Thứ Hai, 17 tháng 7, 2017

Waching daily Jul 17 2017

Hey, pal. How you doing?

Been better.

We'll get you through this.

No.

I should never have hurt you...

...said those things.

None of that matters, Peter.

You're my friend.

Best friend.

Harry.

Whatever comes our way...

...whatever battle we have raging inside us, we always have a choice.

My friend Harry taught me that.

He chose to be the best of himself.

It's the choices that make us who we are...

...and we can always choose to do what's right.

For more infomation >> Harry Osborn's Death / Ending Scene | Spider-Man 3 (2007) | Movie Clip - Duration: 4:30.

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Hjørundfjord Norway 4K Aerial Footage - Duration: 2:30.

Hjørundfjord 4k - Aerial Footage in Ørsta in Norway

Bjørke

Leria

Viddal

Hjørundfjord in Ørsta in Norway

For more infomation >> Hjørundfjord Norway 4K Aerial Footage - Duration: 2:30.

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When High Intensity Triathlon Training Will Hurt You - Duration: 8:22.

- When, why, where, how you should use intense training.

Because he says that bodies basically throw a sissy fit.

(rhythmic pop music)

Morning, trainiacs.

It's no triathlon, Kim's birthday today,

so very short, very easy, very mellow run

so that I've got enough energy to...

Well, we're just going to the spa.

Probably coulda smashed myself

this morning, now that I think about it.

Legitimately, I didn't plan that.

Today, when, why, where, how you should use

intense training as opposed to long,

endurance, steady training.

Al right, there we go, getting there.

(rhythmic pop music)

Nice, trainiacs, that was very nice.

14.6 kilometers, about 8.7, 8.8 miles

for the US folk out there.

Get on the metric system already.

In one hour, eight minutes or so,

it's a 439 per kilometer pace,

which is a little bit slower than race pace

of around 430 per kilometer, but I had a big

epiphany yesterday as Chris and I hopped

off the bike and, bam, hammered it.

I got about two kilometers then

and then I was like, "Oh, whoa, whoa,

"whoa, whoa, whoa, Taren.

"Why are you hammering it?

"This is what killed you in Campeche."

And then I did some soul searching,

just deep, deep thoughts, which I already know,

is that there's a time and a place for hard workouts.

Here are four, maybe five times

that you should be using high-intensity

interval training, HIIT training,

for triathlon as opposed to, in conjunction

might be a better term, with triathlon training.

There we go.

That took a while to get out.

Okay, so for a little bit of background,

a lot of rumblings are made these days

about how high-intensity interval training

is better than long, steady training.

I'm not saying that that's wrong.

I'm just saying that, in my experience,

in kind of general, traditional triathlon

endurance coaching experience,

there's a time and a place for HIIT training.

It's not like HIIT training is better and, no,

you never have to do a long bike

for the rest of your life, but there

are times that you can use it with really good effect.

So, number one, if you are just getting

into triathlon training and you're doing

shorter distances, you're doing sprints

and Olympics that are lasting anywhere

from an hour to three hours.

At this point, having that really fast,

powerful speed, training your legs

to spin over and push a lot of wattage,

push a lot of speed, it's very useful.

And because the endurance side of it

isn't hours and hours on end accessing

multiple different systems of endurance,

you can get away with it quite easily

in sprint and Olympic training.

I used a lot of it, myself, doing 50

and 100 meter sprints when I was training

for sprint triathlons, and it taught me

how to get that fast pace out of my body.

The second time is when you're well out of race season.

So, in my case, race season started this year in March.

In December and November is when Coach Pat

started putting in really fast-paced intervals.

We were working on my speed a long way out

because speed takes a long time to build,

strength takes a long time to build.

Endurance can come quite quickly,

as evidenced by me going from swimming

9K a week to being able to swim 37K in one day

over the course of just three months of training.

So, to go a long way out from your race season,

starting to work on speed with high-intensity

intervals is good, because you need

a lot of time to build strength,

and then coming in closer to your race

is when you can focus on endurance,

'cause that ramps up pretty quickly.

Third is, as you are approaching a race,

you don't wanna completely forget about the speed.

You do wanna have some little pops

of speed in, say, your taper week.

You wanna remind your legs how to turn over

really quickly, not just get mushy and sloppy.

This goes for any distance race.

However, you don't wanna be using that

as your bread and butter workout,

doing many, many, many intervals

where you're smashed because you did so many.

You kinda wanna just use those high-intensity

intervals to, bam, give yourself...

I'm doing, (fist smacks) you're gonna get a lot of those.

Let's do a count of those.

You wanna do just intervals to remind

your body to turn over, but you don't

wanna be finishing those workouts

during your taper period tired.

Fourth, if you are doing triathlon training

specifically for weight loss.

High intensity training is really good

because it releases a lot of testosterone

and muscle-building hormones.

It raises your metabolism quite a bit,

so if you're doing it strictly for weight loss

and fitness, and you're not looking

for that massive endurance benefit, yeah,

throw some high-intensity interval training in there.

It's kinda like a CrossFit or a boot camp

sort of workout, which is good for you.

Oh, the fifth time that I had it in mind

is to mix it in with your overall endurance training.

If all of your training is at a really slow pace,

you're gonna get good at going long and slow.

If all of your training is at your really fast pace,

you're gonna get good at going short and fast.

If all of your training is good at race pace,

as soon as you're knocked off your race pace

your body's gonna start fighting it.

So, a good way to structure your training

is to have some days that are long and slow,

some days that are at your race pace,

and some days that have little frequent pops of intensity.

The big thing that I'm getting at here

is that high-intensity interval training

and long, slow endurance training

are not mutually exclusive with triathlon training.

It's not one or the other.

The best method is to have little bits

of both so that your body has a depth of fitness

at speed, at endurance, at strength, at mental

toughness, for long distances, for short distances.

Now, the knock that I have on people

that say, "No no no, you don't need

"to do long distances" is, quite frankly,

anything past about 20 minutes,

it's 98, 99 percent aerobic.

So, why are you getting good at going really short

and fast if almost all of our races,

like all of our races, are long and steady?

And especially when you start getting

into Olympics that last longer than three hours,

Half Ironmans, Ironmans, the body systems

that need to be accessed at that three-hour mark

and the six-hour mark are really different systems.

Mark Allen, you might know, six time

world champion, potential podcast guest,

says that he specifically adds in workouts

for his athletes that go past three hours,

and then ones closer to the race

that go past six hours when they're

doing a full Ironman, because he says

that bodies basically throw a sissy fit

at three hours and six hours,

so you need to know how to go past that.

You're not gonna do that if you're doing

nothing but hard intervals and an hour-long

workout, and you're like, "Ooh, okay."

I mean, granted, you're gonna be able

to finish because you will have built up

fitness, but are you going to have

the best race you possibly can?

No.

All right, gang, spa time.

Robes and mimosas.

(relaxing music)

Oh yeah, that was a really good spa day.

Agreed?

- Mm.

So good.

- So good.

Later, trainiacs.

(relaxing music)

For more infomation >> When High Intensity Triathlon Training Will Hurt You - Duration: 8:22.

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Midnight, Texas - Would You Live in Midnight, Texas? (Sneak Peek) - Duration: 1:25.

For more infomation >> Midnight, Texas - Would You Live in Midnight, Texas? (Sneak Peek) - Duration: 1:25.

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[14] BWV 184 - O Herre Gott, dein göttlich Wort (Bach) - 4 Guitars - Duration: 1:15.

BWV 184 - O Herre Gott, dein göttlich Wort (Bach) - Guitar

For more infomation >> [14] BWV 184 - O Herre Gott, dein göttlich Wort (Bach) - 4 Guitars - Duration: 1:15.

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Video: Very warm and very muggy week - Duration: 2:54.

For more infomation >> Video: Very warm and very muggy week - Duration: 2:54.

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Xander Music - Cell (Official Music Video) - Duration: 2:43.

You squandered your abilities, silly monkey

Concerned less with love, and more with that filthy money

And trivialities, none of that really matters

Come and battle me, if you want your brain splattered

I'll blow your mind, harm you like a casualty

Cuz you're unarmed and I'm armed like the cavalry

So on with the savagery, here's a little tidbit

Idiots like you are the reason that we nitpick

Too infatuated with your visage tome

Not everything you do needs to be written home

Lie till the cows come, sigh cuz you down some

Log on for validation, and you found some

But in your search you neglected your intellect

Your motivation's hindered, ideas impotent

It's kinda sad I have to tell you this shit's nonexistent

Can you be happy knowing that you never missed it?

You're trapped in a cell, though the cell is external

The internal landscape is infinite and circular

Deeper down the dopamine dungeon

Digging in the dung heap till it's up to your stomach

Now you're probably wondering, how'd I get into this mess?

That thought lasts a second, then you swipe left

Continue on with my happy-ass lifestyle

I know that I'm happy cuz I know how to smile

But smiles don't last, neither do their causes

I need more stimulation, before I die from boredom

Who cares about a long run? I've been long done

I scrolled through all the memes, I mean, I seen all of 'em

But you know, all of this is fleeting

Transitory, we might as well be dreaming

Would this be your life if you could ever dream it?

Looks like a nightmare, the way I sees it

For more infomation >> Xander Music - Cell (Official Music Video) - Duration: 2:43.

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Modified PLA review: Torwell "Silk"! #Filaween2 - Duration: 2:19.

For more infomation >> Modified PLA review: Torwell "Silk"! #Filaween2 - Duration: 2:19.

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The Fog That Killed 12,000 People - Duration: 5:18.

[♪ INTRO]

London is famously foggy.

Sometimes that can mean a wistful stroll or another excuse for a cuppa tea, but when fog

mixes with the smoke and chemicals produced by industry, it becomes something new: smog.

And for a couple of centuries, London's smog could kill.

Really bad smogs could kill a thousand people in a few days, but no one did much about it

until 1952, when a five-day smog in London killed an estimated twelve thousand people.

It was called The Great Smog of London, and it helped wake up the country and the world

to the dangers of unrestricted pollution.

Fog is just a cloud that forms down here on the ground, which by itself isn't that bad;

you might not be able to see well when you're driving,

or you might not be able to land your plane, but it's nice.

But clouds can act like sponges, forming around and trapping whatever's already in the air.

This wasn't a problem until the 1200s, when a lot of London

switched from wood to coal for heating their homes.

Burning coal creates soot and smoke, which can irritate your lungs,

and also creates poisons like sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide.

Sulfur dioxide, which is a sulfur atom bonded to two oxygen atoms, reacts with water to

form sulfuric acid, which can harm your internal organs, as you might imagine.

And carbon monoxide, which is one carbon and one oxygen, binds with the hemoglobin in your

blood to stop oxygen from getting around your body.

So when London started burning coal, all the smoke and chemicals mixed with the natural

fog, and it became thicker and darker as years passed.

It wasn't a health crisis at first,

but people did complain that the smoke smelled terrible.

And this was back in the 1200s, when everything smelled terrible already.

But it was easier to keep burning coal than to switch back to wood, so for centuries,

they just accepted the occasional thick, dark, smelly cloud hanging over the city.

As you do.

Things really got dangerous when the Industrial Revolution happened in the 1700s.

Because now, coal wasn't just heating homes.

It powered huge factories throughout the city, and all that extra smoke and soot made the

air in London's fogs much darker.

It became so common that a physician named Harold Antoine Des Voeux

invented the term "smog" to describe it.

Really smoggy days completely blacked out the center of the city, so that you couldn't

see more than a few meters ahead of you, even in the middle of the day.

The soot also irritated people's lungs, causing illnesses like bronchitis

to become more common.

Some people even suffocated from breathing so much smoke or the poisons in the air.

Individual smogs in 1873 and 1892 each killed over a thousand humans and livestock.

And we don't even know how many people died early from collecting soot in their lungs

over the course of their lives.

But coal kept London flourishing, so nobody did anything to stop it.

Then came The Great Smog.

On December 5, 1952, a thick fog rolled in and mixed with London's dirty air,

just like it did most winters.

But this time, high-pressure weather systems surrounded London

and kept the cloud from moving on.

So an especially dense, black smog stopped on London for five miserable days.

The smog was so thick that flights were grounded, most public transportation was canceled,

trains collided, and theaters and movies stopped,

because people couldn't see what they were watching.

This is difficult to imagine, this was 1952, not that long ago.

An estimated four thousand people died in those five awful days before the smog dissipated.

A lot of them suffocated because their lungs were inflamed from breathing in so much soot.

And with sulfur dioxide from the burning coal reacting with water vapor in the smog,

Londoners also spent those five days breathing air full of sulfuric acid.

That and the smoke contributed to respiratory and other health problems,

which killed around another eight thousand people in the following months.

Ultimately, roughly one in a thousand Londoners died because of The Great Smog.

Some people argued afterward that the spike in deaths was due to a flu epidemic, but scientists

have investigated that in all sorts of ways, and it's really unlikely that the flu could

have been anywhere near as devastating as the smog itself.

Four years later, Parliament finally passed a Clean Air Act that dictated

what kinds of fuels could be burned within the city.

It and other laws have helped rein in the smog problem in London.

But even today, London's air pollution lowers the life expectancy of a lot of people,

and is indirectly linked to tens of thousands of early deaths

every year throughout the United Kingdom.

Despite the Great Smog's devastation, it took a while

for other industrial powerhouses to take the hint.

New York City had a series of smogs in the 1960s that affected more than 16 million people,

and black, soot-filled rain coated Boston around the same time.

But eventually, lawmakers around the world stepped in.

Starting in the 1970s, laws got serious about limiting air pollution, forcing car companies

to make more efficient engines, and factories to produce fewer emissions.

Because it turns out, turning air into poison, is not a great idea.

Thank you for watching this episode of SciShow, you're great.

And a special thanks to all of our patrons on Patreon for making it happen!

If you'd like to help us make more episodes like this, so that everybody can have them,

regardless of whether they can pay, you can go to patreon.com/scishow,

and if you just want to support us by watching, please do that at youtube.com/scishow.

[♪ OUTRO]

For more infomation >> The Fog That Killed 12,000 People - Duration: 5:18.

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Captain America: Civil War (2016) CLIP | Sokovia Accords Debate 'Casualties of War' (Scene) | HD - Duration: 4:10.

Secretary Ross has a Congressional Medal of Honour...

which is one more than you have.

So let's say we agree to this thing.

How long is it gonna be before they LoJack us

like a bunch of common criminals?

117 countries want to sign this.

117, Sam, and you're just like, "No, that's cool. We got it."

How long are you going to play both sides?

I have an equation.

Oh, this will clear it up.

In the eight years since Mr Stark

announced himself as Iron Man...

the number of known enhanced persons has grown exponentially.

During the same period...

the number of potentially world-ending events

has risen at a commensurate rate.

Are you saying it's our fault?

I'm saying there may be a causality.

Our very strength invites challenge.

Challenge incites conflict.

And conflict...

breeds catastrophe.

Oversight...

Oversight is not an idea that can be dismissed out of hand.

Boom.

Tony.

You are being uncharacteristically non-hyperverbal.

It's because he's already made up his mind.

Boy, you know me so well.

Actually, I'm nursing an electromagnetic headache.

That's what's going on, Cap. It's just pain.

It's discomfort.

Who's putting coffee grounds in the disposal?

Am I running a bed and breakfast for a biker gang?

Oh, that's Charles Spencer, by the way.

He's a great kid.

Computer engineering degree, 3.6 GPA...

had a floor-level gig at Intel planned for the fall.

But first, he wanted to put a few miles on his soul...

before he parked it behind a desk. See the world.

Maybe be of service.

Charlie didn't want to go to Vegas or

Fort Lauderdale, which is what I would do.

He didn't go to Paris or Amsterdam, which sounds fun.

He decided to spend his summer

building sustainable housing for the poor.

Guess where. Sokovia.

He wanted to make a difference, I suppose.

We won't know because we dropped

a building on him while we were kicking ass.

There's no decision-making process here.

We need to be put in check!

Whatever form that takes, I'm game.

If we can't accept limitations,

if we're boundary-less...

we're no better than the bad guys.

Tony, someone dies on your watch, you don't give up.

Who said we're giving up?

We are if we're not taking responsibility for our actions.

This document just shifts the blame.

I'm sorry, Steve.

That is dangerously arrogant.

This is the United Nations we're talking about.

It's not the World Security Council,

it's not S.H.I.E.L.D., it's not HYDRA.

No, but it's run by people

with agendas, and agendas change.

That's good. That's why I'm here.

When I realised what my weapons were capable of in the wrong hands...

I shut it down and stopped manufacturing.

Tony, you chose to do that.

If we sign this, we surrender our right to choose.

What if this panel sends us somewhere we don't think we should go?

What if there is somewhere we need to go

and they don't let us?

We may not be perfect,

but the safest hands are still our own.

If we don't do this now,

it's gonna be done to us later.

That's the fact. That won't be pretty.

You're saying they'll come for me.

We would protect you.

Maybe Tony's right.

If we have one hand on the wheel,

we can still steer. If we take it off...

Aren't you the same woman who told the government

to kiss her ass a few years ago?

I'm just reading the terrain.

We have made some very public mistakes.

We need to win their trust back.

Focus up. I'm sorry. Did I just mishear you...

- or did you agree with me? - I want to take it back now.

No, you can't retract it.

Thank you. Unprecedented.

Okay. Case closed. I win.

I have to go.(CoolestClips4K)

For more infomation >> Captain America: Civil War (2016) CLIP | Sokovia Accords Debate 'Casualties of War' (Scene) | HD - Duration: 4:10.

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Bad Behavior That Got Actors Killed Off TV Shows - Duration: 6:40.

It's becoming more and more routine for hit television series to kill of its central stars,

either for shock value or simply to keep viewers guessing.

In the case of some small screen characters, it's the real-life actors who portray them

who've been responsible for their grisly ends.

Whether it's been bad behavior, co-star feuds, or simply creative differences, these stars

saw their on-screen alter egos bite the big one because of their behind-the-scenes behaviors.

Shannen Doherty

Since her Beverly Hills, 90210 days, Shannen Doherty hasn't exactly had a reputation for

being easy to work with.

After being fired from 90210 for alleged drama with castmates and crew members, Doherty also

had tension with her Charmed co-star, Alyssa Milano.

Their rumored feud likely led to Doherty's character, Prue, being killed off the show.

"We were on the air with her for three years, and there were definitely some rough days."

"so It was very much sort of like high school."

Charlie Sheen

Back when Charlie Sheen had tiger blood in his veins, he also had a whole lot of rage

towards Two and a Half Men creator Chuck Lorre.

Sheen lashed out at Lorre, calling his boss a "maggot" and allegedly making anti-semitic

remarks about him.

"Fill the plates with fools and clowns and nabobs."

Shortly after Sheen's insults hit headlines, Lorre ceased production on the eighth season

of the series.

In the Season 9 premiere, Lorre had Sheen's character, Charlie Harper, hit by a train.

"His body just exploded like a balloon full of meat."

He was replaced by Ashton Kutcher, which gave the actor plenty of room to shoot off his

so-called torpedo of truth elsewhere.

And then Lorre killed him again in the series finale, just for fun.

"It's called Charlie Sheen!"

"Carlos Estevez!"

T.R. Knight

Hell hath no fury like a scorned Shonda Rhimes.

Actor Isaiah Washington was fired from Grey's Anatomy in 2007 after he allegedly called

castmate T.R.

Knight a gay slur during a heated on-set argument.

And Katherine Heigl got written out because of her diva antics about the show's Emmy contention.

But that wasn't the end of it.

Knight essentially accused Rhimes of writing him off the show too, in part, because she

didn't want him to come out publicly—Rhimes denies that was the reason.

Before Knight's character, Dr. George O'Malley, was killed off the show, the actor said he'd

all but disappeared from the storyline anyway.

In fact, during the first nine episodes of Season 5, O'Malley was on screen a total of

only 48 minutes.

He told Entertainment Weekly,

"My five-year experience proved to me that I could not trust any answer that was given."

Instead of putting up a fight, Knight said he asked to leave the show, saying,

"There just comes a time when it's so clear that moving on is the best decision."

007's death was definitely a grim one after that.

Mischa Barton

When The O.C. first debuted to the small screen teen scene, Mischa Barton's turn as Marissa

Cooper made her an overnight A-lister.

But it didn't take long for her character to be killed off in a car crash in the third

season, and it was the actress' attitude that led to the demise.

Even her on-screen dad, Tate Donovan, had had enough of her diva behaviors on set.

"Definitely Mischa.

She was pretty… yeah."

Barton herself later told People Magazine of her notorious partying, "Almost overnight

it was like this switch had been turned on.

We thought, 'Work hard, play hard.'

It was a train I could not get off of … I was living a jet-set lifestyle.

There were a lot of enablers around, people to fly you around and to make it all possible."

Columbus Short

Scandal ousted a couple of its first season stars, for varying reasons, but Columbus Short's

character death ensured he'd never be welcomed back for a cameo reprisal like some of the

others.

Why?

Well, problems in his personal life cost him his role as Harrison Wright on the hit ABC

drama.

In February 2014, Short was arrested for allegedly physically attacking his then-wife in front

of their children, then again two weeks later when he allegedly shoved her during an argument.

Less than a month later in March 2014, he was accused of breaking a man's nose and leaving

him unconscious during a bar fight.

Short's wife filed for divorce and obtained a restraining order against the actor in April

2014 after he allegedly held a knife to her throat and threatened to kill her and himself.

That was the death knell of his time on the show, for sure.

Jay Thomas

You might remember Jay Thomas as hockey star Eddie LeBec on Cheers, and if so, you might

also remember that the character was killed off in a bizarre Zamboni accident -- which

was unusual for such a feel-good bar series.

"What's the excuse?"

"He's dead."

"Ha!

That old one."

His character was the onscreen husband of Rhea Perlman's beloved character, Carla Tortelli,

and Thomas was also a morning DJ at the time for a Los Angeles radio station.

Thomas reportedly fielded a caller's question on the air about what it was like working

on Cheers, and instead of simply being polite and professional and telling him it was an

amazing opportunity and a great job, Thomas complained about having to kiss Perlman … and

she heard the whole thing.

After that, he was done away with from the show, and unlike a lot of his former co-stars,

not everybody still knows his name.

Michelle Rodriguez and Cynthia Watros

More than a few Lost stars disappeared because of their bad behavior.

Michelle Rodriguez and Cynthia Watros, who respectively starred as Ana Lucia and Libby

on the series, were both arrested for DUI on the same night in December 2005.

Rodriguez pleaded guilty and served five days in jail and paid a $500 fine.

Watros who also pleaded guilty, faced a 90-day suspension of her driver's license, 14 hours

of rehabilitation, and $307 in fines.

Following their arrests, both Libby and Ana Lucia were killed off in the same episode.

Rodriguez and the writers both claimed her death was the plan all along, but it still

looks and sounds really fishy.

Thanks for watching!

Click the Looper icon to subscribe to our YouTube channel.

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

For more infomation >> Bad Behavior That Got Actors Killed Off TV Shows - Duration: 6:40.

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CBC Here & Now Monday July 17 2017 - Duration: 1:03:04.

For more infomation >> CBC Here & Now Monday July 17 2017 - Duration: 1:03:04.

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Minecraft Bedwars auf GommeHD LIVE - Duration: 47:32.

For more infomation >> Minecraft Bedwars auf GommeHD LIVE - Duration: 47:32.

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Adventure - Fonyód / Check This Out - Duration: 12:33.

So...

In our first video we talked about that the channel main contents is about sport and traveling

This is the first traveling video it's kinda like a test video

We came to the Balaton for 4 days

From Pécs to Kaposvár through Fonyódliget. We gonna go for a bike ride now

We gonna check out the mountain on Fonyód

and the vista of Badacsony

So let's have look! Bye

1. Chapter: The vista of Fonyód

*We going up on József street*

*The lookout of Sipos-hegy from below*

Here we are at the lookout of Sipos-hegy

We went up here with bicycles

The mountain is not that big but at the end there was a really big uphill where non of us could went up on it with bicycle

Now we gonna go Vár-hegy through Bélapáttelepre...

...not Bélapát, it's Bélatelep!

We go have a lunch

In the back you can see Badacsony and the Lake Balaton

That's it

We are at the port on Fonyód

I have to tell this story

I wanna say positiv things on this channel but i have to say this

Last year we decided to go Badacsony and we are going to go around the mountain with bicycle

and we wanted to go the other side with ferry

So we bought our ticket

after that we went to the line and they said we have to buy an other ticket for the bicycle

Okey no problem, we hurried back to buy the bicycle ticket

And we found out it cost more then the ticket i bought

Of course it's cheaper than the adult ticket

But it cost more than mine (Student ticket)

I got angry because of that

We got on the ferry there wasn't bike storage

And they told us to not put a bike here not put it there

All of that of course for 1500 HUF

And they was indignantly because we disturbing the others

All i can suggest is if you wanna go to Badacsony with bike not go with ferry

Go with car or go with bike..

...but not with this... never... never go with that

And of course this year it cost more

The bicycle ticket is more expensve then the student ticket

And the adult ticket is expensive too ( okey not that much)

This back and forth cost more then for me an Intercity ticket on Budapest

So never... not with this

Never!

2. Chapter: On the way to the Üvegtigris buffet

Hi, today we going to Székesfehérvár through Zsámbék via Tinnye to the Üvegtigris

We are near at Siófok

We had to go back to the quarters because we missed something important there

*Easy rider, brother*

Hi, we are at the Garancs lake

...which is at the edge of Tinnye and Pilicsaba

We came here from Fonyódliget

We wanted to see the place where they filmed the..

2 and a half movie because the third one was only half here

So..

There is a lot of people coming where we came at the right time

Who loves the Üvegtigris movies worth to come here once

The buffet is open

You can buy there

But not Lali who run the buffet i expected him to be here when we are here

Next to it they built a guesthouse and restaurant they named is Üvegtigris

It's a medium price range

It's not as expensive as a restaurant in Pest

If someone wanna eat they can do it

We are at the beach in Fonyódliget

We got out drink a bit

We love this place

The water cold so we not going in

What worth to look around here:

The Vár-hegy and Sipos-hegy lookouts at Fonyód

I suggest the Sipos-hegy because you get a unique lookout to the Lake Balaton

Of course the Vár-hegy lookout is higher but it's doesn't matter in this case

You have to pay a minimal price ticket

At the Sipos-hegyi Adult ticket cost 300 HUF, student ticket is 150 HUF. It's a good price.

At Balatonboglár worth to go to the sphere Lookout (Gömb lookout)

We didn't go there now but we was there 2 years ago

The ticket for adults is 250 HUF for students is 200 HUF

There is a bobsleigh track next to is worth to check out *http://balatonboglarbob.hu/arak*

Who wanna go out at night i suggest the Bastille Club at the Platán square

It's open all year on Saturday *https://www.facebook.com/clubbastille/*

They usually invite performers.We went there

The ticket cost 1000 Ft

They renovated the Palán square

it looks nice

There is a lot of restaurant and bar

The easiest way to get Fonyód from Budapest and Dunántúl with bus or train

In summer time you can come here from Szeged, Záhony Miskolc with train and Szeged, Békéscsabár with bus

But is you wanna go train or bus you have to prepare to wait a long time

With bike you can go around easily

Except is you wanna go up the mountain :D

You can go everywhere fast and easy with bike

The bicycle road is really good quality

If someone prefer a calm, quieter beach then i suggest the beach in Fonyódliget

The renovate the train track right now

... next week they gonna finish it(* they already did*) and now there are bus that repalce the train until they finish it

They not really look if you have a ticket

If there is not inspector the bus driver not care

We bought ticket when we got back from Balatonboglár

It's interesting that you had to pay the repalcement ticket too on replacement bus

Again is cost more than my basic ticket :D

That's what you get from the MÁV

But thats not surprise us

This 4 days cost us around 20-25000 Ft and we didn't have to pay for the accommodation

We ate everyday...

In restaurant and buffet

That was our first test video about traveling: Pécs - Fonyód (- Tinnye)

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Comment below the video if you have any question!

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Have a good holiday! Bya

No! No! AHHH

This shit is working! And the expensive shit too! :D

But a little shit is expensive too!

Look casually! Don't look in the camera!

For more infomation >> Adventure - Fonyód / Check This Out - Duration: 12:33.

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2 men shot, killed at Fort Pierce park - Duration: 2:20.

For more infomation >> 2 men shot, killed at Fort Pierce park - Duration: 2:20.

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YTP MINI : Ripoffs Are Coming - Duration: 0:17.

Well Who Do You Want

I Want A Hoter Girl

A Hoter Girl?

Like Who?

[Music]

Im

[Music]

[MORE Music]

For more infomation >> YTP MINI : Ripoffs Are Coming - Duration: 0:17.

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Learn Colors with BAD Baby Foot Spiderman Pool for Children Finger Family Song Nursery Rhymes toys - Duration: 12:13.

Learn Colors with BAD Baby Foot Spiderman Pool for Children Finger Family Song Nursery Rhymes toys

For more infomation >> Learn Colors with BAD Baby Foot Spiderman Pool for Children Finger Family Song Nursery Rhymes toys - Duration: 12:13.

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HIKING ABOVE THE GOLDEN TRIANGLE OF BOGOTA - Duration: 5:11.

For more infomation >> HIKING ABOVE THE GOLDEN TRIANGLE OF BOGOTA - Duration: 5:11.

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Storms produce funnel clouds - Duration: 1:23.

For more infomation >> Storms produce funnel clouds - Duration: 1:23.

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Just Do It! - Thank You Benny and Friends - Duration: 12:01.

Hi, there Steve Kaufman here today to do a video in response to the wonderful video that Benny the Irish Polyglot and his

Friendly Polyglots put together

To congratulate me on 10 years on YouTube I will put a link to the video up in the description box. I've even got my

jacket and tie on here because Benny has a

Bowtie in his and I feel I have to be a little formal in my response although

I have my golf shorts on because I'm going golfing

Thank you very much

I'm blown away by the video, and I always like to take a lesson from things that happen and somehow relate them to language learning

And so there are two things that sort of come out sort of strike me in this video first of all is

The sheer effort that went into putting the video together effort wit

creativity

cooperation

And it's something that I admire in Benny

And that is you know he has an attitude with which is just do it whether it be?

Just speak the language from day one or in the case of putting a video like this together. It's a lot of work

You can think it up. That's one thing, but to actually go ahead and do it and make it happen

That's another thing and all of the people who participated in this video

not only did they put a lot of thought and and probably several trial runs into

their participation, but these are also people like Benny who have put the effort into learning other languages many languages and

Again, it's not as some people like to say oh, well you have a talent for languages

It's because these people decided to just do it. I think that's a nike slogan or something

I hope I don't get into trouble for using it but any

of you out there who's ever thought of learning a language it starts by

Just doing it the second point that I want to make is that

The people who are on that video all of whom. I have met except for I think Michael campbell

they're

Representative of the Polyglot community people that I met in Montreal last year

In Bratislava recently that I'm going to meet again in Montreal on the 25th of August

these are the

Friendliest

supportive most

mutually encouraging group of people

I have come across and I have been in diplomatic circles as business circles, and these are the best people and

Any one of you who has not been to a polyglot conference or who hasn't dipped your toe in language learning I?

Suggest you get going you will never regret it and each language every language has its own reasons for being worthwhile

Learning, and I'm going to try with my you know. I have been away from some of these languages for a while

I'm Gonna try to

comment

To each of the participants in the language that they used and I will even just do it commit to providing

Subtitles which because I'm sometimes lazy

I don't always do when I make videos in other languages all right

It starts with Benny and of course he begins by Si speaking

I'm speaking English, and I've already mentioned Benny, but I'll get back to Benny in different languages

Then we had lynsey Lindsay is an enthusiastic person,

a person who can inspire others to learn languages. Thank you very much, Lindsay.

that was Lindsay, then if I remember correctly

Benny came back in sign language, I can't do sign language. I can just do hi Benny

That's about all I can do in sign language

I'm not sure. I'll ever learn sign language, but I respect you for having learned it then I think we had

Chris speaking Danish. I am not going to speak Danish, I understand Danish. Swedish is enough but thank you.

or however they say in Danish and

Chris is a great guy and

very more person and

I thank him for

apparently inspiring this video by discovering the fact that I had some kind of an old chair that I bought in a in a

Yes, it was a garage sale or something. I can't even remember

Or a secondhand store

Then we had Olly

I am in Swedish. You speak Cantonese very accurately, much better than me. When I speak Cantonese, my wife tells me off and say I am full of mistakes.

I am in Swedish. You speak Cantonese very accurately, much better than me. When I speak Cantonese, my wife tells me off and say I am full of mistakes.

That's Olly speaking his wonderful cantonese

You speak very well.Thank you.

Thank him very much for his kind words

then we had Benny.

I can't speak Portuguese like Benny. Benny speaks with a Brazilian accent that I can't imitate. But I can only say that am envious , not sure if I can say that, of the way Benny speaks Portuguese.

Then we had connor

Thank you for what you said about my clothes. We were together in Lviv and it was very interesting to be with in Lviv.

Thank you for what you said about my clothes. We were together in Lviv and it was very interesting to be with in Lviv.

Yan speaking dutch. I'm not even gonna attempt Dutch Yan is a great guy

I met him on several of these occasions. Look forward hopefully you see him in material

I'm not gonna attempt dutch, but I may learn dutch one day ah

Mike Not clear what you are saying . Do you mean that while there is a debate between speaking from day one and the input method, that there is a third way, the learning of whole sentences?

Mike Not clear what you are saying . Do you mean that while there is a debate between speaking from day one and the input method, that there is a third way, the learning of whole sentences?

Mike Not clear what you are saying . Do you mean that while there is a debate between speaking from day one and the input method, that there is a third way, the learning of whole sentences?

Mike Not clear what you are saying . Do you mean that while there is a debate between speaking from day one and the input method, that there is a third way, the learning of whole sentences?

I don't fully agree. I believe that the basic element in a language is the phrase. That is why I focus on learning phrases. But everyone has a favourite study method and that is not a problem.Thank you for your explanation.

I don't fully agree. I believe that the basic element in a language is the phrase. That is why I focus on learning phrases. But everyone has a favourite study method and that is not a problem.Thank you for your explanation.

I don't fully agree. I believe that the basic element in a language is the phrase. That is why I focus on learning phrases. But everyone has a favourite study method and that is not a problem.Thank you for your explanation.

I don't fully agree. I believe that the basic element in a language is the phrase. That is why I focus on learning phrases. But everyone has a favourite study method and that is not a problem.Thank you for your explanation.

I don't fully agree. I believe that the basic element in a language is the phrase. That is why I focus on learning phrases. But everyone has a favourite study method and that is not a problem.Thank you for your explanation.

I don't fully agree. I believe that the basic element in a language is the phrase. That is why I focus on learning phrases. But everyone has a favourite study method and that is not a problem.Thank you for your explanation.

I don't fully agree. I believe that the basic element in a language is the phrase. That is why I focus on learning phrases. But everyone has a favourite study method and that is not a problem.Thank you for your explanation.

I don't fully agree. I believe that the basic element in a language is the phrase. That is why I focus on learning phrases. But everyone has a favourite study method and that is not a problem.Thank you for your explanation.

that was in Mandarin for

Mike Campbell then we had

Benny. I would like to travel in Italy with Benny and eat spaghetti , and talk about all these things, like the learning of languages (etc. in Ukrainian) as they say in Ukrainian.

Benny. I would like to travel in Italy with Benny and eat spaghetti , and talk about all these things, like the learning of languages (etc. in Ukrainian) as they say in Ukrainian.

Benny. I would like to travel in Italy with Benny and eat spaghetti , and talk about all these things, like the learning of languages (etc. in Ukrainian) as they say in Ukrainian.

