Chủ Nhật, 1 tháng 10, 2017

Waching daily Oct 1 2017

This was my New Balance Furon 3 Test

The boot has improved in all terms

The new soft surface has a positive influence on the touch and comfort

while the durability is still perfect

I would recommend this boot to every winger

This was my little test

If you enjoyed watching give this video a thumb up and subscribe to the channel to not miss any new video

Thanks to New Balance for the boots, I'm out, bye

For more infomation >> New Balance Furon 3.0 - Play Test/Review - "Der ultimative Schuhe für Angreifer?" - Duration: 3:24.

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

Der neue RIESEN ROBOTER in Tokyo | Mini Ausgabe #01 - Duration: 1:41.

Explain Japan in a few seconds.

In March 2017, Tokyo dismantled the gundam. It was the 18 meter high gundam statue on the island of odaiba, which is well known by anime fans.

In the last months, they build a new gundam and finally, you can see it.

The RX-0 Unicorn Gundam is 19,7 metre tall and 2 metre taller as the previous gundam.

Several times per day, the gundam change his form from "Destroy" to " Unicorn" mode.

The RX-0 gundam is shining in his popular colors. After a half year, tokyo got back his landmark.

For more infomation >> Der neue RIESEN ROBOTER in Tokyo | Mini Ausgabe #01 - Duration: 1:41.

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

Cheaters Never Prosper | Season 1 Episode 11 | 4k - Duration: 0:41.

Duel Me or Ill Shoot You

Sure Im up for a duel why not?

Cheaters Never Prosper!

{Gun Shot}

THIS IS SPARTAN!!!!

RAHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!

{Multiple Gun Shots}

Skeleton realizing he is not lonely

For more infomation >> Cheaters Never Prosper | Season 1 Episode 11 | 4k - Duration: 0:41.

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

We Are All Rebecca Bunch - Duration: 20:56.

Numb as they come, so scribble, scribble, on your pencil pad.

Rebecca, your doctor in New York is a quack.

He gave you a Band-Aid, not a cure.

My method would be to do some digging, and figure out what's really going on inside your mind.

And then we can discuss the appropriate medications.

So that's great, but I need to be better by Monday.

HARRISON: The question we may have, going forward,

is when Rebecca Bunch becomes more specific, does that contradict the mission of the show?

In high school, I had a conversation with a friend

and I can't remember what we were talking about,

but it must've been about gender relations somehow,

as often came up between two awkward teenagers finding their voices.

And we reached a moment where she said, "Look, at some point,

you can't know my experience, my life,"

and that's something that I feel like everybody hears or has to hear,

especially as the armchair liberals we become scrolling through Twitter.

It's a profound truth but one that I nonetheless wanted to not be true.

And maybe it was simply the ease with which I could reject a challenging statement

coming from a female person, which is again, our occasion to remember why it's important:

for men especially, we didn't all graduate with degrees for comparative studies

in the lives of literally everyone, so why do we behave as if we did?

Granted, recognizing when we must yield to another's authority

on a given subject can be difficult.

Which can then be our rationale for yielding by default, to make things less difficult.

But in this instance, I didn't.

And while I've grown since then, I partly measure the idealism in my liberal heart

by the dream that given enough engagement, enough conversation,

we can know somebody's life, at least to where we can make some kind of difference.

In essence, I dreamt of telepathy.

Because without this telepathy, how can we solve problems and make things better?

Doesn't this impact our ability to communicate?

Listen up, gang!

Be normal!

HARRISON: Rebecca Bunch is a character who sees the world in a way others don't.

She's always making these odd observational statements as non-sequiturs,

like we're hearing her thoughts, and nobody ever responds to them.

I'm gonna go kiss my boyfriend some more.

(pants swishing)

Sorry about the loudness of the pants.

I don't know why people fish in these, you'd think the sound would scare away the fish.

HARRISON: But we do, because we think they're funny,

those tiny moments between the actual dialogue.

We're the only ones who get it.

When we feel that Rebecca is a lonely character, we are alone with her.

Rebecca is a "crazy ex-girlfriend," which is itself a politically correct revision of "crazy girl,"

or just "crazy," an attempt to couch an irrational claim

in the collective understanding that women are from Venus,

and that label is the ultimate target of the show we talk about here.

The theory presented for how one undermines the term's power is by invitation.

