Thứ Năm, 22 tháng 2, 2018

Waching daily Feb 22 2018

My son hello follow my guidance I brought you in this season for

everything I do you know there is a reason here's the truth listen closely

you're my son I'll never abandon you what I'm about to tell you is only true

so here's why I brought you here you're precious

let me make that clear I only ever wanted you to know that it's very simple

I love you I want you truly I want all of you I was there in your dark nights I

have always been your nightlight I am your light your reason for being

it's easy open your eyes and you'll start seeing don't run away my dear no

stop fleeing I'm here you know what I'll make this simple know that everything

you do makes waves and yes all it took was that ripple that you made the day

that you said "I don't care what people think I don't care what people do. My

actions don't affect other people," But son you know that's not true. "It's yours

now God my life is in your hands yeah everything I do I give you all my plans

I want to live for you." Son you say your life is in my hands giving up all your

pursuits and everything you planned in if this is true I'm gonna ask you to do

one thing and when you do I'll know that you mean it your life fully abandoned

no it won't be easy it won't be just a hand in look up I brought you here to

ask for your obedience you can't understand everything I tell

you until you're fully obedient I brought you here in this season you want

to do that one thing so badly I'll show you why you shouldn't

this one flower represents one reason why you shouldn't follow through

but your heart is so very consistent

how will I ever get to you

simply put I never have just one reason

and never will

stand up now son and be still

if one reason is not enough how about this entire field

son I love you still when you make bad choices I love you even when you

entertain those voices but my voice will guide you through the hard times with me

you'll break through the struggles break through the lies so this is where you

have to make a choice and this is where you have to try

I always have the best for you in mind

just remember this place fellow

because next time you ask me to do something and I say no

just remember

it's "Because Yellow"

For more infomation >> Because Yellow | Spoken Word - Duration: 3:04.

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YTMVP - Trainer Red was (laughing) KIRA - Duration: 1:17.

The God of a new world.

Wait a sec... there's no reason to be sad.

I am Kira... Yes.

For more infomation >> YTMVP - Trainer Red was (laughing) KIRA - Duration: 1:17.

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NC State: Shelter From the Flames - Duration: 1:19.

If you picture all of this on fire, and the

trees bursting into flames, and you got

to put a shelter because you're afraid

of being overrun ... it's intimidating.

My name is John Morton-Aslanis. I'm the

lead technical on the wildland

firefighter shelter. We are in Northern

California talking to the firefighters

here at Cal Fire. They have to deal with the

threat every day.

Grab ahold of this ... as you can see,

there's a right hand, left hand.

When they're deploying we have no

other options.

It's on us. So they have

seconds. At the Textile Protection and Comfort

Center, we produce a fireball over 2,000

degrees Fahrenheit that can engulf a

manikin, that can engulf a shelter. From

a textile standpoint, you're trying to protect the

interior of the shelter itself and

that's the whole point of this project:

is trying to make sure that the

firefighter can breathe and not perish.

These are human lives; that's what's

important to realize. You work in a

laboratory, but it affects real people.

For more infomation >> NC State: Shelter From the Flames - Duration: 1:19.

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SPIRITUAL CHANNELS LIVE II. With Sofía Comino, channeler, ritualist and seer. - Duration: 27:38.

For more infomation >> SPIRITUAL CHANNELS LIVE II. With Sofía Comino, channeler, ritualist and seer. - Duration: 27:38.

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O QUE OS YOUTUBERS GRINGOS SABEM SOBRE O BRASIL - Duration: 12:01.

Hi! I'm Carina, this is English in Brazil.

Hi, my name is Chris Ramsey. I'm from Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

And my channel is about magic. I'm a magician.

Hi! My name is Gil or Gildas and I'm coming from France.

I'm from Japan. I was raised in Hawaii, though.

My channel is about food and travel and a lot of fun

and it's about life too.

It's in English with Japanese subtitles. So, if you guys speak English...

Check it out!

I'm from San Diego, California, United States.

And what's your channel about?

My channel is about fashion for curvy girls, for body positivity,

confidence, outfit ideas, all that kind of stuff.

-I love your channel! -Thank you!

It's amazing! Check it out!

I'm from North Carolina and my channel is about technology.

I'm pretty much on YouTube as TechMeOut,

and I do unboxings, tutorials, reviews, that kind of thing!

So we have a lot to learn from you.

-Yes, yes! -Nice!

What's the first thing that comes to your mind?

-UFC fighters. -Oh, really?

I'm a big fan of UFC, I'm a big fan of MMA

and Brazil is one of... Like, Brazilian jiu-jitsu...

They are one of the biggest, like, countries for MMA. So, I...

I hear the most of Portuguese when I watch them and they win and

they talk in Brazilian "obrigado".

"Obrigado", do you remember anything else?

-Just "obrigado"? -Yes, pretty much!

Latin..

I don't know how to explain it, but maybe because

I did my studies in Mexico, I'm saying it's... Like, really...

...similarities?

But I think it's Rio.

I don't know why! Maybe because I've never been to Brazil,

but what's really like... When you say Brazil, for me,

in my head, it's Rio.

