Chủ Nhật, 17 tháng 12, 2017

Waching daily Dec 17 2017

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Mostly i need to discussion about why youtube rewind indonesia is unavaible

But, In here i would like to

Give you guys something

To the point i need you guys

to remembered again, some incident

Rewind your mind

About... some topic in this video

and i need to you guys to a little contemplating

About this video

So..

Lets REWIND

For more infomation >> Rewind Your Mind. - Duration: 3:17.

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DESAFIO PERDER BARRIGA EM 20 DIAS! 4 Min Por Dia Exercícios Para Emagrecer e Perder Barriga Rápido - Duration: 3:59.

For more infomation >> DESAFIO PERDER BARRIGA EM 20 DIAS! 4 Min Por Dia Exercícios Para Emagrecer e Perder Barriga Rápido - Duration: 3:59.

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6 Stupid and Dangerous Things Scientists Did to Themselves - Duration: 10:24.

[♩ INTRO ]

Most of the time when we talk about science, there are a lot of careful methods and meticulous

calculations involved.

But occasionally, it can get a bit … unconventional.

Over the years, there have been some things done in the name of science that were pretty

outrageous, even if they taught us something along the way.

Some of them were just outrageously stupid.

Others were both stupid and really sad.

Here are six of them.

[1.

Isaac Newton]

Isaac Newton is best known for discovering gravity, but he also did a lot of research

in optics.

Around 1665, he began studying prisms and how they interact with light, and his experiments

were among the first to demonstrate that white light can be split up into a spectrum of colors.

But his curiosity about light and color wasn't limited to physics.

He was also interested in how the mind perceived the idea of color, and how physical sensations

in his eye could affect his perception.

So he stuck a bodkin -- aka a long thin needle -- almost directly into his eye.

Or more specifically, between his eyeball and the bone near the back of his eye socket.

Because that's totally a great idea.

He used the bodkin to poke different parts along his eyeball, and he noticed that different

colored spots would appear.

He also found that the colors changed depending on the pressure he applied and the amount

of light in the room.

For a less dangerous and terrifying experiment, you can see something similar if you rub your

eyes while they're closed.

We now know that what Newton experienced came from photoreceptors called cones, which are

specialized cells in your retina.

Cone cells contribute to your perception of color by responding to different wavelengths

of light.

By applying pressure to his eyeball, Newton was essentially stimulating these cells as

if they were being hit by light.

Which I'm sure was cool, but you'd think Newton would've realized that eyes are pretty

delicate, and that poking them with a giant needle would be risky.

He was okay, but that doesn't mean it was a smart thing to do.

[2.

Isaac Newton, AGAIN]

The bodkin incident wasn't the only time Newton was careless with his eyes.

He also performed an experiment where he was trying to evoke afterimages — those fuzzy

shapes or spots you see after looking at a bright light, like a camera flash.

Afterimages happen when the photoreceptor cells in your retina become overstimulated,

and remain active for a while even after the light is gone.

To recreate this effect, Newton decided to go into a dark room with a mirror and stare

at the reflection of the sun with his right eye.

When he looked away, he noticed a spot.

So he stared at the sun again.

And again.

Because sometimes you don't learn the first time.

After a while, he noticed that the image of the sun had made such a lasting impression

that he could even see the spot if he closed his right eye and opened his left one.

And he realized he might have damaged his eyes when he couldn't see anything but the

image of the sun wherever he looked.

So, he locked himself in a dark room for about three days until his vision started to return,

but it took several months to go back to normal.

Today, we know that Newton likely suffered from solar retinopathy, or damage to the retina

caused by bright light or ultraviolet rays from the sun.

That's why wearing protective eyewear while welding or watching a solar eclipse is so

important.

[3.

Sir Humphrey Davy ]

Speaking of precautions, if you've ever taken a science class, you probably know that

safety is the first thing you talk about when you step foot in a lab.

Well, unless it's 1799 and you're working with Sir Humphrey Davy.

Before Davy became one of the most famous figures in science history, he was a lab assistant

at the Pneumatic Institution in England.

And his work was focused on determining the medical uses for different gases.