The showrunners create an empathy exercise,

to where we see these tiny familiar things in her thoughts and behaviors,

all the way up to the big moments, and on this vertical journey of identification,

we are all Rebecca Bunch every step of the way.

(triumphant music playing)

Only two hours from the beach.

My goal isn't to make people like her.

Um… My goal is for you to understand where she's coming from,

and why she's doing what she's doing.

And why she's quote unquote "so broken inside,"

to quote the cartoon sun.

HARRISON: You type "crazy ex-girlfriend" into YouTube

and you may see the curious preponderance of this same wavy-haired woman,

but far more, you see what look to be found-footage horror short films,

and they're all incredibly popular.

What we might have here is confirmation,

that for the stray YouTube visitor who happens upon these videos,

he or she may believe in the term 'crazy ex-girlfriend,' even lightly, without much thought,

and then he or she watches a video and sees something like this, and thinks "indeed."

And I take issue with that "indeed."

You know, it's funny to think about this juxtaposition of the awful substance

with its very earnest criticism, in the form of music videos and behind-the-scenes interviews

of a television show called Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.

That elements from the show begin to encroach upon the original

is a kind of accidental analogue to the mission of retaking the term,

and so appropriate considering the show's origins can be traced back to YouTube.

Maybe those stray YouTube viewers don't think it's a big deal,

which is again, precisely why things are often a big deal;

the subtle potency of implicit bias or collective indifference

obviating the apparently enormous challenge of self-reflection.

But if language is to function, words must have meaning, and so we ask,

what is the effect this term has on people?

An author named Dylan writes this for the Radical Notion:

"Even in the break-ups I have experienced,

I am constantly examining my behavior towards my ex–

will he think I'm "crazy" if I check in on him?

Will he think I'm "crazy" if I still want to be friends and work through our challenges?

Will he think I'm "crazy" if we still keep in touch via social media?

Where is the line and who is responsible for drawing it?

I would argue that I have actually felt more insecure in the break-up stage of a relationship

than in the relationship itself

because I am fixating on not being labeled as the 'crazy ex-girlfriend.'"

For the woman in this situation, part of it is insecurity.

For the man in this situation, it's dehumanization, and this is a chicken and the egg.

An engine driving abuse in relationships or between heterosexual men and women generally

is the man's dehumanizing gaze, that he doesn't see her as entirely human,

granting license to a creative range of violences,

as we learn by the end of page one of the Everyday Sexism book by Laura Bates.

In military terms, labels and name-calling are part-and-parcel

to conditioning the human mind toward killing the enemy, which is not a human instinct,

and in fact wreaks havoc upon the psyche by way of post-traumatic stress disorder.

Killing is not natural, it is not human, and militaries more than anyone understand that well.

They train soldiers in units to develop camaraderie,

because while most people choose flight over fight if their own life is in danger,

they choose fight if somebody they love is in danger.

And on the opposite end, they dehumanize the enemy to make them easier to shoot at.

As former Army Captain and peace advocate Paul K. Chappell points out,

the Greeks called their enemies 'barbarians,'

and we've called our enemies kraus, japs, gooks, ragheads, and terrorists.

When we call somebody a "crazy ex-girlfriend,"

it's that same dehumanization principle to a different degree.

Women dismissed as such are suddenly vulnerable to certain things,

for example, I would imagine, voicelessness.

Crazy people are hard to take at their word.

And that too is a kind of violence, it's just a different kind.

So from Dylan's experience, we begin with the idea that every woman,

and particularly those in heterosexual relationships,

are at risk of being labeled as a "crazy ex-girlfriend,"

and we understand this implicitly because the work of labeling

is not so deliberative or even fully conscious.

Which is not to excuse it; it's just true that evil is so broad

as to encompass authored evil and unauthored evil.

The usage of the term can be so flip, like it doesn't matter.

But when we think to Rebecca's situation in Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,

after the breakup, Josh didn't see or hear from her for ten years,

and in fact got back with Valencia.

The term only comes into play when Rebecca leaves a job

that would've paid her half a million dollars a year and moves to a completely new place.

As Scott demonstrates, we might think somebody who did that

is indeed being a "crazy ex-girlfriend."

C-R-A-Z-Y.

I know how to spell, Scott.

She's a crazy ex-girlfriend.

