Thứ Năm, 11 tháng 5, 2017

Waching daily May 11 2017

I can notice by the way she looks at me

She gets kinky by herself

I can notice by the way she looks at me

She gets kinky by herself

She likes to have sex when she smokes 🍁

She behaves during the day, she gets kinky at night

She always wears make up, smelling like Chanel, nobody even imagines

That she turns into a demoness with big breasts inside my room

I can only notice by the way she looks at me

I know her intentions and she gets kinky in the hotel room

She does what I want on my bed under lean's influence

She enjoys spending time with me because she gets kinky

She always wears a costume, she only puts it off in my presence

She loses control and consciousness in my room

As she smokes my weed, I warm her up even in winter

If you are a demoness, then I'm Satan, welcome to Hell

She looks like a trendy model because of her body shape

She really turns me on, you can easily notice she's got experience

She only likes parties with pools or hot tubs

She plays hard to get because she knows she's extremely hot

But if you only saw her when she decides to bring down the curtains

She's decent in public but she's the deadliest kitty in private

I bang her doggystyle, I see that booty, my mind goes crazy, it goes grazy

She turns into a killer in my room

She likes to have sex when she smokes 🍁

She behaves during the day, she gets kinky at night

She always wears make up, smelling like Chanel, nobody even imagines

That she turns into a demoness with big breasts inside my room

I can only notice by the way she looks at me

I know her intentions and she gets kinky in the hotel room

She does what I want on my bed under lean's influence

She enjoys spending time with me because she gets kinky

Every part of her body's out of this world

Not only her booty, her breasts are out of this world too

Day and night, her mouth is mine

She knew it since the night we met

I like to kiss her at every moment

Soft, slow, fast and slow again

We foreplay a bit then I undress her

My tongue gets her from here to Europe

Whoever wants to flirt with her knows that he doesn't have a chance

As she's the prettiest one but she's only mine

She drove me crazy, I couldn't stop it

I can't forget about you since the day we first danced

I lost my mind looking at her body, her smell makes me fly

She likes to have sex when she smokes 🍁

She behaves during the day, she gets kinky at night

She always wears make up, smelling like Chanel, nobody even imagines

That she turns into a demoness with big breasts inside my room

I can only notice by the way she looks at me

I know her intentions and she gets kinky in the hotel room

She does what I want on my bed under lean's influence

She enjoys spending time with me because she gets kinky

It's TrvpGvng babe

Listen to me, girl

You know you're very different when

We lock up in my room

You know you smoke 🍁 with me

We have sex and we smoke 🍁

You know you get kinky when you're with me

She really loves smoking 🍁

You know you like it

I know you don't get scared

You get kinky when we see each other

For more infomation >> TrvpGvng🍻 - Se Desata💋 - Duration: 4:23.

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Chicken Under a Brick | Food Network - Duration: 1:20.

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

For more infomation >> Chicken Under a Brick | Food Network - Duration: 1:20.

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#TBT: Logic Talks Being A Student of The Game - Duration: 1:27.

I can take care of my friends and my family.

That's been my biggest accomplishment, for real.

Like, coming from Section A housing, welfare, food stamps-

knowing that that's not my life anymore.

It's not about dressing how fresh you are, this and that.

That's a plus. That's fun.

I think it's okay to indulge every once in a while,

but the fact that the people I love don't have to worry

or get up and work jobs they hate anymore

and we can all work together,

that's my greatest accomplishment.

When you make great music, they compare you to great artists.

And we live in the recency effect, you know what I mean?

Like, when an artist comes out

and he's just kinda different or this or that,

we wanna put them in a box. We wanna label them and go,

"Oh, this is who they are. Okay. Okay, this is who they are."

And with me, I think it's a little difficult.

I mean, I have inspiration from, you know,

A Tribe Called Quest, Nas, Outkast, uh,

Big Daddy Kane, Big L, Jay Z, Kanye West,

it goes on and on and on.

And I think you can hear all of those things collectively,

just the soul and spirit of hip-hop in my music

because I'm a student in the game and I'm learning every day.

But the one thing I want people to take away

from not only this album, but this interview,

is I am Logic and there is only one of me.

For more infomation >> #TBT: Logic Talks Being A Student of The Game - Duration: 1:27.

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Dear White People and 13 Reasons Why - Duration: 4:07.

For more infomation >> Dear White People and 13 Reasons Why - Duration: 4:07.

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Why Do Zebras Have Stripes? - Duration: 4:01.

Hi, everybody!

You're just in time.

Squeaks and I are looking into an animal mystery.

We were looking through our big book of animals, and the last animal in the book caught our

eye.

It's a zebra!

You've probably heard of them before -- they look a lot like horses, but they have black

and white stripes!

Have you ever wondered why zebras have these special stripes?

To find out, let's look a little closer at the life of a zebra.

Zebras are closely related to horses, and they are like them in a lot of ways!

They look like horses, of course, and run like them too.

They eat grass like horses do, and they even sound a bit like them.

But zebras are also different from horses in some important ways.

For one thing, horses can be found in many parts of the world, but wild zebras only live

in Africa.

Zebras also have hair on the back of their neck -- called a mane -- that's shorter

and spikier than it is on horses.

And of course, horses come in many different colors and patterns, but all zebras wear a

coat of black and white stripes!

But still, not all zebras are exactly the same.

There are actually three different species, or special types, of zebra!

Two of these species are named after the kind of place they live in.

The Plains Zebra lives on plains, where it's mostly flat and there's a lot of grass and

other plants to eat.

Then there's the Mountain Zebra, which lives -- you guessed it! -- in the mountains.

The last species is called Grévy's GRAVY'S Zebra, and it only lives on a few special

grasslands in Africa.

But all types of zebras have their famous stripes, and scientists have always wondered

what these stripes were for.