Rio, just Rio? Okay!

First thing! First thing that comes to mind...

...is coxinha!

Have you ever tried coxinha?

Oh, yeah! I tried coxinha and I like this so much.

I researched the recipe and actually, your friend, Rebeca,

helped me with finding a good recipe

and we made it in our channel.

It's was one of the best things I've eaten!

We love coxinhas as well. So, gimme five!

The first thing is the Olympics, because the Olympics were held there

a few years ago and I remember watching it on TV, and seeing

all the promotion for Brazil, the soccer, the ambience, everything..

I don't know, I guess like sunny weather, these happy times.

I don't know!

I don't know, like, warm, sunny weather kind of thing.

Portuguese!

Did you know it before talking to me?

Yes, I have a friend who lives in Brazil.

So that's the reason I know.

Portuguese?

Portuguese?

Yeah! You know it! Many people say it's Spanish.

Portuguese!

-Portuguese! -Is that right?

That's good! That's right!

Because many people say Brazilian.

-Yes, I used to say that. -Or..

-You used to say Brazilian? -Yes!

Is it Spanish?

Or portuguese...

It's Portuguese!

Rio?

-No? -It's not Rio.

Sao Paulo...

Not Sao Paulo!

Many people think it's Sao Paulo and Rio, but it's not! It's like,

New York is not the capital of the United States,

-do you know? -Right, right!

Oh ma'am! I wish I knew this, hold on!

I give up!

Okay, it's Brasilia.

Brasilia?

Is a place?

Yeah! Brasilia that's how we pronounce in Portuguese.

-Brasilia, right? -Yeah, Brasilia!

Oh, you know it!

Sao Paulo is the economic?

Yeah, that's right!

We only have a capital, but you know that's... You're right

Like, economic things, like everything is

-in Sao Paulo. -It concentrates it all.

Sao Paulo?

-No. -No!

-This is embarrassing... -That's okay!

I'm sorry, I don't know.

Brasilia.

Brasilia?

-Really? -Yeah that's our capital.

Okay, I learned something new today.

Thank you, Carina!

Is it Rio de Janeiro?

-No? -No.

Capital of Brazil... I don't know!

Brasilia.

Okay, I forgot that word!

-Brasilia! -Brasilia.

I have no idea.

-It sounds like Brazil. -Okay.

If you don't know, you won't never guess.

-No idea! -It's Brasilia.

Oh God! Oh yes, I would never guess that.

-No! -No?

Not one!

Okay, but what do you know about Brazilian music then?

I... I don't know much about Brazilian music, I know that

there's the...

The big festival you guys have in Brazil, and there's a lot of

local music there and parades.

And what's the name of this festival?

-It's the... -Car...

Carnival?

-Yeah, Carnival. -Yeah, okay, I get that one.

And what comes to your mind when you think of Carnival?

Lots of costumes, parades, floats and party.

No naked women?

Oh I didn't wanna say that.

Okay! You're so polite!

That's our do at first thing.

You're lying!

Brazilian song...

Well, except for the really commercial one we have from..

It's been on the radio for like...

♪ Nossa, nossa...

Yeah, this one!

-Michel Teló? -Ahh, Michel Teló! Yeah, yeah!

That's the one?

Yeah, this one! I'm really bad at singing, I'm sorry.

Does Ricky Martin songs... No, he is not Brazilian!

-No, he is not! -I'm so sorry!

-No, I don't. I do not... -You don't...

Well, what do you know about Brazilian music in general?

Do you know anything?

Well...

Brazilian music to me is like a...

Samba music? I know that's, you know, probably wrong...

-No, it's right! -Is it? Really?

I did hear some songs today from Renato.

He let us hear some Brazilian songs.

Renato is another creator who is here, right?

Right! Yeah! And...

It was interesting, but it was very, very energetic.

But I was sure that, like, you guys also have, like ballads and others...

-Yeah, of course. -There's other songs, right?

There's a lot of different types of music, yeah, many, many, many...

I don't know any Brazilian song.

-No? -No, not at all!

But do you know any...

What do you know about Brazilian music in general?

It has like a beat to it, right?

And it's kind of some more to latin music, right? And that...

It's gotta strong beat to it, people like to dance to it, right?

-Yeah! We're good dancers. -Yes!

Actually no, not one.

But what do you know about Brazilian music in general?

Nothing! I don't think I've ever heard any.

You know, I don't think I do.

Not even sports people or models? We have one of the most famous

top models in the world.

-Who is that? -Gisele Bündchen.

I don't really know much about sports or modeling, so...

Yeah, me neither, me neither!

I just know them because I'm Brazilian, you know?

That's it!

Anderson Silva.

UFC fan?

Yeah! So most of the Brazilians that I know are like... Royce Gracie!

I would say Demian Maia, they are all UFC fighters, so...

most of them are fighters.

I don't even know all of them.

Maybe I'll contest you on your Brazilians...

Maybe, maybe...

I was thinking about someone, but he's not Brazilian.

Who?

The guy from Narcos.

He is Brazilian!

-He is Brazilian, right? -He is!

-He also played... -Wagner Moura.