HARRISON: And that's our oldest complication that may be confusing for us at times,

because the label is always used unfairly, but with Rebecca, that's a little bit more ambiguous.

And that's when we arrive on the element that becomes a recurring theme with the show,

which is something like phases of normalization.

Going in, we're meant to assume that the label is bullshit,

and so the first phase is accepting a measure of Rebecca's actions are unusual,

but persisting in the belief that the label is still bullshit.

Essentially, that a woman fresh out of a relationship is at no point a crazy ex,

and also that the same woman who does something unusual is not a crazy ex, either.

The difference between those two is why we have a TV show at all--

the former is something we should all accept,

but the latter requires those phases, it requires a process.

And that process is all about contextualizing Rebecca's unusual behavior.

Maybe she's doing these things for love, and that in addition opens up commentary

on the commerciality of love as packaged to small children.

And then, maybe it's about a childhood trauma, and so on.

The more we can explore, the more we can normalize,

and that can't happen if Rebecca is completely faultless, if she's been unfairly labeled,

by which the only conclusion we would draw

is that assumed understanding of 'this label is unfair.'

In this, what Rebecca Bunch suggests to me

is that the term 'crazy ex-girlfriend' is in itself kind of multidimensional,

something that would then take a multidimensional response to deconstruct and erase,

and that job is so hard sometimes that maybe we forget or lose track of how it's being done.

Really, the term should be 'irrational ex-girlfriend,' or 'disagreeable at-all behavior ex-girlfriend'

but then it co-opts that term 'crazy' which provides an additional complication.

And so, I think the reason why I might lose sight or conception

of how the show functions in response

is because it's addressing the 'irrational ex-girlfriend' myth

as well as our persistent use and abuse of the word 'crazy,'

and on top of that, discussing mental illness.

And I think structurally, the first half, seasons one and two,

primarily focus on the 'irrational' end of things,

while the second half will theoretically lean toward the mental illness.

So there it is again, that confusion of terms.

When it's laid out like that, we wonder: why discuss mental illness at all?

It would seem to have no place in a conversation that challenges

the myth of the irrational ex-girlfriend,

and challenges our misuse of the word 'crazy,' almost generally.

The answer to that myth is definitive, to simply say that women are not irrational,

because first of all, individuals of any gender do not represent the whole.

And the ex-girlfriend in your life, whether an ex or somebody you know,

has her reasons for doing whatever it is she's doing,

and it's possible those reasons have to do with surviving in a patriarchal society,

which would naturally have the inflection of counterculture, drawing resentment as a start.

Oh, it was nothing, it was just, like, a stupid clerical error.

But, um, yeah, no, I'm-I'm definitely… definitely going, sounds like a hoot.

Um, hey, oh, my gosh.

This just -- (clicks tongue) -- popped into my nogs.

Do you want to go together?

HARRISON: Along with the observational comedy,

another one of Rebecca's habits is to say "this just popped into my nogs,"

which she says when something totally did not just pop into her nogs.

She says it to Valencia in her quest to befriend her,

and to Josh in her quest to get him to sleep in her bed.

She almost says it to Silas but just does the hand gestures.

This is interesting because she knows she has to present herself a certain way,

that she must pass, appear spontaneous rather than whatever it is she is.

It's almost insidious, but it's a blend of manipulation and knowing shame.

She can't express the truth of herself because that would undermine her various missions,

and she can't express that truth because she knows it's unacceptable.

Do we do this, too?

Are there things we're ashamed of, that we would articulate with practiced deception?

I'm thinking about the different masks we wear depending on where we are in a given day,

or who we're talking to.

That's Rebecca on the outside,

and we also get a strong glimpse of what's going on inside via the musical interludes.

Of course her active imagination would manifest as musical numbers,

which have that performative aspect.

Always performing, Rebecca is an actor,

especially in season one, where she was balancing a lie about what brought her to the Cove.

And when you're an actor, you have an audience,

and sometimes she conjures people to perform to,

but is regardless always staring at her reflection,

shaping her identity based on how it's perceived by other people.

And as we learned in episode 115,

these numbers are also how Rebecca makes sense of the world.

It's an escape into a familiar language,

and it's also an escape to something that as she says, made her feel a mother's love.

The feeling of performing, even in the background, is emotional sustenance she's deprived of.

