Thứ Hai, 31 tháng 7, 2017

Waching daily Jul 31 2017

If Gary Vaynerchuk Had 0 Subscribers! (Gary Vaynerchuk YouTube Channel Review & Growth Strategy)

For more infomation >> If Gary Vaynerchuk Had 0 Subscribers! (Gary Vaynerchuk YouTube Channel Review & Growth Strategy) - Duration: 8:34.

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

Restituição, Dúvidas & Avanços - Duration: 11:40.

For more infomation >> Restituição, Dúvidas & Avanços - Duration: 11:40.

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

Minecraft FTB Lite[LIVE]|Jack Freescape - Duration: 1:14:46.

For more infomation >> Minecraft FTB Lite[LIVE]|Jack Freescape - Duration: 1:14:46.

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

UNDEFEATED SCHNITZEL CHALLENGE ON MALTA!! - Duration: 7:55.

Hey everybody this is Randy Santel

"Atlas" with Atlas & Zeus Promotions and

proud owner of foodchallenges.com! Very

very excited tonight! I'm going for

overall win number 440 and my third on

the island of Malta which is country

number 17 but very excited to be back a

couple days ago we were here and Seliema

on Malta at The Tree I took on their

Schnitzel and Chicken, today I am taking

on their King's Plate

Schnitzel Challenge! this is their only

undefeated challenge so I decided to

come back and take it! Loved all the

schnitzel I had in Germany and on that

sandwich so let's get this one down I've

got one hour to finish if I fail it's

going to be about 45 euros there's

basically two full kilos of schnitzel

one person's been able to finish all of

the meat within the hour

but they couldn't finish the extra fries

and the salad so this is I got some

negative or a mushroom sauce over here

too I think that's where the how it's

pronounced but to get some of the

schnitzel but I've got one hour to

finish if I win I'll get the meal free

and I'll be the first person on their

Wall of Fame for beating this challenge

so let's get it started!

All right one of my goals on this

trip was to get to 50 wins in Europe and

I've already done that but I also really

wanted to get up to number 440 which if

I beat this tonight that'll be 440 it

hasn't been beaten yet so there's no

record I just got passed within the hour

that schnitzel looks awesome so lets get it!

One, two, three. . . Boom! Oh that's hot!

It's juicy luckily

I'm going to let these cool off and get the fries down

eleven minutes this schnitzel is phenominal!

The best I've had on

this trip! It's really juicy it's going

down and the mushroom the Diego sauce is

awesome but oh let's get it down get the

win! So good!

14 minutes 45 seconds I left that

last piece of schnitzel intact so it

stayed warm! It's really warm so I'm

gonna let some of the other schnitzel

settle and I'm going to get these

healthy vegetables

I think these were for putting on the

schnitzel well I didn't do that but

we'll get them down

couple hundred grams of schnitzel left

we're 18 minutes 45 seconds.

The sauce wasn't required I just want to do

it - the mushroom and the sauce was good. Twenty three minutes in!

the last bite to get the win!

Felt good on that one! Twenty three minutes

and 28 seconds! First person to win for

obviously the new record! That's a good

bar but thank you to The Trees here on

the island of Malta! Delicious delicious

challenge the owner is German and he did

awesome cooking those that was

definitely the best schnitzel I've had on this

trip great way to end the Malta part of

our trip will be heading to London

tomorrow for my last challenge of the

trip which I'm very happy for but yeah

awesome meal I got the $45 challenge

meal for free or sorry the 45 euro meal

for free I'll be up on their Wall of

Fame is the first person to defeat this

challenge and overall win number 440,

so thank you to everyone for staying to

watch thank you to The Trees for both

delicious free meals I've had here in

Malta thank you guys to watching!

For more infomation >> UNDEFEATED SCHNITZEL CHALLENGE ON MALTA!! - Duration: 7:55.

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

Poland's Got It! The Biggest Castle In The World, Malbork...Under Siege! - Duration: 12:04.

We're about to go see the biggest castle in the world, and guess what

we're not in Austria, we're not in Germany we're not in the UK... we're in Poland, we're in Malbork

Let's go!

So the castle is an incredible sight to see all year round

but if you come here in July, at the end of July, this year 21st to 23rd

they do a reconstruction of the time when Polish powers were trying to get the castle from the knights

and there's lots of battles, there's just a lot of stuff going on

and you can kind of re-live that experience of what life was like living here in 1410

The eagle is here to keep an eye on things

just to make sure everyone understands who is the boss...

You wanna do it?

Is it hard?

You got it?

Yeah, it's just heels right? Tokio girl!

You're very good at it!