He tested them by setting up reactions, then inhaling the unknown gas products and noting

their effects, without any idea of how dangerous the gases might be.

One gas, which Davy's boss had worked with before, had especially unusual effects.

It was nitrous oxide, and when Davy inhaled it, he felt like his senses were heightened,

and had the urge to laugh at everything.

We still don't totally understand how nitrous oxide works in our bodies, but we do know

that it can lead to euphoria.

It's also associated with reduced anxiety and a higher threshold for pain, which is

why some dentists use it.

Typically, dentists give patients a dose of half nitrous oxide and half oxygen at about

5 liters per minute.

But on one occasion, Davy inhaled about 15 liters of pure nitrous oxide in 7 minutes

to determine the effects of the dosage.

And, thankfully, didn't hurt himself.

Instead, he liked the experience so much that, after work hours, he encouraged his friends

to inhale it out of silk bags.

It became almost a social trend, used by poets and philosophers to heighten their senses

and supposedly bring them closer to their art.

Davy's risk-taking helped launch his fame as a chemist, and a few years later, he discovered

the elements sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, strontium, and barium.

Which is an impressively long list.

But he didn't do it by inhaling them.

Still, during his career, he did breathe in a lot more than the relatively harmless nitrous

oxide.

All the exposure to toxic gases probably took a toll on his health, and at just over the

age of 50, he quickly became ill and suffered a stroke and heart attack.

Davy had one of the most successful careers in science, but ultimately, the thing caused

him to rise to fame also likely caused his death.

[4.

Stubbins Ffirth]

Another risk-taker was Stubbins Ffirth, who arguably has one of the coolest names in science.

He also has one of the most disgusting stories, so … you've been warned.

In 1804, to obtain his medical degree, Ffirth put his life on the line to research yellow

fever.

It's a viral disease that can cause fever, muscle and joint pain, and jaundice — or

yellowing of the skin, which is where the name comes from.

It's a common virus in tropical areas, but in 1793, a large epidemic killed thousands

of people in Philadelphia.

The prominent doctors at the time hypothesized that the disease was due to rotten coffee

imports, brackish water, or something called miasma — by which they basically meant "bad

air."

But Ffirth wanted to figure out the true cause of the disease, and he suspected it had to

do with the patients ' black vomit.

And that's where it got nasty.

First, he fed the vomit to dogs.

They wouldn't get sick, so he injected it into the veins of both dogs and cats — but

there were no results there, either.

So he decided to expose himself to it.

Which was noble of him, I guess, but still very dumb.

He poured vomit into open cuts and into his eyes, boiled it and inhaled the gases, and

eventually just drank the stuff.

And when he still didn't get sick, he repeated the experiments using other bodily fluids

from infected patients.

Ultimately, despite all these dangerous experiments, he never got sick, so he concluded that yellow

fever couldn't be an infectious disease.

What Ffirth didn't know is that infectious diseases don't always pass from person to

person directly.

Because we've since learned that yellow fever is actually spread by mosquitos.

Thankfully, we also now have a vaccine and preventative measures to protect us from the

virus.

And it doesn't even involve drinking bodily fluids!

[5.

Louis Slotin]

Over a hundred years later, in the 1940s, scientists like Louis Slotin were still making

bad decisions — except this time, they involved nuclear weapons.

So the stakes were a little higher.

It was a few months after World War II ended, and the scientists who'd developed the first

two atomic bombs at the secret Los Alamos Laboratory in New Mexico were studying a third

nuclear core.

If the war had still been going, it would've been developed into another bomb.

But since the war was over, they were instead using it to study exactly what happens when

a nuclear reactor goes supercritical, and how to get it there.

Nuclear reactors work because elements like plutonium radiate neutrons.

And when there are enough free neutrons bouncing around in an enclosed space, it can create

a self-sustaining chain reaction.

If the reaction rate gets high enough, it becomes supercritical, and the plutonium atoms

split apart in fission reactions that release a ton of energy.

Slotin led a team that worked on the third plutonium core, trying to bring the reaction

as close to supercritical as possible so they could study it.

Their core was surrounded by two halves of a beryllium sphere, which was great at reflecting

neutrons and letting them bounce around.