So what we find is that these numbers are actually a very deep insight on the character,

that for Rebecca, these are very personal.

Which also exists on the surface,

because they often feature or speak to very personal experiences,

the kinds of things we were led to believe are too everyday or undignified

to see reflected by television:

not having friends,

depression,

self-hatred,

meta-self-hatred,

despair,

fantasizing about being cool,

being haunted by memories,

having a breakdown,

having friends,

being petty,

and being desperate for self-assurance.

There's a good chance we can identify with at least one of these, because that's by design.

Let's take a closer look at one of these.

"Research Me Obsessively" from episode 207

has Rebecca and Valencia Internet-stalking Josh's new girlfriend

for three days straight with an almost sexual intensity.

That's something we might have thought of as crazy in the way we'd throw that term around.

At first glance, it is not rational or healthy behavior,

any more than what's displayed those Blair Witches of YouTube.

So part one is the deconstruction, which is providing context for the actions in question.

In this case, "Research Me Obsessively" is quintessential

for when people praise the show for being all-too relatable.

The number appeals to a near-universal experience, really that impulse,

and one that's specifically kind of shameful, which we usually end up regretting later.

Rebecca and Valencia are drawn in, essentially seduced by an online persona,

and of course, it's really about feelings of rejection and inferiority.

"How did they get here, why are they doing this?"

These are the questions we would ask about somebody embodying "crazy" behavior,

and they're answered here.

Rebecca and Valencia's motives are presented, and again,

what's so important is that it's logical, not necessarily likable.

That's a standard for normalization, which is what may lead to likable or to sympathy later on--

understanding presages empathy.

Of course, there are the universal elements and the specific.

For example, about three-quarters of the audience saw "The Sexy Getting Ready Song"

and most likely identified with it, where the remaining quarter, including myself,

was as horrified as Nipsey Hussle here.

So that's where "We Tapped that Ass" or "You Go First" come in for me.

I identify with those, and the moments I don't identify with don't nullify my identification,

because I know I'm not this character.

What's with this one?

She sings to herself all day.

No one knows why.

HARRISON: After the season two finale's big reveal, still Rebecca is not irrational,

or evil and untrustworthy like the Sharon Stone she imitates on a poster for season three.

No, it's that she suffers from anxiety and depression as we see throughout,

and she also has an active imagination and hallucinatory episodes,

that kind of dissociation which provides the rationale for endangering herself and others.

It is not a justification or an excuse or anything, but a reason why, and it's something we see.

And so that reason, though its substance is as of yet unknown,

no matter what it turns out to be, it stands as a replacement to a narrative ascribed for her,

by the patriarchal society that isn't necessarily a physical infrastructure (though it is)

but whose blueprint exists to varying degrees in the hearts of each of us.

Where we might be quick to label Rebecca, or anybody like her,

we have something that blocks that label from shaping her narrative.

What's so remarkable is that we will eventually perceive episode 204 in three different ways,

specifically in the relationship between "We Tapped that Ass"

and Rebecca burning down her apartment.

First, it's the surface values.

It's an incredibly entertaining dance number and a really funny song.

And the comedy is augmented by Rebecca's reaction -- we feel that self-loathing,

and so it all makes sense she's so upset by the number

that she accidentally burns her apartment down.

Like with "Research Me Obsessively," we can accept this

because of the immediately-provided context.

Second, after the season two finale, we go back to this moment armed with the knowledge

that burning down her first West Covina home wasn't an isolated incident.

She clearly isn't just a girl in love; she has underlying issues to address.

And what this changes is the nature of her memory spirits,

that they aren't figurative storytelling tools or instances of magical realism,

but hallucinations.

But in fact, it doesn't really change anything at all.

It's still "We Tapped that Ass" that primarily motivates her to this extreme action,

we just understand why she takes the extreme action,

where we most likely wouldn't do the same.

And each new perception meaningfully builds on the last.

We take from the first experience the power of its comedy,

and I think it's okay that the sequence is still funny because that's our passport to identification.

And the third perception is essentially the same as the second,

but with an even better understanding of the situation.

As it's been teased, we will know Rebecca's psychiatric diagnosis in season three,

as Rachel Bloom and Aline Brosh McKenna have spoken to a therapist to figure it out.

And so this is a discretely new step despite that what's important is that, again,

it doesn't change anything.

