Thứ Ba, 28 tháng 11, 2017

Waching daily Nov 28 2017

A telephone booth.

Hi dad!

Yeah, we're fine.

Nanook's with me. In Budapest!

But Nanook's hungry.

What should I do?

This is A Kind of Adventurous Life.

Hi! My name is Kirikou, and this is my favourite brother Nanook.

The real reason that we're here in Budapest -

is that my mom works here.

But I don't see her anywhere.

So out mission is to find mom!

Aa, is mom there?

I can't find mom anywhere!

Mom! Mom! Mom!

I think mom is that way.

Are you hungry?

I am.

Let's go up there to look for mom!

Yeah! - Maybe we could see her!

Come this way.

We didn't see mom.

But is was fun!

You know Nanook, this is impossible!

This is a too big city!

We can never find mom!

So, that's how we found mom!

And yes, she really got a job in Budapest.

And that means that our future videos -

will be about Finland and Hungary!

Thank you for watching!

See you soon again!

For more infomation >> Finding mom from Budapest - Duration: 3:49.

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¿EVERYTHING IS RIGGE THE MEDIA, MEDICINE, FOOD, ELECTIONS YOUR LIVE IS A FABRICATED FAIRE TALE - Duration: 5:48.

EVERYTHING IS RIGGE THE MEDIA, MEDICINE, FOOD, ELECTIONS ... YOUR LIVE IS A FABRICATED FAIRE

TALE

We live in a fabricated world.

We are living in a world where everything is rigged and every American institution is

sold out and corrupted, along with being rigged in favor of the big business and big government.

Paul Craig Roberts said that America is a lost country and the corruption of private

institutions and public ones is complete and there is nothing but tyranny and endless lies.

The Associated Press, CNN and Reuters are all shamelessly promoting big lies over every

sector of society and this includes vaccines, elections, GMOs and politics.

The federal government is incapable of doing anything else but lies and they have corrupted

the whole realm of science as they pull the strings of funding through the NSF and National

Institute of Health.

He went on to say that the whole of the FDS is corrupt, along with the USDA, with both

of them functioning as marketing propaganda pushers from the Big Biotech and Big Pharma.

Facebook, Google and Twitter are also rigged and they censor the voice and do not want

people to hear when they are highlighting the lies of the establishment that they want

to promote.

He said that when he talks about everything being rigged, he means everything.

All of the official sources are said to constantly lie about anything and everything.

They weave illusions to push a narrative that is rooted in fiction, including no Islamic

terrorists and telling people that carbon dioxide is poisoning the planet.

SOCIETY IS RIGGED AGAINST YOU, TO KEEP YOU ENSLAVED, IGNORANT AND DIS-EMPOWERED Sanity

and voices of reason are silenced and only the irrational most insane voices are allowed

to get magnified through media.

The same is said to be true about sciences and real science is said to be all but dead

thanks to political agendas.

Propaganda has obliterated all facts and facts do not have a place in debate and anyone who

invokes facts is them silenced, shamed, fired, bullied on social media or expelled from schools.

People who try to invoke facts about things such as actual statistics about police shooting

are told that they are just part of the problem due to the fact that they have the wrong attitude

when it comes to social justice.

Each government branch is said to be weaponized against people and then used as a tool against

political enemies who then make threats to the status quo, the FDA, IRS, DEA, EPA and

similar.

Science has been distorted and is now absurd politically motivated conclusions about everything

the government uses in order to be able to control the masses.

This includes climate change, vaccines, flu shots, GMOs, fluoride, carbon dioxide and

more.

Each branch of the medicine has been hijacked by globalist agendas to ensure that medicine

does not in fact make people healthier, cognitively capable of being able to think for themselves

or more alert.

Each and every item of news that is reported from official sources has been distorted to

the point where it is insane and turns away facts while at the same time attacks those

who could offer something constructive to the world.

An example being, when Clinton was given clearance by the FBI, when she had been indicted by

the facts that were presented by the FBI.

All voices that speak the truth are silenced and then taken over by distracting and meaningless

babble or tribal sports competitions such as the Rio Olympics that are meaningless.

The whole point, to dumb down the population to reach the point of cultural lunacy.

True reports that are said to contradict the official stories given are censored and this

occurred with Michael Savage who was blocked from Facebook when he posted a story that

was true about an illegal alien committing murder in the USA.

The emotions of people are being used as weapons for manipulation of the masses.

A radical Muslim dad tried to bring Sharia Law to the US and he attacked Trump expressing

loss for his soldier son and became an instant celebrity and was praised by being courageous

and speaking out.

Everything, everywhere is rigged, food companies are corrupt, public universities, the FDA,

banks, singers, energy and oil industries and more, even Hollywood, is all rigged.

When considering where all of this might head you should look at Communist China, a country

where all independent news is outlawed.

Political prisoners have organs harvested so as to enrich the black market organ traders

and one out of three citizens is said to be a secret spy, snitching on friends.

Hillary Clinton is one embodiment of totalitarianism and the perfect fit for government corruption.

If Clinton had become president of the United States, the US would have been gone forever

and in its place would be a regime of totalitarians that did nothing but violate the RICO Act.

If the biased media is a system that is entirely rigged then censorship on Facebook along with

the search result manipulations of Google will end up putting the USA most terrifying

political criminal into the White House at some point and then it will be the end of

the US as we know it.

For more infomation >> ¿EVERYTHING IS RIGGE THE MEDIA, MEDICINE, FOOD, ELECTIONS YOUR LIVE IS A FABRICATED FAIRE TALE - Duration: 5:48.

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Why Do We Have Saliva? - Duration: 2:54.

We might not think about it a lot, but the insides of our mouths are really wet all the

time.

There's a ton of spit in there!

Aaa, Squeaks, don't lick me!

There's always some spit, or saliva, in our mouths because it has some really important

jobs, like helping us talk and taste.

It even helps break down our food!

Saliva comes from special parts of your body called salivary glands.

They look kinda like little blobs, and you have six of them: two under your tongue, two

by the back of your jaw under your chin, and two under your ears.

Our salivary glands are always making more spit.

We might not even realize how much since we swallow most of it, but they make 4-8 cups

of saliva every day!

That might seem like a /ton/ of spit, but it's a good thing we have it.

Saliva is mostly made of water, and by keeping our mouths wet, it helps us move our tongues

and lips around when we talk.

Saliva is also super helpful for eating.

It makes the food in your mouth nice and wet, which makes it much easier to move around

as you chew and swallow.

And at the same time, it makes your food taste better!

The things that give your food its taste, like salt and sugar, have to dissolve, or

get into water, for the taste buds on your tongue to be able to taste them.

Without saliva, even a cookie would just feel like a bunch of dry crumbly tasteless stuff

in your mouth!

[Squeaks squeaks]

I'm glad we have saliva, too!

But it does even more than help us talk and taste things.

It also helps us digest, or break down, some of our food before it even gets to our stomachs.

Even though most of saliva is water, there's also small amounts of other stuff in it, including

something called an enzyme.

Enzymes are tiny little particles, way too small for us to see.

But they're in lots of different parts of our bodies.

And one thing enzymes do is help break down our food into smaller and simpler pieces that

are easier for our bodies to absorb and use as energy.

The type of enzyme in saliva is in charge of breaking down foods like bread, cereal,

or potatoes.

As soon as you put the food in your mouth, your saliva gets to work breaking it down!

That way it gets a head start on digesting it before you even swallow.

So besides helping us talk and taste, saliva also helps us get energy from our food!

And those are just some of its jobs.

Spit is super useful!

[Squeaks squeaks]

I know, all this talk about food is starting to make me hungry, too!

Which is perfect, because it's almost time for lunch.

Let's go use some of that saliva!

Thanks for joining us!

If you want to keep learning and having fun with Squeaks and me, hit the subscribe button,

and we'll see you next time here at the Fort!

For more infomation >> Why Do We Have Saliva? - Duration: 2:54.

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Actors on Actors: Jake Gyllenhaal and Margot Robbie (Full Video) - Duration: 33:05.

- Do you use an electric toothbrush?

- I do.

- Okay.

- Do you?

- Yeah.

I've tried different ones actually.

- I have too.

I'm kind of obsessive about my teeth though so.

- Oh, really?

- Mm-hmm.

- We have wonderful teeth.

- Thank you.

I have braces for like two years.

- I had two sets of braces.

- Did you?

Why?

- I had a huge gap between my teeth.

Like, do you see that huge gap

and then the other one had a huge gap.

So then I had a first set of braces

that brought them all together,

and then right as I went through puberty

they went full on and put them all over

and then I did like the real...

So they had to put them together first before--

- And then straighten them out.

- Yeah.

(melodious instrumental music)

What I'm interested in is,

is really how you,

how did you come to this project?

How did you get to this material?

And how did you...

Why were you fascinated in the first place?

- I didn't know you were gonna segue

into an actual serious questions.

I was still dicking around a bit.

Okay, um...

But to answer that question.

I read this script.

It was I, Tonya was the script on spec.

It was later released on the Black List,

but it was an available script and

when I read it was just

one of the best scripts I've ever read in my life.

It was very original, very unconventional.

Very scary, which made it exciting as well,

like, how the hell do you pull this off?

And obviously had an incredible character

at the center of it,

but also a lot of incredible characters around her.

And I don't really enjoy...

I don't like acting on my own, I really...

In fact any scene where I'm on my own I,

that makes me really scared.

- But you are incredible in the scene

in front of the mirror

where you're putting on your makeup, that scene...

I mean maybe you should be doing more of the things

that you don't feel comfortable with--

- That's true.

- That scene in front of the mirror is such beautiful work.

- [Margot] Thanks.

- It's such beautiful work.

- That was kind of improvised in the moment actually.

Our DP, Nico, was just like,

"Get her to look at camera and just be getting ready."

And yeah, and then I, I don't know,

it was like an overwhelming day anyway

and then it turned to like the crying.

But yeah, it was one of those weird moments on set

that actually translated well in screen.

- It's beautiful.

And the mirror is such a,

such an interesting thing for an actor

where vanity is such a large part.

I think though we try and pretend

like it's not of what we do,

either trying to avert it or trying to

sort of move towards it or whatever it is.

And it's so interesting when you have an idea of someone

or you have an idea of a character that they're playing

and then all of a sudden that character

is put in front of a mirror

and then they have to sort of

you, yourself have to face yourself

and then you also have to face all the things that you

are dealing within the character that you're playing.

And I felt like in that moment it was so...

I'm always so moved by people

and the risks that you take

not only a character but as a person

and that's what I felt in that moment.

I was like,

you are really risking a lot with this

and it seemed like you did a lot

as a producer and also as an actor on it

and you put yourself into it fully.

And it feels like,

not to say that moment is like

the microcosm of the whole thing,

but it is really telling to see how much you cared

and how much she cared.

And how much pressure was on her?

How much pressure is on you?

I love that.

That's the I like, as an actor I'm eating that up.

I will say it one last time, it's beautiful work.

- Thanks.

Thank you.

(sighs)

(sighs)

I feel like the similarities of what we went through

and that we were both playing real-life people

in a situation that didn't happen that long ago.

And there's obviously the added responsibility

when you play a real-life person who's still alive.

And that was like an interesting thing to tackle

and I'm sure you had

a different experience and a very,

I'm guessing a very emotional experience

because of his story.

But how was playing Jeff

and playing a real-life person

and just that story in general?

- It was a huge responsibility.

I felt like a pressure beyond the pressure I've ever felt

in terms of playing a character because you're...

Like you said, you want to do the situation,

the service that it deserves.

What is the truth, right?

What is being honest?

What is respecting the situation while at the same time

illuminating what's real?

And in the case of Jeff,

I think he was struggling with trying to...

He's a guy who was standing there,

holding a sign for his girlfriend that he was sort of

had just broken up with and then gotten back together with

and he was trying to show her that he was committed to her

and then he could show up.

And he shows up and then all of a sudden he's there

when the explosion happens and then

he wakes up he loses both of his legs.

So I think he was just trying to recalibrate everything

and everything happened so fast, not just that like

within a year people were "Write a book.

"Write a book about your story."

And then it was like,

"Be this symbol for all these people.

"Oh wait, they want to make a movie of it."

And I think I felt that from him and I felt like

I didn't want to pressure him too much,

but there was this massive responsibility to get it right.

And I think,

I'm sure you understand, what is the truth is always,

is always so complicated.

And what I always find interesting

is you always want to empathize with whoever you're playing,

that's like that seeming job of what we do,

is to say how do you love this person.

And yet they've done things that are hard or tough on people

or have been incredibly complicated in the world

and yet you have to stand with them in some way.

So what are you two ladies slumming here for anyway?

- I'm collecting donations for the marathon.

- No...

- Yeah.

- Oh, right.

- Yeah.

- You got a jar, huh.

With pictures of yourself.

That's so great.

So you show people pictures of yourself

and then you ask for money.

- Yes.

- In terms of you, like how...

The truth of the situation, loving her,

I'm sure you love her.

Did you spend time with her?

Did you...

- By the sounds of it, I didn't,

not the way I think you might have,

I actually wanted to keep a bit of distance in...

I knew that if I met her and liked her

I would never play this character properly.

- Yeah.

- I would be sugarcoating her flaws.

I'd be trying to justify the bad things

that she may do or say in a situation.

And I didn't want to do that

because I'm a people pleaser and I know it

and I just like...

So I really needed to know that it was a character

and not a person that I was playing.

So even though that doesn't sound--

- No, it makes total sense. - What I was doing,

but it needed to be like that,

in my head I had to have them completely

compartmentalize in different places in my brain.

So there was the character of Tonya

and then there was the person that I'm telling their story

and there's the responsibility to do their story justice

and it's a weird thing to

try and make something entertaining

and entertaining doesn't always mean funny or happy--

- But it is funny I mean--

- But it did, there are funny moments

and there's horrible moments.

It's like life, it's entertaining

but to entertain in a meaningful way.

I don't think you can really do that if you're not,

if you're sugarcoating something

and I didn't want to do that.

So I did all my character prep before meeting her.

And there's so much footage on her

from 15 to the age she is now.

So that was an amazing resource,

I could study her mannerisms, her dialect,

the story, everything she went through her life.

I could do all my research, I could do all my prep

and I wanted to have that all done

and decide exactly how I was gonna play the character

every single beat and and then meet her.

And to meet her I didn't want it to feel like research,

I didn't want to meet her

and change any of the decisions I had already made.

I'd already kind of done that,

I'm not going to change it now.

And then I met her pretty much just so I could say,

"Hi, I'm playing a character

"and I want you to know that there's a

"difference in my mind between

"the character I'm playing and you

"and I just hope you understand that

"when you one day see this movie."

because I can't let that hold me back on set.

- But I think it portrays her in a...

I think you were all very

kind and thoughtful and

respectful of her situation and I also think that

the movie exists in a tone.

The tone of the movie is like

just slightly from off from reality in that space.

So I think it allows for you to enjoy it.

Like you're saying,

I think it is really entertaining to watch

because you're like, you're rooting for this person,

you're laughing with them and at them too

and all the characters around her.

But I think in the meantime you're really being

really respectful of her story.

And really of other people

who are affected by all this stuff too so.

- Yeah.

The fact that it wasn't a traditional biopic

gave us the freedom to like really go for things on set.

And you hear the story from

so many different people's perspective

that when when we're telling Tonya's version,

it's 100% what I'm saying.

But when we're telling Jeff's version,

you know I'm acting the way he said

that Tonya acted in that scenario,

even though Tonya didn't...

I mean the whole thing was born out of these interviews

that Steven, our writer did with both Tonya and Jeff

that totally contradicted each other,

both their stories contradicted each other completely.

And that was the structure of the film,

to kind of have these unreliable narrators it would seem

because their stories kept contradicting each other and

I loved that and it did give that freedom on set to be like,

this is now someone else's version of the story,

so I'm gonna play it totally different right now.

- Did you find yourself while you were,

while you guys were shooting, did you find yourself like

take to take,

pushing it a little farther?

Because there are these long one take shots a lot of them,

sometimes probably are merged and post and things like that

but I feel like maybe in those spaces did you just say,

"Okay, I'm gonna go farther and then push it farther

"then I'll bring it back and push it farther."

Or was there, like when you say you made

very specific choices.

Did you make those choices early on

or did you make them change them

a little bit on the day or--

- It always like, you know how it is on set when sometimes

a situation just escalates,

especially when you have like co-stars like

Sebastian and Allison who don't hold back at all.

And we would kind of know how to provoke one another

in a really respectful way.

But we knew when to change the line

and say something different that

would take it to the next level.

So it always escalated,

but it always escalated in a very organic way,

so it never felt over the top, it never felt melodramatic.

Because as long as you have out of conviction,

it feels true.

When it stops feeling true that's when I think,

even if you're not doing it, even if you're not screaming

it doesn't feel true, then I think people stop,

it doesn't seem like you're doing good acting I suppose.

So no matter how big we got with these characters

having out of conviction in our point of view,

which was the coolest thing about script

'cause everyone had they're point of view,

their truth that they were sticking to,

like the name of it is I, Tonya.

I, Tonya, this is my version,

he's like "Oh, I'm Jeff and this is my version.

To have that out of conviction meant

that we could get bigger and bigger.

It also helped that we had footage,

especially for someone like Allison Janney

who's playing the mom LaVona,

who has a fur coat and a bowl cut

and giant glasses and a bird on her shoulder.

And if we had suggested that to Allison on the day

maybe she'd be like,

"Guys, I think this is kind of overkill maybe on the nose."

or whatever.

But the fact that we have footage

of Tonya's mom wearing a fur coat

with a bird on her shoulder and all that stuff I mean

the people themselves gave us the liberty

to really go for it because we had that footage,

we knew that that's what they did and said at the time.

- Man, I wish Jeff's mom had a bird on her shoulder.

- She's such a good character.

Talk about like great moms in the film.

- Great moms.

- Well, great in--

- Let's talk about our moms.

No, um...

Yeah, yeah.

- How was she...

- I was just thinking if we had had footage like that

it would have been incredible.

I only had footage of Jeff that New York Times had done

really like a few,

about a month and a half after,

maybe a little bit longer

after Jeff had gotten out of the hospital,

and he was just sort of trying to figure out his life.

And I had asked Jeff,

you know they won a Pulitzer of this,

the guys who did this piece on him.

And I asked Jeff if he could get me

all the outtakes of all this stuff,

because I could really see

how he was moving around the world

at that time which I can...

In spending lots of time with him I could do it day to day

before we were shooting in prep,

but I just no idea what he was like before.

There were only a few photographs,

they're only stories people told.

And everybody wanted this story to be a particular thing,

so you had kind of to pull apart

all the enmeshment of the family

and everybody's idea of that day in particular

and then everything after it.

And then,

in the way, it's interesting,

in your film I think was a group of people

who were very aware of the choice that they were going into.

They're very aware of

the fact that she wanted to be,

she wanted to win gold, she wanted to do those things.

And in the case of someone like Jeff,

this is a group of people who had no,

he was fine just working at Costco--

- Into in the limelight.

- Yeah.

He was just like...

And his family was like, "What is this?

"Who are we when that happens?

I mean...

- I think they're both a product of their environment too.

Their upbringing obviously affected

the people they turned into

and then affected the way they handle a situation like fame

when it was kind of unwanted perhaps and...

- [Jake] Yeah.

You should have seen the sign I made for you.

- What did it say?

- It had like 3D letters and everything.

(sobbing)

Hey.

- I have a few questions.

A, how much time do you spend with him?

When did you meet him for the first time and how was that?

And also how did you jump onto the project

because you produced it as well.

Your first producing venture?

- My company produced it.

I produced other movies but this is the first

film that my company produced, yeah.

- So did you know when reading the script

that it wanted to be,

you wanted it to be a producing vehicle

and an acting vehicle or...

- [Jake] No, I think--

- It just turned out that way.

- We're pretty ambitious and we have a lot

of different projects in development

but this was one that I had read very early on,

has a very early draft

before any filmmaker was on it and thought

this character is incredible.

I was laughing three or four pages into it

and I was surprised by that

because I thought this was going to be

a different kind of character.

And then I called up Erik Feig at Lionsgate and I said,

"Hey, I really want to do this."

He said, "Let me find a filmmaker first."

And so they went to David Gordon Green,

and then when David came on he said he wanted to come to me

and then we met up.

And then there were sort of two...

At a certain point all of a sudden

this other Boston movie came up and everybody sort of

was a little like, "What's gonna happen?"

And we being the sort of smaller duck

we kind of felt things slipping.

And so I brought them the script to the company

that finances my company, we had just sort of--

- Focus, right?

- No, to Bold. - Bold, sorry.

- Yeah.

And I said, "Do you guys want to do this?

And they said, "Yes."

And then all of a sudden we were

producing the film with Todd Lieberman and

Mandeville, his company.

So it was like, I had initially just come on as an actor

and then by bringing a financing then start producing

and now I haven't slept for two years.

- I feel you.

I also have not slept in so long.

Did you understand,

because I didn't really understand the full scope

of what a producer does until I'm now in the thick of it.

And it's like 24/7, every minute of the day.

It's so rewarding, I'm sure you find as well,

but it's also so hard and I never really gave

producers the credit that they probably deserve.

- I don't think that producers

get the credit that they deserve,

unless they're up there at an award show getting an award.

- But even then everyone's like,

"You showed up for a couple of days with this shoot

"and like you know and it's like."

Oh no, you spend years of your life,

like years of it on a project.

- Which is why I understand people going like,

"Why are you actors trying to get into this space?"

But I mean I grew up in

my parent, my mother produced films that she wrote

and so I saw the,

the consistent failure that is producing

more than any I think any job on a film set

or in pre-production or post or anything.

It is just, it's like a sort of seemingly like strange...

You like...

Just constant failure and then all of a sudden

you're seemed maybe you're halfway up the mountain.

It's like, occasionally a day is great,

you have a great day, and all these things go really well,

and then rest of the week is just like

everything seems to be falling apart.

But it actually gives me great patience

as an actor in particular because I think,

I think you realize that in these moments where

one little thing becomes a big deal, it's really not at all.

And eventually the organism of something

is supposed to head in the direction it's going

and you really don't have that much control over it.

- You've been in the business a lot longer than I have.

Your first job was when you were 11--

- 11.

- I believe.

So how long?

20...

20 years, more than years.

- Arithmetic.

Hmm, yeah.

- Well, you've been doing it--

- 25, like almost, yeah.

- And you come from a family who's

heavily ingrained in the film industry.

I'm correct in saying?

- Yeah, my immediate family, yes.

- So did you...

Well, one thing I wanted to know was,

was there a conscious choice to become an actor

or do you think you grew up in that...

If you grew up and no one in your family

was in the business,

do you think you would have found your way

into the business anyway?

Or do you ever wonder what you'd be doing

if you weren't doing this?

- Absolutely, I definitely do.

- What do you think?

- I don't know,

you asked those questions at different times.

I think I don't really know,

because that's why I'm an actor

and why I'm like playing different parts

and pretending like I'm doing a real job.

But I think that,

it's also this crazy blessing that is

really a lot about luck.

And I'm sure you feel that way too it's like

you find yourself in a position where

you've had a lot of luck

and that makes me feel very grateful.

But being around this business my whole life I think

there are a lot of aspects that feel like family.

I think we all come to this

space one way or another to find different families

and then we do in different--

- Do you get this?

Because every time I do a job I tell myself before I'm like,

"Don't get attached to everyone."

You do this every time and every time the job ends

you're so upset and devastated,

don't do it this time and then I harden myself to it

and then like two weeks in and I'm in love with everyone

and we're a big happy family and I never want it to end.

I'm a week away from finishing the film I'm working on now

and I'm--

- Heartbroken?

- I'm already getting that,

I'm so scared about finishing

because I just don't want to leave everyone.

Do you get that after this many years?

- I try not to end it.

I try not to end it, like this movie in the space

I'm still friends with Jeff, we're all still in it,

we talk almost every day, so I think it's that,

that thing where I think now I've tried to sort of...

I was working with an actor once and he said to me,

"There comes a moment where you have to realize

"that this is your life when you're on a set

"if you have the opportunity to work like this.

"And stop fooling yourself that you're gonna go off and..."

he's like, "Figure out what the things that you like."

He said, "I like to cook when I come home."

So I would always like to find an apartment

in the city I live in because

that's my life and what I like to do,

I like to play the guitar and I like to cook.

And that's what I decided and I thought,

"Wow, yeah, we all kind of live in this space we're like,

"we're gonna get to that." or,

and really you're in that space,

that's what I've realized.

But I will say, did you feel, because it's interesting

in thinking about these two characters

they were both kind of thrust into the spotlight

in a particular way.

First, initially for your character because of her choice

and then also because of the event that happened

in a whole different light,

and all of a sudden she became somebody totally different.

- You're so pretty

- No, I'm not.

You are.

- Did you relate to her?

Do you relate to that idea?

- That was something she asked me about when we met.

She said, "How you dealing with with fame and being famous?"

And, I actually,

it was very kind of her to ask

because to be honest I was like,

"Your situation was horrible."

And it happened to her so young,

and I think what made the biggest difference

in the world was,

she didn't have a support network around her

and I do and I'm so lucky.

I didn't start working professionally

until I had finished high school.

I had a very clear bookend

from my childhood to my adulthood,

from my life outside of the film business--

- You have always been very clear about that.

Your life and your work is very important to you

in separating those two things.

- It is, it is.

And my friends and my family

and no one is connected to the business whatsoever.

And I guess it's bittersweet living outside of Australia

because I miss everyone so much.

But the fact that they are so removed from it

helps me keep my life and my work separate

even though they are intrinsically linked

because all I want to do is work all the time.

Honestly, I never complain, but I love it,

I just want to be on set all the time.

Yeah, becoming famous at her age

without a support network around her

and without that clear distinction

I think would be incredibly difficult

and I'm grateful that I have people around me,

great people around me.

Both my team in the business

and my family and friends outside the business.

So yeah, it's a weird thing and it's,

you can never presume what it's going to be like

until you're actually in it.

But you adapt and be grateful for the things you have.

- I think that's true.

I learned from Jeff that just,

that he didn't really, he didn't ask for those things.

He didn't ask for the attention and to become that thing

but he has slowly evolved

into being able to hold that idea for people

and to see the hope.

- I felt that in the film so much,

the moment when he, you really see the characters,

his mindset really transitioned from resenting

the position he's been put in.

Not just physically and the horrible trauma that brought,

but having that responsibility

to be the beacon of hope to everyone

is a huge responsibility that he never asked for,

he didn't ask to be that guy

and that was heartbreaking to watch.

And I was in tears in the moment when he's

at the Red Sox game and you can just see that it's,

he suddenly realizes that responsibility he has

and the positive impact it can have on the people around him

by just listening to their story

and shaking their hand and

I was bawling by that part.

I mean there's a lot of parts in the film that made me cry

but that one to me was so moving and important and it's,

like I said earlier, I guess

in this business we want to entertain

but we want to entertain in a meaningful way

and that moment in your film just feels very meaningful.

Like one of those films you finish and you're like,

"I'm so glad I feel like I went through that

"and I'm glad I did that.

"I'm glad I watched that and I feel..."

Yeah, it's very emotive.

- That means a lot.

Thank you, that's really sweet of you to say.

I think that movies bring and can bring joy

and I think that that's what I feel Jeff showed me

is that his spirit when you get touched by him

or you're around him or if he were here you would feel,

you'd feel so happy to be alive.

And also just he has such a great sense of humor

and makes all my petty crap seem like petty crap.

And all the things I take super seriously,

I think he just always puts it in perspective for me

in this way.

And I don't know if he was like that

even before this situation,

he may have just had that in him.

But I think, we can only learn

how we move people from other people

I think in a lot of ways,

you can see how people respond in it.

It means so much to me that, that the movie moved you

and you should know how much your movie moved me.

And I think that's really important for us

to tell each other, all of us to share that and to connect

because I feel like what else are we making movies for.

- Yeah, exactly.

- You showed the world that they can't break us

no matter what the hell they do.

You know it gave me a little hope.

It made me feel a little better.

And I just want to say thank you for that, man, that's all.

- What's your name?

- My name's Larry.

- Can you imagine if Dr. Johnny...

I don't know if you seen that movie but Dr. Johnny

who I play on Okja met Harley Quinn, that would be...

- I haven't seen Okja yet,

but I did hear that your character is like very...

- I feel like we wore the same shorts maybe.

- You saw my outfit?

I knew this was gonna happen.

- Maybe your your socks, yeah, maybe I...

- No, I really want to see it

because I did hear you did like--

- You can't already hear it, it's still happening.

It's so loud, you might be able to experience it now.

No, the performance--

- Oh.

Was it really?

- Yeah--

- Did you enjoy that?

Do you think of yourself as a character actor or...

- I think that in the case of that it was,

to me it was, like that role was so polarizing to people,

some people thought it was great

and some people thought it was horrible

and that was exactly where I want to be.

- Yeah.

- And I think you know,

you live in a place where creativity gets sort of like

washed through this thing

where it's supposed to please everyone

and in the space of making choices there.

I mean I remember walking out,

everyone walking out on the outfit in New York City

because we've been shooting in Korea,

I wear this crazy outfit.

And I remember walking out, everyone's like,

"You know there's paparazzi out there."

and I was like, "This is how I've always wanted to look

"in front of photographers."

It feels like you want to be able to make bold choices

that throw things off for yourself, right?

And then you also sort of throw things off for others,

it's super fun.

And Bong Joon-ho is an incredible director,

and the movie is so moving so.

- Do you want to keep doing

kind of outlandish characters like that?

Have you always wanted to do that

or you're gonna continue to do that?

- That's how I wake up in the morning.

That was just--

- And then you just chill yourself out for the...

- For the Actor on Actor interview, yeah.

I'm forced to put on a suit

and come here and act like you know...

- Responsible and serious.

- Responsible and serious, yeah.

What about you?

Aren't you doing another one?

- Yeah.

I hope to be playing Harley again at least next year.

I love her.

I mean...

I love any character that...

Every character I played doesn't feel like

I don't feel like myself and that's why I like doing it,

which is why it's so weird

when people want to know about you because you're like,

"But wait, my whole job is not being me.

"Me? I don't know, I'm boring,

"but these characters are amazing, ask about them."

And Harley's one of those insane characters

and people do seem to really like us,

I hope I get to keep playing her.

But no, I love that, and it's so nice,

like right now I'm working on a

indie film that we're producing as well.

It's a six million dollar film and with very small crew

and a second-time film director and,

I love it so much and the idea that I get to do that

and then walk into a hundred million dollar film set

with pyrotechnics and all that crazy stuff

and have my baseball bat

and do a totally different thing is just...

Oh, it just occurred to me, we've both worked it David Ayer.

- Yes, we have.

Yes, we have.

- End of Watch by the way was one of my favorite films

and the reason I signed on for Suicide Squad

was because I love End of Watch so much

and I saw it about four times at least and all.

- That was a really special...

- [Margot] I don't know if I told you that.

- You never told me that.

- Didn't I?

- Just in front of the camera.

- Just so you know, Jake and I go way back to yesteryear,

and that's something else I wanted to ask you.

'Cause when we met you were doing, we met...

Did we decide it was five or six years ago?

- I don't know.

Yes, six probably I think.

- A while ago.

- Yeah.

- And you were doing a play in New York.

- And you were about to start Wolf of Wall Street.

- And I had my first day of Wolf of Wall Street

the next day.

- Oh, that's right.

Oh, wow.

- And you were like, "Wait, why are you out tonight?

"Why don't you..."

I was like, "I'm just so scared.

"I need to keep my mind..."

- I was like, "You looked really tan too."

- I was like, "I've had a spray tan.

"And these nails."

My life for the next six months.

The smell still haunts me.

But you were doing theater and I loved that play.

I loved you in it, you were so, so good

and I haven't yet had the chance to do theater

and it's something I plan on doing.

And I was wondering,

what do you feel you get out of doing theater

that you don't doing film and vice versa.

And will you be returning to the stage?

- It was a very long name of a play.

- If I'm there you're there and...

- If There Is I Haven't Found It Yet.

- If There Is I Haven't Found It Yet.

- [Jake] The play that I was doing.

- I remember your performance just not the title.

- Yes, thanks.

It was by Nick Payne, who's a wonderful British playwright.

And I then did his other show called Constellations

which is really kind of a masterwork.

- With Ruth Wilson?

- With Ruth Wilson, yeah.

I think the stage, I think we're all different,

we're all different animals.

I think that I admire people who can really...

Movie acting is very particular,

it's almost like these little sprints,

it's like delivering in a very short period of time.

Something magical, something dense and full of choices

and sometimes it takes some choices to do that

and a lot of mistakes along the way,

it's a much more imperfect process in the moment.

But I feel like on stage there's

the animal that you have to be is a very different one,

it's sort of a much more, it's an endurance animal.

And I feel like there's preparation before

and the choices are made through,

I think the messy part is much earlier on.

- Right.

- And so to me I feel like you're also tested in that space,

your bold choices can be made

and you have to make them bolder.

And working in the theater has made,

made it possible for me to make more confident,

bolder choices when I'm on set,

because I don't really care about all these people here,

we are connecting in a different way,

it's not like it's judgment, it's like it's something else.

Sometimes I used to feel that way

before I did more theater work,

because when I was on set I was always like

very sensitive to people watching.

- On what they thought of your performance

or what you were doing?

- No, I just think it's weird.

Here we are talking in we're on a set

and half of the set is there

and then the other half is like--

- Let's be honest, they're on their iPhones,

playing like Candy Crush--

- They really don't look like it.

They look pretty interested.

- You guys...

- Four of them are like...

(melodious instrumental music)

For more infomation >> Actors on Actors: Jake Gyllenhaal and Margot Robbie (Full Video) - Duration: 33:05.

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Christmas Loaded Bag - Duration: 3:16.

hi friends and welcome to decor8yourlife in this video I'm sharing

a Christmas theme loaded envelope that I've created for one of my

subscribers at the time that I was making this Christmas loaded bag I

didn't have any Christmas paper pads so i went through

my stash and I got the prettiest pink and grey combinations that I could

find

I don't know about you but when it comes to loaded

envelopes or loaded bags or loaded anything I never really know what to put

inside them I always fall short so after watching a few videos and doing several

searches for the loaded envelopes I came across Rose's video I believe her

channel name is roses creative way and she had uploaded this beautiful

absolutely gorgeous WINTER THEME LOADED ENVELOPE and and she was pulling out the

tags and and all the neat items that she had made for her partner and so she gave

me the idea of making several different tags for the recipient and I hope that

the recipient likes it

I used a combination of laces and Spellbinders

to embellish the front of this CHRISTMAS THEME LOADED ENVELOPE

added a few handmade goodies inside this loaded bag and one of which was shonda's

shaker tag and I've added some handmade cards now this

small journal that you see here was created using Spellbinders from

amazing paper grace by Becca feeken and I added a few paper pieces

in this envelope for her to use and yeah that is pretty much it like I said I

fall short when it comes to putting stuff in there I never know what to put

in there but thank thanks to all of y'all's videos I can pretty much get a

very good idea of of what the norm is so anyways it was a lot of fun creating

this and I hope that the recipient likes it and if you have not subscribed to my

channel go ahead and click on that subscribe button click on that icon so

that you can be notified every time I upload a new video thank you so very

much for watching my videos don't forget to like comment and share

I'll see y'all real soon bye now

For more infomation >> Christmas Loaded Bag - Duration: 3:16.

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[EVENT REVIEW] Masters Match preview, Mega Digiclones and more! - Digimon Masters Online - Duration: 4:13.

For more infomation >> [EVENT REVIEW] Masters Match preview, Mega Digiclones and more! - Digimon Masters Online - Duration: 4:13.

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Meet The Incredible Mother Behind Caroline's Cart | Southern Living - Duration: 1:34.

(upbeat, lively music)

One in five under the age of 17

have some registered form of disability.

We should have accessible shopping

just like everyone else does.

I'm not the only mom out there

that has a special needs child.

It started at my dining room table with a drawing.

So when Caroline was born I left the hospital

with what I thought and was told

was a perfectly healthy baby girl.

She was diagnosed with a genetic condition called Rett.

It is a genetic disorder

that has nothing to do with my husband or myself.

Nobody's a carrier.

It's like hitting the lottery.

It just happened.

Being a stay-at-home mom with three children,

where was I many times a week?

I was at the grocery store.

It didn't take me long to realize

once Caroline outgrew the traditional shopping cart,

I begin to wonder, "Okay well what am I gonna do next?"

That's when I really dug into this and started looking

for a special needs shopping cart

and there never was one.

Just from the napkin to the prototype

was almost two years.

I thought Caroline's Cart

would be in stores within six to nine months

from my cute little drawing,

and it was almost 10 years.

When you are trying to do something

that's never been done before, it's not easy!

You have to make that happen.

You have to figure it out.

So don't give up the fight.

No one's gonna do it.

And take ownership of your own hopes and dreams.

For more infomation >> Meet The Incredible Mother Behind Caroline's Cart | Southern Living - Duration: 1:34.

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PASSWORD 1966-10-04 Carol Burnett & Ross Martin - Duration: 21:21.

For more infomation >> PASSWORD 1966-10-04 Carol Burnett & Ross Martin - Duration: 21:21.

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

URGENTE ENERGIAS DEZEMBRO ARCANJO MIGUEL - Duration: 10:33.

For more infomation >> URGENTE ENERGIAS DEZEMBRO ARCANJO MIGUEL - Duration: 10:33.

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Why Can't You Bring Mercury Thermometers on Planes? - Duration: 2:43.

[♩INTRO ]

You've probably never tried to carry a mercury thermometer or barometer on a plane.

But even if you really wanted to, you can't in the U.S., unless you happen to work for

a government weather agency.

That might seem like another weird restriction, but there's an important reason for it:

That tiny bit of liquid metal is fascinating, but really dangerous.

Mercury is the only metal that's a liquid at room temperature, which is why it's sometimes

called quicksilver — which comes from the Old English for "living silver", not the

X-Men.

And it's especially useful for thermometers because of how much it expands when you heat

it.

It has what's called a high coefficient of thermal expansion, which means that when

you heat it up a little, it expands a lot.

So that way, you don't need to use a magnifying glass on your thermometer to see if you need

a sweater.

Mercury also forms mixtures, or alloys, with a lot of other metals very easily.

An alloy with mercury in it is called an amalgam, and they're useful for all sorts of things.

For example, if you've ever gotten a silver filling at the dentist, that's a harmless

amalgam of metals like mercury, silver, and copper.

But some amalgams aren't so harmless.

Like, when mercury comes into contact with pure aluminum, things get pretty quickly.

And you definitely don't want it in your teeth.

We make so many things — like airplanes — out of aluminum because it's so durable.

When most metals are exposed to oxygen, they rust and degrade over time.

But when aluminum reacts with oxygen, it forms aluminum oxide, which is non-reactive and

protects the pure metal underneath.

Normally, this is great.

Unless there's mercury involved.

If mercury can get to the pure aluminum, like through a scratch on the plane, it immediately

starts to react and seep into the metal, forming an amalgam.

When that amalgam meets the air, it stills turns into aluminum oxide — except this

time, because there's mercury involved, the reaction doesn't stop.

And the aluminum oxide starts to grow out of the plane like some kind of cyberpunk plant.

And the mercury isn't consumed during this reaction, so it keeps reacting with more aluminum,

and the whole cycle continues until either the mercury evaporates or there's no aluminum

left.

Which is why you don't want your old-timey thermometer anywhere near a plane.

If you have enough of it, the mercury can slowly destroy the integrity of the plane.

And even though a tiny amount of mercury probably won't do fatal damage, mercury spills have

damaged and even grounded planes in the past.

But conveniently, even if you really did want to measure the temperature on your plane,

most thermometers these days don't have mercury in them, since it's also toxic if

it enters your body.

So even though some air travel laws change over time, you probably won't be bringing

your mercury thermometer on board any time soon.

And I'm okay with that.

Thanks for asking, and thanks to all our patrons on Patreon who keep the answers coming!

If you'd like to support the show and submit a question, you can go to patreon.com/scishow.

[♩OUTRO ]

For more infomation >> Why Can't You Bring Mercury Thermometers on Planes? - Duration: 2:43.

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LEGO Powerpuff Girls sets coming in 2018! - Duration: 1:01.

Hello, just2good here,

and we have more LEGO news -

this comes from Stellar Bricks on the Brickset forums.

We're getting LEGO Powerpuff Girls sets in Summer 2018.

There's two that he listed -

set 41287 Bubbles' Playground Showdown,

and 41288 Mojo Jojo Strikes.

This has been verified by some sources I know,

so I'm 99 percent sure these are actually coming.

And yeah, I'm just as surprised as you are.

I thought Powerpuff Girls was something

we would only experience with LEGO Dimensions.

However, I'm cautious, since these set numbers begin with 41,

which is for minidoll themes.

You see, I would like Powerpuff Girls sets,

since I enjoy cartoony themes,

even if I despise the new show.

But I don't think the characters would work in minidoll size.

Either way, here's to hoping they're minifigures,

because I would love a Mojo Jojo minifigure.

He almost made my Top 10 Missing LEGO Minifigures list,

actually.

Anyways, are you guys excited?

Do you think this will be a minifigure or minidoll theme?

Leave your thoughts in the comments below.

I'll see you guys later, peace out.

Bye.

For more infomation >> LEGO Powerpuff Girls sets coming in 2018! - Duration: 1:01.

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My Life As An Exorcist - Duration: 8:44.

(spooky music)

- My name is Carlos Oliveira.

I'm known as Brother Carlos.

I'm probably the craziest exorcist out there.

Because I do stuff that the average ones don't.

I go into situations that the average don't.

I do what I do because of a passion that I have in my heart

and obviously, a calling from my god in heaven.

(spooky music) (whispering voices)

(spooky music)

(whispering voices)

What got me into performing exorcisms

was a situation that happened in 1989

when a woman who was possessed by evil spirits

began punching me and I did not know what to do.

I had no clue about evil spirits.

We were doing a seminar in a church

and I called for help and my friends came

and performed an exorcism on that woman.

Then I saw the woman, who was thrown to the floor

by the demonic, get up and just walk away

as if nothing had happened and when that happened,

I felt I was called.

I felt there was a calling in my life

to be helping people spiritually.

I'm Carlos!

Brother Carlos, how are you doing?

- Good and my name is Laurie.

- When I meet people in need of deliverance,

I usually start with an investigation.

I wanna know what they're feeling,

when did that happen, what is that that happened

that brought those problems upon their lives.

- I still struggle with smoking.

- [Carlos] Okay.

- I'm diabetic and insulin-dependent.

- [Carlos] Mm hm.

- And I have stomach problems a lotta the time.

- Now based on what they tell me,

I can also perceive that there may

be other things related to those.

Then I start asking questions.

Have you ever had an encounter with evil spirits?

Then that's when I find out where the demonic is residing

and why they are in.

- I had to renounce witchcraft

because I was introduced to witchcraft.

- After the investigation, when I know the kind of spirits

that are there, then I proceed to perform an exorcism.

Father, in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ,

we just come before your Holy Triangle--

- Thank you, Jesus.

- We ask that you forgive us of all sins

we have committed against you and against those

made in your image.

Exorcism is the casting out of evil spirits.

Some people call deliverance.

No weapon formed against us shall prosper

in the mighty name of the Lord Jesus Christ, we pray.

When I confront demons in people,

I usually start out by making eye contact.

Why?

Because the eyes are the windows of the soul.

In the name of the Lord Jesus Christ of Nazareth,

I command every demonic spirit brings about and empowers

assigned against this woman right now to surface.

From there, I begin calling names.

I already know some of the demons

that are there by that time.

Then I begin.

I go after them.

In the name of Jesus Christ,

I command you now to lose this woman!

Lose her! (he snaps)

In Jesus' mighty name.

In Jesus' mighty name.

That's when, in some cases, people start manifesting,

screaming, falling to the floor.

In Jesus' mighty name, feel the torment

right now on you.

So now I know I'm in control.

Now I know I'm in charge of the game.

So now I know exactly what to do

to get those creatures out of those people.

Come out now, demons that have been

causing this woman to suffer so much!

Get out!

Get out!

Come out in Jesus' mighty name.

I don't go by the book.

I don't go by the Rite of Exorcism.

I just get to the demons right away.

Feel the fire burning every single

one of you unclean spirits!

Leave this woman right now!

Today is the day of her redemption!

During the process of exorcism,

I always encounter resistance from the demonic

because in some case, they've been there for so many years.

In their minds, they own that body.

They own that person.

They own that soul.

That's why they resist in some cases.

Sometimes they communicate, they speak in the third person.

Evil spirits, I'm talking to you.

You made her sell voodoo dolls, didn't you?

Yes or no.

- Make them.

And put curses on people.

- Who's talking to me right now?

- A witchcraft demon.

- Witchcraft demon's talking, huh?

You see, I don't let their mind game

play games with my mind.

Look in my eyes, Witchcraft!

I am commanding you!

I am commanding you now, look in my eyes.

I already know that demons are liars and they are losers.

When they say, I'm not leaving,

I say, who do you think you are?

You are leaving.

- I'm gonna kill you like I killed--

- [Carlos] Oh, you're gonna kill who?

You're gonna kill who?

- You!

- Who do you think you are?

It doesn't happen many times, but sometimes demons say

they're gonna kill me.

They said that before, I'm still alive.

They said that 20 years ago, I'm still alive.

Nicotine, you cannot live inside this body anymore!

Nicotine! - Get out of me!

- [Carlos] You cannot!

What?

- I said, get out of me.

I'm tired of battling it.

- When I pull the demon out, what I normally do

is I bind them, I handcuff them and I restrain them

because I want to forbid them from coming back.

Come out of her and go to the bed!

Right now in Jesus' mighty name.

Go! (he snaps)

I want to send the demon out.

I want to send the demon away but I wanna make sure

that demon is restrained for eternity.

Laurie, come up here, Laurie.

Talk to me.

Laurie, are you there?

- Yes.

- Okay.

Well, people know the kind of problems

they are going through.

Skeptics out there can't pinpoint

what other people are going through.

Jesus loves you so much.

- I know. - Okay?

He loves you so much.

He hasn't forgotten about you.

(soft music)

You are his child.

Okay?

Even though people may reject you,

but Jesus never rejected you.

- I know.

- So, these people, they know what they're facing is real.

So that's why you see that emotional reaction from someone,

like crying, because the person is feeling relief.

Who knows, maybe for the first time in several years.

Abuse, abandonment, rejection.

Come out.

(soft music)

There are people out there that choose not to believe,

but what somebody's feeling is what they're feeling.

You cannot say they're not feeling that.

It brought me joy to see Laurie feel better

and feel like a relief.

You had pain when you came in?

- Yes.

- You have no pain right now.

- No.

- Now she was able to see the spirits

that were oppressing her for so long, now being cast out.

So, the demons are gone.

Okay? - And I feel at peace.

- [Carlos] You feel peace.

Okay? - I feel free.

- What a joy to see someone like Laurie

get that kind of freedom and go back home

with less stress than she had when she came in.

- Thank you.

- Praise the Lord!

Oh!

(reciting bible)

Amen.

- It felt like an amazing experience because I was in pain,

all the pain is gone out of my body and I truly believe

that Jesus used Brother Carlos to set me free.

- I choose not to doubt when people tell me their stories.

I know they're real.

I know what they're feeling is real.

I know that.

So that's why I do what I do and I love helping

as many people as I can.

And I will continue doing this for as long as I live.

Amen.

(inspiring music)

For more infomation >> My Life As An Exorcist - Duration: 8:44.

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CBC NL Here & Now Tuesday 28 2017 - Duration: 1:01:33.

For more infomation >> CBC NL Here & Now Tuesday 28 2017 - Duration: 1:01:33.

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Counterfeit money makes rounds in southern Indiana - Duration: 1:27.

For more infomation >> Counterfeit money makes rounds in southern Indiana - Duration: 1:27.

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Cryptocurrencies Surpass Bank Of America's Market Cap For First Time - Duration: 3:28.

Cryptocurrencies Surpass Bank Of America's Market Cap For First Time

In recent weeks, cryptocurrencies have rushed to all new highs in value, and have now reached

a market capitalization higher than Bank of America.

As of market close on November 24, Bank of America had a $277.35 billion market cap,

while the current market cap for cryptocurrencies is now $285 billion.

Below are recent numbers from the New York Stock Exchange showing Bank of America�s

market capitalization:

Below are numbers from coinmarketcap.com, showing the market capitalization for cryptocurrencies:

Bitcoin makes up over half of that volume, representing 52.9% of the crypto market, with

1331 other currencies, known as alt-coins, contributing to the other half.

Bitcoin alone has a market cap of $151 billion.

The two most popular currencies behind Bitcoin are Ethereum and Bitcoin Cash, which was created

from an earlier fork of Bitcoin and is supported by many of its biggest players.

Supporters say that Bitcoin Cash solves many of the scaling problems that Bitcoin was faced

with as more people got onboard, such as growing transaction fees and processing times.

In fact, Roger Ver, one of the most well known Bitcoin investors in the world recently declared

that Bitcoin was dead and that Bitcoin Cash would be its replacement.

�The reason that bitcoin was able to [increase in value over time] was because it had fast,

cheap, reliable, censorship-resistant transactions for the entire world to participate on.

And [Bitcoin] no longer has those properties, but Bitcoin Cash does.

I can�t exactly say how soon it will happen, but I think it�s going to surpass [Bitcoin]

here shortly as well,� Ver told The Crypto Show.

�I think a lot of the people that are buying into bitcoin right now have been hearing about

it in the news for years, and every time they hear about it, it�s at a higher price than

before.

And they�re buying it because they think, �Oh, this is a great investment; it�s

going to go up some more,� he added.

Activists have had mixed feelings on cryptocurrencies over the years, but as more people learn about

the intricacies involved, many are seeing the blockchain as a new battleground where

war can be waged against central banks.

Libertarian congressman Ron Paul has recently been coming around to support cryptocurrency,

even going so far as to tell CNN that Bitcoin could destroy the dollar, a day that he welcomes.

�There will be alternatives to the dollar, and this might be one of them � If people

start using bitcoins en masse, �it�ll go down in history as the destroyer of the

dollar,� Paul said.

�As a firm believer in currency competition, I�m excited to see the options what bitcoin

opens up,� he added.

For more infomation >> Cryptocurrencies Surpass Bank Of America's Market Cap For First Time - Duration: 3:28.

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EPISODE 5: THE DALTON HIGHWAY - Duration: 6:22.

How do you get lucky to do this why don't they make Mike do something like this?

Because Mike's a grumpy bastard and he won't do them.

I don't mind and I'm a camera whore.

Have you been drinking?

Yes, I have.

There's no more of those, you drank them all.

I know I drank them all and then two Rolling Rocks or whatever too.

The funny thing is you've never asked me what I thought our chances of success were on this

trip.

What do you think your chances of success are on this trip?

Now?

Between five and ten percent.

That low?

Oh before I thought zero.

This is freakin difficult!

What is difficult about it it's just riding?

Oh no!

How many times did I almost get killed yesterday?

That was yesterday!

I mean I'm not a puss, and people were like putting their car like right here and I was like...

What's up YouTube, Simon Edwards from Where the Road Ends, it's been a crazy last couple

of weeks, we are uh recovering, in Portland, Oregon.

So we left Deadhorse on Veterans Day, November 11th with subzero cold and pretty strong wind.

But we got increasing daylight through out the day.

When the sun comes up in the Arctic it's amazing.

It's so sterile that when it's lit you just can't believe the incredible beauty that's

up there.

The mountain ranges on the horizon that you're heading towards, just stunningly beautiful.

I think the thing that struck me the most was the lack of any aroma.

There is no... you don't smell anything.

It's just cold.

Your eyelashes literally freeze together when you blink.

Essentially we got to Atigun Pass where it started blowing fifty to sixty mph gusts.

Visibility dropped near zero, and of course Atigun Pass is hugely steep, treacherous,

big avalanche zones.

We stopped on the Northern side of Atigun pass because the weather was so extreme that

we felt that our best opportunity to survive was to get the tents up and get out of the wind

One of the security patrol that were on that highway stopped and said you guys are crazy,

you gotta get out and get over the pass.

It turns out that it was probably ten miles down the road the weather conditions were

actually going to be better so we took the tents back down again, packed them in the

truck and got out of there as fast as we can.

Lot of difficulty navigating that whole section, getting up and over that pass was extremely difficult

After we completed the Dalton Highway, we took a brief break in Fairbanks, Alaska, to

rest and reequip the bikes, kinda get prepared for the next phase through the Yukon Territory

and down into British Columbia.

But again, subzero cold the whole way.

Which kind of limited having fun because you were just focused on the road, moving

the sidecars and the bikes pretty fast down the road.

In the last day even pushing down to Oregon we had rain every day, it's been really challenging.

Doing as good of job as we can to document the whole experience.

What you're going to see next is a preview of some of the footage that these guys have

managed to capture while we were riding in the Arctic.

All riders this is Salt Truck, please make sure your headlights are on.

It's total whiteout out here, I can't see anything!

We're pulling over here.

I'm not getting any traction up the hills.

We're takin a vote, it's either set up camp here and re-stud or try it.

What's the time?

It's two o'clock it's gonna get dark in an hour and a half.

I can't make it up there without re-studding my tires, no way.

And I have no lights.

You have no lights?

No headlights, no tail lights nothing.

Fuck.

He's got no lights.

Yeah he's completely dark.

Alright we're gonna set up tents here.

You guys got the latest weather?

We're getting it right now.

Yeah.

You ain't getting it yet, it's coming.

Alright.

It's just building.

We're only going about 35 mph right now, they're saying it'll get up to 50.

You make it to Atigun, that might be your best shot.

Hey Rich

he's saying that once you get to Atigun Pass

It's crystal clear and it's crystal clear on the other side

All hands to pulling up.

We're trying to fix the lights on Simon's bike and get some studs in the tires.

Something here is fried.

Yeah it probably blew a fuse.

Yeah.

One, two, three!

I think this is the worst conditions I've ever worked on a motorcycle in for sure.

The stakes are pretty high here.

You gotta take time and just warm your hands up enough to avoid getting frostbite.

Human beings... how did people live here?

Are you guys actually ready to go?

No I'm close.

I'm just trying to get my fucking visor cleaned off with some heat from my gloves.

Ok bikers go.

All riders and van back on the road.

For more infomation >> EPISODE 5: THE DALTON HIGHWAY - Duration: 6:22.

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Voces de los Mercados de Agricultura en Arizona: Granja Aguiar - Duration: 2:09.

I've been selling at the farmers market for 5 years.

It has helped me a lot because they can use one dollar extra every time they come to buy

they get more for products.

The program is good because it

helps more people and it helps the sellers and the buyers.

We have now in the winter, in the cold, beets, carrots, celery, green onions, spinach, lettuce, arugula,

rainbow chard, kale, dill, rutabagas, turnips, cilantro, parsley, all the things that have to do with the cold

that withstand the cold cover crops we use a lot of raw cover to protect from the

cold and everything grows better. The majority we use them fresh for salads,

the carrots raw by themselves and some to prepare soups or other kinds of meals.

For more infomation >> Voces de los Mercados de Agricultura en Arizona: Granja Aguiar - Duration: 2:09.

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সরাসরি আজকের রাতের সর্বশেষ বাংলা খবর ইন্ডিপেন্ডেন্ট সংবাদ ২৯ নভেম্বর ২০১৭ Independent Tv News Today - Duration: 13:53.

bangladesh news 24

For more infomation >> সরাসরি আজকের রাতের সর্বশেষ বাংলা খবর ইন্ডিপেন্ডেন্ট সংবাদ ২৯ নভেম্বর ২০১৭ Independent Tv News Today - Duration: 13:53.

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Flute Killer - Castlevania challenge entry - Duration: 1:36.

I've had it. I'm leaving now.

For more infomation >> Flute Killer - Castlevania challenge entry - Duration: 1:36.

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*FREE* Drake | Meek Mill | Type Beat | Hip Hop - Duration: 2:35.

Freddo Beatz

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