it correct what if I refuse to consent to open it [Music] what is for I'm out in that direction all of us okay so my work outside is done and I'm going to film some of the ceremony and the security process I guess oh thanks I'll probably have to take my stuff out too should I go first hi [Music] okay come on through and I just need to see inside here if I didn't I insist on documenting the process you've asked to search my bag correct well then I guess that's what you're gonna do oh you want you want to look inside it but have me open it correct what if I refuse to consent to open it I see I'm comfortable with not coming through in that case and comfortable in that case with not coming through yeah I'm not gonna consent to you opening my bag or I'm not gonna open it for you does it make sense some people exercise their Fourth Amendment rights and though you're probably not used to it perfect and what's your name it's Dave Ridley Ridley report.com okay thank you very much okay I'm not gonna thank you but take care best wishes [Music] well I want to but not not to not giving up forth of minutes for it yeah well that's what we all have to follow security I'll accept those of us who decline to go in all right well there's nothing else I need in that case okay um I'm all out of questions show you the way out I don't need it do you require do than you're required to no thanks I know it's pretty easy to figure out where East is getting to the right right Road that's the hard part if you're not you for me yeah but no I would I would assume that I go let this direction on I guess that's a cadet Drive and then I hit the parade iam a pretty okay right that's right Oh off off to the right okay you can if you want not required all right if I don't see you again just mr. Worthing good to meet you all right I appreciate all the answers I don't remember all right take care all right thanks mr. Worthing that's what you'll be doing to yourself if you forget dispute if you forget to attend fork fest what is fork fest well it's a little bit like pork fest it's also in New Hampshire at Rogers campground but you don't have to wait for it to start to participate go by their website check out the forum and the chatroom get involved in planning it for best party it's gotta be party
RidleyReport
UCE_3GcvLERTeS9XFZPtRsIA
2018-06-05
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metadata
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475
2,353
iWfK-p1ohVc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iWfK-p1ohVc
Ya Don't Know Until Ya Dan-O: Popcorn Chicken
did somebody say popcorn how about some popcorn chicken slice it and dice it now you're gonna need one of these add you a couple cups of all-purpose flour start out with the Danos crunchy that's the blacktop get you a nice big handful of that then get your Danos original we got about a third of a bottle pour all that in there give that a shake just get it mixed up add your chicken in and give it another Shake now you just gotta crack a few eggs whipped up real good throw them in the egg wash now we lay back into our breader give it a shake get you one of these wire racks and simply lay your chicken on it now into our 400 degree oven we go been 10 minutes already almost forgot to tell you spray them down it's been 20 minutes they came out all right I give them like a six on a scale one to ten it's just a little bit too flowery for me so I'm gonna make this again and I think next time we're going to use bread crumb yum yum get you some thanks for watching
Dan-O’s Seasoning
UCyP9TINtZzvTJfN69GskqLQ
2023-03-22
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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metadata
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200
967
eBuvmEbRg2Y
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eBuvmEbRg2Y
16 Reynold Equation –Part I
ah hello friends myself professor p patel today's lecture in our tribology subject we have to see the reynold equations which is required for your hydrodynamic global engine analysis [Music] so first of all [Music] we have to see this journal and general theory [Music] so first of all we have to make the some assumptions to analyze these reynold equations okay so this first assumption is the fluid is considered to be newtonian second is the fluid flow is considered to be viscous and laminar third one is the fluid is incompressible [Music] for these inertia forces due to the acceleration of fluid and body are small compared with the pressure and viscosity the pressure varies in across the theme is small for negligible facial variation across the field is always negligible the curvature effect is depicted and there is no sleep of the bearing okay and the last one is important the viscosity of the oil is remains constant as it flows through the variance okay there are two methods by direct methods and by the way stroke methods okay so in this figure we are seeing here the renault equation for two dimensions direct method in this we have to consider a journal which is rotating in this bearing with a constant surface velocity eob okay for analysis a fluid element the small fluid element is considered having dimension dx divided in three directional as x y z respectively okay so here x axis is represent the direction of motion of the fluids okay the y axis is the parallel to the general axis and zx is the radial direction of this generator okay so various forces acting on this fluid elements are first one is the fluid pressure free design pure dye okay in positive reaction find the fluid pressure force in opposite direction p plus of p del x into dx divided by this direction in negative directions so shear force of the bottom surface tau x del x divided by the shear force on the top surface is tau x plus delta of tau x by d z into del x d y direction okay so considering this so here we are preparing the analysis in this small element of this fluid element [Music] and according to the newton's law of viscosity now x the shear stress is always equal to the product of this coefficient of friction into rate of shear okay putting this value in among equations we have to solve this pressure gradient gradient delta del x okay similarly we take this pressure gradient in x directions so my integrating above is presented okay so after integrating we have to apply this boundary conditions okay and z is equal to zero the velocities must be zero where z or the h filtering s there is some velocity u b okay putting all these above in our equations [Music] when set is equal to h gives you dv equation becomes up is equal to 1 upon 2 mu delta by del x into x square plus a into h plus 0 okay so after analyzing we are getting this is equal to uh by h minus h by 2 mu into delta by del x so putting the values of a and b in equation for first equation as u we are giving this two terms okay in this first term this one by two mu then delta del x into under bracket that is injured this term is called as positions flow terms and other term uv into z by h is called as counting two terms so equation u is equal to 1 by 2 mu delta idealize z square minus h z plus u b into z by h gives the velocity distribution of this lubricant okay so this is the first part we are here we are showing this velocity distributions now where to find this rate of flow of the fuel that is set up from fluid so it is given in h direction per unit with qx is equal to integration of 0 to h u into [Music] 1 into del z okay so therefore qx after putting the conditions limits and solving it we are getting this qx is equal to hq upon 12 upon delta del x plus up upon 2 into h so this is the fluid flow rate okay is the fluid flow rate in the direction of x okay similarly q i minus h cube upon 2 mu into del del p by d y plus v by 2 into h is the fluid flow rate in y directions now consider our continuity equations [Music] with respect to z okay so after integration and solving we are getting this q x is equal to this qh and qi you have to integrate it and today and we are rearranging the terms we are getting finally this del by del x into the underweight of h cube into del p by del x plus del by del y under we get h cube plus del v by del y is equal to 6 mu [Music] 6 mu hundred by del by del x into u b into h plus del by del y to give me into h okay so again simplifying this equations this is nothing but this other also we can call that regression for surveillance renault equation for which two dimensional flow [Music] okay again simplifying this by consideration the infinitely long value as per assumption there is no flowing y direction therefore delta by delta is almost zero therefore remains there by del x into h del v by del x plus zero is equal to 6 mu into ub del x by del x so finally we are getting del by del x into h cube del p by del x is equal to 6 mu del h by del x is always equal to six mu u v dash by del x and which is a required level equations for one dimensional flow so this is the anode equations analysis by direct methods okay so second method we have to see next lectures okay thank you
MECHANICAL DEPT SNDCOE & RC YEOLA
UCVPPEoSnt7cQVwAIXG8vp_A
2022-05-28
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mw1pmzHe9ms
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mw1pmzHe9ms
Hierarchical consensus: A horizontal scaling framework for blockchains - Alfonso de la Rocha
our next speaker is alfonso de la rocha from protocol labs uh alfonso's involvement in r d began at the university at the polytechnic university of madrid where he worked on topics related to energy efficiency and data centers before joining pl he was a blockchain expert at telefonica r d where he was responsible for the design and development of core technology based on blockchains distributed systems and advanced cryptography these rnd experience also includes research into compression efficiency of video coding standards at ericsson and projects related to inter domain routing at kth his talk today is titled hierarchical consensus or horizontal scaling framework for blockchains and this framework is designed around the concept of subnets organized hierarchically which can be spawned on demand with their own states consensus and policies alfonso the four is yours saying that uh of course i'm not the only one behind this work i mean all the consensus lab team is is contributing to this and mainly left there is george and marco so you can blame them for the bugs um i mean you're probably aware of these of these slides we want to target a web 3 able to to accommodate the kind of use cases that we see in web 2. but if we want to do that we see that we have a bottleneck in one of the key substrates for the web 3 which are blockchains and this is what we are trying to to tackle at consensus lab mark also shared all of the requirements that we are targeting so it would be great if we can have a substrate for the web 3 that can handle internet scale throughput with fast local finality and another uh other number of interesting features what i'm going to talk today is uh about the architecture that we're coming up that we call hierarchical consensus in order to horizontally scale the blockchains in general and we are focusing initially into falcon and the idea is that hopefully this architecture will allow us to target all of these features especially the ones that you can see inside the square and it will allow to integrate many of the technologies i mean i was hearing all of your talks and i think that many of the technologies that you've presented probably will allow us uh i mean they can be integrated into our framework so i feel that is great so hopefully like after uh this talk we can have a lot of discussions um and if we go through the the different lines of of work that we have right now at consensus lab we could frame these regular consensus into the sharding i mean we don't call it starting and you'll see in a moment why but uh we can frame it here as the architecture to start like accommodating the different building blocks that will allow us to scale or hopefully scale consensus into the requirements that we've been mentioning and like the motivation behind here consensus is quite straightforward um there are a lot of of course there are a lot of of uh work out there trying to scale blockchains with layer twos with payment channels we've seen a few of these proposals uh but at a consensus layer our take is that probably we can't come up with uh one-size-fits-all consensus that allows us to accommodate any kind of use cases and if we want to accommodate the like from the more decentralized like d5 use cases to the more web 2.0 kind of use cases we cannot come up with the right trade-off between security and performance because like all of these proposals in the end they they impose some kind of trade-off between the security guarantees and the performance of of the of the substrates of the blockchain so as we think that we cannot come up with the right and optimal trade-off we were thinking okay let's make a flexible framework that allows for users and developers to grow the blockchain substrate to fee in a way that fits their needs so uh the idea is to have like an on-demand horizontal scalability as i said initially for fightcoin but hopefully german general enough to be adopted in any blockchain and uh the idea is to give developers a way to like spawn new states spawn a new blockchain substrate that fits their security guarantees and and the kind of performance that they they need for their use case but keeping the ability to interact with the rest of the networks and the rest of the hierarchies uh the rest of the of the networks that and the subnets that we have in the system and something that we realized when we were working on this that we have a first mvp is that it may also foster the innovation in the consensus layer because having this framework which is flexible and having the right interfaces can allow others like the the talks that we've seen and the technical proposals that we've seen to integrate inside this framework and see how things uh work together uh and before i start describing in detail what hierarchical consensus is i'm gonna just throw a few concepts there in case they sleep and in order to present them early so whenever i say subnet in the end we'll see that a hierarchical consensus subnet is like a side chain so it's an independent network with this width with its independent state its own consensus algorithm uh but that will be able to interact with other subnets uh in the hierarchy when i say that uh or i refer to apparent subnet we'll see that uh new subnets are spawned from um a specific network so i spawned from a specific network that become the parents and i am the child so once we build the hurricane this will make a lot more of sense but just to in case i start talking about parent subnet so that you know what i'm talking about of course uh when i say peer or note i'm referring to full notes and user and clients are light notes so so these line notes not necessarily need to sync the full state of a subnet then we have the native token uh in order to interact and like become a participant in all these subnets and be part of the hierarchical consensus the token that we use for all these interactions is the the token of the root net the root net is the the the main chain in our case falcon magnet but the main chain from which the hierarchy starts being built with all of these subnets and the circulating supply of a subnet it's the amount of native tokens that have been injected in a subnet so so these are the native tokens that through a bunch of crossnet transactions so transactions between different uh subnets were injected in a specific subnet um so yeah crossnet messages are transactions between subnets and then the collateral is something that i won't describe in detail probably in this talk because of lack of time but in order for in order to spawn a new subnet users need to stake some collateral and the reason for this is that we i mean we don't assume um i mean we don't enforce any kind of security guarantee in the consensus of the of the child subnets so this means that there can be certain attacks there are misbehaviors and this collateral is just a way of covering like uh making validators have skin in the game when they spawn a new subnet so the validators of a subnet and in order to be able to slash specific misbehaviors in a subnet again hopefully i will try to introduce this slightly but i don't think i will have time to to describe it in detail and finally a final disclaimer i may be talking about messages when actually they're transactions because that's the way we refer to them in in the falcon world and then whenever i say i refer to actors they're in the smart contracts in in photograph so without further ado let's see how hurricane consensus work so as i said the idea is to have an underpin on demand scaling framework uh to simplify like the deployment of new networks that allows the seamless interoperability between all of these chains so we can have for instance uh root net like the falcon magnet that has its own consensus it's on state we can have storage like it's the case of of the falcon magnet and we could even have a parallel chain like bitcoin where we are periodically checkpointing in order to to protect against long-range attacks but at one point a subset of users of this root net may i mean they want to deploy a use case for which i don't know the the the load of of uh fico magnet is not enough of the root net or maybe the finality is not enough so with hierarchical consensus they are able to spawn their own subnet these subnets in the end what they are spawning is a completely independent network with its own state and its own consensus algorithm so these users will be able to choose the consensus algorithm that better that fits the the needs of the of their use case all these subnets will be validated as they are running their own consensus algorithm they will be validating transactions in parallel so the consensus algorithm between these subnets they are not connected but subnets can interact with each other um through what we call crossnet transactions and then um these child subnets so we have the rootnet being that the parent subnet for these new two child subnets these child subnets will be anchoring their security to the diet of their parent in this case the root net through checkpoints we'll talk more about checkpoints in a minute and finally uh the main uh requirement that we enforce in subnets regarding security is the file the firewall requirement so whenever as we don't know the consensus algorithm that softness will run because we want to leave this open to the users so what we can but what we can enforce through correct consensus is that the the in case i mean if there's uh an attack in a subnet the maximum impact of this attack in the amount of native tokens can be up to the the circulating supply so the amount of native tokens that are held and are uh and have been injected in a subnet so in this way we protect uh to some extent um against attacks in the subnets of course we have then uh another alternative to cover um for potential misbehaviors which is the collateral and as i said i mean i'm gonna leave it leave that for some other talk and this hierarchy can be built recursively so if the subset of users in in this first subnet see that the consensus algorithm is not enough for their use case and they want to um scale horizontally even further they could also deploy new subnets from a child and in this way we would be building the hierarchy of softness and users will be building the actual architecture of the system um the implementation so um hierarchical consensus uh works thanks to two main actors so all of the logic is handled by two actors or smart contracts in the in the different networks first we have what we call the subnet coordinator actor which is a system actor so it's an actor that is deployed in a subnet or in this case is deployed once we do the upgrade in the falcon main net and it's the one that implements all of the logic for the hierarchical consensus protocol so it is one that enforces the firewall requirement it is the gateway from a subnet to the rest of the of the hierarchy it is the one that that handles all of the cross messages so it's the one that handles all of the although the mechanisms of hierarchical consensus and then we have uh the subnet actor the subnet actor uh actually what we have is not it's a reference implementation of a subnet actor and then a subnet interface because subnet actors are user defined actors that determine the the consensus algorithm the different governing policies and so on of of a subnet so whenever um a sub subset of users want to deploy their own subnet the first thing that they do is to deploy deploy a subnet actor in the parent so with this subnet actor they're saying hey this is a new subnet that i'm deploying from this um from this parent and that will have these uh policies these governing policies these joining policies and so on this is the minimum stake that you need and so on so with this um the subset of users will be able to to spawn the process for their new stack with their new network consensus and state but they won't be able to interact with the rest of the hierarchy until they register to the to the hierarchy and the way in which a subnet registers to the hierarchy is by putting this collateral threshold so putting staking this minimum amount of collateral to cover um against potential misbehaviors with this uh once the the subnet is when the subnet is registered it can start anchoring its trust through checkpoints and exchanging crosstalk messages with the rest of the hierarchy at any point if we want another subnet the the thing that we do is again deploy us an actor that determines the consensus algorithm all of the poisons and so on and um starting the subnet and registering to the hierarchy so that we can start interacting with the rest of the networks if we look at the like the peer level how is this implemented inside up here in the end is just uh what we're doing is instantiating a subnet is just an instantiation of a new stack for the blockchain so we see that when we have a subnet and we start sync either syncing uh or we spawn any subnet what we are instantiating inside the node is um a new uh transport layer in order to broadcast messages and your message pool a new consensus algorithm new state tree a new api but we are sharing all of the semantics and this is what allows us uh to interoperate with the rest of the networks because we are all run we are all running the same semantics for the state tree we are all running the same vm and we thanks to this is this is why we can uh interoperate with the rest of the networks um and another thing that it's really interesting about this is that subnets are are uniquely identified and the id is inferred from the id of the parent so the root net always has the same id which is root and then the way in which we we infer the unique id of a subnet it's through the id of the of the subnet actor in the parents so in this case like we can see this child subnet that has id root slash t01 uh if we had an another uh subnet like the one to the right we would have root slash c01 slash the id of the subnet actor the advantage of having this uh deterministic identification of subnets is that we don't need any kind of discovery service in order to be able to exchange messages or interact with um with subnets in the in the system because they follow the architecture of the hierarchy so the ids uh directly map with the architecture of the hierarchy as i already advanced subnets use checkpoints to interact with the higher levels of the hierarchy and to anchor their security and we'll see that in a moment and okay i also mentioned this we enforce the final requirements so we limit the impact in amount of native tokens of course once this misbehavior affects uh the state and not the exchange of native tokens we will need additional things like fraud proofs and does the collateral that we are that we are staking in order to spawn a subnet but at least for native tokens there's a limit in the impact even if there's a mis behavior or an attacking subnet so let's talk a bit about the the checkpoints um as i've said like checkpoints include two main um two core um pieces of information first we commit a proof of the state of a subnet this proof of a statement of a subnet right now like in the in our reference implementation right now what we propagate is the tip set at a certain epoch in the subnet so that with these this can be seen as like actual checkpoints of the of the states of the blockchain that we can use afterwards in order to to validate the state in the subnet or even create thread proofs but we are already exploring uh using more complex proofs like for instance a say k proof of the state of the blockchain so that we can verify it uh directly and and simplify fraud proofs so uh in checkpoints what we have is in the end a field where the subnet through the subnet actor can choose um what they want to introduce in this blob of data that can serve in order to get proof of state committed into our parents and then also so this is this part of the checkpoint and then we have uh we also use checkpoints to propagate cross messages to the rest of the hierarchy once we talk about crossnet messages you'll see how checkpoints uh help in propagating messages uh to the rest of the of the hierarchy and if we look now to the [Music] to the checkpointing protocol and how it works um checkpoints through the subnet actor checkpoints are choose are free to choose the their checkpointing period so uh how often they want to commit these checkpoints to their parents and um i like to think about these checkpoints as the clock of the system so it's the it's what is orches these checkpoints they flow through the system and and it's the key uh scheme that orchestrates the communication between the different the different subnets so let's consider uh a subnet that has a checkpointing period of 100 epochs um in we differentiate two two stages in the checkpointing protocol we have first what we call the checkpointing window which is the the window of a checkpoint period in which we populate with the corresponding information the checkpoint and then then we have what we call the signing window and in the sending window what we do is that the validators they agree on the on the checkpoint and they commit it to the parent so let's let's consider this checkpoint window that goes from epoch 100 to epoch 200. in this in this check period um what we will be doing is to to populate the checkpoint template for epoch 200. so as cross messages arrive to the to the subnet we will be including them the ones that need to be routed through a checkpoint will be included in the checkpoint template and also we will include checkpoints from children from these subnet children so that they can be pro aggregated and propagated up to the hierarchy so that they are recursively anchored to the upper layers of the hierarchy then once the we reach epoch 200 the checkpoint template for epoch 200 closes which means that we don't accept more cross messages and more uh checkpoints from from children and this epoch 200 starts the signing window for the epoch 200 and in parallel the population the checkpointing window for a for the checkpoint of epoch 300. so in this uh signing window uh validators of the subnet will take this checkpoint template will inspect it validate that is correct include their their their proof of the state of the subnet being this uh safety proof or an epoch or whatever the subnet has decided and they will sign it and commit it to the parent the way in which these checkpoints can be signed and verified in the parent it's also up to the subnet actor and to the founders of the subnet right now in the reference implementation we we expect a super majority so two thirds of the votes uh from the validators in the subnet to commit the same checkpoint to the parent but we could use something like we are also working saturdays working on on first world signature um schemes and so on so we could use also that first called signature in order to sign these checkpoints and propagate them up to the parent and in parallel as i've said cross messages and other checkpoints uh as they arrive to some that they're included in the in the template for epoch 300 and we start all over again when it closes there's a sign in window there's checkpoint and in this way we have this clock that populates um checkpoints and propagates them up to the to the parent for two reasons to anchor the security through this proof of the subnet and also in order to propagate cross-net messages and in hierarchical consensus uh we have two and a half types of messages so we have first what we call top-down messages that are messages that go from a parent to a child so they go from an upper level of the hierarchy down and these so all all validators in a subnet are required to sync with um with um with their parents this means that um propagating a message from the parent to the child is quite straightforward because uh whenever there's uh and we'll see in a moment in detail how this works whenever we see that there's a new message for a child or that for a child or that needs to be routed through the child we can pick it up from the state of the parent right away then we have bottom-up messages and these are a bit harder because parents are not thinking are not are not required to sing we're with their children so in this case the way in which we propagate um christmas messages to the rest of the hierarchy and like for these bottom-up messages is through checkpoints so we include as we saw before the cross messages in the checkpoint and we propagate them up and finally we have uh path messages that are the ones that we see here in pink that are a combination of bottom-up and top-down uh messages so in the end they are either so they are propagating in a checkpoint to the closest common parent and from the closest common parent it's a top-down message that goes down um as i'm running out of time i'm gonna go super quick here so whenever we send a top-down message uh low-level how this look is that we sent a top-down message to the sca which is the subnet director this triggered a state change in the in the parent and then uh subnet validators they have two kinds of message pools they have uh the plain traditional message pool that uh that collects unverified messages within the subnet so that needs to be that are started and are executed within the subnet and then the cross message pool which is uh listening to the state of the parent and listening for cross-net messages in general that have been unverified and that need to be proposed so whenever the cross message pool sees that there's a new unverified crossnet message in the parent state it's proposed i mean it goes through the consensus engine of the subnet it proposes in a blog and once it's validated in a blog it will be executed in the in the statement for bottom up messages is similar but not the same because in this case what we are propagating up is just a link to the list of messages that needs to be that are propagated inside the checkpoint so in this case in order to avoid state explosion as we propagate messages up in the ch ask cross messages arrive and when we close the the cross message um sorry the checkpoint template in the cross messages we don't include uh all of the messages but a cid with the list of the messages that need to be propagated once the checkpoint arrives to the parents there's a state change and the cross message pool is notified about like new cross message meta as we call it so new links to messages that need to be applied in this network that are available and aren't verified but in this case the cross message pool will have to resolve the the messages behind that cid because it doesn't have the individual messages but just the link to those messages and in order to to resolve these messages we have a content resolution protocol that can resolve through the state of the children so it broadcast a message through the transport layer requesting the resolution of the messages behind that cit and with these once the cross message pool has the list of messages it can pass them through the consensus engine and once it's verified in a is validated inside these messages inside a block they can be executed as a plain message in the subnet so uh as i mentioned we have this cross message push-pull resolution protocol that is used to not only to resolve um i mean it's used to resolve any object in the state of a subnet that is behind a cid we use it for cross messages but we can use it also for lock state for the atomic execution protocol as we'll see in a moment and really briefly um we have two main approaches for these whenever uh the validators of a subnet propagated checkpoint they proactively broadcast a message with uh with information or the objects that are behind the cid that are included in the checkpoints for the case where the validators of the other subnets that they're receiving subnets like root and sub one in this case they want to cache and and store loc locally the information to prop uh to use it as soon as they need it if this is not the case and once the the information is needed uh they don't have they haven't cached this information they have also a pool fallback where they can pull the information behind the cid by sending a message to the source to the search network and another important point here is that as we see here so here we have uh some cidca messages to the root and cid cb to the to the to sub one as we go up in the hierarchy we aggregate uh recursively the messages so that we what we propagate up is just uh a single cid that will be resolved recursively with this protocol in this way we are making checkpoints as small as possible so that we know we don't need to propagate raw messages all right okay and um up till now we've been talking about exchanging messages between different parties but what if we want to perform an execution anatomy execution using state that lives in different subnets so for this we came up with this atomic execution protocol which actually is quite similar to the payment channels approach with of course its differences but we use the account based uh approach we we want to enforce the following properties in this protocol atomicity timeline timeless timeliness and unforgeability and of course consistency so uh we want that after the execution the output states uh uh we we want the output states of the execution to be consistent with the history of the different subnets involved and briefly how the the this protocol works is that uh there's of course an off-chain agreement between the different parties here we see two parties but we could have end parties in n subnets they do an off-chain agreement to agree on the function on the function to be executed the actor or the smart contract to execute and the input states to use and the the first thing once they agree on this the first thing that they do is lock the state of of their actress so they lock it in order for new messages not to be able to to change that state when we lock the state we create a cid a unique cid that is used to to identify the the log state and be able to gather it with this concept resolution protocol so all the parties pick up the the state input state that they are missing and they perform the execution uh of chain so they perform the execution they get the output the output states and then the then they delegate the the orchestration of the atomic execution to the common parent they could use any other subnet but the reason why we choose the the closest common parent is because it is the i mean they have some shared trust assumptions over these over this pattern because he's the closest parent for both of them um and with these uh one of the parties would initiate the execution by sending the output cid the function being executed and the input states and then the other parts will have to to commit their output state the root i mean the parent net orchestrating the execution will check that the that the the output states match and if they match what they what the sca in the in the common parent does is send a top-down message to with the output state in order to unlock the state in these uh in the corresponding subnets and merge the output state to the state of the subnet at any moment any of the parties in case like the the protocol blocks or there's a party that disappears any of the parties can abort and if the protocol is supported what it happens is that the sca does a top-down message but in this case directly unlocking the the state and that's i mean we have an mvp already we have a spec we hope to be able to to have it in the falcon magnet soon i don't know what zoom means but soon and of course uh there are other scalability approaches i really loved all of your talks because there's a lot of inspiration that we can use and even integrate directly many of your solutions and we have a bunch of open problems and things that we still have to fix in hurricane consensus uh an example is data availability i mean you've seen this content resolution protocol this content resolution protocol uh assumes at least one honest participant so we are um exploring how to relax a bit these requirements then there's the the question of censorship resistance um we i mean subnets have children in the hierarchy have a lot of trust on their parents and parents if they go wrong they could do a lot of sketchy things so that's why we're coming up with all bats for uh for for instance um children to be able at child submits to be able to migrate to other parents in things if things go wrong there's a full design of the cryptocurrency how gas would work here and how the the checkpointing fees would work uh of course all this is public so if you want to participate into these discussions or contribute let us know we can chat in slack and we can point to the right resources there's the question of fall proofs and threat proofs because we have the firewall requirement but then once the misbehavior impacts state we may need additional things in order to to report missed behaviors and slash dismissed behaviors so that it's economically uh insane to do it and before going to production we want to do some performance measurements we have some theoretical idea of what would be the performance of this framework but we need to work a bit more on this and of course we may be losing something and there may be more things to do so let us know if you've realized like a blind spot or something that needs to be improving this design because we would love to to hear your thoughts and that's all of course i mean we have an mvp you can test it i cannot demo lack of time there's a really small paper that describes the idea and we have a working progress spec that it's looking i mean you would get the the low level details so it should be good enough for now at least uh thank you very much everyone and like if there are questions i guess i don't have time but we can chat inside thanks right thank you alfonso we are indeed that time for the break there there has been some discussion already in slack but i will read out a question by by dave castenaro i don't think he's in the i don't see him in the in the zoom room but the question is is that a novel filecoin innovation having collateral pledged by validators that there's a prerequisite sorry prerequisites to spawning the subnets so i don't know if i got the question so the question is if collateral yes if is having cholesterol pledged by validators as a prerequisite to spawn a subnets an innovation or does this happen in other systems i don't know that's a great question i guess dude i don't know if someone knows please i mean it's the most it's like the proof-of-stake approach is the most straightforward way that we could think to incentivize well-behaving validators with such an open system but i don't know if others are doing it like the inspiration come from proof of stake more than like subnet spawning i guess these types of questions
Protocol Labs
UCJvMzILpV3b4AWXTEeQjcng
2022-06-23
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e_ZSK88ELZA
Necrovalley Ultra Pharaoh's Rare PSA Reveal. (EPIC!) #yugioh #konami #necrovalley #psa #tcg
uh let's have a look at the corners again top left doesn't look too good top right not bad bottom left bottom right not so sharp down here but it's it's okay and let's see what we get here necra Valley Ultra farer is [Music] rare yes okay we got an ultra F rare gem mint 10 necra Valley nice this is one I was hoping to become a 10 just because it is quite valuable um alone this card is something in the region of about 100 between 140 160 raw as is so I can't imagine what the price would be for a G Min 10 um but yeah okay so another Gman 10 I will take that for sure
AdrenAl1ne
UCKKt6PX1P3pzP8y61Dlvegw
2023-09-03
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Leading Together Chapter 3 - Engage Proactively
[Music] no operation led by outsiders can substitute for the will of the people of the country to flick a lot I think one of the first things that anyone going to any contact should do something really be an anthropologist try and understand the history the culture the institutions the organization's of that particular place every place has a long history they have ways of organizing themselves to produce food and trade food they have ways of building and repairing buildings they have ways of educating each other of settling disputes just organizing daily and communal life they have to be aware selling things first of course know about the country the context in which they are operating which of course requires a lot of consulting listening reading you know getting the right advice pre-deployment planning is critical and it's important that it be done together it's a big disaster a lot of new actors show up very very quickly and not just the operational actors say like militaries who come in to help with a relief effort but also the political actors so within the humanitarian space there is a coordination system there that exists run by the office of creation for Humanitarian Affairs OCHA the part of the United Nations luccia has a very good what they call a cluster system to help manage on the humanitarian side so food nutrition housing water health sanitation all that stuff coordinating horizontally across those groups that traditional aid community those new actors like military police and also some bilateral aid agencies who are who want to play a big role and then the politics is complicated and then kind of the folks who are doing the real work in the trenches the muddy boots it's a very complicated coordination space the more that you can get a handle on what's going on and who's doing what and what somebody's motivation or mission is then I think it's easy to understand why somebody is acting in a certain way and therefore able to coordinate cooperate and work with that counterpart if you take that mindset you will build interagency solutions inherently into your force and your people will be thinking ahead of you about how to resolve issues that complement the team not one aspect or element of the team and I think that the leader demonstrating a commitment to working in interagency environment is implicitly driving that philosophy through the organizational day lead the most important the coordination but you can't coordinate agencies that cannot interpret it means initially you must create that interoperability capability and through exercising you need to be prepared and how are you prepared in many ways you need to practice before you do it's a very difficult thing to do in fact the nature of our professional careers makes it very difficult to practice particularly for operational roles that's where we think that involving people in exercise programs is increasingly important training and education really important at the leadership level you know the mid-level leadership company commander brigade commander because they set the tone I mean this at the tone as the whole team is going over there as to what their what how they're going to to and interact that's very important is an individual that you know where do I operate the best and where does my skill set rest and some people do have the span of ability to be able to work across all of those facets from high ambiguity high response quick decision-making through to very structured and organized approach in having the fundamentals in place and building on those fundamentals what capacities and competences they bring to the table and then what role are you going to play the leader must understand where they fit in it's like a wheel when the will be fit so that the wheel and smoothing culture is incredibly important subculture I like is a people culture a people culture defined by like values one which really emphasizes teamwork and collaboration but what would be my advice if I walk into any country I think my advice would be as follows first and foremost be humble do not assume that an SR edgy you know everything leaders intended we are humble and willing to learn willing to listen they cannot be good leaders in fact I think listening leaders are more important than positive leader as a leader to mean what you have the experience or you don't have experience it's critical when you first step in to realize that you are you not in charge you there to support somebody that their needs they'll have to articulate those to you and sometimes it's difficult not to be in charge but that little bit of humility a little bit of realization and a lot of training and a lot of changes taking place I have great optimism it's collecting 20 years change in this area there is a huge number of people and organizations and agencies and military and different disaster management authorities who are there at the time of the crises but then when it really comes to a point to which it's time to use the phrase that we often use a building back better they're not necessarily there and it's in that period where we really can get ready for the next event and if we get ready properly the next event might not be a disaster
Australian Civil-Military Centre
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2017-03-30
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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917
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H2AUoMs39T4
Funeral Mass for Mary “May” Bridget Sciarra,
difference foreign Embassy all right uh foreign [Music] foreign [Music] please don't know me [Music] love you [Music] in the name of the father and the son and of the holy spirit amen amen May the father of mercies and a God of all consolation that all of you in the waters of baptism Mary died with Christ she now share with him eternal glory [Music] virgin better [Music] on the Earth [Music] foreign [Music] let us pray oh God whose nature is always to forgive and to show Mercy [Music] grad that she maybe led to our true Homeland to the right in his Everlasting joys through our Lord Jesus Christ your son who lives and reigns with you in unity of the Holy Spirit God forever and ever amen we kind of be seated now as we will hear God's word first from the Old Testament Proclaim To Us by Saul a reading from the book of wisdom but the souls of the just are in the hand of God and no torment shall touch them they seemed in the view of the foolish to be dead and their passing away was thought and affliction and they're going forth from us utter destruction but they are in peace for before men indeed they be punished yet it is their hope full of more immortality chastised a little they shall be greatly blessed because God tried them and found them worthy of himself as gold in the furnace he proved them and as sacrificial offerings he took them to himself in the time of their visitation they shall shine and shall Dart about as Sparks through stubble they shall judge Nations and rule over peoples and the Lord Lord shall be their king forever those who trust in him shall understand truth and the faithful shall abide with him in love because grace and mercy are with his holy ones and his care is with thee elect the word of the Lord [Music] where the Lord is the Lord is my shepherd I shall not want s [Music] inside restful Waters he leads me rushes my soul foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] if by the transgression of one person death came to Reign that one how much more will those who received abundance of grace and the gift of justification come to reign in life through the one person Jesus Christ in conclusion just as though one transgression condemnation Came Upon all so the one righteous act equivalent of Life came to all or just as though the Disobedience of one person the many of the Disobedience of one person the many were made sinners sold through Obedience of one the many will be made righteous law entered in that soda transgression might increase but we're seeing increase overflowed all the more so that as Sin Reign and death Grace might also Reign through the justification for eternal life through Jesus Christ Our Lord the word of the Lord and thank you Mom for everything and thank you Lord please now stand for the gospel [Music] foreign [Music] it was about noon and darkness came over the whole land until three in the afternoon because of an eclipse of the Sun then the veil of the temple was torn down the middle and Jesus cried out in a loud voice father into your hands I commend my spirit and when he had said this he breathed his last and after they had taken the body down they wrapped it in a lemon cloth and made him in a raccoon tomb which no one had yet been buried on a Daybreak on the first day of the week the women took the spices they had prepared and went to the tomb they found the stone rolled away from the tomb when they entered they did not find the body of the Lord Jesus and while they're pausing over this behold Two Men and dazzling garments appeared to them they were terrified and bowed their faces to the ground they said to them why do you seek the living one among the Dead he is not here but he has been raised the gospel of the Lord please be seated they are perhaps the most comforting words found in all of the Gospels why you seek the living one among the Dead those words were spoken of course after Calvary after our Lord's death those words are spoken by two angels at the moment of the Resurrection where Christ was the first to be born again from the dead and ever since that day 2023 years or so later here we are hoping and listening to the very same words those angels spoke to those women those angels speak those words to you and to all of us why do we seek the one who lives among the Dead she's not here we as Christians know with the certainty of our faith death is not the end of us that God created us not just for Earthly existence when God created us with the love of our parents he gave to us eternity by his death and Resurrection from the dead he gave to those who believe in him eternity and so we never die our Earthly life will come to a completion one day but then we're born again we're born again to that eternal life of which God has created us to begin with he's as wonderful as life on Earth can be it's always something missing there's always something more we yearn for nothing completely satisfies us this side of Heaven because God would put him within us that deep yearning for him and that life that we have is a trust given to us to be lived a certain amount of years for some years along with others the years are short it's not that important how many years we get to live here what's most important is how we live out those years how we live out those years in love and in faith and in Hope all right so today we gather as a family not just May's immediate family but the family of the church all of us are gathered together the family of our Parish as we present back to God a beautiful woman who lived a beautiful life a life of an example of Faith to inspire all of us as we continue to live our life and your family how blessed you are to have her as a wife of 63 years self and then as a mom and a grandmother how blessed we are Saint Marcus to have her as a Christian her prayers her love her example family life all of those things God has given to us as a gift and so today even though our hearts are heavy for someone that we love so well is no longer with us physically here on Earth our hearts are also full of gratitude thanking God for a beautiful example of a beautiful lady who inspired her love by a simplicity by your beauty that so many people today are lacking tears of that generation who suffer greatly in their life and despite that new the one thing that held them always together was the gift of her face that somehow someway through it all God will get us through and that's a beautiful way to live It's a Wonderful way to live yes life is difficult and we all have burdens and anxieties and fears of normal living but somehow someway we know that God's there with us walking along with us bringing us to that moment of the Resurrection and so today we're thankful thankful for our beautiful family thank for her example thankful for her face the faith that she gave to you most beautiful gift your mom and dad ever gave us is the gift of our faith the ability to enter into a relationship with God that God is not just a cosmic Force looking at us from a distance but God experienced everything we as human beings experience the one thing that we haven't experienced yet is death but something that we don't fear because death now is a rebirth and so may has a new birth today July 5th when she quietly closed her eyes at a place called Calvary but open them up see her God the God she loved the God she so much wanted to be a part of at the end God she knew intimately through her prayer through her love and that moment of knowing she saw her God her God looked at her with great love must have said those words well done by good and faithful servants May those words be spoken of us when our Earthly life comes to a completion and when we chew our laid to rest from all our Earthly labors whenever that day comes for us we too will walk with God back home for Heaven is the place we're meant to be so the words of the Angels are spoken to all of you why search among the Dead the one who lives she's not here she will be raised and so now we stand unto the Lord and ask him to hear our prayers on the day of her baptism Mary received the Light of Christ May the light now scatter the darkness a leader over the Waters of death we pray to the Lord Mary received to the table of the Lord our Lord's sacred body and blood may she be invited to the Feast of the lamb in heaven for all eternity we pray to the Lord we pray for all those who helped us and have been good to us here on Earth may they receive now the reward of that goodness we pray to the Lord we pray for ourselves well good and gracious father hear the prayers of the family who stand before you whose lives are purchased by the blood of the Lamb forgive the sins of those who sleep in Christ and Grant to them the light and happiness of your kingdom where you live and Reign forever and ever amen kindly proceeded [Music] thank you [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] into your [Music] s [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] as you humbly present to you the sacrificial offerings O Lord for the Salvation of your servant Mary we beseech your mercy that she who did not doubt your son to be a loving savior may find in him a merciful judge who lives and reigns forever and ever amen [Music] the Lord be with you admit your spirit Faith up your heart [Music] let us give thanks to the Lord Our God it is [Music] truly right and just our duty and our salvation always and everywhere to give you thanks Lord Holy Father Almighty and eternal God through Christ Our Lord in him the hope of blessed Resurrection has dawned that those sat in by the certainty of dying might be consoled by the promise of immortality he shall come indeed for your faithful Lord life is changed not ended and when this Earthly dwelling turns to dust and eternal dwelling is made ready for the heaven heaven and so With Angels and Archangels with Thrones and dominions and with all the hosts and powers of Heaven We Sing The Hymn of your glory as Without End we acclaim thank you [Music] foreign [Music] please kneel you are indeed holy O Lord the fount of all Holiness make holy therefore these gifts we pray by sending down your spirit upon them like could you fall so that they may become for us [Music] as time he was free is where the movies giving thanks broken gave it to his disciples saying take this all of you and eat of it for this is my body which will be given up for you in a similar way when supper was ended he took the chalice and once more giving thanks gave it to his disciples saying take this all of you and drink from him for this is the Chalice of my blood the blood of the new and eternal Covenant which will be poured out for you and for many for the Forgiveness of sins do this in memory of me from a history of faith foreign [Music] we offer you Lord the bread of life and the Chalice of Salvation giving thanks that you have held us worthy to be in your presence and minister to you humbly we pray the partaking of the body and blood of Christ we may be gathered into one by the Holy Spirit remember Lord your church spread throughout the world and bring her to the fullness of Charity together Francis our Pope Timothy our Bishop and all the clergy remember your servant Mary whom you have called from this world to yourself grant that she who is united with your son and his death like his may also be one with him in his resurrection remember also our brothers and sisters who have fallen asleep in the hope of the resurrection and all who have died in your mercy welcome them into the light of your face have mercy on us all we pray with the Blessed Virgin Mary the Mother of God the blessings Joseph her spouse with the Blessed Apostles with our beloved patroness Saint Margaret and with all the saints who have pleased you throughout the ages we may Merit to be coheirs to eternal life and may praise and glorify you through your son Jesus Christ through him and with him and in him oh God Almighty father in the unity of the holy spirit all glory and honor is yours forever and ever [Music] so we stand together now as God's family pray the prayer that Jesus our brother taught us as we dare to say Our Father who art in heaven Hallowed be thy name thy kingdom come thy will be done on Earth as it is in heaven give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us and lead us not into temptation the difference oh Lord we pray from every evil and graciously Grant peace in our days that by the help of your mercy we may be always free from sin and safe from all distress as we awake the Blessed hope and the coming of Our Savior Jesus Christ oh Lord Jesus Christ you said to your Apostles peace who by peace I give you look not in our sins but on the faith of your church and graciously Grant your peace and unity in accordance with your will who live and Reign forever and ever and the Peace of the Lord be with you always go offer each other a sign of crisis [Music] foreign [Music] oh my Lord [Music] true [Music] this is Jesus Behold the Lamb of God Behold Him who takes away the sin of the world blessed are those who are called to the supper of the Lamb Lord I am not worthy that you should enter under my roof but only say the word and my soul shall be healed at this time the church invites our Catholic Sons and Daughters who are practicing Catholics and are prepared spiritually receive our Lord and Holy Communion if you please form two lives the main aisle and return a few places by way of the silence [Music] foreign [Music] relax [Music] are the dear that once more stripes [Music] foreign [Music] forth your light and your feet [Music] that I will bring your thanks [Music] let us pray all right we pray almighty God that your servant Mary who has Journey from this world May by this sacrifice be cleansed and free from sin and so receive the Everlasting joys of the Resurrection through Christ Our Lord r with our faith now in Jesus Christ we must take leave of our sister and let us pray with confidence to God and inside all creation lives you'll raise up in Holiness the power of the Mortal body of our sister and commanded her so many women among the blessed may God grant unto her a merciful judgment a deliverance from death and a pardon of sin May Christ who is the Good Shepherd carry her home now to be at peace with God our Father and may she Rejoice forever in the presence of the Eternal king and the company of all his Saints foreign [Music] control [Music] s [Music] foreign [Music] of mercies we command our dear sister Mary in the shore in the search and Hope that together with all who have died in Christ shall arise with Christ on the very last day and so now we give you thanks for all the many blessings which bestowed upon her in this Earthly life for they are signs to us Lord of your goodness and the fellowship that we share with the Saints in Christ Jesus oh god of Mercy turn to us now and listen to our prayers open the gates of paradise to your servants and help us remain here on Earth to comfort one another with assurances of our faith until that great day when we shall all meet again in Christ to be with you and with our sister forever through Christ Our Lord and so my dear sister I commend you now to almighty God and I entrust you to him who first gave you to us so that you may now return to your true home and so may the right company of the Angels come out to meet you may the Assembly of the Apostles welcome you May the Victorious Army white robe Martyrs meet you on your way the glittering throng of holy men gather around you and may the Glorious choir of holy women to receive you may all the Patriarchs the prophets enfold you in the Embrace of blessed peace and may Saint Joseph and Saint Mary your Patron raise you high and may Holy Mary the Mother of God lovingly turn her eyes toward you and then gentle and joyful May Christ Jesus appear before you to assign you a place forever among those who stand in his presence may Jesus the son of the Living God lead you now into paradise and may He the Good Shepherd recognize you as one of his own may he cleanse you of all your sins and offer you a seat at his right hand in the company of his Saints and may you receive your Redeemer face to face basking his glory forever may you now experience the truth reveal in all of its fullness and they are the most holy Place may you may wait for us until we too are called to join you in the blessedness of that Kingdom where God lives and reigns forever and ever Eternal rest granted to her soul O Lord and left Perpetual light shine upon her and may she rest in peace and The Souls of all the faithful departed through the mercy of God Rest in Peace amen just before we all go our separate ways I really want to thank all of you for being here this morning I know how very important it is for the family to know of your love and your prayers and your support not just for this day but for the weeks the months the years to come and to sell your family please let me acknowledge you as a wonderful family and certainly God has blessed you with the great faith and we thank God for the beautiful gift of your wife and your mom and thank you for sharing with you and her with all of USA Margaret's so in peace now let us go and bring our dear sister to her final place of rest thank you [Music] foreign [Music] God promises [Music] thank you [Music] thank you [Music] foreign
