Thứ Ba, 3 tháng 1, 2017

Waching daily Jan 3 2017

Put Like and subscribe to the channel...

For more infomation >> THE BEST Street Fights, Knockouts, №69 - Duration: 8:01.

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Take A Hint - Minecraft Music Video - Duration: 2:04.

Where's the llama?

t-the.. it's alive!!

She isn't...

Hahha.. look at..

For more infomation >> Take A Hint - Minecraft Music Video - Duration: 2:04.

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YTP: Jimmy Takes Out The Dog (Collab Entry) - Duration: 0:55.

"JeJ"

"ARE YOU FLIPPING KIDDING ME?!"

"Take out the dog."

"Yes mother."

"Wiggle Wiggle Wiggle"

"For a walk, Jimmy."

"ARE YOU FLIPPING KI..."

"Dad. I'm hungry."

"Hi hungry, i'm dad."

"Why did you name me this way?"

"You're gonna..."

"Die"

"Were all gonna..."

"Die"

*Facepalms almighty*

"You're gonna die."

*Piano*

"Are you hungry?"

"No, i'm crazy!"

"Whoops!"

*Cellphone ringing*

*boop*

"Hello sir or madam, can i please have a moment of you're time?"

"I'd really like to talk to you about..."

*sombra*

"And now, my love life."

laugh.

Go check out SpartaYoshi for the full collab. His channel is on the screen under mine.

For more infomation >> YTP: Jimmy Takes Out The Dog (Collab Entry) - Duration: 0:55.

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tamachon ki matchine Full Open kabaddi match 2017 - Duration: 22:16.

Open kabaddi pakistan

Tamachedar larain

It is a Pakistani WWE and UFO

It is a Pakistani WWE and UFO

It is a Pakistani WWE and UFO

For more infomation >> tamachon ki matchine Full Open kabaddi match 2017 - Duration: 22:16.

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How to register your child in the Boston Public Schools - Duration: 4:12.

[music]

Thank you for choosing Boston Public Schools.

The following video will give you an insight about how to register your child for Boston

Public Schools and what to expect when you visit one of our Welcome Centers.

Registering your child is a very important step that will set you child off into the

educational pathway to success and we want to make sure that you have all the tools to

help you pick the best school for your child.

The first step is to visit www.discoverbps.org to obtain your customized list of schools

along with very important information about each school.

Things to consider when picking your schools should include: schedule, distance from home,

transportation eligibility, before and after school programs and uniform policy.

Once you have researched your schools and know which are your favorites you can start your registration.

You are now ready to visit one of our 4 Welcome Centers located in Dorchester, Roxbury, Roslindale and East Boston.

To make your visit to the Welcome Center quicker we highly recommend pre-registering online

through our website and making an appointment.

When you visit the Welcome Center please make sure you bring all the required documents for the registration.

You will need your child's original birth certificate or passport, up to date immunization

records, picture id and two proofs of Boston residency from our accepted documents list.

Proofs of residency must include the parent's name, address and they must not be older than 60 days.

If you are a legal guardian you will also need to provide any court document stating such.

Once you arrive at the Welcome Center, you will be greeted and given a number.

The greeter will then give you a registration packet and ask you to read over the cover

page with all requirements to ensure that you have brought all the proper documents.

Please note that if you are missing any documents, your application will not be processed and

you will have to return when you acquire the missing documents.

While you are waiting for your number to be called go ahead and completely fill out all

the forms in your packet.

This will speed up the process once you are called.

When your number is called, one of our registration specialists will sit with you and look over

all your documents to ensure that they are up to date and have the correct information.

The specialist will make copies and return the originals to you.

At this point, the registration specialist will begin to input your application information into our system.

This would be a good time for you to review your school options or ask any last minute questions.

The specialist will now print out a school choice form for you to rank your school preferences.

If your child requires a language assessment the specialist will now schedule an appointment

at the Newcomer Assessment and Counseling Center.

You will then be given a packet to take with you on the day of the assessment.

Once your child is assessed, you will be given your school choice form so you can rank your school preferences.

Once your choices are put into our system you will be given a case summary.

Please look over this summary to ensure that all the information is correct.

Once everything is verified please sign on the bottom and you're done!

You will be given a copy of all the registration paperwork along with information about when

to expect a response from us.

Your child is now officially registered in Boston Public Schools!

For additional information please visit our website www.bostonpublicschools.org or call

or visit one of our Welcome Centers.

[music]

For more infomation >> How to register your child in the Boston Public Schools - Duration: 4:12.

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This Is Not Happening - Bert Kreischer - Flying Dildos - Uncensored - Duration: 16:00.

- They kept her in a fucking closet?

Are you shitting me?

And they were like, "Yeah, the Nazis were looking for her."

I go, "The fucking Nazis were looking for her?"

[laughter]

"How did they not put this in the movie?

How did the Nazis not find..."

[babbling incoherently]

[dark electronic music]

- Oh! Ahh!

Ugh! Oh! Ahh!

Augh!

[cheers and applause]

- One of my best friends.

The host of the "Bertcast" podcast.

Please give it up for Mr. Bert Kreischer, everybody.

[cheers and applause]

- Yeah, I am the machine.

[laughter]

I'm nursing one of the worst hangovers

I've ever had in my fucking life right now.

So cheers to Ari, to Comedy Central.

[cheers and applause]

I don't read a lot.

[laughter]

I'm not--I'm not--I'm not, like, a--I'm smart, but I'm not,

like, a--like...

[laughter]

I'm not good with facts and stuff.

Like, I was talking to someone the other day,

and I realized I'd always thought Anne Frank

and Helen Keller were the same person.

[laughter]

Like, well into my 20s.

[laughter]

Do you know where I found out?

At the Anne Frank house.

Do you have any idea wh--I-- I went--okay.

I backpacked through Europe when I was 22 with these four guys.

Three are lawyers, so I can't say their names.

The other one's named Wicho.

And these guys were just fucking nerds.

The whole time we were backpacking, they were like,

"You want to go to, like, the Louvre?

"Do you want to see David?

"Do you want-- we should take a class

"and learn about how they cut diamonds

so when we get engaged we can have"--

I'm like, "I...

"what the fuck is wrong with you guys?

"We--we're here to bang Swedish chicks.

That's it. Like, are you out of your minds?"

And then one day they're like, "Hey, do you want to go to the

Anne Frank house?"

And I lit up. I was like, "Fuck yes."

And they were like, "Wow, you seem really excited."

And I was like, "No, we'll get a bag of weed,

and we'll laugh our dicks off."

[laughter]

And they're like, "Really?"

I go, "Yeah, I've been hearing jokes about this girl

my whole life."

[laughter]

"We'll get high, put a plunger in the toilet."

[laughs]

And they were like, "What?"

I go, "Do you get to go into the house?"

And they were like, "Yeah, you can go see the closet

they kept her in," and I go, "They kept her

in a fucking closet?"

[laughter]

Are you shitting me?

And they were like, "Yeah, the Nazis were looking for her."

I go, "The fucking Nazis were looking for her?"

[laughter]

"How did they not put this in the movie?

How did the Nazis not find..."

[babbling incoherently]

[laughter]

So I get excited. I get a bag of weed.

And I'm like, "I can't wait to go to the Anne Frank house."

[laughter]

I'm, like, beaming, I'm so pumped up.

[laughter]

On our walk to the Anne Frank house in Amsterdam,

we pass by a sign that says,

"Live sex. Live sex. Live sex. Flying dildos."

[laughter]

And I'm like, "All right, suck a silent dick, Anne Frank."

[laughter]

"We're going to see flying dildos."

We can--well, what are you gonna pick, culture

or the Anne Frank house?

I'm going with culture.

[laughter]

So I get us tickets.

We all go in.

Has anybody ever been to a live sex show?

- Whoo.

- One guy in the back. Perfect.

It's aggressive.

It's a lot creepier than you'd ever think.

See, here's the problem with a live sex show:

every show you go to elicits a response.

When you come to this show, you know to laugh.

When you go to see music, you get inspired.

But when you go to a live sex show,

the only response is to creep people out.

Just like, "Oh, maybe I'll get hard."

[low laughter]

So we go in. We sit down.

It's as intimate as this.

And we light a joint, get to know some of the other fellas,

like-minded gentlemen.

[laughter]

First woman comes up, no fanfare,

no intro music, not even that hot.

She's like a sex show six.

[laughter]

Comes up-- she definitely has another job.

Like, trust me.

It's this intimate.

It needs to be ex-- we are this close

and she just starts oil-rigging herself.

Just wha--no.

Listen, I'm not big into foreplay,

but total lack of foreplay looks a lot like assault, okay?

[laughter]

And she is going to town,

and we're making the same look, just, "Ohh-ohh-ohh,"

which she confuses for, "Oh, I guess they can't see,"

and just goes back to performing her gynecological exam

on herself.

Now, I have a problem with silence,

so I immediately start talking to her.

[laughter]

And I'm like, "Do you speak English?"

She's like, "No."

I was like, "Fuck.

Uh, you're doing a really good job."

She was like, "Oh, thank you."

And I go, "Do you do flying dildos?"

And she's like, "No."

And I was like... [sighs] "Great."

Five minutes. Five minutes she does this.

Five minutes, just goes to town on herself.

Just--it gets aggre--by the end, we're like,

now we're learning shit about the woman's anatomy.

We're like, "That's her urethra I think.

That's amazing."

She gets done. We give her a golf clap.

[laughter]

Two girls come on stage, and, now, if this girl was all song,

no dance, these girls were all dance,

no song.

A lot of foreplay.

You can't walk backwards in a story.

Like, I had to stop and go, "Ladies, ladies,

"we just watched a woman fist herself.

"Like, let's cut to the pink meat, okay?

Like"--they're, like, making out.

And now I'm the spokesman.

Someone's like, "Can you get them to hurry it up?"

And I'm like, "Sure."

I go, "Do you guys do flying dildos?"

And they're like, "No."

I was like, "Okay. Next."

And they're like, "Huh?"

And we're like, "We're good.

We've seen what you have to offer."

They leave. Then--

[laughter]

A guy and a girl come out.

Now, this is where it gets creepy.

I'm not a huge feminist,

but I believe in women's rights, okay?

And this guy just starts doing crowd work.

He's not even incorporating her in.

It's like an improv team where she sits off to the side,

like, fucking one of Jeff Dunham's dummies, just...

[laughter]

And he's like, "Aww, you guys"--

this--by the way, this is exactly what it feels like.

I want you to feel it.

"You guys ready to see me fuck, huh?"

[laughter]

"You want to see me fuck this shit, man?

I fuck it good."

It's creeping me out, and it's assaulting my morals.

[laughter]

And I lean over to my friends, and I go,

"We should have just gone to the Anne Frank house."

[laughter]

Which pisses this guy off.

He goes, "Oh, don't bring up Anne Frank in this room, man."

And I go, "What? Fucking wish I was Anne Frank right now

so I didn't have to see this."

[laughter]

[applause]

And then he starts arguing with me,

but he's arguing with me and getting his dick hard.

Like...

[laughter]

Like, it's such a--like, he's, like, pulling it going,

"Oh, man, don't worry. It gets bigger."

I'm like, "Not on my watch it doesn't."

And I start heckling his dick.

I'm like, "Think about your mom,"

and he's like, "Hey, fuck you, buddy."

I go, "Do you have any sisters?"

He's like, "Hey, not now, man. Not now."

I go, "We should just go to Anne Frank."

And he's like, "Fuck you,"

and he storms off, and now the lunatics are running the asylum,

and I'm their fucking leader.

I'm their--I'm like their Rosa Tubbsman.

Not fucking Rosa Tubbsman.

[laughter]

God damn it.

By the way, I am neither Rosa Parks or Harriet Tubman.

[laughter]

Right--right--

[laughter]

[laughs]

I don't know--right now-- right now in heaven,

Rosa Parks, Harriet Tubman, Helen Keller,

and Anne Frank are going, "What the fuck is this guy

doing to our names?"

Helen Keller's like... [babbling incoherently]

[laughter]

So I'm their Rosa Tubbsman.

I'm fucking-- I'm leading the--

fucking--

if I--if you didn't think I was stupid

when I started this story...

[laughter]

I'm leading the charge.

And I'm, like, I'm fucking pulling out old high school

chants, like, "We put our hands up high, our feet down low.

"We want flying dildos.

"Flying dildos.

"Flying dildos.

Hey, fellas." "Yeah?"

"Hey, fellas." "Yeah?"

"We want?" "Yeah?"

"Flying dildos, yeah."

They send out some girl to calm us down and we boo her offstage.

We're like, "Get the fuck out, bitch.

"We only want...

"flying dildos!

You heard us." And now--then there's--okay.

Then--let's fucking kill this beer.

[low laughter]

- Whoo!

- Get it, machine.

- I'm hitting it hard as fuck.

[laughter]

Woman comes out, German woman, six feet tall,

thigh-high leather boots, biker's cap, medicine bag,

plops it on the stool, and goes,

"Gentlemen, please, calm down.

I am the flying dildos."

And the place goes fucking bananas.

It looks like the control room in NASA when Apollo 13 landed.

Like, "Oh, we did it!

We did it!"

[laughter]

She goes, "Stop, I will need one volunteer from the audience,"

and these assholes look at me like, "You're up, numbnuts."

[laughter]

I fucking get up onstage, and I am so excited

that I've brought about change.

I feel like I've accomplished something in my life.

I'm literally-- look at my constituents like,

"You said you wanted change!"

I--I didn't say that, probably, but I was like, "Fuck"--

whatever I said.

"I'm Rosa Tubbsman!" And--

[laughter]

I don't even realize her putting a handcuff on me,

and when the second one goes on, I go,

"Hey, maybe we should talk about how flying dildos works."

[laughter]

"Like, I feel like I'm in the dark on this one."

And she does not have, like, happy eyes look on her face

and sweeps me legs in, like, a "Karate Kid" move.

Just... and I land hard.

I land so hard, I knocked the wind out of myself.

And let me tell you something about--when knocked out of wind,

that's a real fucking noise, just, "Hehhhhh."

It is so real, and real respects real.

When you hear that, you're like, "Oh, fuck."

"Hehhhhh."

She tears my pants off me, and my dick pops out of my boxers

unprepared, gentlemen.

I look at my best friend, Wicho, and I go, "Poke it back in."

He's like, "I will not be doing that."

And then the air is removed out of the room, and I hear some guy

go, "Fucking do it," and I'm like, "What?"

I look up.

This woman is straddling my face with a 12-inch black dildo

and Excaliburs it into my mouth.

- No!

- Gentlemen, you have a game-time decision to make.

[laughter]

What do you do in that situation?

Do you purse your lips, close your teeth,

and hope to block the shot?

Could lose your front canines.

[laughter]

Or do you acquiesce and open up and let her go yard in your jaw?

[laughter]

I chose the latter.

She went 8 inches into my throat just...

[gagging]

Now I'm gagging, the wind's knocked out of me, and my dick's

popping out, I'm wiggling like the very last unicorn.

[laughter]

And she looks at the guys and says, "Gentlemen, get your

cameras and line up to get a picture with flying dildos."

These turncoats line up like they're meeting

the fucking queen.

They're like, "Oh, I can't wait," and everyone takes a

picture with me...

[gagging]

The point of my story-- the reason I told it to you...

[laughter]

Is if you ever go to Amsterdam, just go to the Anne Frank house.

[laughter]

Thank you.

[cheers and applause]

- Wait a second.

First of all, don't leave your shirt--

[laughs] Before you leave.

Second of all, did you ever go to the Anne Frank house?

- Oh, yeah.

So...

I was-- [clears throat]

I was a little rattled after the whole flying dildos experience,

and--but all the guys in the room

thought I was the greatest guy ever.

It was like killing in a comedy club,

and I walk out, and they're all--

it's three football players form UCF,

three French Canadians, a dude from Tennessee,

and a guy from Australia, and my four friends,

and they're like, "We would do anything with you."

And I was like, "Well, I could use some cheering up.

Let's go to the Anne Frank house."

[laughter]

So--so-- [laughs]

So...

- [laughs]

- So, I, uh...

- That's not a cheering up kind of place.

- It gets so much worse.

- [laughing] Yes.

- So we get high as giraffe pussy

and go into the Anne Frank house, and all I'm doing

the whole time is telling Helen Keller jokes.

I'm like--

I'm, like, leaning up to them going like,

"You know she had a dog, right?"

And they're like, "Really?

How do you know so much about Anne Frank?"

I'm like, "He ran away."

And they're like, "He ran away?"

I was like, "Well, you would too if your name was..."

[babbling incoherently]

We go into the kitchen and I'm like,

"Oh, here's where she burned her fingers."

And they're like, "What?"

"Yeah, she tried to read her waffle iron."

[laughter]

And this lady in front of us turned--

- [laughs]

- This--mind you, I'm high as fuck.

This lady--

- No one's gonna tell you, like, "That's not the right person."

- Lady turns around and goes,

"Are you making Helen Keller jokes?"

[laughter]

Ari, Ari, I realized at that moment

that we're not in Helen Keller's house.

[laughter]

We're in the Anne Frank house,

and I don't know who the fuck she is.

[laughter]

And these guys see it in my eyes and 12 dudes fall apart

as high as fuck in a Holocaust museum.

[laughter]

And that is the best laugh you can have,

is when you're not supposed to laugh.

When you're like...

[guttural yelling]

And I'm putting all the pieces together like,

"Oh, I think I was thinking of Anne Sullivan."

- [laughing] No.

- Shit.

Oh, yeah, yeah, this is the wrong--

I go, "What happened to this girl?"

And they're like...

[laughter]

- She didn't invent Braille.

- [laughs]

Didn't invent Braille!

- [laughs]

- [sighs]

That's it.

- Yeah.

[laughter]

- Thank you.

- Bert Kreischer.

For more infomation >> This Is Not Happening - Bert Kreischer - Flying Dildos - Uncensored - Duration: 16:00.

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ЛЕГО ЗВЕЗДНЫЕ ВОЙНЫ Эпизод 6 Возвращение Джедая 23 Серия Лего Мультики для детей Мультфильмы #лего - Duration: 25:23.

For more infomation >> ЛЕГО ЗВЕЗДНЫЕ ВОЙНЫ Эпизод 6 Возвращение Джедая 23 Серия Лего Мультики для детей Мультфильмы #лего - Duration: 25:23.

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Adobe Premiere Pro CS6 - Duration: 3:12.

Adobe Premiere Pro CS6

For more infomation >> Adobe Premiere Pro CS6 - Duration: 3:12.

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ANIMAÇÃO-SPRINGTRAP EM BUSCA DO PAI-(SEARCHING YOUR FATHER) - Duration: 3:33.

For more infomation >> ANIMAÇÃO-SPRINGTRAP EM BUSCA DO PAI-(SEARCHING YOUR FATHER) - Duration: 3:33.

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AMAZING PREVIEW OF CES 2017 - Duration: 4:21.

For more infomation >> AMAZING PREVIEW OF CES 2017 - Duration: 4:21.

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Hago Mierda A Todos En Pot PvP Viper y Todos Hackusean Como Putas Niñas.. - Duration: 4:28.

For more infomation >> Hago Mierda A Todos En Pot PvP Viper y Todos Hackusean Como Putas Niñas.. - Duration: 4:28.

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10 Mysterious Things Science CANNOT Explain - Duration: 8:02.

10 Amazing Mysteries Science Cannot Explain

You don't know everything you don't know.

If you haven't accepted that by now, by the time you finish this video... you will.

Somethings just are; we're not sure how they got here, what created them, or what

purpose they serve.

They're origins – they're mysteries — never solved.

Maybe that's alright.

It's okay to leave a stone unturned or a door unopened.

So sit back, don't ask, and prepare to have your mind blown by 10 Amazing Mysteries Science

Cannot Explain.

After the video, be sure to subscribe to our channel so you don't miss our next video.

What's Right is What's Left

While no exact number is known, scientific estimates put the amount of right-handed people

between 88 and 92%.

Leaving roughly 10% left-handed, with ambidextrous, or mixed-handess, less than 1%.

Recent studies have presented the theory that a very slight starvation of oxygen to the

area controlling the hands occurs during birth, resulting in one hands dominance.

There are also a set of genes associated with language, that could assist in determining

what digits we hold our fork with.

All of that may prove how we get to be right or left-handed, but why such a vast majority

are right-handed is still unknown.

No known advantage exists between the two, though if you ask a lefty, they're sure

to pontificate on the virtues of being the left thumb wrestling champion at every office

party.

Effin Magnets

Even the most hardcore Juggalos raised a pierced eyebrow, when Shaggy 2 Dope, one face-painted

half of Insane Clown Posse, drop the infamous lyric Fucking magnets, how do they work? during

the song Miracles.

Science, duh… fans of Faygo soda, and the internet, replied mockingly to his rhetorical

question.

Yet, the reality is no one can truly explain why magnetism exists.

We understand HOW it works.

North poles, south poles and magnetic flux density vector fields; information people

have learned since the discovery of lodestones over 2,500 years ago.

But why magnetic properties are they way they are on our giant round rock?

That's a giant shrug emoji.

It's a force since forever is the best explanation given.

Next time ICP spits knowledge your way, maybe you should give it a second look...

Or not…

Placebo Effect

Something else you're just going to have to accept; the placebo effect.

Most often associated with medical testing, it is not easily summed up, but we're going

to try: if your brain believes the treatment you're getting will help you, it just might.

It could be a pill you think will work, or an exercise routine given for rehab therapy.

Even if the medical aspects might be helping… it could be because you're brain thinks

it going fix you.

The process is also used in medical studies on new medicines, with a portion of test patients

receiving actual treatment, while others patients only get expectations.

A controversial practice for over a century, treating some patients with medicine and giving

others lip-service and seems like a douche move.

Yet.. sometimes it works.

And no one can truly explain why.

Cocaine Mummies

Over three-quarters of the world's cocaine supply comes from Columbia.

Mostly because the coca plant is indigenous to South America, the soil perfectly cultivated

to grow the leaf that creates the illegal drug.

Given it's native location and combined with no known cross-continental travel at

the time, it explains why researchers are still stunned over the discovery of the alt-rock-band-name-sounding

Cocaine Mummies.

In 1992, archaeologists were testing the remains of mummified corpses from Egypt, when traces

of cocaine and tobacco particles.

The vegetation containing the chemical components necessary to make this happen should not be

found in Africa during the time the former people roamed Earth.

The scientists making the discovery have fought against accusations of faking the data, or

botched results, insisting their findings are accurate.

To this day, no one has been able to determine exactly who's was the mummies dealer.

WOW Signal

Tom DeLonge, of Blink-182 fame, is a big fan of searching for the existence of extra-terrestrial

life.

Chances are, during his journey to prove aliens exist, he came across the discovery made by

Jerry Ehman on the campus of Ohio Wesleyan University in Delaware, Ohio.

In August of 1977, the Big Ear telescope located at Perkins Observatory on the campus of Oh

Woo, picked up a 72 second transmission that is considered the most likely reception of

alien transmissions the planet has ever received.

While reviewing the recorded information, Ehman was so impressed by the findings that

he wrote the word WOW, next to it.

Since then, the finding has been commonly referred to as the Wow Signal.

Despite numerous attempts to locate another incident of the transmission, it has never

been found again, leaving astrologists, and rock stars, baffled.

The Bloop

Twenty years after the Wow Signal, another one-time anomaly occurred.

A loud, ultra-low frequency sound was heard at the same time, at two different underwater

listening stations – over 3,000 miles apart.

The sound has been dubbed The Bloop.

The recorded noise appeared to be animalistic, but given the distance between the stations

and the volume of the sound, it would require the aquatic animal to several times larger

than any known underwater creature currently known.

In 2012, a report was published claiming the sound was made by icequakes., or the cracking

and melting of ice falling off glaciers into the ocean.

That explanation makes sense, but it's still only an educated guess.

We'd like to believe there's an alien force living under the Earth's crust.

One that will require we build giant robots and un-emoting pilots to defend ourselves

against their invasion.

And, of course, Idris Elba.

Hum-Dinger

Sounding like the least scariest movie monster ever, The Hum is a phenomenon that no one

can explain, and only a portion of the population can hear.

Those unlucky enough to notice the almost constant, invasive low-frequency humming or

droning noise can't find a way to make it stop.

While people everywhere have claimed to have superior listening skills, the largest groups

of people occur in Taos, New Mexico, Bristol, London and Zug Island, Michigan.

Reported loosely by the media, scientists have visited the areas with high amounts of

complaints, but are unable to determine the exact source.

Especially since only some of the researches were even able to hear the hum.

While people have recreated the sound, no actual recording exists, leaving many people

to claim the hum is a hoax.

A claim refuted by those always asking can you hear it now?

Some Like it Hot

The Sun is over 93 million miles away from Earth, and it can still fry and egg on the

sidewalk.

Even with that heat, most people feel safe knowing how far away they are from the source.

One that reaches 6,ooo Kelvin, or over 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit on the surface.

In fact, more people fear the sun exploding, leaving the world in permanent, frozen darkness.

If you are one of those, you might not like to hear that less than 4,000 miles under your

feet is a solid iron core that scientist think reaches temperatures comparable to the sun's

surface.

While that is supes hot, comparing the Earths core to the Sun's core isn't even close,

as the center of the sun is approximately a balmy 27 million degrees Fahrenheit.

Better bring your shades and sunscreen when you go to the stars.

Easter Island

Located in the southeastern Pacific Ocean is the Chilean island, Rapu Nui, more commonly

known as Easter Island.

Or that place with the giant heads.

The 887 large statues, known as Moai (Mo'ai – long "i"), were believed to be carved

by the native people of the island between 1,200 and 1,500 AD.

The statues are believed to be the ancestors of the islanders, as they aim inwards, towards

the land the statue's subject once owned.

Though, archaeologists recently let the public at large know the heads had another giant

surprise… a body.

While the most common images only show a tiny amount of the nearly 1,000 carved rocks, hundreds

of torsos have been discovered, some all the way to the knees.

Leaving some to believe that they were praying towards the sky.

Perhaps to a god, perhaps to the visitors that assisted in creating the monoliths.

How Are We Still Alone?

One of the biggest mysteries is one for a moment that has never actually happened.

Proof of extraterrestrial life, of alien anything in the vastness of space.

Astrologists have estimated the length, or age, of the universe at 13.8 billion light

years old.

Mostly because that's all they can observe.

Assuming the possibility of a never-ending blackness, it seems scientifically unlikely

that not one strand of actual proof exists that we are not alone.

Given how much unknown is out there, it would seem likely that even a lost little ET would

have stumbled upon the third rock from the Sun by now.

Or, if you think we already have been visited, and the men in black or hiding the evidence,

then another life form knows WE exist.

Which could mean eventually, when we do discover evidence, we're going to wish we were still

alone.

There are so many more mysteries out there that even the smartest minds on the planet

can't explain.

Unexplained phenomenons, enigmas or paradoxes.

We should never stop in our quest to learn as much as can about our planet, but be confident

in knowing that we may never learn what truths are really out there.

What crazy conspiracies or magical moments have you perplexed.

Be sure to let us know if the comments below and like our video.

For more infomation >> 10 Mysterious Things Science CANNOT Explain - Duration: 8:02.

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SHERLOCK on MASTERPIECE | Season 4: Mark Gatiss on Filming Episode 1 | PBS - Duration: 0:53.

- Hi, welcome to Sherlock.

(mischievous music)

As you can see, it's a beautiful day.

The sun is shining, the beaches are open.

We're at Margam Abbey today just outside Port Talbot,

an absolutely beautiful place and a beautiful day,

and we are shooting the christening.

(mischievous music)

This is somewhat the calm before the storm,

and explaining what's been going on

in the intervening months since the birth of the baby.

I think we've managed to get

about half a dozen of the people

who were at John and Mary's wedding to be back here,

which is quite good, 'cause I always

I always get worried about that thing

when people's best friends don't show up

to weddings and stuff like that,

but it costs, it's expensive unfortunately.

Mike Stanford apparently is permanently unavailable.

(laughs)

For more infomation >> SHERLOCK on MASTERPIECE | Season 4: Mark Gatiss on Filming Episode 1 | PBS - Duration: 0:53.

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İLK VİDEOMDA Asphalt 8 Oynadık - Duration: 3:23.

For more infomation >> İLK VİDEOMDA Asphalt 8 Oynadık - Duration: 3:23.

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Pyrodox Adventures #4 - Chaos, Gigs, Christmas, New Years Eve & more! - Duration: 7:20.

Entering the new year with a bang!

It's monday December 26th

2nd day of Christmas

Tonight we will be going to "De Kroon" in Markelo

Party, Carlos are you ready?

Guys, we have to go!

Take it easy, we made it!

After a very fast ride we arrived on time in Markelo

to party with so many amazing people

The police is already waiting for us

Good evening gentlemen, welcome

Kelvin, do you have a drink for me?

yea, grab some

Kelvin?

Yea?

How was the tennis match?

Yea great!

Is it time for the show?

Yeah!

What are we going to do today?

Making pictures!

With...

Yung Wolf

A quick meal

Can you go stand over there to see now it looks?

That's hot!

Yes we can again!

Who?

Lighting fireworks!

Pieter, light it up!

What are we going to do today?

Eating "Oliebollen" and shooting "Carbid"

And after that?

Performing!

Entering the new year with a bang!

That was frightening!

This isn't normal...

Thank you, thank you

Tastes good!

What are you eating?

One bite, one bite...

What a great afternoon with the friends

Absolutely, and now it's time to get ready for tonight

Three shows

In five hours

There we go!

It's now 24:00

Happy new year, happy new year!

On the road to Deventer

For the first show of today

After that we will go to Hedon

And after that our own party, Santé!

Hey Elmar

We are almost there, show one

Deventer, Club Paris

After that we have to leave immediately

But first, a nice show!

Dancing!

Excited!

Club Paris in Deventer was amazing

Now it's time to go to Hedon - Zwolle

Kelvin, what are we going to do?!

We are going to Hedon now!

You wanna go directly to the stage?

Yes!

After a loaded Hedon it was time for "Santé"!

The last party of tonight,

to close this awesome night and begin the new year fantastic!

We are at ZINiN now

"Santé", we are going to stage directly!

Thank you!

Pyrodox this is the last one!

Santé Nijverdal, thank you for tonight!

Let's jump!

What a legendary month

Month? What a year!

That's right!

Thank you guys for watching

Share the video,

Like the video,

Do something with the video which makes you happy!

And see you next time!

Byebye!

For more infomation >> Pyrodox Adventures #4 - Chaos, Gigs, Christmas, New Years Eve & more! - Duration: 7:20.

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

APRIL - "April Story" Music Video - Duration: 3:43.

DSP media Present

Don't know where the story started,

but the girl didn't say a word.

Time after time, season after season.

(The heart stayed the same)

Hid well somehow.

(Look so happy)

That I hate to see you so

This growing heart secretly beating for you

The girl in the Spring Land saw the boy from the Ice Land

Evergreen smile on her face so unforgettable.

Had to hide his feeling and prayed for the day when two would become one

Prayed that their love be everlasting to the above. Like me

3

2

1

Go!

(Look so happy)

That I hate to see you so

Really there's nothing that can be done about it. So I keep it all inside me.

A girl from the Spring Land say a boy from an Ice land

They wished their heart will never wear out. Like me

The sad sad story of the fairy tale

Everything in it was like my story

I wish there's another spring to come

(Yes I do)

Afraid my heart can be heard

This pain I don't let anyone know

A girl from the Spring Land saw a boy from an Ice Land

Evergreen smile on her face so unforgettable

Had to hide his feeling so he wished it to go away

Back to the days he never knew this girl prayed every night. Just like me

A

AP

APR

APRI

APRIL

For more infomation >> APRIL - "April Story" Music Video - Duration: 3:43.

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

Why Cities Are Where They Are - Duration: 15:44.

This is a Wendover Productions video made possible by Squarespace.

Make your next move with a beautiful website from Squarespace.

The Cumberland valley is home to six towns lying between Hagerstown, Maryland and Harrisburg,

Pennsylvania— Greencastle, Chambersburg, Shippensburg, Newville, Carlisle, and Mecanicsburg.

What's exceptional about these small Pennsylvania towns is that they're each almost exactly

10 miles from each other.

The distances deviate by no more than a mile from this rule.

This isn't a coincidence and this isn't planned.

Drawing equal sized radii around each town shows you their spheres of influence.

Assuming each town has the exact same shops and services, rational people will just go

to whichever town is closest to buy or sell goods.

Towns ten miles apart mean that nobody has to travel more than five miles to reach a

town.

Each one of these towns was founded before the formation of the United States, so that

means that, of course, nobody had cars and pretty much everybody walked everywhere.

10 miles, or 5 miles each way, is about the distance a person can comfortably walk in

a day with enough time to buy or sell goods at a central market.

Back in this era before cars, a 5 mile radius was essentially the largest possible commuter

zone to small agricultural towns and therefore having towns ten miles apart was the most

efficient possible use of rural land.

When you get a chance, take a look at map of a rural area that existed before cars.

You'll see that the distance between medium-sized towns is almost always somewhere between about

10 to 15 miles.

Because the Cumberland valley is a valley, towns really could only develop in a line,

but in most cases towns develop in all directions.

This is what the ten mile rule looks like going out in all directions.

Each of these points is a town and the hexagon around it is the area from which people will

go to the town.

In the real world, each of these towns probably has a small grocery store, a pharmacy, a bank,

and maybe a restaurant.

Since everybody uses these services, there doesn't have to be many people in a towns

sphere of influence in order to sustain these shops.

But where do you put something more specialized, like a mechanic.

People only need to go the mechanic every once in a while so you need more people to

sustain one mechanics shop than one grocery store.

Well, some of these small towns develop into larger towns with more people that can support

more specialized shops and services.

Putting these larger towns with more specialized shops closer together would be unsustainable

since there wouldn't be enough people going to those shops but putting them farther apart

would be inefficient since there's land that people would not go to a city from.

This happens once or twice more until you have cities.

These cities have the largest spheres of influence and the most specialized shops.

You of course still have grocery stores and pharmacies in cities, but you also have things

like luxury car dealerships, brain surgery centers, and airports.

The city's sphere of influence is enormous because people will travel hundreds of miles

to buy an expensive car or get brain surgery or fly from an airport.

Think about it within a city.

How far would you walk to buy a latte.

Probably only a few blocks and that's why you see Starbucks or other coffee shops on

almost every block.

Since almost everyone buys coffee, you only need a few blocks of people to sustain one

coffee shop.

But how far would you walk to buy a MacBook?

Probably quite far since its a infrequent and substantial purchase.

That's why Apple stores are rather rare even in cities.

You need an enormous amount of people to sustain one Apple store and we can actually figure

out roughly how many.

In Connecticut, the Trumbull Apple Store is about 20 miles away from the New Haven store

to the north-east and the Stamford store to the south-west.

In the 10 mile radius around the Trumbull Apple Store there are about half a million

inhabitants which tells us that you need about half a million people to sustain one Apple

store.

We can compare that to the Starbucks' of lower Manhattan which are spread out at an

average distance of about 600 feet.

Drawing a 300 foot radius around one Starbucks in lower Manhattan covers around 6,000 people

which means that one Starbucks needs 6,000 people to sustain it.

Of course both Connecticut and New York are places with higher than average incomes which

means less people are needed to sustain one Starbucks or Apple Store.

The numbers would be very different in, say, rural Kansas, but since each store generally

only builds in areas with higher-than-average incomes this gives a good sense of how many

people Apple and Starbucks looks for in an area before opening up a store.

So, our model shows where cities should be, but its not like this in reality.

This is the most efficient spread of cities if you're assuming that the cities are on

a perfectly flat plane with no geographic features, no social influences, no variability

of income, equal distribution of resources—essentially assuming the world is one homogeneous place…

which its not.

In reality, of course, our world has an enormous effect on where and why cities develop.

To start out, let's cut this down to one city on a flat, featureless plane for simplicity.

What affects the location of cities more than anything is water.

If we put an ocean on one side of our isotropic plane, our city will almost certainly locate

near it.

Oceans have always been and still are what connects the world.

There's no other means of transport that can move such enormous amounts of cargo for

so little.

Any city needs to be economically efficient to grow and it will cost more to bring goods

to a city that's 1000 miles inland than one right by the ocean.

Just look at Europe.

6 of the 10 largest European cities are within 100 miles of the coast.

But oceans aren't the only bodies of water to affect cities.

Rivers are just as or perhaps even more influential.

Milan, the 19th largest European city, is the largest to not be either directly on the

ocean or on a river, and even then its only 15 miles from a river and 75 miles from the

ocean.

Until the last century or so, cities could not survive without direct water access.

If you need more proof, 14 of the 15 largest cities in the world are within a few dozen

miles of the ocean.

Perhaps the most obvious attractor for cities is resources, so going back to our isotropic

plane, putting natural resources anywhere on this map will draw cities near it.

Cities that existed before the last century or so generally sprung up right near the resources,

much like Pittsburgh, since they acted as manufacturing and transportation hubs for

those resources, but more recently new resource dependent cities don't need to be as close

to the resources themselves.

New transportation technologies can bring the resources from their source.

Just look at Dubai.

Of course the UAE has enormous oil deposits, but they're much closer to Abu Dhabi and

the South-West than Dubai.

In 1900, Dubai had 10,000 residents, less than half that of Carlisle, Pennsylvania—one

of the farming towns we talked about at the beginning.

That only grew to 40,000 by 1960, but today its known worldwide and has more than 2.5

million residents.

It was able to grow at this enormous rate—even faster than Abu Dhabi—since it cemented

itself as the economic and administrative hub for the oil industries of the region.

Another geographic feature that we can add to the plane is mountains.

Now, mountains don't always have a uniform affect on cities.

Mexico City, Bogota, and Addis Ababa are all enormous cities at elevations above 7,000

feet.

Mountains do make transport and trade difficult, but they also provide protection.

Many ancient cities grew in these locations since they were easy to protect, which left

more time to focus on growing the city, but mountains can also hinder development.

For quite a while, the United States could not develop west of the Appalachian mountains.

They just served as an enormous barrier.

In 1800, the average center of population for the entire United States was here even

though the US had sovereignty over this entire area.

Of course technology eventually conquered this barrier and moved the mean population

center all the way out to Missouri today, but if the Appalachian mountains didn't

exist American history and geography would be completely different.

We would have seen urban development much earlier in the mid-west.

But mountains can have another effect.

You see, coal, silver, gold, and other mineral deposits are all often located in mountainous

regions, and, just like Dubai, cities can develop in less hospitable and easy places

due to resources.

The economic advantage of exploiting the resources overpowers the economic disadvantage of being

in an inhospitable location.

Denver, Colorado grew 650% between 1870 and 1880 with the opening of a railroad branch

connecting with the transcontinental railroad.

It served as an access point to transportation to the gold miners in the rockies.

So mountains can either push cities away or bring them nearer—it really just depends

on the circumstance.

Let's exchange our isotropic plane for a world map.

Where should cities be on here?

Well, our world's cities are not necessarily all in the most geographically efficient locations.

While there is a certain level of natural selection that grows the efficiently placed

cities and shrinks the inefficiently placed cities, humans are not always able to put

cities in the most efficient locations.

Let's put up the 224 cities in the world with a population over 2 million.

You can immediately see some patterns.

Putting up the equator, you can see a clear divide.

Only 32 of these cities lie in the southern hemisphere.

One might think this is because there is so much more land in the northern hemisphere,

but that's not entirely true.

You see, the southern hemisphere still has 32% of the world's land, but only has 14%

of the world's large cities.

There's clearly a higher density of cities in the northern hemisphere.

You can pretty much trace this all back to Europe and Asia.

The first large civilizations and empires were on these two continents even though the

human race likely originated in Africa.

There's hundreds of different theories on why civilizations succeeded in some places

and failed in others, but one of the more plausible and interesting theories is that

Europe and Asia succeeded because they're wide instead of tall.

The very shape of the continents may have changed the course of human history.

You see, when a continent is wide, you have a ton of land with roughly the same climate.

Climate tends to change when you go north and south rather than east and west as a nature

of how the earth rotates around the sun.

Much of the success of early civilizations had to do with the domestication of plants

and animals and the corresponding technology.

When expanding horizontally, the climate is similar enough that an empire can use the

same successful plants and animals, while expanding vertically requires the domestication

of new plants and animals.

If a civilization started in central-america, for example, there would be very little land

on the continent with a similar climate and their expansion would be severely limited.

In Europe and Asia, on the other hand, theres thousands upon thousands and miles of similar

climate that can be reached just by traveling east or west.

There's evidence to back this up.

Just look at the maps of the four largest early empires—the Qing Dynasty, the Abbasid

Caliphate, the Umayyad Caliphate, and the Mongol empire.

They were all in Eurasia and they all expanded horizontally.

When some of the more modern empires expanded, they had the technology to do so overseas.

The three major modern empires were the British, Spanish, and French empires—each of which

came from relatively similar climates.

A major reason why America was able to succeed is because all the agriculture from Europe

worked there.

Climatically, Europe and America are nearly identical.

The majority of developed colonized countries are in the northern hemisphere just because

they were closest to Europe, but formerly British countries like South Africa, Australia,

and New Zealand are all highly developed and in the Southern Hemisphere.

Their success over more northern countries in the southern hemisphere can also be partially

attributed to their greater climate similarity to Europe.

Let's ask one more question.

If our world only had one city, where would it logically be?

Well if you take the location of every person in the world and average it out, you come

to south-central Asia.

That means that this general region is the optimum place to live on the planet, but where

more specifically should our world city go.

Well, this region is already in the Northern Hemisphere and in Eurasia, so we've already

covered those two criteria.

We want a place within a hundred of so miles of the ocean, on a navigable river, near mountains

with rich mineral deposits—the single best place for a city on earth just might be…

Dhaka, Bangladesh.

Every geographic model and theory says that there is no better place on earth to put a

city than here.

There's evidence to back this up: Dhaka is between the 4th and 18th largest metropolitan

area on earth depending on how you define metropolitan area, and Bangladesh is the sixth

densest country on earth—there are 161 million people living in an area about the size of

England.

History has affected geography enough that the largest and most advanced civilizations

are not all in South-Central Asia, but if we started all over again, did humanity a

second time, every geographic model says that this region could be the origin and central

point of human civilization.

I hope you enjoyed this Wendover Productions video.

This video was made possible by my amazing, brand new sponsor, Squarespace.

Squarespace is an all-in-one platform to make your beautiful, professional website.

Months before Squarespace signed on to sponsor Wendover Productions, I used them to make

my website—WendoverProductions.com.

Now, I wasn't looking for anything fancy.

I just wanted to make sure that nobody else got their hands on the WendoverProductions.com

domain and also to create a great-looking landing page.

This way, I can give people one link that goes to all my different social accounts.

I know that most of you guys are smart, upstart, entrepreneurial people that want to make your

mark and what's so much more professional than a LinkedIn or Twitter or Facebook account

is a standalone website and its cheaper than you'd think, especially because if you sign

up using the link squarespace.com/wendover and use the code "Wendover" in your order,

you'll get 10% off.

This is hopefully the beginning of a long and prosperous relationship between Wendover

Productions and Squarespace.

They're really committed to helping independent creators like me and perhaps you make great

things, so definitley take a look at what they have to offer and make your next move

with Squarespace.

You can support Wendover Productions by contributing on Patreon where 100% of the funds go right

back into the channel.

I even release expense reports at the end of each month.

You can also get great rewards over there like early access to videos, stickers, hand-written

letters, and most recently, t-shirts.

You can also order a t-shirt by itself for only $20 through DFTBA.

The link is here and also in the description.

Other than that, please make sure to follow me on Twitter @WendoverPro, watch my last

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and most of all, subscribe to this channel to receive all my future videos right when

they come out.

Thanks again for watching, and I'll see you in two weeks for another Wendover Productions

video.

For more infomation >> Why Cities Are Where They Are - Duration: 15:44.

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

CIVILIZATION VI - How to Generate Science - Duration: 2:47.

Science drives your progress in Sid Meier's Civilization VI.

Science is one of the major resources in Civilization.

It is used to unlock new technologies, which give your people new abilities and units.

The more science you produce, the faster those technologies unlock.

Initially, science is generated by your palace.

You can also get science from certain resources, natural wonders, and the Campus District.

Eurekas are boosts to specific technologies, and you can earn them through different things you do in the game.

You don't need a Eureka to complete a technology, but they can speed your scientific progress.

For example, settling a city on a coast automatically completes half of the sailing technology, which helps you improve sea resources.

Discovering another Civilization boosts Writing, which allows you to build the science-producing campus district.

The Campus District is the best way to generate science.

Build Campuses next to Mountains and Jungles to get the highest adjacency bonuses.

Libraries, Universities and Research Labs on your Campuses will further increase their science output, and allow you to assign your population to this tile.

Great Scientists are legendary people your civilization earns.

You can accumulate Great Scientist points each turn, through your campuses and social policies.

You will earn a Great Scientist after enough great scientist points are obtained, or you can patronize one with gold or faith.

Each Great Scientist has a unique and powerful effect.

Wonders can also help with science.

The Great Library boosts all Ancient and Classical Technologies, and Oxford University gives 2 random free technologies.

Certain policies and religious beliefs can help as well.

To Win a Science Victory, you'll need to be the first Civilization to establish a colony on Mars.

First, Research Rocketry.

This will allow you to build a Spaceport district and launch a satellite.

After that, researching Satellites will allow you to land a human on the moon.

The final step requires researching Robotics, Nuclear Fusion and Nanotechnology.

Sending a Mars Habitaion Module, Reactor, and Hydroponics component will complete the Mars Project and a Science Victory.

Be aware, these projects require tons of production, so try to build spaceports in cites with Industrial Zones.

Or you can always get help from a Great Scientist.

Will your civilization reach for the stars?

Master science in Sid Meiers' Civilization VI.

For more infomation >> CIVILIZATION VI - How to Generate Science - Duration: 2:47.

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

'Ride' Premieres January 30th! | Ride Sizzle Trailer | Nick - Duration: 2:01.

[THEME MUSIC]

"Ride" is a show about a girl named Kit who

moves to England with her dad.

A fancy new school for me; a stable full of horses for you!

Does this mean you might actually get on a horse?

KENDRA TIMMINS: He gets a job teaching

at an equestrian boarding school, which means

that all the kids ride horses.

Think you can get used to this?

It's about Kit and her adventures

and her overcoming her fear of horses

and meeting a ton of new friends.

[CHEERING]

We should do this again some time.

[SPEAKING WITH HER MOUTH FULL] Yeah, I'd--

You've got some chocolate here.

KENDRA TIMMINS: She's really positive and really determined,

and she gets herself into a lot of trouble.

You do not lie in the mud at Covington.

KIT: It was a protest.

I didn't want you to take my horse away.

That animal is going to auction whether you

lay in the mud or not.

Kit and TK have a really special relationship.

They're both kind of fish out of water.

They're not really comfortable, and so they get

to become friends through that.

There is no way I'm letting them take you away from me.

KENDRA TIMMINS: It's funny, but it's also really heartfelt.

I knew you two could do it, even if you didn't.

KENDRA TIMMINS: We get to be filling in a real castle

in Northern Ireland.

It's amazing.

Holy Queen of England!

Look at this place!

The best part of shooting the show is all of it.

Everything-- everything except getting up early.

Let's do this. [THEME MUSIC]

THEME SONG: --carried by the song. [INAUDIBLE]

believe in my [INAUDIBLE] with all of my hanging on.

It's who I want to be, so ride, ride with me.

For more infomation >> 'Ride' Premieres January 30th! | Ride Sizzle Trailer | Nick - Duration: 2:01.

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

On Creating Powerful Imagery with Joe McNally: The reDefine Show With Tamara Lackey - Duration: 8:06.

Hi I'm Tamara Lackey. On this episode of

ReDefine show for AdoramaTV I speak with

my friend and fellow Nikon ambassador

the internationally acclaimed Joe

McNally on how he was the last staff

photographer for Life magazine. How he

brings his unique ideas to life so

powerfully and why partnering with the right

person can make all the difference

in the world.

Check it out.

Hey, Joe how are you?

Hey Tamara how is it going good.

Good.

We've actually never done this before

even though we're friends and photographers,

ambassadors and Adorama people

yeah well that's the weird thing about a

life as a photographer you can you

travel so much right?

Yes and you cannot see each other for

like two years right and then you just

pick up the conversation. So anyway

like I was saying. Yeah,

remember that time? Pretty much. You know,

three and a half years ago when we last

saw each other?

And we just think it's completely

normal. Yeah. Because that's the life we

lead. Exactly but I was thinking about

like the connections that I have to you

are like I think, obviously we both have

done work with Adorama, right, forever and

partnered with Adorama, right, but also Nikon

Nikon ambassadors and also Mylio we both were

early adopters of Mylio.

Early adopters yes. Together.

And there's something else?

I'm just trying to remember it?

It was fascinating, ingenious,

there was a great connection.

Well we're connected there

obviously because we're

both fascinating. Yes.

No I can't think of it, you know but

yeah we, I think the whole social media

swirl. Yes. And digital, and transmission

immediacy, and all that stuff has

connected us in ways we never could have

imagined when we started our career.

Yeah and you started your career

with tell us a little about Life Magazine.

Well I started working for them 1984.

Yeah. okay and I kept working for them and

then one way, shape or form or another

right through the early 2000s

and even now, I guess, you know, I have

done things through

two years ago for Life Books so it's

always been a 'brand' if you will that

I've have loved and associated myself

with. Incredible brand too, like. I was

the last staff photographer in the history

of the magazine. There was 90 of us who

trant at that magazine when when it

was still alive and viable, but I, they

have named it appropriately because it

went through so many lives.

Yeah. It got killed, it came back, it was a

weekly, then it was a monthly, then it was

a newspaper supplement and then it

became a book, you know book

division. So I think it's a, the

longevity of Life I think is a tribute

to the power of pictures.

Yeah it's amazing and what a distinction?

To have been the last staff photographer

I'm personally responsible for the death of

photojournalism. Congratulations. Thanks

Well done. Thanks. Did you see Smitty?

Was it Smitty? Which? The one with

Ben Stiller?

Yeah. The secret life of Walter Mitty.

Yes, yes, yes the re-up.

Yeah. Did you see that?

Yeah it was wonderful.

Did it feel familiar?

Absolutely. Because it was all about the demise

of Life magazine right? And it was

actually filmed in the timelife

building, at least partially. Yeah. You know I am

a little bit of Walter Mitty because I

live in the realm of my imagination

a great deal and my wife Anne, my beautiful

patient wife. Beautiful, patient, loving

Yes. And she's right there.

She'll, yes she is right over there, and she

will tell you that I drift, you know

sometimes like I might drift right now.

You just never know. We have a sharp nod yes.

Because, you know, you're just

wandering, you're thinking about and then

all of a sudden you think 'wow that', you know, and then

people kind of look at you funny, you know.

Like Joe. Are you still in there?

Is anybody home? You know,

but I often times find that's where

as I'm sure you do as well, your

imagination is a powerful thing

photographically. It implicates itself

into your work into your life and if you

can express it well, I think you'll end

up with some good photographs because

your imagination is close to your soul.

Oh I like that line. You know it's just

part of you. Its brilliant. It's true. And if you try

to explain it, I'm sure you've been in

pitch sessions too at magazines or

clients, where you are trying to explain

your imagined set of photographs.

Yeah don't you see it?

You know and it's like taking your

clothes off in a conference room because

you're actually stripping yourself naked

in lots of ways. Do you do that too?

Well it gets attention, you know.

It actually cuts to the chase, they either

give you the job at that point or they

don't. Get out. You know, but no you

I always tell young photographers.

Just the vulnerability of it.

Don't be afraid of your imagination

because it's the path to photographs that

will really resonate, because it is part

of your soul, it's part of your mind, it's

your life, you know, in life's embrace of

the world that you've seen and how you

then interpret that.

Yeah. You know. I remember talking to you once

and asking you if, because you do so

much travel, like if you're on a plane

and your laptop's dead and there's no

movie and you know you've read the book

and your wife's not there, it's just you

what do you do? Where does you're mind go?

Right I remember that question. You said?

Yeah you wander into like, what could I do or if

you're heading to a job certainly you start

to wander into the vagaries that the job

might present to you.

How's the client going to be?I hope the

talent is cooperative. I hope it doesn't

rain, you know,

I hope my rental car is there,

like they promised. I mean all the

things that can befall you as a

photographer, we are beset by

problems that are all around us and

sometimes the fact you actually come up

with a successful photograph out of a

location venture is a minor miracle

because lots of stuff conspires against you.

So I wander into that or I wander into a

future, future job I mean, I'm,

my mind is a bit of a 'beaver dam' you

know like, it doesn't let much go

downstream I kind of, I keep ideas in my

head for years and years and years, and

in fact like this year, I finally got

something I wanted to build a set

completely out of mirrors in the desert,

and so we did that, you know, and I had

thought about that literally for

probably 20 years. I t just came in your mind

and you're like one day I'll get to it

then but then you actually do it.

Yeah, it's like, it's like a bookmark in

your computer. How did you become known

as like a, so good with speedlights too?

I mean was that on purpose

is that just something you decided

that's one of your talents and

I'm going to put it on a bus, I mean what

what is that? To suggest that anything in my

career happened with a predestined

purpose or plan in mind? It's more like oh?

Is really speaking way too much, it is

too grand a claim. Okay. You know I sort of

fallen in the right and wrong direction

throughout my whole life, it's like, it's

like tumbling, you know, forward as a

photographer you bounce into rocks,

you leap the stream, you have no idea

what's over the bend?

I mean, I've made an entire career out of

doing whatever seems to be the next best

thing to do, which does sound mildly idiotic.

I get it, okay? It sounds floppy.

Yeah but you know, you do, I mean how can

you plan a life as a photographer?

Yeah, because you don't know what's next?

A phone call comes, can you do

this story and maybe it's a

sizable story and it's a different kind

of an experience that you realize you're

getting yourself into and I always

describe this to young photographers too,

you have to regard stories like that,

especially ones, that really terrify you

as gateways. You walk through that story

and it's a door that opens and on the

other side you'll be a different

photographer, because it changes you.

It just redirects your compass a

little bit and the tell tale sign of

knowing that this is an important story

is how much you are scared, to go do it.

Interesting. If you're really terrified

you must go do that. Yeah. Because you'll

be a different photographer on the other

side; win lose or draw. So the idea of

saying; my career's a straight line, I'm

not stopping for anybody, you know, forget

about it. It doesn't even work that way

To coin a phrase here in New York; forget about it.

Forget about it. So where can people find

out more about you?

well they can stop on my blog

joe@joemcnally.com/blog

I'm on Instagram @JoeMcNallyPhoto

Thank you so much Joe, such incredible work.

Join us here next time on AdoramaTV

and do not forget you can subscribe to

this channel to AdoramaTV and see all

kinds of amazing video content to peruse

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