Because I did! I was doing it in Japan. This is one of the traditional old Japanese...

ohh, so you did this before?

yeah

ohh, ok

almost every day

Let me try...

What is it called in Japan? Let's go, let's walk forward there's better light...

What is it called? it's called "takeuma"

I can do higher one too, like 2 meters high...

Really?

Damn, nice!

You wanna put a hood on him...

So, you're not from Poland! Not even from "Małopolska", not even from "Wielkopolska", and not from any other "Mazowsze"

I don't know if I can let you in...

Brother!

Who is this?

Ohhh...

Good looking

Ma'am please, the rest stays...

I think we can let her in...

for the rest of you...

So we're right in the middle now. O

Originally didn't used to be this big, only a small castle

and then in 1309 the Teutonic Knights decided to move their capital from Venice to here

and then decided they decided to make it massive!

So you see this little tiny building...

As unassuming as it is, that is sort of the most important building in the whole castle

because that's the well, and without the well without water

the whole place is unusable... almost unusable

so I didn't know this but apparently a common practice when conquering castles back in the day was to just try to poison the well...

like you know throw throw in a dead animal or dead people into it

so it's poisoned, and then you can't do much about it

Not me, I'm innocent...

I'm innocent!

They have a reconstruction of the prison, and lots of different things that they obviously did here at the castle

One interesting thing about the castle, it was actually never fully conquered

it was partially conquered, but ultimately it was taken over once, and not by force but by money

it was bought by the polish King for 600 kilos of gold

So pretty standard real estate transaction and this is the kitchen for the night it

And this is the kitchen for the knights. It seems kind of small, but the truth is that in this whole castle...

there was only about sixty knights that lived here permanently

and out of the thousands of people that were kind of working here on a regular basis

they were just hired workers for the knights

So really, sixty people, sixty key people and everyone else was service...

So back in those days water was so polluted, and there was no easy way of cleaning it that people just drank wine and beer

and here in the Teutonic Order they had something like 18 types of wine and 12 types of beer available on site

So if you think we've made progress...

This here is the main church, that's the heart...

of the place... because after all, they were monks, they were knights but they were also first and foremost monks

This is where the grand master would sit

when they were they were making all the important decisions, here in this room

I do have to say that you don't have to be religious to appreciate... the mood...

that monasteries have

makes you stop a little bit and kind of reflect and think

even with all these people here it still feels really serene and peaceful

So the story here is really cool

The Polish forces had a spy that went into the castle

went into the room where all of the leadership, the Teutonic leadership was considering

how to defend the castle, and when the Polish forces were about to attack...

he put a red hat in the window so the artillery knew where to attack and the

plan was, if we can hit this one column in the middle the whole room would

collapse and then kill all the commanders

and without the command, without the officers, the leaders, it would be...

a piece of cake to conquer the castle

unfortunately they narrowly missed it

and here on the wall you can see how close the Polish artillery was to just...

obliterating the whole command center of the castle

so that's the cannon ball...

and... the Teutonic Knights put it there to remember how they were saved by God on that historic day...

Łukasz, did you know that Malbork was destroyed, like about 50% of this castle

Yeah, that seems very probable...

Soviet and German...

No war! No war! No war anymore!

Yeah, you can see... new brick, old brick...

they repaired it really nice...

they filled it up and repaired it really nice, but still...

It's probably not what it would have been...

had we not had Germans come here and...

Germans...

Take a boat on Nogat River

So once you're done exploring the castle, a great thing you can do is take the boat up the river

and see the surrounding nature, see where the Teutonic order chose to have their castle

Catch her! (Screaming)

For more infomation >> Poland's Got It! The Biggest Castle In The World, Malbork...Under Siege! - Duration: 12:04.

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

ASMR 💤 RILASSATI MENTRE TI TRUCCO ! Makeup Roleplay, Personal Attention - Duration: 27:38.

For more infomation >> ASMR 💤 RILASSATI MENTRE TI TRUCCO ! Makeup Roleplay, Personal Attention - Duration: 27:38.

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

What Really Happened To Geena Davis? - Duration: 5:33.

Oscar-winning actress Geena Davis was celebrated for her roles in iconic feminist movies in

the early '90s, but these days, she's known for a disappointing TV comeback and a random

attempt at making the Olympics.

What's kept Davis out of the spotlight for so long?

Here's a look at what happened and the exciting projects that may finally bring her back.

Commander in brief

Davis staged a full-fledged comeback in 2005 when she landed the lead role on the ABC political

drama Commander in Chief, playing America's first female President.

Although the show debuted to strong ratings and won Davis a slew of awards and nominations,

including a Golden Globe, its success was relatively short-lived.

Amid sagging ratings, ABC pulled the series after just one season.

Speaking to Vulture in 2016, Davis admitted she was "devastated" by the show's cancellation,

saying, "I still haven't gotten over it.

I really wanted it to work."

Davis' previous attempt at television, The Geena Davis Show, was also canceled by ABC

after one season.

Hollywood flops

Davis' attempts to salvage her career on the small screen may have been prompted by a disastrous

run at the box office during the mid-to-late '90s.

After a string of successful hits, including The Accidental Tourist, Thelma & Louise and

A League of Their Own, Davis' stock unexpectedly plummeted when she made two back-to-back movies

with her then-husband, Renny Harlin.

The first was 1995's jaw-droppingly bad Cutthroat Island, which bombed so hard at the box office,

it remains one of Hollywood's most unsuccessful movies.

"I hope the lady is prepared to be a good loser."

"What gave you the idea I was a lady?"

"M----!"

Then came another underwhelming action thriller, 1996's The Long Kiss Goodnight, which recovered

less than half its budget domestically, amid mixed-to-positive reviews.

The one-two punch preceded a series of blows in Davis' personal life.

She divorced Harlin in 1998, then took an "unusually long" two years off to reflect

on her career, according to the New York Times.

She became picky

Davis told Vulture in 2016 that she got far more selective once she hit her 40s, noting

that she only made one film in that decade of her life, 1999's Stuart Little.

"George, this is Stuart, your new brother."

"No, really."

Davis said the right parts just weren't coming along: "I was getting offers, but for nothing

meaty or interesting like in my 30s.

I'd been completely ruined and spoiled."

Baby boom

After what the the New York Times described as a "difficult divorce" from Harlin, Davis'

personal life bounced back in a really positive way.

In 2001, she married neurosurgeon Reza Jarrahy.

Less than three years later, by age 48, she had given birth to three children, including

twin boys.

For most actors in Hollywood, having three kids that quickly would be enough to take

some much-deserved time off.

However, in her interview with Vulture, Davis insisted the two things were never related:

"A lot people leapt to that conclusion because becoming a parent happened to coincide with

film roles tapering off.

When I made Commander in Chief, I had three children under 3 years old.

If I was really going to take time off from working, I think it would have been then."

Bullseye

Davis shocked everyone in 1999 when it was revealed that she was competing for a spot

on the U.S. archery team for the Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia.

Davis—who took up the sport about two years prior—did not make the team, but she finished

in 24th place in the semifinals of the U.S. Olympic Trials.

Davis still considers her training to be a positive experience, saying,

"It was the most out-of-body experience I've ever had,"

"It was fabulous.

I will never forget about it."

Davis even joked about her archery skills in a 2013 Funny or Die video …

"I was in a League of Their Own.

As an archer, I'm in a class of my own."

Starting an institute

You may see less of Davis on the big screen these days, but she's still making an impact

on the industry.

In 2004, Davis founded the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media, a "research-based organization

working within the media and entertainment industry to engage, educate, and influence

content creators, marketers and audiences about the importance of eliminating unconditional

bias, highlighting gender balance, [and] challenging stereotypes."

According to the Observer, Davis created the institute after noticing the lack of female

roles in children's TV shows and movies she watched with her daughter.

The organization has been a huge success thus far, launching numerous studies and even its

own film festival.

Comeback mode

For Davis and TV, the third time is proving to be the charm.

In the fall of 2016, the actress starred in a TV reboot of the classic horror movie The

Exorcist on Fox.

Davis plays Angela Rance, a similar role to the one Ellen Burstyn played in the original

film.

Despite disappointing ratings, Fox wound up renewing the show for a second season, reportedly

because executives are big fans of the show.

Davis won't appear as a series regular, but she helped set the stage for what's ahead.

Davis also has two movies in the pipeline, including Marjorie Prime, in which she co-stars

alongside Jon Hamm and Tim Robbins.

Does this signal the Geena Davis revival fans have been craving for years?

Whatever happens, we're just happy to have her back in action.

Thanks for watching!

Click the Nicki Swift icon to subscribe to our YouTube channel.

Plus check out all this cool stuff we know you'll love, too!

For more infomation >> What Really Happened To Geena Davis? - Duration: 5:33.

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

Crime: Crash Course Sociology #20 - Duration: 11:31.

Over the last few weeks, you've heard me say many times that deviance isn't necessarily criminal.

But of course, sometimes it is.

Understanding crime sociologically means we need to answer some basic questions:

Like, what is the nature of crime?

Who commits crimes and why?

And how does society respond to it?

You'll see pretty quickly that these questions are actually all tangled together.

And you can't untangle them.

[Theme Music]

It might not surprise you to learn that the literal definition of crime is the violation of criminal laws.

And the FBI's Uniform Crime Report, a major source of data on crime in the U.S., tracks many different kinds of crime.

There are crimes against the person, which include murder, aggravated assault, rape, and robbery,

and crimes against property, which include burglary, larceny-theft, auto-theft, and arson.

But there's also a third kind of crime, not generally tracked in major crime indices, often called victimless crimes.

They include things like illegal drug use, prostitution, and gambling.

But the name is misleading, because many of these cases have serious negative consequences for the people involved.

Data from the FBI show that in the US in 2015, there were about 1.2 million violent crimes and about 8 million property crimes.

Raw numbers aren't terribly helpful, though, so we can turn these into crime rates –

in the case of 2015, that would be 372.6 violent crimes per 100,000 people and 2,487 property crimes per 100,000 people.

Those numbers are about half what they were in 1991, when crime rates peaked after a steady upward trend from about 1960.

These numbers allow for some useful comparisons, but it's important to realize that they can't capture the whole picture.

Because, crime statistics are based on police reports, so they only include crimes that are reported to the police.

And not all crimes are reported.

So researchers sometimes conduct victimization surveys,

which ask representative samples of the population if they have had any experiences with crime.

And one such survey from 2015 suggests that fewer than half, about 47%, of violent crimes were reported to police, and just 35% of property crimes were.

So what can we say about who's committing these crimes?

Well, based on government data, sociologists have put together a kind of demographic picture,

but it only shows us who's being arrested for crime, not necessarily who's committing it.

To begin with, the average arrestee is young and male:

people between the ages of 15 and 24 make up about 14% of the population, but accounted for 31.8% of all arrests in 2015.

And while men are about half the population, they made up about 62% of arrests for property crimes and 80% of arrests for violent crimes.

And, while FBI data don't assess social class, we know from other sources that those of lower social class are more likely to be arrested.

But again, that's not the whole picture, because, as we talked about last time, wealthy Americans aren't likely to be seen as criminally deviant in the same way that the poor are.

This brings us to race and ethnicity, where disparities in arrests are clear:

despite making up only 13.3% of the population, African Americans make up 26.6% of arrests.

There are a number of reasons for this.

First, race and ethnicity are closely linked to wealth and social standing, and as we just saw, people of lower social class are more likely to be arrested.

Second, the data don't include many crimes that are more commonly committed by whites, like drunk driving, embezzlement, and tax fraud.

Finally, African Americans, and people of color generally, are overcriminalized:

They're more easily assumed to be criminal and treated as such by both the police and the public at large.

For example: A study of pedestrian stops in New York City found that African Americans and Hispanics are disproportionately likely to be stopped,

even when controlling for race-specific arrest rates – that is, the rate at which those racial and ethnic groups are arrested.

And this rate itself isn't entirely fair:

despite the fact that black people and white people use drugs at similar rates, black people are far more likely to be arrested for it.

A 2009 Human Rights Watch report found that in 2007, black people were 3.7 times more likely to be arrested for drugs than white people.

And studies have shown that the racial composition of a neighborhood has an influence on perceptions of crime in that neighborhood.

Larger African American populations, for example, have been found to be associated with increased perception of crime,

even when controlling for the actual crime rate.

And this brings us to our third question: how society responds to crime.

Overcriminalization, after all, isn't a matter of who commits crimes, but of how society imagines who criminals are.

Society's main institutional response to crime comes from the criminal justice system, which is composed of three parts in the US:

the police, the courts, and the system of punishment and corrections.

The police are the main point of contact between the criminal justice system and the rest of society.

There are about 750,000 police officers in the United States, and it's their personal judgement that makes for the actual application of the law.

And, in exercising this judgement, police officers size up a situation according to a number of factors.

The severity of the situation, the suspect's level of uncooperativeness, and whether the suspect has previously been arrested all make an arrest more likely.

Officers also take the wishes of the victim into account.

Likewise, the presence of observers makes an arrest more likely,

because making an arrest moves the encounter to the police station, where the officer is in control.

Finally, the suspect's race plays a role, as officers are more likely to arrest non-white suspects because of a long-standing association of non-whiteness with criminality – which is the cultural basis for overcriminalization.

And the effects of this can be clearly seen not only in the data on overcriminalization that I mentioned before, but in studies of race and perceptions of threat.

And race shouldn't be understood as an independent factor here; the other factors are also all seen through race.

So when a police officer assesses how threatening or uncooperative a suspect is, non-white suspects are viewed as more threatening and more uncooperative, even given the same behavior.

The point here is that policing has a lot of aspects to it that are surprisingly subjective.

Given this problem, we might expect the courts to help correct them by accurately adjudicating guilt and innocence.

And sometimes they do.

But in practice, how well they do their job is often a matter of who the defendant is and the economic resources that they have access to.

Let's go to the Thought Bubble to see how people with less money are affected differently by the criminal justice system:

The first problem is bail.

Bail allows people to be released from jail after an arrest by guaranteeing, usually with a deposited sum of money, that they'll show up for their day in court.

But in practice, it just keeps defendants without money behind bars until their court date.

A date which may be a long time in coming.

The Sixth Amendment guarantees the right to a speedy trial, but many jurisdictions in the US are heavily overburdened.

There are just too many cases.

So those who can't afford bail may wait months, even years, before their case is heard.

And defendants who can't afford to hire lawyers are represented by public defenders,

who are, to varying degrees, underpaid and overworked.

They often simply can't give their clients adequate representation, frequently leading to harsher sentences for the poor.

Together these make the last issue, plea bargaining, much worse.

Plea bargaining is basically a negotiation in which the prosecution offers concessions on the legal punishment in exchange for the defendant's guilty plea.

In theory, this is a useful tool for quickly resolving simple cases and easing the burden on the courts.

But while plea bargaining may be a negotiation, the parties aren't on even footing.

A poor defendant, stuck in jail because they can't make bail,

represented by a public defender without the resources to adequately defend them, and facing the threat of a long jail sentence,

is strongly incentivized to take a plea bargain, regardless of their actual guilt or innocence.

Thanks Thought Bubble.

Those convicted of criminal deviance are then moved through the last part of the criminal justice system, the system of punishment and corrections.

And this brings us, unavoidably, to mass incarceration.

Mass incarceration refers to the growth of the incarcerated population over the past several decades, and the social, political, and economic conditions that caused it.

Here's what that looks like in terms of the numbers:

Today there are over 2.3 million people imprisoned in the United States.

For some context, while the US has about four and a half percent of the world's population,

it has nearly a quarter of the world's incarcerated population.

And the US has the highest incarceration rate in the world, with 693 people out of every 100,000 behind bars.

This is more than 5 times higher than the rate in most other countries.

But it hasn't always been like this: the incarcerated population has increased by 500% over the past 40 years.

And this increase has only a limited relationship to actual crime rates.

Like I mentioned, crime rates dropped dramatically in the 90s, but prison populations continued to rise.

Mass incarceration is a consequence of political choices, namely "tough-on-crime" policies, like mandatory minimum sentences.

And mass incarceration falls hardest on the poor, and on people of color:

Despite making up only 37% of the US population, non-whites make up 67% of the prison population.

In 2015, the incarceration rate for white men was 457 per 100,000.

The rate for hispanic men was more than twice as high – 1,043 per 100,000 –

and the rate for black men was nearly six times higher (2,613 per 100,000).

So, are these "tough-on-crime" policies effective?

Well, there are a couple ways to think about the purpose of punishment.

One approach to punishment is retribution, which is about making the offender suffer as the victim suffered, as a kind of moral vengeance.

In the U.S., a more favored approach is deterrence, which tries to reduce crime by making the prospect of getting caught sufficiently awful.

Yet another approach is societal protection, designed to render an offender incapable of further criminal offense, usually through long prison sentences or capital punishment.

And finally, rehabilitation views punishment as an opportunity to reform offenders and return them to society as productive citizens.

In practice, rehabilitation is hard to accomplish, because the prison system has limited resources and because severe limitations are placed on convicted felons that go beyond the criminal justice system.

Felons are often barred from social welfare programs, for example, and face extensive legal discrimination in hiring and housing.

The fact that reintegration into society is so difficult leads to high rates of recidivism, or re-offense that leads to incarceration.

A study by the National Institute on Justice of prisoners from 30 states estimated that within three years of release, two-thirds (67.8%) of them were re-arrested.

Five years after release, three-fourths (76.6%) had been re-arrested.

So these approaches to punishment don't appear to work as deterrence.

Now, long sentences succeed in removing offenders from society,

but that removal itself can have damaging effects, with communities of color being particularly impacted.

Incarceration puts stress on families, destabilizes neighborhoods as residents cycle in and out of prison,

and leads to increasing numbers of people with limited employment prospects,

partly because employers can legally refuse to hire those with criminal records.

So when we talk about crime, we can't look at any of these questions in isolation:

Defining crime based on FBI data misses how these definitions are applied in the real world.

And only paying attention to the demographics of offenders overlooks the conditions that create those statistics.