Saint Margaret of Antioch, Pearl River NY
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2023-07-10
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2dHcwrJAJU
PDT | Chastening | 6.7.20
is that time Sunday 2:30 p.m. Central Standard Time proper Taylor here for your weekly live prophetic warriors trying to get my phone straight for periscope okay I'll write hello periscope hello Facebook so glad to be with you again on this beautiful Sunday okay and we've got the live a prophetic word from the Lord all right today's prophetic word is chasing me today's prophetic word is chasing some people pronounce it chastening okay either way so let's say a prayer more than job right on him thank you Lord for this day thank you for your kindness thank you God even from your chasing and thank you for your judgments because true and righteous are the judgments of God thank you for your love thank you for your grace and thank you for your mercy even in the midst of chasing and judgment because truly you are and good God showing mercy to those that love you O God showing mercy to us all and I just thank you for your kindness I should be with me O God I surrender myself to you now Lord I'm just a vessel for the you so briefly speak through me to let what stead and done be said and done till you're on your glory thank you for and I believe you for in Jesus name Amen amen amen now y'all know I'll do this for money I'll do this because the Lord call me to do it but if you do want to donate to my ministry I've had several people tell me that they wanted to sew into my ministry so you can give through yours L you can give there's L and my email there's profit entertainer Gino calm or you can give through the cash up in my my side there is dollar sign D and t2 now the number two but DMT and then to capitalize on cash up and I will have those links on my Twitter and on my facebook live page okay if you want to zoom to my ministry where that money goes is it helps me to make more music but for me to make my music videos and then I'm working on establishing my meet my my house project and so I have a lot that I'm always doing so it's going to expanding my ministry okay so I just want to thank you in advance for all of those of you that choose to bless me alright so let's dive into our prophetic work which is chastening okay I'm done pronouncing chasing the unit nominally could be chased and more chastening we're going to look at Hebrews 12:11 which is probably the most famous scripture in the Bible on this subject okay Hebrews 12:11 probably the most famous scripture in the Bible on the subject as I told you before some scholars say that Hebrews was written by Apostle Paul some scholars say that Hebrews was read Hebrews was written by a policy and one of Paul's contemporaries and some people say that Hebrews was written written by Luke but all scholars did not agree on who actually wrote the book of Hebrews the one thing that is agreed upon however is that Hebrews was written to Jewish Christians today we would call them sometimes they're called Jews for Jesus another term is messianic believers and what that means is that they're Hebrews and Jewish people that physically the seed of Abraham but they believe and have accepted Jesus Christ as Savior okay the actually the book of Hebrews is written to people that had realized that the Old Testament was done that the Mosaic law was done and that the New Testament grace and truth came through Jesus Christ and was written in Jesus's blood and it was ratified and enacted by the Lord's death so Hebrews was written to Jewish believers that believe that and accept that and have transitioned into the New Covenant on the grace now as Gentiles us now now Gentile just means someone that's not Jewish not Israelite not a Hebrew as Gentiles the only covenant we ever had with God was the New Testament so all we have known when his Jesus okay so we never were under the Mosaic law as Gentiles is not is realized so the only covenant we ever have of God was the new one so praise God for that but again the book of Hebrews is written to Jewish Christians so we're going to start at Hebrews chapter 12 and we're going to look at verse 11 I'm gonna read a couple of different translations as normal good in Hebrews chapter 12 verse 11 I'm going to start with the King James Version now no chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous but Grievous nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them which are exercised thereby okay a new American Standard Bible all discipline for the moment seems not to be joyful but sorrowful yet to those who have been trained by it afterwards it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness okay marine Study Bible no discipline over those 2% and all discipline oh I'm sorry this marine literal Bible and I'll disciplined indeed for those being president does not seem to be agile and better grief but afterward it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those haven't been trained by it okay marine Study Bible no discipline seems enjoyable at the time and painful later on however it yields a harvest of righteousness and peace to those who haven't been trained by it now why do I read scripture and why do I read multiple translations even during the prophetic because we have to have a foundation in the written word of God to understand the other two levels is three levels a word is the written word of God it's a living word of God which is Jesus and then there's the rebel word of God the fresh breed word of God that normally comes to the Apostolic and the prophetic you need all three and one of the reasons that God had the Scriptures written down and so that we would know how he thinks so we would have his written word as a basis to build our lives and to understand his thoughts his commandments his judgments his responses and so that we can use that as a springboard to get to know the God of the Bible in the Old Testament until Moses came all they had was a prophetic word all they had was a personal relationship with God nothing was written down until Moses okay nobody in the Bible had the full Bible like we do so we are blessed indeed so look that's why I read some inscription because you want to understand the prophetic lament word it's never going to be in conflict with the written word that's why okay so in all those versions it says in the King James it says no chastening but just about every other version it says no discipline so let's look at that word in the Hebrew in the Hebrew that word discipline means tutelage education or training by implication disciplinary correction now I'm reading out of my Strong's exhaustive concordance that's 3/8 to 0-9 if you want to look it up just so you know I'm not making stuff up I'm not just pulling stuff out of thin air so Strong's exhaustive concordance entry number 3 8:09 on the New Testament side 3 8:09 and that word there is idea and it means to rich educational and training by implication disciplinary connection so what the scripture is saying is that the Lord will discipline us he will chasing us and the Lord will tutor us so in other words there are some things about Jesus about life about kingdom and about the way we're supposed to live there we don't know so we have to be tutored the same way you would have a tutor for a subject in school there are some subjects some things that God wants to teach you that he's got a tutor on okay and then it says education or training that means some things you need to be educated on there's some things that you don't know that's why one of the most dangerous attitudes you can have both as a Christian and as a person in general is what you think you know everything when you think that what you know is all there is to know you are in trouble you are in more trouble than you realize God is always bigger than you think he is you can't fit that guy down into your mind life is always bigger than you think it is you can't fit life into your mind and over and over and over and over again as humans we think that what we know is all there is to know that what we've seen is is all there is to see and what we've experienced is all that life entails and that's not true so the Lord has to teach us he has to educate us okay and then it says or training mmm what's the difference between teaching and training I will tell you the difference teaching is when you convey concepts training is when you impart skill this is so in other words teaching is where I get it in your ear training is where I get it in your hands okay so if I'm teaching you a concept I'm teaching you how something works I'm teaching you the idea that's where your hand that's teaching training means I know how to apply the concept which is why whenever you take a math class you have to have math homework because just getting the concept of you know addition subtraction algebra geometry whatever is not good enough you have to do the problems you have to do the work that's training that's applying the teaching and the concepts so teaching is for your head concepts training is for your hands application skin oh can I do it okay now so it says no discipline no teaching seems enjoyable at the time now that's pretty self-explanatory okay the Word of God says that when the Lord is trying to tutor you when he's trying to train you when he's trying to educate you and also that word discipline also means by implication disciplinary correction in other words just to keep it real and make it plain sometimes the Lord has put us in check sometimes we're out of control sometimes we're not being obedient sometimes the path that we're on it's going to lead to our own destruction and the Lord will step in as a good parent as a good father and put us in check okay that's a disciplinary correction so we got tutoring education training disciplinary correction all bound up in that word discipline now the Bible says it's not enjoyable at the time and it's not mmm anytime you being whipped any time you'd be in chastise any time you're being told no it is having your flesh is being told no because there's a difference between you and your flesh understand that your flesh is that rebellious nature that we got from Adam and Eve when they sinned against God and then we became the opposite of God when they ate from the fruit of the trees of knowledge of good and evil and walked in lust and pride - your flesh that nature that's not you but that flesh nature is a real thing and it lives in these mortal bodies and we have to deal with it every day until we got until they die and go to the glory round but sometimes you need correction sometimes it's not your flesh sometimes God will correct you by saying your dream is too small like you had one level and God said you know you need to change your thinking or you have a dream but you're not doing the things necessary to make that dream come to pass God needs to correct that behavior otherwise it's never going to happen it's never gonna happen if you're not taking the steps necessary to birth that dream sometimes God has to tell you no meaning what you wanted I'd give you a personal example there was something I was dreaming about my whole life since I was a little when I say it up since I was a little boy and they kept me going through rough times and when I got grown the Lord told me no and I don't was stunned so what the Lord did was he gave me a little taste of what I thought I wanted and after I had a little taste I was like Guillen Oh Lord she was right I didn't I didn't actually want to do the thing that I was dreaming about I did it wasn't what I thought it was okay so he was gracious to give you a little taste of it but he helped me understand his know and that's why he was gracious because he doesn't owe me an explanation but he helped me understand that you wouldn't actually be happy if you had that what she thought you were dreaming about so sometimes God has to say that thing what you're doing is not actually what's best for you sometimes what God says in his correction is not now that's not to say him as no no means is not going to happen not now means is that this isn't the season let me tell you something I have learned to chase me and discipline and correction that that the smartest thing you can do as a believer it's fans sync with the Lord stay in step with Christ if you try to birth something before the time like when Moses tried to deliver the Egyptians but he wasn't ready so he rose up in his own strength and kid that tried to deliver the Hebrews I'm sorry tried to deliver the Jews he rose up and killed the Egyptian that was oppressing the Hebrew and then he committed murder and he did it in public and he got found out any ran because deliverance was in him but it wasn't time Moses went back to Egypt forty years later armed with the tools of God with a command from God with the rod of God with hearing the power from God with all that different kind of stuff it was 40 years later when Moses actually got to walk into the deliverance that he knew he was called and walked and it was in him but when he tried to do to try to do away out of season he wasn't ready okay and let me tell you one of the most painful things about life you can discover and that is that if you do things after your season because some seasons are gone when they gone they're gone for example you have one shot and you like to be a child you're only if you live to be a hundred years old you're only a child for less than fifteen percent of your life fifteen percent or less of your life is spent as a child you really only have ten good years to really be a kid birth through 10 I first decade that's really the only time you are an actual Akita when you turn 11 or 12 you and your tween years you're on your way to young adulthood and then when you get 13 and 19 you get puberty in full bloom and now you are capable of sexual reproduction you're able to make babies so that's a different stage of life 13 to 19 so you really only have a decade of actually being a child yeah whatever you do or don't get in your childhood once it's gone it's gone it's not coming back now there's that old saying once a man twice a child saying sometimes when you get super old people have to have to take care of you sometimes that's true sometimes it's not but what is true is that you only get one shot at being a child it means time states happen to us in our childhood that our fair aren't right but your childhood is not coming back and sometimes we hold onto you what should have happened or what did happen or what wasn't right or whatever we hold on to that sometimes for decades sometimes we're well into our 30s and our 40s and our fifties and we're still holding on to those childhood things and reading healing we need deliverance we need forgiveness we need understanding but then you ain't coming back that's the thing another thing is a lot of people go to school as an adult there's nothing wrong with going to school or back to school as an adult because when you're 18 you're an adult but I mean if you go back to school in later years normally 30 years and older one of the things you discover when you go back to school as an adult is that playtime is over a whole lot of people wish especially people that had to get their GED and don't misunderstand me there is nothing wrong your GED your high school equivalency and if you got it praise God and you don't have it then I encourage you to get it but a whole lot of people that have that you could do it that way realize I should have went to class when I was in high school okay you only got them high school you my school years ain't coming back so if you didn't graduate when you should've graduating then you have to go back and get that equivalency nothing wrong with that but a whole lot of people in their 20s sitting in class with you know 18 to 19 year olds of people that are out of the age range realize I should have panel dismiss when I have my four years of high school and get done with it they're my school years ain't coming back they are not coming back okay so that's what an example of what I mean about how the most important thing you can do as a Christian is stay in step with God because God literally has a plan for every single season of your life don't be listening to these people that tell you that you have time or gifts to wait you know you don't you we have virginity at one time that's one time gift you really have childhood for than 10 years that's one time gift okay you only have your first love one time that's a one time gift okay all that use of energy and strength and your teen years comes from the hormones come from comes from puberty that's only for a season that doesn't last like long okay and so don't ever listen to somebody that tells you that you've got time to wait so you're yelling you got time nothing wrong fail you need to seek the face of God no matter where you are in life but he's because God has a plan for exactly where you are age-wise the stage of life and you want to stay in sync with that plan okay for example if God called you to start a family late in life like Abraham and Sarah God called them to do that if God calls you to start a family late in life like Elizabeth and Zacharias the parents of John the Baptist God called them to do that but if God don't call you to do that then you might not want to be starting the family at 75 years of there's nothing wrong with that most women can't have children that over yeah you know if your body still works you can still a father a child but if your father and kids at that age you might not be allowed to see them grow up okay you probably don't have 75 years in front of you like you have 75 years behind you if you're just having kids in but I know men have done it I read a story last year about a man that had his first baby at the age of 80 and he had actually he claimed that he was a virgin and so it was first time for him for everything so I don't know if that's true or not and that's not provable okay but the point I'm trying to make is that having kids at 75 and 80 it's not the same as having kids in your young years 18 20 to 25 30 where it's not the same thing and so that's why it's important to seek the face of God no matter where you are and ask the Lord what is your will for me during this season and if you don't like what the Lord has to say he might have to chasten you he might have to discipline you know let me show you another form of chastening still in Hebrews 12 11 12 11 one of the ways that God chastens you is what I mentioned before is that sometimes the Lord will let you have your way okay that's one of the worst things God could ever do is let you have your way because we don't know what we're talking about and we don't know that we don't know and one of my most favorite exam I'll give you two examples one of the biggest biggest examples about how we don't know what we talked about is with money what happens when you give young people a lot of money okay many times unless they're extraordinary wise they tend to run through it it's in a bundle that happens to a lot of people their professional careers when they have their money-making years they couldn't borrow that money do you know why because they think it's always gonna be like it is right now and then you get used to certain lifestyle no no no like if you're an athlete for example you've got to do something with that money why you didn't have any money making years because in years they come no one's gonna pay you that kind of money again okay example1 example2 is relationships most of us have been to a point in our lives where we thought to be in the wrong relationship where we actually thought to be with someone that was all wrong for us all wrong for us and Laura tried to tell you and your mama tried to tell you and your daddy try to tell you and your friends tried to tell you and your passenger I've to tell you was like I know you didn't want to hear and then what happened then you had to suffer consequences and that relationship cost you more than you thought it would and God was trying to correct you and say leave that boy alone leave that girl alone and that's a necessarily mean there's anything wrong with them they're just not right for you understand most of us have been through something like that okay and if we had received a correction of the Lord we could have saved ourselves a lot of trouble and a lot of heartache and a lot of problems if we are just listening with God was trying to put us in check because God no here comes a principle God will always talk to you first if you didn't know that then I want to share that with you that the Lord will always talk to you first if you are a child of God you're not just going to go stumbling into situations if there's danger if you're going down the wrong path if there's a wrong turn that you're making the Lord will always because he's faithful he will always talk to you first do you know what the problem actually is a problem that isn't we don't listen we don't receive his gentle correction we don't hear that still small voice we don't receive we don't want to hear it we just want to have our way and do it our way and if that happens and God will step back and let you have your way somewhere further down the road you will be so sorry that you did it your way you won't know what to do you will be ashamed and embarrassed when you have to eat the fruit of what your way produced that's why God was trying to correct us in early stages but he knew how the story was going to end that's why so many people are married to the wrong person everybody tried to tell you when you first sucked up with them they run the water and you was like now you don't want to hear now you're in a marriage and you're unhappy you're unfulfilled a whole bunch of things might be going on in your life and unless cuz you with the wrong person the Laura tried to tell you before you marry them there wasn't the woman you just didn't wanna hear okay so many of us have been through that that's what I mean about how important it is to receive the Lord's correction receive the Lord's chastening and even though it's not pleasant and even though you don't want to hear it it's still going to end up for your good as the scripture says let's get back to the scripture later on however again Hebrews 12:11 later on however a deal's a peaceful harvest of righteousness to those who have been trained by it so but the Bible tells you right there later on out of the Hebrew history on that means last day afterward later more lately eventually so what the Bible is teaching you is that there's a time element involved that's one of the things sometimes about God that we don't like because God can surely and truly do things like that but he didn't even make the world like that he took his time and made the world over six days and made mankind on the sixth day and the rest of the seventh day he didn't even make everything all at once so the Bible is teaching you to several scriptures there's going to be a time element involved and so sometimes that's what God uses to teach us patience and in your daily walk with Christ he's not gonna tell you everything all that wants on the one day he's gonna give you whatever he wants to give you day by day which is what he said in the prayer remember give us this day our daily bread okay so there's a time to event time element involved but it says later on however it yields a peaceful harvest a peaceful harvest of righteousness what does that mean in practical terms that means that your life will have a greater sense of peace to it and what you'll be reaping will be peaceful and righteous it'll be right it'll be right in the eyes of God right in your eyes and it will be a blessing it won't be a burden it won't be something that was birthed in the flesh it'll be something that was born in the spirit because you listened to you in obeying Christ but then then the last part of that first you have to understand the conditions it says it years of harvest of righteousness and peace the arenas to those who have been trained by it do not skip them I have some hundred adverbs now I'm finding it really real up in here okay some children you can correct them and they learned a lesson and they'll come back to you later and say dad you was right I was acted up thank you for disciplining disciplining me thank you for putting me in check some children can get chastening and they don't learn nothing some children look like they get a whipping and they get mold hard-headed and stubborn okay because all people aren't the same the Bible says that when God corrects you you have to receive the training what that means what that means is that when the Lord puts you to check and put you on the right track in whatever the Lord has to correct you you then have to reorder your life to walk in the new correction that Jesus gave you so in other words if you're having health problems and you go before the Lord for healing and the Lord says I will heal you but you also need to change your diet if the Lord says you need to you need to eat better then you need to change what you eat because God is not just saying he's gonna release his divine power to heal you because if you keep living the way you're living you're gonna have to keep coming back for the healing God is sitting that you need to change the way you eat and the way you exercise and that will solve some of those health problems that's what I mean so from that point forward you have to have that new diet and that new exercise plan if you don't you're going to keep having them chronic problems okay same with money similar relationships same with anything if you're trying to make a marriage work and you go over for the Lord if you come before the Lord and you do like most people most people go to God and say change that other person you need to fix them cuz they and bright the Lord will always change you okay the one person you can't control which is you and he will take you to the word and he will show you how a marriage works because he's the one that invented marriage he invented it for himself and he invented it to glorify Him and therefore does not work the way we think is you work and it doesn't have to so he wants your marriage to work you got to go to Jesus and let the Lord tell you what to do and I can almost guarantee that whatever the Lord challenges you're not gonna like it you would rather have your way and make that other person change the one's gonna tell you what you need to do as a husband as a wife but once the Lord tells you what to do you have to keep doing it you can't just do it one time and then go back to your own way that's not gonna work so the Bible says that it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness and the reason that I take so much time and I try to be detailed and meticulous that's because I've heard so much bad teaching in my life since I was a child because I've heard people that don't read like the whole verse or they don't get behind the language the Hebrew and the Greek and the air man they just spout these stuff off they're just pulling stuff out of thin air and all of that bad teaching in ends up messing up people and I've heard people teach his verse and talk about it years a peaceable fruit of righteousness no if you as a principle fruit of righteousness to the oppose we have been trained by it so in other words you receive what the Lord said you did what the Lord said and then you continued on that new path God gave you the whoopin God gave you the correction and he said okay Jesus different that what I was doing before that made you have to let me I'm gonna live that way anymore I'm gonna do this now what you say that's what that means that's how you get your piece of oh yeah and righteous harvest that's how you get it you can't just take the whippin and then go back to do what you're doing before worse stuff is gonna come worse stuff is gonna come but whippings more consequences more everything of what you don't wanna so the Bible says you've got to be trained by the correction trained by the disciplining then once you receive it then you get that peaceable fruit and I'm telling you it's true I can tell you in my own life I give a quick example God has to do something on us called pride processing pride processing because we all walk in pride pride is one of the fundamental core elements of the flesh nature and it was pride that made Adam and he feel like they could separate from God and still live that goes against what God said God told Adam if you eat the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil in English it says thou shalt surely die and Hebrew it says something closer to dying thou shall die so the God told Adam was that you have the freedom son to walk away from me if you want to but if you do it's going to kill you if you don't stay attached to me said God to Adam you're going to die so it's not that God didn't tell Adam what was going to happen if you get that food but I don't would have been on and ate it anyway and somebody after listening to the devil because they thought that they could have a higher quality of life if they separated from God he believed that Adam knew that was alive but he went with it anyway god I told him before he did that that you're gonna die to do that so we all are cursed and burdened with something called pride and pride is the opposite of love so God has to give us pride process and to help us come out of our it hurts but it's worth it so I was going to give you a personal example one of the things that the Lord taught me when we were going through one level of pride processing because it's continual is that he taught me about letting go of the expected outcomes that I saw in my mind letting go of thinking that things had to happen a certain way or that they had to look a certain way but they had to happen at a certain time so in other words give control of the situation to him God will always do what he said he was going to do but it don't have to happen when you think and don't have to happen the way you think and don't have to look like what you thought and the Lord told me that that was just prime then when I had all these things in my mind and I had decided that it has to go that way the Lord told me that was pride and then he broke that off me and showed me not to walk on that anymore when he did that I had so much peace in my mind I had peace in my mind like I had never had in my entire life and I would never want to go back to the way I was thinking before because I had so much peace when I when I just let go of thinking that my expectations or how things had to play out but rather turn control over to him because he'll always do what he said he was gonna do but it don't have to happen when you think you think is gonna happen in me and God hasn't scheduled for June of next year I mean you get on man cuz it get happening me it doesn't mean it's not gonna happen but you know next year is better god scheduling God's timing is better than yours Oh God told Abraham he's gonna be the father of many nations if that was me I would have thought that men so I'm about to have a lot of kids and that's not what happened hey Abraham I had the one kid by hey garland was not the will of God and then he had Isaac by Sarah at a hundred years old I'm sure that's not what he had in mind what God change his name to Abraham I told him you gonna be the father of many nations but it didn't look like what hey man they said I thought it was gonna look like both of them had try to control the situation and let God do what he was going during his time and you understand that's an example of what I mean about chastening and discipline it hurts when the Lord does it but if you can make it through the hurt then you learn and if you learn the lesson it brings you so much peace you would never want to go back to the way you were before the discipline and I would never want to go back to the way I was thinking because once you learn how to let go and let God your mind literally floods with ease you literally live that leave the outcomes in the details to the master to the creator to the Potter and you just be the client let me do what he told me to do and then whenever it comes to past whenever he wants his timing is better than mine his results are better than mine his vision is bigger than mine so you gotta learn how to let your stuff go on telling you my mind has never been the same on the positive tip I've had so much peace because I'm a type a person of a creative person I got a bunch of different projects going at the same time I was that stuff rolling around in my head some of mines always popping my mind's always talking and then when I learn how to let go of my expectations I just had a level of peace and I would never want to go back but that's because the Lord chasing me I think I didn't do wrong home the Lord chasing me he disciplined me he taught me about my pride and gave me a way of living that was better than the way I was living you with me all right amen any minute so that's how prophetic word for today is chastening based on Hebrews 12:11 okay so be sure to watch the video from the beginning to get to fool if you came in late or from beginning the beginning to get the full understanding and what I was teaching now when you see me close my eyes and pray in tongues I'm asking the Holy Ghost is there anything else he wants me to release now for those of you that don't understand why I do that or why prophet might do that it's because we don't want to do presumptuous there's a scripture that says Lord save me from presumptuous sins in other words you only want to say what the Holy Ghost what you just said you don't want to be presuming and assuming the will of God so you have to invoke the Holy Spirit you have to ask him is there anything else you want to release because these are his words not mine and that's why idea and that's why sometimes people don't walk in the prosthetic get in trouble they start presuming you know with Lord's name is oh this is any nerves you better ask him you've been asking before you speak so that's why I do it so here we go okay all right the image of the Lord just gave me was of a green and a yellow tree it was kind of like a two-tier tree it's kind of yellow at the top and he got more green sometimes prophetically you get images sometimes you get sound sometime you can smell sometimes you get words prophetically what that means a yellow-green tree in these two things it means that there's fruitfulness in life but that's the green but the yellow means there's a ripening it means that there's a ripening and what that means is that some of the fruit you've been waiting on is finally starting to ripen because they nothing worse than premature food have you ever eaten an apple and that Apple wasn't ready have you ever eaten a green banana and have banana now ready and here's the big one his grapes man cuz I love grapes have you ever eaten some grapes and increases dinner it was nice and green a nice and grandeur nice and burgundy and nice and black a nice and white whatever kind of grapes you're into they looked all right on the outside but you didn't immigrate from yeah it's kind of sad okay well that's because they weren't bright beer so what the Holy Ghost just showed me through that image that means that some fruit is finally ripening it means it's a time of ripening up some fruit so that means that things were that we've been laboring on we've been planting and watering and working in toiling you try to make happen that means some of these finally starting to right and that's a good word man that's a good news I'm excited about that I'm excited to see exactly what he's talking about in my life because I got it likes it up I'm doing it but that also goes back to what I said about about staying in step with the hole that goes through the season because left her own devices we will always try to birth unripe food almost every time almost every time we're out there trying to do something it ain't ready there so we have to wait on God's timing all right okay let me ask him that that's it alright a man and a man and I'm gonna leave this laptop wiki never let anybody tell you that the prophetic isn't real good people only want God to manifest in ways that they are comfortable with that's why people so easily accept evangelists pastors and teachers because you can understand that but apostles and prophets almost always covered ways that are out of the norm uncomfortable they don't look like the way people does it the way people would do it you know why because God gives us heavenly things see there's tongs in heaven the whole property of how do you know that because the scripture says that around God's throne there lightnings and thunderings and voices and when the voice of Jesus speaks it as it is as the sound of many waters tongues is a heavenly tool it doesn't look like it would look on earth that's why when the Holy Ghost fell on Pentecost the way of thinking they spoke in tongues so don't ever let anybody tell you that the Apostolic and the prophetic is not from God it just many times doesn't look like the way we were doing it don't look like what we think and that's what I was telling you before about having to let go of your expectations because if you don't get Rhema word from God if you don't get a right now word from God in sake and in season you gonna miss and you gonna miss every time okay alright god bless you thanks to those of you that tune in to watch me live thanks to those of you that are listening on the podcast those of you that are watching me on Facebook on periscope and those of you that are watching on youtube god bless you a man thank you so much for tuning in this Thursday is my no more genies teaching this Thursday at 7 o'clock and I'll be finishing out my series on the Kingdom of Heaven and because I've been teaching about what Jesus actually taught which was the kingdom okay and I've been going through the parables that the Lord taught about the kingdom this Thursday at 7 o'clock is no more Ginny so to you for that I'll be here next Sunday at 2:30 p.m. Central Standard Time my prophetic devotional quarter chu is out but we're about to go to quarter three next month in July I can't believe is Gina ready lord have mercy got a lot more stuff coming out I've been releasing music and when I release music that do that on music Friday at noon so you can find out on this page I think I'm going to set up a separate page for my hands I have 150 here project and I think I'm gonna have a page just from I am so people can find them all in one place okay cuz they have you know a lot more to go and I'm totally excited about it so I have a lot so thank you for those of you that support my ministry of the prayer with attendance with finances god bless you orly appreciate it and remember to like and share these videos liking the share of these videos on facebook on youtube and all on periscope helps the word to get out because whenever there is a prophetic word released we want to have two to go around the world we want everybody in the body of Christ they have a chance to hear all right amen amen god bless so have a good rest of your Sunday have a great week and remember that if the Lord is chasing you it's because he loves you he's trying to course-correct you he's trying to get you on the right path so you end up with a peaceable fruit of righteousness later so listening to the listen to the chastening listen to the discipline listen and receive the corruption and make it be a part of your life okay a man any man god bless I'll see ya on Thursday
Prophet David Taylor
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2020-06-07
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Briana Murrell at NCNSP Summer Institute
good afternoon as just stated my name is Briana Morel and I am delighted to be in your presence this afternoon to share with you a few words when given the theme of this year's summer Institute acting on our beliefs my student Instinct kicked in I immediately began researching and went to the dictionary and found the technical Definition of belief the psychological state in which an individual holds a proposition ition or premise to be true in basic terms a belief is confidence in the truth it was during my elementary years that my personal belief of self suuccess was born I was confident and had a premise that I would be successful no matter what with my mother and father by my side I had a sort of built-in belief system along with teachers and mentors I acted on my main belief of self ESS daily with my father in the military my role as an army brat began early and this is where I form my own belief that learning is a constant action that we all encounter and I will be successful at it often beginning the school year in one state then moving to another I moved around more than the average child traveling became second nature to me I had to adapt to new environments and people on a regular basis but even as a young young child I believed that one thing was persistent and that was school no matter where I went country to Country state to state school was the same you read write take tests do projects and have the occasional fun days school was school to me I found refuge in learning new things when it came to school I believed that I would achieve I didn't worry about anything else if there came the time when we had to reload loate I knew that I would be going to a new school but it was basically the same learning though going to different schools with different curriculums I was the one everyone could count on I believed that this was a quality that would be very important in my future and today I pride myself in keeping this quality of dependability a quality that complements my belief of self- suuccess through my middle school years school was still number one and of often took it upon myself to complete School assignments and projects before I indulged in anything else growing up as the only child in the household for eight years I believed in myself and developed a very independent attitude I was self-motivated and always took the initiative I had grown up this way and carried it on through life in eth grade I made one of the most important decisions of my life applying to a new school that was opening the next school year this particular particular school would allow me to earn up to 60 free college credits go to school on a college campus and be the very first to graduate after Consulting with my life coach my mother I filled out the extensive application complete with recommendations and essays this was just another step in my journey of self- suuccess about a month later I received a letter in the mail and was officially accepted to Cross Creek Early College High School on the campus of faville State University since the start of my journey at this new school I knew that education will always be number one I made no hesitations to stay on top of all my school work I had a mission to complete high school knowing I did the best my whole way through I will let no one or nothing get in the way of this goal I had a belief of excellence and strived for it every day all throughout High School I did just that with the help from Cross Creek early college teachers and staff with small class sizes I had my own family away from home I stayed on course never lost sight of my goal and completed my mission at the top of my class on May 22nd 2009 while giving my valid Victory address I realized that I had made it all my years of learning and self-discipline up to this point had paid off graduating as number number one of the first graduating class was one of my greatest achievements as a college student I continued my education at faville State University and my love for learning never stopped it was stronger than ever I enjoyed the classes the professors and the overall experience with skills I gained at Cross Creek I felt I Was A Step Above the Rest I interned at two local magazine companies traveled to conferences and conventions I was Senator at large on the student government Association staff writer for the student newspaper and supplemental instruction leader for chemistry my discipline for Learning and belief in myself helped me to be involved in many extracurricular activities and maintain a 4.0 grade point average on May 7th 2011 at the age of 20 I graduated as valid dictorian once again and I received my Bachelor of Arts degree and communication with a concentration and mass communication next week I will embark on yet another journey and enhance my belief of self- suuccess heading to Upstate New York I will pursue my master's degree in magazine newspaper and online journalism at Syracuse University the extensive one-year program will allow me to receive my degree in the year 2012 and I will have my masters at the age of 21 when asked what SN next when asked what's next my response without hesitation is school why stop my brain is still fresh and young one more degree or two won't hurt my ultimate goal is to become editor and chief of my own magazine would tomorrow not promise to anyone I pride myself in helping others and living life to the fullest self- suuccess is an ongoing belief that I work towards every single day to individuals who are hesitant or uncertain on goals in life or even your next move I say don't think just act you yourself can be the one to think about something too hard and talk yourself out of it my mission in life is to Simply live laugh learn and love four short words that have no meaning with without action thank you for your time and I wish everyone a life full of Victory and success thank you
NC New Schools/ Breakthrough Learning
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2011-07-11
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Mayhem Minute: RIP Dusty Rhodes
hey guys we're back it is a Mayhem minute I know we haven't done one of these for a while but I think I want to dust this off whenever there's a topic worth talking about that's uh definitely a little far away from the wrestling Mayhem show on Tuesday nights uh so I'm M Sor sron on the Twitter wrestling mayf show.com to find this a whole bunch of other videos uh Big Ups to our friends uh our friends on uh uh uh on uh Slice on broadway.com as well as bold Pittsburgh uh go check them out they support the show support them back today I want to talk about Dusty roads uh of course the news came out on Thursday uh about him passing and that I'm aware of I don't think it was anything other than old age nothing nothing came out about it they just say that he passed away at 69 I you know certain some kind of complication but um but the roads family if you're not if you're a wrestling fan you you're probably aware of this uh Dusty roads is is is one of the classics one of the classic wrestlers um and actually see in a recent picture he's definitely losing a lot of weight I got to wonder if that's that's to more recent sickness or not um but of course we got the uh Cody and Dustin rhods rynolds however you want to say it uh currently known as gold dust and stardust in the WWE uh Dusty rhods is a Hall of Famer Dusty rhods is is the guy to me my first experience with Dusty rhods with the old polka dots the American dream oh but Saturday I mean Saturday night's main event or something like that when when he was looking ground beef coming out of the uh com coming out of the uh the the pressor in one of his American Dream promos this is the classic stuff I grew up with and that's not even including the even more classic stuff and matches and battles he had with Ric Flair and with everybody else uh if you're not familiar please if you have WW Network go look up the dusty road story on there uh their documentary they did about him a few years ago actually there was a DVD came out I remember there's a push button that said that that had him going American dream or something like that uh but anyways uh and and and and it was interesting timing of course because of course uh he is uh he's been very involved with um uh NXT the developmental that's becoming more than Developmental and uh as our friend actually Matt Carlin was there doing media for KDKA there's actually an article over on kdka.com and we do have this linked on the Twitter at Mayhem show as well as our other social media platforms um attributes to Dusty roads prominent during nxt's debut in Pittsburgh uh of course of course I mean these are people that that worked directly I mean Dusty has had to be somebody who's been influencing everybody's career coming up in that system in the uh WWE Developmental and uh and and if they're fans they grew up on Dusty roads in in some fashion even though I imagine some of these uh people are are a lot younger to even remember the poke American Dream Dusty roads uh if they're early early in their career but uh it's it's he's influential and and uh I think it's it's sad to see that he's gone but he's left such a legacy behind in his wake and uh definitely somebody that's influenced me um the Aman dream yes but anyways so please let me know your thoughts please attach to this video let us know on Twitter at Mayhem show if you're on our one of our uh platforms wrestling mayem show over on the Facebook or the Google+ please let us know what do you think about uh Dusty roads what are your favorite Dusty roads memories I I shared one of mine with the ground beef I know I I had the weird WWE ones but still um one of the greatest things I saw on Instagram I believe is from our friends at iron skull uh Productions they are doing the the artwork for our rwa rwa Productions over at sron media uh there was uh the Wrestlemania 6 rematch of uh of uh Macho King Sensational Sherry against Sapphire and Dusty roads so that that definitely brought a smile to my face and in such a sad moment for uh wrestling fans right now so let me know your thoughts and we'll see you guys next time tune in Tuesday of course uh for live. wrestling mayham show.com 900 PM eastern time we'll have the regular wrestling Mayhem show back to its normal time as well as uh our Indie mayham Show interview I know up coming up on June 23rd we'll have Mary Elizabeth Monroe doing some great things in in the independent circuit for the ladies we'll see you guys next time [Applause] thanks this show is a member of the sron media podcast Network find out more at sron media.com
Wrestling Mayhem Show
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2015-06-12
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3NuiokR6dg
Origin of Shit, Fuck, Pussy, and other bad words.