That you the viewer have understood Rebecca's pyromania twice over in different contexts.

Adding the third, with specific real-world analogues, should not change that understanding.

And that's the mission of the show, as far as I see it.

Phases of normalization, a little bit more discovery each time,

testing your tolerance while also training it.

When I rewatched episode 204 most recently,

I had this realization armed with that deeper knowledge of Rebecca, and watching her face,

that she reminds me of people from my life,

people who seemed to have had problems under the surface.

And the number one characteristic about these people,

which they didn't choose for themselves, is they're very easy to ignore and avoid.

And the older the become, the more I think back

to those missed opportunities to reach out to someone.

And maybe it's unfortunate that I need a fictional character as an intermediary for real people.

But works of art are the abstracted medium for communication between artist and audience.

Rebecca Bunch is not a perfect one-to-one to Rachel Bloom,

but she represents a truth that Aline Brosh McKenna and Rachel Bloom wanted to express.

Life is short and busy, and for the Americans watching, we're apathetic.

We can't depend on school to teach us

about the nature and existence of every perspective on Earth,

despite that each of those perspectives should be considered.

So that's where art comes in,

with the power to connect our emotional response to an effective narrative

with an important and suddenly compelling subject matter.

And in this case, that subject matter is mental illness.

As this Everyday Feminism article points out,

one out of every four adults and one out of every five teenagers in the United States

will experience mental illness in a given year, and that's tens of millions of people.

There is such a stigma around mental illness to where people don't seek help,

and if their symptoms were more normalized in society, maybe they would.

Also, maybe if the word 'crazy' wasn't used so flippantly,

as symptomatic of a general insensitivity when it comes to those with mental illness.

And a lot of it is a matter of education, and it's hard to educate oneself in a vacuum.

So we go to school and we experience works of art, we talk to people,

we research as those armchair liberals scrolling through Twitter.

We're faced with an overabundance of information on any given subject,

and I think that to optimally navigate that abundance, to stay focused,

we have to begin with the right motivation.

In this case, it behooves those of us without mental illness to learn enough about it

to at least not be insensitive about it, even accidentally.

And what the fictional Rebecca Bunch does is provide us that emotional motivation.

She helps us understand why it's important, and she connects us to the other in question.

When we arrive upon Rebecca's diagnosis, we'll be arriving there with her,

having witnessed and understood her various motivations through the first two seasons.

But as the character narrows with specificity,

moving from the universals of "The Sexy Getting Ready Song" and "Research Me Obsessively"

to stays at psychiatric facilities and arson, we are in one sense moving away from her.

So I think that there's a line, where identification and empathy stop and only empathy persists.

But the equation still holds true: the focus of the show is threefold,

being the "irrational" + the "crazy" pejorative + mental illness,

the problem area being the mental illness,

and the mental illness and the irrational parts of this equation interact

to solve the "crazy" pejorative in a definitive way.

And because of that interaction, the arrival we make,

I don't see this divergence of identity and empathy as a problem.

In fact, it's probably better described as an alley-oop, and it feels, actually, all too natural,

and then, embarrassingly, maybe obvious.

When the mission of the show is to make you the viewer feel solidarity,

feel less alone because somebody else has had similar experiences,

you're then vulnerable to the next thought,

feeling that solidarity and then realizing so many others could be just like this, and just like you.

Ultimately, that "you are not alone" is a two-way street.

I have to level that perfect one-to-one telepathy may never happen.

Until it literally happens when Samsung puts a phone in our brains, but even then,

we may never fully know the experience of someone else, the experience of an other.

But when we try, when we find an inroad to identify with an other,

when we work the muscle of empathy and humanize instead of dehumanize,

the results can be surprising, and depending on you and the Rebeccas in your life,

could be the difference for somebody in need.

Somebody who, like Rebecca Bunch, can pass pretty damn well,

for whom things just pop into her nogs.

We are all Rebecca Bunch until the moment we are not,

and that line is different for each viewer,

but what that identity does is make us care,

and caring is remarkably essential to the functioning of a society.

Okay, so just-just imagine I'm, like, floating, like, on a pillow of magic.

And there are men with trumpets lining the walkway.

Wow.

It's the movie Slumbered. It's fine.

For more infomation >> We Are All Rebecca Bunch - Duration: 20:56.

