Thứ Tư, 21 tháng 6, 2017

Waching daily Jun 21 2017

Hi there smart drivers. Rick with Smart Drive Test talking to you today about parking

in a car park or a parking garage. I had a comment from Ann Smith, she's in Hawaii.

And also had a comment from ex both of them wanted me to give some further

information on parking in car parks parking garages and all those types of

things today we're going to do parking garages and in another video I'll do

busy parking lots for you just before we get started here be sure to hit the

subscribe button especially if you're working towards a license or starting a

career as a truck or bus driver and get all the great information as I get it

available for you now parking in a car park or a parking garage the first thing

is note that safety bumper if you're driving a larger vehicle make sure that

you can actually get into the car park because that safety bar that's on change

if you hit that know that you can't go into the parking garage because you're

going to get jammed up in there now the other thing is go slowly in the

parking garage that will give you better reaction time and allow you to scan

better for other vehicles and pedestrians in the car park it's gonna

be a little weird because when you're going up the ramp if you're parking on

the ramp oftentimes the cars are going to be on a bit of an angle so that's

going to feel a little bit weird as well you're going to have to pay in most of

these parking garages and car parks so know that you can most of them now you

can pay with a Visa card you might need some change in those types of things

take note of which level you're on that side there's the level number or it'll

be color coded as the one we're in today and when you're parking out backing out

of the space or driving into the space whatever you're doing make sure you go

slowly that way you can get a clear line of sight before you actually back out

the key to a car park or a parking garage especially the smaller ones if

you're driving a bigger vehicle go slowly because the slower you go the

sharper the vehicle turns so that's key to parking in these parking garages and

car parks and whatnot and you know the slower you go as well you're going to

have a better line of sight and be able to see other vehicles and pedestrians so

stick around we'll be right back with that information

I respect your ever welcome back Rick the smart drive test talking to you

today about parking in a car park or our parking garage and this one here you may

be able to see in the dashcam the clearance is six feet five inches

six foot five inches if you hit those overhanging things you know you can't go

into the car park because your vehicle is too high so we're yield to the

traffic on the right here this is another another entrance into the car

park here so nice and slow up and one of the things is that you're going to feel

claustrophobic because there's a roof overhead and it's low it's only six foot

five which is about two meters for those of you in other countries

the use of a news metric now the signs overhead do not back into the stall so

pay attention to those signs as well pay attention to which level you're on we're

on level 2 the elevator is there and you want to take note of where your vehicle

is often most car parks or parking garages will have signs indicating which

level you're on and this one has lots of parking for people with disabilities

mobility challenges most types of things because it's the parking garage is

attached to a health unit where there's doctors and whatnot so there's that as

well and again go slow in these places because the slower you go the sharper

the vehicle turn just look out for pedestrians and other people walking and

people that have children with them and those types of things so we just pick a

spot here and some of these parking spaces you can't see the the pavement

marking but it says for a small car so we pull in we stop until the front of

the vehicle is near the wall and we secure the vehicle by putting on the

parking brake put it into a low gear if you're driving an automatic it's going

to go into park and you secure you all your valuables in the vehicle because

you don't want valuables and those types of things to get stolen so that's how

you do it and then you back out of the space put it into reverse and when you

back up pull 360 degree scan and we back up slowly and it's a little bit weird

because we're on a bit of an angle here because we're on the slope now ok and

we're just going slow we're back far enough and now we proceed out of the car

park now I'm going to park one more time I'm going to go right to the top and

I'll show you how to do this and again this is a small car if you have a bigger

vehicle like a Ford f-350 you're a big dodge or a Hummer what not

it's going to be pretty challenging driving in these car parks with a bigger

vehicle if you've got a smaller vehicle like I do and again over on this

direction here over on that side I can't see so I'm going really slowly 360

degrees scan lots of looking they're going very slowly in these car parks and

again as I said and the key to this is going slowly because the slower you go

the sharper the vehicle turns so we'll just go up to the roof will do a u-turn

and come back down just to show you the top of the car park or the parking

garage here you can see this when they've tried to decorate the cement up

a little bit by allowing some of the people to come in and put some what some

people might call graffiti some paintings artwork on some of the walls

here in this parking garage which makes a little bit nicer and again the colors

you can see this one isn't labeled in terms of the levels but the colors are

different for each level so take note of which color and which level you're on

you can count the levels as you're coming up if the signs aren't there you

can see this is the top of the parking garage here and again this is where the

trucks and whatnot are parking up here because it's fairly easy so now what we

do is you pull up here looking behind us into reverse all the way around looking

out the back window and again we're not supposed to be back in I'm just going to

turn around here so that's why I'm not really backing into the space ok

signaling 360 degrees scan no children no pedestrians and we

proceed and so this is the top of the building and this is color coded and

that's that's a good point is that some of the parking garages will be color

coded in terms of the levels so the top level on this one is gray is orange the

next level down is green so when you park your vehicle take note of either

the level or the color of whichever it is for the parking garage that you're

going to be in and then you just obey the signs stay in

your lane go slowly as you can see I'm not going very quickly at all probably

less than ten kilometers an hour which is about six or seven miles an hour and

that is the key and just I've got my foot on the brake and I'm controlling

down and now we're on the blue level you can see that you can see the most of

these parking garages and car parks that they're over three levels they're going

to have elevators so take note of where your car is in relation to the elevators

as you park to the vehicle so that was the blue level and see that car was

going a bit fast and I'm just covering the brake I've got my foot on the brake

so that I could just slow down a little bit as I was coming around the corner

this is the yellow level here so we're proceeding down and we're just keep

going around in a circle and that's all it is in parking garage so we're on the

yellow level which I believe is level two and we should be fairly close to the

exit and getting out and heerd right there in front of us you can see the

alleyway over to exit and we go to the right the alleyway back there to the

health unit and yes and we're out of the car park here and we can see the stop

sign here just before the sidewalk or the footpath and we come to a complete

stop and then we creep out until we can see the sidewalk clearly clear of

pedestrians clear of traffic and when all of that is clear then we can proceed

with our left-hand turn quick review of parking in a parking garage or a car

park now that safety bar at the entrance to the carpark if you hit that know for

a fact that you cannot go in there if you're driving a larger truck or a van

do not go in there because if you hit that you're going to jam yourself up in

there between the floor and the ceiling of the carpark so just know that the

first defence as well it's going to feel a little odd when you're in the carpark

because you've got a roof over top of you and that roof oftentimes is only six

feet five inches as it was there in that car park or around two meters which is

not very high it's often a little bit taller than what you are so though it's

going to feel a little bit weird as well if you're parking on the ramp

going to you're going to be parking on a bit of an angle so that's going to be

weird gold slow in the car park less than 10 kilometers an hour 6 to 8 miles

an hour don't go very fast because the slower you go the sharp of the vehicle

turns as well the slower you go the better you're going to be able to scan

and look for people who are walking around the car park and other vehicles

in the car park and you saw in the video there that woman kind of came tearing up

the ramp there and cut the corner off so if you've got your foot over the brake

and you're covering the brake and not going very fast you've got better

reaction time and I'm going to get less into trouble and as well you saw the

warning signs in that car park there that you weren't to back in you were to

drive in and oftentimes the reason is because people back into the wall and

those types of things they're just not very good at backing up so that's the

reason for that just safety when you park your vehicle most of the time if

you're above level 2 or 3 you're going to take the elevator down so note where

your vehicle is parked in relation to the elevators know which level you're on

so you can remember to find your vehicle in that car park there weren't levels

but there were different colors on the levels and that's how they designated

the level so take note of which color it is take note of which level you're on in

the car park and that way you'd be able to find your vehicle when you're back

out of the space go slowly until you can see and have a

clear line of sight for other vehicles and pedestrians in the car park going

slow until you can see and scan is the key to getting in and out of the car

park as well as going slowly and again when we came out of the car park there

we follow the signs for the exit and sometimes you're going to have to peg as

most I didn't pay to go in there because but you do have to pay and you'll have

to go to where the pay booth is and get a ticket and sometimes you have to bring

it back and put it in the car sometimes you just have to enter your license

number in but for the pay's displays the ticket on the dash of your vehicle and

then when you exit go slowly stop before the sidewalk make sure there aren't any

pedestrians on the sidewalk and then exit the car park caution for my fired

drivers what is the most interesting car park that you have been in and what was

interesting about it leave a comment down in the comment section there all of

that helps out the new drivers learning how to drive you like what you see here

share subscribe leave a comment down in the comment section as well hit that

thumbs up on check out all the videos here on the channel if you're working

towards the license or starting your career as a truck or bus driver lots of

great information here as well header and website awesome information over

there and tremendous online courses that you can purchase and all the courses are

guaranteed passion road test first-time otherwise money-back 30-day

guarantee if you don't pass your road test first time so check those out as

well at the end of the month June 2017 we're bringing out air brakes explained

simply air brake manual that updates the 40-year old air brake course and 100

multiple-choice questions that you will be asked on both the theory and a

practical air brake exam for those you working towards your bus or truck

license I'm Rick with smart drive test good luck on your road test and remember

pick the best answer not necessarily the right answer have a great day bye now

For more infomation >> How to Park in a Parking Lot, Car Park, Parking Garage, or Enclosed Structure | Learn to Drive Smart - Duration: 12:13.

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Nintendo Switch Bluetooth Headphones Setup - Duration: 2:01.

How's it going guys, my name is Luis and I love my Nintendo Switch but I hate that I can't use my bluetooth headphones with it, so let's fix that!

This is a bluetooth dongle that's only roughly the size of two quarters side by side.

And this little device is going to enable bluetooth connections on your Nintendo Switch

and it's pretty easy to set up too! Just go ahead and press the button at the center of the device until the light turns on

and plug it into your Nintendo Switch.

Now all you have to do now if find yourself a bluetooth device, I have my Sony MDR's here.

And just put them in discovery mode, put them next to the dongle and they should automatically connect. That's pretty much it.

You can use this method to connect things like wireless headphones and even wireless speakers if you want an extra volume boost at public events or just when playing tabletop mode.

Now the dongle itself comes with a small little connector that keeps the dongle attached to the top of the Switch.

However if you want to attach the dongle to the back of the switch with something like a velcro strap and a case, you can do that too with a 3.5mm cable.

While the dongle method may not be the most ideal method to get wireless audio on Switch, it's sort of the only method at the moment and it works really well.

With this dongle I'm able to get wireless audio on my Sony MDRs for up to 30 feet from my Nintendo Switch without any delay or lag.

Best of all is that it also works when the system is docked so you can still game on the tv and get that wireless audio with a good amount of distance from your display.

This bluetooth dongle currently goes for about $18 at the time of filming this video but I paid about $20 when I bought it back in February.

And I got to say it's one of the most useful accessories for my Nintendo Switch

and I think it's one of the lesser known accessories for the Nintendo Switch by the general audience.

But I'll have them linked in the description down below in case you'd like to pick them up for yourself.

They're pretty inexpensive and really useful to have.

If you enjoyed the video be sure to let me know by dropping a like on it.

And get yourself subscribed for more content just like this on all the platforms, PC, Nintendo Switch, Xbox One and PS4.

As always, thank you all for watching, have a great day and I'll see you in the next one!

For more infomation >> Nintendo Switch Bluetooth Headphones Setup - Duration: 2:01.

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Intel i9 & X299 5 Reasons Not To Buy! - Duration: 9:11.

For more infomation >> Intel i9 & X299 5 Reasons Not To Buy! - Duration: 9:11.

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Super Mardana Timing | Suret-e-Anzal Ka Khatma Karay | Timing Up By My Help in Health - Duration: 4:16.

Super Mardana Timing | Suret-e-Anzal Ka Khatma Karay | Timing Up By My Help in Health

For more infomation >> Super Mardana Timing | Suret-e-Anzal Ka Khatma Karay | Timing Up By My Help in Health - Duration: 4:16.

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SISTER SISTER - LES SEINS (MARION SECLIN & LOU HOWARD) - Duration: 6:22.

For more infomation >> SISTER SISTER - LES SEINS (MARION SECLIN & LOU HOWARD) - Duration: 6:22.

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Выходит Новый УАЗ кроссовер! Секретные снимки прототипа уазика и тюнинг УАЗ - Duration: 4:42.

For more infomation >> Выходит Новый УАЗ кроссовер! Секретные снимки прототипа уазика и тюнинг УАЗ - Duration: 4:42.

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Байки МЧС #12 "Ребёнок" (Страшная История на Реальных Событиях) - Duration: 9:33.

For more infomation >> Байки МЧС #12 "Ребёнок" (Страшная История на Реальных Событиях) - Duration: 9:33.

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Vanquish (Zero Punctuation) - Duration: 5:17.

It's been a long, confusing journey, hasn't it, Platinum Games, which funnily enough also

describes most of your fucking releases.

There've been some strange turns, Bayonetta 2 exclusive to Wii U springs to mind, that

was like a fucking modern art installation being exclusive to the Etch-A-Sketch, but

Platinum Games has finally joined us in the sun.

First Bayonetta 1 gets a Steam release, and everyone went "Aaoookay!

Bit weird!

We didn't particularly mind that being a console game because it made it slightly easier to

furtively hide when our mum bursts into the room.

Why don't you bring out a Steam version of that shooter you made?

The one that became a bit of a cult hit and that's now sort of hard to find?"

"What, you mean Anarchy Reigns?"

"HA HA HA HA HA HA.

NO."

Obviously we're talking about Vanquish, which is highly suitable for release on PCs partly

because it's a high-octane cover shooter and partly because the main character spends the

entire game wearing one.

Obviously no-one told the Vanquish dude not to wear a pure white suit of armour to a grimy

battlefield.

By rights he should have ended up looking like the floor of a sharehouse bathroom.

The plot of Vanquish concerns Russia being evil.

It was a little bit quaint at the time the game first came out but has since somehow

come back around to being relevant again.

They take over an orbital death ray station with an army of death robots and blow up San

Francisco in a humanitarian effort to combat rising housing costs in California.

But America take it the wrong way as always and refuse to surrender, despatching a bunch

of marines to the death ray station to take it back.

The main character is not a marine but an employee of DARPA wearing a very expensive

DARPA-developed suit of armour.

Because it's not like DARPA develops tech to be used by the military, no, that's why

every tank and fighter plane has to be piloted by the nerd who developed it.

Shush now, everybody, the thing is, we're not actually supposed to be taking this plot

seriously, so it is a shame that the Russia aspect has gotten itself all inconveniently

relevant.

There's always an undercurrent of irony in Platinum Games' stuff, although it's admittedly

slightly subtler here than it is in, say, Bayonetta, the woman who routinely has to

clean small children out of her armpits after they mistake her for a roller coaster.

The main character smokes constantly to maintain the stereotypical grizzled badass image, but

I think he only does so so he can dramatically flick cigarettes away when he's about to do

things, 'cos I don't think he ever got through more than a quarter inch of one.

He's partnered for most of the game with Robert Burns, famous Scottish poet and author of

Auld Lang Syne, here reimagined as a nine foot shaved bear of a man who's so grizzled

he can peel potatoes by rubbing them on his chin and as for badass, his ass is so bad

it denies the holocaust and fraudulently uses disabled parking spaces.

So the two of them spend the entire game having an incredibly insecure grizzle-off, the flash

young newcomer in his go faster stripes versus the cynical old timer wearing an entire double

decker bus, down on their knees competing to see who can suck the most gravel into their

throats.

There's also an attractive female support character and whenever she's on screen the

camera always seems to be one flicked cigarette away from pointing right up her skirt.

It's all immensely silly stuff and par for the Platinum Games course.

What makes Vanquish interesting is the combat mechanics.

So obviously Vanquish set out to make a cover shooter, but after looking up what those were,

it asked "Do we really have to plop ourselves down behind little walls so much?

We exclusively make fast-paced games because we have the attention span of a moth at a

fireworks display."

Then, after they were firmly told that yes, plopping down behind cover is a pretty essential

part of a cover shooter, Vanquish went "Could we maybe have the character break dance behind

cover rather than plop?

Oh, and weird idea: rocket skates."

Yes, apparently DARPA's jetpack research went nowhere so they've repurposed the tech to

let you scoot along the ground like a fast forward video of a dog with an itchy bum,

and most of the combat takes place in big, wide-open arenas so the emphasis is less on

plopping down and more on dodging, changing position and managing your suit energy.

Here's a little tip I discovered - if you switch weapons midway through a reload animation,

the first weapon will be reloaded when you switch back to it.

In accordance with the principles of homeopathy.

I think.

Whatever, it keeps the pace up.

But speaking of pace, one thing I could do without is the way you automatically go into

slow motion when you're near death.

Yeah, I know, it's to get yourself out of danger, but once you are there's no way to

turn it off again, so all you can do is let your suit energy run out and then pop a plop

while you wait for it to come back.

It's a bit of a pace killer.

I thought we were avoiding plop.

The last thing you want is for your game to become ploppy.

I very much enjoy saying the word plop.

Plop aside, though, Vanquish's combat is generally a speedy and interesting take on the genre.

What else has it got?

"What else?

Damn it, we weren't prepared for this part of the interview.

Quick, spawn five hundred million identical robots."

Yes, sadly like a severely poorly maintained harp, the game's kinda one note.

The entire thing takes place in the same environment, improbably oversized space station city that

can't be bothered to so much as throw a carpet down now and then, and you fight ten million

copies of the same robot that looks like a Transformer that turns into a pink dildo.

Everything that passes for a boss fight happens again at least twice.

The story somehow gets from A to B while standing completely still.

I sort of grasp that Burns doesn't care about individual soldiers dying and the main bloke

does, but demonstrate it another six or seven times just to be sure.

At least he cares in cutscenes.

Not in gameplay because he's busy plopping.

But hey, don't worry that the game doesn't evolve much, 'cos it's also really short,

so it won't bother you for long.

All in all, if you're planning to buy Vanquish then make doubly sure you don't need the money

for anything really important, like medicine, or a donation to the Republican party.

'Cos it kinda feels more like a proof of concept than a complete game.

A concept proved, certainly, you can have a fun cover shooter where you glide around

on your back the whole time like a prostitute on a highly polished dance floor, but the

time to develop the concept into something a bit meatier has long since passed.

And now the game only exists as a sort of glimpse into a parallel universe where triple-A

shooters remembered that video games are supposed to be fun.

That aside, Vanquish is also a PC port of a last generation game, so let's take a moment

now to share our favourite bugs.

That one where you took double damage if the game was running 60FPS must've been a nightmare

for hardcore PC gamers, for whom playing at 30FPS is apparently like trying to breathe

with a plastic bag on your head.

The measure I was given to correct the bug added a whole bunch of exciting new ones,

like on one level I kept falling through the floor and dying before the screen had faded

in.

Loading screen, pause, hideous dying scream, reload, repeat.

It was like playing a blunt dramatization of stillbirth.

For more infomation >> Vanquish (Zero Punctuation) - Duration: 5:17.

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The Black Comedian Who Was Almost One of the Three Stooges - Duration: 8:25.

The Black Comedian Who Was Almost One of the Three Stooges

There's a good chance you've never heard of Mantan Moreland.

But, if you are lucky enough to have seen him in a film—any film—you'll definitely

remember him.

Moreland's comic timing manages to transcend the decades in films like King of the Zombies

(1941), where he steals the show, saving what would otherwise be a completely forgettable

(and by now, probably long-forgotten) comedy-horror flick.

While changing attitudes about black roles in film may have hastened Moreland's fall

from popularity, he's finally being rediscovered as the talented character actor and comedy

genius that he was.

Had history unfolded just a little differently, Mantan Moreland would most likely have never

become forgotten in the first place.

In fact, he once came awfully close to being cast as one of the Three Stooges (more on

that later).

In an era when segregation was in full swing, the fact that he was strongly considered to

be part of the internationally-known trio, let alone be the choice of Moe and Shemp Howard

themselves, speaks to his considerable talent as a comedian.

Cutting his teeth on the brutally competitive vaudeville stage, Moreland honed his comedy

skills doing several live shows a day.

Vaudeville was a cutthroat business.

With dozens of performers waiting in the wings, any act that faltered for even a moment would

be yanked—if not booed—off the stage.

Former vaudevillians like Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Bob Hope owe their cinema

stardom largely to the quick-thinking and high level of professionalism required to

make it big onstage.

It worked for Moreland, too.

His talent as a comedian on what was then known as "the chitlin' circuit"—the

string of nightclubs and theaters deemed safe for black comedians during segregation—soon

led to roles in movies.

Moreland's earliest roles were in "race films," made with black actors for black

audiences.

His first screen role was as a night watchman in a haunted pawn shop in That's the Spirit

(1933), followed by a small role as an angel in The Green Pastures (1936), a retelling

of Biblical stories as black American folklore (Rex Ingram, Disney's original choice for

Uncle Remus, played "De Lawd").

Moreland was quickly moved up to supporting roles in all-black westerns like Harlem on

the Prairie (1937) and Two-Gun Man from Harlem (1938), playing the comic sidekick to Herb

Jeffries (better known as the Bronze Buckaroo, America's first black singing cowboy).

Recognizing his talent, studios soon snapped him up to play comic relief roles in mainstream

movies (in other words, with white casts), but his real break came when he was paired

with Frankie Darro in a series of crime comedies.

The two appeared in the films as porters, bellhops, or pages who stumble across murder

cases (hijinks, of course, ensue).

While Moreland's performances are stereotypical of the era (he's always the frightened one),

the films represent a huge turning point on the part of the studio: Moreland and his white

co-star are depicted as friends and equals.

A high point of the series is when he and Darro recreate one of the bits that made Moreland

a hit on the stage.

The "indefinite talk" bit appears in Up in the Air (1940), and pays homage to the

routine he developed with Ben Carter, in which the two would finish each other's sentences.

Like this:

Moreland: "I haven't seen you since…"

Carter: "Longer than that!"

Moreland: "Last time I saw you, you lived over…"

Carter: "Oh I moved from there."

Moreland: "Yeah?"

Carter: "Sure, I moved over to…"

Moreland: "How can you live in that neighborhood?"

The series came to an end when Frankie was drafted during World War II, but Monogram

hung onto Moreland, recognizing him for the amazing talent he had.

Perhaps intentionally, he was featured in some otherwise-lackluster films, injecting

a healthy dose of humor where there would have been none.

King of the Zombies (1941) is perhaps the best known, and nearly every single line spoken

by Moreland is memorable, from "Move over, boys, I'm one of the gang now!" to "If

there's anything I wouldn't want to be twice, zombies is both of them."

(You can watch the film here.)

Moreland was somewhat less valued at other studios, where he didn't receive top billing,

but his role in Universal's The Strange Case of Dr. X (1942) caught the eye of Three

Stooges cast member Shemp Howard.

The two appeared together in a gambling scene, and Howard was impressed with Moreland's

comic timing.

He suggested to brother Moe that Moreland would be the perfect replacement stooge, should

the need ever arise.

Meanwhile, Moreland was cast as chauffeur Birmingham Brown in Monogram's series of

Charlie Chan films.

While "chauffeur" certainly doesn't sound like a memorable role, Moreland, as

usual, made the character one of the most memorable parts of the series.

In fact, he was the only actor to stay on board for the entire run, appearing in 15

of the 17 films.

In two of the Charlie Chan films, Moreland got to reprise his indefinite talk bit with

original vaudeville partner Ben Carter.

Both The Scarlet Clue (1945) and Dark Alibi feature versions of the routine that made

him famous, and the movies are worth a watch if just for those segments alone.

When the series ended in 1949, Moreland saw less and less work.

Some attribute his disappearance to the decline of the B-movie in an era that was embracing

television, but many historians and biographers think it had more to do with changing political

attitudes.

Black men as servants and chauffeurs were not seen as funny so much as demeaning.

It didn't help that Moreland's shtick was to play the skittish, frightened man—another

stereotype.

On the other hand, his performances always seemed to transcend stereotype (and those

who knew him said that the deep Southern accent and the expressions were true to how Moreland

really was).

His scared-out-of-his-wits characters are really not that different from the ones played

by Bob Hope (see The Ghost Breakers, 1940).

It's easy to understand, though, why Moreland's scared routine sits a little uncomfortably

today, especially as he plays a servant to white men to boot—which is not something

Bob Hope had to do.

Remember Moe Howard's suggestion that Moreland would be a great Stooge if the need arose?

The need did just that in 1955, with the death of Shemp Howard.

At a time when Moreland could have used the work, the comedy team suddenly had need of

someone with brilliant comic timing and plenty of experience.

Moreland biographer Michael H. Price talked to Howard about just what a great idea it

was:

Mantan was responsive, when Larry (Fine) and I talked the idea over with him.

I mean, we'd all seen our better days by that time, but ol' Moreland, – now there

was a talent that could' a' invigorated the whole act!

He had the word play – you ever heard him do that 'anticipation' routine, where

he and one or another of his partners finished each other's sentences? – and he had the

physical shtick, the jive moves and double take receptions that would' a' filled

in the gaps when Jerome (Curly) and Shemp had kept covered.

The studio had other ideas, though, according to Howard:

But of course Columbia (Pictures' management) demanded a white guy, because they'd apparently

been scared off of Mantan, and we ended up with that prissy damned Joe Besser, who was

whatcha might call a pain…I've always thought what a great act the Stooges could'

a' stayed for a while, if only we'd' a' gone with Mantan.

And that was the end of that.

Having appeared in over 300 movies in his career, Moreland then only worked sporadically

in the industry until his death in 1973 from cerebral brain hemorrhage.

His last featured role was as a doomed delivery man in 1964's weirdly wonderful comedy-horror

film Spider Baby, and though the role was small, in true Mantan Moreland fashion, it

is not easily forgettable.

He played a few more blink-and-you'll-miss-them roles, wrapping up his film career as a man

almost run over by a motorcycle in the soft-core film The Young Nurses (1973).

Moreland made a few TV appearances on shows like "Adam 12" and "Love, American Style"

and released a few raunchy "party records" on the Laff label, including That Ain't

My Finger (his "mashed potatoes" punchline famously appears in the Beastie Boys song

"B-Boys Makin' With the Freak Freak").

One thing Moreland never stopped doing was the indefinite talk routine that originally

made him famous, performing it up until the last year of his life.

Mel Watkins, a black comedy historian, noted that to black audiences, it was as well-known

a classic as "Who's on First?" was to white audiences.

Once so famous that his films bore his real-life name (Mantan Runs for Mayor and Mantan Messes

Up, 1946), the actor is certainly not a household name today.

While he deserves rediscovery, one thing's for sure: if Columbia Pictures hadn't been

opposed to having a black comedian in one of the most beloved comedy groups of all time,

he wouldn't have needed to be rediscovered at all, and his name would have been sealed

in mainstream comedy history.

If you liked this article, you might also enjoy subs

For more infomation >> The Black Comedian Who Was Almost One of the Three Stooges - Duration: 8:25.

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

Different types of friendzone - Duration: 7:15.

Bro, have you seen this video?

Bro, Have you seen this video?

Lets go over to Mawimawii's place

Mawimawii...Mawimawii... Mawimawii

Is Mawimawii home?

Yes. Come on in.

LALRINMAWI (Mawimawii)

Your big brother is here.

'your big brother?!!'

Looks like you're in familyzone

Don't worry, there are so many girls out there in this big world.

Asang, He texted me.

Who? Matthew?!!

Yes, He told me he has something very important to tell me. What should I do?

Wait wait.. What are you going to wear?

I'm coming over

Ok ok ok.. Bye bye...

This is my girlfriend Bella.

And who is she?

She's like a sister to me since childhood. This is Hruaii.

For more infomation >> Different types of friendzone - Duration: 7:15.

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

Cargadores USA vs Europa: colaboración con Kim de Like Tesla - Duration: 9:27.

hola chicos en este video stream una colaboración especial con kim la chica

del canal like Tesla came you chose con las Heras pero para los que no NOS como

en el la serda su canal you're gone okay passes a ver sus videos suscribe Rosa

suka nada por cierto como Kim no habla espanol yo si habla ingles hemos

recibido hacer este video collaboration an englis para los que Nintendos inglese

locate any SCA's entonces es active Arlo's substitue los del vídeo de

youtube a kiosk on gabacho y en pantalla say vez de colo gara hora como sacked

even y a salmon era Padres entender lo que deben este video ok yo slow

Gwendoline esto cerca de tormenta nuovo siempre Scalia

oh boy khempal nice Tesla so we know there's a lot of differences in buyer

Tesla in Europe versus the US in terms of charging so I'm going to show you how

we charge our Model S in the US hello Kim my name is Sal Lopez you

pronounced it a little bit funny that but that's alright now in our garage is

how we typically charge we have a NEMA 1450 installed and this is the same

thing you would find in RV parks and you can see what the plot looks like right

here in the outlet and you can charge anywhere in the u.s. is 50 amps you get

27 miles to charge per hour with this and I just leave this plug in most of

the time like that and I would press my button and you can see what the charger

looks like here's a little bit different and there you go so little bit of a joke

here since you showed me yours I'm going to show you mine come over here in

Europe and this is the interesting part for you guys in the US the connector is

a bit different you see it changes it's different from what you have in the US

and of course also the charge port on the car itself is a little bit different

we don't have that light surrounding the port itself we have these three lights

here on the right instead the first one that you showed us the the RV camp

connectors the equivalent here is the one that we have in Europe is different

it's a blue adapter that I'm going to show you right now okay this is the one this

thing here allows Tesla owners to plug in single-phase 230 volt 32 amp

connectors, outlets sorry, and this allows us to draw energy for charging rate of

about 30 to 32 kilometers per hour of charging so this is the bag that comes

in Tesla that have all the adapters in it it also comes with an adapter for a

regular wall outlet it's a 120 volt outlet it gives you about 3 miles per

hour of charge and this is how you would use it is you

would just plug your charger into it plug it into the wall and charge your

car from the other end right here and this is great because anywhere you can

charge your cell phone you could use this you could plug it in any external

outlet and most people when they go to bed at night they go to bed for about 10

hours so if you were to charge it for 10 hours that would give you about 30 miles

and that's typically about how much most people drive here in the US per day

Tesla also provides a part of the original equipment this one very funny

for u.s. citizens I suppose like a pigtail hello and this is like the

equipment that you need to use for your standard wall outlet home which in

Europe means 230 volts 16 amps sometimes 13 amp and which will allow

you to draw about 13 kilometers of range per hour of charge so overnight with 10

hours you can top up your battery with 130 kilometers range which is much more

than the one you have for wall outlets home wall outlets in the US because we

have a higher voltage than you guys in Europe so awesome in our charging bag it

comes an adapter burner in a public setting and this is J1772 and it

gives you 30 amps 60 miles per hours per charge and you can kind of see how this

end of the charger is identical to the adapter piece so your J 1772 would go

right in here and you could put it into your car and charge your car so another

adapter that we purchased separately that did not come in our bag of goodies

led for clothes dryers a lot of times in the US and you're traveling people put

their washer and dryer in the garages and you can actually charge your car

from the dryer plug so this is the NEMA 14 30 and the NIEM at 10:30 and these

are very similar to the J 1772 where you get the 30 amps and you get about 16

miles per hour charge the only difference between them

that this one right here with the four pins is for houses that were built

after 2000 in the US and three pins is before 2000 I also have a bag with

goodies like you said that Tesla provides but I have put in here some

home made by electricians who know their job homemade the doctors those are not

provided by Tesla but this one is it's very similar to the other one but being

red and having five pins instead of three what this tells youis that this is

made for three-phase 230 volts 16 amp connections and then this allows you to

draw eleven kilowatt which translates into about 50 kilometers per hour of

charging so if you wanted an option for fast charging of course you could order

the beautiful Tesla wall charger and installed in your home and that's about

100 amps and it gives you 50 miles of charge per hour there's now also sells

the Tesla wall charger in Europe and in Europe you can use it with charging

power ranging from 4 to 22 kilowatts but I don't have it what I do have when I'm

going to show that is a type 2 cable this is exactly the same type of

connector as you can see the UMC has it's the type 2 connection and you can

use this in many public charging stations in Europe so I also carry this

cable it's a three-phase 32 amp cable so I

can charge in public stations that use the type 2 ports and connectors

then there's superchargers and Tesla is the only easy in the world the capable of

charging at 120 kilowatts that's equal to about 170 miles in 30 minutes

Elon has actually expressed that you might triple this in the future which would

give us 350 kilowatt that would give us 90 percent charge in 8 minutes

now this is a funny one because it looks like a gas nozzle at the petrol station

right type 2 for Tesla just the standard one and this bit here

is the CHAdeMO adapter the Japanese have these

in charging ports and the difference with all the others that we have just seen in

the video is that this one uses direct current like the superchargers but at

lower power the CHAdeMO charger can go up to 40 sometimes 50 kilowatts power

while the supercharger like you mentioned of course we also had them in

Europe exactly like you in the u.s. 120 125 maybe kilowatt power and it's

just different but of course this is the one that you will see on

superchargers in Europe and I think that's it so that was it for Europe this

is the things that you need to use thanks Kim see you next to my wife just

said that we should acknowledge or special thanks to the

poor spouses that record our shit her words not mine

I hope you enjoyed watching

this today and if you are not subscribed already my name is Kim and my

youtube channel is like Tesla and if you're already following us make sure

you all follow Saul Lopez I will put his description below thanks for watching

después de todo esto en inglis pasados a no Calvo mundo aspetto pasado

another key

yeah

For more infomation >> Cargadores USA vs Europa: colaboración con Kim de Like Tesla - Duration: 9:27.

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

Eva Longoria's TV Daughter Doesn't Look Like This Anymore - Duration: 4:25.

Madison de la Garza played the defiant, often hilarious Juanita Solis on Desperate Housewives

for four years.

But since then, she's gone on to do plenty more, including more acting, voiceover work,

speaking out against bullying, taking up aerial gymnastics, and becoming a budding YouTube

star.

Here's a look at what Eva Longoria's precocious TV daughter has been up to since she left

Wisteria Lane.

Good times

As Desperate Housewives was coming to an end in 2012, De La Garza recounted in an interview

with My San Antonio what a great experience the show was, especially her relationships

with her on-screen mom and dad, Eva Longoria and Ricardo Chavira.

Being a celebrity in her own right, though, took some getting used to.

"People would walk up to me and ask, 'Are you that girl in Desperate Housewives?'

It freaked me out at first.

Now I know how lucky I am to have people recognize me like that.

It makes me feel warm and fuzzy."

The bonds of sisterhood

Though there's a nine-year age gap between Madison De La Garza and her half-sister Demi

Lovato, the two couldn't be closer.

Over the years, De La Garza and Lovato have shared the stage, the screen, and the fight

against online bullies.

In a 2015 interview with Seventeen, De La Garza talked about a time when Lovato came

to her defense.

"I got a ton of negative comments after I posted a Vine on Twitter where I was cooking

with Demi.

People made fun of me, saying I had a hunchback.

Demi freaked and direct-messaged people to yell at them, and she tweeted at her followers

to stand up for me."

The support goes both ways.

Lovato told Access Hollywood that it was during an intervention that her mom told her, "You

know, we're going to move back to Texas and you're not going to be able to be around you're

little sister."

Just the idea of not being around De La Garza was enough to motivate Lovato to overcome

her drug and alcohol addictions.

She was cyber-bullied

Unfortunately, the Vine incident wasn't the only time De La Garza was a victim of online

bullies.

In an essay for Latina, she revealed that as young as age six, she was, quote, "being

called 'fat,' 'ugly,' and 'slut' on Twitter."

Naturally, De La Garza was deeply affected by it.

She wrote, "Their opinions turned into my insecurity—and suddenly I was aware of every

meal, every outfit, every post on social media.

However, every day it gets easier to accept myself for me instead of the labels they had

put on me."

"Reading the mean comments online is not gonna hurt me forever.

That's one thing I've learned."

Flying high

What exactly is aerial gymnastics?

Good question.

Basically, it's that Cirque du Soleil stuff where people flip around on big drapes hanging

from the ceiling, all while somehow not barfing everywhere.

It's pretty impressive, and De La Garza definitely loves it.

"I just have a passion for it.

It's so fun, and it's a great workout.

And number two, it's awesome."

Strong social media game

With over half a million followers on both her Twitter and Instagram pages, De La Garza

has cultivated her stardom into a loyal fanbase.

Like any teen, her pages are filled with selfies and group photos with friends, but De La Garza

also uses her platform to promote causes she supports, like The National Alliance on Mental

Illness and the Suicide Prevention Lifeline.

Surprisingly, she doesn't seem to have an official Facebook page, so either kids are

too cool for that now, or she reads all of her grumpy older relatives' political gripes

elsewhere.

She has her own YouTube channel

After Desperate Housewives, De La Garza moved on to television roles on Bad Teacher and

Muertoons, a cartoon that takes place in a world where "every day is The Day of the Dead."

But she's also staked a claim in the emerging world of new media.

She relaunched her YouTube channel where she declares aspirations in many fields including

acting, directing, producing, and writing, as well as doing special effects makeup.

"Since I want them to look super deep, I'm going to go in with a black color to create

dimension."

"Now that looks super deep."

And she even wrote a short film called The Imbalancing Act, which is pretty impressive

for anyone, much less a teenager.

With both her TV family and her real family backing her, there's no telling just what

she'll end up achieving.

Thanks for watching!

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

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

For more infomation >> Eva Longoria's TV Daughter Doesn't Look Like This Anymore - Duration: 4:25.

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

Prodigy of Mobb Deep TALKS Favorite Song He Wrote, Importance of Putting His People on #ripprodigy - Duration: 4:25.

so and I just want to ask you before we wrap it up what the fuck we going onto

your model and you write something and sit you write like you wrote some of

that craziest shit ever the Jesus ride we probably gave us

extraneous as the craziest ever like Muslim what was it what was what was he

thinking when he wrote that I was just right in speaking my mind about Sunday's

like a lot of you know I'm believing religion on sound loud miss person real

spiritual person no I'm saying they don't basically I was just speaking my

mind about provision without really explaining myself

no I'm saying because I was going to shock people I wanted people to be like

you look fuckin kokomo bring that verse back no thing like really just make them

listen hard now he's listening closing in on saying

like what the fuck you talking about knows that now I know people will say

that you people get asked all the time what's their favorite album what's your

favorite and the answer is always it's like picking your favorite kid you know

but people you can have a favorite kid most the timers who take the you the

most if you can pick that one prior to diverse that you think of stand the test

of time for 40 years like that the best verse what would you pick on quite

strong your labor supply is going when would an end and I'll disagree with you

I think the a CD verse was fucking asiavision guys it was fucking got to be

ridiculous in a TV show and then you had all our voices yeah yeah you had another

you had a lot of oh god they'll all say you had a lot of them but what is P is

most proud of the quiet storm very well so when you did that record like was

that a different vibe for you to do a record like that musically no it was

just like you don't mean basically I heard a beat out the rest as mom's only

here on me that's what I need some up Temple City did nigga tight knows that

so what hours Alice unreleased material does mall deep and prodigy had and we

got down into some in women when you stop making rec you

can stop making music right now when you go for the next 20 no say-so like and

what's the possibility of some of the records coming up on this it's all going

to come up do you do your own all of those markets yeah as I said so I wanted

to ask you one right there in particular is my own and you talk about the garden

in Eden be tomorrow I kept equate is that that's wrong that's not even an

album here that was like mix it when a mixed thing what rec was the name but I

record on what the fuck did they call this you get it for this who did it try

happening homes on a double yellow and Maddy sweet daddy to be able and on like

Matt right now I know he was real on instrumental early on in your career

like where's the relationship with him right now

is cool yo ray is cool wait he helped discover mall deep digging no say-so he

got a lot of power in the game I mean here on the low you little nothing wrong

with it my regulator's infamous dark sonic so

it's still infamous record yeah so how long did y'all have that that label on

how I got infamous is really just a name no I'm saying I got brand no no no so

whatever we do that brand it follows us on me so that's what it is well what I

wanted to ask I think a lot of people want to know was you afraid like you got

the infamous model and then y'all name is the infamous Mobb Deep was you afraid

that Mike did you give them that name yeah we gave did you was you afraid that

that might confuse the fans a little bit I'm not gonna stand long time they don't

because you like you know sometimes you be on the tail of an H the infamous

might be confusing that time and once you get down to the bottom of it so I'm

glad is a multi yeah forget how you in small non me you're gonna be like this

thing isn't as mall this mall big okay like you know there's an insane pseudo

thing so like how to do how you feel knowing that gives a lot of people that

you help and you see them able to branch out do their own projects how you feel

about that that's gangster that's all supposed to you know II like the people

that surround us that keep you gangsta with niggas late that's how it's

supposed to be see them getting in the sea instead of

getting into the streets beginning or something that no man that's good

For more infomation >> Prodigy of Mobb Deep TALKS Favorite Song He Wrote, Importance of Putting His People on #ripprodigy - Duration: 4:25.

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

BOXDRIVE - Das neue KNAUS CUV - Duration: 0:57.

WHAT ARISES...

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THE NEW KNAUS CUV

For more infomation >> BOXDRIVE - Das neue KNAUS CUV - Duration: 0:57.

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

Bullfighting-Man vs. Beast: Real Sports Full Segment (HBO) - Duration: 12:02.

Bullfighting.

The word alone provokes feelings of intensity,

especially in Spain,

where the traditional spectacle of bravery

and blood disgust some, even as it thrills others.

♪ (TRUMPETS BLARING) ♪

JON FRANKEL: It's like going to a sporting event

at the ancient Coliseum.

But this... is modern-day Spain.

And, instead of gladiators, here it's man versus beast

in the original extreme sport...

-Bullfighting. -(AUDIENCE SCREAMS)

FRANKEL: It lies somewhere between ballet...

-boxing... -(AUDIENCE ROARS)

and bloody public execution.

(AUDIENCE CLAPS AND CHEERS)

FRANKEL: To the people here, this is the purest form of courage.

After all, not everyone has what it takes to get in the ring

and do this...

(AUDIENCE CHEERS)

FRANKEL : Go face-to-horns with a 1200-pound bull,

where in a moment's notice, you could be gored...

(AUDIENCE SHRIEKS)

FRANKEL: ...trampled...

-or even killed. -(AUDIENCE SHRIEKING)

CAYETANO RIVERA ORDÓÑEZ: Knowing the fact that I might die

makes me feel more alive than ever.

Do you think about death each time you step out there?

Absolutely.

(AUDIENCE CHEERING)

FRANKEL: Cayetano Rivera Ordóñez is one of the most famous matadors around.

A rock star of this world,

who has to fight through a crowd of fans

just to get into the arena to fight the bulls.

(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

FRANKEL : Something we saw firsthand in Seville,

the epicenter of bullfighting.

The pre-game ritual here? Simple.

Say your prayers.

And then step into the ring, kneel down,

and hope those prayers are answered.

FRANKEL: What is like when you're there? On your knees?

ORDÓÑEZ: It's a moment of truth.

Your senses are very awake.

You hear everything. You feel everything.

And you just wait.

FRANKEL: And, in a flash, it's out of the pen

-and into the fire. -(AUDIENCE SHRIEKS)

FRANKEL: On this day, it's a close call right out of the gate.

Each fight is a roller-coaster ride.

Twenty minutes long.

But the matador does have some help along the way.

♪ (TRUMPETS BLARING) ♪

FRANKEL: First come the so-called picadores ,

men on horseback who jab the bull with long sharp lances

to weaken them.

(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

FRANKEL: Next come the banderilleros, who stick sharp,

-colorful darts in. -(MATADOR SHOUTS)

-(AUDIENCE CLAPS AND CHEERS)

FRANKEL: But, for the final act, it's one-on-one.

(AUDIENCE CHEERING)

FRANKEL: The goal?

To plunge the sword right between the bull's shoulders,

and straight through the heart. The cleaner and quicker,

the better.

-(ORDÓÑEZ SHOUTS) -(AUDIENCE CHEERS)

FRANKEL: For a truly spectacular performance,

the matador's awarded a trophy... the bull's ear.

It's not exactly the world cup, but for these men,

that's the point. Soccer is just a game.

This is life and death.

No one risks their life playing soccer or basketball or tennis.

You might get injured, that's it.

This is not some kind of act

you're going to see in theater.

This is no fake blood.

Everything that happens in the ring is real.

FRANKEL: This love of the sport has been bred into Cayetano

from birth.

ORDÓÑEZ: Here you have my grandfather,

my great grandfather, they're old memories.

FRANKEL: The forty-year old is bullfighting royalty.

I'm the fourth generation of bullfighters in my family.

And you're named for the original,

-your great grandfather. -For the first one.

Yes, my great-grandfather, Cayetano.

Cayetano Ordóñez.

FRANKEL: That Cayetano was an icon.

The inspiration for none other than Ernest Hemingway,

who used him as the model for the matador in the classic novel

The Sun Also Rises, and became a family friend.

ORDÓÑEZ: My mother used to call him Uncle Ernest

and he was great friends with my grandfather.

FRANKEL: Hemingway spent untold hours here at the family ranch

in Southern Spain.

And, he wasn't the only American titan of the arts

to fall for the romance of bullfighting

and the sports first family.

One Hollywood director spent so much time here

that he had his ashes buried in the yard.

You may have heard of him.

Orson Welles.

Still, for any family of matadors, their history is not

all glitz and glamour.

Cayetano's father was killed in the ring

when Cayetano was just seven.

FRANKEL: Do you think your dad is looking down on you and saying,

"Cayetano, don't meet the fate that I met."

Even if, uh, something happened to me,

I had such an intense life.

The sacrifice, the hard work, the dedication, being brave,

being able to stand up for difficult moments,

and... I like to think about it that way.

FRANKEL: And while Cayetano says he's been gored more times

than he cares to remember, like most matadors,

few have endured what this one has.

Is it a miracle that you're even sitting here

doing this interview today?

(SPEAKING SPANISH)

INTERPRETER: No doubt. No doubt.

This has been a miracle of God.

FRANKEL: That's because Juan José Padilla has been gored

more than 38 times.

(PADILLA SPEAKING SPANISH)

INTERPRETER: Of the 38 gorings, nine gorings have been

so serious I have almost lost my life in them.

(SPEAKING SPANISH)

INTERPRETER: I was in intensive care for five months with tubes.

I almost lost my life at that moment.

And then I had another goring, very serious, in Pamplona.

The bull crossed my neck, broke the third bone vertebra.

That almost killed me.

♪ (SPANISH MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

FRANKEL: But none compare to what happened six years ago,

in this fight, when Padilla, daring to play

both the role of matador and bandillero, was gored

right through his skull.

Fair warning,

what you're about to see is not for the faint of heart.

(ANNOUNCER SPEAKING SPANISH)

(PADILLA SPEAKING SPANISH)

INTERPRETER: The impact was like a hand grenade exploded in my face.

It felt like a bomb. And, when I fell,

my face and eye were on the ground and I wanted to put it

back together with my hands.

I knew at that moment of the danger that I was in.

FRANKEL: He'd never see out of that eye again,

and lost hearing in his left ear,

but, somehow, didn't lose the will to fight.

Soon, this practice ring behind his house beckoned

and Padilla would return to fight for real

just five months after losing his eye.

FRANKEL: Nobody would question your courage,

but some might question your sanity

for ever stepping foot back in the ring.

(SPEAKING SPANISH)

INTERPRETER: It has always been said that bull fighters are a little crazy,

but I am a person who lives the present.

I do not live the past or the future. I live the present.

FRANKEL: And so it was a few weeks ago in Seville

where we caught up with Padilla on game day

at a hotel near the bull ring.

This is his pre-game ritual,

getting geared up in what matador's call their

"suit of lights" in front of a makeshift shrine.

Prayer is very important to you.

(TRANSLATOR SPEAKING SPANISH)

(PADILLA SPEAKING SPANISH)

INTERPRETER: Yes. The majority of bull fighters are people

of great faith.

(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

FRANKEL: Padilla's refusal to quit after all he's been through

has made him a cult hero to the bull fighting faithful,

who now know him simply as El Pirata , "The Pirate."

(AUDIENCE CHEERS)

FRANKEL: And, like a pirate in the ring, he takes no prisoner.

(AUDIENCE ROARS)

FRANKEL: But while the thousands in attendance here

can't get enough...

-(SPANISH MUSIC PLAYS) -(AUDIENCE CHEERS)

...outside the ring,

not everyone is a fan of bullfighting.

Across Spain, supporters of animal rights have begun to

rally against bullfighting.

(SPEAKING SPANISH)

FRANKEL : Against the public taunting and killing of an animal

in the name of sport.

(CHANTING WITH MEGAPHONE)

FRANKEL: Young people in particular reject the old custom.

In fact, nearly two-thirds of them,

according to a recent poll in Spain.

(CHANTING IN SPANISH)

FRANKEL: And some cities have actually banned bullfighting altogether,

like Barcelona,

where people think this 300-year old tradition

is better left in the past.

FRANKEL: Are you conflicted at all?

Do you feel bad about killing that bull?

I don't have any satisfaction killing the bull.

I mean, it's just part of everything.

It's not why I got into it, and it's not why any bullfighter

gets into it.

It's the fight. It's being able to face the fear.

It's being able to use your intelligence,

or your knowledge, to conduct

a beast's behavior, a savage bull that wants to kill you.

We all have traditions.

We all have things that are near and dear to us

and were to our ancestors, but times change.

I don't intend everyone to understand it.

My intention is for them to respect it.

FRANKEL: Not likely for the opponents of this sport,

who either refuse to watch or watch to root...

yes... for the bull.

FRANKEL: Does it bother you that somebody's watching,

hoping maybe that you'll get gored?

(SPEAKING SPANISH)

INTERPRETER: Yes. Unfortunately, we feel the humiliation,

we feel insulted by the protesters, that they ask

or wish that a bull kills you,

and that something nasty happens to you.

(SPEAKING SPANISH)

Sadly, yes, that hurts.

(AUDIENCE CHEERS)

FRANKEL: Whether you see it as a barbaric relic from the past

or an artistic endeavor and ultimate test of fortitude,

even the greats of the ring know that their sport could,

in the not-so-distant future, be dealt a final deadly blow.

(AUDIENCE CHEERS)

(PADILLA SPEAKING SPANISH)

INTERPRETER: There's always been an attack on our culture for centuries.

But, I do not believe, because I do not want to think about

if our profession will end.

That our adventure will end.

I hope not.

FRANKEL: How much longer do you think this tradition lasts?

How much longer do I think? How much longer do I hope?

-Two different answers, I guess. -(ORDÓÑEZ LAUGHS)

I guess so, yes.

Sadly. And the fact that there's a chance we're going to lose it

makes me sad and makes me angry.

I'm going to do all I can do not to let that happen.

(AUDIENCE CLAPS AND CHEERS)

Thanks for watching.

Remember, you can catch the rest of the latest edition

of Real Sports all month long, on HBO.

For more infomation >> Bullfighting-Man vs. Beast: Real Sports Full Segment (HBO) - Duration: 12:02.

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

Mabakunahan at Iwasan ang Tigdas - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> Mabakunahan at Iwasan ang Tigdas - Duration: 1:02.

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[VAPP] 160403 - Guerra com água (Legendado - PT/BR) - Duration: 45:24.

For more infomation >> [VAPP] 160403 - Guerra com água (Legendado - PT/BR) - Duration: 45:24.

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

WEINSBERG CaraBus 601DQ - Your Variable Companion - Duration: 0:56.

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WHETHER WITH FRIENDS AS A COUPLE OR FAMILY

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