so seeing as I would have potentially been eligible for monetization at YouTube at this point except that they changed their policy a day before I would have reached that did you kind of realize that even if I met that a lot of the videos I wind up using language that is not suitable for advertisers and I thought it'd be interesting if we took a look into a bit of the historical origin of many of these bad words and they're more appropriate counterparts see if you notice what I notice so [ __ ] seems to be in both noun and verb form of Old English origin that is not surprising and so even going back from 1580s had the general definition of excrement or facies but that it even back then had a bit of a slang for an obnoxious person so it's actually kind of interesting because for 500 years it maintained that same slang now shed is definitely an obnoxious person you learn something and then yeah that it went through a period and you'll you'll notice this several times that approximately the 1600s it fell into heavy disuse where it's largely remained anything going back before the 1500s though not that I can see but the more appropriate word for [ __ ] if you're going through research you'll see this okay so they've got this for the entry and faces is Latin ultimately of no origin but we get it the 1630s from Latin let's think of another one let's start with n1 and see if we can find here we go from let's see at least 1879 perhaps from the Old Norse puss which means pocket or pouch and that seems to correlate when you're looking at the load German de prisa which quite literally means vulva and purse has definitely sounds similar to [ __ ] given some of the vowel differences between German and English you typically see a rise you know we think of German as being lower so push it or push it would very readily become [ __ ] in English that's not surprising but it yes so this is this is actually valid potentially valid as well because I can see that that is a way of the word forming especially since the did to share that with French and it's pretty undeniable that French had that effect the work is now used of a woman okay so there's recorded use of it being used for that purpose from back in the late 1500s the absence of [ __ ] engross and other early slang works argues against the vaginal sense being generally known before we I see so it does seem to be like a slaying for a woman but 1879 seems to be the earliest that it was identified for referring to the female genitals I want to have a look at that as an old book so that shouldn't be covered by copyright anymore let me see if I can find that archive.org has really a chance they have it oh boy this is long I'll find it so it seems like you can only find the word once within this document and it's in an untitled chapter five and unfortunately that gives absolutely no context about what this is talking about but based on the were use of the word [ __ ] every boy huggles his pretty [ __ ] and runs up a cottage this is definitely referring to just woman in general and despite some of the language that's used within here at least from my reading it doesn't look like [ __ ] is being used in a pejorative manner so not as an insult but just merely a likening to a cat that's all it seems to be so there isn't a whole lot of historical use of this word it definitely seemed to just be a rather meaningless slang that was you know at one point referring to a woman and at a later point referring to the female pudenda doesn't really seem to have ever been offensive in fact pussy-whipped is probably the most offensive part of that and that's not even the [ __ ] word itself it's the implications of it not really sure how this ever became offensive I can't really look up the equivalent of it because I mean in this case we know that the the equivalent of the growing really old was just cat you know if it happened to come from the low german place then there is actually something I can look up there so I'll try to remember to do that if it was from the old norse then pocket or pouch there's nothing nothing going on there yeah yeah I I don't I don't know I don't know but in case you don't recognize where Volvo comes from it's Latin now there is actually a word for what [ __ ] kind of means now so specifically the female into enter coral foramen but back in Old English early 14th century was just referring to the female genitalia in general and definitely seems to be going back even to proto-germanic may have very very old latin origin but is definitely not recent Latin origin it's interesting I noticed that with the with the [ __ ] as well is that it's sort of interchanged between the two whereas Latin does the same also for those not aware since you'll see a at quite a few club places not just in this but on other words P ie is a proto-indo-european I think that's right proto-indo-european yeah yeah hey I don't even need that one anymore okay yeah yeah p IE is proto-indo-european that's the theoretical root language of all of the european languages first known reference in English is apparently as in a compound a girl : uh yeah I can I can I can get that I how'd that come to a guard for cool and being a haunt or just sort of a gathering of prostitutes so yeah this word was historically so acceptable that you would see used in medical writing in the 1400s but then and a keep track of these avoided in public speech since the 15th century so the sixteen hundreds and considered obscene since the 17th century so the 1800s the latin equivalent of this is or sorry the appropriate equivalent of it is the latin ah so let's let's come up with another one ah I know since it came up in the reading that I had to do so from the 1530s it's a spelling alteration of horror we added a W which happened to la-la-la with English words actually from the Old English or where it mostly meant the same thing ISM for a word that survived [Music] so this actually is a so-called bad word although there is some of course some debate over whether or not your dad consider a even the mention of prostitution or other types of sex work bad I'm of the mindset that it's as long as they got into it willingly and maintain control over their their environment and everything that it's it's just work obviously there are a lot of ways in which that can be wrong there's sex slavery is still a thing there's even still some pretty shady porn studios and all sorts of other stuff you know pimping is still a thing there is quite a shine a way of sex that happens with certain types of people not really sure why that happens but yeah it does but you may have noticed that one of the equivalents given here something mentioned pretty freely so let's let's again look at that one we've got [ __ ] just means prostitute a bad word I keep doing that forgetting that doesn't I mean I could use the keyboard shortcut but I don't leave me alone I guess I like fogging up my typing from Latin so even though horror and prostitute mean the same thing and are you know in and of themselves just refer to somebody's line of work bad thing to call people who aren't those those things but one of these has a considerably more taboo attitude what else can I come up with from the Old English and I any time I've ever actually read Old English I don't see it in the like modern English writing so I I'm not sure how that would actually be said but like BCI or something comes from Old Norse female of the dog that's a horrible translation but basically the it said it's gendered I don't know why they wrote a female of the dog because we just say female dog in normal English but yep I just ultimately I've only known origin but you know can trace that back to at least Old Norse might come from lop converse is equally possible so we don't know whether we got it well although other Old Norse got it from lop or lap got it from old norse so as a term of contempt applying to women dates from the 1400s and of a man 1500s so it came to refer to both offensively actually oh wait wait wait wait wait I think I might have read this wrong yes yes I did sorry okay so why would you write that so differently but please don't do that right things if you're okay I was essentially setting up the when it happened to what sex and what it came to mean for that sex do that in a consistent way for each of them because oh my god it causes reading problems so what it's saying here is in the 1400s it for women it came to be used as a term of contempt but in the 1500s for men it came to refer playfully as a dog so then in the starting with the 1400s you see it being used to is that oh sorry coming as a bad word in certain constant contexts but Old Norse goes way way older than that so you did still see it with a pretty pretty reasonable origin or before that I did not know about that I've never heard of that use before okay ah what other bad little words can we look up well I think I should go without saying that I don't need to look up the you know the Latin equivalent of this it's k9 the appropriate one for this now it's just dog and that actually has to do like this this one is an obvious exception to what you've been noticing prior and that dog is still an English word I shouldn't even need to search that for that you can if you want but did it it's an English word that happened because English just started dropping a lot of its modifications of words used to see two competing things depending on where you were historically but basically just basically declension for the dead two different words to assign them their grammar roll you started to see that drop as well as the gendering of words so a great example of that is like how we're and life just became man and then wery gendered that one but for most other things we used to have a gendered a nun gendered invariance and now the concept of gendering is so out of touch with english for the most part that when people learn a gendered language they're like whoa why the hell is like a pen female but what what else can we look at oh yeah because I haven't done this one yet so at least as far back as the 1670s you know the slang word for just a woman itself but at least from the 16th century the Oxford English Dictionary second edition cites it from 1503 in the form of fo'get bishops may [ __ ] their fill and the environment with more ancient word but not one written in the kind of texts that are survived books I see John John Lee Hooker from 14 this is her name could have oh yeah that that especially since Thalia ten indicates that it's probably French so you [ __ ] probably has probably has very different origins than the English [ __ ] they are not in heaven because they [ __ ] my wives of Eli orale released examples the words otherwise are Scottish which indicates the Scandinavian origin perhaps from a word akin to Norwegian dialectal Flicka which is copulate or the Swedish dialectal haka just copulate strike or push another 30 traits to modern English or like just a move wrestling or fidget yeah so I guess you could generalize this to saying that [ __ ] basically means to strike and this should make sense that given things like to fidget or was the other one - like interest scratch especially if you look at say like a dog scratching it is very obviously repeated striking again I'm speeding the in the very generalized sense well then if you think about what happens when you're when you're [ __ ] is it's repeated striking of the pelvis ease of the two people over and over and over and it's known quite well in linguistic circles at least that English especially is quite a is one of those languages where words tend to be rather broad in scope and get narrowed a bit by their context not all languages operate that way now that context is usually narrowed by things that happen in love languages that don't do that as well so it's it's yeah it seems like regardless of which where you got this the word flock basically means in a very general sense to strike so you know they overwhelmingly have the modern meaning of sexual intercourse so let's just do I don't think I can I look up both of those I want sexual intercourse yeah we have the specific though well either way you can pretty easily see that intercourse comes from the old French and then ultimately from Latin anything anything else I can think of what so from the 1400s a dirty slovenly or untidy woman earning the oxford english dictionary of doubtful origin but probably cognate with the dialectal german screw it slovenly woman why because there's nothing offensive about that Jesus that was sarcasm by the way slaughter of an IO woman or a [ __ ] Dutch slaughter slower slow okay the exact relationship to these is obscure Chaucer uses sluttish and reference to the appearance of an untidy man okay also of a kitchen maid so going back historically it seems to basically be like an untidy or dirty and then came to be you know just like dirty as a slang term refers to yeah yeah has its sexual connotations it seems like [ __ ] actually did the same thing where just refers to like dirty and unkempt but then took on that sexual connotation means slot and that's actually a really good example I have read I'm not sure how well substantiated they are but some theories that [ __ ] basically derived from sleet and that they both refer to things being sort of sullied I can see although how that one way hold up that well but it still it's an interesting idea nonetheless I can see how they came to that idea but the more appropriate way of describing these types of people is promise goose any surprise yet really any surprise yet at all that the appropriate word had that origin now I'm all about ideas word well actually I even have some non bad words that you'll notice this happened with so let me do one of these just to further demonstrate this point a little bit is the show that it's not just bad words but that's some of these totally innocuous things totally unoffensive things that became bad words so thing this word that has became overwhelmingly meaningless actually historically refers to a meeting assembly a council discussion or later an entity being a matter essentially a congress assembly or Parliament that meaning clearly did not survive with us from the old French and then likely a spelling alteration of the medieval Latin and from the Latin you you noticing yeah you probably noticed this way before a lot of these words historically had nothing bad about them and all right about the same time period became bad where their counterparts from a another language became appropriate so what what happened exactly while I generally shy away from Wikipedia they do have these really convenient hundred year breakdowns of the major historical events and it's we're talking about a considerable language change there's going to be a major event related to this so the death of Queen Elizabeth the first James the sixth of Scotland crowned King of England the plague on November on the fifth of November the Gunpowder Plot is uncovered in which Guy Fawkes and other Catholic associates attempted to blow up the King I just sort of laugh of that like trying to blow up a Scottish guy is that humor is probably lost on anybody who's not Celtic so the execution of Sir Walter Raleigh the death of James at war until so five years for the bishops war the long Parliament's of her English Civil War he arrives the Great Fire of Glorious Revolution and the Bill of Rights and then a claim of Rights sue at least based on those I am not sure I need to do some more digging around I looked for about two hours after that and I don't know if you would have asked me before I started this video my guess would have been it bent considerably well before this you know another sent another thousand years before the stirring mean Roman invasion or possibly even there like five hundred years before at the Norman invasion but I this is way later than I would have expected and I don't know so I put this up I'll do a follow-up video when I get an answer or eight I guess if I get an answer it's always possible that the reason why is just sort of lost because it was either not recorded or damaged somehow I'll do a follow-up either way yeah exactly what wound up happening
Patrick Kelly
UCKedGCKVSomtsC162wvaF8g
2018-01-26
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F7dQakQeigU
How to Use the VBA Gameboy Emulator
hello everyone in this video I'm going to show you how to use your visual boy advance emulator I already have a folder I've already done every procedure in this video but this is solely to teach you how to use yours now first things first you're gonna want to have the file of visual boy advance I'm assuming that you already have it I'm not gonna teach you how to download it because you should already know how just go to the website and download it it's not that hard now you're gonna want to extract the file if you have 7-zip or WinRAR doesn't matter just normally extract it using 7-zip all just do that save it to the folder that you want it to be in there you go if you don't have 7-zip or WinRAR and you're using the extraction software that you've been giving given at the beginning since you've got your computer like a normal Windows software that extracts the file you're just gonna want to right-click it in go down to extract but I don't have that option since I have 7z now the next thing that you do is create two folders this is just for organization purposes there's one for roms which are the games that you play and there's one for setup I'd you don't really need set up but I use it because I like organization pace of copying folder in there and when you boot up visual boy advance it should create this file don't move it anywhere because then it's just gonna create another one it's an endless creation of configuration so now you're gonna need some games go to cool rom-com or any other place that allows you to download roms and go ahead click browse by system for using cool ROM and this emulator can play Game Boy Advance games and gay Boy Color games so it doesn't matter which one you click just it matters because you get a different game each time in each category I'm gonna download Pokemon firered and yeah it's actually really simple wait for it to let you download your file and then download your file now once it's done downloading go to the file that you saved it in and go ahead and I'm gonna have to move it to my file or folder and put it wherever you want now don't open it at all don't mess with the files inside of it unless you're some sort of professional coder or you know how to code and another thing is that if you have two rounds be careful not to grab one ROM and drag it into another one because then it will corrupt one of them and you'd have to delete the game so next thing you want to do is play the game so open up visual boy advance and the top left corner click on file then click on open I have a different folder of roms so that's why it brings this one up let's move on a desktop and select the game that you want to play click open and it should work right from there so that's pretty much it there's different settings and things that you can tamper with some of them you may not know how to tamper with like this so I recommend not tampering with that you can save/load anything you want cheats I'm not sure how to use these yet but I'm sure another video can teach you how that's pretty much it it's a really simple process and I hope you learned something from this video and have fun playing around
DysenteryBanana
UCe160fVKVndhEj16J5A6gzw
2011-10-30
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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dpTiIXBwMc8
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How to do alternate picking fingerstyle, with Jay Collins
[Music] [Applause] [Music] err folks today I'm going to show you how to do alternate picking with the thumb and the one finger only and that's all I'm going to use the thumb of the one finger like a Down stroke in the back so if you do with a flat pick but using your fingers okay this little two-minute tunes kind of a kind of improvise over top of that and then after it's done I'll show you some techniques and how to apply it here we go [Music] in now with this technique I'm just going to play around the a minor pentatonic scale just amazing scale this to show you what I'm doing here was this alternate picking okay summon one finger now if I'm going to do a lick just a basic lick on the 5 7th fret of the fifth string the five seventh fret of the fourth string and the five seventh fret of the third string if I'm gonna do it lip like this I'm gonna start with my finger and that's gonna seem odd for a lot of people you have to get used to starting with the finger and starting with the thumb depending on the lick that you're going to play if I'm gonna do it and look like this I will intuitively know and it won't just come to you after a while start with a finger for this particular lick and what you do usually not 100% of the time you're going to alternate from the finger to the thumb finger cuz it's all like this [Music] just top it down just like that that's a really good little exercise to do which is fine I'm starting with a finger then the thumb finger goes to the fourth string thumb finger goes to the third string right now [Music] you keep that door [Music] and then to start incorporating what's get really really used to doing picking every note that you want to play some finger thumb finger no slides no hammers no pull off just get used to doing to some and the finger ultimate picking starting with one first than the other just to mix it up for different Lakes you'll just find that's just the way it's going to be for something like this I would start with the song [Music] and again now is not it's not a written rule it's not written in stone that you are note I'm going to do maybe a couple of notes with your finger and a couple of notes which is dominant role absolutely for effect for dynamics for attack I do that quite often here's a good example if I'm going to do this Lake I'll start with the foam finger keep the finger [Music] okay so to do a really good little exercise you can do all kinds of little things around me a minor pentatonic scale just keep them really short short little licks and start with the finger in one occasion start with the thumb but that feels goofy too yet then try the alternative because one of them will will lead you better into playing the next string that you want to play depending on the liquor you want to play so for example I'm going to start with a finger on this one the third string on the fifth fret and go to the thumb on the seventh [Music] a couple of times there I screwed up and did a couple of hammers to pull off friction there's nobody that wasn't trying to show you that but you get the idea basically just start with some on one finger and keep picking there we go [Music] if you get that technique down some the finger or finger thumb fingers up the olds on it baby get that down when you smooth then when it comes time to start doing incorporating pull off hammer ons and slides you'll have no trouble stopping one finger and putting a slide in there or a hammer or pull off and believe me when you start building that your fingers your thumb on your finger where they will start to know even your second finger with your second finger going in there your fingers and your thumb will start to know just how much time you actually have to to throw in a lick after a hammer-on and pull-off you've got tons and tons of time it really is cool you have to take my word on this if you practice the ultimate picking technique thumb one finger back and forth and pick every note for a good two three four weeks [Music] you will start getting some speed up believe me and then once you get that down I'm gonna have a video later incorporating hammers and poles and slides with that technique and you will be amazed how fast and how clean you will be there you go I hope these tips helped and if you'd like the video please give it a thumbs up and share with your friends also don't forget to subscribe to my channel and I have the links listed below to check out my website where you can have access to my books and some free downloads and please sign up to my email list to receive cool updates and more free stuff post your comments and questions anything you want maybe see things you might want to learn check out techniques and stuff I love answering that and I love to make a video for that kind of stuff down the road until next time bye [Music]
Jay Collins
UC4KKsQRbKmejSmyLz09i9kQ
2019-03-11
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=emP2um8LQd8
Life Insurance Using Personal Financial Statements Part 4 Gross Income 10143
personal finance practice problem using excel life insurance using personal financial statements part number four gross income method prepare to get financially fit by practicing personal finance here we are in our excel worksheet if you don't have access to it that's okay because we've basically been building this from a blank sheet in prior presentations starting with the balance sheet and then two formats of the income statement this time we're going to look at method number one for the life insurance needs calculation if you do have access to this worksheet there's three tabs down below example practice and blank example tab in essence being an answer key let's take a look at it now information is on the left-hand side we constructed a balance sheet and an income statement our personal financial statements to help us out with our calculations for the life insurance the income statement we had constructed on an accrual myth method and more of a cash flow type of method now we're going to use that to construct our life insurance calculations we'll start off with kind of a more basic life insurance calculation we'll get into a little bit more complex calculation then we will add our mortgage alone calculations for the amortization table breaking it down on a year by year basis this will be in future presentations and then we'll use that to get to a more complex life insurance calculation that we might use for more complex say term life insurance that might like decline over over time so that's going to be where we're going to go the second tab practice tab has a pre-formatted worksheet so you can work through the practice problem with less excel formatting the third tab the blank tab we've been building from scratch here so we we made our financial statements the balance sheet the income statement two formats of the income statement we're going to use that to do our life insurance calculation and we'll show this in a couple different ways so first i want a skinny s column skinny s that's where we need to start here so i'm going to go to the home tab oh let's go to the skinny o i'm going to paint brush the skinny o to the skinny s home tab paint brush and skinny s so we got the same skinniness for the o and the s and so this is going to be the insurance needed this is going to be method let's just call it method number one method one and i'll make this a little bit wider for column t let's make that a little bit wider here something like that and then i'm gonna select from t1 to v1 and make that our header format which is in the home tab font group bucket drop down black and white has been our format now we're going to start off with basically the first part is going to be related to what we think our our needs are from a cash flow standpoint uh from year to year so if we were to die and someone was dependent in part on our income how would we first think about how much income they would need for example for the years going forward on a cash flow basis and then we could tack on top of that goals that we're looking to save for such as college tuition retirement for example and that kind of stuff so first we're going to start with this method using the the times yearly income uh income method so i'm going to say we'll base this on the income so this first kind of component there's multiple ways we could do this right we could say okay i'm going to take a look at this spouse the spouse that makes more money that's the one that's going to die so if that one died they would be losing that income we could base then this yearly needs for the other spouse that would be living based on that income we could use that income to calculate some fraction of that income to calculate or we might use the expenses that we got down here on an accrual basis method or we might use more of a cash basis method for the expenses and that will depend in part if i scroll back on over and we see that we have the assets minus the liabilities we might first decide could i just pay off the liabilities maybe i could set up my life insurance to be enough that we could pay off the liabilities and then i might say simply base my calculation for the yearly needs after that point based on the expenses not including the cash flow for any liability payments or i might say hey look i want to make my my year by year calculation based on the total expenses including those liability payments assuming that they're just going to keep the things as they are and pay off the liabilities as they come due according to the current loan structures or we might say hey look we're good right now with the 60 000 i would like to keep keep the spouse at the same uh basic uh income level or threshold and just base the calculation based on the 60 000 on uh the earnings or possibly some fraction of the earnings so we'll look at a couple different methods as we think about different methods this first one we're going to base on the gross income so i'm going to say the yearly income yearly income of the spouse that that would pass away we're going to say is this 60 000 spouse number two that's who we're concerned about then we have the number of years that they're going to need that income for again multiple ways we can get this calculation we might say how many years would i have that income in practice until retirement for example and then past that think about the retirement needs for the spouse as a separate goal-oriented component or i might think about how many years my spouse has till retirement or i might think about how many years until the children the youngest child possibly reaches age 18 and then after that point i could think about other things targeted goals like tuition like retirement for the spouse for example or i can use a generic heuristic which would be like seven to ten years for example so i'm going to say that we'll base it on the youngest child here we're going to say okay the youngest child uh has 10 years to before they're 18 and out of the house or at least going to college and then we'll figure out the college calculations if we're going to add that so we're going to say there's 10 years so i'm going to say years years i'm going to say is equal to 10. so we'll just say 10 down here on the years and there we have it we're going to underline that i'm going to put an underline bracket in underline and i'll multiply that out this is going to be the 60 000 times 10 and that's going to be the 600 000 and this is going to be i'll say this is just the times i'll copy it down let's just copy that ctrl c and paste it down here get rid of the colon do some indentation selecting these three home tab alignment indent i could select this item alignment and indent again now notice in prior presentations we also thought that you could take a fraction of that 600 000 and say well i'm not going to be around therefore maybe i could take a heuristic fraction like a 70 and or notice that this is saying that they would need 600 000 in order to get 60 000 for the next 10 years but that's not necessarily the case because if they got 600 000 in a lump sum they could invest it and basically get get possibly a return on that so we could get into more complex calculations in terms of what would be the annuity or what lump sum would we need in order for them to draw out 60 000 per year so this is kind of a more of a generic calculation and so we'll get into more depth on it in in future presentations to get into some of those questions but that's the first part and then we got the estimated cost so we got the estimated costs we'll say above daily daily living costs and so then we might do a calculation i'm going to have a sub calculation i'm going to call this for dependence and retirement retirement for example so we might say for the dependents we might say we have something like college tuition so college tuition might be a targeted goal now we had five kids we listed out here but i'm just gonna like do it on one on one child one calculation for one special child we're gonna say that's going to be that last child is going to go to college but i'm going to say it's 35 000. so 35 this is going to be equal to i'm going to go to the left here and say this is for the special last child that had that 10 years till they get to college and we're going to assume that it's 35 000. now the college tuition gets a little tricky too because we could say hey look uh if it costs 35 000 now how much is it going to cost 10 years i could use a future value calculation to get to how much it's going to cost 10 years from now but i don't necessarily need to put in the college tuition for that future cost because uh if they got the money at this point in time and i died they could save it possibly put into a savings account get a return hopefully that's increasing over inflation to reach that targeted goal but it gets it so it's a little there's going to be some confusion in terms of what when i would die and how much money we would have to put in in order to reach the targeted goal of the college tuition so a generic number might be say simply today's college costs so that when i die they can invest it hopefully at least getting the the rate of inflation in order to pay for the college when when you need it but we could get into more in-depth calculations about that which we'll talk about in future presentations and we might have added child care so if we die then they might need more child care for example over and above the expenses so so let's say that we added the nanny cost of the 3600 a month let's say or 3 600 that was well we're going to say that's for the year so i'm going to say that's for the year so nanny costs i'll just say that's going to be the 3600s that we'll tack on as well and then we might have a retirement uh that we're going to we want to help out with as well so retirement retirement so so again this calculation up top represents the cash flow needed for that years possibly up till retirement or possibly up until the child reaches 18 or whatever and then we might say okay i'd like to help with my spouse's retirement in some way and we might have multiple methods we can think about how we would do that or how we would get to that it would be a same kind of targeted approach that we might use for retirement we might just or we might say i would like to basically be able to contribute i'm going to come up with just a random number which is going to be 500 000 for the retirement to put that in place to help with the retirement but the point is here that it would be a targeted type of thing that we might be able to put in over and above the cash flow that would be needed for the day-to-day operations uh up top that we would tack on so so i won't get into that in more detail here we'll talk more about like this college tuition as a targeted kind of component that we could treat in a similar way in future presentations so let's go to the home tab let's go to the font group let's underline so this is going to be the the total added costs i'm going to sum that up in the outer column equals the sum of these and enter so there we have that okay actually we'll talk about the retirement as a targeted goal too when we get into the to more complex calculation of it but in any case there we go so then we've got the emergency fund i'm going to say emergency funds six months of expenses six months expenses now notice that because we based this on the 60 000 and not really a needs basis the expenses method then they might already have enough kind of clear to clear an emergency fund in that case because because we're we're having the full income here but uh we might we might then add you know a six month emergency fund for six months would be a a general heuristic type of number let's do some indentation here by the way let's select these three alignment indent let's indent this one again alignment indent again so we might say that i would say i want to take my yearly expenses yearly expenses so let's not base it on the income this time our income let's say we want to take our yearly expenses and i'll do it on the cash flow basis method so that would include the mortgage and the credit card so the cash flow that would be needed for a year for example and then i'm going to say that we have the added nanny costs for the year nanny costs that are over and above what we're currently paying which i'm going to assume that might be in place if i was to pass away in order to to keep the job going and so then that would be the total uh yearly yearly expenses equals the sum of those two and then i'm going to take half of that half of that for the emergency fund and that's going to be our emergency fund i'm going to copy this top number paste it down here double click on this cell get rid of the colon at the end and then we'll take this to the outer column this will be equal to the 44 820 divided by the two to get us to the 22 uh for 10. okay so let's do an indentation here so i'm going to say indent on these alignment indent i'll indent this one again and so on top of that we also might have the funeral costs funeral expenses estimated now this is something that we could possibly take care of some of this and preset our funeral kind of arrangements up beforehand right and then and then maybe we could take care of it possibly that way but or we can try to estimate how much you know our funeral expenses would be just burn me up and throw me in a coffee can for crying out loud how much could it be for so but any case this is going to be three thousand five eight thousand five hundred is going to be over here so here's the 8500 we're going to assume that's going to be a one-time cost so notice it's not going to be up here because these are the yearly costs these are our targeted gold costs these are the added costs for the emergency fund which is kind of a one-time kind of calculation and then we've got our one-time cost of the 8500 just to just to get rid of my stinky corpse so that you can move on so it anyways so we're going to say that this is going to be that's going to be the 8500 so the estimated estimated family's financial needs financial needs then it's going to be the sum of all these the sum of this outer column sum of this outer column so we've got the income needs the cash flows they'll need and then the targeted goals and then the emergency fund and that one-time need for our funeral expenses so then you might say okay but we already have some liquid assets over here so if i look at the balance sheet we might say that's what they would need but i already have you know these assets they could they could pay for part of that and so we could say that uh that and notice the way we did this we're saying we're not really calculating the pain off of all the liabilities at the time of death but rather we're kind of calculated on a cash flow basis imagining that we could still continue to kind of pay those items off and we already have on the cash flow side of things this this uh 39.5 and possibly have access to this 24 000. notice we don't really have access to these assets down here we could possibly tap into them by taking equity on the home or something like that but these assets are kind of not going to be helpful to us to take care of those cash flow needs for the most part so considering these liabilities we kind of took into consideration by by mapping out and thinking they're going to be part of the of the payment structure for our income that we that we added so now we could say well we already have these assets on the books so maybe i can subtract those out now remember the current assets are something that they have access to at this point in time the ira and the something that under the 401k plan there could be tax implications if there's death benefits on it and you have to determine as is this your ira or the spouse's ira i mean do they have access to it at the point of retirement you know how how much access do they have but we're going to assume that they're going to have access to these two at least at some point so they got a cash flow of this 635 so if we're saying that this is the total cash flow the total cash flow they have then we could say okay let's we're going to take out the liquid assets that they already have access to so i'm going to just add them one at a time here i'm going to say we got the checking account we got the checking account currently and i'm going to copy that down and so like this emergency funds you might be saying hey look when i calculated this you might say but yeah they already have an emergency fund set up that's right but i'm kind of calculating the full you know cash flow needs and then we'll subtract out what's already on the balance sheet right that's kind of the idea and then i'll also include the ira assuming they either have act they have access to the ira at the point of death possibly uh depending on whose ira it is and tax consequences for state planning and age at death and so on so then we're going to go the alignment and indent i need the numbers too you need the numbers too you can't just pull over the name so we'll pick up the number which is going to be that 3 000. and so i'll copy that down on the 3000 put my cursor on the fill handle copy it down i can't copy it to the ira because there's another i think i can take the ira and copy it to the right auto fill it to the right and no i can't do that either whatever i have to do it this way i was trying to make it easy but no but no the ira has to be a problem it's over here in the 24th in the outer column that's why so there it is let's go ahead and format paint this down because i messed up the formatting too let's put an underline here underline and this is going to be then the total liquid assets i'm going to copy this up top put it down below and just put a total in front of it total liquid acids and again remember that that last category the ira is the one you might want to put a little bit more thought into but alignment indent twice outer column equals the sum of those four so we got the 65 635 already in place so then we're going to say the life insurance needed is going to be equal to the 1 million 169 total minus the 63 uh 5. so that's one method that we can kind of use font group underline notice that this method is kind of calculating things as of this point in time right and so you would think that as i get closer to like retirement or the kid the youngest child reaches college that my life insurance needs would go down right and that's why some term policies might have lowering life insurance as time passes so we could think about that a little bit more depth we thought about the fact that this 600 000 is based is based on you know the 10-year factor and we could calculate that multiple different different ways and think about what would happen as time passes we talked about these targeted goals being these are pretty you know just an estimate of the target goals but we could we could get more detailed into those calculations and and then and so and we can also think about this as if what if i tried to first pay off the liabilities right pay off the liabilities which would be nice and then think about what my cash flow needs would be afterwards and or think about the cash flow needs on on an expense basis rather than an income basis so there's a whole lot of different ways we can imagine this and we'll talk a little bit more about them in future presentations for now let's just wrap this up wrap it up put a put a bow on it you can't wrap it up without having a bow on it if you're going to wrap it you might as well go all the way we're going to put the brackets around it we're going to put the bucket if you don't have that blue right there it's in the more it's in standard and that blue right there blue that's the one i typically use and then we'll put a double underline maybe down here home tab and font group double underline let's then go to the review and spell check it families okay if that's what you say spell checker retirement emergency all right i'm cool with those spell checks so that looks good so we'll continue on with another method next time [Music] you
Accounting Instruction, Help, & How To
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2022-06-27
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International Round-Up: Peace talks between the Koreas, Escalation in West Asia
[Music] hello and welcome to newsclick international roundup I'm Prashant and this week we look at a series of historic developments that have happened both in the Korean Peninsula and West Asia to speak with us on this issue here premier poor guys they founding editor of news click so premier will start with the Korean Peninsula so yesterday the pro leaders are North Korea and South Korea met and it was a pretty historic moment both in terms of the visuals that we saw as well as the joint statement that came out and there was reference to denuclearization there was reference to reunification and all these are quite a lot a lot of positive hopes of the future so could you give us a brief background of the deal as well as what is likely to happen I think the two significant parts of what you are calling at the historic moment and the dawn of course know how far this will go or whether it'll really fact affine what the presidents have said I think the two important issues are the two presidents of North and South Korea and they call themselves differently as you know Democratic People's Republic of Korea and Republic of Korea so they have affirmed that the two called to Cody and Korea's as it were will take charge of the reunification of the Korean nation and therefore they are really asserting that they will decide what's going to happen in the Korean Peninsula I think that's a very important decision that the first time that the leadership of the process is being asserted by the two Koreas and it is not something they are saying well will be decided internationally with others and so on so in that sense certainly in this occurring climate where the prayer the president of the United States Trump has been making various comments about nuking North Korea sending them back to state stone-age etc etc in this context this two presidents meeting and asserting that they are going to decide the future of Korea's I think it's a very important assertion the second point of course is that we have had in Korea as you know a long armistice which means there never has been a peace agreement which becomes or as it were is signed at the end of any of the wars or conflicts that we have seen in 1953 what was decided the 38th parallel is a temporary line of control it's an S LOC and there is only an armistice it's a temporary cessation of hostilities it is not the declaration of peace this is something North Korea has been asking repeatedly that we need a peace agreement which guarantees what we have guaranteed the sovereignty of North Korea and therefore it is something which should be part of the start of a peace process and not the end of one as it were and I think this again the two Korea presidents have asserted that they are going to have the they will go to they're go to lead the peace process though they have also said that either trilaterally or quadrilateral a they have also made both the United States and China as a part of the peace process because it know that there were four parties in the armistice itself in the Korean War itself and therefore without taking into consideration the United States and China a full peace process is not possible it's also clear if you look at the map of the careers and you can see the American bases you can see that North Korea has China and Russia as its neighbors you have Japan on one side you have also Okinawa the military base where the United States has stationed soldiers you know Guam which is not that far away from the Koreas if we say all of this you will realize that there is a larger geostrategic issue over here and I think therefore it is an admission of the realities if you will of the theater that both have accepted that yes there are other parties to the peace process which in who need to come on board I will say the denuclearization etcetra etcetra are the things which actually were the consequence of not having a peace in fact the nuclear part that North Korea took was the realization that after particularly particularly Gaddafi gets killed that nuclear weapons and weapons which can for even weaker States provide a certain guarantee of survival against the nuke conventional nuclear the conventional military power of the NATO particularly the United States and I think therefore this is the lesson they drew and if there is lasting peace in the region then the logic of nuclear weapons and missiles become much less for North Korea so one of the key factors is also that Kim jong-un is expected to meet Donald Trump also in a couple of months so considering what you mentioned about the geostrategic situation there and the back kind of u.s. deployment does the United States really have an incentive for taking this process forward is it likely to end in a problematic gonna still meet again I think this is an interesting issue because Trump can now claim victory okay whether it is or it is not as is not really the issue but he can claim victory that's because of his threats this has happened now as we know Korea's have earlier also negotiated peace there was a sunshine policy which was there in place for by two presidents which was abandoned really in 2008 and then we have these two presidents who went very conservative right-wing very aggressive towards North Korea and then we again have the current president president moon who is continuing really the sunshine possible policy so you have the the Careers taking a certain role there is also the United States which as you said has always been in some sense of spoiler because though it did agree to certain things when clear agreement was struck earlier that agreement was with respect to news North Korea abandoning nuclear power production and also fissile material production it was something which the North Koreans did keep - the letter of the agreement but the Americans never delivered even letter of the agreement which was supply of diesel for the loss of the powers and power that the nuclear reactor was generating the fact that it really decommissioned and reactor and they're supposed to build power reactors which for six years and this agreement was in place nothing really happened on the ground all of this led to what the Americans claimed is a violation the spirit of the agreement they started the uranium enrichment centrifuges which are not bad under the agreement so then the Americans of cost as john bolton said we got the hammer to break the agreement so they took a hammer to the agreement using this as a pretext so the question is americans of them lived up to their commitments while they expect everybody else to do so and this is something we have seen across across the globe on every agreement that u.s. enters it - I think the issue really here is that irrespective what united states done how much leverage - they have over South Korea if South Korea says we want peace and this is the way to go what exactly can the United States do and I think that's an open question and what we are beginning to see is that those that instead of us being the sole global superpower determining the future of the future of every conflict whether there is peace there is war I think more players are now starting their right to their future and I think this in that sense is also now going to open up what can the regional players do how they can bring about peace without really interference from the global hegemon or is it possible impossible for them to do so I think an open question okay so moving on to another area and another deal that the United States was involved in so recently president Emmanuel macron visited Washington and had a discussion with Donald Trump and at that point they took a more hardline stance on Iran in the 2015 nuclear deal and they plan to impose more strict conditions on Iran if the deal were to continue including missile technology including again nuclear technology extending the deadlines which had been stated in the deal so what are broadly the geostrategic reasons for their taking a more hardline stance later on considering that the deal was more or less settled and everyone had agree everyone was on board with it well let's put it this way the European Union was on board with agreement which was engineered essentially under President Obama's time and at the time itself Donald Trump said he thought it was a sellout and he would break the agreement after becoming the president he has not broken the agreement but he has sort of put the ball on the Congress to see whether the agreement needs to be broken or not and it's possible for the Congress as well as Trump to provide for sanctions which go far beyond what was originally envisaged or which are which I'm going to be completely unilateral bringing in issues which are completely extraneous to the agreement what they're trying to do is to get Iran to break the agreement by putting all these conditions on Iran and therefore making whatever their deliverable was on the side of the United States and the European Union those deliverables are therefore postponed or stopped because further conditions are being put and what does Iran do so instead of breaking the agreement creating conditions which Iran dances I leave the agreement I think that's the game that we have now how much macron would play into this how much would the rest of the European Union followers issue for Iran therefore the question is and the better off if large sections of the European Union say we do not accept what the United States is doing we will not impose the sanctions then what does Iran do will the European Union or large sections of irrespective of macron and teresa may who seemed to have become Trump's camp followers as you saw in the cereal strike also will the rest of the European Union play ball or not is really the big question and I think that's something we have to see this threats have been developing since Trump took over we now we have john bolton in place who is always advocated breaking the agreement we have macron who seems to have become now shall we say United States or Trump's puppy for reasons which are not clear don't forget the France France never joined the Iraq war so they did differentiate themselves from United States at that time and they have always tended to follow a relatively independent if you will foreign policy unlike the United Kingdom now that we have these three countries sort of going together it's really something we have to see what the rest of the European Union will do so I'm not saying that the Iran agreement the nuclear deal is off I think we'll have to see what exactly transpired what the other states will do and the big question in the region how far will the US England and France go to shore up essentially Israel's interests which is really the issue because it's not the nuclear deal as we know Iran has completely adhered to the nuclear deal the the missile capability they have built or their building is far weaker than the missiles which have been given by US and United Kingdom and France to Saudi Arabia and what Israel has so it's very clear it's really the regional strategic balance again which is what they are trying to play in by disarming missile technology from Iran if missiles are longer-range missiles of Iran are taken out and these missiles are not intercontinental missiles here really missiles at a range to hit Israel if that is taken out then what you're doing is establishing Saudi Arabia and Israel is a preeminent regional pass and Iran with 80 billion people or much larger in size than Israel and certainly much bigger both in capacity and in people that the population of Saudi Arabia dare to set up to much smaller countries and the preeminent paths are not going to be acceptable so the fact that Iran's missile technology is the target now it's clear the issue is not about nuclear weapons nuclear deal it's really about how to have military dominance of Israel Saudi Arabia and the NATO powers over the region and one of the targets is also of course they Iran involvement of Iran in Syria also and when we look at Syria right now the OPCW is conducting further investigation into Duma where the alleged chemical attack took place so has there been any further developments on that or any more evidence or anything that basically changes the game I think it's increasingly clear that Assad had absolutely no reason to launch a chemical attack on Duma at a time when he was obviously winning and the Duma was being evacuated by the shall we say the various forces over there which is a combination of al-qaeda as well as Isis so there is that there was no incentive for him to use chemical weapons and they were bused out the next day or the day after that thank you for it that's all the time we have for today keep watching us click you