This is what we're curious about today!

Let's look at a few ideas about how these stripes might help zebras to survive in the

wild.

Some scientists used to think that zebras could use their stripes to recognize each

other.

It turns out that each zebra has a unique pattern of stripes, just like how every person

-- including you! -- has a unique set of fingerprints on their fingertips.

Maybe, by looking at each other's stripes, zebras could recognize each other, and their

families.

But you don't recognize your friends by their fingerprints.

So, we're not sure that zebras use their stripes that way, either.

After all, zebras have many other ways to recognize each other, like by their smell

or by the sounds they make.

So, scientists have also thought that zebras might use their stripes to hide from predators.

Lions and hyenas are two predators that often hunt zebras.

So some have thought that the zebras' long stripes might help them stay hidden in the

tall grass.

But after looking closer, scientists noticed that the zebras' stripes didn't stop lions

and hyenas from finding them.

Instead, the predators used their noses to find zebras by smell -- they weren't fooled

by the zebras' stripes at all.

So, maybe the stripes do something else!

And, there is one other animal that zebras need to keep away: horseflies!

Horseflies are big, pesky biting flies, and they often bite animals like zebras, kind

of like how mosquitoes bite people.

But scientists have noticed that horseflies don't seem to like zebra stripes.

Something about the pattern of the black and white stripes makes horseflies confused, so

they stay away from them.

So maybe that's it!

Today, some scientists think that the stripes help zebras avoid getting bitten by horseflies.

The stripes might work kind of like a built in bug repellant

In fact, it turns out that zebras have the most stripes in places they really don't

want horseflies to bite them, like on their faces.

And many other people have started using the answer to this animal mystery to help protect

horses, too.

Some farmers have started putting zebra striped coats on their horses to keep horseflies away.

What an amazing way to use what we've learned to help our animal friends.

It's important to remember that there could be more than one right answer to a question

-- especially when you're dealing with nature and science.

So, scientists are still looking at all of the other things that stripes might help a

zebra to do.

Maybe you have some good ideas of what these stripes could do, too.

Try using your science skills to make your own guess!

Ask a grown-up to help you to leave your ideas below, or send us an email at kids@scishow.com

We'll see you next time, here at the fort!

For more infomation >> Why Do Zebras Have Stripes? - Duration: 4:01.

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Stephen Curry TRANSFORMS Into Chef Curry : Steph Curry COOKING With The Pot! - Duration: 15:12.