To prevent the core from going supercritical, Slotin needed to keep the two halves of the

beryllium sphere separated, so the reaction couldn't get out of control.

Except, instead of using the pre-approved spacing blocks, Slotin just wedged a screwdriver

between the two halves.

It had worked a dozen times before, and he was the expert, so why not?

But Slotin should have realized how dangerous it was.

His predecessor, Harry Daghlian, had died from radiation poisoning just months earlier.

From the same plutonium core.

In Daghlian's case, he was conducting an experiment that used bricks to reflect the

neutrons.

At one point, a brick slipped out of his hands, making the reactor go supercritical.

He was able to knock off the brick and stop the reaction, but his exposure to the radiation

killed him after only 25 days.

Despite that accident, Slotin just kept using his screwdriver.

And this time, it didn't go so well.

As he slowly lowered the two halves closer and closer together, the screwdriver slipped.

The nuclear core immediately created a fission reaction, causing a radioactive flash of blue

light.

After only 9 days, Slotin died of severe radiation poisoning.

It's calculated that he was exposed to 1000 rads of radiation — more than twice the

lethal dose.

After his death, the core was dubbed the "demon core", and all hands-on criticality research

at Los Alamos was terminated.

[6.

Werner Forssmann]

In 1956, Werner Forssmann, André Cournand, and Dickinson Richards collectively won the

Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for their work on a technique known as heart catheterization.

But the research actually began almost 30 years earlier in 1929, when Forssmann broke

all the rules to prove a point.

Fresh out of medical school, he began a surgical residency, which allowed him to pursue one

of his big ideas.

He'd read about inserting catheters into the animals' hearts as a diagnostic technique

to measure the pressure in their hearts.

And he wondered if this was possible in humans, too.

His mentor supported his ideas, but like any reasonable person, encouraged him to do more

research to make sure the procedure was safe.

But Forssmann was convinced that it was doable, so he went ahead and tried it ... on himself.

He used a ureteral catheter — a long, skinny tube normally used to drain urine from bladders

— and inserted it into a major vein in his arm.

Then, he pushed the catheter about 65 centimeters up his vein towards his heart.

As if that wasn't intense enough, he casually walked through the hospital to the X-ray room

— with the catheter still in his arm! — and had a nurse help him use the X-ray to guide

the catheter into a chamber in his heart.

It was really risky, and Forssman got in trouble with the hospital for breaking the rules,

but it worked!

And over 10 years later, thanks to additional work by Cournand and Richards, heart catheterization

became accepted in the medical community.

In the end, it might have been worth it for Forssmann, since he was fine and the experiment

eventually led to a Nobel Prize.

But he risked both his career and his life in the process — and as scientists like

Davy and Slotin learned the hard way, ignoring safety can end in tragedy.

From their stories, we can learn how to become better scientists and curious thinkers — but

we can also learn to have more common sense than they did.

Because, sometimes, really smart people can make really bad decisions.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow, brought to you by our patrons on Patreon!

If you'd like to help us keep making episodes like this, you can to go patreon.com/scishow.

[♩OUTRO ]

For more infomation >> 6 Stupid and Dangerous Things Scientists Did to Themselves - Duration: 10:24.

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► Aventamos a una Vaca en Paracaídas - Duration: 3:57.

For more infomation >> ► Aventamos a una Vaca en Paracaídas - Duration: 3:57.

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What The Cast Of True Blood Looks Like Today - Duration: 4:53.

HBO's True Blood definitely had its ups and downs over its seven season run, but to the

show's fans, it will always be remembered for its campy and captivating portrayal of

supernatural Southern life.

Let's see what the cast of True Blood has been up to since the series finale.

Anna Paquin

Already an Oscar winner when she signed on to True Blood, Anna Paquin also received quite

a few awards while she was on the series — including a Golden Globe.

Since then, the actress voiced a character in Pixar's The Good Dinosaur, made a guest

appearance in the History Channel's Roots miniseries, and landed the lead role in the

CBC Television series Bellevue

Paquin also recently appeared in Netflix's Alias Grace, and will be seen in the highly

anticipated Amazon anthology series Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams.