Likewise, looking at society's response alone misses how that response answers the other two questions.

It's all tangled.

Today we learned about crime in the US.

We looked at the legal definitions of crime and used FBI data to get an idea of the amount and kinds of crime.

We put together a demographic picture of who gets arrested, and we talked about why that's not necessarily who commits crime.

And we talked about society's response to crime in the criminal justice system, and how that response ends with mass incarceration.

Crash Course Sociology is filmed in the Dr. Cheryl C. Kinney Studio in Missoula, MT, and it's made with the help of all of these nice people.

Our animation team is Thought Cafe and Crash Course is made with Adobe Creative Cloud.

If you'd like to keep Crash Course free for everyone, forever, you can support the series at Patreon,

a crowdfunding platform that allows you to support the content you love.

Thank you to all of our patrons for making Crash Course possible with their continued support.

For more infomation >> Crime: Crash Course Sociology #20 - Duration: 11:31.

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

Free Trap Beat-"Water Whip"|Rap Instrumentals|Trap Instrumental|Rap Beats|Prod. by:GameChangerBeats - Duration: 3:28.

Free Trap Beat-"Water Whip" |Rap Instrumentals|Trap Instrumental| Rap Beats|Prod. by:GameChangerBeats

For more infomation >> Free Trap Beat-"Water Whip"|Rap Instrumentals|Trap Instrumental|Rap Beats|Prod. by:GameChangerBeats - Duration: 3:28.

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

Три білборди за Еббінґом, Міссурі (2017) - трейлер №1 (українські субтитри) - Duration: 2:31.

What's the law on what you can and can not say on a billboard?

I assume you can't say nothing defamatory, and you can't say fuck piss or cunt. Is that right?

Or...

... ass. - I think I'll be alright then.

I guess you're Angela Hayes' mother. - That's right.

I'm Angela Hayes' mother.

So, Mildred Hayes, why did you put up these billboards? - My daughter Angela was murdered seven months ago

It seems to me the police department is too busy torturing black folks to solve an actual crime

What a hell is this?

Dixon, I'm in the middle of my goddamn Easter dinner

Sorry kids. - I know chief, but... I think we got kind of a problem

I'd do anything to catch your daughter's killer

I don't think those billboards is very fair

Time it took you to get out here whining like a bitch, Willoughby...

Some other poor girls probably out there being butchered right now

We've had two official complaints about those billboards. - From who?

The lady with a funny eye...

A lady with a funny fucking eye?

and a fat dentist

There's a lot of good friends of Willoughby in this town, Ms. Hayes

You didn't happen to drill a little hole in the dentist today, did you? - Of cou..se not.

Huh? - I said, of course not.

I'm sorry about Angie, but the town is dead set against these billboards.

You know who threw that can? - What can?

How about you, sweetheart? - Uh, no I didn't really...

You go, girl

Hey, fuckhead! - What? - Don't say what Dixon when she comes here and calling you a fuckhead!

We keep the case in the public eye, the better your chances are at getting it solved

You know if you hadn't stopped coming to church, you'd have a little bit more understanding of people's feelings

All this anger, man

It just begets greater anger

In 3, 2, 1...

And as sad as the spectacle of these billboards might be

this reporter for one hopes this finally puts an end to the strange saga of the three billboards outside Eb...

It's going to put an end to shit you fucking retard! This is just a fucking start!

Why don't you put that on your 'Good morning, Missouri' fucking wake-up broadcast, bitch

For more infomation >> Три білборди за Еббінґом, Міссурі (2017) - трейлер №1 (українські субтитри) - Duration: 2:31.

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

Jacque Fresco - Tierra 2.0 - Duration: 8:34.

For more infomation >> Jacque Fresco - Tierra 2.0 - Duration: 8:34.

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

READING OLD FACEBOOK MESSAGES | EXPOSING MYSELF - Duration: 11:46.

my name is canon welcome back to my channel if you're new here

welcome today I'm going to be reading some old Facebook messages I know that

seems kind of crazy but I wanted to dig deep into some like

dirt okay maybe not dirt just like my stupid past really no intro for this I'm

just gonna be sitting here and reading to you guys some of my old facebook

messages this is probably gonna be like a crazy throwback for me and like

bringing up some like weird times this one it's not loser issues that I

remember you and you probably don't even remember me but we were friends when we

were at Albert Leonard in eighth grade I remember hanging out with you and

hopefully rings a bell and whoever else during eighth grade recess I hope at

least I hope you at least remember me somewhat or I'll feel mad loser ish for

remembering you okay so I kind of feel bad I want to get like a conversation

I've actually had with somebody because I didn't respond to her okay this is

really funny I'm totally not embarrassed to like put this out there so I guess

some girl wrote me hi have we met somewhere before are you just adding me

are you just add me just because our I think I've seen you on my boyfriend's

aim before I said oh sorry you were in the friend suggestions on Facebook and

whose young boyfriend by the way can I just add how the hell I used to type

like she said oh it's okay though but I met my ex babe but Oh something yup

that's him oh yeah I know him I literally just felt

a hand with a hym like what she said I know but yeah I asked you if

I knew you cuz girls be adding mean to be nosy lol oh I know girls like that

but I'm not even like that I hate drama so I don't even try and like and try and

like butt in lmao never that do you guys need to just

hear how hard it was for me to even read that like whoa that's embarrassing

she said elbow all right we good then haha yeah sorry for the confusion lol

look not lol or lol with the Z she said LM L it's all good I was about to hit

him mister flirt up and cuss him out cuz I thought he was like one of those that

broke up us up I guess one of the dr. Olssen broke us up I said mister first

assuming mr. blank lol and not first night I ain't even knew him

when he had a girl you yup second I'm not a fucking a fuck fuck in bird head

cuz that's some grimy shit and third I'm sorry you let other people break y'all

up said yeah that's what kept us together for so long

because I kept telling myself that at the end of the day he's at my house

he'll he'll never have girls that support and treat him like I

do I tell him that all the time and he agrees I said oh I saw them basically

y'all just taking a break is like early late see I said yeah you should have

never let any other bitch break although like I was real back babe

she said L oh yeah you can you can call it that dot dot dot and that was the end

of the conversation I never answered after that and I'm gonna try to read one

more for you guys okay so last but not least I'm gonna read this message I I

think this is probably gonna actually do something for me in a long run it might

actually give me closure on the whole situation um this is like I definitely

have to block out the name but yeah I think it's really funny we broke up over

Facebook baffle okay so I'm gonna take this time now to like read this whole

conversation between me and some buddies back then I think it's the funniest

thing ever and we literally broke up on Facebook and I'm like a little e I'm

literally like a petty ass bitch oh he says is there someone else is that why

this is just random if so let me know yo I'm just making sure I heard you right

you said we are over I would appreciate it if it I would appreciate it if you

reply and I love these dudes all over your stuff famous already since you got

the single thing up and next time you are with the men and you go to meet him

don't just walk by and have you follow you like a dog like you did to me today

and how to attitude since the first minute he sees you

that's why I didn't stay around you and to say olive and just say all of that on

your status is type hurtful and untrue but everyone is entitled to their own

opinion and I see you are already cheating on me

so this literally cannot go be far less than I thought to be really honest like

I was like head over heels for this person but I was trying to play it off

like to the max because of who he was oh I was like trying I guess way too

hard I said first nobody was cheating on you I had one of you but you paid me no

mind and with my next man I will treat them how they deserve because hopefully

they actually will care and are interested in me also I did not have an

attitude straight from the beginning otherwise I wouldn't have even said a

word to you so I don't know why I don't know what you're seeing and lastly my

statuses are hurtful what's hurtful is having a boyfriend

one night you're really into and he says the same but when you guys are together

at the same place where you met you can't even show that you guys are

together as if he's embarrassed by you because if he denies having a girlfriend

or even as if he's hiding a lot from you but whatever I got nothing else to say

because you because you should realize all of this so actually I feel like I'm

saying the exact same thing that I did back then just I wasn't very clear with

my words I was like a little flippant girl like I was a child I don't know why

I was so petty all the damn time but I was he said I'm trying to see where

you're coming from but it's not easy when you're trying to straighten out

straighten it out and you say to me I have nothing to say to you

and with the fuck niggas get money right

fuck niggas get money you know what's right crazy I introduced you to my

mother and brought you into my house because I didn't think something so

little and stupid like this would end us but ok ok so this is so funny

so skip me down some because I time to read the whole damn thing but I

think I hit him back because like I knew I was wrong I was like well I guess

you're not gonna answer that but before you just forget about me completely lol

I wanted to ask you something not to be annoying but yeah so it would

be nice if you would answer but it's not it's all good it's cool I'll just I'll

just stop hitting you up he said what are you talking about I'm confused

this is how you know I was like nervous I was like scared I don't know what I

was feeling I go mm well I asked yes something in a message like two days ago

better no responding i ck I wrote you all Travis and just wanted to ask you

you know una pregunta before do you all diva men LOL better yoga your

veal i'm just getting annoying how crazy is that god damn sentence this is the

prism of everything it out loud this is the first time I think I also like

really wanted closure from this because first that is fucking embarrassing

that's literally straight embarrassing I literally decided to banish guys if you

know me now I don't speak a goddamn word of Spanish the fact that I probably used

a translator just to figure out that sentence like the translator on like

Google or something man I don't know what I was going through I probably

realized how that I fucked up then I like wanted him back then I was like so

damn desperate I don't know but if you know who you are

I don't think you're watching this but if you ever end up watching this I'm

sorry and I fuck them like I fucked up back

then and I know you don't care now um because brah you're big but yeah alright

thank you guys so much for watching that video if you did enjoy it please make

sure you give it a big thumbs up go ahead and hit that subscribe button

right down there I honestly wish I had like access to my myspace because those

messages probably would have been even crazier through this video I love you

guys always the better to choose happy bye guys

For more infomation >> READING OLD FACEBOOK MESSAGES | EXPOSING MYSELF - Duration: 11:46.

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

My Grand Plan (Kind Of) - Duration: 2:42.

Hello, I'm Sofia Marie Race, and you're watching my YouTube channel.

And someday I'll learn how to do special effects so you can get where the reference is from.

Um, Disney. It's from Disney.

So, today I'm going to be talking about four things that I will be posting about on this channel.

And then I would love if you commented down below on something you think I should also talk about.

So, here we go.

#1 - I am going to be talking about Christian media because I love Christian books,

Christian music, Christian movies. Especially Christian books.

I have a blog that has currently eighty book reviews on it, and I'm just so so excited

about, like, doing, like, talking about this via camera because this is something I'm really

passionate about, something I will hopefully be doing for a while.

#2 - I am going to be talking about Scripture because I am a Christian girl, and I love,

love, um, talking about how the Bible is not just a book that is old and for, like, the

weird people.

It's actually, like, the living message of the living God, and it still applies

to our lives in the 21st century. I love that.

#3 - I am going to be talking about college life.

I am a college sophomore, or I will be in one month. Less than one month, actually. That's scary.

Um, and I just have a lot of opinions on a lot of different things. Anything from, like,

questions every freshman gets asked or, like, why I'm going to be sleep, um, like, sleep,

the whole, the whole sleep thing where we don't get enough sleep in college.

Ranting is awesome.

And college is awesome, but also hard.

And #4 - I am going to be doing monologues.

I did one last week, so go check that one out.

And I'm just going to be talking about, like, monologues, just acting videos in general.

I'm going to be trying this year to do a lot more acting than I've done before.

Just because I am, like on this point where I'm, like, "Okay, I'm going to try this out,

and hopefully this will work."

And. Yes.

So, I'd love to take you guys all on that journey.

So, those were the four things I am going to be posting about.

I also have an ongoing project on YouTube where I sort Christian music into playlists.

Like, Christian music on fear, songs about God's holiness, or sold out for Christ, and

just songs to get you pumped up, or songs about loneliness when you're sad and you just

want to remember that God is still with you.

So, go check that out under "playlists" on my YouTube channel.

Obviously, on my channel. I just need to say channel. Why do I say YouTube channel?

Like, we're obviously on YouTube. {sigh}

Thank you guys so much for watching again.

Like, share, subscribe, and comment down below on anything else you'd like to see me do.

For more infomation >> My Grand Plan (Kind Of) - Duration: 2:42.

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

HiGH&LOW (概要) パート3: THE MOVIE (字幕) - Duration: 4:00.

For more infomation >> HiGH&LOW (概要) パート3: THE MOVIE (字幕) - Duration: 4:00.

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

How to Live: Think about Death - Duration: 2:50.

Hooo-ahh.

Our days are numbered.

We just don't know the number.

Pbtbtbtbt (like a horse)

For more infomation >> How to Live: Think about Death - Duration: 2:50.

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

PURPOSE - YAKEEN (OFFICIAL SPOKEN WORD VIDEO) - Duration: 2:21.

For more infomation >> PURPOSE - YAKEEN (OFFICIAL SPOKEN WORD VIDEO) - Duration: 2:21.

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

Teenager pulled from water in Mashpee - Duration: 0:48.

For more infomation >> Teenager pulled from water in Mashpee - Duration: 0:48.

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

REDNECK NINJAS: HOME ESSENTIALS | UniquePublications - Duration: 1:42.

(music)...

how's the day goin' ethel?

it's moving like molasses.

paper? or plastic?

stay tuned for another excitin' episode...

here with redneck ninjas.

(static)...

...heartbeat, heartbeat, heartbeat...

hi. thank you for watching.

please subscribe, click like...

and stay tuned for more unique entertainment.

cheers.

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét