Thứ Sáu, 23 tháng 6, 2017

Waching daily Jun 23 2017

For more infomation >> 5 Ways to write Better Dialogue - Duration: 3:04.

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Let's Speak Dutch Today ((SWEDISH)) - Duration: 4:44.

Hello, everyone!

I hope everyone is good today

I'm doing good

It's still the morning here and I just woke up

today I want to practice a bit of Dutch

I've already been studying Dutch for about 1 month

yea, that's right

and I want to make some clips here to practice the language

because soon I will start practicing Dutch with native speakers

There's still quite a few things that I must work on still, no doubt, but I believe that I will be understood when I speak in Dutch

but we're about to see soon, right?

then...let's do it!

OK

My name is Moses

I'm an American learning Dutch

((DUTCH)) I've been earning for a month

and I find Dutch to be very interesting, and also a little difficult, especially the pronunciation

The grammar is OK, because it's similar to Swedish and German

that's all

thanks a lot

As I said, there's still a lot to work on, but this video is just for fun and entertainment

That's it. Thanks for viewing my video. Goodbye, all!

For more infomation >> Let's Speak Dutch Today ((SWEDISH)) - Duration: 4:44.

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НЕ ПРОПУСТИТЕ - Duration: 0:26.

For more infomation >> НЕ ПРОПУСТИТЕ - Duration: 0:26.

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Heidemarie tried to report UFO sighting? - Duration: 7:09.

For more infomation >> Heidemarie tried to report UFO sighting? - Duration: 7:09.

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The Real Reason Daniel Day-Lewis Quit Acting - Duration: 6:07.

After more than three decades in the movie industry, three-time Oscar winner Daniel Day-Lewis

has decided to hang up his hat.

"Mr. Daniel?"

"I'm finished."

The actor announced that his 2017 film with writer-director Paul Thomas Anderson, a '50s-set

dress designer drama titled Phantom Thread, will be the last installment in his esteemed

filmography.

The statement, given via his spokeswoman, read,

"He is immensely grateful to all of his collaborators and audiences over the many years.

This is a private decision and neither he nor his representatives will make any further

comment on this subject."

The notoriously private thespian may not be willing to elaborate publicly, but he has

plenty of reasons to leave Hollywood's bright lights behind.

The toll of being a method actor

It's no secret that Daniel Day-Lewis takes a very unique approach to his craft.

Not only is he exceedingly choosy about which roles he'll accept, but he's also known to

disappear into them throughout the production process.

"I follow my curiosity and it takes me into all kinds of strange places."

He stayed in a wheelchair and was spoon-fed by crewmembers to fully experience having

cerebral palsy for his Oscar-winning turn in My Left Foot; he spent six months in the

wild to prepare for his role in The Last of the Mohicans; he isolated himself from the

cast and crew during the production on The Ballad of Jack and Rose; he tattooed his hands

and trained for 18 months as a fighter for The Boxer.

The results speak for themselves, but all that dramatic heavy lifting takes a toll.

"Part of my job is to be drained."

"I wore myself out."

Post-production depression

Not only is the work itself grueling, but once he's done with a role, he has to deal

with the emotional repercussions of letting it go.

As he told The Telegraph, "There's a terrible sadness.

The last day of shooting is surreal.

Your mind, your body, your spirit are not prepared to accept that this experience is

coming to an end.

You've devoted so much of your time to unleashing, in an unconscious way, some sort of spiritual

turmoil."

He also has trouble letting go of his characters as a result.

"You're not quite sure what to do with yourself when it's finished."

"It's very hard to conceive of any kind of life after it.

Of course there is one waiting."]

For example, after finishing Gangs of New York, Day-Lewis admitted to speaking with

his Butcher dialect for months after the film's completion and felt a sense of alienation

during the film's debut, telling Rolling Stone,

"I got nervous before the premiere.

I knew I'd also feel a sense of sadness.

Now I have to accept that the film is complete and no longer has anything to do with me."

Secondary career paths

He was showered with decades of praise for his work in front of the camera, but Day-Lewis

ultimately sought a different level of fulfillment in his side career as a cobbler.

After shooting The Boxer, he started a family with his wife Rebecca Miller, and apprenticed

in Italy with master shoemaker Stefano Bemer.

He told Rolling Stone, "It's an antidote to this other thing I do."

"Most particularly, perhaps, because you see this visible evidence, you have this tangible

thing at the end, and if you f*** up, you can see it very clearly and do it again.

It's not a matter of opinion.

It's either good or it's bad."

Making shoes might seem like a strange passion for an Oscar winner, but as we've seen countless

times, it can be hard for a celebrity to stay grounded in the spotlight.

Working with one's hands to produce work you can point to at the end of the day seems like

a great way to stay centered.

Allergic to fame

Even at the peak of his career, Day-Lewis retreated from the public eye for years between

projects to spend time on his family farm in Ireland, where he's often spotted visiting

the pubs to have a pint—alone.

Unlike a number of his more outgoing colleagues, he's rejected the notion that he's a public

figure at all times.

He told The BBC,

"I am, whether I like it or not, a public figure during certain periods.

Then I disappear, it seems."

"Of course in my experience I don't disappear, I'm just doing other things.

What I'm doing is re-engaging with life."

At this point, given his merit as an actor, any movie starring Day-Lewis earns special

attention—which undermines his interests in making movies in the first place.

As he told The Telegraph,

"The work itself is never anything but pure pleasure, but there's an awful lot of peripheral

stuff that I find it hard to be surrounded by.

I like things to be swift, because the energy you have is concentrated and can be fleeting.

The great machinery of film can work against that."

In today's Hollywood, that machinery seems larger and louder than ever—and it's left

less room for the quieter sorts of character studies that Day-Lewis tends to favor.

Instead, studios are looking for properties with proven brand value, which means lots

of sequels, reboots, remakes, and cinematic universes.

To an actor who built his career on taking emotional and physical risks, it may no longer

be worth working within those constraints.

"Oh, oh oh, well in that case…"

Going out on top

When Day-Lewis won the Best Actor Oscar for Lincoln in 2012, he made Academy Awards history

by becoming the only actor to win three trophies in that category.

Once you've set such a high bar for yourself, there's really nowhere else to go but down,

and Day-Lewis seems to know that his status as a legend is well worth protecting.

"I have a competition in me.

I want no one else to succeed."

And while this time seems like the real deal, Daniel Day-Lewis has walked away from acting

before—more than once, in fact.

He left a stage production of Hamlet in the middle of a show because he thought he was

interacting with the ghost of his dead father.

He took five years off after The Boxer, and planned a five-year sabbatical from acting

after Lincoln.

He told The Guardian, "I just wanted some time away from it all.

I need that quite often … I have quite a strong feeling about when I should work and

when I shouldn't."

Evidently, Day-Lewis is still going with his gut—and walking away from the spotlight

at last.

Thanks for watching!

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For more infomation >> The Real Reason Daniel Day-Lewis Quit Acting - Duration: 6:07.

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THEY WHAT?- Beach Trip part 1 - Duration: 17:13.

Hey what is up you guys, this is Philip and you are watching my channel so

thanks for stopping by and in this video my friends and I went on a beach trip for

four nights????

four..

four days and three nights four days and three nights

"Four days and three nights, Phil?!

That's a long time!"

Yes. Yes it is.

Alright that was weird.

BUT yeah it was a lot of fun being with my

friends and it was a lot of fun making memories there was a lot of fun editing

this video because I had such an awesone (lol) time so thank you all who were able to

be with me at the beach trip. Thanks for making me laugh and just making this

trip awesome!

And I hope you all can enjoy this video.

Sooo,

HERE WE GO

Hello everyone!

Kevin could you explain to the people where we're going

right now.

We are going on a sophomore beach trip

And right now our ETA is 2:39

which is in like two hou..

two and a half hours away (?)

from now (?)

So

we will...

we will see you later

Alright

We are here

Let's see how our rooms look alike (?)

look alike (?)

look like

Oh blog day (?) day one

Just got here from a long trip

or a long drive. I can't even

make (?) words right now

So this is Matthew

The glimpsening (?) of the Sun is kinda

bad

God shines upon me.

[Ignored]

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