Stephen Moyer

Paquin's husband Stephen Moyer has also kept busy since wrapping up True Blood, both onscreen

and off.

In 2015, he appeared in the Will Smith-led biopic Concussion, and that same year, he

played one of the leads in the FX series The Bastard Executioner.

Moyer took roles in the TV drama Safe House and the Fox miniseries Shots Fired before

signing on to lead the live-action X-Men series The Gifted.

Outside of his acting work, Moyer works with the Clare Foundation, which fights against

addiction, something he has struggled with in the past.

Sam Trammell

Outside of True Blood, Sam Trammell's recent roles include appearances in the John Travolta

crime drama I Am Wrath and the Daniel Radcliffe thriller Imperium.

Trammell also landed a role on another hit TV series, playing the handsy band partner

of Mandy Moore's Rebecca on NBC's hit series This Is Us.

Ryan Kwanten

Australian actor Ryan Kwanten captured viewers' hearts as Sookie's sweet but kind of dimwitted

brother Jason.

Since then, his notable appearances include parts in Reach Me, Kidnapping Mr. Heineken,

and Who Gets the Dog?

opposite Alicia Silverstone.

In 2018, Kwanten will star in the Crackle drama series The Oath.

Rutina Wesley

Since True Blood, Rutina Wesley has appeared on shows like Hannibal and Arrow, but her

biggest role was the lead character in the Ava DuVernay series Queen Sugar.

Wesley earned a NAACP Image Award nomination for outstanding actress in a drama series

for her work on the show.

Alexander Skarsgard

Unfortunately, Alexander Skarsgard was overlooked by the major TV awards for his enticing role

as Eric Northman on True Blood, but he made up for it with a terrifying, Emmy-winning

turn on the HBO miniseries Big Little Lies in 2017.

Before that, Skarsgard appeared in Zoolander 2, The Diary of a Teenage Girl, Hidden, and

the action comedy War on Everyone, before leading his own blockbuster with The Legend

of Tarzan in 2016.

Joe Manganiello

Since True Blood went off the air, Joe Manganiello has kept busy.

In 2015, he gifted us with a second Magic Mike appearance in Magic Mike XXL, and the

next year he popped up in an episode of Mom, as well as in Netflix's Pee-wee's Big Holiday.

In 2017, he fittingly voiced Hefty Smurf in Smurfs: The Lost Village.

However, what might be Manganiello's most exciting role yet has been long delayed.

The actor signed on to play the Batman villain Deathstroke, but the movie has been struck

by production issues and pushed back from its planned release date.

For now, fans can look forward to seeing Manganiello act opposite Dwayne Johnson in the upcoming

video game adaptation Rampage.

Deborah Ann Woll

Instantly recognizable to True Blood fans thanks to her fiery red hair, Deborah Ann

Woll actually lost the signature look for her most notable role since the HBO series.

In 2015, Woll was asked to go blonde after landing the lead part of Karen Page on Netflix's

flagship Marvel series Daredevil, a role which she has since reprised in The Defenders and

The Punisher.

Woll is also expanding her profile on the big screen, signing on to appear opposite

Logan Miller in the psychological thriller The Maze and opposite Martin Starr in the

indie Silver Lake.

Anna Camp

Outside of True Blood, Anna Camp has done very well for herself, appearing in TV shows

like Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Ground Floor, Good Girls Revolt, and Resident Advisors,

along with reprisals of her Pitch Perfect character in Pitch Perfect 2 and the upcoming

Pitch Perfect 3.

Camp has also made further outings into film, appearing in Brave New Jersey, Café Society,

and Caught.

Carrie Preston

True Blood's Carrie Preston is an Emmy winner, although it's not for her beloved role as

Arlene.

The win came for her guest starring role on The Good Wife, which she reprised in 2017

on the CBS All Access spin-off The Good Fight.

Preston, who has been married to Lost star Michael Emerson since 1998, has had a long

career in TV and film, with starring roles in shows like Person of Interest and Crowded.

Most recently, the actress landed the role of an ex-con in the TNT summer breakout Claws,

which is set to get a second season in 2018.

Thanks for watching!

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

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

For more infomation >> What The Cast Of True Blood Looks Like Today - Duration: 4:53.

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BREAKING! George Soros Promises 'NATIONWIDE RIOTS' If Trump Does It This Week! THIS IS HUGE! - Duration: 6:53.

BREAKING!

Soros Promises 'NATIONWIDE RIOTS' If Trump Does It This Week!

THIS IS HUGE!

Ever since Trump defeated Satanic Democrat Hillary Clinton in the election, the left

has been doing all they can to bring him down.

Democrats want the government to control our lives, and they want to take our hard-earned

money and give it to their constituents in return for their loyalty at the ballot box.

This is how they stay in power year after year.

So when Trump came along and wanted less government control, and for us to keep more of what we

earned, the Dems were having none of it.

Trump is systematically destroying a corrupted system that Democrats love, so it's no surprise

they are fighting back tooth & nail.

They are fighting back by concocting stories about collusion with Russia to undermine President

Trump by casting doubt on his legitimacy.

It has been almost a year since the investigations into collusion began, and to date, there is

absolutely ZERO evidence that any took place.

Like Jeff on Facebook

At the head of the investigation is special counsel Robert Mueller.

When Mueller was appointed to look into possible collusion on the part of the Trump campaign,

he immediately hired a team of investigators who had close ties to the Clinton crime family.

One top FBI agent who hates Trump had to be fired after it became known that he conspired

against him with others, and tainted the investigation.

Rumors are now swirling that President Trump will fire Mueller as it's become obvious

this is just a Democrat witch-hunt to take him down.

Enter head-of-the-snake, top Demoncrat socialist, George Soros.

Soros is well-known for funding anti-American organizations that send thugs & terrorists

into the streets to wreak havoc on our lives.

One such group is MoveOn.org.

This group is now threatening nationwide unrest of the type we see with Antifa & BLM riots

if President Trump does indeed sack special counsel Mueller.

Via YourNewsWire:

"George Soros has boasted about plans to roll out nationwide riots across the U.S.

if Mueller drops his Trump Russia probe.

The Soros funded radical left group MoveOn.org has warned it "will begin hours after news

breaks of a Mueller firing," according to a post on its website:

Donald Trump is publicly considering firing special counsel Robert Mueller, the person

leading the Department of Justice investigation of possible illegal actions by Donald Trump

and members of his presidential campaign, and the efforts to conceal those activities.

This would be a constitutional crisis for our country.

It would demand an immediate and unequivocal response to show that we will not tolerate

abuse of power from Donald Trump.

Our response in the minutes and hours following a power grab will dictate what happens next,

and whether Congress—the only body with the constitutional power and obligation to

rein Trump in from his rampage—will do anything to stand up to him.

That's why we're preparing to hold emergency "Nobody is Above the Law" rallies around

the country in the event they are needed.

Intellihub.com reports: Now the snowflakes at MoveOn.org are saying that it would be

a "constitutional crisis" if Trump were to fire Mueller and vow to hold emergency

"Nobody Is Above the Law" rallies in all 50 states.

The Alt-Left group's plan is as follows:

If Mueller is fired BEFORE 2 P.M. local time —> events will begin @ 5 P.M. local time

If Mueller is fired AFTER 2 P.M. local time —> events will begin @ noon local time the

following day."

President Trump is fully within his Constitutional rights to fire Mueller.

Many Republican lawmakers believe he should do just that as it's obvious this isn't

about justice, it's about taking out Trump because butthurt libs just can't get over

the fact that he won.

Indeed, just today it is being reported that FBI agents & DOJ officials might be investigated

by the House for anti-Trump bias.

Via NewsWeek:

"Top officials at the FBI and the U.S. Justice Department might be subpoenaed as part of

a House investigation into alleged agency bias against President Donald Trump.

A Republican on the House Judiciary Committee said Saturday that the panel's chairman,

Representative Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.), has vowed to subpoena several leading officials

as Trump and some GOP Congress members stoke speculation that intelligence and law enforcement

agencies are perpetuating partisan opposition against the Trump administration.

Republicans are apparently focused on deputy FBI director Andrew McCabe; FBI lawyer Lisa

Page; FBI counterintelligence agent Peter Strzok, who once worked on Special Counsel

Robert Mueller's team investigating the Trump campaign; and former associate deputy

attorney general Bruce Ohr and his wife Nellie, who were both tied to the infamous dossier

alleging collusion between Trump and the Russian government.

Speaking about the probe on Fox News, Representative Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) said he believes there

has been a full-blown campaign within Washington to derail Trump's presidency, which supposedly

including federal agencies.

"President Trump won in spite of the Republican establishment being against him, the Democrats

being against him, the elite media being against him and the FBI and Justice Department being

against him," Jordan said.

Jordan did not say when the subpoenas might come, and Goodlatte's office has not confirmed

the plans.

Jordan has been an outspoken critic of Mueller's investigation into the Trump campaign's

suspected Kremlin ties and has even called for a second special counsel to look into

Mueller's team for supposed bias.

Trump has long claimed that Mueller's probe and the congressional investigations into

Russian election interference are a partisan "witch hunt" aimed at toppling his presidency.

But the attacks have escalated in recent weeks as several developments have invited new scrutiny

of the people probing Trump.

Media reports revealed that Strzok was taken off Mueller's team over the summer after

Mueller learned of texts Strzok sent to Page during the 2016 campaign criticizing Trump

and his campaign.

Meanwhile, Fox News revealed Bruce Ohr was demoted over meetings he held last year with

Christopher Steele, the British spy who compiled the Trump dossier, and Glenn Simpson, founder

of the company that produced it, Fusion GPS.

Nellie Ohr reportedly worked for Fusion GPS during the campaign."

Florida Republican House member, Matt Gaetz who represents the 1st District wants Mueller

fired immediately.

If Soros & his minions want to riot in the streets in an attempt to take down President

Trump, we'll be out there making sure it doesn't happen.

What do you think about this?

Please share this news if you think Soros should be locked up for Treason!

Scroll down to Comment below and don't forget to subscribe Top Stories Today.

For more infomation >> BREAKING! George Soros Promises 'NATIONWIDE RIOTS' If Trump Does It This Week! THIS IS HUGE! - Duration: 6:53.

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6 Games To Make Putting Practice Better And More Enjoyable - Duration: 4:52.

Hello.

I'm Brian Fitzgerald The Golf Doctor.

And today we are going to look at trying to make our putting practice a bit more interesting

and a bit more fun.

We have got 6 games we are going to work on that's going to help us with our putting.

Stay tuned.

[MUSIC]

Okay so here is our first game.

I've put 2 alignment sticks down.

It's a left to right breaking putt.

So we try and get the kids hitting the balls between those sticks.

Ah the next game I have set up.

I have 3 cones.

One, two and three.

The aim is I have got 2 balls at each cone.

And we have to get balls inside the circle.

Six possible scores.

But we don't hit the same putt twice.

We have got to try and hit different putts.

We hit them alternatively, any order you like, random works really well.

The other gme I have got here is called North, South East and West by 2.

So they are basically 4 compass points.

A ball at each of those ball makers.

And we try and get 8 in a row.

The interesting thing here is we have got an uphill putt.

We have a down hill putt.

We have a right to left putt and a left to right putt.

Ah this is one of my favorite games.

Especially for kids.

And I've set this up for a junior clinic.

It starts in about 15 minutes.

And I have got a whole pile of balls here.

I have my string line there.

So we are trying to play a game called Leap Frog.

So we hit one ball that goes in front of the string.

The next ball has to go slightly further.

And the next one slightly further.

And we keep going and we count our score.

Until the ball goes either shorter.

That's when the game stops.

Or if you hit it past those witches hats down the end there.

Now this one here I've.

My last group of kids have set this up.

Slightly differently.

So this is a game called Killer.

And kids love it because it is basically I try and turn it into a computer game for them.

So we have 6 lives and we have 5 stages.

So we have got one ball there so we get one in.

And if we get it in.

We then keep our life And we move all of the balls back to the next marker and we try and

get one in from there.

If we miss one we lose a life.

We have got 6 lives and there are 5 markers here.

We have got 5 different stages or levels.

So we go from level 1 all the way up to level 5.

Hopefully you get to the last level.

And there is a little bit of a you have 1 life left so you can have a go at getting

it in.

And then we have got the last game I have set up which is the putting mirror.

And I have intentionally set this one up so that you can see there it's aiming slightly

right of the hole.

This is a right to left breaking putt.

And I get the ids to put a ball down in the middle of the mirror.

It's a bit hot today and it's a bit scratchy.

So we take our set up over the mirror.

We try and get our clubface nice and square.

And you can check your eye position in the reflection in the mirror.

Basically I want to see the eyes sort of down in this area.

I will try and do this left handed.

Which is going to be tricky.

I have got it in.

So there's 6 games we can play that will help improve our golf.

Every single one of those games has a purpose or a skill that we're trying to do.

Working on our alignment.

We are working on our distance control.

We are working on our fundamentals.

Of getting our feet parallel to the mirror.

Getting our eyes in the right position.

Learning to get the ball starting on the right line.

So every one of them has a different purpose.

So if you can introduce some of that type of practice into your putting.

One.

It is going to help you.

Two.

It's actually enjoyable.

So you don't spend too long.

Spend about 5 minutes on each skill.

And then you try and rotate through.

So I have got a half hour session with the kids.

Six kids in a class.

I normally time it so that they have a few minutes on each and then we rotate.

We know that kids have the attention span of that.

So we have got to keep them busy.

If you don't they start getting bored and that is when the problems start.

Thank you for letting me help you with your golf.

I'm Brian Fitzgerald The Golf Doctor.

And if you like my videos you can subscribe by clicking the round avatar down the bottom

there.

You can get further information from my FaceBook page or my Twitter feed.

You can also listen to my podcast at thegolfdoctor.com.au/podcasting

For more infomation >> 6 Games To Make Putting Practice Better And More Enjoyable - Duration: 4:52.

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Cómo hacer una lámpara circular reciclando botellas de plástico - Duration: 4:14.

This lamp is a version of one of the most visited videos of my channel.

More than two million visits and more than five thousand "likes"

You have encouraged me to continue sharing recycling projects

To make this lamp we will need about 65 plastic bottles

About 160 plastic flanges

And to make the holes

A drill

Or a welder

We will make h4 or 5 holes at the top of each bottle

In the previous version, the bottles were also joined with flanges, but without perforating the top

With the flanges, we will join the bottles in groups of three units

Passing the fastener through the holes

We will cut the rest of the flanges

When we have a lthe groups of bottles, we will join them

First in a row, and it will take a curved shape

Adding more bottles, it will be turn into a sphere.

Then, we will join and reinforce the necessary points from the inside

We will use LED lighting

We wil cut off the rest of the flanges

Thank you for the millions of visits to my channel!

And for the thousands of "likes"!

To know that there are so many people on the other side of my screen, encourages me to continue creating and sharing with you all my recycling projects

For more infomation >> Cómo hacer una lámpara circular reciclando botellas de plástico - Duration: 4:14.

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Nicki Minaj's Deleted 'Great Time to be a White Rapper' Instagram Post Sparks Controversy - Duration: 1:29.

Hey guys for Complex News, I'm Natasha Martinez.

Nicki Minaj posted a screen-grab of the iTunes top Hip-Hop/Rap songs on Saturday night.

At the top of the chart was Eminem's River featuring Ed Sheeran, Post Malone's Rockstar,

NF's Let You Down, G-Eazy's Him & I, and Lil Pump's Gucci Gang.

However the chart itself was not what got people talking, it was what Nicki Captioned.

In an Instagram post that has since been deleted Nicki wrote,

"It's a great time to be a white rapper in America huh?

These are the top 10 rap songs on US iTunes.

S/O to Em & Post.

Two of my faves.

Congrats to Em on his new album.

#Motorsport put dat thing in sport."

Since the post the chart has been updated but you can get at what Nicki is trying to

say.

Controversy over what Nicki was implying erupted and prompted her to change her caption.

"Update blocking all u sensitive dick riders.

It IS a great time to be a white rapper in America.

I wanna sign one for my new label.

U know anyone?

I spk my mthafkn mind n if u don't like it gtfo my page dick rida!

Y'all can never wait to ride the Queen dick!

Sensitive ass ig thugs.

Gtfoh."

Before the posts were deleted, Nicki captioned that she was posting "on new developments

within the music industry."

There's plenty of historical context and data to disprove the theory of white artists

gaining increased popularity in predominately black spaces.

The conversation isn't new, but Nicki's intentions are debatable since her posts have been deleted.

That's your news for now for more on this and the rest of today's stories subscribe

to Complex on YouTube.

For Complex News, I'm Natasha Martinez.

For more infomation >> Nicki Minaj's Deleted 'Great Time to be a White Rapper' Instagram Post Sparks Controversy - Duration: 1:29.

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Wooden Nativity Blocks - CCC Day #17 | SewBrenna - Duration: 4:04.

[bells jingling]

Merry Christmas! Today I'm going to show you how I made

my wooden Nativity block ornament. This is something that was on my list to show

you and then I went to a church event where we made something very similar. How

cool was that? So the supplies that you'll need for this are: twine, paint, I

used red, off-white, and green. A paintbrush, ball knobs work the best but

you can also just use wooden balls. You'll need three square wooden dowels.

This one is half an inch square and then it's one and 3/4 length long. These two

are both 3/4 inch wide and this one is 3 inches and this one is 3 and 3/4. You'll

probably want to use some sandpaper to help smooth your edges after they've

been cut. I'm using a plastic plate to use as a paint palette. To finish it all

off you'll probably need a glue gun. We're gonna go ahead and paint the

bodies of our little manger scene people. Joseph, Mary, and baby Jesus. Using green

for Joseph, red for Mary, and off-white for Jesus. Actually it's kind of like a

burgundy for Mary. So I'm actually gonna start with baby Jesus and I'm holding on

to the shorter ends just to make it easier to get the long ends. Go ahead and

give a good coat to your first person and then we're actually gonna wipe it

down with a paper towel to help it dry faster. Now we're just gonna crumple up a

little towel. I have it looped around one finger and I'm just gonna wipe it off.

You don't want to wipe all of it off, this is just to help it dry and it kind

of gives it a little bit of a distressed look also. Which I think is kind of cool.

Now I'm just gonna set this on the plate so that it will dry the rest of the way

and move on to Jesus's parents. We'll do the same technique for each of them. Now

we're going to paint their necks or the tops of their shirts, whatever you'd like

to call this shorter section, and then we'll also wipe that off just so that it

will dry faster. We're all finished with our paint so we're going to hot glue

their heads on.

Now since our Mary doesn't have any arms, poor thing, we are going to hot glue baby

Jesus to her.

Now all that's left is to clean up our hot glue and tie some twine around them.

I'm using about 23 inches of twine. I'm leaving it long enough to where we can

tie a bow in the front and then we're gonna wrap it around them a couple times.

So there is our finished little nativity scene. You could also make them into an

ornament or they can just sit and be a pretty decoration. I've decided that I

want to hang mine on my tree so I cut off an 11 inch piece of twine and I'm

going to tie a knot on the back and then we'll glue it to the back of Joseph.

Thank you so much for joining me today for another Christmas Crafts and Chats. I

hope I get to see you again tomorrow. Merry Christmas!

[music]

For more infomation >> Wooden Nativity Blocks - CCC Day #17 | SewBrenna - Duration: 4:04.

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Vlogmas 2017: Snow in London (with English subtitles) - Duration: 8:22.

For more infomation >> Vlogmas 2017: Snow in London (with English subtitles) - Duration: 8:22.

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[#16] Grand Conte de Noël - Alchimie à l'Herboristerie - Duration: 3:25.

For more infomation >> [#16] Grand Conte de Noël - Alchimie à l'Herboristerie - Duration: 3:25.

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Cake Coloring Pages for Kids - How to Draw Piece of Cake - Painting Birthday Cake for Kids - Duration: 10:13.

[Music]

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Magic

Coloring Pages

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