boss / step back

three-pointer someone said to be like

Filipino food you remember when I made

pork adobo and lumpia we're in our old

house I'll try to go to the painter who

was inviting trying to go I went three

years ago it was an amazing time a

triangle bed hold up if I got the hook

go the other way to go go with Jim to

show that I got the neck up go-to for

people to see you let me know

maybe back you up others I love you

watch come I said why did you choose the

number 34 your Jersey there's a guy with

gray hair on right here on a soul patch

Brandi his name's del / used to wear

back with high tonight so absolute far

call from three meters his number I got

two minutes on these potatoes I got

about 30 seconds of these steaks and

about five minutes of the experience so

how easy would you say this homemade

meal kit has been freed up I still

wanted to one being easy and Sandy and

try to win a James Beard Award like a

long what you heard that you heard that

say quasi momentum on it

I ever see juices great let's see it

baby oh you hear that sizzle you hear

that sizzle whoa you can put it on the

cutting board

yeah you can restaurant look at those

perfect filet Stefan did this all by

himself

oh we refurbish cryptologist now you're

gonna take your tongs and remove it and

put it off okay sorry sorry

are you always gotta tell us what to do

all the things on the face I don't want

to say baby come on the time I'm a

little bad boys why are you putting

these on the cutting board put on the

cutting board and let them rest before I

serve them so they can get to the right

temperature tell me fuck they can firm

up a little bit and you see some of

these juices kind of four ounces but oh

this would be Nicole made calm all right

yeah ladies but don't be tempted right

they have to rest

look at these juicy steaks about 2000

BMW potatoes

I gotta see to hear that a nice Colette

I'll enter Colin they're all the

electrical calendar as a training bowl

over here so I think these potatoes down

with the Dre demand the trader bowl in

his golf bag I'm going to take this

heavy cream whoever takes the heavy

cream a little bit of butter and she

goes in laughs installing that Oh

parsley chicken so proud of you it's a

good night and it should be tender when

you stab it in there right Dave it feels

pretty darn to there to eat a minute or

is more probably probably 90 seconds

sandy second girl watch this gamer talk

about the game for second yeah chat 3206

agree you pitying juices up

some extent is that a tattoo on your

wrist to Trish's he got two hats one for

me and one for his team he got to that

he walked away cuz he's being mean come

on

oh yeah better go they have better go

yeah beautiful look how perfect they are

don't they look perfect yeah so put

those on there would you like me to get

you a platter Jordan they can actually

rest in the pan on the countertop if you

have the dress clothes right beautiful

sizzling asparagus night yeah things are

looking up people these pigs are resting

he's studying other cousins Lebanon have

beautiful would you like a lemon

cooking

so trick hold it

/ side to your palm and then please but

the juice will flow over is having you

won't get these yeah but your hand goes

Chef Curry

a little bit of lemon juice perfect babe

well I mean you took everything out of

that lemon or this is so beautiful for

this drink but that sauce you say potato

is the photo you think the middle I

think the model yes like we get this

overhead shot Oh potato face old potato

potato potato facial all right back to

the strawberry even I don't know I got

my heavy cream here

every cream shot in every pretty oh

absolutely

you want me to turn your flame on Oh on

hi everyone where would you go

medium-well

would you like it on the plane

oh butter I'm just gonna add a little

more oh oh you used all your butter and

cheese

get a medium good fakes are resting he's

making the mashed potatoes say hi to my

father's bass more people cocoa made at

cocoa maker call me calm or you milk it

now I'm at pork smash right that's the

best thing you don't need a potato

masher with the trustee or just for

smashing these potatoes pretty nice and

tender

yes not quite yet no they're not

should I need to boil some more - chief

do this yes position yes boom all of

chef curry with the pot

asparagus boom

Riesling yet this is just the starter

we're having a little Riesling to start

the meal this is what we sippin on

I think it's Riesling huh and then we're

going to switch it to a little red you

want to talk to the people while

oh yeah

check out my space right here take this

up

they're resting above the rest of about

four minutes now for like it's time to

show you how exactly what I'm working

Steph Curry COOKING

you look you ain't gonna lose if they

can cut no goodies thank you

just freakin ridiculous go you got a

little bit up there sale with this

colorless bike I mean just look at that

look at that

uh-huh take that right quick Oh Horace

code one 10 to 12

okay you run fellas any wet company

housing prematurely pick your potato

guys again prematurely took the potatoes

out the pan so they were as tenders I

wanted to be so we're just going to call

an audible in this one big old minute

here tender him up a little bit so we

got the saucepan with the potatoes in

there terrible day we'll let those bask

in its own glory for a little bit I'm

gonna go only see what's going on up

game right quick my my potatoes still

getting sendest I got time to walk away

for a second 7063

rockets playing well in the road game

pie was critical

tough move eating speech fish air

gorgeous

- go and bring the three Spurs all the

way to the rest down money let them go

bow you see why are you select your

place while you're wait

I like my please select your lady honey

this the competition well I'm gonna go

to the nice place over there I love it I

don't guess over it just rush you might

get the pamphlet

no wait does this mean I'm on this gta5

I'm always on yet so I need one more

plate this is me and Ayesha my mom my

pasta pal so perfect serving we got we

got 34 5 here but Olga's gonna be forced

these are all looking pretty good

tonight Thank You Lola thanks a lot

it's the final steps right here we're

waiting on these potatoes to get a

little tender potato say thank you ready

let me drain that for you

I'm just getting his arms ready for for

the next game

got a probably until Sunday you ready

for the game so I get mashed potatoes

babe oh so cute guys this is the sexiest

thing he's ever done by far I mean just

look at those look at those arms

I mean GQ is sexy but this is you in the

flesh in your everyday clothes looking

good with your beard that I love your

beard fantastic I mean I never said you

couldn't trim it up but I like you with

facial hair I think it's exactly the

score you want me to go look at the

score he wants me to check the score for

him so follow me people take a look at

my seat I'm not afraid to show them real

women show their feet no I'm just joking

guys and last but not least no you

didn't oh right oh don't they hold on oh

that's me wait wait

good what yeah honey that's my man okay

did a great job great job

alright babe are you plating that up

look at that like a motor-car people I

know are you got some o'clock you want

to slice your steak or do you want to

just keep them home beautiful look at

the skills look at my man wait I got to

show them as perfect medium cook steak

oh my goodness you want to Pink's better

people look at that beautiful pink

Center oh my I can't wait to eat this

would you like me to get you a damp

towel you can clean up the place when

you're done this is a competition look

at him

I'm so proud oh yeah honey do it

say hi to Donna I'm sure I'll apologize

I'm sorry but I go more than one who's

also mama okay be careful with the knife

would you like a spoon as pouring : oh

yeah

do you have clean plating there you go

oh my god hey do you like the potatoes

people nice baby I'm so proud of you

should we pour a glass of cab was you

saw how quick that was just all by

himself

Wow look at these yummy creamy Parmesan

e parsley potatoes lemony asparagus and

deliciously cooked pan stick infused

with butter garlic and rosemary oh yeah

I love you too

happiness squad that's it he didn't you

thought out we came within the time

forty minutes just like the recipe cards

bed is up and getting chased celebrating

over there I'm so proud of him

I hope you guys enjoyed this livestream

he'll say buddy you guys might know

you're not here for me so order my mail

check her out of my kisses Gandhi

sorry other

For more infomation >> Stephen Curry TRANSFORMS Into Chef Curry : Steph Curry COOKING With The Pot! - Duration: 15:12.

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SERIES PARA VER EN FAMILIA || Hermanas Cardi - Duration: 6:01.

For more infomation >> SERIES PARA VER EN FAMILIA || Hermanas Cardi - Duration: 6:01.

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Be A CofC Cougar - Duration: 3:07.

(clomping) (murmuring)

- [Woman] This is our College of Charleston,

and this is our story.

(thoughtful epic music)

As a College of Charleston student,

the whole city is my campus.

Its coastal location, history, and amazing opportunities

have inspired my educational journey.

- [Man] From the moment I set foot on the campus,

I knew this was a special place.

I couldn't believe I would find

so many modern facilities and cutting-edge programs

at one of the oldest universities in the country.

And the college is a liberal arts college, which allows me

to pursue my passions in a uniquely personal way.

My theater classes taught me how to handle myself

in front of large groups of people.

Now I have the skills to be a strong business leader.

- [Woman] Charleston is a truly cosmopolitan city,

and the college attracts students from everywhere.

But what we all have in common

is an insatiable appetite for learning

and the belief that we can and will make a difference.

- [Man] I have learned that there are strength in numbers

and that being part of a team will help me change the world.

(cheering)

(swish)

- [Group] Go Cou-gars, go! (murmuring)

(cheering)

(thump)

(echoing crack)

- [Woman] I truly believe

that this campus has no boundaries.

My college years have taught me how to be flexible,

adaptable, and a creative problem solver.

With these intangible skills,

I can stake my claim in a rapidly changing world.

- [Man] I'm proud of my college.

Now I'm gonna make it proud of me.

I might discover a planet or start a business.

Whatever happens in my future,

my education will make it happen.

And that's what it means to be a Cougar.

For more infomation >> Be A CofC Cougar - Duration: 3:07.

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Mountain Monsters Huckleberry's Predator - Duration: 9:56.

For more infomation >> Mountain Monsters Huckleberry's Predator - Duration: 9:56.

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Game of Zones - S4:E4: 'Trade Winds' - Duration: 4:33.

What is going on?

Shhh....it's the trade deadline

This could be our ticket out of here

Why would you want to leave?

Aren't we in line for the first pick?

No, we're not!

Because that fool Billy King traded it to

Boston a few years ago!

What!?

I know! They're idiots--

Der coming! Der coming!

Back up, back up!

Everybody back up!

I'm sorry to announce...

we have made a trade

Oh yes oh yes

Please please please

Bojan

Yeah

You're going to Washingfell

Sorry

Oh my god!

They are like, uh...

They have like...wins

Yes

Thirty-four wins, they have

THIRTY-FOUR?!

Oh man, that's like so many wins!

I know you're disappointed, but...

pack your bags

They expect you there on the morrow

Right. Right. Oh yeah I'm very sad

This is so--I'm very sad but I'll go pack now

and fight all the tears

Um...love all you guys!

Thanks, uh, Lord Commander--ex-Lord Commander!

Oh this is so sad!

This is SO GOOD! OH I'M FREE!

I'M FREE FROM THIS PIECE OF SHIT TEAM!

THIS IS THE HAPPIEST DAY OF MY LIFE!

I DON'T HAVE TO BE IN STUPID BROOKLYN

THIS IS THE DUMBEST PLACE

WORST FRANCHISE EVER!

MAN THESE GUYS ARE F--

Any..uh...other trades to report? Or...

No

Dammit!

Now, come on, it's time to practice

Tomorrow we lose to the Nuggets!

Who goes there?

House Magic!

What are they doing here?

We don't play 'em for a fortnight

What do you want?

We want to propose a trade!

Well we don't need a trade.

We're contenders!

Oh come on now, you're fifth in the East!

You're worse than the...Hawks right now!

Don't you want to compete with the Cavs?

I mean, It's true

We could use, like, a power forward

Well then do it! Do it! Do it!

Well alright, whaddya got?

Serge Ibaka!

He shoots, dunks, and he's an elite rim protector.

He's everything you need

Isn't that right Serge?

I defend anyone

Except LeBron

Alright. Okay

Well what do you want for him?

DeMar DeRozan!

No! He's my friend!

Argh. Very well

Worth a shot

Then give us...

Norman Powell!

No!

He's...too young!

But I'm also your friend, right?

Shush Norman!

I'm trying to make a trade here!

I am also his friend!

Norman!

Alright. Well then what else do you have to offer?

We'll give you...

Can we trade Drake?

I don't think so. No

What about Terrence?

What about Terr--

You can have Terrence Ross

Well what does he do?

He's like...

an older Norman

No I'm not

Terrence! You'll like it in Orlando. It's warm

Let the man speak!

Terrence, what do you do?

Well, I'm a pretty good 3 and D player...

Um...

though some people might call me inconsistent...

So maybe I'm not a good 3 and D player--

No no no, you are!

I AM a good 3 and D player

OH! And a decorated dunker!

Well he's certainly inconsistent

Throw in a draft pick and it's a deal!

A draft pi--

Fine, but then you gotta give us somethin' else too!

Something else? Ugh

Alright we'll give you a choice

You can either have...Mario Hezonja...

Or...this horse

Well what does Mario do?

He scores three points a game

And what does the horse do?

It's a f-- it's a horse!

It walks around with people on it

I don't know...does horse things!

That kid was the fifth pick in the draft. He's probably got potential.

Yeah but it's a horse! It does horse things!

We'll take the horse!

For more infomation >> Game of Zones - S4:E4: 'Trade Winds' - Duration: 4:33.

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Would Earth Be Breathable Without GRAVITY? | Dolan Life Mysteries - Duration: 11:50.

• From what the biggest star ever is, to whether rain has an actual smell, we answer

some of your most burning questions about life

• Hey there, my name is Doopie, I'll be reading out the questions and answers

• I'm Danger Dolan and I'm here to blow your mind with truth

10 – Peachy 12 How do bees make their hives?

• With hammer and nails.

You think it's easy for them?

They're like, a millimetre wide!

Tools are out of the question.

That saying, "You're being a busy bee?"

You think that's just idle talk?

No, these things work 36 hour days.

Considering the work they put in, hives are a god damn biblical monument created by their

whole tribe.

• You're, like, deeply invested in this, aren't you?

• I dig bees.

I like their attitude.

• Yeah, till they sting you with their BUTT and die.

• …………….why would you say that?

• Honeybees construct their hives by chewing on wax until it is soft enough to mould into

the hexagonal cells that make up the hive.

The worker bees store honey in their stomachs and turn it into wax using their glands.

The hive is constructed in a location that is protected from weather such as a hole in

a tree.

9 – Y Steizer Why does the rain have a smell?

• Fast food.

These companies are pumping out plumes of greasy gas from factories just so you can

have your McObesity Burger.

Killing the environment with waves of stinky oily air.

Melting the polar caps.

Ending the lives of children – all for a handful of your grime-ridden chicken strips.

• Noooo – that stuffs delicious.

I'd kill for a box of the greasiest chicken wings, twenty, NO THIRTY nuggets with a tub

of some… mmm… chocolate… mouse – oh gosh….

I need it…

• You.

You're part of the problem, Doopie.

• No no no, go away, I love my grease.

• Rain has a smell because a chemical reaction is caused by oil that plants secrete during

dry periods.

When the rain hits the ground after a dry spell it releases the odor into the air through

microscopic particles called aerosols.