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coming up next on auto show TV will learn about two cars which deliver great fuel economy the electric nissan leaf and the new 2015 honda accord hybrid plus some new best buys for this week also victorious walk around to the all-new acura TLX you've probably seen the commercials and some great deals from Ted's auto sales all that and more next on auto show TV it's auto show TV good morning welcome to auto show TV I'm John caleta we're here at anchor nisana North Smithfield today we're going to get an up-close look at the Nissan Leaf this is Nissan's entry into the electric vehicle world and we're going to take it for a test-drive never taken an electric vehicle for a test drive before so this should be fun but first we're going to see let's bring in Victoria Moran who's that first acura good morning today auto intelligence visits first accurate in see if you're looking for a step up in a midsize sedan something more luxurious then this is for you the new 2015 acura TLX it's been turning heads ever since it arrived in showrooms so let's give it the full walk around the new 2015 acura TLX is gorgeous both inside and out you can get it in a four or six cylinder front wheel or all-wheel drive the interior is stunning with luxury 45 and with an array of technology and safety the 2015 acura TLX is selling fast let's take a closer look here at first acura in seekonk joining us this morning is Bob Woodward our product specialist here at first accurate Bob now I've already said beautiful luxurious gorgeous did I miss anything well that pretty much covers a lot of things Victoria this new TLX has an awful lot to offer but it's more than just good looks it's a well-designed very safe extremely well thought-out automobile let's take a look all right one of the most striking features of the vehicle is these new July headlights they're LED segments are they incorporate the driving lights the high beams everything in one unit in fact each one is aims individually to give you a better view of the road as you're driving we come along to the side this accent line that you see on the side of the TLX is one of the tightest lines in the industry on the sides of the mirrors you have LED turn signal indicators a great safety feature and of course they've incorporated the keyless entry system which is wonderful in this vehicle a lot of people love that also victoria actor has incorporated a capless fuel fill system basically no more fuel cap when you go to gas up the car you simply insert the nozzle of the from the fuel pump from the gas pump it'll open the valve fill the car up close the cover and you're done nice and easy come on around the back LED tail lights LED brake lights leds are everywhere great Oh Bob these are nice seats this chocolate interior Acura calls it espresso but it's a new color for us this year and it really gives the car very distinctive look yeah definitely now as far as technology goes Acura is known as a technology company and this car is loaded with it this car hasn't as a vehicle stability assist system which is an anti-skid in this model and this is a technology package car they've incorporated a number of driver assist features you have blind spot indicates which are next to the myris on the arm on the doors coupled to radar in the rear bumper you also have a feature here called Lane Keeping Assist which is fabulous for long trips a little camera that's behind the rear view mirror here looking forward identifies the lines in the road when you engage Lane Keeping Assist the camera identifies them and basically will keep steering you in the middle of the lane you're in the advanced model which is one step above this one also has a system that will I detect an impending collision and stop you one thing you might notice about the the instrument cluster is we have two screens and a third one in the dash exactly you have a small what we call an M ID or multi-information display right in front of you that will show things like your tire pressure monitor your trip computers this is a navigation car so the top screen in the center of the dash is for navigation although you can bring up an audio screen you can bring up a screen for your phone system and this does have full bluetooth phone and phone book capabilities for up to six phones the center screen is primarily for for audio and for climate as well now is this dual climate it is dual climate in fact the navigation system tells the climate system what side of the car is in the Sun oh very nice and it will actually tweak the temperature on the Sun side if there's enough energy coming in through the windshield that's great so it's a it's a pretty smart car now one thing Victoria you might notice is this center console yeah very sleek very sweet very Queen no lover right the 6-cylinder models of the TLX feature this push button type shifter arrangement I'm you have a button for park you have a button that you pull back for reverse much like you would with a shifter a drive button a neutral button and below that we have a button labeled IDs IDs allows you to coordinate steering response suspension response transmission response and noise cancellation in the vehicle so you can you can turn an inch from your living room couch to a sports sedan just by pushing the button changing the feel and responsiveness of the vehicle very versatile they've thought of a lot of stuff and of course power moonroof is standard then in this vehicle auto dimming rear view mirror on the home the home link system for garage door openers the car is pretty much everything you could want we have cars in stock we have more coming every day so we have a real good supply of these vehicles first actor is a family-owned business we are a three-time dealership of Distinction Award winner which is a very prestigious honor giving to given to only the top 40 accurate viewers nationally and it's a measure of our performance our level of customer satisfaction our commitment to the Acura brain well Eric Farah is our all-knowing nissan expert here at anchor nissan obviously these electric vehicles aren't for everybody at this point in time but i know you really like the Nissan Leaf don't you right now I think you're right it's not exactly for everybody but when you're doing 40 even 50 miles each way this car can cover you the range that you do have on the new ones that are up to a 126 and there is a lot of views that you can get out of this electric vehicle tell us a little bit about charging and how long is everybody wants to know how long can I go on a charge how long is it gonna take to charge it up again sure you'll get easily 90 100 miles out of it city or highway yep you know I always kind of refer to as a cell phone you know at night time you plug it in in the morning you unplug it and you go now correct me if wrong the leap comes with a seven year battery warranty so if you're leasing for three years you really don't have much to worry about no a lot of people have you know two things with the leaf you'll find mileage anxiety and also battery anxiety what if my battery goes at 34 years from now how much does it cost to replace well Nissan went a step ahead and said you know what for you know the hundred thousand mile and for the duration of the the warranty will cover it 100% no money out of pocket will replace it if for any reason something does happen to it down the road well I'm excited can we go for a test drive sure let's go all right well this is nice yeah I think one of the things you'll notice right off the bat how much room you have in this little compact car it's a very deceiving especially if you look at how much headroom you have yep yeah pretty tall guy very comfortable very comfortable and would you say it's about like versus sighs yeah yeah easily very very comparable versa and even as much room as as the new Sentra there's a lot of cargo area even for the rear seats for adults now what do i need to know before we go it I've never driven an electrically no problem that's exciting yeah first thing you want to do place your foot on the brake and just press the start button yep and now you'll notice all your gauges are lit up you hear the intro to the the the leaf music you'll notice how many miles you have over here so you know what you have for driving distance kind of have your double double screen here which is cool in the center display that's where you'll get all different menus to tell you how many miles you've been driving if you go to a charger it'll tell you which charger you using and how much time it will take to bring you back to the full 100% charge up on the very top you'll even notice a power meter how much power you using while you're driving it so you'll see the white dots in up grease one two three four five or more when you have using it heavy and when it goes to the left it will turn green and that's when the battery is being rejuvenated so you never have to wonder it's always telling it's right in front of you is it's right in front of you and it's very clear and easy to use so I'm gonna go yeah when I'm driving right now I let's do you are ready to go me right what yep all right it's the same to me except I can't hear anything you can't hear anything but you do have a backup beat when you are in Reverse just so pedestrians can hear you in case you can't see them for any reason there is a beeping noise that the car makes outside of the car to make people aware of the car that says to backing antigen array it's absolutely quiet one of the things too when we get through this intersection don't hesitate to put your foot on the gas the nissan leaf is a hundred percent torque torque so when it gets up and goes it's a very quick very responsive you will not have a getting out of the way of other vehicles yeah that's one of the things they say that I think this is probably a misconception they are Pepe they are very bad no very peppy not sluggish at all all right here we go go I like it fly it now that picked up I didn't even hardly touch the gas pedal to be honest so we're going to hop on the highway a little bit you love cambio club feel how it gets up to on the highway speeds alright so we're going to pop on 99 north I think a lot of our viewers know exactly what we are here and don't have to take to put your foot down alright let's do that got instant acceleration it feels really good let's remind you of like a go-kart you just get up and get go you know and with the CVT transmission you're not feeling any shifting or hunting for years or anything get the responses is immediate it must be it must be fun to dispel some rumors yet immediately I say hold on let's go take it for a drive and then or any kind of concerns that you might have because a lot of people look at a small car like this and they think of eco cars or really cheaply made cars and it's not with the Nissan Leaf it's a very heavy durable car provides a great smooth ride and handles phenomenally around corners and as well as taking the bumps as we as we just saw with the bumps that we just went over so are they selling they are we just had a you know I sold three of them just last month we remember ordering seven more coming in hopefully soon because we've got orders of being fulfilled so they the popularity of the leaf is finally establishing itself where people are actually walking in asking specifically for this car very exciting I'm sure anyone who is considering an electric vehicle a leaf or any other they've done their research this tons of information online but I'm sure you would like to encourage them come to anchor Nissan take just like what we just did take it out take a noise test drive yeah you know get get the feeling because once you get the feeling of how this car performs and handles it's it's amazing it really is coming up next this week's best buys you're watching auto show TV the official auto loan provider of auto show TV is Navigant credit union for all your new used and classic car and truck financing needs you love everything about your new ride it smells so good but maybe you could be paying a little less for it it's not too late you know let Navigant credit union take a look at your rate we could help you refinance and maybe save you a little every month what could you do with the extra money huh road trip maybe navigant credit union enjoy life's journey at slow we're building a new showroom to better serve you but this constructions taken up a lot of space so we need to make deals like these 2014 Malibu's only 49 95 we need to make space come to Sir owns I'll be glad you did hey Jeff here villas motive exciting news we have over a hundred vehicles in stock all competitively priced and come with an additional five year 100,000 mile warranty here's an example purchase this toyota solara with 76,000 miles and you'll have coverage till 2018 176,000 miles so hurry down pick your vehicle and add an additional five years in a hundred thousand miles to its current mileage so visit us at experience why we have become rhode island's largest certified pre-owned dealer village motors higher standard and three on the ends after all we've got the help but we need to make room that's why these 2014 in captiva zar only 16 995 you save almost 10,000 the new buildings going up at our prices are coming down see them all at ceron GM calm now it's Auto Show TV's best buys we search for the best cars in the market and tell you where to find the deals majestic onda cells and leases a lot of Accords right now they feature the 2015 accord LX with so much in standard technology for 179 a month on a 36-month lease and that's with only a thousand dollars down at majestic if you're looking at a smaller sedan anchor Nissan has the 2014 sentra sv discounted over 2300 dollars buy it for just 16 8 14 or at least for three years and zero down plus you get anchors lifetime assurance plan or how about a move up to maxima this deal caught our eye this week a 2014 nissan maxima s with a savings of over eight thousand dollars that's the best buy this Maxima is 20 40 50 at anchor Nissan and you can lease with zero down if you prefer with the popularity of the all-new 2015 honda fit there aren't a lot of huge discounts yet but majestic honda did it the fit LX with its forward-thinking technology and majestic is leasing this fit for 149 a month that is a no brainer we found a great price now on a 2014 Dodge Charger one of America's great muscle cars elmore Denise providence has charges starting at 22 999 save over six thousand dollars and 0% financing is available too we noticed a popular 2014 Chevy Malibu at a great price at Sur owns in South Attleboro they've got a big construction project going on so they are moving cars this is a program Malibu which is 14 995 almost 8 grand off MSRP also a smaller SUV that packs so much for the money is a chevy captiva this program captiva with low mileage is just 16 995 at Sur owns that's 10 grand off the original price program captiva is at Sur owns anchor Nissan is selling a lot of the redesigned 2015 rogues they're so nice and right now they have rogue starting at 25 158 nissan did such a great job with the new rogue and anchor includes the lifetime assurance plan another small SUV that provides so much is the honda crv the 2014 CRV can be course on a 189 a month lease for 36 months another no-brainer this is at majestic honda in lincoln and west warwick they sell an awful lot of ram pickups at Elmwood in East Providence we found their offering right now a 2014 ram 1500 quad cab with the ram box 428 999 delivered it's very nicely loaded up and save over 5 grand recently we featured the chrysler town and country on auto show TV sure enough Elmwood has put a really low price on the L model right now they flashed the price over eight thousand dollars its 3599 at Elmwood and also 0% financing is available that's Auto Show TVs best buys for more info go to our website the Auto Show TV it's Ted's time on auto show TV Ted's auto sales route 6 in Somerset let's head out there now here's mark Mannion thanks John welcome back to our segment on auto show TV my name is Mark really excited about the vehicles we have to present today and the first one is a 2008 this on maxima SE one owner you want the fuel you want the fuel efficiency you want a little growl you wouldn't wouldn't mind a little wing either spoiler on the back elway wheels moonroof automatic price especially for the show at 11 995 you want your next family vehicle to have attitude along with a little growl how about this 2008 cadillac escalade EXT as every option 22-inch wheels brand new tires as the moon roof has navigation as the back up camera has power folding mirrors retail value of close to 29,000 price for the show at 24 995 features a factory remote starter also come get it at teds the leader in the pickup truck market for sure many years 2007 ford f-150 SuperCrew all wheel drive this one wing sachar it's got the chrome package the running boards the bedliner in the red fire clear metallic red only 75,000 miles price especially for the show at 19 9 95 eye catching design and devotedly functional as it should be 2008 toyota tacoma double cab sr5 four-wheel drive one of the leaders in the mid size truck industry they go out as fast as they come in you got the side steps you got automatic you got four-wheel drive you got a soft tonneau cover and you have a tow package price to the show with only 17 995 versatile roomy functional all with a nice little retro style to it 2008 honda element DX with real-time four-wheel drive seating for five alloy wheels fog lights we got it priced specially to the shell with 12 995 so you want your family's next SUV you want it to have low miles you want it to have Boone rules you want seating for seven and you want it under 10 right that dog doesn't hunt right and now with us 2005 this on pathfinder SE cd27 automatic side steps only 9995 price of the show got a retail value nada nearly twelve thousand dollars come get it it sets again thanks for tuning in to our segment on auto show TV my name is mark you have any questions honey the vehicles i presented 508 677 95 170 it says auto sales inc com all of our vehicles are serviced by our own service department we've been in business since 1990 thank you again next the Accord that gets 50 MPG you're watching auto show TV you love everything about your new ride smells so good but maybe you could be paying a little less for it it's not too late you know let Navigant credit union take a look at your rate we could help you refinance and maybe save you a little every month what could you do with the extra money huh road trip maybe navigant credit union enjoy life's journey if you'd like more information about any of the dealers and deals you've seen on today's show or would like to view previous episodes of auto show TV go to our website the auto show TV the next time you fake wearing your seat belt remember this cops have been trained to spot seatbelt violations even at night and they don't give out fake tickets day or night click it or ticket so car shoppers wanted all these days a car that has plenty of room all the new technology and safety and not good but great gas mileage take a look at this 2015 honda accord one of the top-selling midsize cars in america now what if i told you that this Accord delivers 50 MPG city well it does because it's a hybrid this Accord Hybrid looks exactly like the gas power to court all the safety creature comforts technology the room of the midsize but this Accord is powered by gas and electric we're joined by Casey Martin here at majestic honda in lincoln so the Accord comes as a hybrid isn't that kind of like the the cherry on top of the sunday it is John a lot of people don't realize that not only can you get a regular Honda record which gives you all the great honda accord qualities but it is available as a hybrid and well that gives you absolutely incredible gas mileage well let's talk about it show us around here what are we looking at this is the newest honda accord hybrid it's a 2015 model and it has the most advanced hybrid motor that hot has ever produced so here's your four cylinder gas engine here's the electric part of it that's that's correct there's a lot more to it inside that we can't show here but essentially the gas motor drives a giant generator the generator creates electricity and the electric motor actually drives the car now other than this other than this Accord as a hybrid it's really just an accord all the safety all the other technology all the other creature comforts inside pretty much mirror the gas-powered Accord correct we're absolutely correct if you want to get into if we close this hood you're driving 100 cord so not only give great wide quality handles great still honda accord so it seemed to get up same performance it's actually it accelerates maybe even a little quicker than the standard four-cylinder because the electric motor generates talk immediately so as soon as you hit the pedal it's got full talk to the wheels yeah so it's actually a fun car to drive I juicy one difference this nice blue trim here on the grill absolutely it's on the grille in the front it's also in the back and the tail lights just to help differentiate it from the standard honda accord so it's the hybrid Accord a little more expensive of course it is right Casey because it's got the electric part of the whole configuration here exactly and the largest cost of the hybrid technology is still the battery the lithium-ion battery pack is very expensive to produce as well as the additional electronics for the generator and of course the electric motor but most of that extra cost you should recoup over the life of the vehicle again if you're a commuter who drives high mileage in stuck in stop-and-go traffic a lot the almost double gas mileage should give you a good return on your investment all the hybrids have the same style 17 inch wheel which is unique to the hybrid yeah but they're all 17 again being the EXL model it has some of the features that we've discussed in prior episodes it does have the lane watch system it has the directionals built into the headlight for an additional safety feature it has the lane departure warning camera and then the model above this one does have the newest feature which is the adaptive cruise control which is down here correct correct it has an actual radar unit in the card it measures the distance of the vehicles in front of you have and it's got the keyless it does this model has the push-button start with the keyless entry so you don't have to remove the key from the via from your pocket or purse okay see let's fire it up here because I'd like to I'd like the viewers to see the instrument panel all lit up you got it John I hit the start button one again it is a push start it just turns on the basic features of the car if you hold the brake and hit it again the car will start as you can tell the display there's a lot of information up here the first thing you'll notice is the flower in the upper left which is the econ button that we just walked before we can turn that on or off for the most part we recommend you leave lead on of course that's what gives you this little item in the front of the instrument panel which is a little car that little car is going to tell you or show you how you're driving you know if you're driving aggressively a little car will move up and it'll turn blue showing you accelerating too quickly green is good blue is bad the idea is to not only as a technology in the car giving you the great fuel economy but it's trying to teach you to be a better driver right is there anything here that's going to tell the driver whether it's in gasoline mode or electric mode there is when you go through the display here there's a lot of different screens but one of them as we go through them all is right here now the two outside icons are actually your tires yeah the upper one is supposed to be an engine and the bad one area and the bottom one is the battery yeah as you drive it's going to show you and the car just shut off because we will idling for too long car is so smart as it now it's going to run only as you can tell the AC is still on it's using the electric power from the battery to keep the AC running and keep the car going so again as you accelerate now depending on how quickly you're accelerating it's either going to draw the power from the battery from the generator which the motors power on the generator or from both so as you're driving is actually going to show you where the power is going to move the wheel so you never have to guess it's right in front of you that's correct yeah and also when you're breaking it does have regenerative braking so as you apply the brakes it spins the generator to actually recharge the battery then I'll show you that as well this really is some impressive technology now I know you don't have a ton of the hybrid because they don't make that many but you do have some fourteens and fifteens I do I have a couple for teens left over the Honda isn't put a great incentive on and they're offered for a great price and that this is actually our first 15 model that came in it is identical to the 14 so if you're looking for a great deal when the left over for teens is available to locations in majestic honda absolutely i have cost Lyman the majestic north in lincoln rhode island and we have another location in west warwick gone on route to this has been auto show TV produced in cooperation with auto intelligence thanks to our participating dealers and sponsors this has been auto show TV
AutoShow TV
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2016-03-14
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BECOMING BILINGUAL: Find a Community, Start Practicing | Tips on Learning a Second Language
hi my name is katie and this is the start of a series on my channel called becoming bilingual where i talk in english about how i became bilingual in english and esperanto the first thing when you're trying to become bilingual is that you have to use the language that is a requirement you're never going to become fluent and get really good at speaking and understanding a language until you start using it the first thing i want to recommend is it's summertime there are some online events that are happening you should hop on them my first experience speaking esperanto with other people was at an event called nas nord amerigo somero which is the north american summer congress of esperanto there is three different levels at least three different levels i'll put the link to the website in the description so you can go check it out it's really important if you're really trying to learn esperanto that you get some experience speaking with other people and that's a group setting and it's meant to be a teaching setting if you haven't had the chance to try any esperanto events so far that would be a great first step the british kind of version of nask sommera esperanta maybe that is also happening very soon also i'll find a link for that and you should check that out too because it's really important if you want to be bilingual in any language that you start using it find someone that you can use it with so for esperanto those events would be awesome to start with and i really suggest that you go pursue those the duolingo esperanto learners facebook group is an amazing resource to ask your questions and get fast reliable answers because it has very strict moderation which is very helpful for new learners because you're not going to get crap answers like you can in some other places if you're not learning esperanto and you're learning some other language look for online groups look for a facebook page look for a twitter community look for people using the language in the way that you plan to use the language maybe you're looking for spanish business language look on twitter look on facebook maybe looked on linkedin look for the places where that language is being used for the purpose that you're planning on using it for people acting however they normally act on social media is a great way to just see a language being used in the way that it's normally used because people aren't expecting that they're being watched so then you can be a non-obtrusive observer people can just be doing whatever they're doing in the language that you need to see in action and it's a great place for observation and learning so again i really want to emphasize when you are learning a language get using it start right now so that's the first thing you keep in mind when you're trying to become bilingual and thanks for watching have a great day rubber
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Diddy Settles Explosive Lawsuit
so we told you last Thursday about this wild lawsuit that Diddy's ex Cassie filed against him alleging rape alleging human trafficking other misdeeds as quickly as it came it went over uh just over 24 hours after she filed the lawsuit uh they settled it late on Friday night this was shocking I mean we knew that that there would be talk of a settlement I just didn't think it would come this quickly but on Friday night I went to sleep on Friday night right and it was an active lawsuit I woke up and you had gotten into the the the post and you complet it's like what yeah yeah we had to change I mean I was falling asleep on the couch actually Friday evening and then someone called and said they're settling the lawsuit so we got it up on the website but the St question is how how could something this ranker and serious yes end on a and the statements that both of that both Diddy and uh Cassie released said that they were settling this amicably uh Cassie made mention of she wanted to this by the way how can that be it's almost an oxymoron right and the fact that they both used the word amicable said all right this was part of the deal exactly uh and she said that she was settling because she wanted to have some level of control um over what come because obviously if she went to trial all sorts of things were going to come out and i' clear she did not want to go through that immediately like the moment that the news of the settl came out the debate then turned to well does this mean that she was telling the truth or does it mean that Diddy was that that she made it all up which way do you do you read this the fact that they settled it Diddy's lawyer wanted to make that something very clear about this settlement he said just so we're clear a decision to settle a lawsuit especially in 2023 is no way an admission of wrongdoing Mr com's decision to settle the lawsuit does not in any way undermine his Flatout denial of the claims he's happy they got to a mutual settlement and wishes Miss Ventura the [Music] best
WBNX-TV 55
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Chemical hazard | Wikipedia audio article
a chemical hazard is a type of occupational hazard caused by exposure to chemicals in the workplace exposure to chemicals in the workplace can cause the cube or long-term detrimental health effects there are many types of hazardous chemicals including neurotoxins immune agents dermatological carcinogens reproductive toxins systemic toxins as magan's pneumoconiosis and sensitizers these hazards can cause physical and/or health risks depending on chemical the hazards involved may be varied thus it is important to know and apply the PPE especially during the lab long term exposure to chemicals such as silica dust engine exhausts tobacco smoke and lead among others have been shown to increase risk of heart disease stroke and high blood pressure topic types of hazards liquids such as acids solvents especially if they do not have a label vapors and fumes flammable material chemicals can change their physical state depending on temperature or pressure thus it is important to identify the health risks as these states can determine the potential route the chemical will take for example gas state chemicals will be inhaled or liquid state chemicals can be absorbed by the skin topic to exposure ingestion inhalation from fumes poisoning explosion topic symbols hazard pictographs are a type of labeling system that alerts people at a glance that there are hazardous chemicals present the symbols help identify whether the chemicals that are going to be in use may potentially cause physical harm or harm to the environment the symbols are distinctive as they are shaped like diamonds with red borders these signs can be divided into explosive exploding bond flammable flame oxidizing flame above a circle corrosive corrosion of table and hand acute toxicity skull-and-crossbones hazardous to environment dead tree and fish health hazard hazardous to the ozone layer exclamation mark serious health hazard cross on a human silhouette gas under pressure gas cylinder these pictographs are also subdivided into class and categories for each classification the assignments for each chemical depends on their type and their severity topic first aid in case of emergency it is recommended to understand first aid procedures in order to minimize any damage different types of chemicals can cause a variety of damage most sources agree that it is best to rinse any contacted skin or eye with water immediately currently there is insufficient evidence of how long the rinsing should be done as the degree of impacts will vary for substances such as corrosive chemicals however the recommended flush time is as follows five minutes non to mild irritants 15 to 20 minutes moderate to severe irritants and chemicals that cause acute toxicity 30 minutes most corrosives 60 minutes strong alkalis such as sodium potassium or calcium hydroxide transporting the affected person to a healthcare facility may be important depending on condition in the case that the victim needs to be transported before the recommended flush time then flushing should be done during the transportation process some chemical manufacturers may state the specific type of cleansing agent that is recommended topic long-term risks topic cancer topic cardiovascular disease a 20-17 SBU report found evidence that workplace exposure to silica dust engine exhaust or welding fumes is associated with heart disease associations also exist for exposure to arsenic benzopyrene LED dynamite carbon disulfide carbon monoxide metalworking fluids and occupational exposure to tobacco smoke working with the electrolytic production of aluminium or the production of paper when the sulphate pulping process is used is associated with heart disease an association was also found between heart disease and exposure to compounds which are no longer permitted in certain work environments such as phenoxy assets containing TCDD dioxin or asbestos workplace exposure to silica dust or asbestos is also associated with pulmonary heart disease there is evidence that workplace exposure to lead carbon disulphide or phenoxy acids containing tcdd as well as working in an environment where aluminium is being electrolytically produced are associated with stroke
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{#BigBangTheoryRL #BTSvlog} #LifeDNerd | My new patio Kawaii TeaHouse & Discussion of the Mundane
well hello everybody welcome back to the next segment of big bay theory Arella BTS vlog yeah i'm outside once again is it this is now gonna be our one of our normal spots in my little tea house cafe Elsa hey there's room for three years to some whole thing was nothing not anything large but it's nice ah it is 23 hours in 20 minutes into the day of Saturday jun 25th 2016 friday was a rather long day but to ran over until till saturday know what up hands up happening is that sure excuse me is that around two o'clock in the morning i was just doing some some some errands to do about fixing up around my place and it's kind of like i was view my place the in many ways it like a gel and ship or the Starship Enterprise it's the physical building to take you places and well the ultimate goal we were your endeavors our utmost important in your mind the physical realities often pop into play and has to be dealt with and the cathay cir grind the whole ship rise to halt and last night my toilet stopped working and it backed up i couldn't figure out why I had it backed up and so i sat down i started working on trying to clean clean near 20 as best as I could um got on the internet looked at YouTube look at the rive different suggestions on how to resolve a problem and uh everything end up working out all right but I didn't finish to look just about one thirty in the afternoon so that's when I finally went to bed and then the usual pattern happens you think I'd be dead exhausted and wouldn't be able to sleep but no five o'clock 5 30 rolls around i get up i have 0 something to eat for about an hour and then go back to bed so six o'clock go back to bed and you would think that would be sufficient and but 10 1030 rolls around I'm up against oh I'm still laptop I'm gonna have something eat half my place here out a little bit more and then I'll go and have something to eat and get ready for tomorrow which it's gonna be another long day so I think the days they're going to start running into each other certainly one long weekend as rather than having a separated days these things occur me almost sort of matched together and I guess the couch was heavier than I expected it to be I moved I got it here but I was tired afterwards it now my upper arm is my biceps and my pecs are all sore down so my muscles are sore right legs are fine but the upper body uh really gotta work out and so that's an issue so said beyond the esoteric beyond the your adventures ahead that lie ahead in terms of your voyages the one day comes in the reality comes in to sort of halt your progress and this is sort of situation we are in now basically I've got a role until the week till weekends or with the Monday then Monday uh I don't really have necessarily break because now that the the film's lead the second studio is not working it's then that within this scene scene where it was basically the research desk but now with a DSLR can't DSLR camera that's going to be doing the the shows and we're all at wheatland plus tweet line vlogs that's the iron and also have a beauty and the geek and then of the living the quiet life will will come out as well from there all from that one area they're so different teams do you a different content as I am the one geek here so so there's multiple people here just one person and is it just sort of different aspects of my life if you will mmm because that has to come onto the schedule um there isn't we're gonna be there isn't gonna be much of a break there's not gonna be much of a weekend so well that's kind of the way things go and uh okay yeah it could be worse see hey famous asura gate don't say that anyways I'll see in the next second well hello everybody it is one hour of 30 minutes into the date of monday jun 27 2016 in my side but i'm not on the couch has been raining out so the couch is now so this has been bundled up for the rain and they're this turpis actually done a good job is even though it doesn't fully cover it's done a sufficient job that that it's done a sufficient job in that the black part of the couch is still dry and we will have the couch back in operation when weather clears up now I want to take you around the front did I better check something one of the problems that was having there's some closed doors bit let's put it to they'll go around the front bolt jaquez go around the front here one of the problems I was having is is that my standard mail box doesn't work properly it's oldie so that you have sort of a show the mail through a slot I use that for my air conditioner it's handles the air in there it's that's the air intake not anything guys it's the output for the air a little wet around here try to put bubble puddles it's still very humid out so there's more rain coming under on the front and i'll show you a little done and let's see if it works typically did for waterproof something you have to put a gasket around it and that is if it's a gaseous is busy in material that goes around the lid of something or the connecting joint and it prevents water from seeping in and so that's what I want to see I want to see rightly when I me I mean II a gasket out of duct tape and I want to see get it work will know and see I'll take a look and see how much water is inside if there's any water inside doesn't give it an idea how the gasket has worked watch it's quite dry out here a little wet on the outside and dry on the inside can't show you this dark coat so what nothing thats dark and i didn't bring my slat flashlight my brother flashlight could have seen in sizes so the gasket worked the doctor gasps it works ah it's dry we had a good pretty good east winds from today there should be another wing storm coming on tuesday but we'll see what happens though i don't know exactly when the coach is going back in operation again they have the weight to the rain clears we have have a couple good days of weather before the coach comes back online again huh so what gunshots hmm we wonder what it was the sirens lights there is blinding the camera so yeah so that's good the tooth the tooth those two things are working now the color just working the tarp is working so everything is kind of in working order the question now is uh well steal like I mean it is one of the issues is that this is what happened Sunday around two o'clock one morning I had finished talking outside Sunday was yes his little 26th most 26 at two o'clock in the morning come to assign found my toilet was backed up I spent until one o'clock in the afternoon doing the repairs so uh what the day of the day sort of in terms of it is compilation of the day from Friday Saturday into Sunday that's how the date worked out it was food shopping and peripatetic I thought it took you with me on Friday Friday evening around nine o'clock I wouldn't go out the couch uh you saw a house I how big it was I have to do repairs on my my little uh toboggan notice a little wagon hmm the coach was heavy enough that it bent the steering mechanism so I have sit down and figure out how to repair the steering mechanism and so given the weight and the distance today that I hauled it remember if you look at one of my videos down near the end of the street I'm sort of a closer to the other side the other side of teleson so I'm more than halfway more than halfway I'm three-quarters of the way from from from from esta park that's the corner where I go food shopping usually where the trees are the end building there I talked to say okay I've got to turn the camera off because I'm going across a major street okay take that point there I'm three-quarters of the way up the street here now so I had to drag it all that distance on there the hard part was this is I'm glad I didn't bring the volume camera with me it's hard bending over and picking up the handle so I had to attach a strap to it and hold the strap up and pull it as hard as I could huh that killed my biceps so came back relisted talk to you guys then two o'clock in the morning the bathroom went down at the bed that's where clogged up ironically enough this place is old I've been here for a long time and I think it was 16 years with worth of buildup in the toilet because it when you flush not everything goes down right so if you get things that stick sticks to the pipe and so forth you have a buildup in the drain pipe and that can cause clogs and all sorts of things so I started I emptied the toilet out turn the water off actually turn the water off then empty the toilet then what I began doing is I began a series of using an auger to go in to the toilet this is a long basically one type of brush tip a thing to go in there and start cleaning out the drain pipe and bit by bit I got things going ah it's boat but close to 12 hours to get everything done properly in the last six hours what I did is basically every half hour I turned this woman my big papa kettles on busy it the conflict is nothing no it's not a comment it is a large commercial earn that holds whoo I don't know how many liters of water and you turn it on it brings it up to the boiling point I must have put an entire earn down every hour using the dish using the dishwashing liquid Don and I began to see it I began to see slowly but surely more clothes floors or more towards ten o'clock in the morning that I started seeing progress and I started seeing the water go down slowly that way I knew when my parents would but I probably buy a new plunger is a plunger I had it was started breaking so I got a new one in the morning plunged the toilet and as I started plunging the toilet everything just went down and cleared the clog so it took about 12 hours to really clear the clog and that's when I ended up one of the bed John Saturday just about one thirty two o'clock in the afternoon that's that's a whole day so by the time I but I didn't stay sleeping I didn't sleeping I got up around I got up around ya know I gotta I gotta run went to bed at two got up at six then again at ten o'clock and then around two o'clock in the morning when I got up the second time my arms were so sore that basically i called the rest of the day off on sunday and stayed sleeping for most of the day and this kind of the way it's been today all today you know yesterday well few hours ago so uh and that's kind of it right now and so I'm just starting to get things back in order again and kind of have to sort of see and play by ear how things end it blend up going over the next well Monday and Tuesday because the day is having but stopped if you want to put it that way so what are you gonna do this is that's the way things work yes that's kind of it you know you have to sort of deal with whatever comes along as a right now I'm waiting for the place to cool off it's doing a pretty good job I think another half hour 45 minutes and I should be able to go back in again and start good but the rest of the my day anyways I'll talk to you in the next second probably i don't know we'll see nothing one that's happening today all right bye well hello everybody is time for another beaches vlog i'm out front i had to do some repair work on my mailbox here it is ever is everything you staying dry the gasket is working duct tape gasket is working the problem was that this keeps coming off the door so i put some rope around it and now i've fixed the duct tape a little better so now it's really well fixed to the door see two more if it comes off the door the rope prevented from flying away cuz i had had happened one it's just sore just got away from the door the wind took it so wasn't enough just have a duct tape there I had to put the Rope there as well and there are other options for the rope as well that will secure things a bit better so let's keep light done properly silly have a good side here anyways it is 55 minutes into the day of tuesday jun 28 2016 see this what happens when we need have the lights behind you it swamps the sensor and so it's always best to have the light in front of you and let let it adjust that way so that's what we're doing now yeah so it's about 55 minutes into the day of two as they do in 8 2016 and i'm not going to fully take off the tarp from the couch because it might rain again they're calling for thunderstorms and it is a bit windy which could indicate that a thunderstorms are on their way so at this point in time I'm going to leave the tarp here and I want this one just going to move half a row you'll see once I sit down I'll come back I'll vlog again so this is the first part of