He also played in the movie about favelas.

Tropa de Elite.

Tropa de Elite in Spanish...

-Tropa de Elite. -Because I saw it in Spanish.

So, did you like this movie?

Yeah! I really enjoyed it.

Well, and then I'm really focusing on the like, the political personalities

because, of course, that's what I'm doing on YouTube, but...

Give us some examples.

Lula, Lula is really interesting..

...personality for us as European.

-Then Dilma Rousseff. -Why?

He is quite interesting to see, because I think in France

It's the political elites. They all have the same like, path, you know...

So, it's hard to find someone who has different evolution and

started from the company, and then is indicates and everything.

So that's why it's been different for us.

For you, it's interesting for you.

Yes, I actually do.

Carina!

Oh c'mon!

I'm not famous.

C'mon, she is famous, right?

Actually now that you asked, no.

Okay, maybe, if I say

Gisele Bündchen?

-Doesn't ring a bell. -No?

-Sorry! -Neymar?

Neymar? Okay, okay, that's fine!

Good question.

I've never been to Brazil. So, first thing that comes to mind is like,

spicy?

Is it spicy?

-Actually, I think it's more... -Not really?

...like Mexican people.

Yeah? But I know like...

Maybe in the northeast they do eat...

But not in the whole country.

At least Brazilian drinks, like caipirinha.

Specific Brazilian food, maybe because I've never been there,

I don't know it much.

But they're really...

We like rice and beans, steak, barbecue...

Oh, yeah! And all the...

Well, I've never been to Brazil, again, but all the...

Brazilian restaurants you can find in big capitals, like they're there

serving you lots of meats, and different types of meats

and barbecues..

Speacially in the south, where I am from!

We are specialists!

Brazilian food... Well, like I said, coxinha.

But...

Actually, what comes to my mind is condensed milk.

Because...

Every Brazilian I met, are in love with consensed milk.

Like they say, they always have it in their homes.

And most of the desserts are made with condensed milk?

Yeah, we love it! Have you ever tried it?

I did! I actually...

-Did you like it? -Yes!

Because we also made brigadeiro, on our channel.

We tried it in a Brazilian town and we loved it.

So we tried to make it and...

Yeah, I love condensed milk now.

Japanese people usually don't like very sweet things,

but now I think I'm half Brazilian, because

I crave very sweet desserts now.

Now you like it!

I don't think I've ever had truly Brazilian food.

There isn't like, really any Brazilian restaurants near me.

So I guess I'll have to try cooking some for myself.

I don't know!

I don't think it would be spicy.

Or is it, spicy?

Actually everybody says that it's spicy, but it is not actually.

I think it's Mexicans who eat spicy food

Am I right?

Yeah, Mexican food is typically known to be spicy.

But I don't know, I've never had Brazilian food.

Yeah, you should try caipirinha, for instance, which is a famous

drink we have, and we also have a sweet called brigadeiro

which is a chocolate truffle. You don't have it

anywhere else in the world, so you should definitely try it.

Yeah, I might have to! I have never heard of these things, but

they sound like they'll be good.

Can you say brigadeiro?

Say that one more time.

Say it one three time.

-Brigadeiro? -Bri-ga-de-ro.

Perfect! That's amazing!

Alright, so that's everything for this one..

I think after talking to her now a little more about it,

I definitely need to go visit Brazil soon.

Come visit us!

-Thank you so much! -I will, no problem!

Thank you so much!

For more infomation >> O QUE OS YOUTUBERS GRINGOS SABEM SOBRE O BRASIL - Duration: 12:01.

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Is Being The Middle Child The Best Or The Worst? - Duration: 7:26.

- Of course all parents say that they love you all equally.

They treat all their children the same.

But all middle children know, we are forgotten about.

(laughs) My mom's gonna kill me for this.

(soft playful music)

(whooshing) (creaking)

- I am the second child of four.

At one point, I was the second child of three,

and then my youngest sister surprised us (laughs).

Or blessed us.

- I am the middle child, one of five.

I guess here that's considered pretty big.

My parents are, both originally were born in Nigeria,

so they had bigger families.

- I'm technically a middle child.

My dad had a son from a previous marriage,

and then when he got with my mom,

then she had my younger sister.

- I have an older brother and a younger sister.

I am very much like Stephanie from Full House, I'd say.

- Thank you, Stephanie.

(organ playing)

Thank you, Stephanie.

(audience laughing)

Thanks, Steph.

- I definitely got plenty of attention from my parents,

but when I was a kid it never felt like enough.

- When it came to mines and my parents' relationship,

they sort of like knew that I would be okay.

- It was always, oh take care of the baby,

or oh it's the oldest, you have all this responsibility

that you're supposed to do.

And then the middle child just kind of floats in between.

There was one time I went to my sixth grade dance.

My parents said that they were gonna come pick me up,

and I was the last kid outside just sitting like.

(crickets chirping)

Nobodies here to get me.

I had no phone to call anybody.

It traumatized me so much.

Would they have done that to my younger sister?

Absolutely not.

They would have been there at five o'clock

when the dance ended.

- There are a lot of home movies of me

trying to get as much screen time as I possibly could.

You can definitely tell when my sister was born,

because once my dad started filming her instead of me,

I would throw myself in front of the camera

every time he was filming her.

- When the middle child tells you something,

believe them because for the most part,

there's a lot of things that the middle child

is just trying to get across.

Like, "look see this."

And a lot of people don't pay attention.

I think in between my siblings,

I was always the weird one.

They would get along with each other, really fine.

I always went to sleep early so they would stay up

watching movies and playing video games.

I sort of ended up being like the third wheel.

- I wanted the respect of my siblings.

Even to this day, that is something I want more of.

Growing up when I was younger,

they did not look to me at all (laughs).

It's always the curse of the middle child.

- My older brother and my younger sister are pretty close.

They tease me a lot about how organized I am,

and how clean I am, how I'm always nagging at them

to clean up after themselves,

but they always know that they won't do it,

and so then I will so they kind of abuse it a little bit.

They get me to do stuff that they don't wanna do.

I've always kind of felt like sometimes

they do kind of pick on me.

- When my brother came around, we would just bump heads.

- You didn't tell everybody about the years

of torment that I put you through.

- I never got to see you very often.

- Right.

- And so I would always be this close to you (laughs).

- [Michael] And when we got together.

- [Destinee] Yeah.

- [Michael] Because of that.

(Destinee laughs)

- Come on, let's go!

No, Michael, come on, I'm serious!

I remember one time you tried to push me down the stairs.

- I won't deny that.

I also won't agree that that's true.

- Michael and my younger sister, Raven, got along fine.

I'm over here fighting for Michael's attention,

and Michael's over here fighting for Raven's.

- On behalf of middle children everywhere,

I would say to older and younger siblings,

just ease up on the middle children a little bit.

We're very sensitive.

We just want to love you, we just want you to love us.

- My biggest advice for any middle child out there,

find a creative way to get attention.

My coping mechanism for trying to get attention

was being as good at possible at athletics.

So, I literally played every sport

my high school had to offer.

I was on the soccer team, volleyball team, basketball team,

I ran track, and I made sure my parents were

at every possible event, because I was like,

"You are gonna watch me,

and you are gonna watch me be great."

- To get my parents' attention,

I took on acting and singing and things like that.

I did a lot of school plays,

so inevitably my parents would have to come to them

and watch me perform and I would

get all the attention that day.

- In school, I was a really good student.

Since you aren't given the opportunity to just

be your own person, then you start doing things

that are very unique.

You want to make a statement.

- Middle children are trendsetters.

They're the pioneers, they're the ones that are going

to go out and make something happen,

even when it's never been done.

Middle children are a handful,

but they're going to be one of your biggest gifts,

and you're gonna get the most out of them.

- I feel like being a middle child comes with its perks

because no body's paying attention to you,

you kind of get to do some things under the radar.

- I didn't have to be the first to do everything,

and my parents were able to get out

all of their first-parent stuff with my brother.

When it came to me, they were a little bit more lenient

and a little bit more loose.

- Being the middle child, there was pressure to follow

the footsteps of my brothers and sisters in front of me.

And I did not adhere to that.

I think figured out sooner than later that this was my life

and, especially for my culture, my background,

being Nigerian, that was not the script that

I was supposed to follow.

My parents were really really big on education.

When it came to college, I was like,

I'll do it, but then when I was there I was like,

I want something more, so I left.

And that was the biggest shock to hit my family ever.

I was the first and only child to this day

to ever to make the decision to walk away from college.

Being the middle child, I had the opportunity to be me.

And I think when you're older,

you don't have that opportunity, I think

you have an expectation to represent the family first.

- As the middle child, you're given a lot of space

to sort of create your own identity away from your family.

Because my family is really traditional Mexican,

there was a lot of things that I sort of

broke the rules in.

I was the first child to move out at 18

because I was the first child to go to college.

Being a vegetarian, that's something

unheard of in a Mexican-American family.

When I was vegetarian, I went to Mexico.

Everywhere you go in my parents' little town,

there's street tacos.

I really wanted tacos, but I was a vegetarian,

so what I did was that I had tacos

made of lettuce and carrots and that is

an ongoing joke.

My family still jokes about that today.

- As a middle child, I definitely felt like the mediator

within my entire family.

- I definitely think I bring the family together.

Onyi's going to provide a good time.

He's either gonna end up DJing the party for us,

he's gonna end up mixing drinks for us,

he's gonna make sure we're laughing,

we're joking, we're having fun.

- On family trips, I kind of had to balance everyone out

and make sure everyone was having a good time.

And I think that's a role that the middle child

usually takes on?

I wouldn't change it for the world.

- One thing that people don't really know

about middle children is,

if you really need them and you tell them that,

they'll be there for you.

They will not let you down.

- I feel like that we're older

and that we're all adults, the three of us

are all on the same playing field.

When we get together, we're just goofy as fuck.

We don't make sense.

- We're all pretty close now.

We like to play board games and things like that.

- Even though there were five of us,

it always felt like love.

They were my homies, my best friends.

Because we knew our parents were working hard

just to provide for us,

so we always had each other, and that was enough.

(whistling) (upbeat music)

For more infomation >> Is Being The Middle Child The Best Or The Worst? - Duration: 7:26.

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FORTNITE IS GOD - Duration: 0:24.

I should make a video about my farts cause damn they smell bad

For more infomation >> FORTNITE IS GOD - Duration: 0:24.

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Salaam Karnay Ki Sunnatain Aur Adaab | Isharon Me | Haji Abdul Habib Attari | Attari Tigers | Islam - Duration: 4:29.

LIKE, SHARE, COMMENTS, SUBSCRIBE

For more infomation >> Salaam Karnay Ki Sunnatain Aur Adaab | Isharon Me | Haji Abdul Habib Attari | Attari Tigers | Islam - Duration: 4:29.

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【MMD】【The Grey】 - Duration: 2:21.

I am standing on the edge of returning or just running away

I am letting myself look the other way

And the hardest part in all of this is I don't think I know my way back home

Is it worth the journey or do I let my heart settle here

How cold have I become?

I didn't want to

Lose you by what I'd done

Caught in the grey

I don't wanna look you in the eyes, you might call me away

I don't wanna give you the chance to make me stay

And the hardest part in all of this is

I know my way back, I don't want to go

And let you see all that has become of me

I should've known, I should've known

I didn't have a chance

How cold have I become?

I didn't want to

Lose you by what I'd done

Caught in the grey

It burns for a moment but

But then it numbs you

Takes you and leaves you just

Caught in the grey

In your deepest pain

In your weakest hour

In your darkest night

You are lovely

In your deepest pain

In your weakest hour

In your darkest night

You are lovely

I am standing on the edge of returning or just running away

For more infomation >> 【MMD】【The Grey】 - Duration: 2:21.

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Pani Peenay Ki Sunnatain Aur Adaab |Isharay Me | Haji Abdul Habib Attari | Attari Tigers | Sunnatain - Duration: 2:04.

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For more infomation >> Pani Peenay Ki Sunnatain Aur Adaab |Isharay Me | Haji Abdul Habib Attari | Attari Tigers | Sunnatain - Duration: 2:04.

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The Truth About Luke Bryan's Marriage - Duration: 4:11.

Country music mega-star Luke Bryan has had his wife Caroline by his side for as long

as he's been in the public eye.

If you can't get enough of these college sweethearts, these facts about their marriage are for you.

Time apart

Bryan and Caroline began dating as students at Georgia Southern University.

They dated on-and-off for two and a half years before going their separate ways for a lengthy

five-and-a-half years.

The reason for the break-up?

Bryan told the Huffington Post,

"I was about done with school when we met.

So I kinda went off and did my thing in Nashville and she finished up her college experience

and it kinda allowed us to both go get our feet a little firmer on the ground."

"I guess fate kinda brought us back together.

It was all the right time and right place when we got back together."

Raunchy cakes

Birthdays in the Bryan household can get a little crude.

The country singer told Taste of Country's radio show that his wife…

"...gets really, really creative with birthday cakes.

Half the time they're not anything I can post."

For Bryan's 40th birthday, Caroline ordered a Guinness chocolate cake with an image of

Bryan as a Chippendales dancer popping out of it.

But that was nothing compared to the vulgar toilet cake Caroline had made for for Bryan's

39th birthday… and those are just the cakes that have been made public.

Caroline's song

Much was made about Bryan's song "To the Moon and Back," when he dedicated it to his wife.

"I have never physically found a song that I could hand to Caroline and go, 'This one

is for you, this was designed for you."

What many stories failed to mention is that Bryan didn't actually write it, although he

hasn't taken credit for writing it, either.

He has only said he had Caroline in mind when he recorded the song.

He told Radio.com,

"The second I heard it I told myself, 'Well, this is a really manly, masculine way to tell

your wife and tell people you love them.'"

Hunting and fishing

In Bryan's song "Huntin', Fishin' and Lovin' Every Day," he sings about the woman who occasionally

joins him on his outdoors adventures.

But if you think that means Caroline is a hunting enthusiast, you would be incorrect.

"I'm an outdoors person, but I'm not a hunter.

I don't, I can't, I'm not going to kill anything.

I'm just, I can't."

Interior designer Chad James told Nashville Lifestyles that while he was decorating their

home, Caroline didn't want him including any hunting trophies... though she eventually

came around on a few ideas.

Famous butt

The butt with its own Twitter account as well as its own meet-and-greet rule…

"No one can touch your butt?"

"Well, we had to lay that, we had to start that one."

...apparently wasn't always such a hit.

Bryan admitted to Parade,

"My wife and I laugh about it, because she always thought I had a flat [rear end] until

I started working out."

It's also possible Caroline took more of a liking to his butt after he supposedly had

her initials tattooed onto it, as country singer Jason Aldean revealed in a Chicago

radio interview.

"I think he has his wife's initials on one of his ass cheeks."

For the record, Bryan said on Sirius XM's The Jenny McCarthy Show that he doesn't think

he has much of a butt.

"Tell you what's important is the right jeans, I've learned."

Jealous women

Caroline told Country Weekly that Bryan was popular with the ladies in college and dating

him came with its share of scrutiny — especially since she was younger than him.

She said,

"I got hated on some because he was a big popular guy on campus and here comes a little

freshman.

A lot of girls didn't take to me too much."

Now that Bryan is a superstar, there are countless women who would like to get their hands on

him.

Caroline said she doesn't mind, claiming it comes with the territory.

She told People,

"He's a beautiful man and girls are going to see that, and that's just how it is.

It's honestly never bothered me."

No marriage guru

Because he's been married for over a decade and has outlasted other high-profile country

music relationships, Bryan is constantly fielding questions about the key to a successful marriage.

But as Bryan himself has admitted, he doesn't have all the answers.

In an interview with San Diego's KSON., Bryan said,

"My problem is when you're all up in the fight, the argument, I should just hang up.

But I keep wanting to make it better and that makes it worse."

"I've learned when to shut up."

Thanks for watching!

Click the List icon to subscribe to our YouTube channel.

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

For more infomation >> The Truth About Luke Bryan's Marriage - Duration: 4:11.

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

Will robots take our jobs? | CNBC Explains - Duration: 3:26.

Hi, I'm Elizabeth.

Hi, I'm RoboThespian.

Nice to meet you.

Likewise.

This is a humanoid robot, which means it looks,

it talks, and it even acts, well, like a human.

So does that mean it could take a human's job like mine?

You better believe it.

Nah, I'm only joking. Not really.

There's no denying robots and automation

are increasingly part of our daily lives.

Just look around the grocery store, or the highway.

Or in the case of RoboThespian here, even at the theater.

I'm singin' in the rain, just singin' in the rain.

The rise of robots has led to some pretty scary warnings

about the future of work.

Robots will be able to do everything better than us.

A recent study found up to 670,000 U.S. jobs

were lost to robots between 1990 and 2007.

And that number is likely to go up.

A widely-cited study from 2013 found

nearly half of all jobs in the U.S. are in danger of

being automated over the next 20 years.

Occupations that require repetitive and predictable tasks

in transportation, logistics and administrative support

were especially high-risk.

And just think, robots don't need health benefits, vacation

or even sleep for that matter.

But the debate over whether robots will

take over all of our jobs is by no means settled.

Many economists argue automation will ultimately create new jobs.

After all, someone has to program the robots, right?

Let's go back to the 1850s, when trains

were the most popular mode of transportation.

This chart shows the number of locomotive engineers,

railroad conductors and brakemen increasing by nearly 600%.

But that growth slowed in the early 1900s.

Why? You guessed it. The automobile came along.

Car mechanic and repairman jobs surged

even though railroad jobs began to disappear.

And some companies say the same thing will happen

when robots move into the marketplace.

A survey of 20,000 employers from 42 countries

found that the IT, customer service and advanced manufacturing industries

will add workers over the next two years as a result of automation.

It's hard to imagine that robots could replicate

human characteristics, like empathy or compassion,

that are required in many jobs.

I mean, would you really want a robot as your nurse, babysitter or teacher?

But even if robots don't take our jobs entirely,

research shows they will significantly change

day-to-day tasks in the workplace.

This is particularly a problem for lower-skilled workers

who aren't able to retrain for new jobs.

They might get stuck with lower wages in a world with more robots,

and that could make income inequality even worse.

These guys are making a lot of things uncertain right now.

But one thing that's clear is skills training is required

if we hope to get along with friends like them in the workplace.

I think we're going to get along just fine.

Hey everyone it's Elizabeth and RoboThespian here.

Thanks so much for watching our video.

You can check out more of our videos all the time,

including one about universal basic income,

over here on our YouTube page.

While you're at it, leave us some ideas in the comments section

and subscribe to our channel.

See you later!

For more infomation >> Will robots take our jobs? | CNBC Explains - Duration: 3:26.

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

Do the Right Thing: Crash Course Film Criticism #6 - Duration: 11:27.

Mainstream American films don't often tackle race and racism head-on, and when they do,

they often end up trying to find easy answers.

Which makes films like Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing all the more powerful.

It's an intimate portrait of a Brooklyn neighborhood, with a vibrant, intergenerational,

multi-ethnic community.

But it also has an explosive climax, fueled by racial resentments, economic anxiety, and

rising tensions on the hottest day of the year.

Lee uses an incredible array of filmmaking techniques to make audiences think and engage.

And the issues he's wrestling with are still very much alive today, more than 25 years later.

[intro music plays]

Do the Right Thing burst onto screens in 1989,

after electrifying audiences and polarizing critics at the Cannes Film Festival.

At the time, writer-director Spike Lee was just 32 and had made only two feature films

– the sly, sexy She's Gotta Have It and School Daze, a comedy set at an all-black

Southern college.

Lee began conceiving Do the Right Thing with his cinematographer Ernest Dickerson as they

were finishing work on School Daze.

He was partially inspired by an incident in 1986 in which Michael Griffith, a 23-year-old

African-American, was beaten up and chased from an Italian-American pizzeria, only to

be killed by an oncoming car.

Having grown up in Brooklyn, steeped in the complex lives and racial politics of its residents,

Lee wanted to make a film that captured that world.

The story of Do the Right Thing takes place almost completely over one blistering day

in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn.

Rather than following one traditional protagonist, this film follows a variety of characters

as they try to beat the heat, make a living, take a stand, or just get by.

It's a film about community.

Spike Lee plays Mookie, a young African-American man who delivers pizzas for Sal's Famous

Pizzeria, a neighborhood hangout.

And it's through Mookie and the restaurant that we're introduced to most of the other characters.

There's Sal himself, a proud Italian-American played by Danny Aiello.

He works with his two sons, the aggressive Pino, played by John Turturro, and the more

passive Vito, played by Richard Edson.

Then there's Da Mayor, played by the legendary Ossie Davis, a kind of elder statesman and

alcoholic who wanders the streets trying to keep the peace.

Mirroring that, there's Mother Sister – played by Ruby Dee, Davis's real-life wife – who

keeps a watchful eye on the neighborhood from her open apartment window.

Mookie runs into friends throughout the day, from Giancarlo Esposito's politically outspoken

Buggin' Out, to Bill Nunn's Radio Raheem, who carries around the world's biggest ghetto-blaster,

cranking Public Enemy's hip-hop anthem "Fight the Power."

Woven through the story is Smiley, a developmentally delayed man played by Roger Guenveur Smith,

who makes a few dollars here and there selling a photo of Malcolm X and Dr. Martin

Luther King, Jr.

And overlooking the whole thing is a smooth-voiced radio DJ played by Samuel L. Jackson.

He not only spins tunes, but also watches the day unfold from his window, calling out

to characters as they pass his studio.

Beyond the Italian-American and African-American characters, there's a grocery store run

by a Korean couple, a group of Latino kids, and Mookie's girlfriend Tina, played by

Rosie Perez.

There's also one white yuppie, who signifies the coming gentrification of the neighborhood.

And, finally, a pair of white New York City policemen patrol the streets in a squad car.

All of these characters and their plots keep interweaving throughout the day, leading to

a climactic showdown that ends with a riot, Radio Raheem dead from a police chokehold,

Sal's Famous Pizzeria in flames, and everyone trying to find a way forward.

This film, like many films, is all about emotion and visual communication.

Lee, his cinematographer, and production designer worked tirelessly to create a mood and the

sense of a ticking bomb.

So looking at this film is a great way to understand how cinema affects an audience.

One of the things Lee does to ratchet the tension and immerse us in this very specific

world is to emphasize how hot it is.

And he uses all kinds of filmmaking techniques to do it.

Not only does the cinematography highlight the blasting rays of the sun, but Lee had

production designer Wynn Thomas remove all the blues and greens he could from the costumes,

props, sets, and make-up.

Instead, the film is a feast of warm colors: vibrant reds, oranges, and yellows.

Lee and Dickerson even put heat lamps right under the camera lens in some shots to produce

those wavy heat shimmers.

Characters are routinely covered in sweat.

Their clothes stick to their bodies.

And their tempers are set on a hair trigger, just waiting to be ignited.

Lee mixes all kinds of filmmaking styles, mirroring the way the block mixes cultural

identities.

The movie begins with an heavily-stylized, color-saturated dance sequence that plays

during the opening credits.

In it, Rosie Perez dances alone to "Fight the Power."

This is the film asserting its agenda right up front, both stylistic and musical.

It's a challenge, but it's also fun and exciting, just like the rest of the film.

Lee makes excellent use of wide tracking shots as characters move from one part of the block

to another.

These shots feel expansive and natural, and yet they're clearly highly choreographed.

He'll have minor characters move through the background or step in at the end of a

scene to redirect the story.

That kind of meandering is actually really hard to pull off, and the work here is seamless.

It underlines the interconnectedness of the film's community.

At other times, Lee and Dickerson will tilt the camera 45 degrees in what's often called

a Dutch or canted angle.

Suddenly, the horizon line isn't flat and the world feels unstable and off-kilter.

It's almost as if the characters are in danger of falling out of the screen because

their world is so off balance.

In one of the film's most powerful sequences, Lee even has his characters look directly

into the camera, breaking the fourth wall.

And they unleash the most profane string of ethnic and racial insults in the film.

As the film critic Thomas Doherty writes in Film Quarterly:

"The interethnic, interracial animosity explodes in a montage of face-front slurs...that

serve as warm-ups for the ultimate bonfire."

All this anger and resentment simmering below the surface prepares us for the eruption that's

about to come.

It also adds another dimension to a film about community.

Because this community, however harmonious it may seem, is deeply, perhaps irrevocably,

fractured.

The film echoes this fracturing by shifting tones and moods.

Scenes will go from light-hearted and funny to tense at the drop of a hat.

In one sequence, kids from the neighborhood open a fire hydrant and cool off in the spraying water.

All the tensions dissolve for a while as people start dragging their friends in to get soaked.

It's a glorious free-for-all!

And suddenly, this carefully-choreographed, stylized film seems to take the approach of

a documentary.

It's as though Lee set the action in motion and is just capturing it as it happens.

The freedom of the camera mirrors the freedom of the characters.

Then, a middle-aged Italian-American drives a beautifully-maintained convertible up the

street.

He threatens the kids not to spray him as he passes.

And not in a nice way, either!

As the insults fly back and forth, and the tension returns, Lee and Dickerson lock their

camera down again.

And sure enough, when the man drives past the hydrant, the kids turn the water loose,

dousing both him and the car.

The man storms out of his car, the kids run, and the cops show up, shutting off the hydrant,

and ending the fun.

The shifting moods of Do the Right Thing are a large part of its power.

The film keeps us unsure about which encounters are going to lead to trouble and which ones

are going to end in humor.

In the lighter moments, we empathize with the community.

We don't want to see it torn apart.

At one point, Radio Raheem faces off against a group of Latino kids who are playing their

own music from a slightly smaller boom box.

When Radio Raheem cranks his volume to the max, the other kids nod sheepishly, conceding

that Radio Raheem's speakers can't be beat.

And this moment is more than just a funny gag.

That ghetto blaster means something.

When Radio Raheem cranks it up, he's not only demonstrating his machine's power,

he's also asserting his cultural identity and the coming dominance of hip-hop.

And in fact, the final confrontation that ends with Radio Raheem's death and the destruction

of the pizzeria escalates when Sal demands Radio Raheem turn down his music.

This time, instead of ending with a laugh, Lee flips the script and has Sal smash the

ghetto blaster to bits, bringing on the killing and the riot.

Critics and scholars have been debating the film and its ultimate stance on race and racism

since it was released.

Film critic David Denby initially labeled the film incoherent and irresponsible.

Political columnist Joe Klein even warned that the movie might spark actual riots.

Roger Ebert, on the other hand, strongly disagreed, writing:

"Thoughtless people have accused Lee … of being an angry filmmaker.

He has much to be angry about, but I don't find it in his work.

The wonder of "Do the Right Thing" is that he is so fair.

Those who found this film an incitement to violence are saying much about themselves,

and nothing useful about the movie.

Whatever its stance, Do the Right Thing is an unapologetically political film.

It wrestles very explicitly with two strands of black activism, and what those two approaches

mean for the community as a whole.

There's peaceful direct action, as advocated by Martin Luther King, Jr., and a more militant

strain, most often associated with Malcolm X.

The film presents us with characters on all sides of this divide, from Buggin' Out,

who tries to organize a boycott of Sal's pizzeria, to Mookie, who just wants to get

through his day and get paid.

Outside of the black community, we have everything from the obvious racial antagonism of the

Italian-American in his convertible, to Sal, who begins the film with a kind gesture toward

Da Mayor, despite the objections of his own son, Pino.

By the end of the film, though, Sal is revealed to be a much less sympathetic character.

His stubborn refusal to add photos of African-Americans to his "Wall of Fame" and his destruction

of Radio Raheem's boom box led directly to violence.

Not only that, but Sal destroys the boom box with a worn baseball bat, itself a heavy

symbol of violence against African-Americans, including in the incident with Michael Griffith.

Some scholars point to this character as key to Spike Lee's strategy for engaging with

white audiences, especially when he's tackling racism.

In the journal Thinking Through Cinema: Film as Philosophy, Dan Flory writes:

"Lee depicts sympathetic racist characters so that viewers may initially forge positive

allegiances with them in spite of those characters' anti-black beliefs and actions, which in earlier

stages of the narrative seem trivial ... or may even go unnoticed.

He then alienates viewers from such characters by revealing the harmfulness of these typically

white beliefs and actions."

In other words, Lee's choice to make Sal sympathetic early in the film forces non-black

audiences to confront their own, perhaps deeply buried, notions of race and racism – especially

as the story reaches its boiling point, and Sal is revealed to be a much more harmful

character.

During the film's climax, Mookie finds himself sharing a shot with Sal and his sons as they

face down Buggin' Out, Radio Raheem, and Smiley.

He's on one side of the divide.

Only after Radio Raheem has been killed by the police does he signal that he's had

enough, crossing the street, emptying a garbage can, and then hurling it through the window

of Sal's restaurant.

Did Mookie do the right thing?

A more traditional film about race may have ended there, suggesting triumph in his revenge.

But Spike Lee isn't interested in declaring right and wrong.

Remember, he's making a film about a community.

And that community has to get up the next day, sweep up the ashes, and find a way to

move forward.

And that's exactly what happens.

It's an uneasy ending, not traditionally satisfying, but it feels very real and immediate.

These same difficult conversations about race, violence, and community are as relevant to

our society today as they have ever been.

For Mookie, Sal, Spike Lee, and the rest of us, the struggle continues.

Next time, we'll look at Lost in Translation.

It's a quieter, more contemplative film about a lost young woman who strikes up a

friendship with an older, fading movie star in contemporary Japan.

Crash Course Film Criticism is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios.

You can head over to their channel to check out a playlist of their latest amazing shows,

like Eons, Origin of Everything, and Deep Look.

This episode of Crash Course was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Crash Course Studio

with the help of these nice people and our amazing graphics team is Thought Cafe.

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