The pleasant smell of rain is called "petrichor".

Also, lighting can split oxygen and nitrogen molecules during a thunderstorm, creating

nitric oxide.

This scent is known as ozone.

• Your scent is known as stink, fatty.

• Dolan STOP.

• Gotta stop eating that smelly fast food.

• NEVEEEEEEEERRRRR.

8 – FreddyFusebarRO150 Can we still breathe without gravity?

• Here's the thing though.

If there's no gravity, that means you're likely in space.

Which means there's no air.

It is difficult to breath in space, I've heard.

• But – what about those rooms they put you in where you float and stuff?

• That's… not a real thing.

• Um.

Yes it is.

My dad knew a guy who did it.

• Well, I know a guy who says you're wrong.

Me.

It's me.

You're wrong.

• Yes, you CAN breathe without gravity, but only if you have something to keep the

air around you – either a space suit or spaceship.

Gravity helps us breathe on Earth because it holds in the atmosphere, keeping the air

around us.

So, gravity is not necessary for breathing as long as there is another means of containing

air.

7 – Escamillo Animations Who started naming plants with latin names? and why?

• Someone who just hates making things easy for us.

They couldn't just walk up to a brown leaf and say "Yep, this is a brown leaf".

No, instead it's a brownlificusmomentumshoogyboogyrasputinus.

Thanks.

Man, ya really cleared up that confusion, didn't ya?

• HA.

Caught you, Dolan!

• What—?

What are you talking about?

Where'd you come fro— • That old thing you said?

A little while back?

Calling my skin condition "Birdificus Melissalie" – that's a LATIN name.

If you were so interested in avoiding confusion, why didn't you just call it bird disease?

• Wow.

Um.

Sure.

You're right.

I'm sorry… for that thing I apparently did.

• Thank you!

Sorry to interrupt Doopie, just had to correct Dolan.

Later guys!

• Yeah.

You uh… really sorted me out.

• It was Swedish naturalist, Carl Linnaeus who developed the binomial system for naming

plants, which groups plants into "genus" and "species".

He chose Latin because it doesn't need to be translated and will always mean the same

thing since it's a dead language and therefore won't change over time.

6 – MicroMator Why do dinosaur fossils remain on Earth but human skeletons don't?

• Because dinosaurs were huge, mate.

Humans are puny, shrimpy things that die if you breathe on them wrong.

If it takes 30 years for a human skeleton to waste away, trust me, it'll take 3 billion

years for those big ol' dinosaurs to clear out.

• 3 billion?

Come on.

That's a bit of an exaggeration, right?

• Na.

When you die, I give your skeleton 3 years, tops.

• Well I guess I won't die then.

Hmph.

• Tch.

Good luck.

• Dinosaur fossils aren't skeletons but rock that replaced the bones after minerals

leeched from them while being encased in the Earth after a disaster – usually volcanic

eruption – that prevents the air from reaching the bones.

Human fossils have been found, but skeletons don't remain on Earth because all organic

matter will eventually decompose - bones just do so at a slower rate.

5 – LunaStarGirl AJ Why is glass fragile?

• Cause it's cheap.

They don't make glass like they used to.

Back in my day, you could run over a pair of glasses with a tank and it would utterly

destroy the tank.

Nowadays I can't even pour two drops of water into a glass without it exploding into

3 billion pieces – AND NO THAT'S NOT AN EXAGGERATION.

• This is due to the brittle, crystalline structure of glass, which doesn't allow

it to bend or dent.

This happens because the tetrahedral crystals that compose the glass are not regular and

repeating.

This means it cannot bend, and if enough force is applied it will shatter.

This is why glass shatters when it gets hot, because it doesn't have the ability to expand

very well.

4 – Narwhalsaman 44 Why do electronic screens randomly dim and brighten?

• That's the phones way of saying, "Hey idiot, stop using me so much, go outside and

interact with your friends".

But of course, nobody pays any attention.

SOME people are just way too addicted to their….

*sigh*…feed.

• Hey I am talking to my friends, you butt stain.

• Yeah well, when I was your age, your friends had to actually BE there.

• When was that – 3 billion years ago?

• Ugh.

Oh.

That was a good rip.

I'm genuinely hurt.

Damn.

• This is an automatic energy saving mechanism designed to limit power consumption in portable

devices like smart phones and laptops.

The iPhone for example, also adjusts the brightness depending on the light around you.

It goes brighter when out in the sun to counteract the glare, and dim when in low light conditions.

3 – Milca Cebujano Which is the Biggest Star ever recorded?

• I think the major problem with this question is that when you look up, they're all the

same size.

I guess some of them are kinda, a little bigger than others?

It's like comparing ants though.

Man, which grain of sand on the beach is the biggest grain ever?

Yeah, I'm sorry, I don't care.

• UY Scuti is currently recognized as the biggest star.

German astronomers discovered it in 1860 but the true size was not known until 2012 when

it was observed through "The Very Large Telescope" in the Atacama Desert, Chile.

It is between 1,054,378,000 – 1,321,540,000 miles in radius, which is 1,700 times the

radius of the Sun.

• Hey guys – what is it?

What do you want?

• Um… what?

• What are you talking about?

• You wanted to talk to me, right?

Said something about the biggest star ever?

• ………..ooooooh COME ON.

Not you, ya dingus.

• Huh?

• Ugh.

He thinks biggest star means him.

• Oh.

Wow.

WOW.

• Hey – what can I say?

I'm fantastic.

2 – Jacket-the-rooster Why are Eagle, Falcon, Hawk and Vulture females larger than the males?

• That's just a myth.

Nobody can tell the difference between a male or female bird.

Visibly they look exactly the same – angry eyes, hook face.

You haven't got much to work with.

• You saying Melissa looks like a guy?

• Her?

She got bird disease, it's different.

If she spent more time exercising and less time swooping on people rambling about Latin,

she'd be bigger than all of us.

• What are you talking about?

Melissa's ripped!

She plays tons of sports, her body's tight – it's just hidden under her feathers.

• Well, no…

I — wait how do you know what her body looks like?

• Girls know things that boys don't.

• * • The best theories suggest that it has

to do with the females taking care of the nest.

Called "reverse sexual size dimorphism".

The female spends more time building the nest and then incubating the egg, and therefore

must keep the eggs warm and protected.

So, it would make sense that she would be larger to defend herself.

The male needs to be lean to catch prey efficiently.

1 – ClarkGuild Why do we only have 5 senses..

Are there other senses that exist or others that we don't know about that we may have?

• You know when you're on the beach and you get sand stuck between your toes and you

try to brush it off but it just makes more sand stick in there & you realise you're

literally surrounded by sand and there's no escape so you feel frustrated, depressed

& sunburnt?

I have no idea if that's another sense.

It's just been bothering me so I thought I should tell you.

• Well, I love the beach.

• Good for you.

• You should just give it a chance.

• No thanks.

• Don't be such a pooper.

• Bye.

• Senses are a way for our body to register various "physical phenomena" and for our

brain to process them.

In fact, we have more than five senses - although the exact amount cannot be agreed upon.

Some additional senses that have been confirmed are: pressure, itch, balance, temperature,

hunger, pain and thirst.

• * • Oohhhhhh it's so nice to relaaxxxxxx

• WOAH.

Guys.

Check this out.

Biggest grain of sand I've ever seen in my LIFE.

For more infomation >> Would Earth Be Breathable Without GRAVITY? | Dolan Life Mysteries - Duration: 11:50.

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VÍDEO X • [RE-EDIT] - Duration: 7:25.

Hey, fuck, fuck, pussy.

For more infomation >> VÍDEO X • [RE-EDIT] - Duration: 7:25.

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Bow Wow Challenge #bowwowchallenge - Duration: 2:12.

Bow Wow Challenge #bowwowchallenge

For more infomation >> Bow Wow Challenge #bowwowchallenge - Duration: 2:12.

-------------------------------------------

Upload to YouTube - Duration: 0:57.

In this video, we'll show you how to upload videos to YouTube.

To get started, click the "Uploads" icon here.

Before you start uploading the video you can choose its video privacy settings.

Now choose the video you'd like to upload from your computer.

As the video is uploading you can edit both the basic and advanced settings of the video, and decide if you want to notify subscribers.

Click "Publish" to finish uploading a public video to YouTube.

If you set the video privacy setting to Private or Unlisted, just click "Done" to finish the upload.

Here's a tip - if you don't click "Publish", your video won't be viewable by other people, even though you set the privacy setting to public.

You can always publish your video at a later time in your Video Manager.

If you'd like to learn more about uploading to YouTube, just click the card in this video.

And that's it!

Subscribe to our channel for more tips and tricks.

For more infomation >> Upload to YouTube - Duration: 0:57.

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MEDITAR QUÉ ES Y CÓMO SE HACE por Sol Ahimsa - Duration: 1:50:41.

For more infomation >> MEDITAR QUÉ ES Y CÓMO SE HACE por Sol Ahimsa - Duration: 1:50:41.

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Keto Snack Box - Duration: 1:40.

Hello and welcome back to my channel I

have a really quick video for you today.

I'm about to head out with my kids and I

made this snack box, lunch box, whatever

you want to call it and I thought I'd

share what I'm taking because it might

help you if you need some meals for

out-and-about, lunch box and snack boxes

and all that, so we've got a bit of

spinach leaves there and half an avocado

I'm going to top it with some salt and

some avocado oil as well for some extra

fat and flavor, I've got a whole heap of

salami

I just chopped up pieces of salami, I

love salami and it's just such an easy

awesome low carb high fat snack or part

of a meal box and then we have grated

cheese, so I just really popped a

portion on. This took literally a minute,

two minutes to put together and it means

while I'm out and about I won't be hungry,

it means that I don't have to worry

about going for foods or trying to find

something that's low carb keto friendly

and I've just got awesome food on me

that tastes delicious and it sticks on

plan and I'm using one of my favorite

lunch boxes it's an easy lunchbox and

I've got a whole stack of these, so I'll

make this for myself and make some boxes

for my kids they're not on Keto, so they will have

sandwiches and all kinds of things, so

that's the quick and easy video for

today make sure that you leave a like

and subscribe for more inspiration and

leave a comment and let me know what it

your go to, when you want a quick go

to snack box, something that's on the go

low-carb keto friendly, I look forward

to reading your comments and thanks so

much for watching this super short video

and we'll see you again soon bye.

For more infomation >> Keto Snack Box - Duration: 1:40.

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How to use "filter" function of the "Google Photos" - Duration: 2:44.

How to use "filter" function of the "Google Photos"

Hello everyone

This time, we will explain how to use the "filter" function of the "Google Photos"

Of function can change the appearance of photos that are stored in the "Google Photos" "filter" it is equipped with

By using this feature, for example, to brighten the indoor photos you've taken in a dark feeling,

Or a photograph of the cooking more vivid, like or increase the depth to the sea of ​​landscape photography, will be able to edit various

"Filter" function of the "Google Photos" becomes the editing mode by clicking on the edit icon to display the photo for editing in the "Google Photos"

It will be able to use immediately

"Filter" is only to select from among the "filter" that is basically originally prepared

To reflect the effect of the "original" as soon as you select anything other than "filter", photos of appearance will be changed

Also by "filter" will also be displayed slide bar where you can change the white balance

And the slide bar of the switch to the slide bar tab "brightness" "color" "pop" in the other edit mode,

For "Brightness" and "color" is displayed more slide bar by clicking the arrow of the slide bar lateral,

You will be able to quite finely customize

Being edited by holding down and clicking the mouse when the mouse arrow in the photo, it is also possible to make a comparison with the original photo

Edit that it is to click on the "Finish" When you are finished, but "filter" will be overwritten as a photograph that has been reflected,

You can revert to the original photo at any time by clicking the also "undo Edit" after storage

Also if you want to save it as a separate file by clicking the menu icon and then click the "Save a Copy"

These features can be used in exactly the same way in the smartphone version of "Google Photos" app

You can also expect the diffusion effect changing the "filter" impression of the photos by using the function of the "Google Photos" in the case of especially post photos to SNS

Also, when detailed settings when using the "filter" function is cumbersome by selecting the "Auto", I recommend optimal effect is applied to the photo

Please try by all means take advantage

For more infomation >> How to use "filter" function of the "Google Photos" - Duration: 2:44.

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Here's My Canada: My Home - Duration: 0:11.

To me, Canada is

one word: my home.

For more infomation >> Here's My Canada: My Home - Duration: 0:11.

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Fleadome ACT NonToxic FleaKilling System - Duration: 11:49.

For more infomation >> Fleadome ACT NonToxic FleaKilling System - Duration: 11:49.

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The Language of Film: Crash Course Film History #5 - Duration: 9:29.

The earliest days of film are full of self-taught artists, doing lots of experimentation, and

stumbling across many a happy accident. And some sad accidents, probably.

Nobody really knew what they were doing.

They were making it up as they went, and audiences went along for the ride.

At first, people was impressed by the sheer technical marvel of moving pictures.

But thanks to Georges Méliès' passion for to dazzling illusions and tricky editing,

film began to emerge as a new medium for stories.

As filmmakers started to experiment with narrative film, they began to establish a language through

different editing techniques and camera movements.

And with any language comes rules – things like grammar, syntax, and punctuation – which

can help artists and storytellers communicate their ideas in clear and interesting ways.

But before rules can be followed, or broken, or mastered, they have to be discovered by someone.

And for film, that someone was Edwin S. Porter. And for Eagle Punching, that's me.

[Opening Titles Play]

Georges Méliès was a stage magician whose whole approach to entertainment

was to wow an audience with illusion, extravagance, and surprise.

So it makes sense that his films, as impressive and influential as they were, operated as

performative spectacles.

This type of filmmaking is more interested in presentation than representation.

We're supposed to sit back in slack-jawed amazement at the mysterious feats occurring

before us, instead of empathizing with characters or "finding ourselves" on screen.

The film scholar Tim Gunning calls this the "Cinema of Attractions," and offers it

as a way to think about the entire first decade of film – where the novelty itself of film

is enough to keep people buying tickets.

You've probably experienced this concept at some point: a new technology comes out,

and at first we're all just marveling at what it can do.

Like, posting shaky vertical videos of your cat online for everybody to see.

Or wandering around outside throwing virtual Pokéballs at virtual Pokémon. Speaking of... GOT 'EM!

But eventually, the newness wears off, and people want something more.

I havn't played Angry Birds in many months.

That's what was happening in 1903, as mainstream

films started to focus more on narratives designed to engage the viewer, rather than

simply astonish them.

And that's exactly when Edwin S. Porter entered the filmmaking scene.

Born in 1870, Porter worked as a sign painter, telegraph operator, and minor inventor, before

becoming a touring projectionist.

He travelled from South America to Canada exhibiting films for a device called the Projectorscope

– one of Edison's competitors.

Part of Porter's job was to assemble the various actualités and short films into longer

feature programs.

He picked the order, created transitions between the films, and arranged for any musical or

spoken accompaniment.

Now, this feels like a good place to make a point about silent films.

Because there was no such thing!

WHAT!?!?!

I mean, even in the Golden Age of Silent Film, movies were almost never shown in actual silence.

We call them "silent films" because the technology to record synchronous sound hadn't

really been invented yet.

But that doesn't mean that folks gathered in theaters, church basements, or barns and

watched films in pin-drop silence.

Larger venues employed full orchestras, bands, or organists to accompany their films.

Smaller spaces might have had a piano player or a phonograph.

Or a guy who went, "la la laaaa"... probably not that though.

Some films were even released with scripts to be performed by actors, or voice-over narration

to be read along with the images.

So in 1899, after his stint as a travelling exhibitor of not-so-silent films, Porter returned

to New York.

He eventually became the head of production at one of Edison's film studios, responsible

for setting the stories, operating the camera, directing the actors, and assembling the final films.

Wore a lot of hats, that guy.

This is where his time as a touring projectionist came in handy.

Not only did he have a good idea what kinds of stories and techniques played well in front

of an audience, but he'd also spent a lot of time cutting together different pieces of film.

In doing this rough kind of "editing," he stumbled upon a bunch of techniques and

effects he would put to use in his own multi-shot films.The most influential of these is called

parallel action or cross-cutting.

It's an editing technique so powerful, and which occurs in so many films and TV shows

today, that you probably don't even think about it.

Basically, parallel action is the idea that a film can cut back and forth between two

or more events that are happening simultaneously within the world of a film.

Even though you're seeing these scenes in sequential order, your brain understands that

they're actually happening at the same time.

Like, imagine two parallel lines.

Each one represents the timeline of an event, and both events are occurring at the exact same time.

Now, imagine slicing those two lines up, and stitching a few alternating pieces together

into a single new line.

If I were to show you that final assembly of film, your brain would intuitively understand

that these events were happening at the same time.

Cool, right?

The first film that we know utilized parallel action successfully was Edwin S. Porter's

Life of an American Fireman, made in 1902 and inspired by Méliès' A Trip to the Moon.

The story follows – spoiler alert – an American fireman, who rescues his wife from

a burning building.

The film begins with a napping fireman dreaming about his wife and child going to bed at home.

I love napping.

After a fire alarm is pulled, and the firemen race to the house on fire, we cut inside the

building to see the wife and child carried out of their smoke-filled bedroom.

Then, the film cuts back outside the building, and we watch the same firemen enter the same

building and emerge once again with the wife and the child.

Even though this innovation seems small, it contributed to film grammar in ways we still

see to this day, and affected what filmmakers thought was possible as they constructed their

stories for the screen.

Now, in 1903, Porter released his most successful film: The Great Train Robbery.

Some scholars argue that The Great Train Robbery doesn't use parallel action in the same

way that The Life of an American Fireman did.

But I think a close reading of the film shows a sophisticated understanding of how a filmmaker

can manipulate time by cutting between simultaneous scenes.

In the film, a railroad engineer is knocked out and tied up by a group of bandits bent

on hijacking a train.

The heist plays out in a traditional, linear fashion: Each scene is one uninterrupted shot

after another, including a really long shot of the thieves lining up the passengers and

stealing their stuff.

Then, a remarkable thing happens... and I'm gonna remark on it.

Once the heist is complete, the film cuts back to the railroad office, as a young girl

discovers the unconscious engineer, revives him, and sets him free.

We then cut to a group of law enforcement officers at a dance, where the engineer busts

in and alerts them to the heist.

And finally, we cut to the criminals riding horses through the woods, being chased by

the law enforcement officers.

At this moment, the two time streams that were happening simultaneously – the railroad

engineer's and the criminals' – suddenly merge.

And the rest of the film plays out in another linear scene in which the offers gun down

the criminals, dispensing the kind of frontier justice that would make Clint Eastwood proud.

Contemporary films use cross-cutting all the time.

Take the final sequence from The Godfather, for example.

70s but, contemporary.

In it, director Francis Ford Coppola cuts

back and forth between the baptism of Michael Corleone's godson and the slaughter of his

enemies – church to bloodbath and back again. Fun.

This kind of parallel action not only shows us events that are happening simultaneously,

but also connects them thematically and symbolically.

Michael is consolidating his power as head of a major crime family through both violent

and peaceful means, in ceremonies both sacred and profane, juxtaposing life and death.

Not every use of parallel action is as profound as that, though.

Comic book blockbusters like The Dark Knight or Captain America: The Winter Soldier cross-cut

during action sequences to heighten tension, while thrillers like The Fugitive and The

Silence of the Lambs juxtapose the pursuer and the pursued.

And every romantic comedy that ends with a race to the airport cuts back and forth between

the would-be sweethearts, daring us to consider the possibility that they won't live happily

ever after.

All of that starts with Edwin S. Porter and his experiments with parallel action.

Porter was responsible for a few other innovations in The Great Train Robbery that made it one

of the most influential movies of the early silent era.

Before The Great Train Robbery, most films consisted of static shots.

The camera was set up, someone turned the crank, and the scene played out before the lens.

Porter was among the first filmmakers to begin moving the camera during the shot.

And that's how we got the pan and the tilt.

A pan occurs when the camera is turned left or right on a horizontal axis from a fixed

point, like the top of a tripod.

And a tilt happens when the camera is moved up or down on a vertical axis from a fixed point.

Porter used both in The Great Train Robbery, including one remarkable pan as the escaping

criminals hop over a stream and scurry through the trees.

The camera pans left with them to discover… horses: their means of escape!

The film and the filmmaker are playing a trick on us.

They know more than we do, and Porter is revealing narrative information in a camera move, instead

of just showing us everything!

He's using the camera to tell the story. Amazing!

Here's another chance to put yourself in the shoes of an audience member: one who's

only seen films where the camera never moved, and all the story information was right there

in the shot.

Then imagine seeing a film where that information was withheld and given to you piece by piece,

keeping you on your toes.

You're suddenly watching an exponentially more sophisticated film.

Lucky you.

Not to mention, the last shot of The Great Train Robbery was unique in its own right.

It's a medium close-up of one of the bandits, much closer than any shot we've seen so

far – from about navel up – and he's looking directly at us.

He raises his pistol, aims at the camera – at us! – and fires.

The size, scale, and direct gaze of this shot was startling at the time, and influential

enough that Martin Scorsese stole it for a key moment in Goodfellas.

And if it's good enough for Marty, it must be pretty good. Marty, if you're watching? Can I call you Marty?

Let me know in the comments.

No single filmmaker did as much to shape narrative film grammar in the first decade of motion

pictures as Edwin S. Porter.

He uncovered a series of tools and techniques – the first rules of narrative film language

– that subsequent directors would use, modify, and expand upon for decades to come.

Prior to The Life of an American Fireman and The Great Train Robbery, films were almost

all constructed in a strictly linear fashion – complete scene followed by complete scene. BORING!

But after Porter, filmmakers became more adept at telling stories, using shots and cuts to

engage the audience and keep them coming back for more.

And in many ways, film has never looked back.

Today we learned about Edwin S. Porter, whose experiments with editing helped establish

the language of narrative film, and expanded the horizons of what filmmakers thought was possible.

We introduced the idea of cross-cutting, and how our brains can understand when a film

cuts between simultaneous events.

Then, we discussed how Porter innovated even more storytelling tools, like moving the camera

in pans and tilts.

And now that the foundation has been laid, next time, we'll talk about even more developments

in film language and the emergence of the feature film.

Crash Course Film History is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios.

You can head over to their channel to check out a playlist of their latest amazing shows,

like PBS Space Time, The Good Stuff, and Blank on Blank.

This episode of Crash Course was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Crash Course Studio

with the help of these nice train robbers and our amazing graphics team, is Thought Cafe.

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