this I want to come back in just few minutes after I've set the couch up I'm gonna put my mail away and we'll sit outside let the place cool down for because it's just a boat up just a little bit above 85 degrees humidity inside is pretty high so I got a lot open the door and let the place cool down a little bit more so I think but our two are so it's one o'clock now I think we'll be done around 2-230 I'll go inside so we'll play it by ear anyway so I'll be back in a few seconds Oh welcome back back on the coach again and yeah so it's just about one o'clock in the morning so it's both not even two minutes after i spoke to you since this is the first part so this is part two of our discussion outside the couch is working up pretty well it's not very nice out here I can I can hear the wind I can see the clouds I didn't bring any music hopefully today i'm working on the first episode of living the co I life so that's a thing to fix things up a little bit it's a little windy and so the tarp is kind of flying around but it's not bad i got a bad guy but i'm not using the whole couch right now so rather take it oh the entire tarp I've just rolled it back a bit and you can sort of see this here when I get the image of it there we go see it's been rolled back so there you go rollback tarpons believe it's kind of violent flying up there some witnessin wind is taking it so uh we have it works you know the thing is it doesn't always have to be pretty it just has to work and that's the kind of talking about that before this is actually a couple before I stop vlogging was a sort of sign on Maya my channel it said free free get inside cuz I'm a freegan and what's a freakin a freakin it's a person who has learned how to dumpster dive to a certain degree and I'm not picking food out of the garbage but I am taking like someone left the couch on the curb to be taken away and I had my little wagon and picked it up I got my little wagon but I used the haul stuff away from the from the industrial trash ah the good stuff that's out there I got that also from the get from the garbage I'm gonna left it I didn't want it anymore and yay I got my my executive high back chairs are from there that Lisa guys I'm very nice all my chairs that I used that he uses his executive high back tears they're all from the garbage and they're easily four or five hundred dollars if you bought them brand new used to be spending a creek 500 bucks easily on these chairs so uh you know this is kind of way I live my life you know if you said yes before I'm private scientist I don't have government funds flowing in I don't have deep pockets so how do you do it well freakin is the way to go and that is recycling as much as you can reusing what you can you go buying refurbished for the price of a brand new laptop but about a thousand dollars ah with linux on there i can get three laptops for about three hundred dollars 320 bucks what about there ah i can get 33 lap 233 refurbished laptops and these laptops do the job they they get the job done and this is how my office has been right my right offices are running on all refurbished equipment and so this there's no need to go up for me for me anyways there's no need for me to go and buy brand new because it I willing to do the work and one of the put stuff put the effort in and work my way from a sort of if you will a deficit where I don't have everything that everybody else has to something more significant and these other people to do the same thing that I've gone from up buying kool Kuts which are very expensive ah to making my own and that cuts the cost down greatly so all but you know when I do the first episode with co wildlife I'll be talking about some of the foods of it I make some of the the way I fixed up my tea house I have that's the way I have the couch here and I have the sort of the table set up there I had the same thing on the research desk I have a tiny little table the growth rip us on the couch it is core I this on the kids side of things and this is what it is this is living the quiet life as being kid for the rest of your life in it as a scientist that's what you're doing anyways and this it kind of fits perfectly so okay so doing advanced physics where you watching cartoons yes there's no other way of living wifey do you know you're sitting down you're studying in you've got your cartoons in front of that this that that so that's my off the couch is my office is okay okay it wouldn't be possible to do the 12 hours long hours I do if it weren't comfortable like that I mean I had a day because I could've I about Jason didn't work I couldn't do 12 hours in the chair about the music studio is now functioning that's where right we havin say where the music studio is now that was my research desk so now it's now the music studio and next to it is the electronics bench and that's still being fixed up and of course on the other side that's the laundry so is it the projects are getting done they're getting bit by bit we're moving forward with different things and uh as this occurs uh you'll start seeing more and more content coming out on cyborg alpha TV because several graphic TV is going to pull into the the the episodes from all the different channels so from all the different show of all across all different channels that I have on the internet on YouTube and this is one for this one for our Oceanographic and Atmospheric Research I will tandel those projects there's one for astronomy physics and space that will handle that area there it's a bit business many more advanced physics we'll talk about superstring theory there M theory quantum mechanics will will bring the compy the question of God when we talked about agnosticism and how atheism is actually a belief now is we wanted to believe now but it always was but they were never able to get to that point to say okay that is real they had the assumption but they were able to hide enough of the sort of the doubts up into 1945 in 1945 a lot of adults had gone and they weren't able to prove that there wasn't a God so the statement that there is no God was more of a belief so atheism became a belief and because it's a belief an uncertainty about God it falls under the broad umbrella of agnosticism agnosticism is the uncertainty or lack of knowledge of God it doesn't mean it means that you don't know who God is if you believe there is a God and if you don't please if there's a God it means that you probably they're probably might not be a gut and so it covers the entire range of belief and non-belief about God so as long as there's an uncertainty layer then that's where it is that's agnosticism so this will do a variety of the Byzantine and antiquity study chan will handle a lot of the ancient history bringing up a lot of the asian culture that hasn't been seen in Western culture for too long I think most of it was not known to the Western culture though it's gonna be brand new stuff so there's a lot to get done there's a lot to work through I'm still working on the open protocol Institute there's still work to be done there Mars alpha needs work so there's a whole checklist of stuff that has to be done and I think I hope to be getting to film the first episode of living the quiet life tonight and I hope also to get to if it's the film it depends on on the lights leaving it's very hot plates are hot if you turn off my lights on so if I if I can come a play down enough that's about two hours to do that if I can cool my place down enough then I'll be able to film but if I can't cool place down enough that I'm not gonna be able to show them so that's gonna sort of bring up the it's going to bring this is what determines the factor whether something goes or it doesn't go if the conditions are right and it goes yet the conditions aren't right then it doesn't go so anyways I'll leave this here and I'll think we've got enough for another episode of big bang theory RL we'll sort of see after this and I'll either see you in the next segment or elsewhere i'll see you in the next episode either one welcome welcome to library library I am the professor and professor of what professor of physics oh say can you see surely Allah free speech rules here at Democratic earth
Cyborg Alpha TV
UCdMPHVtXmmVqMa7vw5PzW1Q
2016-06-29
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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metadata
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NacO0LT5aZ0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NacO0LT5aZ0
PROG2006 Advanced Programming
so we will record and we will do go back to our tutorial uh what is it no no we I don't have the tutorials so let's open it so we started doing this tutorial and um we can't really program everything um by kind of a uh by me giving you kind of small tasks and reprogramming it but what I would like you to do is I would like you to program with me an imperative version of the checks okay so I did some um I've already did some implementations which we're gonna review uh in a moment but what we will do now we will kind of try to implement uh an imperative validation check for our student and see how it will look like okay uh okay maybe I use called so let's see can you read it is it legible so let's Zoom it a little bit okay um and then uh what do we have we have a number of let's imagine that we have a number of validation classes right so that the task is we have to we will have an ID let's do it as a comment such that the ID doesn't complain too much okay so we have an ID and this one is a number uh we have a name and surname and they are both strings string and it has to be at least two characters capitalized and only letters and then this one is the same the same as above but four cars limits and then we have um H and H must be a number uh in a Range this one needs to be unique but unique we don't do for now because we have to have a database reference to check what we already have right so we sort of have we have to do it but we're not doing it now so we're only doing the uh the validation for those things so let's imagine that we have to do the validation and we would do it in some sort of imperative programming language so what we would do is we probably would have a couple of functions uh so we would have a functions like uh valid ID and then we would pass a string this is a pseudo code so let's continue with the comments okay so I will have let's kind of use golang for example okay let's use Haskell we don't want to be playing with the with the syntax so much so we get confused so let's use Haskell but let's kind of try to think like uh in terms of um imperative programming so we would have a function like valid ID which would take our string right so it would take a string um and it would return a bull telling us is that a valid ID right and then we would have the same for a valid name and then valid name would take so this function is quite easy valid name so let's say because we're using Haskell we can close this because it should undefined then valid name uh valid name is the same it takes a string and it gives us a bull and then a valid name has couple of things to do so valid name takes the string as an argument and then we have to do a couple of things so we have to check if um if it is at least uh two characters right so we have to say um if length of string is more or equal to then we good right else we not good so maybe we convert it again and we say if it's less than 2 then false else we are good okay so then we would say else and then we have to do the other check so we we've checked this uh then we have to check this capitalize so let's imagine that we have a function uh as upper which Haskell actually has um so we check is upper um head of string then we good but you see the pattern like it would be nice to have the false first such that we can quit and then do that um the true path afterwards right so we say if is upper if not is upper um so I would say something like this then we say it's false otherwise we good right so we need FF blah blah blah then it's not good otherwise we good uh uh syntax wrong else we good so then we need to check what else we need to check if all the letters are um [Music] if all the characters are letters correct so then again we want to turn it around and we want to say no so first so we will say if uh if any of the characters um is so not this letter or our string then [Music] then false else we are good is that correct pseudo code the syntax doesn't have to be perfect but we have to check if it is a string yes it is a string because we're passing it as a string we have to check if the is at least two we did that if it's capitalized uh we did that and if it's only letters we did that and then we say true so we've done that and this code is quite ugly already right so we have kind of uh one two three level of nesting of our ifs um it's kind of uh the complexity of analyzing like what is true what is forces even though we try to make it kind of uh simple for us that we have this exit kind of first it's still a little bit ugly and then you also see a very clear pattern that we're doing something and then we we shortcut to to false like we jumped saying here quit this like it's false um for every single thing that we do so there is a certain repetitive pattern here right we kind of doing copy and paste and this copy and paste says if something doesn't work uh return false if something doesn't work return false something doesn't work written false right so in imperative programming and especially in golang you often see this right and it's like annoying like you have to type those ifs and say oh yeah if I have an error return an error right return an error return an error and usually signature is like you return something or the error and then you have those checks for every little thing that you do um in in Haskell we have these indentations because we do those if else uh with indentations and golang you have it kind of if true then do this else to this and then you can kind of um skip the else part if your if part is the exit so in golang what we usually do is say do this if there was an error return an error and then we don't have else Clause because else is like yeah the the if didn't work right so then you say do the rest right so this is a very typical pattern for uh this kind of a shortcut and in Rust you would kind of achieve I also so let's not talk about rust yet okay so here we already see that this is somewhat repetitive and somewhat um uh ugly and it would be the same for valid surname and now because in for valid surname we kind of need to do a text string and returns bull again uh we would kind of need to repeat pretty much just do copy and paste of all of this and replace just this one number right so every time you have to do copy and paste of a whole method or whole function you know yeah there must be a better way right so we probably should um abstract what we're doing here to a function parameterize it by by the number and then use this function here and use this function here right so we can kind of make the code more modular by copying that into its own function we have a parameter two and and string right because we need to compare two things which returns Bull and then use this function here and here right I'm not going to do this because we just doing kind of conceptually how it would look like we don't necessarily want to write code like this right so at the end of the day I will have valid surname I will have a valid um what was the other thing H so I will have those um so for valid age uh the signature is already more interesting because we kind of need to return that actual age and if it didn't work we have to say it didn't work right so in in here we already have to do kind of uh parsing the string into a number that may not work so then we may not have anything to return right so like you know I could say we return a tuple we return an end and a bull but you know if bull is false there is no end so then we would have to return like a default value yeah we could return at some sort of a h which doesn't make sense like uh we could pick -1 for example and and see usually you do that um because we're doing a pseudocode in Haskell yeah exactly then the the the best way to do that is just to return maybe end right because if there is no end we just written nothing and the the caller will know okay the parsing failed right it didn't work and if we return an end that the caller will know oh yeah it worked so we would kind of have like this right again I'm not going to implement it it's not the point here it would kind of look a little bit like this we were to do the parts maybe if the parse may be worked then we would use the number and check if it's within the range because here we also have to pass the range right so and and we're passing the range and then if if the end worked and it was within the range it would work you can imagine that the code would kind of look similar to this right okay so then at the end of the day you would have this kind of a new student function new student functions students and this function would take a string and would take uh it would not take the range because the range is kind of a hard-coded like so but we could pass it we could pass the range for the h but all those rules this number two and the range we let's assume that those things are hard-coded right so maybe it's hard coded and we don't even pass it okay um it's part of the domain it's not gonna change and we decided to hard code this um and then it would return again if everything worked it would return a student but if it didn't work it would return nothing right so we would say maybe student and here we would say this um we would say new student equals and we're passing the string and then we would say um if um valid name uh yep so first of all we have to say uh so we would have to kind of work with do otherwise we cannot type sequential code it's a little bit awkward in Haskell so let's use boom and then we can type sequential code so it say let params equal words from string before we can do that we also would have to say if uh if length of string is less than four we don't have enough tokens for ID name surname and H we would say if left length of string is less than four then nothing else we do this right so we already have one level of nesting uh by the way can we return nothing yes we can return nothing because we have a return type maybe student perfect so then uh we would say okay we are good we have four tokens so let's parse them we have params which are our tokens and then the param params zero is the name no is the ID so the name is this guy so first let's check ID so if um a valid valid ID and then it's param 0 then if right so if the ID is not valid we want to shortcut again right so again let's twist our um our if statements same as we're doing in golang and say if it's not valid ID then we return nothing otherwise we're checking for valid name and you will observe that here we are kind of doing if not valid name then nothing else if not surname from then nothing else if not Elite what was the last one h and that would be params three then nothing and eventually we got to this else where we know everything is valid right so then we just say ah finally we got the students so we say just and then we say student and then we say params zero bottoms um uh one we kind of need the I should have called it P so much typing but um two and uh three all right so it doesn't have to have the syntax perfect but the logic is correct do you think yeah yeah we could use guards but the guards are kind of not available in in golang and we wanted to have something which would kind of need to ride in golang right um so yes we could use guards for those checks for some of those checks uh but um it would be kind of an equivalent of the if statements which you have to use in golang right the pattern here is again is clear we have we are doing kind of different things right and you see we're doing uh them multiple times here with this then nothing and it's like a repetitive pattern right so this is exactly the pattern which applicative functor captures right applicative Factor captures exactly that pattern um and the whole point of applicative factor is that you don't have to do that explicitly it's kind of done by the pattern itself and the pattern is what we've been polishing and learning and kind of trying to get on under our skin is that to achieve exactly this you would uh want to convert those checks to a function which returns and maybe something and then you can change them by saying I want to return a student which is in fact a combination of um so I call them valid ID so so we still need to do we still need to do this first check so if um [Music] is less than we return nothing else we we have do so so we cannot get rid of the first parsing part so for that part we still have to check for the number four because we're gonna pass those um parameters to our functions so then we're gonna say uh student and we're gonna drop it with this valid ID and the valid ID function is going to take uh params 0 and it's gonna return a maybe ID for us right uh if it if it returns nothing then this chain would kind of a shortcut here and it would return nothing so student would not be just student student would be nothing because one of those functions returns nothing right so instead of doing this kind of a nested repetitive uh if checks what we do is we do this instead um and we say um so we say valid ID the second one is valid name and we pass params one and then we do valid surname name and we do params two and then we do the last one is ID right so if you see code like this a repetitive code where you're kind of returning nothing because of kind of a shortcutting you can almost always turn this code into code like this which is so much nicer to deal with yeah yes good good catch thanks so we have H as the last one so if we watch this code now um we can see that this code is much more modular it's much easier to read it's much easier to maintain it's much easier to check the validity of this code than kind of going yeah what are this like do have I missed not somewhere right if you miss this note the logic is wrong right uh here it's much different much more difficult to make errors right like you check this it's like you know looks good uh I don't have to be very specific like I'm not gonna miss a knot in here uh and also this code renders itself much better for parametrization because suddenly adding parameters to my valid name is kind of much easier right so I can say I want a surname um to be uh two uh but a name to be length of two but surname to be lens of four otherwise they are the same uh the same function right so I can say valid text length or lens let's make it shorter right so now I can reuse the same function uh for both and if we kind of trying to do that we can also combine uh functions because now I can combine two functions together and I can check for length and for capitalization and I can make the code even more modular right uh because in here I'm checking uh like I'm repeating um if we if we parametrize this uh we make it monolithic because I cannot decouple checking for length and checking for capitalizations but if I have two functions one checks for length and one checks for capitalizations then I can compose it right and functional programming and our programming approaches to make things modular and composable such that if I can uh avoid checking for capitalizations I I don't but if I can I can just call this function if you have everything in a single function like this then it's kind of Monolithic and modifying is much much more tedious right uh so if you have let's say we have another uh you know our boss comes and says yeah we we have name and surname but we also need to have um tags for students and tags don't have a requirement for capitalizations they are actually all lower case right then you have to check for that and then checking for that is another blog of code and if you did this like here monolithic then you would be copy and pasting and removing some things right instead of composing functions so just kind of a heads up if you see patterns like this don't don't write this kind of a nested uh if statements and kind of indentation going to hell rewrite it using applicative into something like this right um so that's the first thing that that one is relatively straightforward all you need to do is you need to turn uh those functions for valid names and so on into maybes right because all of this requires that valid ID valid length and valid age return maybe something uh that's all um and then it will nicely compose right so as I said uh in Rust we kind of have code like this because we use the question mark and we use this shortcut to kind of return a result so if your function call returns a result which is the same type as your actual calling function then all you need to do is you have to add a question mark and if this question Returns the left side if it returns an error then the code will stop here and it will jump out and it will return you this error to the color right so rust already has a mechanism to turn code like this into code like this right in specific circumstance golang doesn't have that in golang you actually have to write code like this in golang we write it the opposite way right so we say um if it's not valid return an error and then we don't have an else close and then you say if the valid name is not valid return an error and so on right and at the end you will kind of do this right so golang code will look exactly like this but without indentation you just don't have the else kind of you flatten the else that that's also a pattern um if you can flatten the else you should so if every time in your code if you have if statement like in the imperative code like in C or C plus plus or rust if you have if something do this else do this if you can remove the else you should remove the else you should kind of a flattened the indentations um so in in Haskell we cannot we have to have both we have to have done and else uh but in in most programming languages imperative programming languages specifically in golang you can avoid else and you should so you you should not say if my database call is correct do this with the with what I got else there is an error right because mentally it's much harder to keep track of your long method and then else like what is else for right uh so what you should say is like if my database call has an error return the error and there is no else then you go back to your context and you say oh yeah now I'm in kind of a good context um okay so is that clear I think this is relatively straightforward and that's the beauty of of Haskell compositions because we can compose not just functions we can compose applicatives right uh and this composition of applicatives removes this kind of a boilerplate here okay so I think this one is pretty straightforward and this one is pretty simple the problem is that uh that's not all we need to do uh so in our case um we did that uh let's let me go to the maybe students new maybe student we basically did that here right we have a very easy to read implementation a very nice and very maintainable and we sort of did turned all those functions into maybe functions right so this is why for name we have to say uh we actually don't check here it is a the version without error checking so let me see yeah we don't have the version anymore because I rewrote it to either um okay let me see if in the merge request one I still have it um maybe I have it yeah so this is this kind of a nested um power of Doom and then we have no I didn't yeah so we kind of need to imagine that there are checks um that we are doing for the maybe version uh and those checks return maybe parameters right and now in in my case I'm not actually I'm passing a parameter here which is a string but I need a maybe string um so I'm converting it to maybe string by cheating and by saying pure right otherwise you'd have to have this valid function here which returns nothing if the string is not valid or string if it's valid right because for name we need a maybe string so here we need maybe string here we need maybe number here we need maybe string and here we need maybe number right um so this may be number here is obtained by reading the um the last parameter but I'm not doing any checks so instead of just doing those things uh you would have to kind of you know implement the function which does the reading and checking and then Returns the the thing so this is the example of the code which works fine and returns as mab student but the task is a little bit more difficult uh because we want to return the error which happened right we need to know why we got nothing so if you don't care then this is fine this is the simplest solution but if you do care why you got nothing you need to pass additional information right so what do we use in Haskell to pass additional information yeah exactly we pass either and either is also an applicative and either has the left and right side and either composes exactly the same way as applicatives um it's just that instead like you have um I don't have a pen here yeah I don't have a pen so one item happens so this is quite nice um so normally we have we have to do we have to do something then do something else and then do something else and then we have the final thing right um do you see it so they are kind of um you have some some things you need to do you're doing this then this then this then this and each step the step May Fail right and then if the step fails if this step fails we kind of go into the into the nothing Branch right so if this step fails and returned nothing then we don't care we go into nothing branch and then we written nothing right uh if all the steps completed then we we return something we return just um does right so it's the same with the with golang like if we're doing this if there was an error return an error otherwise do this if there was an error return an error but we have to do it explicitly right he here it kind of composes nicely um so then um this is with maybe with either we have a little bit more here we have the left left side right so let if this one worked then we have this if this one worked blah blah blah blah blah and then we have right so we have right side everything worked we are on the right path if something failed we kind of uh shortcutting to left and then we're returning left something right something so here we have the ability to kind of a shortcut with additional context with nothing we have no no context it's just kind of Curves as yeah we kind of went to this uh failure Branch but if we have left then we can include additional context and we can return it right so what we did um what we did later is we wrote our checks we rewrote this and we have [Music] um decided that we're gonna check for example for the length and we're gonna return either there is an error or the the string was correct we could um uh return arbitrary things on the left hand side but there is a kind of a best the the a good approach is to define a type uh which defines all the errors that can happen for you for the validation and then return the instance like a specific error that happened right um and then the errors uh you can see um you don't see it but what I did initially I had errors like this I had errors like um I show you I had an error like um error the prefix is just a convention because in ID if you start typing error then it will show you kind of all the hints right so it's kind of nice to prefix it with something that makes sense for you to to work with if you didn't have a prefix then you need to remember all the names of your Errors By Heart right um it's a lot of typing maybe you should prefix it with error so anyway um if you have error name to Short and I had error surname Too Short right and then I had um error name not capitalized and I had error surname not capitalized and then I thought there is some repetitiveness of my errors right uh those two errors are kind of almost identical right and those two arrows are almost identical the only difference is is it the name too short or so name to short right so then if you have a repetitive code if you have to copy and paste then you know you you just have to abstract it away and have a parameter right so that's what I actually did like initially I wrote all the arrows like this and then I said yeah that kind of smells so then I have [Music] um I have error to short and it says what was too short was it the name to short or was it the surname Too Short you know maybe in the future I will have tags and they may be too short so I can contextualize the error with additional information right instead of having errors like this um so that's what I kind of um ended up refactoring it with so then we have errors like this it probably is a good idea to shorten it and say error maybe I will I would do that if I refactor it again and then you have some sort of error Handler and the good thing like I we don't really need an error Handler we kind of we can show the errors because we derived the show method so we can say show you know but the point here is that um you can handle errors uh by saying what you want to do with a particular error right so what you can do is you can say um if you say error who short and then you have some string you can say do this but if you have a handle error um error error not a number uh does that one take uh yeah it takes a parameter as well and then you can do something else right you can say this one is undefined it throws like it actually blows the program right it it gives the program if I have this error and then if you do this and you try to compile the compiler will tell you Mario's uh your error handle doesn't handle all the errors that's kind of a beauty of enforcing something by the types uh because the compiler will know that I don't have an exhaustive pattern matching here so it will tell me Mario's error handle error doesn't handle order errors you kind of need to implement the cases which you forgot about right so it will enforce certain things on you just by type checking right um so if you have implementation like this it will say yeah uh you know you you don't have you have missing cases right uh so then you can say okay I have missing cases so I have to deal with them and then you know you can say uh for everything else um come on for everything else do something do show right um uh there is one annoying thing yeah I would have to I cannot use the 0.3 because I've already implemented um the functions with the parameters so if you try to do this it will complain it says yeah you need a parameter because you did use parameters before so you kind of will have to do this um there are some small annoying limitations of Haskell as well not as with other programming languages but there are two so this one annoys me right so if you started implementing your function uh with a certain number of parameters then you cannot switch to 0.3 suddenly right um okay so that was a little bit of a detour about hunting errors uh we just have a default implementation and it works for everybody and then um I also have a default implementation for showing students because if I get an either student at the end I want to either show the student or I want to show the errors right because we have this kind of a repo and we kind of sang new students so then we want this okay and then we basically have [Music] um our new maybe student with errors um yeah so that's the one so that's the implementation and as you see I'm again using this yeah questions right we can take a short break sure yeah so short break so that that is um those two two lines uh the kind of the happy happy line and the unhappy line it's kind of the the highlight of monarchs and applicatives um how how they are actually working all right so uh coming back to uh to the either applicative we can see that we kind of doing the same thing here uh and um we have some um uh uh let's say utility functions defined here and where uh so we have a check check number which uh is basically returning an error um which has not a number and it says for what because remember our type stake parameters so if we say uh not a number we have to say what was not the number uh so for example here we have error not a number and then we say what was wrong like what was not the number so here we passing um where is it uh so that was maybe student we have like we have a function check check is if something is a number and then we pass the uh the what the the kind of what we want to combine with the error and we pass the string which supposed to be the number and then what we do is we basically do this um check uh on read maybe right so we we uh do read maybe on the string which is the second parameter uh here and then if the read maybe is correct then we we are passing it into a maybe function which has the default value which is this one and the default one is an error right so the default value for our maybe is an error which says return left side error not a number and what what it is so in our case it will be node error not number ID but if this call doesn't return an error it Returns the actual value then we call this function and return it with the value which in our case is end so then we return Right End right so this is kind of a clever way of using a maybe function to avoid doing a case because otherwise we would have to rewrite it something like this we would have to say equals um case um reads Maybe of string off and then we have two cases right one case is that it's left no it's nothing so one case is it returns nothing and then if it returns nothing we want to return this error so we would kind of return that right so say yeah return return that otherwise we are returning a maybe end right so here we would say just a number n and then what we want is return right and so instead of writing a case like this I mean you know if you look at the code is this code less or more readable than this one kind of the same maybe for you even this one is more readable right um but in some more elaborate cases you may prefer this maybe function so this is a maybe function which takes the default value if this one returns nothing and holds this function on the value which this one returns right um yep uh how do you the return value Yeah by Magic no like if it's a validation uh no so in in this case it's just a single check so we only checking if it is a number so we're passing it as string and saying can you parse it into a number and then if you can return me the number write the number if it's not give me the error yeah so the problem here is that maybe Reit is not a either it doesn't return it either right if it was returning an either we could just compose it directly we could just like in our usage we could just use it directly but because this guy returns maybe and we need either we have to have this type conversion now you we have to return either but but but read returns Maybe yeah so yeah either is its own type yeah that's right so here we basically converting from maybe uh nothing and just to left and right right yeah you can have right nothing yes uh so if you if your either is between uh some validation error and maybe int then you could return nothing that's right but then on the right hand side you would have to have maybe ends right so um and sometimes you want that sometimes you want kind of this nested thing but in our case we don't we want to get an end such that we can compose the student because we want to pass an end into the student Constructor right so yes this is an equivalent code I can leave it here um the the same code as above right all right so this is the check number and then when we actually constructing the student we say uh check a number with the error being ID so it will be not a number ID and pass it the string which supposed to be a number and we're gonna get either an error or a number and because we're gonna get either an error or the number we're gonna we we can um use it in this chain of applicatives right um we're not doing the range check here so I forgot to to check for the range but we have this case for multiple checks inside the name right so inside the name we're doing a little bit of a trick because as you see we have to do three checks we have to check if the length is two we have to check if the name is capitalized and we have to check if the we the name contains only letters right um so uh let's quickly go to repo so if I have two if I have um so so normally if we were to write it in a in a kind of um let's say uh imperative code we would say if like we we could compose those three functions uh but we would have to pass the parameter uh and the other parameter are three times right so we could compose them by applicatives but we would have to pass the parameters three times and then compose them three times right but there is this kind of a neat trick so if we go to to rapple and I have um I have a number let's say I have a number 100 and I have to add um I have to add something to it so so let's say we we need to do this I have a number 100 and then I have to add uh add 10 to it I have to multiply it uh multiply by two and um subtract uh subtract 50 okay so we want to do three things on one single parameter that we are passing right so one way to do that is you would say a equals 100 um what we're doing plus two plus ten [Music] um b equals uh hundred times two or C equals hundred minus 50 right but again you see some repetitiveness right uh you kind of see this parameter is repeated three times and I'm kind of doing something on it right um so in Haskell what you can do is you can say okay I have uh Plus I have multiplied and I have subtract okay and I need to do this uh on a parameter which is 100 and I'm doing it with the right hand side parameter parameters which in my case is um pen to and 50. okay so then if we do that um you see that I am constructing um three functions with the parameter 100 so if we do that without the last part um uh I cannot print this in the n and jci but you kind of need to imagine that I have a list now of three functions and those functions are um 100 plus 100 multiply and hundred minus right yep in that case isn't that just more characters almost than the original thing and like part of the community yep you may kind of say that but the whole point like if you were to multiply the uh the two if you were to do those three operations you would write it like this right that would be much simpler but sometimes it is actually simpler to do what that mechanism allows you to do right so let me let me finish this and then I will show you how I used it inside the the code so here you have three functions which are kind of waiting for a single parameter and um if you um so now if I compose a I compose a with um with a single parameter so um who for example um that doesn't work because this one is not an applicative then you're gonna get 100 plus 200 multiplied by two and hundred minus two and kind of a single um pattern matching uh as a single list right so then what you can do is you can actually pattern match a prime V Prime and C Prime and kind of do something like this and then you have a prime and B Prime like what do you want it right so instead of doing three assignments and three lines like this you can kind of compose the operations and kind of do the pattern matching at the end to kind of extract what you really wanted this becomes even more um important if your numbers are not real numbers yet right so for example imagine that I have um I have I I will shorten it to to just two operations so I have just 10 and I have uh just 20. so let's make it into a list and now I will have um this um let's say pure Plus and then we compose it with these guys and then we um again I cannot print it so if we check what is the type of a then you say that I now have a list of functions which are from maybe a to maybe a right so now I kind of created a list of functions which are from a maybe a to maybe a and then I can apply it um to some maybe arguments because then I will get the the results right so if I have a being those two functions 10 and 20 and then I have another array of just 30. I can compose it with my a and then again I'm getting lost with those so then I have B is kind of a maybe a uh so I have now a list of maybe A's right um and then what I want is I want those A's and I want to convert it so I have a list of maybe A's and what I want is a maybe list of ins right so if one of the maybes is nothing I'm gonna get nothing but if all of them were correct if I was on a happy path and all of them gave me numbers I want a list of those of those numbers and that's where the um this kind of um a sequence sequence a operator is four so sequence a [Music] um kind of a traverses the list of maybes and says if one of them was nothing I will give you nothing but all of them were just I will say just and it will give me a list of um of numbers so yeah I kind of got lost a little bit so if I do sequence a of a list of just 10 and just 20 let's say we got this as a result it will give me back just 10 and 20. so it will kind of uh collapse all the inner kind of you know applicatives and I will say it will return you an applicative of the inner values right and that's something useful because in our case what we want is we want to check for the errors and then we want to do that in kind of an extensible way and we want to collapse it to a single value which says was there an error or not if there was an error I'm gonna get it if there was no error uh I'm gonna get just the list of all the return types right so in our particular case what I'm doing here is I'm constructing a list of functions that I want to call all those functions gonna get a name as a parameter right so I'm gonna say check length 2 name and then all the functions are gonna get the second parameter which is the actual parameter uh for the for the functions and then I'm gonna get a list of eithers and they will be either right or left right if they if one of them is left the sequence will return a left for me um if they were all right the the sequence will return a write of a sequence and because each of this function is written in such a way that it Returns the actual string right so uh it doesn't return a ball it returns a string which is the string after the check so it in a sense it's kind of pointless because I don't really care right uh if I'm checking is this string a proper name if it has a proper length and the function returns right this string then I already have that string because I passed it to that function in the first place right so this is a little bit too much um but I use this as a demonstration that you could do some processing here right so you you may actually take a name do something with it and return a modified value and then all those functions will return you a modified value right in our case in our case all those functions return the same value right so in a sense because I already have this parameter because this parameter is here I don't actually need it I just need to know if um because you know this is kind of redundant I don't really need to do this this way what I can do is I can say right params uh uh columns one right and in fact I don't really need all those checks to return anything on the right hand side I actually don't care about the right hand side so what I could rewrite them for I could say yeah if it's only letters return me nothing like return me an empty Tuple like I I don't care what you're gonna return on the right hand side because all I care is the left I all I cut is errors if you return me to something on the right it means it was fine it is like a Boolean check true right that the check test right so I could rewrite it to this and it would work fine but um I kind of opted for the more complicated way of returning the same thing you see I'm passing it here and I'm returning it on the right hand side so I'm kind of propagating it right so because I'm propagating it uh in this function here what I'm gonna get is a list of all the same strings like four three times right the same string here the same string here the same strings here so so I'm gonna get the list of of let's say Alice three times and it passed so what I'm doing is like I'm saying yeah just take the first one because all the other ones are the same right so I'm saying take the first one from the list and return it on the right hand side right are you with me with this or not quite there yet um all right so you can kind of study it a little bit at home right what star I did a little bit and kind of a play with the plus and minus on the ghci and you kind of understand what sequence is doing here and why I compacted it into this notation I you can unfold it right you can kind of say all right all right let's let's don't let's not be so fancy let's say name equals and then you have to say what is name equal to right so you would have to say well I have to do three checks I have to check if the length of the name is correct if the capitalize is correct and if the other thing is correct right so you have to kind of build an expression here which does three checks and gives you the the thing that you need so you probably want to write a function which does those three checks and returns you and either error or the the thing right um and I I am kind of doing it here as a kind of it's not a one-liner but it has a kind of a expression which I it's more compact here you would have to write a function um that uses a check lens to check check pedalized and check on the letters and returns either error or string depending on the outcome of those three calls right you can try to come combine them you can try to com combine those three functions because those three functions also return an either so you can actually use um some notation to combine them and that's what we're doing in the next example so in the example of surname we say well you know those three functions checking for length checking for capitalized and checking for only letters are actually monads right because either is a monat and then we have a fish operator which allows you to compose monarchs together and then you have this kind of a nice composition so let's have a quick look what fish operator is like so if we say show me what fish is like okay so fish is in the module called um so we say M plus control so efficient operator is a very simple operator it takes a function which takes a normal parameter and returns a monadic outcome another function which takes a normal parameter and returns a magnetic outcome and it creates a composition of those two so the new function takes a and return C right so this function takes a and returns B this function takes B and returns C but B and C are in monotic contexts and this function is like clever enough to say yeah I get it you give me an a you give me a string and I will return you and either a string or an error right and we have check for length which takes a string which is a normal string and Returns the either we have check for um capitalized which takes a string and returns an either and then we check for uh what was the last one that is all the characters are letters so all of them fit that pattern right so because all of them fit that pattern it's great because then I just use fish and say yeah I have this one function which checks for length I have this other function which checks for capitalized they compose into a single function with the fish and then I have the third one which is checking if the string has only letters and again I compose it with the fish and then I ended up with a single function which is which takes a string and returns me the either error or a string right perfect right why why did I I didn't use that here why I'm teaching you this ugliness here well there is a reason so this works perfectly fine and then for the for the age I also use the fish it's much nicer right I mean using a fish composition of those three functions than this nonsense right it is nicer that's why I use it here so it works you could decompose this fish because the fish is sort of like the monadic composition of functions so you can kind of do it with do notation and do it like here so I'm showing you how to do it for age because it only has two checks so you can kind of do it like that explicitly right by passing it manually from function to function right um so um why do we do this any guesses all right so imagine okay so so let's go let's go to um let's go to our code let's quit that I am in Branch 2 so let's say git checkout Mario 2. and let's say stag run so I have some warnings because I have some things that I don't use and then we have our beautiful repo so if I type some nonsense it says I don't know what you mean if you type nothing it just doesn't do anything if you say new and you miss some parameters it will say you don't have enough parameters right and then if I say new one Alice everything is clean ID is okay name surname is okay age is okay I will get a student right but if I say new one Alice Cooper 199 then Alice is NOT capitalized Cooper is NOT capitalized and the age is out of the range because we limited age 230 years right so if I do that I get an error and it says Alice is NOT capitalized name is not capitalized right if I try new one ah C and B again I have three errors I I actually have a lot of Errors the name is not capitalized and the name is too short uh C is NOT capitalized it's too short and B is not a number right and it's not in the range because it's not a number but I'm gonna get ah name is too short I'm cutting I'm getting n Only One error right that that's what we achieved we achieved with left do you have a pen it's great thank you very much so hopefully the zoom people also see the word yeah so so here we said left perfect and here we got into right and right is a student so this is this is not a problem the the happy path the happy path is still fine right because we are returning right students then uh the last part the unhappy path what's what's left returning left is returning an error right a validation error singular one but we might have many right um so the unhappy path is okay with either because either works like that either returns a single left from those unhappy you know occurrences and this left let's say we're doing this and there is a left um and this left is the one which is being returned right we're not doing the rest we're not kind of doing anything else because we kind of Hit the unhappy path and that's what we return that's how either works and then that's how maybe works also if maybe it's doing multiple things and one of them hits the nothingness then that's it that you're gonna get nothing out of this composition right but what we want we want something else we want something which is if I with that and if I go check up check out Branch 3 and if I say run and if I say my new one a b and c we want to get multiple errors right so then I'm getting multiple errors and you would think yeah that that's simple uh instead of returning left instead of using either so we have either and we said uh validation error and student we just say let's return a list of Errors right would that be great and that would be great but if you say either an array of errors and a student unfortunately um that will still return you the first array the moment it hits down happy path right it will return you an array of error which is a single error if you do that we need a slightly different either we need an either which accumulates the errors and combines them in a different way than either combines the errors right yeah I should not say right um so that's what we did we actually defined in here a new either for us which is a chord validation and it has a failure branch which is the left branch which takes a list of errors and it has a success branch which returns whatever the type is right I should not said right uh it's called failure and success this time so we could Define it with um with validation a kind of an error type and a a happy path type but we kind of doing it for the purpose of this validation so I can short it shortcut it so we could do it like this we could say there is an error type um like this and then this would be a type Constructor which takes two arguments the error type and the happy path type but because I don't care about like I want to simplify it then I can delete the that part that type and I can um uh hard-coded here right so I I kind of hard coded what the list is off and then I only made it flexible here why did I make it flexible on the happy path such that we can use it for students and we can use it for something else but does it make sense maybe it doesn't maybe my validation I don't need to parameterize it at all uh maybe I I kind of only want to do it for a student would we do that we could it would work but there is a catch it would work but I cannot make it into an applicative anymore because to make some type into an applicative the type needs to have a kind like it needs to take a single type parameter in the Constructor if it doesn't take a parameter in the Constructor I cannot make it into a functor and I cannot make it into a applicative so I sort of need at least one parameter for my type Constructor such that I can turn it into a [Music] um applicative and a functor why is that because when we say um so so remember for example for um for applicative I am able to do this right so I have my type on the on this hand side but what I need on the left hand side so so my type with the value let's say is a type with a student right so I have a uh my signature is type of student but if I have type of student here this doesn't make sense because I do need to have a function here so I have to have kind of like a student to student or something like this but this signature is not like this anymore so that's why I need a generic type here such that I can stuff a function in in my tea if I don't have this parameter like if I if I if I have a fixed type type of student then I cannot kind of put a function into the place of a student and I do need it for this to work because this means take a function from the C context and apply it to the value from that context right and that doesn't work if I cannot put a function in here so to be able to put the function into my P context I do need to have a generic type I need to have a t of a not t of student so that's the constraint that when you want to make something into applicative you have to use a generic type because at the end of the day you should be able to put in a function in there um so that's what we do we have a generic validation type of a we have a success uh with with this a and then the failure branch is fixed and then we Define a semi group and that's the basically the the fancy add-on of what we did we basically said if I'm combining two validations which are errors and we know the errors is the list then the result is the concatenation of those two right so if I go if I go to my uh ghci again so we're gonna quit that we go to ghci and if I have a list if I have a list of um one two three and I will combine it with an 2013 it will do what I expect what would you expect yeah one two three exactly so watch this now I have left I have either a list that's the normal either right and the left hand side okay let's do right first so what what would you expect if you do this the same right you would you would kind of expect combination of both no you're not gonna get it the either doesn't kind of know that it's a list it knows it's a thing but it doesn't know it can kind of combine it like this either assumes it's a single thing so if you have right and right it kind of returns you the first one same as if you have right left and left so if I do the left left snow um so if you do left left it returns you the second one right yeah so with just it will work you're right so if we combine just with the maybe um semi group so if you say just has to lists and I'm combining two just you're gonna get what you expect so it's a little bit strange but it's a little bit up to the implementation and what we did we did our own implementation in which case if I have a failure [Music] then it would combine them that's what we kind of defined here we said Well if you get two things on the failure side I just concatenate them right that that's all we really changed that it behaves kind of like a just for maybes that it combines their lists together and then the rest we kind of need because um uh we want this to be also like an applicative and a factor such that we can use all those combinators uh that we used before but we Implement them in a very standard way right so all those implementations are as you would imagine apart from this one if you combine two failures we're using our redefined semi group um the same way as we kind of did for the um or the F and for the G um you could you could say You're Gonna concatenate here as well but yeah it's kind of a more fancy to do that so then to be able to use this fish operator uh we have to use uh we have to define a bind so I'm not defining a fish but I'm defining a bind and then fish is defined using the bind so it will work automatically as well and then what we can do is we can do all the things that we did before so we can do the fish and we can do the fancy um applicative notation here so the code is exactly the same this function doesn't change anything it works exactly the same way but now it combines the error but only for this case because how you like if you watch the implementation for the fish um if I have um yeah so for the applicatives it works because it combines the errors but for the fish uh if I have a failure and it's bind to something how I'm gonna propagate the result of the calling of the function in here such that I extract the second error I don't I don't have access to that because the second parameter to F is a function so here is a function which takes a normal value and returns me a monadic context right so I I the only thing I can return is the first error so we back to the limitation of what we had with the either such that if I'm using the fish I'm actually stuck with the first error um so the name is handled with applicatives with with this and with the sequencing the surname is uh dealt with the fish so if you if we go back to to the um if we go back here observe this I will say mu 1 the name has three errors okay it has three errors it's two now I cannot have three errors uh because if it's if it's um okay okay let's let's do it so I will say it now it has three errors um mu okay ID is okay the name has three errors because it contains not letters it's too short and it's not capitalized hopefully I I don't know if two is capitalized or not actually and then the surname is the same it's too short blah blah blah blah blah blah and then the uh the age let's say the age is fine so I get for name I get it's too short it's not capitalized and it it's I got all three errors for the name but for surname I only got one error right so you see that our very nice notation with fish kind of doesn't allow us to collect all the errors it will work it Compares it works fine but it only gives you the first error it kind of gives you the error for this that it's too short and then so if you want to collect all the errors somehow you do need to collect them all and one way of collecting them is this one uh which is the manual way of collecting all the Errors By sequencing the executions but you can also do the same if you combine all those calls using the um somehow combining the function calls together but that is the limitation of the applicative and the applicative view cannot really do that you cannot compose applicative calls um like one after the other you can com like you can create one long applicative call from a simpler ones but you cannot pass one parameter from a call to the next one right so we kind of need to think how this can be done nicer but this will not work if we want to collect all the errors all right so that's it um it has been a little bit hard I guess uh and you do need to stir a little bit into the code so let me know what you think and we kind of discuss it a little bit more on on Thursday so that's it thank you thanks
GTL
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2023-03-14
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SMMDrfK76Hk
Kansas City Podcasting Meetup Featuring Suzy Chase
i'm assuming you're talking about emo's pizza you know we do have a couple of emails around here right now because that's chicago isn't it no no no not talking about emails okay i will okay unfortunately emotes is not good pizzas hey girl why how are you good how are you thanks for can you see me yes thank you for joining us yeah i'm so excited thank you for having me yes well i think um i'll just do a brief introduction of you and then i think we should introduce ourselves and and apparently you already have one one uh customer of the pod process so way to go uh-huh thank you david um anyway susie i i came across her article in the nkc magazine and i was like yay hometown girl does well uh and she's been podcasting for over 20 years it sounds like she she lived in prairie village and um it now lives in new york and has two very successful podcasts one for r b music called the groove and the other for cookbooks and tell me the name of that one again it's called cookery by the book cookery by the book i think his cute name um anyways she's very successful in what she does and she's also a podcast coach and uh has a big following and we're just thrilled to have her here for a little bit and thank you for sharing your time with us thank you i'm so happy i always love to talk to kansas city yay good well we can just kind of go around i'm regina newhan i'm a retired plastic surgeon and i um started just retired a little over a year ago and i started a podcast for patient education it's called plastic surgery decoded and so far it's just a singular voice just talking about different procedures each episode and at some point i'll run out of those and i'll probably switch it to an interview uh format but not quite there yet so uh mike you're next yeah so i'm mike chernowski i've actually run the podcasters group now haven't inherited it from our founder rob walsh uh i'm cur i my podcast i've done three so far my first one was called sunflower brew which i was just a producer on and that was bad kansas politics while drinking beer as one does yeah and i love it and there are all craft beers too so i found out the hard way i cannot stance the uh darker bears who can yes it's like drinking uh ash coffee yeah yeah then the second podcast i started was called winning side coaches that was more as me with a bunch of friends and we would talk about sports on the like sports discussion uh making uh wage wagers and everything and then my current podcasts which uh tomorrow is the two-year anniversary of my first recording for that podcast it's called this podcast is uncalled for i apparently work on the fourth season and uh that's more uh interviews based kind of an introspective type thing interviewing my friends talking about all my different interests and everything i got three episodes submitted for this year's casey fringe spool which will be entirely online again this year and uh and uh yeah definitely check that out if again cool great i think you're frozen are you are you only frozen for me yeah no yes okay yeah everyone's going everybody's frozen on my screen so uh it's just the opposite well david you want to introduce yourself sure my name is david aarondale a retired 40-year college history teacher actually have six podcasts that are rolling at this point wow um well you know if you were my coach i think you'd have a few words for me about that but i'm a uh they're all kind of educational um history related so let me just leave it at that but that's what i do with my time and we'll switch over to um mr anthony and also we need to check in with you susie is it okay if we record this and then share it with others this 15-minute section yeah totally yes yes yes okay well you should always ask those things anthony hi i'm anthony and by the way if you have more than 15 minutes we'll take it but yeah um i am a um software architect and just nerd uh based in kansas city i'm kind of weirdly podcast obsessed and i've been working on several over time one of the things i'm working on is actually building a self-hosting podcasting platform so i'm very focused on the tech side of it but um it's yeah it's been really cool and also uh doing what i can to kind of position myself as a little bit of a consultant for the podcasting industry itself so i have a couple of projects going on with different people right now um but when you build your own broadcasting platform it kind of prevents you from releasing podcasts because it's not done because you're building the airplane while you're flying it and that's not great so um i've been working on a podcast that i'm going to release somewhere else i'm not sure who i've chosen as the host i'm not sure exactly what i'm going to do as far as like ads or monetization but the one that i'm going to end up releasing first is actually the uh plant-based product review or pbpr.wtf and i don't know where that's gonna land but i've been a vegetarian for like 25 years so hopefully it's going to be a fun podcast about weird things that aren't meat that most people don't eat that's really cool and it's so hot now like yeah it's right yeah and there there aren't a lot of them either that's another thing that's the that's the thing you need it's perfect yeah and and the other thing is that the ones that are that i've looked at are fairly kind of dour yeah it's yeah it's a lot of self-righteous you know people that go to a lot of yoga classes and i'm very much the opposite of that i'm very much a junk food vegetarian so you know yeah and it turns off us meat eaters like i like we might want to be a vegetarian but if it's like preachy and finger waggy it's like oh well okay never mind no judgment no [ __ ] i'll tell you real quickly when my daughter was raised vegetarian when she was like four or five years old we were in line at a grocery store and the guy behind us was just buying nothing but bacon it was just like like slab after slamming bacon and she turned around and she said you shouldn't eat meat and i said uh he can eat whatever he wants you shouldn't eat meat and i said i'm really sorry he was cool with it but um that's a toughie in kansas city i know yeah pen house or something or mcgonagall's it's actually getting a lot better we've got some really good vegetarian and vegan places that have popped up and have survived the pandemic it's pretty great that's really good funny susie that we were just talking about barbecue before you came on so yeah oh my gosh where anthony was like oh god oh that's that's the joke regina's from st louis and i was talking about the year that i spent in st louis and i would like people would get disgusted with me because they're like okay you're from kansas city you don't eat the barbecue and you don't care about sports what are you doing from san francisco what's happening pretty much pretty much no it's it's way mellower than it used to be i'll i'll stop talking um just we should we should move ahead with this you're really time constrained susie i don't want to you know step on the door you have you know flexibility good yeah i didn't want to eat into your meeting or your our eating is because our meeting is very unstructured so our talk about thank you yeah it's fine we just bounce ideas off of each other and ask questions together and try to help each other basically so once a while yeah and once a while we'll get a program like this yeah where someone wants to give a presentation and everything soon yeah well susie's not gonna happen but but we can ask her questions and and um you know pick a brain a little bit if anybody wants to ask any questions um otherwise i have some but go ahead is there anything anybody's wondering i have one um what are you doing about this stuff with apple and having a channel uh and subscriber i know that's super complicated and if you want to just share 60 seconds with us that's okay i'm trying to understand it from my point of view uh having a channel and i'll explain more of this if others don't know it but not while you're here don't want to chew up your time but this whole thing about being able to showcase all of your podcasts together as a channel is kind of a cool idea and i guess that spotify may be doing this but this whole deal about uh also charging people to listen so we're not asking you to give away your trade secrets uh or anything like that or what you're considering because now i'm very similar i don't have any trade secrets i was like yeah no i don't have any trade secrets well um so what do you think about this thing that apple's doing and supposedly spotify is going to be doing later in the year i i don't want anyone else to deal with how i'm monetizing my podcast it makes me very uncomfortable that they're getting into it for you oh yeah you know yeah like i'll i'll do my own ads or my own patreon or my own whatever but why don't you you just host or you just uh you can just listen to my podcast on apple you don't have to purchase it and and i feel like at this point people are going to be really put off if they've been listening to your podcast for free for so long and now all of a sudden it's behind a pay wall so i feel like it's more in apple's best interest than it is the creators yeah what do you think well from what i've read it was their response the spotify which plans to do some version of this for free is everyone familiar with what we're talking about here at this point we can squeeze this down to 60 seconds yeah well i'm familiar with the the new idea of subscriptions i didn't realize that it would include you having your own channel for your podcast i just thought it was you know maybe it's the same thing you know but just subscriptions that people would potentially have to pay to listen to your podcast which podcast which i think i don't know might be a real turn off to a lot of people um and i i don't know i just feel like podcasts are these wonderful it's such a wonderful medium that is there for everybody buddy and it's equalized who has access to it and i even though it's gotten very popular i still consider it a fledgling medium and i feel like this might kind of ruin it a little bit but that's just me and i don't really have anything to base that on frankly can you give us any insight susie where things are going i try to keep up with the literature anthony keeps up with the literature and i won't speak for him but i get overwhelmed trying to understand where things are going i see a lot of money flowing around to some of the popular podcasters i see all of this aggregation going on where people are being purchased and put into distribution channels um can you give us any insight of what's going on with this well you know i'm not i don't work for apple or spotify so but i do i do think it's the flavor of the day now podcasting is so hot and so everyone's seeing the money but i think for us regular podcasters it'll still like nothing is changing we're still going to be able to get our advertising we're still going to be able to make money off of our podcast but i believe it's changing for the um the the big names and the big companies because they all want to get on top of the podcasting thing like the amazon thing and um but but i think for for us regular podcasters nothing's really changing right now that's just what i think where do your company and i'll get i'll quit asking questions regina because you've got a list for everybody my final question for now is um who hosts your podcast i'm i'm kind of naive i use lipson because it's kind of easy to follow um how do you do your two podcasts i like to own my ip at the end of the day so i have my podcast on squarespace i was on i started with libsyn when they started and i left i was with libsyn for like six seven years and i left them to be completely independent well i know anthony has strong feelings about that i mean i'm being respectful to you anthony because we've talked about that in previous things about owning the ip and obviously you've heard about what uh he's up to i guess i just need to go into mr google and have them help me understand i use squarespace for websites but you're using squarepage space for distributing your podcasts and i just need to learn a little more about how that works just from a curiosity point of view i'm probably just going to stay with lip sync because it's simple and easy for me except you're also checking out you know with all my podcasts i'm chucking out about 70 bucks a month to do lipson then that's a lot more expensive at the end of the year in comparison to what you're doing with squarespace because yes they're like what 140 to 190 a year something like that okay exactly and i think the only real difference is um with uh squarespace i had to submit my podcast everywhere you know to spotify and libsyn does it automatically it shoots it out everywhere um and the and the um analytics on squarespace aren't that robust but it's good enough for me um and i think those are really the only differences okay may i just throw in um that i also um do my podcast through square space um and that's just frankly from uh being naive and just starting out basically i started out what six months ago um and it seemed economical but it met my needs um and that's the way i do it right now and i'm curious susie that i was just going to ask you what you do about analytics because the analytics on squarespace are limited do you use another service to track for you or do you only look at squarespace analytics i only look at squarespace because it it it pulls everything in um you know so you have a subscriber count and yeah i'm looking for growth that's that's really what i'm i'm looking for that's like that's your benchmark that's all you need yeah yeah but it keeps going up yeah and they do break it down geographically so you can tell if you have listeners in china or something right yeah totally yeah um anthony did you want to say something else about ip owning and stuff like that or um yeah we don't have time for everything no when it comes to uh owning the ip that was the initial impetus for the platform that i was looking at so where what you're doing with squarespace you do own your ip and you are separate from all these other podcasting hosts it's a different business model with squarespace what i was looking at was a turnkey sort of thing that would drop onto any kind of cloud server so essentially you would self-host the podcast from your own server and if you're in business with me then i'm managing that and hopefully there's a value add for other services that go along with that but if you want to leave i will sign the server over to you and it's yours you have your own linux cloud server which is hosting your own podcast and it's it's all yours um i i think that there's a um i think there's a appetite for this i don't think it's huge but i think it's the no and the places like lipston have kind of bamboozled us to think like we need them we need them to shoot our podcasts out we need them but we don't really we don't really um and i think that's brilliant what you're doing i think it's really really smart cool that's a ringing endorsement i appreciate that um the one thing i wanted to point out like david said he and i have been exchanging email about some of this with spotify and apple and i'm way down in the weeds with various people in the industry on this right now so i'm i'm steeped in all of the details and like like i said i could waste all night talking about this but the the biggest thing that is a huge red flag with apple subscriptions is that apple is moving away from the rss feed in doing this they are using their own crawler now to go out and find things and they're not really hitting rss feeds from the app the way that they used to so it used to be that if you were using apple podcasts and you were subscribed to a podcast it would hit the rss feed directly and you would get an update for a new episode now it's only updating when the crawler hits it which is very very different and rss is the fundamental underpinning technology of podcasts and apple has moved away from that spotify's monetization efforts actually are preserving rss and it is weirdly much more democratic and sort of cross-platform and that you can opt in to spotify as a payment gateway and still be using rss the same way that you were before apple is moving away from that and that's an issue because as regina was saying podcasts have remained a fairly open communication channel for a long time and it's because it's based on a very democratic well understood open source technological underpinning and we've seen other areas change youtube sucked up and consolidated all the video it's very difficult to do anything with video if you're not on youtube facebook has essentially done that for social um well twitter less so but no one has done that to podcasting yet and this looks like an attempt to do that and it's it's disturbing especially coming from someone like apple that has the ability to really best things up i'll stop i get a lot more to say but i'll stop so um in the middle of the pandemic i hopped on this startup um a podcast platform startup to coach their creators and they said oh we want you to come on to our platform and i said great but they wanted me to change my rss feed so it looked like i was like not a team player because i didn't want to completely change my rss feed one of which i've had for 16 years and the other for six years to their rss so i i i cannot tell you how brilliant i think what you're doing is again wow thank you that's great would you like to be my client yeah [Laughter] do i have to change my rss feed never never maybe no that's the whole thing and um rss was conceived of as a completely open platform that anybody could contribute to and anybody could do anything they wanted with it and um i've been involved with the uh podcast index guys the podcast 2.0 i don't know if you guys i probably talked about this before but do you know anything about podcast index or podcasting 2.0 no no okay um so again i i don't want to go down a rabbit hole on this too deeply but um it was an effort by a few people to create an independent podcast index separate from apple separate from google separate from all of these other wait that was um i'm waiting for it okay uh yes come on adam curry yes that's it yeah it's adam curry so if you guys remember adam curry the guy with the terrible metal hair um he was one of my least favorite vjs back in the 80s he like went on a tear through the 90s and started all these tech companies and sold them off and did a ton of different things he's the guy that actually registered the domain mtv.com because mtv wouldn't do it and then they sued him for it yeah i listened to him in 05. i listened to him in 04 and he was so good well they call him the podfather he's credited as being like the the og podcaster yeah so he started okay now i gotta tell the story so i'm just totally eating up susie's time but no what happened was about a year ago i can't even remember how this popped up on my radar but um adam was starting up this independent podcast index and the idea was to have an independent index separate from all of these other players who might do something terrible like turn their index off which is kind of what it looks like apple's about to do because they're they're not using it internally anymore and um it was adam and this developer out of alabama dave jones that he works with and they had a call out to developers to help them with this and i jumped in and did some stuff with them and did some consulting early on and i'm still in contact with those guys and um it's almost a self-fulfilling prophecy the idea was that they needed to get this thing done in case apple shut it down and now that it's there and there's like three and a half million podcasts in podcast index it looks like apple is shutting it down in response almost it's like now there is something else so we don't have to provide public stuff anymore and the irony like the triple irony in this is that back in 2005 steve jobs summoned adam curry to cupertino do you know the story susie yes i do it's so good yeah and he was like he was like um we're gonna put podcasts into itunes give us your index and adam curry had been maintaining a private index of like 15 or 20 000 podcasts at that point and that was the basis for um apple podcasts was the index that adam curry had made so now it's like full circle he's like taking it back he crawled apple speed pulled everything out of it they've added a ton of stuff on top of it so um when i'm talking about doing like software development and industry involvement consulting and this kind of thing this is part of what i'm involved in is you know talking about these guys yeah it's it's it's awesome it's kind of cool to be inside and kind of see how stuff is happening but um yeah it's a lot of fun i every once in a while i get to uh you know get on social media with adam curry and we get to complain about people that that aren't good at what they do adam's got a lot of opinions and i don't know that i was obsessed with his podcast but in o5 when he was married to that older lady in and they were in like holland or somewhere yeah wow he like rode he uh flew airplanes around yeah yeah he's he had a helicopter company for a while he's dutch so he he actually was born there he speaks come on but okay but that lady was like 30 years older than he was what's wrong with that it was weird anywho i'm okay with that i don't judge but anyway yeah it's a lot of fun yeah to be able to like ben adam's ear every once in a while is uh wild it's like oh yeah this guy on mtv that i couldn't stand as a bj now he's like a guy i talk to you on social media that's funny um by the way i do want to say up front i do not share his politics so he's he's a very kind of libertarian right-leaning kind of guy and i'm not so um we're pals despite that that's good and that's that's like the world should be i'm so glad you guys knew about adam curry i'm gonna stop talking now we go back to susie she's our guest well that's oh did we lose my oh well uh well susie i had some just some basic questions um uh much less sophisticated but um i you know just for my podcast i i'm still not monetized yet i'm kind of hoping for there he is hoping for a bigger sponsor that is industry related and so right now i'm just kind of producing my podcast as a labor of love which is fine but i want to ask you when you were first starting out in the world of podcasting when and how did you start finding ways to monetize your podcast or actually not monetize just even just market your podcast um what did you do early on so um early i came from i don't know if any of you know karen adler in kansas city i know who she is yeah um so i worked for her as her cookbook publicity big pig something yeah pig out publications yes yes publications yeah and so i came to new york city to be a cookbook publicist um so i knew about publicity and that was the thing i sent out a press release about my podcasts oh cool far and wide and back then you know it really wasn't the internet or emailing or much you know but now you can send your one sheet anywhere um to get someone's attention or to have them on your show it's a really really great marketing tool to have a one sheet with your logo your picture some stats um a little bit about your show and just send it out far and wide and send it locally send it to in kansas city magazine cool cool yeah yeah that's a fun idea yeah so that's a it's a good way and and if um someone doesn't uh write about you um you'll gain a new listener yeah yeah that's a good way to think about it yeah thank you we've got tracy oh she popped in okay i do apologize for that my computer was acting up there so if if i could real quickly um when it comes to promotion there's something new that i've encountered that um i've worked for ad agencies before i didn't know about this until recently but one of the people i'm working with on a project is sort of like the podcast ad tech wizard and um there's a concept of upfronting with advertising where you would basically pitch a season of content to advertisers and try to pre-sell it like this is what it's going to be this is how much the ads are going to be and he's been doing this as up next as a series of podcasts where people are creating a podcast really it's two episodes one is the pitch and the second one is the exemplar podcast like this is the one i want to highlight and my season is going to be x number of episodes this is the price that i'm looking for this kind of thing and trying to engage a sponsor early on and if you want to look into this the person who's doing this his name is brian barletta yeah do you know him i know of him you know often okay not sure if that's a good thing you kind of look like i don't know here's my problem with that though is to get advertising or you have to have listeners so i don't know how he's like spinning this advertising just on some kind of idea of a podcast without having the community yeah it's it's hard to say i mean brian has cultivated a fair amount of community around his expertise in ad sales so well at tech i should say um i i'm not directly involved in it i'm not trying to monetize a podcast at the moment but um i thought it was interesting um that is an interesting idea it is yeah well it sounds like the way that you promote television shows that that's that's that's exactly what it is it's an adaptation you know you've made a that's right yeah and that's why it works on tv shows he's trying to say that it could work on podcasts interesting he's choosy too like i'm assuming he doesn't just get anyone it's a good question i don't know actually i'm in full disclosure i'm in early stages of starting a project with him and evotera on doing some podcast data processing uh we're looking at some stats and ways of processing and doing trend forecasting and that kind of thing so that's a consulting gig i have that brian's involved in but i've been following brian for a while on social media listening to his podcast and that sort of thing but yeah i don't really know did he approach you yeah no okay here's my thing with pot like it's a it's a big boys club and and they kind of stick together yeah you think really [Laughter] yeah well that would be go ahead would that prevent you from having a conversation with brian no no no see i thought it's really funny i have a tentative meeting schedule with those guys for tuesday and i figured that i would start the meeting by saying okay well it's three white guys with beards and glasses talking about podcasts so you know it's pretty standard that's it but that's it though and that's why i'm a woman talking about it and i've been in podcasting for 16 years and i i maybe know of like one other woman who's been in podcasting for 16 years but it it's so true that like men are kind of uh dominating podcasting um discussions and and talk are you on clubhouse not exactly um i'm actually i'm gonna out myself here um i'm actually an android user so i'm waiting for this well you can get on this week they just started i know and i'm waiting for the invite i've done everything but get the invite to do it um i have done twitter spaces which is kind of similar and uh yeah you're not you're not wrong about the ethnic and sort of gender skew i mean that's the joke is that every podcast is you know two guys talking about the internet on the internet so it's it's not wrong at all i i will say though in brian's defense brian was looking for some guest writers to help with the newsletter that he puts out and he was specifically looking for women people of color and people with disabilities that's who he was trying to find and he recently had a hearing impaired woman talk at length in the newsletter about accessibility issues and what she deals with as a podcaster and a podcast consumer which i thought was pretty valuable that's really right that's really good if i can jump in just for a moment i'll not disclose everything i've learned from your 59 inexpensive podcaster training module it actually is pretty cool and i'll make sure to put a review up whenever i get done but you mentioned just going off of that issue you mentioned in there that you make transcripts and you work with this outside company for five cents a minute which sounds really very very reasonable where how are you using the transcripts because regina and i talked before you just provide those upon requests for an accessibility reason i do it for many reasons one for accessibility um i put it on my website on squarespace so that's where you find them for every episode then yes and also i make it i turn it into an interview that i post on medium and it's really really good for seo which is search engine engine options yeah i'm still learning uh but when you said you put it on medium what is that it's a website with articles um like uh you can go and read tons of art it's medium.com you can read articles about different things that people are writing about lots of podcasting articles i didn't know that either actually i'll tell you what i'll not make you describe more i'll just go to the site and i'll learn about it but that's how you're leveraging that uh transcript is that you provided upon request you post to your uh website like you must make like a page for each episode uh no it's um you can um look at cookerybuythebook.com you can listen and then you can follow along all on the same page okay okay i'll go in there and i'll take a look at that sounds very interesting um i distribute some pdfs with my podcast and sometimes um i'll have as many people downloading the pdf as listening to the podcast it's you can't tell who's who could be the same person but people have a real hunger for these uh pdfs and what you're talking about that's that was an excellent idea uh but i'll not disclose anything else that's within it it's fine no but it's really it's a very accessible system um that you worked with some developers on it was really quite sophisticated so anyway enough of that are you talking about my course yes i don't know i that that i was well that's your course isn't it yeah it's my course but i didn't work with developers i i did my course in my 14 year old he's my developer oh my god but they i will tell him he'll be thrilled oh absolutely well now you've opened the floodgates it is really nice um because you make the you make it an accessible um topic that's terribly complicated and i find that for the most part the podcasting books that are out there don't meet my need um and i won't take time to say disparaging things about it i don't know well you know they do what they do but they don't tell me i've told the story to the people here before on how i went to a podcast meetup in kansas city and all people wanted to do was drink i asked them i need some help on audio balancing i don't quite understand some stuff and one guy just got in my face and said hey you learned it on your own no one helped me i'm not helping you i went this is a podcast meetup group um but they certainly enjoyed their wine um david that's how we do in bars here in kansas city you ask for podcasting help we're going to like step to it yeah for contact yeah it's all for context that we did used to meet up at uh johnny's tavern all the time before my time is that uh this particular giant's tavern was on in south overland park 119th and uh almost metcalf i think there are a couple of them yeah yeah so this was not true i found i went to one of the johnny's meetups and i found it really helpful yeah um so thank you for helping about the how you use transcripts that's really interesting and i'll learn more um and i may even take your course on how to use garageband i swear to god i do not understand the current version of garageband i have version 6.0.5 installed on my apple computer i had to uh delete the garageband and delete a photo and i got a copy of um oh it was part of a four pack it was life pack or something that apple used to sell and that's what i used to make my podcast with is version 6.0 but i swear to god they've got too many knobs so you may end up getting me to do that with you because there's there's really no help even on youtube on how to be able to use garageband to make podcasts i'm sure it must be great for people who have music groups but they totally dumped support for people like me on podcasting and i just don't get it i kept thinking maybe there's a plug-in somewhere that allows you to adapt it and i won't say much more because that's one of your services but i very well may follow up because i've got to be careful with my apple um computer because it keeps asking whether you want to update the ios and if you do then that software will no longer work i have two imacs in the house and i went ahead and and upgraded on one and it wiped out that garageband version but downstairs i just had to be careful about not updating the ios or s i'll lose that you know at the apple store you know in overland park or the plaza you can take a whole garage band class you guys have those there right i'm sure absolutely yeah i don't know about minneapolis but yeah oh i'm sure that there are and i need to do that i'm still curious about your course um but i i and i appreciate you saying well david there's the free version over here um i just have some transportation issues i don't drive anymore they have very strict rules on eyesight up here in minneapolis or in minnesota so um but anyway thanks for the reminder about that yeah sometimes it's nice to have very tailored experience to your particular needs well because you're talking about your one-on-one thing but yeah i'm more than happy to help you out just like cutting and pasting and it's not it's nothing crazy it's just it's such a different experience i just gave up and then i came up with this other version of jail breaking i guess my uh ios computer to get that software on but anyway thank you for that so anyway that's how i make my podcasters i do them on garageband and i do too and i even went through the learning curve on the anchor um podcast software and i won't ask you to give a professional evaluation of it it is interesting that it's kind of like legos you can just kind of snap these pieces together for intro music you talk uh sound effects and then exit music and then you can have music underneath your podcast but oh my god if you go and hit the button to put spotify music on then your podcast is um only available for people who pay the monthly fee for the spotify music very clever marketing they're out to get us well anyway you didn't need to hear that story but you know it's free so i'm respectful to that well mike um we've all been chattering away here um mike yeah i'm i'm i'm still here i'm just letting you guys talk uh okay because i've got nothing to add to the discussion right now anthony okay well thank you what's up um anthony i i wanted a susie honey hey tony hey new guy what's up we can't hear you tony you're muted i mean that's that's the 2021 word you're muted i just saw this on my computer screen and thought i'd go be nosy i didn't plan on it just like i'm glad you're here hey tony we're talking to susie chase who is a very successful podcaster who's originally from kansas city so we're just picking our brain a little bit wow i don't know how i got on here but maybe it was a blessing in disguise yeah well good to see you anthony what were you trying to say uh i was going to ask susie um i have not benefited from your course and i don't want you to give anything away that's valuable but i would really like to know what is your like production tool chain what software do you use what hardware do you use how much of your process can you reveal well no i can tell you everything um so i record i'm i'm very simple and this is what i tell people it doesn't cost a lot of money to podcast or to edit i record on skype and audio hijack and then i um separate the tracks on audacity i drag it over to garageband i cut it up and i mess with the sound and make it better and then i put it out it's so simple so why do you start with audacity and then go to garageband because i i um separate the tracks and i need to raise or lower the volume on um you know my guest or me and then i bring them back together and i go to garageband so does garageband not do that i would assume it did yeah well i don't i i don't do it in garageband i'm not again i'm not throwing [ __ ] i'm just curious i did a whole presentation on audacity so i was like you know a weird audacity power user and um no i was just curious so as far as like physical gear usb mic audio interface what are you using i have an audio technica 2020 usb mic um that's it i do it in my dining room at my dining room table that's my schtick and yeah with you know excuse me you interview people through skype then skype and audio hijack okay i don't know what audio hijack is i'll look it up it's a software that voiceover people use and it makes uh the the skype sound better and so i turn i i turn off the video to make the audio sound better um it's a very inexpensive way you can do a podcast remotely cool you also throw what on your table to help absorb the sound i thought that was very clever a comforter yeah because you don't want to try to go and do it in a closet i do mine yeah the closet is the best place but i live in new york city oh yeah wow your whole apartment's a closet right but i thought that was very clever about how you did that um and you're very happy with the sound absorbing from the uh the cloth on the table yeah that's cool totally i'm using a towel yeah you know i anyway it's what i dairy cloth all those little nubbies will catch the sound very good awesome anybody else have any questions before let poor susie go it's susie it's been such a delight and we're just thrilled that you were agreeable to come chat with this little humble kansas city group so where did everyone go to high school we were talking about that earlier so i didn't go to high school in kansas city yeah that's that's not a kansas city question that's a st louis question who who amongst us is originally from kansas city then well i'm from olathe so right here close enough yeah overland park and uh shiny mission west in case anyone wants another high school suit oh that was a hated high school for us we competed against them oh yes we did yeah um probably lost we didn't uh which just north east and south when i was there well i'm so old there was only one high school and there was olathe well now it's called north but we alumni refuse to use that word because now there's five high did a schools uh west yeah so your school was susie did you go to school and cancel i went to um scion and then they asked me to leave and then i went to bishop miesh okay then yeah yeah nice i used to live by bishop miege a great little area oh it's so cute over there very good well thank you thank you susie i'm just is there anything next on your horizon is there some project that you're working on that you want to share or not really well i just no goodbye um i signed on to i don't know if you've heard of fireside it's an it's another clubhouse audio thing oh cool it's mark cuban's thing and so i signed on with them in march waiting for it to launch and i've been doing test shows on there it's supposed to mark cuban calls it um podcasting 2.0 oh so we will see oh that's exciting good luck thank you i'm sure you'll be a success if it would ever launch well you know whole other thing little glitches happen and we just have to get through yeah part of the problem might be that he's stepping on two different brands with that podcasting 2.0 is podcast index and fireside is firesighted on fm which is dan benjamin's podcast hosting platform so yeah they you know they think that he's just gonna he's gonna buy the other fireside that's what i've been hearing around the in the air i hope so it'd be awesome if dan benjamin you know could level up to uh you know extra big mcmansion in austin be cool yeah that would be really cool for him because you know you had you have to think i i i have to imagine mark thought i mean mark knew that company was around don't i mean he he had to well you you'd think so um i've registered a lot of domains and i usually do a google search first and yes you think you could afford that yeah maybe that level of due diligence so yeah perhaps by the way if you um if you need a um software nerd consultant developer you should totally hit me up just saying and if you need a female podcaster on a board of some sort of podcasting board hit me up nice that's very generous i think every podcasting board needs that representation is candy [Music] well susie thank you so much thank you look at how dark it is it's so dark in my room now we saw your black cat cross the path and oh they were fighting i had to throw my glasses oh my god oh gosh thank you guys it was so nice meeting everyone yes thank you very much so generous with your time we really appreciate it so all right if you ever get bored we're here every second wednesday so watch out yeah the third wednesday in july okay i'm gonna write that down i'll bring my craft beer [Laughter] and i'll give a plug for all of your products after you leave the room oh thank you thank you so much take care bye okay bye-bye all right that was fun thank you regina for sending it out for us yeah it was just total serendipity you just happened to be reading that magazine and thought hey how about this oh good deal that was fun you
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Allah Facets of Islam - Yusuf Estes
Islam like a precious gem has many beautiful facets explore with us now the facets of Islam I'm Yousef Estus your host on facets of Islam and today I would like to talk about one of the most important facets of all Islam and that's the subject of God who is God where is God how do we know that there is a God Is there proof I've often reflected from the Bible and more recently from the Quran about the teachings offered about the God the god of the universe in the Arabic language he's called Allah in the Hebrew language we find a similar root something referred to even now as IL or L an Aramaic Allah and even in the Old Testament we find reference to yahawah we find reference in the New Testament to Eloy and Eli all of these can be related related to the characteristics of the one true God in Arabic the word Allah comes from IL ilw means something worship anything you worship is an Ela a rock a stick a stone or a bone can be an Ela to somebody a star the moon the sun whatever is worshiped is the IL the plural is ala the gods but when we use the word Allah this is unique and it's special because everything in Arabic language has gender such as the sun the moon trees rocks Stones anytime you mention something you're going to find it has gender with it even a fly has gender she an ant she the Sun the moon all of the different things are going to have male or female gender attached to it we don't say it when we refer to Allah LA and that's the only reason why Muslims use the word he when they speak about Allah we don't say it there isn't really a way to say it referring to Allah in Arabic but the word Allah also has no gender it's not male it's not female another interesting thing about this word is it can't be made plural I already showed you the plural of God ala Gods but Allah cannot have allahs for instance it just doesn't work there only one so the word itself means the only one to be worshiped not male not female never plural this the meaning of the word before I go any further I already know there are going to be those who are going to say hold on a second I bought a Quran at the store the other day or somebody gave me the Quran and in the Quran it clearly says he he he over and over he it says right here ha ha means he it says it well as I just explained we don't say it about our law so we say he out of respect dignity honor for the only God to worship okay but wait a minute another question hold on it says we created the heavens and earth call which means we created says we ah hm how do you deal with that well actually it says in the Quran many times we our us so how do we resolve that how are we going to come up with an answer for this clearly plural yes no as a matter of fact this is called the Royal we whenever a king or a queen decree a decree they say we this is well known it's been established for centuries and centuries that the one who is the dictator or the main one in charge over everything he uses this kind of statement we we declare the following we but he means me myself and I just me in the same way Allah uses this Royal we it's found in English it's found in Arabic and it's also found in Hebrew so that we don't misunderstand I want you to know the word itself Allah is the perfect name to use for the almighty now some people might say and I've heard it said that Allah has nothing to do with the god of the Bible that's incorrect it's very Incorrect and the person saying this obviously has no knowledge of it because in fact you can verify what I just told you real easy by going to the B Bible in any hotel or motel the Bibles that are placed there are put there by a group called the gidan society and the beginning of each one of their Bibles has a description of the languages that they have also translated the Bible to the first language they give you the example of is called Africans language the second one is Arabic and in the Arabic language it gives you a sample of the Bible John chapter 3 verse 16 and it says real clear the verse that everybody knows it for God so loved the world it's how it starts out for God so loved the world the word in Arabic is Allah so if if you know that the Arabs today that are Christians and there are many Christian Arabs if you know they say Allah and Arabic is an ancient language then you have to agree H there's some validity to what I'm saying also if you go to the Jewish book in Arabic and that would be for any Arabs who happen to be Jews you can open it up page one and the word Allah in Genesis is there 17 times on the first page Allah Allah Allah Allah Allah Al it's right there you can read it so if Arab Jews and if Arab Christians are using this word Allah and you understand the meaning of it then why would you continue to use the word God because the word God didn't exist at the time of any of the prophets you see the English language is where we get this word god from and the English language didn't exist even a thousand years ago it wasn't until the Normans invaded the Saxons and at that time implemented this language called anglish for the anglicans and that's where it came from this word god so nowhere in all the history of all the monotheistic religion will you find this word God but you will find this word L IL Allah and Allah and this was used by the prophets now that I've established the source of the word let's talk about what it actually means and how we understand it the concept of Allah in Islam is that God God is one he's unique he has no partners he existed before all other of the creation he is the only Creator all that's created is created by him and he's the only provider the only sustainer of everything nothing exists except that he created it and nothing continues except that he allows it to continue he has full and complete power total control at all times of everything in other facets of Islam programs that we've had episodes we've talked about this we've even mentioned from the Quran his description of himself being the ever living self-subsisting that he never needs to rest or sleep all that's in the heavens and earth belongs to him and that there's none that's going to come between him and his creation except that he has to give him permission that he has full knowledge of everything that exists everywhere in the universe and that you have no knowledge at all except the knowledge that he gives you it even continues by saying he never gets weary from taking care of all of his creation he's Mighty Majestic and Powerful over all things this is more or less a partial translation from a number 255 in Chapter 2 of the Quran Surah bakar the cow many statements of Allah in the Quran indicate immediately that this is from the one and only creator of the universe he tells us from the very beginning in the name of Allah the all merciful the all gracious most merciful most gracious most benevolent so many words we try to come up for that we've spoken about his names in other episodes but who is this Allah and he's telling us he created everything now here's a question here's a good question for you if Allah is the only Creator and there isn't anything else that he didn't create is Allah good answer is yes says so in the Quran is Allah La ever bad of course not never so then who created evil because if there's evil in the world and you said that God is the only Creator where did Evil come from ah there's a good question and I'm going to let you think about it think about that one while we take a break we're going to come back and give you the answer to that and some other questions about Allah in the next part of our episode facets of Islam stay right there we'll be right back Salam alaykum we're back as youfest this your host here on facets of Islam we've been talking about Allah the god the one and only we've explained already the meaning of the word Allah and a little bit about the aspects or the facets here of his characteristics his his attributes then we came to a question when we went to break and the question was is God good yes God is good God is pure okay great is there evil in the world world yes there is where did it come from did God put evil in the world if so is God evil oh good question the answer is in the Quran the answer is real clear if you go through the 114 chapters of the Quran you constantly see how Allah is telling you that he's the only God to worship that that he's all merciful he is all loving he's alud the loving God he's pure and he's good but he also tells you where evil comes from he tells you clearly but I'll take you to one reference at the end and then we'll go back to the beginning the end of the Quran chapter 113 next to the last it goes something like this I'm going to stop right there because he gave you the answer he's telling you to say I seek Refuge with the Lord of Daybreak from the evil of that he created the Lord of Daybreak of course is the law he's the Lord of everything but you say I seek Refuge with the Lord of Daybreak from the evil of he created evil was created by Allah whoa hold on now let's go back to the second chapter of the Quran go all the way back to number two and look at verse 102 in the translation it's going to tell you about two angels that God sent down to the people of Babylon and he ordered the angels to war warned the people about something they had called sah magic so the Angels told them we're coming with something here called Magic sah but don't use it this is the test don't use it it's bad and it's the kind of magic that can make a husband and wife separate in divorce it's the kind of magic that can make things happen in people's lives it's something here you got to be careful of don't use it and they taught him magic the two angels they're called harut and marut and they're mentioned right there go look it up read it for yourself chapter 2 verse 102 now right away you're going to say and all the other episodes of facets of Islam you guys have been telling us over and over and over there's only one God he has all the power there is no none to worship but him Magic's not real um Superstition isn't for real but now all of a sudden here you've got in your book and you're ah what are you saying we're saying that Allah sent down this as a test it's not really really magic what it is is something that Allah allows to happen because everything always happens by his permission in one of our other episodes when we spoke about K we understood that there isn't anything that happens except by his permission totally and completely from him the life that we live in is a test and he's put good things in this life and bad things in this life and he's given us the choice without the evil without these superstitions magic and so on then the choice wouldn't be the same would it now let's come to the subject of prophets prophets have Miracles oh look here's a prophet who threw a stick down it became a snake a prophet who hit the water it split and the people walked through the water a prophet that had a rock that split open and a camel came out of it another Prophet who brought the dead back to life and another Prophet who was able to cure the sick and the lame and make them be able to walk again somebody's blind and now they can see oh oh doesn't that mean these prophets maybe they have some kind of powers with the law huh but in fact that's not true every case that we find of about these prophets mentioned in Quran says that they only did it by the permission of Allah he let it happen we call it maaja or a miracle but really it's from Allah his permission anything that happens happens by his permission have you ever heard Muslims talk they say mashallah mashah you know what it means it means because Allah willed for this to happen oh somebody got a good job mashallah because Allah willed oh somebody had a new baby today oh mashah because Allah will anytime you see anything you say masallah somebody got sick we say mashah it's from Allah but may Allah give them shifa or the Cure because the Cure also is only with Allah we understand as Muslims nothing happens except by the permission of Allah one of the things we know in Islam that sometime people could be praying and asking for something and there was something horrible coming to right toward them right toward them but then Allah diverted it and it went away and they never had it happen they didn't even know what it was they didn't know it took place so it's always important for us to keep asking Allah turning to Allah seeking refuge in Allah from the evil that he created and from the evil inside ourselves because every one of us has within us the capability to do evil oh yes we all have that it's so easy isn't it oh you don't know how mad I can get you don't know how bad I can be have you heard people say things like that you just don't know how bad I can be that's not too smart is it I don't hear people say too often you don't know how good I can be oh I can be better than this well do it let's do that let's focus really you and I let's focus on seeing how good we can be instead of how evil whoever does anything good for the sake of God for Allah he knows that and it's recorded and it's with him don't worry about that but whoever does any evil and he doesn't repent from that he's going to have to answer for that on the day of judgment because in the final analysis everything is going to be judged only by Allah he tells us in the Quran about those people who come to the right belief and they do the good deeds and he tells us that the reward is with them the AZ will be with them and they'll find it on the day of judgment it's going to be there waiting for them and he says that he's the one going to be there for that judgment and he asks us isn't Allah the best of all the judges and he tells us in the Quran that from Allah you came and to Allah is the return and that doesn't mean that you came out of Allah and you're going into Allah it means you were in front of Allah in the beginning and you're going to be back in front of him again at the end he asked all of us when we were in the backbone of Adam he asked us am I not your lord and we all said yes then he made us to forget that we don't have any memory of it in Arabic we're called insan which means from the same root as the word nasia anasia I forgot the one that's created to forget the human inside has forgotten that he's been in front of his Lord and he forgets that he's going to be in front of his Lord again and throughout the Quran Allah tells us over and over of Allah remember Allah don't forget to remember Allah remind each other about Allah encourage and exhort each other to remember the H of Allah remember think realize Allah is reminding you and telling you to remind each other think about Allah be afraid of Allah how are you stealing when you know Allah is watching you how are you cheating and you know he's listening to every word you're saying how is it that you could go out here and commit these sins adultery drinking smoking cheating lying killing how can you do all of these things knowing you're in the presence of almighty God how in Allah is as close to you as your jug vain but he's never in his creation he comes in the last part of the night to take the prayers of the Believers but still he's not like his creation we don't compare him to the creation he's not like anything he says and there is nothing like unto him anywhere any time any place and he is unique Ahad Ahad Ahad and this is the word which means uniquely one in Arabic and if you believe that Allah is uniquely one and that he's the only God and you believe that you need to turn to him then do it now do it before it's too late nobody knows how long they going to live and only Allah lives forever this is one of the most important facets of Islam allahum
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Petey Aprendendo Português - Dia 417
all right let's start the show [Music] all right everybody welcome to peter up and then deport the gays yeah that's how we doing wow you're in two what did you earn 20 000 xp oh my god so here's what we're gonna do here's a high five tube buddy high five good for you [Music] so okay so here's the rush here's where we gotta go i don't think any anybody's gonna show up tonight but anyways so we are we're still at one hour or is it like less than an hour we're either way we're fighting to get somebody back in the 29th place because i think this mic guy is gonna be uh yeah i think he's just accepted his fate at this point so 382 i got to get at least 100 today but even then you know there are people still battling for their spot so i think i'm gonna go maybe get 150 for today all right so expectations are established and look at that see it's that one day that really really messed it up for the rest of the week also yesterday i was kind of like yeah you don't have to do 100 today i kind of do now so let's see how we can do this most effectively i'll start off slow and i think i'll do a couple of story times as we go four out of nine yeah let's just go right into absorb three or six uh [Music] um i think it's ah yeah it is uh because it would the sows are usually [Music] um okay hey how's it going ruby i miss you too i really do i hope you're doing wonderful you know um it's been so long what have you been doing with work i mean you probably yeah you got you got so much going on let me know on discord too but i'd love to talk about it here i didn't know you switched to twitch already i'm also on d live and tro trovu there are links in the description if you want to follow me there but good to see you buddy what is it can i help can i change the channel um this is not a mission impossible open your mind though [Music] what's up erica how you doing everybody's here amazing i think it's a margin the margin see i've said it like the english version uh daily and menia eminia principal there we go i'm glad your cousin's safe erica h [Music] my television has one good channel capacitance she is capable work okay in any position in any position i got to remember qualcare is any remember that mr mr ruby miguel she has the capabilities oh just the capabilities she is the capabilities no it has capabilities okay [Music] as of now there is no margin of error [Music] um i cannot talk i'm on a mission this is a prize for good comportamento comportamento behavior [Music] foreign i cannot leave my post ellie reached she go she go uh [Music] so there we go his behavior is my main concern amazing oh whoops i forgot the r so you can make the cashew i did i'm sorry that i'm taking a long time to respond erica i'm like i'm falling behind she has the has the capabilities to work in any position [Music] um all right i cannot talk i'm on a mission to here let me say that again um [Music] uh what's that what's the highest popsicle that looks like posto posto is position pasto not in paresa okay mice out of my sato i'm rushing deadly oh god reached shigo arrived uh reached okay this is wrong poster mice autonomous [Music] mice we'll just put that idly um mice in placer [Music] alto oh my okay posto mice alto is what i'm going to put not in and place uh and then ellie should go see how i'm breaking it down this actually helps so um ruby if you're still watching um wait uh let me actually i'll there we go we got um i still owe you a battle once diamond and pearl comes out the remakes i'm gonna develop a team i'm gonna be more involved with the mainline pokemon go or pokemon games i'm gonna take a break from pokemon go and i'm gonna prep my team live um i don't know if i should do it live but i do want to have a team going so then i could fight you i i i need to because i need to beat your team and um that was pretty atrocious but we still did it so that's better than nothing we've got 39 xp away from our daily goal i'm not too concerned about that because what's most important and what's most important of all is that we're up to 417 days on our daily streak we're keeping the flame going we are keeping it alive be sure to subscribe on all of my channels youtube twitch d live and trove erica um you know about my youtubes definitely ruby you know about my youtubes and use on twitch too that's pretty fancy i didn't know that and uh i probably did but it's i'm i have the memory of a goldfish sometimes but i also have d live and trovoo so check that out and uh once i reach 500 subscribers on whatever platform they uh will let me to let me be on i'll make a special music video 500 subscribers that's going to be a special thing but uh kudos to 417 let's keep going i do not want to get demoted and i have an hour left and i have to listen to this voice message so bear with me uh i'm going gonna mute my microphone for a sec uh let's see let's do uh actually can i mute i'm gonna mute myself really quick just uh give me a sec [Music] a [Music] meaning [Music] sorry i had to listen to a message red and milk i couldn't wait either i don't know why i'm like that but uh hopefully you didn't hear that um nina we're gonna just plow right through this bread and boy menina so e is the same pronunciation as spanish as it is with with english or sorry with portuguese but it's spelled differently e is y in spanish e is just e you know like ee like the meme i'm a boy uh woman oh wait oh wait okay i am i also saw oppai the father of my son i am the i have my daughters i am the my daughter's father oh i am the father of my daughter i am the daughter of my fa my that's so confusing i'm flipping everything around [Music] agua [Music] drink water come on [Music] um and then i make a biblical joke there got a perfect score for that one of course because we've done it so many times 29 away from the daily goal guaranteeing 10 xp for that one let's see what our placement is are we doing good are we doing awful we're in 28th place okay how much time we got we still have an hour oh boy so we still got some i don't know if i should go really quickly with that or should i because i think i think i'm gonna sneak attack this where last minute i do two story times i'll do a two-parter story time and then whatever i do before that time i think i'll yeah that'll be the good game plan i i got a game plan now so we're good to go i'm really white i need to get a 10 before i go oh yeah by the way i'm going to brazil so uh good news for me let's do magikall i like that one yesterday or gao [Music] ah [Music] diagnostico oh wait i didn't do an a uh oh hospitality of 40 doses quadrant doses is it really spelled it's a cognate okay that's great the gravity esteem the private clinic this is a private client a dozen oregon [Music] this the hospital received 40. how severe is that disease in case oh sorry in case [Music] okay any man can make this diagnosis [Music] boom be an emergency uh to work chaba yet chubby yar new aim so uh if you're still there uh ruby let me know and can i still call you ruby or can i call you by your real name reveal it for everybody but if oh man [Music] so i don't know if he's still there but he's if he's leaving me uh playing that's still hey it's still the view and um what was i going to say if you've noticed my results because you haven't been uh saying hello for a while if you've noticed my i've gotten i've improved a little bit two people were injured but not severely but not severely two people were injured um i started work at the clinic yesterday erica says my dad gave me nerf bullets you have a wonderful dad give him a medal for me you get the pd seal of approval all right that's top tier dad let's talk to your dadding right there i approve just don't shoot the you have a cat right don't shoot the cat be sure to be safe with them too [Music] to work oh wait it's i think that's how you spell it clinica [Music] at a clinic [Music] at [Music] so i have to break it down like this all comes [Music] and that was probably 11 plus plus 11. that wasn't bad okay it was plus 13. not bad at all but we definitely gotta get up there to at least um 400 i think so we don't want to agitate too many people it's like poking a hornet's nest when it comes to you know trying to get get the good spot hola okay we're one away from catching up to gail and then that'll make us wait a minute okay and then after gail we'll go to bremeda and i love this profile picture it's a it's a duo owl with a baguette learning french i've talked to a lot of brazilian people and it's lately and it's it's really like most of the conversations i've talked to them about is like hola irish and then it's just back and forth like that every day i like that i mean i like the the practice on that those phrases but i got those pretty much down listen fella put the gates with the fame yeah i'm talking to somebody from uh from uh uh twitch in the comments section there's somebody from youtube talking to me as well what what does fr mean all right we gotta we gotta stop procrastinating all right we're gonna go to let's go to no let's not do phrases yeah i mean a lot of texting apps it's like what else do you talk about other than uh you know hello how are you that's how you get ghosted on online dating though so you have to be more creative and i've become such a wordsmith from online dating you know how's it going erica you're heading to bed are you gonna show your nerf gun be safe with that nerf gun okay um but you have a good night if you're going to bed i think it's a school night yeah go to bed okay uh let's do phrases let's do this really quick agua por favor [Music] ciao [Music] hey good after noon oh is he heading out no he's not heading now uh thanks obrigado congratulations no no no no sing obrigado [Music] hey [Music] congratulations i don't know if i spelled congratulations right [Music] all right we got another perfect score there uh we got 10 xp away from our daily goal and we're in 20th place still um here let me let me respond to you real quick reply okay we're we're 59 minutes in so we're below the hour mark so we're at 355. 360 is ricky so we're we're in 27th place okay that's good oh all right let's keep trucking along i think maybe at the 30 minute mark i'll do a couple of a couple of things magical was actually pretty hard so let's do the arts [Music] differentiates anno this year's fashions are completely yoga i like playing the piano suicide is the forage mod your skirt is saya istafora out of fashion [Music] okay that's an exact cognate is the starring in the movie is a lot of pressure ellie feel me oh wait what's up what's up uh not deadly what's up striker how's it going i present uh [Music] um [Music] agora um i'll explain it to you in a sec so google actually let me go to duolingo right now so uh let's go to events it is dayla okay let's go to dictionary dating would be um like uh um romantico amances um you know you go out for dating is like when you go out to the movies or you go out to get dinner you know in a you know in that type of way oh wow we got a bunch of viewers got two viewers on twitch we've it's probably ruby and maybe a bot or maybe somebody else is on twitch too maybe it's strike as well and strike if you're on both eye kudos to you my friend [Music] uh opera okay that was not right for some reason i can't hear what's going on here bam bam i don't know why this isn't working my internet's fine i think it's just the website itself is being poopy um let me maybe if i refresh it i can't discard the changes um i'm gonna leave that open and i think i'm just gonna start another duolingo because i can't lose my progress um see let's do one that's actually not that because i don't want to work too hard if uh okay let's do infinite to restore that important yeah i guess i can't listen now yeah we'll be back in an hour hey yo yo import fuzzier okay believes please begin to fall in october me ordeal you hate it too so we got we got strike yeah we got strike and purnam i don't know about that good to see you guys i don't know if i'm saying that right he has money to receive now uh erica's from a different country she's from the us uh cosmeto oops swimming around chicken franco like ghost dog forgive discourage new york if they care of their own documents up there up there he wants to obtain the documents immediately the shar is to retrieve right where is it to find i think it's to close right boyfriend before ancies curtis i'd like to receive letters nos precisely we need to build a house she wants to observe the birds yeah oh [ __ ] uh importante it's to have right there [Music] aki there we go she likes observe is [Music] elizabeth [Music] there we go here we go entertain yo i hate how there's no audio on this i don't know what's going on here uh um importante there we go we finally got it oh and i lost all my viewers uh well at least we reached our daily goal so we're we're good with that we got five linguists and uh we're just gonna keep going i actually oh this is actually unfortunate because i was planning on relying on story time at the end i think i'm just gonna level grind but we got that egg cracked and open so i think i'm going to have to level grind really quick so let's do basics to acer vegeta magua i don't know why there's no audio coming through you'll call me um oh wait no it's vosikum okay for some reason youtube's isn't showing me um who's watching yes if i got that basic one wrong we'll say let me see if i lay yes lay only bro the girl rights we'll say i read the book [Music] the boy writes [Music] yeah uh the cat ugatto lay um umakarta oops she has a cat um [Music] i drink the beer oh casho [Music] nina right boom libro you lay a character leo leo akarta okay that wasn't perfect but we still got 10 and then we got 64 for today so i think what we have to look at is okay we're at 75 and then we're gonna go here i can't listen now so we'll be back so e nerf it's something just unpacking my nerf bullets here it says erika enjoy yourself she couldn't see oh she is known for starring in indep independent films uh what's over for drums tokar tambor like tambourine tambor uh oh fill me daily present [Music] ah uma um panorama jiffarenchi us there we go so we're doing okay that was 13 xp that's a bit more than then uh than what we got before erica says do you think vic has a job now i think he does okay that's five out of six let's see how well we're doing do we uh do we beat what's her name oh nice we're out of the hole nice we're at 25th place so we might just stay here for the next hour unfortunately in feliz manchi but of course i don't know if i should stay here for long so i think what i'm going to end up doing is i'm going to get a little bit past um yeah i'm going to get past here maybe a little bit more maybe if i get 150. wow look at that straight line right there that's pretty cool kind of see that i only knew if i only knew on thursday i get too cocky all right we did let's do phrases too hola am coin [Music] you know uh strike you're you know what nerf is actually let me show people who don't know what nerf is nerf gun this is it's this thing and it's like how do you not know a nerf gun but yeah this is basically a nerf gun and uh it's got these little bullets these little rubber bullets it's like little little uh plastic darts it's kind of it's really fun i like how they go like oh yeah we've got a machine gun it's so american this guy this kid's got a machine gun that's so cool he's so i look at how happy he is it'd be the same way i'd be like that now honestly calmly says sensa well i didn't know you didn't i didn't know you i don't know what you know strike but i but i will say some people might not know i don't know it's one of those predicaments i assume people don't know anything why you have seven jeez see that's how you know that that is love right there um oh wait what's the fuzzier wait we'll say now this could be your fellow portuguese sorry laura you follow english hola and nothing [Music] poor is it the i'll put the gays hola el follow english or portuguese calmly sensa or favor and we got a perfect score yet again and that's pretty nice we got 87. let's see if we're getting demoted did somebody to somebody care okay all right we're in 24th place and i'm concerned got 38 minutes left what do we do what do we do i hate how it's like i don't think yeah it's not working on yeah we gotta get past 400 at the very least i think what i might end up doing is you know next week will be um definitely a lot easier but i think how i'm going to start it is i'm going to just do maintenance days and i'm going to have a level grind day one one day of the week i don't know which day that would be i want to do like wow victor's so close to a hundred thousand i can't do story time because i can't hear it i was gonna do i was gonna do story time but it's like what's going on here actually let me see if i could fix this um the settings oh [ __ ] oh [ __ ] personal [ __ ] um let's check if i could figure out the sound settings i hate doing this um okay hold on speakers check one two okay so you guys can't hear either can you guys hear this like you can hear me but i can't hear what's happening in front of me so like let's do food real quick i'm just going to do just an example oh mortal no not no it's moyo oh yo um now tame [Music] see i can't hear the ta-da for some reason i can't hear can you guys hear that um i can't hear that it's not playing through here and i don't see it through the the monitor yeah okay you couldn't hear that that's why i can't do it if i can't hear it here how i won't be able to hear it in the story time and that wouldn't really be a good story and i'm sorry about that i i probably need to reset the computer which means i would have to end the stream so it'll probably come out of the wash tomorrow once i reboot my computer but now i'm kind of stuck stuck here call me um oh it's a banana oopsie i did a a mixture [Music] o daniel agua so tomorrow i promise you a story time [Music] the dog my dog actually i actually fed my dog a carrot yesterday i'm like tunnel vision sofia eats chocolate ah carne oh beefy right commonly call there we go excuse me do you eat the chicken [Music] oh thank you erica i hope you yeah every yeah you remembered my pets a potato all right strike you could tell the story i love my bunnies they're so cute i just changed my uh the bunny and that's in my room mr chunky bean young chungus is what i call him but i can't hear any of this coming through cash [Music] beefy why would a dog cut a steak cashol with an extra r the cat eats a ben banana oh coco [Music] i think it's how you would say oh yeah fairvae or moyo okay or beefy oh coursing yeah [Music] is cute too i think he's very cute all right well we almost got a hundred there and we were gonna do story time but you know i'm uh i'm confident that we'll make it but i i will say we we're going to agitate a bunch of people so somebody's gonna want to catch up to us i think this guy is already trying to but we'll see what happens in the last bit of this i'm afraid i'm a bit afraid but it's okay maybe if we could surpass dwayne i don't know we're still going to be here but if we get 150 we'll i think we'll be in the clear okay let's do animals because it's basic um or i also need a refresher on how animals are the armadillos speaks english just some words i forget does he have a horse [Music] oh yeah right you show um lobo havaka call me um carries an apple you a um boom ins insane inceta without the c [Music] instead of kaiba um animal okay uh is it no masculine um as with the accent he is without uh a house and a cow great what a wonderful story insect instead of fly uh mosca oh [ __ ] fly moscow hand slipped pato duck or potto could mean gay in in puerto rico but uh shark dubudo cavalla horse the stories my dog met another dog and they and they fought and my dog died really did that really happen how many packs of nerf bullets do you have a lobo now for la portages wolf does not speak portuguese oh wait um a cavallo [Music] there we go oh my god that's horrifying man that must have been tough to hear or see to see about to see it it's probably the worst but to hear about it too it's equally and it's like what kind of dog was it not that it matters but you know okay we got 27 minutes until uh cinderella hour until midnight is struck in brazil of course there's like three different time zones there at least the eastern eastern most part of brazil you're waiting for war with your brother i hope you win stake out we i wish you the best young soldier the dog that killed him was an american bulldog see here they're trying to break the stereotype of american bulldogs being uh not as violent but the stories like this that make me think you know maybe maybe bulldogs are kind of violent just fine i guess there some of them are really cute and cuddly and stuff like i have a i have a maltese mixed it looks like my dog looks like a sentient teddy bear you know you ever watch like snuggy bear like her actually this like this face okay not this one whoa but just the eyes and the mouth and just my dog gives me that look sometimes with the beady eyes it's my dog chloe she if you guys she sometimes guest stars on the show because she needs attention and she just gives that same face like a little teddy bear god it's so funny she i love her but she's a pain in my ass sometimes um i'm gonna hit refresh again to see where we're at am i still am i losing is somebody catching up to us is somebody uh i don't think anybody's like trying to challenge us that is a little creepy says erica yeah i mean the the small beady eyes can be when it's on a little puppy dog it's adorable [Music] ah genji let's do two voc because that's the difference between those two is something that confuses me you are a boy or you are a girl ha to s you write the newspaper you are a man we'll say lair libros to it two lace levers two lasers now two less lace they i don't know how to say that to lace libros v l i v r o s there we go that was easy that was like five for 10 xp that's actually good to know that's pretty pretty that's a short level okay so i think now we'll be in 22nd place oops somebody's somebody's woken up i think it's the guy i think it might be john whoever that john person is because i don't want to be anywhere near the um okay so i hate making that noise with my face or with my mouth me and my brother won't have war yet all right it's the calm before the storm with erica's doubt er not erica's dog but erica's brother you don't have a dog i don't think you do let's do ajaychi let's do another practice of ajinchi we do not speak reporting of your geese or we do not speak english the animals love us we boil the tea wow that's an easy perfect score what the heck that's like a green perfect i don't understand how that's why are they so much easier in the beginning yeah well i think it's because it's it was like a little requirement to get those let's do plurals let's see where it starts it might oh wait oh a woman eats it's apples girls os meninas see look okay here's more evidence here osmoninus lili is the same age as bia look at this they're the same age but they aged they aged beer but not to match lean's age but not lily or uh what was the other girl she's my favorite um what's that other girl's name the pink looking uh pink looking girl uh she wears a lot of pink lily and i can't think of it right now but anyways aspen nina's rock the girls fry potatoes smash and boil them stick them in a stew what's this mysterious says the dark side of the moon i see okay i messed up you eat bread you yeah it's just you eat bread because that's technically plural no somos meninos we are men plurals for free thumbs up are you speaking german over there games mike how you doing what's bit life [Music] agua because they're female all right i'm gonna report that because it's like my answer should have been accepted yeah i'll just do that not mochas als please so nina's got us oh [ __ ] that's three got us there we go listen the games mike says i listen to some just disney songs in german spanish and the languages i'm learning at some point well that's kind of cool let me look up bitlife real quick just before i what is this the hell is this i don't want to play this the hell this is like this is like a game about life life sucks that's why i play video games i don't want to think about actual life as a fantasy i'd rather have dragons and [ __ ] i'm not doing pokemon after this i already did it earlier today i could actually but i'm i'm tired and hungry it looks bad but it's good like most things you know in this world everything looks uh you know can't judge a book by its cover but i don't know i i might not have enough energy to or patience in myself to to to do that you've seen your friends play okay i don't know i don't think i'll play it i'm actually like tapped out with with the duolingo every day so i'm really unless of duolingo and like i got enough crowdfunding to keep this going for a full-time job i would definitely explore new avenues of gameplay i'd probably stream eight hours a day if i could but it's uh you know money makes the world go round in feliz manche i have to make money if i didn't i'd probably be out in the mountain playing my tuba and i wouldn't even know anything about portuguese and i'd be a hermit but you know that's uh i don't know enough about collecting acorns and foraging from the forest naturally yeah do one more so you beat jon says erica i might i and i think i'll stick around for okay 15 minutes we got 15 minutes left holy crap yeah i'll do one more but i do want to scope out who's all like if i yeah i want to beat jon but i kind of want to do a sneak attack sniper is anybody trying to one-up me here is dwayne online i don't know if he's online was he here before i think dwayne is is also climbing up a little bit yeah i'm gonna be i'm gonna beat john at least i could beat john plurals and we did plurals adjective one possession free pose contract clothing let's do clothing yeah i don't know i don't know where victor is [Music] jeans boy takes off the dog's clothes okay i don't know what that means we're going to go to google translate because i it is my friend petey i don't know i don't know what you're saying i'm not going to read it out loud either um she puts on the jacket moulier woman brought us boots salad salad good boom insects insatos her pants do not have pockets what kind of tyranny is this bestie [Music] buys a denim jacket i don't know what it means strike a caterer the wallet has no pockets the belt is the boy of the voice belt oh the okay it is tagalog let's do detect language okay pd support kitty okay pd okay support you okay well thanks man you shall support i mean with money unfortunately the money makes the world go round um and i would do more stuff actually i'm i'm thinking of doing uh um i'm sorry i'm like i'm my brain is fried right now i'm tired very tired what was i saying oh no i was thinking of doing a travel segment of my channel and um you know understanding brazilian culture and things like that clubs are mine ah nina gostaji [Music] okay not jack caita it's oh yeah it is jack keita it is jeans i think it is uma yeah my coat my jacket they buy buy a jacket um also the belts belongs to the boy amen the o ata what tests yeah it's bought us all right erica you did your dues lingos good for you you're doing it you're doing it i'm i'm proud of you let's see did we beat john did john wake up and decide hey i'm going to do duolingo today all right we holy [ __ ] we beat john green la valida la valida and i have a feeling with eight minutes to spare i think we're good your streak is 20. ah nice i'm proud of you i still gotta you still gotta verify your email address holy crap how many people have i added yeah bloaty was one of them oh i got a bunch of friends here got all the gangs all here but yeah 20 000. santo nunez he got just got 20 000 good for you he's in pearl league he's just starting up just like i did he's doing spanish going from spanish to united states english which is the best goddamn country in the world america oh did he miss a day got to do his dues lingos floaty blue lily bloody bloody floaty baloodle he's got ah wow he's got a lot of points with the sage doing a lot of stuff wildfire gotta he's got close to a 50-day streak scholar there needs to be higher levels for all of these because i'm i'm like i don't know how many words i got and let me see my profile because i'm pretty sure i've won a little bit i got okay i've earned third was it 30 000 xp 2000 new words in a single course i think they could bump up to 3 000 don't you think 390 total crowns i'm really building it up man i just need to conquer one legendary finish number one in the diamond league which was hard i got a profile picture uh discuss let's go to learn yeah i'm just gonna keep i'm gonna stay i don't know where bloaty is he showed up at one time and he's like i haven't heard from him since so how much xp did we get for today that was 147 you know so that's about the 150 we were talking about and uh you know i think i'm confident enough to know that we don't really have to think about it ooh he's in sapphire very good for him he's learning english from spanish bloody bloody bloody i know i'm like obsessed with his name he's got a he's got to keep his streak consistent man goddamn what are you doing oh i i i said that his profile picture when you look far away and you squint a little it looks like a ferret i wonder if i offended him with that so what i wanted to do was uh really i was gonna do like a two-parter for story time keep it easier on ourselves like uh like package delivery or the first assignment which is kind of cool well this one's locked because i can't do part two without part one yeah i was gonna do the first assignment one of two pyramid of tikal that was skydiving that's pretty cool i kind of wish that these were locked so that you couldn't bump ahead but i do like how it goes in increments now like 16 xp and then now we're we're into the 18 xp once and then then 22 then i think it's going to go into increments of four if i'm not 16 17 18. might go into increments of two which is actually pretty cool we do xp you know maybe there'll be one that's just a solid 20 22 and then the 28s pretty good i hope they add more stories i hope they had like a bunch more stories because i'm like am i halfway let me see let me see i'm at set 22 and yeah yeah actually i'm i'm not even halfway it's kind of cool because then it'll be 44 that that i'm going up to i think brim me mira is actually trying to bump up their spot so we got about three minutes left and i'm gonna stay here for the three minutes okay guys we're gonna make sure that we we we validate our parking because you never know let's look at other stuff so bitlife is about vampire fitlife mod akp there's one about like uh being in a gay dating app that's kind of funny yeah i don't uh i don't want to live so vicariously through a virtual life all right strikes got to leave all right let me leave you off with snuggy bear here's snuggy bear snuggy bear says goodbye and shot screwed bra oh my god [Music] enjoy your class man i love i love snuggy bear so much he says goodbye what the [ __ ] is this don't mean to swear a six-foot giant hunka love bear 200 see this this that is the face of loneliness right there you can't find a husband i don't mean to be that way but it's like and what is what is this turning into where where i'm where men are being replaced by by inanimate teddy bears premium fur i love oh see look why do i always gotta like think about like the worst possible thing of something that looks so innocent it's like oh look she's got somebody to snuggle i'm always thinking of like oh well she doesn't need anybody anymore oh this scared me right here you see this this scared me but as you can see it's not a refreshed page this is the this is the correct page and we got one minute left so i'm going to refresh for now see if anything happens see if anybody scrambles for anything looks like dwayne's doing stuff but i don't know so theoretically we could have been we would have been fine with uh getting just under 400 but you know getting that extra 50 makes me feel safe with a bit of peace of mind too and we're at i would say you know would be midnight brazil time you know nor eastern 54 53 52 51 it's like an ebay order i treat this like ebay now stay up late at night so you can get the right pet you can get the right deal man 39 38 36 35 34 33 32 watch everybody gets like 100 xp and i'm left in the dust 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1. blast off all right let's see did we make it i think we did make it all right complete a lesson and join this week's leaderboard i'm not going to do that till tomorrow but look at that look at that graph right there that is quite a lot for today in comparison to the rest of my week so i think with that being said am i still in diamond league i think i am all right well with that i will say my final goodbyes a wonderful night and um i love you all and i hope you take care of nih
The Petey
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2021-10-25
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6,808
33,489
dTrvTfSxMTw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dTrvTfSxMTw
যেনা থেকে কিভাবে বেঁচে থাকবো? কাজী ইবরাহীম। মুখলেস বিন আরশাদ মাদানী। জাহাঙ্গীর আলম
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product will be struck on the declutter only like a safe but then operate the hair ever so my husband beach basurin again I'm not I don't know Hara hybrid the heavy they're not always a bit Emma novel starts to 70 DB T as the city can take a possible the Asian no hater who Bangalow Quranic Caribbean Latin as a Rasta in tha who can afar - was nature a portaloo had to be single for harmony or slim be single at an American bikini revolution Jay Jay pollution a beer Khurana when they need a beer karana it in with the heart attack in Harshad Cara Cyprus turn busy oil arrivals the true now there are people home on the rapid attacking now that Sarah's right % bc heart attack our entire current law at the most efficient even G Shock Trauma kiss Fraggle and once she does take longer than the cooler water would evaporate in Germany a grocery boy Irish has a look at integrity - no - Devon and to show him JJ project iterate over every shop is computerized come on Tyrone one day at Otakon Oh Monty fire John shot Chitra monarchist duty should be an aesthetic erotica taken mana Shanti here is initiated at a holiday share catharsis antiquity Parana joke on nari Raj openly jihad Karina so another so much rakia say dragon devours from is a homage on eliminate of Alana live over China is an American on a second a say Jonathan Khadijah so cognac or Ricky J ACTA August emotionally tied Lamar Virginia come clear agency at the Lakota gotcha the coup D etat acid oath actually act America be additive Abdul taught in temerity be edited other Maharaja harmonica and you JT gigantically coalition mana jihad in DARPA will erode our own bahudha biotech a I'm a turkey for seminar say the exam detect an engineer example Chiquita minaj at a path which I take it elitism on American to originally website a litigation another purity the wonder was it should be a good China 0-7 Akebono job need to meet a bolo be a good test eternity actor me night that can be vicious kotemari no keep ankles Tatas a teacher a mother he may escape indicates a good engine happy son AJ I'll kick to China turns I needed to have as a university system aqui esta no the return addiction a mother's day mother's equally a say mochila modesta mythic passion or again shot karana by persons a teacher is a he so this of Manas news I today okay Dean chica delay laughter only a visual narrative acidity I meet all okay got another kitty so doom optimistic a deity I'm like I said I've been interviewed ESA extra eggs on manners naturally feel good as a commercial actor maniacally that's a tree shaker on parade I'm occur on an interview nice you know Graham chickadees lumber step Quran Sigma C possibility okay a believer they'll make an animal that BL I don't move tic-tac for it I want all eyes on hated to me at the dinner for Tennessee Sarah pity we wanted to look at of Islam parties just wants to mirror a slammin party in his garage incorrect here at the greens customers took around her own leases I ever attack a poor country espionage aft through decade appreciated too honorable to Veritas community yakitito din the Reaper in his garage estimator McConaughey that into a schedule to try on its little Johnny the cauchy-riemann loader ask a stuffy to achieve it that's cannot take it he say ask you I mean determine a kid Walker he's a lotta mother Janet Leigh and I work at idea see that Kapoor brothers a top morning bitter take a goofy take a de marsay Dominic to make a job chocolate decadence ashati that became taka nota generally - but country enorme dedicated green about the children additionally on a show pony no they're targeting me that money actually not it what about Allah push it on through da Paz Italian a month away turbo China Tamra - Tucker - a car that a Volvo judge camera Europe America be window this Jarrah ask a kurta he wrote a book sheikh jarrah one of the boys Shiva Hadi China here idea was territory not a word Elohim Adonai I wonder generation they reduced ambassador Cajun article which article shamrockin corridor car Toby test K enough just with the someone circular hand Hamas to three at a sham Bob Bob a toughening I wanted to feed on karoon I mean super Hanukkah ahumada Kashia had wa la ilaha illa anta a stockbroker to be late assalamu aleikum wa rahmatullah
পিস টিভি বাংলা - Peace TV Bangla
UCClsYw7y1BTTtTT8-EE_GPw
2018-09-04
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metadata
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2,845
15,626
AKxydkg3iuk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AKxydkg3iuk
Casey Barnett With A State Record Pin Again In Ohio State Quarter Finals
here we go quarterfinal action you're looking at the 138 pound casey barnett of milan addison sticking on aidan ilo aiello 25 and 1. bishop reedy out of columbus bernat the kit pin king in ohio 163 pins miele digs a hook so ella digs the hook and now a barrel roll attack step over by aiello nice job good exchange by both guys fires off again aiello stuffs it i always got a cradle locked up [Applause] looking to score here he's on a single now nothing great exchanges so far both guys [Applause] he goes back to the barrel roll dump again he's not having any of it not fooled by that [Applause] would be the last central ohio team to win a team championship in ohio of course with the savados tommy rowlands from there the all-time great programs in ohio high school history columbus area is from arena [Applause] hello barnett 35 seconds scoreless first 138 pounds quarter finals ohio high school state championships winner end of the summer oh hello trucks a beautiful double two takedown no nothing yet [Applause] of that oh my goodness gracious and barnett is actually gonna come close he's going to take them to take down barnett oh my goodness what an exchange oh my goodness these guys are getting after it all right aloe absolutely trucked and picked them up beautiful double leg no points awarded reaction time i can't believe that wasn't two unbelievable barnett's credit he does wrestle through the position and scrambles out of it does get the two but hell for sure i thought i had to take that but there's that thing called reaction time so we're not gonna go two and two on it we're just gonna give straight two to the pin king and that was close folks i'd go two and two on that all day but we're not wearing the zebra stripes matches are brought to the front defense smart chooses neutral down to all questionable takedown against the ohio pin king and there's a single leg far and run out to take down he is going to run down to take down here against the halo valla tries to roll with it this spiral is his bread and butter and he got him in trouble the pin king's looking for another fall here isle is in big trouble as the ohio pin king brady barnett check that casey barnett [Applause] sorry about that brady and casey in case you burn out your ohio pink
GOhioCasts
UC6rE5liwuVz-t9TE7MNTqrA
2021-03-14
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425
2,278
YXJtPbrnun4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXJtPbrnun4
Work in Thermodynamics
now we can look at work from the thermodynamics standpoint back in mechanics we defined work as the transfer of mechanical energy to a system and it still is in particular positive work means energy was transferred in to a particular object or system and negative work means energy was transferred out we also saw in mechanics that force resulting in a displacement was how we got work you had to have a force and you had to have a displacement and the force had to result in that displacement now we're going to think of it in a little bit different terms but highly related pressure and volume because we're dealing with a gas so let's go back to the equation we had from mechanics now this was the simplest one-dimensional equation for work where work was the work done by the force f is the force and that delta x was our displacement or a change in position along the horizontal direction now we're going to take this equation to make it a little bit more general and as applies towards thermodynamics but doing it step by step so you can see the connection what we really want is the work done on the gas which is always the negative of the work done by the gas the work done by the force and in particular force is expressed as a gas as the force per area is the pressure so if you know the pressure in the area you've got the force similarly for a gas we can express the volume in terms of the area and that horizontal distance now this is easier to see if i draw you a little cylinder here the volume is going to be the area of the cylinder times the length of the cylinder and the change in volume keeps that same constant area times just the little change in length of the cylinder now in general we can use this change in volume and pressure for a gas because it doesn't have to keep a constant shape so they are more general and more applicable for gases so bringing this all together for thermodynamics then we can express the work done on the gas as minus p delta v now this assumed a constant pressure p just like our general force from mechanics assumed a constant force well back in mechanics we didn't have to have a constant force but in order to deal with it we had to use calculus so the same thing is going to happen here the more general equation is going to tell us that the work done on a gas is minus the integral of the pressure with respect to the volume so you're taking the integral with respect to the volume of the pressure which may or may not be constant so let's think again conceptually if i've got an expansion that means the volume gets larger and my delta v or my dv is positive and this is going to be caused by some sort of a higher pressure inside compared to outside and that means the work is done by the gas on its surroundings and the gas loses its energy to the surroundings so that means that the work done should be negative if i go back to that general equation the minus pdv if my delta v is positive i end up with a negative work which is what i expect similarly if i've got compression it's sort of the opposite my volume gets smaller my delta v or dv is going to be negative and this is generally caused by a higher pressure outside or if something causes the inside pressure to become lower and that means that work is done on the gas by the surroundings and the gas gains energy from the surrounding because it's the surroundings that are doing the work and that means the work done on the gas has got to be positive so if we go back to our equation here we have our negative out front our pressure is still positive but now our delta v is negative and the negative times a negative gives us a positive so indeed having this negative sign in here is what we want to be able to have our work correctly expressed for the work done on the gas whether the gas is losing or gaining energy now this is a very quick introduction to the work done in thermodynamics and when it comes to that integral we're going to have to be careful when we get to very specific cases of what we're doing
Jennifer Cash
UCi7Dw2AX_Hj8PmIYUjP9p8A
2016-01-01
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metadata
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782
4,037
6gQWZoHODL0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gQWZoHODL0
Timber Auction 1 Nov
hello Michael once again for the Tuesday afternoon auction preview this week's Auction Wednesday the 1st of November 2023 at 10: a.m. plenty of stock in again this week guys let's go for a walk and check it all out we are starting down the back of the yard here guys we've had a whole semi load of the um MGP 10 2.7 nail plated studs there guys all right so 9045 27s all nail plated there's a example of uh what they look like guys uh a whole assembly load of those to clear tomorrow all right plenty more stock to look at let's make our way over here now all right bit of F5 Pine 9045 48 54s in behind there some long length tree to Pine 90 by 45 there as well uh so lots of stock there making our way down there as you can see quite a lot of of stock ahead of us there all right some long length tree to P once again uh some I think some 190 by 45 uh feel about of 9045 there and some long length there 5945 60's I can see there and some 5.4 so yeah some nice stock in that row over here bit more uh clearance stock here whole pack of uh assorted uh composite cladding there uh some just mixed packs of um Timber all there to clear guys uh some nice uh mid-range lengths of tree to Pine along here uh 7045 9045 19045 140 45 uh number of difference sizes there 9035 on the opposite side here guys uh more of similar product there Fair bit of 240x 45 there nice little pack of 9035 42s all right some studs there couple uh pallets of tiles these are really really uh nice looking tiles here uh lot 105 and 106 okay 300X 600 tiles really really modern looking tile uh more and stuff here all these packs of cement sheet uh we'll go to the highest bidder all damaged packs as you can see there guys all right over 100 packs now 190x 45 Pine uh all right so there is um 1.2s uh 1.5s 1.8s and 21s all right they all set length packs there guys as you can see a little bit of weathering on them um so just a little bit of age stock so um they're clearance pack sky so they will go to the highest bidder so yeah over 100 packs of that stuff so yeah be a nice cheap buy if you can find a use for for the uh shorter lengths might even be able to treat some of them you never know make them into sleepers or something uh lot one and two right here guys some uh cement sheet products there more cladding cement sheet type products lot three got a nice little pack of 90 by 90 treer Pine post there uh then we go to a couple uh packs of LVL beamster clear lot four five and six all right bit of weathered stuff there then we've got um some 19045 F5 uh treated pine there 4.8 and 5.4 and we also have one pack of 36ers in there as well all right so nice looking stock there all right we'll make our way inside now all right once again tons and tons of decking packs to choose from here's some stock that's just arrived have a look how good does this look all right so three different sizes we've got in these LVS 240x 45 it's all f17 it's all Australian standard stuff um you'll find about six or seven packs throughout the auction these are the 6m stock here so keep a look out for that guys it'll be significant saving what you normally pay for it outside uh pre-oiled uh standard and better grade decking finger joed material there all in 5.7 M lengths um quite a uh few packs we have of that scattered around also got a carry as well lot 351 is the one we're over the top of now uh pack of assorted arraes Etc to clear um spot gum decking there some 86 by9 there and we got the 135 by9 in the Queensland mixed hardwood this week all right so more packs of decking we got a a few packs of the um silver toop Ash decking shorts in an 86 by9 four or five packs there I reckon all right we'll make our way further in the shed now my you can see how good this decking looks have a look at it all right says your um set length 5.7 there uh more of the uh that's the Jara there a bit of standard gray carry here in a 135 between as well a few packs you'll find of that um also got here's some of the coin land blondes in the 135 by9 all right so um yeah good mix of product there guys jarro I can see there as well um and and some more of the spot of gum we even got the 64 by9 in the spot of gum such as that one there lot 479 you're going to pick up a 64 by9 something like about two bucks a meter so it'll be really really cheap here's some of uh a carry there yep all cool well we'll just have a quick look across here right couple nice big uh packs of finger jointed uh Jara 48 and a 5.4 there we got a little bit of t Ying behind there pack of 65 by 12 couple packs of 120 by9 I can see there uh three packs of 120 by9 all right in behind there we've got a few packs of wormy Chestnut 130 by9 uh cover grade flooring I there's about seven or eight packs of that roughly uh pack of 90 by9 tazok alongside that and then we got heaps of flooring in here as well guys a lot of feature grade stock in this week uh spot of gum 13 50 by9 there is also an 80 by9 as well uh in the feature grade spotter G floor and quite a decent looking floor uh lots of other flooring as you can see down there all right swinging around this way now all right stuff that's just arrived literally come off the truck a couple of hours ago so we've got um uh some 80 by9 cover grade black but flooring there's about three packs of that uh We've also got some uh black butt decking in the cover grade 135 by9 probably find about maybe four packs of that roughly uh and some Queensland spotter gum 86 by9 cover grade decking as well all right so that's all new stock in today make our way straight across here now all right here's the rest of those lvls uh 190 by 45 is said it's all f17 e14 H2S treated LVL beams uh greated the Australian standards so two uh 190 45 is a pack of 36 underneath that is a pack of uh 290 by 45 36 uh there was a pack of 240 uh by 45 I'm guessing that's 3.6 as well uh and on the bottom there 190x 45 pack of 4.2 as you can see this is magnificent looking stock it's only been kept inside guys so absolutely Sensational uh lots of packs of screening here uh a few packs behind there the silver top Ash decking shorts nearly all gone now in the 135 by9 basically uh straight across here we have more packs of spotter gum flooring uh there's some of the uh 80 by9 size there I said 80 and also 130 by9 we have uh just in behind there we got a number of packs of overlay flooring here okay the 14 mil material uh once again it is all listed in your catalog there uh lot 586 up the top there is a pack of 185 by9 tazok uh utility grade shorts 185 by9 right making our way across here now uh more set length packs of the uh screening uh more packs of uh Jarrett in the 12 50 by 25 skip dress uh heaps of tazac bench trops have a look at these guys have a look at the Taz benchtops how good do they look they are absolutely Sensational uh they are a Select Grade product guys okay so been looking for some bench Toops you're getting for a fraction of what you would normally pay for them uh over the back there more packs of silver top Ash uh decking shorts in the 86 by9 four packs of overlay flooring so all in all guys we have a pretty decent look at auction for you tomorrow uh don't forget we've got carpets over the back and home Renovators behind us here all kicking off for 10:00 thanks for watching
Fowles Auctions + Sales
UCAMefWEBL-PsASay4IjKR0w
2023-10-31
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
1,502
7,294
14DBZUlZF_U
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=14DBZUlZF_U
Locals in rural Mexican town fault Coca Cola for depleting water resources
the beverage industry is one of the world's top consumers of water coca-cola says it replaces every drop that it uses but a cbs news investigation raises questions about how to evaluate that promise jonathan vigliotti recently visited a city in southern mexico where coca-cola is everywhere jonathan good morning tony good morning to you the city of san cristobal's struggle to get clean drinking water was profiled by the new york times in 2018 many people said the water started disappearing when the coca-cola bottling plant began operations decades earlier coca-cola says it has exceeded its expectations for water security in mexico for several years but we discovered something different when we recently visited and took our findings back to the company the highlands of chiapas in southern mexico are rugged and remote but when we arrived we saw signs of america everywhere people here are among the biggest consumers of coca-cola in the world one study found three percent of babies and 16 percent of toddlers in chiapas drink soda i've been drinking coca-cola from a plastic bag while coke doesn't flow from the taps critics say the coke bottling plant in san cristobal de las casas consumes much of the town's drinking water to make soda shop after shop here advertises coca-cola but the one thing this neighborhood does not have is running water residents of this neighborhood invited us to see what's left in their municipal water tanks [Music] jose is telling me that these three tanks are the main source of water for this community can you open the lid no water juan semana is data from coca-cola shows 39 of the company's global production was generated in high or extremely high water stressed regions and some of those products end up on american store shelves we reached out to coca-cola they declined to speak on camera but told us in a statement they met and exceeded their replenishment goals for five years in mexico so sylvia is showing us how she gets water for her house sylvia perez-mendez relies on rainwater seeing este agua without this water tiene agua potable in la casa no you wouldn't have any drinking water without this water in the house no and with climate change impacting rainfall sylvia's reserves are running low it's sad we can't bathe we can't clean we can't drink water she says sylvia is part of a growing group of residents calling on coca-cola and the mexican government to protect their water supply how many of you struggle to get water every week cbs news has found the san cristobal bottling plant is permitted by the government to extract around 110 million gallons of water each year even as rainfall has declined and a growing population has moved into protected wetlands last year the local government requested the federal water utility revoke the bottling plant's water license but was denied the utility said in a statement the plant draws water from wells that are deep underground and do not affect the local water supply coca-cola's influence in the region began in the 1960s with marketing that had religious undertones [Music] and an indigenous churches across southern mexico we found it used during prayers coke also helps fuel the economy employing 358 people at the bottling plant and supporting hundreds of shops that sell its product but doctors say this financial lifeline for many may also be making people sick dr marco serrano researches diabetes in the region we know that in adults over 40 years of age it's over 35 percent over 35 percent have diabetes arana says without easy access to water people are primarily drinking coke specifically addressing our findings in chiapas coca-cola said we recognize the challenges the san cristobal community faces and that is why we've been working for nearly a decade to provide community water tanks rooftop water collectors and water conservation projects [Applause] sylvia perez-mendez claims her community has not received any of that help she will continue her fight for more water she says until she sees real change and coca-cola says going forward it is setting specific context-based targets that seek to create water security including planting hundreds of thousands of trees in the region regarding potential health impacts coca-cola says it is continuing to reformulate its products in mexico to further reduce overall sugar consumption anthony jonathan thank you yeah one thing is clear coca-cola should not be replacing water
Walter Gonzalez
UC5yhbkQIDaAwpWyFKWPi5fA
2021-07-02
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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745
4,457
VYoT9zkQTnQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYoT9zkQTnQ
Interplay of Languages and Forms of Writing
in the last lecture we had talked about multilingualities and three paradigms of hybridities were presented before you i want to develop this discussion further especially in terms of hybridities and the three paradigms that we presented before you one of the key issues there was the issue of english and translations i want to sort of widen the discussion a bit because actually the issue of translation and i think i had briefly referred to it last time also this is an issue which is equally applicable to writing or you can say creative writing in any indian language because of our plural context and therefore when i began to think about this some more immediately in my consciousness a story that i had actually read as a you know college going student it surfaced in my consciousness and this is a story by chandra dhar sharma guleri and the title of the story is usna kahatha there is this remarkable sense of you know mixture of languages and uh a sort of certain milieu where people speak different languages but they interact with each other very actively in the story titled us nakahata i remember vividly that when the soldier lena singh he thinks about the best moments of his life as he's dying on the battlefront he remembers meeting this young girl in amritsar 1890s of amritsar where every time he met this young girl in the marketplace he asked her that he called my hogie and i remember as a reader of that text i am hindi speaking i i didn't know what that phrase meant and it sort of estranged me and at the same time it woke me up to a description of another town another place time different characters and their beautiful subtle sensibility their desire the yearning for love and suddenly this phrase it sort of animated the whole text in a very different way because the language was not fully accessible to me and therefore as i said this question of translated texts or a mixture of various languages this issue of hybridity or code mixing is equally applicable to any kind of language or any kind of writing especially in the indian context because even if you are writing in hindi or marathi tamil or telugu it sort of also brings you close to the way people live and therefore i want to place this idea before you that when we talk about multilinguality plurality or writing we really are not thinking only about the english language although we have conducted this discussion or we are conducting this discussion in english but what we have to say about these ideas or attitudes and also the creative work that comes out of it this is equally applicable to all our languages so this to me was a really very important thought and actually in the slide that i showed you i have referred to usq roti by mohan rakesh another short story that is steeped in the punjabi a countryside and the character the main character is a bus driver and this is about his wife who brings him his roti which means his food actually every day the manner in which hindi is constructed in this short story is also very very evocative of the punjabi countryside and the sensibility of the punjabi characters maybe you can dip into it and explore the story and the film in order to understand how there are these beautiful subtle blends that have grown in realistic writing in india and also it will perhaps make you realize that there is something to hijaz ahmad's statement when he says that the you know that english in itself cannot bridge the cultural gap between the original indian language and the translated text whereas i think when a writer writes about the indian milieu and he's dipping into or she's dipping into the indian ethos the transition from one indian language to another indian language is easier so this is a point of view and an experience that you can also consider before deciding whether you want to write in english hindi or your mother tongue this is an important question now this other viewpoint although on the one hand that hijaz ahmad had said that there is this cultural gap between the original and the translated text so far as translations into english are concerned although he also acknowledges english as a very big archival resource from that that point of view the other point of view about this comes from rishi and we have already talked about it so i won't repeat it but what seems interesting to me is the fact that actually everything said and done our relationship with english is not an easy one even if we agree and we know historically that english has more or less become an indian language and rashdi in a recent paris review interview edition that he has edited he talked about the malleability of english and indeed through his creative work he has shown how english can be used to convey the vitality of the indian context so in other words i think his claims and his ideas are very important because on the one hand we have an uneasy relationship with english he may not have an uneasy relationship with english but i think a large majority of us have an uneasy relationship because on the one hand if the language is considered as a vehicle of modernity and nation building and we see that all the national discourse in india has emerged out of english even if we uh agree with that sort of perception the fact remains that it has also become the language of social academic and economic mobility so in some ways it does threaten the indian languages i think if we simplify this issue too much we don't understand we cannot understand the fissures that are opened between our own languages and english and these are fissures that actually push us in creative directions so i would say that the other viewpoint that has been articulated regarding this language issue and about the significance of english in india as a vehicle of modernity the other point of view has been articulated by amit chaudhary who feels that actually it is the rise of the vernacular which became a vehicle for a new secular nationalist consciousness my other take on this issue about languages about using english as an indian language is again a question about the fact that whether we talk about english or we talk about the vernacular and the nationalist discourse we have to remember that there always have been languages on the margins that were not part of this discourse i think gradually the scene is changing but i would like you to keep that in mind so the question of how to expand one's vision or understanding to accommodate such a vast variety of issues that is something that actually needs a lot of you know self-assessment and introspection and that's where the creativity can start to bubble so our emphasis in all this you know discussion is the growth or development of investigative and inclusive approach for creativity if one sort of remains engaged with the world at large then i think the sense of isolation when one begins to probe one's own identity and one's own desire for self-expression that will actually find greater depth and space within oneself so that seems to be an intuitive and also in some ways you can say a combination of intuitive and objective aspects of our understanding and we hope you will be able to judge whether it indeed works for you or not so what we are again suggesting is to observe experience events and your context with eyes unclouded expand your awareness of as many indian languages and issues as possible from this we want to shift our attention to indian writing in english and also the experimental use of english in novels in particular the reason we have actually singled out novels is related to the very very special aspect of this genre many scholars uh many many of them and i think kundera talks about some writers also who hold the opinion that the novel does not really have roots in indian tradition i think kundera also pointed out and maybe i'll talk about milan kundera later on but right now i'll concentrate on this point of view that he mentions i think in testament betrayed in which he says that now there is almost a transnational history of uh novel and that it has grown uh very vigorously in non-western or non-european countries that was his point of view and he makes a remark which i want to place before you because when we begin to dip into writing we are dipping into various genres with this assumption that whether you want to be an essayist or you want to be an academician or you want to be a creative writer reading of this enriched work is extremely important so we're not really looking at just a particular kind of result in terms of your creative endeavors when we introduce you to these experiments i want you to keep that in mind because in the first module i have tried very very clearly to release possibilities for different kinds of students who want to pursue creativity in any vocation any field so from that point of view the novel form it's sort of according to kundera it is a response to new historical situations with their new existential content in other words it sort of gives you space gives the writer the space to look at things that maybe are not addressed in our analytical or our political or our social discourses so it's a very very different kind of cultural space and it's also a space where i suppose there is maximum amount of freedom for one's imagination although from rishi's case we know that that freedom can also be curtailed at any point in time due to political forces so it's not really a simple realm of absolute freedom but certainly it is a very different kind of space so now in terms of indian writing in english i'd like to go back to the first page of rishti's midnight's children which we had read and i do want to also share the second idea that this exploration of indian reality in a plural setup it also redefines it's a way of redefining one's cultural identity now going back to that particular first page and you know i am fully aware of the complexities that a text like midnight's children demands but in this early stage of our discussion i have stayed with that first page and the choice of the first page in which saleem sinai's birth and how deeply it was intertwined with the birth of modern india that is placed before us right from as i said page one line one this actually choice was determined by the paris review interview that rushdie gave and this paris review interview series we recommend to anybody who is interested in writers important and great writers of our time in this interview the interviewer was able to sort of pose questions that actually elicited some really fine responses from rishti for us who want to learn to write or for you who is who wants to see these models or you know seek sources of inspiration some tips from writers i think there is much that one can learn from this particular uh interview and i will just read the response selectively so what i am trying to do is to one point out why we chose that first page tell you a little bit about one's own response to the language mixture that plays out on that page and also then see what one can learn about writing from it so the first thing that he says in response to the interviewer's question about his own early writing and i would just come to the midnight's children before that he he said i have three books that i i've discarded more or less and i'll read this now until i started writing midnight's children which would probably have been late 75 early 76 there was this period of flailing about it was more than a technical problem and i want you to pay attention to the rest of the statement until you know who you are you can't write because my life had been jumbled up between india and england and pakistan i really didn't have a good handle on myself this is what he said and then he went on to point out that you know one day after many years of struggle he actually suddenly sat down and started writing by discarding the third person narration which wasn't working for him and i think i have the quote here for you so if the copyright permissions are taken we will place the code before you otherwise you can look at the selective reading of you know you can hear the selective reading that i have to offer today so he said that third-person narration which is what he was trying out it didn't really work for him so he says i decided to try a first person narrative and there was a day when i sat down and i wrote more or less exactly what is now the first page of midnight's children it just arrived this voice of saleems quite savvy full of all kinds of arcana funny but sort of ridiculous i was electrified by what was coming out of my typewriter it was one of those moments when you believe that the writing comes through you rather than from you so actually you know this again seemed extremely important very interesting and also it takes us back to another quotation we had shared with you earlier where it was pointed out that if the mind is ready i think it was from louis pasture that if the mind is ready which means one is working on that idea with great deal of conviction great deal of passion and commitment then there is a kind of a sense of release possible you never know which way experimental work will take you so success is not guaranteed but the process in itself is so exciting and it is this process that i want you to begin to understand and explore because the end result will depend on many many factors including the kind of passion or conviction or capability that you have but certainly the process will remain very very rich and it will be very exciting for you so now this particular statement that i read and the interview that you should read later on on your own i want to share my own response to the first page as i was reading the first page i i actually would just come to the last two or three last sentence almost last but one sentence because as was reading it the flavor of hindustani words in english uh it just sort of broke through you know the flavor the subtext it broke through in multiple ways the statement or the sentence that i am referring to reads like this i salim sinai later variously called snot nose stain face baldi sniffer buddha and even peace of the moon this kind of suddenly evoked very amused amusing responses because these are words that are used in a very teasing manner you know to tease somebody with a mixture of affection and ridicule and it sort of evoked the the subtext the cultural texts and in that sense uh what jazz has to say about the cultural gap between english and the indian context i think instead of actually taking away from the english text for me a sort of it really worked very well it estranged me amused me brought uh brought forth my own references frame of references and i think in terms of other words they are not really very polite words when you translate them in hindi so i won't really try the translation but the last phrase piece of the moon chant i'm sure it is accessible to all of you through films that you see and the metaphor of similar kind that is evoked time and again so in other words i found this very exciting and although it does a strange you but what you do with that fissure creatively that's also a very important challenge that one can place before oneself now this process where language two languages are intermixed as i indicated to you earlier this is described as code mixing and hybridization is a sub category of code mixing i'm actually using many many ideas that have been explained very lucidly by neelam srivastav in a paper titled languages of the nation in salman in rishti and sait the full title of this essay and the you know resources or the journal in which this article is published this has been shared with you towards the end of this lecture when we give you the reading list so many of these ah insights have been taken from neelam shivastov's article but basically we are interested in showing the possibilities of code mixing and some of the other ways of looking at this is through the theory of bhaktin which i will not go into because many many theoretical insights that impinge on our analysis it is really not possible to explain each one of these but at the same time if it is possible later on i will weed that discussion expand that discussion in the other modules so this theoretical concept is related to the dialogic interrelationship of different registers and dialects in which gravitate within the orbit of a national language that's a statement from bhakti so what that means is again the interplay of various languages so there is no formula for it it shows the life of the people but what again i'm trying to argue for is to allow yourself the possibility of watching more watching the complex interplay of languages ideas and also cultural differences so now there is uh i think need to turn towards another example of similar kind of writing in english where the indian ethos is evoked and evoked quite powerfully but at the same time the methodology is different the title heteroglottic or the was used the concept of heteroglossia from bhakti was because he tries to keep the multiplicity alive and he actually doesn't remain aloof in terms of the language he's invested in creating the charge of that language the moments of history the existential issues of history that he wants to evoke and therefore his kind of writing is slightly different from the kind of writing that vikram set has undertaken in suitable boy we are talking only about midnight's children and suitable boy it's not possible to talk about the complete works of both because there's such a lot of variety and we would need a full course to handle those kinds of details but this instead of translating the differences in a predictable manner as i said rishi has retained the sense of multiplicity plurality and he's played around it with this to the great joy of the readers in a suitable boy there is an omniscient third person narrator and the multilingual reality is captured in monologic form and as i said some of these ideas have been taken from neelam shivastov's article essay because she speaks about these issues with great clarity and we have been looking for material that you can relate to and understand without excessive difficulty so according to her again you know she has pointed out that the code mixing in suitable boy it occurs in in terms of english and other indian languages such as hindi urdu bengali and the rustic dialect spoken in de barya i'll try and present a reading of suitable boy an excerpt from suitable boy in english and hindi translation because seemingly bikram said likes the hindi translation because he feels that the particular translation that he had in mind had captured the sense of the people the sense of that language exactly in the way he wanted to recreate and represent in a suitable boy today i'm going to read out to you an extract from vikram state's novel a suitable boy and subsequent translation in hindi by gopal gandhi vikram said being from india and though he chose to write in english seeing the translation has very interesting ramifications vikram said himself is known to be quoted that this translation has actually conveyed what he meant to say quite more effectively than he could have he would have had he written in hindi so here is the extract in english 19.7 jagat ram reacted to who haresh's wedding invitation with visible shock not so much because haresh was getting married and in brampur at that but because he should have thought of inviting him moved as he was he had to refuse the two worlds did not mix he knew it it was a fact of life that ajata from ravi dasa should be present at a guest at a wedding at the house of doctor kishan chan said would cause social distress that he did not want to be at the center of it would injure his dignity apart from the practical problems of what to wear and what to give he knew that he would feel no joy and only intense awkwardness at being present on the occasion haresh reading his mind only partially said with brushed act you're not to bring a gift i have never been a believer of gifted weddings but you must come we are colleagues i would hear if you are not coming andrew invitation is also for your wife if she so wishes to come it is only with the greatest reluctance that jagatharam agreed the red and gold invitation meanwhile was being passed on on hand to hand between the boys of the family haven't they left anything for your daughter asked haresh as the last of the bananas disappeared oh her dust has been washed away said jagataram quietly what asked haresh shocked jagadram shook his head what i meant to say he began to say but his voice was choked what happened for heaven's sake she got an infection my wife said it was serious but i thought children get a high fever so quickly and it comes down just as quickly and so i delayed it was the money too the doctors here are well high handed to us your poor wife my wife said nothing she said nothing against me what she thinks i do not know after pause he quoted two lines don't break the thread of love rahimus had said what breaks won't join if joined it knots the thread when haresh commiserated jagathara merely sucked in his breath through his teeth and shook his head again now i'm going to read out the text foreign m the other example which i want to place before you and remember in the last lecture we talked about the subaltern point of view on the one hand and the outlook of globalization on the other hand and if you notice in terms of my titles to the talk i have tried to highlight it for example if we go back to the title of rishti's segment i have given the title conversation with the world you know this is from his editorial comment to the vintage book in which he actually tries to promote the idea and i think this idea comes from his placement or his space in the indian diaspora but he sort of argues for a global outlook an outlook uh where writing indian writing actually is a mode of conversation with the world and in terms of his notion of the world it is the international setup in addition to our own indian setup so as a contrast you will notice that both the writers are very important but mahashvita devi she wants to talk to the tribals and the oppressed that is her world so to say and in terms of her creative process and as i said all the writers that we are talking about are deeply engaged with every facet of reality they are the kind of people who are very open-minded and they have been very investigative in their approach for example if you want to understand about different kind of writers i think imaginary home lines of rashdi by written by rashti is an excellent example of how deeply he has tried to understand different kinds of writers and their location in their own historical context and how their writing has emerged as a dialogue with the world at large now in terms of mahashvaitadevi this is a very different kind of outlook and a very very important one for reasons that you will understand yourself but she wants to talk to the tribals and the oppressed she is not thinking of any other audience although her initial writing was published in bengali literary magazines so to say so it's not as if she has given up on other kinds of readers but her conscience and her soul is stirred by the condition of the tribals their beauty also and therefore the let's see what she has to say by way of the creative process in the interview to sumik bandho padhya we have listed that book i think the this is an editorial kind of uh comment that he has written uh and he's also quoted this interview this is her five plays so in that she says to him a responsible writer standing at a turning point in history has to take a stand in defense of the exploited otherwise history would never forgive him so there is that this sense of responsibility to birth history towards people to stand up in defense of the exploited the particular interview that i have mentioned it is as i said uh this is an editorial interview and also uh it refers to her place now mahashvita devi actually started writing novels and short stories and then she wrote plays at the behest of samik bando padhyay but she sort of continued to keep some kind of a hold on her uh well investigative approach and i keep using that word because in terms of middle class writing of mahashvita devi also you know she wrote about areas of conflict where the middle class was in direct confrontation with the savalton and in the place that she wrote she picked up stories where this confrontation was brought brought out and also the failures of our systems uh political systems were brought out but in such a way that the voice of the exploited remain very very authentic it was not you know reduced to a particular stereotype or a caricature so the same desire impelled her towards not only translating some of those short stories or adopting them in a naturalistic framework but at the same time she began to explore traditional folk forms like the alcap with its rich treatment of social themes in an idiom of three parties now the genre that i am referring to therefore ah is different here i am referring to her plays although she is not known as a great you know playwright but at the same time i am referring to her place because in some ways she shifted to writing of plays and also searching for this model of public participation because short story writing and novel writing did of course offer her cultural and public space but it was very different and she felt that this kind of engagement public engagement or community oriented engagement that she wanted this form was very participatory and important we will go into this in other modules again but i think i do want you to be aware of the change of form and how each literary form offers a very different kind of possibility while we are exploring writing and what it you much will depend on what you want to say who you want to say something to etcetera so she sort of began to explore many of these folk forms so they were already there because oral for a kind of thinking and writing or reality is very strong in many many tribal groups so and also in other cultures so then the code mixing that is present in mahashvita devi so again in terms of code mixing i bring back this whole issue of code mixing within indian languages and that's why i had shared the example of usna and here again we find that the code mixing that is available in mashvita is a combination of bengali and the dialects of the tribals depending on which particular text we are talking about we will perhaps dip into water but let us also see what she has to say about why she dipped into this material because she feels that she wants to use the folk imagination through its legends mythical figures mythical happenings but she places them in a contemporary setting i think all of this is very visible in water her play where maghe dom is the protagonist and he's a traditional water designer we cannot go into the details again but she has placed magay the traditional water designer in the framework of contemporary needs and aspirations of the domes of that commun you know he belongs to the dome community and the fact that they are exploited by the landlord of that particular village by asking dom to divine water but he doesn't allow them to use that water so there is a very contemporary problem that she has placed in the play and she has explored how to balance this deep indigenous source of knowledge that magay dome represents and the modern possibilities uh you know interventionist modern possibilities that actually need to respect this indigenous base of knowledge and at the same time offer democratic contemporary solutions to the existence of marginalized communities so this third uh paradigm again of uh you know the code mixing in the indian language brings us back to ijaz emma's contention the and i think here there is it you know it is relevant because the kind of nuances that mahashvita devi brings to her original text i think that is not accessible in the english translation now whether it's the limitation of the translator or it is the limitation of this process or whether you need strategic translation and not just straight translations of a certain kind all this actually needs to be examined my name is jim matthew kochiti and i will be reading makhari dom's dialogue from mahashvita devi's water when the king bhagirath brought the when the king bhagirath brought the holy ganga down from the heavens basmati the mother earth asked ganga give me a little bit of it sister to keep hidden in my bowels ganga told basmati hold the nether ganga in your bowels so the nether ganga flowed into the secret depths of the mother earth my earliest ancestor had come all prepared to offer puja to the holy river at her advent but by the time he arrived bhagirath had already left with ganga so he stuffed himself up with booze gathered all that he had brought with him to offer to the holy river and offered puja to the nether ganga once he closed his eyes to do obeisance the drunken stripper took over and he fell asleep when he opened his eyes there was no sign any longer of ganga it was emptiness all around he was just a dome after all and naive and so easily fooled so he thought i must have dreamt it all then from the bowels of the earth the nether ganga herself the mother deity of all the hidden waters spoke you are my chosen priest i am the goddess the nether ganga whenever men dig for a well or a pond you will gather the offerings pray for water and go around looking for where the water lies hidden till i tell you where to dig and ever since that has been our work how can we charge for water it is forbidden and that is why we are fated to go hungry foreign
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2015-06-12
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HCC788 - Patrons Choice vote -- Chose a vehicle to review!
hello everybody hooter Cobra Commander 788 here and I am free from my captivity during Cobra convergence too and as I announced in my cobra eels review I will be taking the week off there will not be a new review this coming weekend but the next review will be another patrons Choice review so I thought I would show you the options for the patrons Choice review and if you'd like to know how to vote on what we will see next just skip on over to patreon to find out how option one will be the 1988 swamp masher this is a very interesting vehicle with some very unique features this is one I'm looking forward to reviewing it's got some crazy colors and just got a lot going on with this thing so if you would like to see the swamp master as the next review just vote for this one option two will be the 1989 Cobra Fang 2 and this is a vehicle that has been requested a few times and I've had it for a while and maybe it is time to review this one we will of course compare and contrast it with the original thing helicopter and see how it stacks up so if you'd like to see the Fang to go ahead and vote for this one option three is the 1984 Cobra stinger with the stinger driver this is the only one of the three options that comes with a figure and this is one that has been reviewed before but that review was a long time ago and so it may be it's time to take a second look at this vehicle and the driver so I wanted to give you guys an option to vote for a redo of an older review if you want to so if you'd like to see an updated review of the stinger you can vote for this one one of these three will be reviewed next on this channel you do need to be a patron to vote but it's easy to become a patron I have the link to my patreon on the screen right now so just go over there become a patron and vote for one of these guys if there's a tie I will break the tie you have until five o'clock on Friday my time to vote voting begins now go
HoodedCobraCommander788
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2017-08-01
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