What else do we have a Lydia ? You know I had a great time in Slovakia

I had a wonderful time in Bratislava. There were many friendly people there.

I had a wonderful time in Bratislava. There were many friendly people there.

I had a wonderful time in Bratislava. There were many friendly people there.

I had a wonderful time in Bratislava. There were many friendly people there.

I had a wonderful time in Bratislava. There were many friendly people there.

Thank you for everything you did for the bratislava

Polyglot Gathering and then we had we have also Kirsten

Kerstin who spoke in German to present Jana and Judith. We hear Jana who spoke in Japanese and Judith who in Esperanto. I didn't understand anything.

Kerstin who spoke in German to present Jana and Judith. We hear Jana who spoke in Japanese and Judith who in Esperanto. I didn't understand anything.

Kerstin who spoke in German to present Jana and Judith. We hear Jana who spoke in Japanese and Judith who in Esperanto. I didn't understand anything.

Kerstin who spoke in German to present Jana and Judith. We hear Jana who spoke in Japanese and Judith who in Esperanto. I didn't understand anything.

But I understand Japanese

and therefore if anything I understood what Jana had to say, of course I agree with her since I am in favour of focusing on input, so I was able to make sense of what she had to say, since I understand Japanese, but...

and therefore if anything I understood what Jana had to say, of course I agree with her since I am in favour of focusing on input, so I was able to make sense of what she had to say, since I understand Japanese, but...

and therefore if anything I understood what Jana had to say, of course I agree with her since I am in favour of focusing on input, so I was able to make sense of what she had to say, since I understand Japanese, but...

and therefore if anything I understood what Jana had to say, of course I agree with her since I am in favour of focusing on input, so I was able to make sense of what she had to say, since I understand Japanese, but...

unfortunately, I don't speak Esperanto however I

Let us say I do recognize that esperanto is a wonderful language

to learn as a means of encouraging students to

Learn languages because it's easier to learn apparently and therefore once people achieve success in learning one language Esperanto that may very well

encourage them to learn other languages, so

There you have it my response, but beyond anything else. I want to thank the people who put this together I?

Very much appreciate it. And I look forward to seeing most of you in Montreal

August 25th to 27th. Thank you very much. I hope I didn't forget anyone or didn't forget any language bye for now

I forgot to speak French.

So here I am again in my golf clothes. I wasn't going to put my jacket back on.

A few days ago was the 14th of July and that reminded me to what extent I am thankful to France.

A few days ago was the 14th of July and that reminded me to what extent I am thankful to France.

First of all I was in France as a foreign student but I had a French government scholarship so it was the French taxpayers who paid for my stay in France.

First of all I was in France as a foreign student but I had a French government scholarship so it was the French taxpayers who paid for my stay in France.

First of all I was in France as a foreign student but I had a French government scholarship so it was the French taxpayers who paid for my stay in France.

First of all I was in France as a foreign student but I had a French government scholarship so it was the French taxpayers who paid for my stay in France.

French is the first language I learned to speak fluently, that is the second language which gave me the confidence to speak other languages. I know that I can learn.

French is the first language I learned to speak fluently, that is the second language which gave me the confidence to speak other languages. I know that I can learn.

Not only that, but, as is the case for all the languages we learn, I learned so much about French culture and civilization.

Not only that, but, as is the case for all the languages we learn, I learned so much about French culture and civilization.

This is a richness that I acquired via the language, which gives me the feeling of being, I don't know, how would I put it, to have a greater breadth in my life, in the things that I can think about, the way I can express myself, the people with whom I can speak, and even more than that.

This is a richness that I acquired via the language, which gives me the feeling of being, I don't know, how would I put it, to have a greater breadth in my life, in the things that I can think about, the way I can express myself, the people with whom I can speak, and even more than that.

This is a richness that I acquired via the language, which gives me the feeling of being, I don't know, how would I put it, to have a greater breadth in my life, in the things that I can think about, the way I can express myself, the people with whom I can speak, and even more than that.

This is a richness that I acquired via the language, which gives me the feeling of being, I don't know, how would I put it, to have a greater breadth in my life, in the things that I can think about, the way I can express myself, the people with whom I can speak, and even more than that.

This is a richness that I acquired via the language, which gives me the feeling of being, I don't know, how would I put it, to have a greater breadth in my life, in the things that I can think about, the way I can express myself, the people with whom I can speak, and even more than that.

This is a richness that I acquired via the language, which gives me the feeling of being, I don't know, how would I put it, to have a greater breadth in my life, in the things that I can think about, the way I can express myself, the people with whom I can speak, and even more than that.

This is an experience that I have repeated many times with other languages, but it began with French and therefore I want especially to

I'm sorry I forgot to speak French in the video, and I thank not only Benny and his friends, but I thank France for this possibility that was given to me more than 50 years ago. Thank you and good-bye.

I'm sorry I forgot to speak French in the video, and I thank not only Benny and his friends, but I thank France for this possibility that was given to me more than 50 years ago. Thank you and good-bye.

I'm sorry I forgot to speak French in the video, and I thank not only Benny and his friends, but I thank France for this possibility that was given to me more than 50 years ago. Thank you and good-bye.

Thank you and good-bye.

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