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

A SUMMER IN BERLIN - ANOTHER GERMAN SHORT STORY - Duration: 5:28.

For more infomation >> A SUMMER IN BERLIN - ANOTHER GERMAN SHORT STORY - Duration: 5:28.

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

Смешные еврейские анекдоты из Одессы! Анекдот про женщин! - Duration: 0:39.

For more infomation >> Смешные еврейские анекдоты из Одессы! Анекдот про женщин! - Duration: 0:39.

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

GALATASARAY 3-2 KARABÜK | ERSİN DÜZEN İLE STADYUM #1 | MUSTAFA DENİZLİ & ALİ GÜLTİKEN | Youtube - Duration: 10:42.

For more infomation >> GALATASARAY 3-2 KARABÜK | ERSİN DÜZEN İLE STADYUM #1 | MUSTAFA DENİZLİ & ALİ GÜLTİKEN | Youtube - Duration: 10:42.

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

✔ Out Of Curiosity ! - Από περιέργεια ! - Duration: 5:58.

During my descent , i identified a white grouper...

I assume that the fish will allow me to approach it so i change my course towards it .

It went inside so i decide to move a little more to the left , assuming that it's curiosity will force it out of the cave...

My assumption was right...!!

I am checking the seabed carefully in order to spot a fair sized fish...

I didn't see something interesting so i decide to remain there for some seconds in order to give it a chance....

Since nothing better , i will try to shoot this big brown meagre ....

While i am moving , it also moves ! When i decide to stop , it will also stop out of curiosity to check me out !!!

At this little depth , with turbulent conditions on the surface , all the vibrations that my body produces , are covered...

And so....these fish will approach fearlessly in order to satisfy their curiosity !!

For more infomation >> ✔ Out Of Curiosity ! - Από περιέργεια ! - Duration: 5:58.

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

Pusnakts šovs septiņos - 4. raidījuma kopsavilkums - Duration: 5:29.

For more infomation >> Pusnakts šovs septiņos - 4. raidījuma kopsavilkums - Duration: 5:29.

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

#53 the Japanese baby and Golden retriever are so cute! - Duration: 0:50.

For more infomation >> #53 the Japanese baby and Golden retriever are so cute! - Duration: 0:50.

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

【マインクラフト】クリエで世界を破滅させようw - Duration: 1:25:15.

For more infomation >> 【マインクラフト】クリエで世界を破滅させようw - Duration: 1:25:15.

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

GALATASARAY | 1 EKİM 2017 | SABAH SPORU GS GÜNDEMİ | SETENAY CANKAT & İLKER DURALI | Youtube - Duration: 10:55.

For more infomation >> GALATASARAY | 1 EKİM 2017 | SABAH SPORU GS GÜNDEMİ | SETENAY CANKAT & İLKER DURALI | Youtube - Duration: 10:55.

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

Como Pintar - Empire of Men: UBERMAN - How to paint (ENG-Sub) - Duration: 21:21.

Greetings Wargamers & Players, Welcome to MiniatureWar I'm Meinkopt and in this painting guide we shall see how to give color in a easy and quick way to the Empire of Men Big Guys.

In this miniature it takes parts from the first and second World Wars, so we're going to give some tones of color according to the style that represents.

We start with the grey metal tones. For this we take Leadbelcher and mix it with Abaddon Black in a proportion of 50/50 to get a darker tone for the layer base. This will help that the later effects will create a more worn out effect for the final result.

Once the layer base it's applied and dried, we give it a wash with Nuln Oil.

Once the tint it's dried, we proceed to create a worn out effect, for this we shall take some Ironbreaker Armor, and with this tone we can give strokes with the technique of dry brush or like the case of this tutorial, give soft strokes with the diluted paint. The strokes shall be random and not covering completely, a small flat point brush will help us with this process.

Now, we give a layer of Agrax Earthshade, this will help to create a patina of extra dirt that will help to create a more interesting effect in the metal, leaving a mor off tone and with an appearance of used.

With the shade dried, we repeat the last process, give soft strokes or dried brush, but in this time with less quantity and the color should be Runefang Steel.

To create a burn effect in the shotgun mouth, we take a little of Leather Brown from Army Painter and give soft strokes creating the effect of difuminated until the middle of the barrel. Then with black, we repeat the process but this time only in the point of the barrel.

For the hatch gate that our friend has as a shield, we use a classic tone of the ships and submarines from the first and second World War. We use a sepia tone and for this we use a blend of Steel Legion Drab and Zandri Dust in a proportion of 60/40 for the layer base.

Once the layer base it's applied, we give a generous wash with Agrax Earthshade to stand out the details and homogenize the color.

Now we take the base tone and give very soft strokes with a something big flat point brush. This will create an effect of scratch. After some strokes with the base tone, we give more pure Zandri Dust.

If we want to add more worn out to the gate and stand out the damage that has, we take a small sponge and with it we take a little of Zandri Dust mixed with Ushabti Bone in equal parts.

Drain the excess of paint and give some random dots with the sponge.

To create the effect that the paint it's come out, in the more vivid zones we can paint with a little of Rinox Hide.

For the crystal of the hatch, we can create an effect of dull really fast, for this we paint the crystal with con Kantor Blue as a layer base.

With layer applied, we give a wash with Drakenhof Nightshade.

Now with diluted paint, we first apply Kantor Blue to the inferior part and until we get to half the crystal, then we're going to be mixing it with Caledor Sky, to create an effect of difuminated in the superior part of the crystal.

For the raincoat, we take a earthy tone mix with Steel Legion Drab and Rinox Hide in equal parts and use it as a layer base.

Once the layer it's dried, we proceed to give a wash with Agrax Earthshade.

Serving it as a layer base, we start to give light and form the raincoat, to lift the color, we add more Steel Legion Drab to the base blend.

For the detail in the ledge of the raincoat, we use a golden yellow tone without any metal. For this we mix Zamesi Desert with Mourfang Brown in a proportion of 80/20.

With this tone, we paint all the ledge, then we add more Zamesi Desert to the mix and give it another stroke but this time leaving the last tone near the interior part of the raincoat without touching it.

To clear more the color and apply it only in the more exposed zones to the light, we're adding Ushabti Bone to the mix, this will leave it with a more clear tone.

This same process will be done with the hair of our friend as we will see later.

For the boots and straps, we use Abaddon Black for the layer base and then mix it with Celestra Grey little by little to create a mild effect of light, for the edges we apply pure Celestra Grey.

For the reds, like the hammer's handle or the cartridges of the shotgun, we give for the base Khorne Red, then we mix it with Mephistone Red to give the first light and later we give Mephistone Red as final light.

For the skin, we mix Doombull Brown with Cadian Fleshtone in equal parts.

This will serve us as a layer base and create the depth so little by little with diluted paint and a detail brush, we can create volume and light.

To create light, we add more Cadian Fleshtone to the base blend, to create the points of final lights, we add Ushabti Bone.

And with steps, we quickly have finished this fantastic miniature from Empire of Men, leaving it ready to destroy it's enemies.

Hope that you liked this new painting guide, give it a like if you do, so it will get far, suscribe if you're not to keep up to date with our news and you can follow us in Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. Thank you very much for watching and till next time!

For more infomation >> Como Pintar - Empire of Men: UBERMAN - How to paint (ENG-Sub) - Duration: 21:21.

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

Godzilla Vs Dinosaur Wild Animals Fight Short Film For Kids 3D Godzilla Attack Dinosaur For Children - Duration: 15:20.

Godzilla Vs Dinosaur Wild Animals Fight Short Film For Kids 3D Godzilla Attack Dinosaur For Children

For more infomation >> Godzilla Vs Dinosaur Wild Animals Fight Short Film For Kids 3D Godzilla Attack Dinosaur For Children - Duration: 15:20.

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

Let's fight together with PCOD| A big weight loss MOTIVATIONAL story| FATTOFAB| INTERNATIONAL CLIENT - Duration: 8:24.

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

INSTAGRAM ID:- Suman_sunshine

For more infomation >> Let's fight together with PCOD| A big weight loss MOTIVATIONAL story| FATTOFAB| INTERNATIONAL CLIENT - Duration: 8:24.

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

GALATASARAY 3-2 KARABÜK | ORTA NOKTA MAÇ SONU YORUMLARI #2 | NİHAT KAHVECİ | Youtube - Duration: 21:45.

For more infomation >> GALATASARAY 3-2 KARABÜK | ORTA NOKTA MAÇ SONU YORUMLARI #2 | NİHAT KAHVECİ | Youtube - Duration: 21:45.

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

Nederland vs USA **grootste verschillen!** - Duration: 2:49.

Mother Trucker, Shut the front door!

Hey everybody, this is Egbert. Thanks for watching my newest vlog. I am Originally from the Netherlands. Lived there for 26 years.

I moved 4 years ago from the Netherlands to the USA.

The first day that I arrived I already saw a lot of differences between the Dutch and US culture.

I like to talk about that today. One of the first things I noticed was the way of greeting eachother.

In the Netherlands you give somebody 3 kisses...

But in the USA, people give eachother hugs.

You are my sweetest buddy!

Second thing I noticed in the USA is the hospitality in bars and restaurants.

In the Netherlands you feel like an intruder sometimes. Here in the USA they are very welcoming.

They will assign you to a table, they will give you refills when you order soda.

They try to serve you as good as possible to receive a decent tip since their salary is very low.

In the Netherlands they just round up the cost.

In the USA you tip between the 15 and 20 percent.

Difference number 3 is swearing. I noticed that it's rare when an American swears.

Sometimes you will hear it, but that's very rare.

It is a lot more common in the Netherlands to use swear words in sentences.

Especially the words *bleep* and *bleep*.

Americans do swear, but they use alternative swear words.

Example: "Shut the front door" or "Mother Trucker"

That means: *bleep* and *bleep*.

Difference number 4 is internet banking. I think this is one of the most bizar things.

You have to buy checks to send money to somebody else. This is what they did a long time ago at the Netherlands. Very old fashioned.

There is a possibility to do internet banking at the USA, but the bank will still send a check to the other person.

So it will never go fully online.

At last, this is an interesting difference. A lot of people (outside the USA) think that Americans are superficially.

Especially when they give compliments. I also thought, are these compliments real?

If they give a compliment, it is a real compliment.

Yes, they are sometimes theatrical while they give compliments, but they mean what they say.

But there is not a lot of criticism.

Dutch people give compliments, but they also like to give some criticism. Criticism is more rare in the USA.

Did you think this was interesting? Do you have more examples of differences between the Netherlands and the USA?

Let me know in the comments. Thumbs up & subscribe to my channel. Thank you so much!

For more infomation >> Nederland vs USA **grootste verschillen!** - Duration: 2:49.

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

Learn Colors with Paw Patrol Chase Cartoon WOODEN FACE HAMMER XYLOPHONE Soccer Ball for Kids - Duration: 4:21.

Subscribe now and start Enjoy & Have Fun!

Subscribe now and start Enjoy & Have Fun!

Subscribe now and start Enjoy & Have Fun!

For more infomation >> Learn Colors with Paw Patrol Chase Cartoon WOODEN FACE HAMMER XYLOPHONE Soccer Ball for Kids - Duration: 4:21.

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

Коса Бердянска 30.09.2017 Азовское море - Duration: 2:47.

★ Делитесь этим видео, оставляйте комментарии! ★ Thanks for da like ★ And Comments !

★ Пишите комментарии, чтобы не пропустить новое видео! ★ Write comments to avoid missing a new video!

For more infomation >> Коса Бердянска 30.09.2017 Азовское море - Duration: 2:47.

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

PULAU ANAK KARAS - Camping and Fishing Trip - Duration: 13:20.

We have arrive at Sembulang port

we want to go on a camping and fishing trip at Karas Island

from here it will take 30 minutes to the island

from Batam to Sembulang took us one hour and thirty minute

hungry sir?

hungry, took us a long time to get here

this place is amazing!

we are heading out for an afternoon fishing

so we are done fishing for the day

this is mr.Bobby our guide

now we are cooking the fishes

trying my fish that I caught earlier

taste pretty good

good morning

we had our breakfast

we are planning to head out again, before we come back home this afternoon

so that is it our camping and fishing trip to Karas Island

This was a fun collaboration between Teman Mancing Batam

seniberjalan.com

and Berjalan Tour

Thanks to seniberjalan.com who put the story of this island so we can found out about it

if you want to check out unique places to visit in Indonesia go check out their website

link in the description

also Berjalan Tour

if you want to travel and know more about Riau Islands ge check them out

also thanks to Bobby our guide on this trip

Thank you our host Pak Bujang and family who made us fell right at home on this Island

Thanks for watching! See you guys on the next adventure

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét