Thứ Ba, 17 tháng 7, 2018

Waching daily Jul 17 2018

10 Sea Creatures You Never Knew Exist.

Number 10.

You might already be familiar with the Ctenophores as animals called "comb jellies," transparent

invertebrates who usually use their beautiful, rippling cilia to swim through the water.

Some species, however, don't have the cilia and don't swim at all.

They slowly crawl around on the sea floor, mouth-down.

Branching into two large horns, they tend to resemble a cross between a slug and a pair

of bunny ears, each horn able to extend a long, silky feeding tentacle into the water.

Other, smaller species are transparent and amazingly camouflaged, while still others

spend their entire lives clinging to the bodies of starfish.

Number 9.

The last thing you would expect a starfish to live off of are trees, but that's what's

going on with Xyloplax.

Also called "sea daisies," Xyloplax are tiny, saucer-shaped starfish cousins ringed with

feathery spines very much resembling cartoon flower petals.

They are found thousands of feet down in the black abyssal reaches of the sea.

It's an especially strange home for an animal that feeds exclusively on wood, like a termite.

However, we shouldn't be surprised that enormous amounts of wood - from twigs snapped off in

storms to entire dead trees - make their way into the ocean every day, and a great deal

of it sinks to the abyss.

Number 8.

Instead of trailing long, threadlike stinging tentacles behind its swimming bell, the helmet

jellyfish, Periphylla periphylla, has thicker, stiffer tentacles it holds out in front of

it as it swims.

These capture small fish and swing them back into its digestive cavity.

Avoiding light, they usually lurk as deep as 1,000 meters (3,000 ft) below the sea's

surface, but massive numbers of them may come to the surface at night and have even become

invasive pests off some coasts.

As for their dark red to purple coloration, this is believed to keep the jellyfish invisible

to most predators even after swallowing bioluminescent prey.

Number 7.

The hooded or "lion" nudibranchs of the order Melibe are like the Venus flytraps of the

sea slug world, their huge mouths flaring into nets lined with tooth-like sticky tentacles.

Clinging to seaweed, their transparent bodies are almost invisible to the tiny fish and

shrimp who may blunder into the gaping trap.

Strangely, these slugs are also said to smell like flowers when pulled from the water.

Number 6.

What resembles a transparent, beady-eyed sausage with a trunk on its head?

It's another bizarre species of gastropod, sometimes called a "sea elephant," a swimming

snail with a tiny, reduced internal shell.

Unlike most snails, Pterotrachea is a highly maneuverable and visual predator.

Its advanced telescope-like eyeballs allow it to spot even the tiniest prey in the surrounding

water, which it slurps up with that tubular trunk.

If it looks upside-down, that's because it is.

Sea elephants swim around on their backs, likely allowing them to surprise their prey

from below.

Number 5.

As filter-feeding, immobile crustaceans, most barnacles are adapted to grow on stationary

rocks or on such large, slow-moving animals as whales and turtles.

One species, however, can be found dangling from the fins

of fast-moving dolphins.

Their long, slimy, leech-like bodies trail behind the host even as it leaps and dives

through the water, a thickly barbed anchoring organ embedded fairly deep in the sea mammal's

flesh.

Like most barnacles, it only feeds on plankton from the surrounding water, but it goes through

the trouble of attaching to a dolphin for its own protection.

There's not a lot of crossover between things that want to eat barnacles and things that

can catch a healthy porpoise.

Number 4.

Ribbon or Nemertean worms are some of the freakiest animals most people have never heard

of, despite being found not only throughout the ocean, but even in your own backyard,

albeit usually much tinier.

Nearly all of these slimy, gooey creatures are carnivorous.

They scavenge on dead animals or hunt live prey, which they overpower with a venomous

sting, acidic spit, or toxic slime secretion.

Many possess a projectile proboscis that can even branch like a spidery web, while others

can simply stretch open their mouths like a python to engulf meals far larger than themselves.

Some species are among the longest of all known animals, reaching nearly 60 meters (200

ft) when outstretched but fortunately still little wider than a human finger.

Number 3.

While it's a stiff competition, the marine worm R. Multicaudata (Ramisyllis multicaudata)

just might have one of the strangest body plans in the animal kingdom.

Like a reversal of the mythological hydra, it possesses just one head, but with a seemingly

limitless number of winding bodies branching off one another, resembling a network of segmented,

hairy roots.

The head resides at the center of a sea sponge, while its many bodies spread throughout the

holes and tunnels of the sponge host.

Whether this relationship is parasitic or mutually beneficial isn't certain, though

the two creatures may offer protection to one another.

Number 2.

We've seen one "jelly" that traded swimming for crawling already, but that was one of

the comb jellies.

The Stauromedusae are a group of true jellyfish but have given up swimming and adopted a lifestyle

closer to their distant coral and anemone cousins.

What would normally be the top of the jelly's bell is stalk-shaped, flexible, and ends in

a powerful sucker, allowing the funnel-shaped creature to cling to rocks or seaweed and

wave its open mouth in the water.

We've also now seen this strategy in a slug.

The stinging tentacles are bunched into eight pom-poms on the ends of short, muscular arms,

which the animal uses to grasp and hold hapless prey.

When it wants to pick up and move, it can walk end over end, tumbling from its sucker-tipped

stem to its pom-pom arms, or it can detach and allow itself to float in the water,

riding the current to new feeding grounds.

Number 1.

These animals look familiar to anyone who's seen James Cameron's Avatar, which lifted

them almost unaltered for its alien forest fauna.

These filter-feeding worms live their entire adult lives sealed in the same tubular tunnel,

excavated from rock or coral.

The Christmas trees we can see are the animals, elaborate, coiling palps, very complex lips

used for trapping plankton.

These feeding appendages also double as the animal's gills.

Weirder still, they possess specialized light-sensitive cells allowing the worms to see.

These animals are so adapted to expose only their mouths that their mouths subsequently

evolved into their new eyes.

For more infomation >> 10 Sea Creatures You Never Knew Exist - Duration: 7:47.

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10 IKEA Hacks 2018 - Duration: 11:21.

Enter the IKEA hack.

These simple upgrades instantly elevate your affordable finds into stylish and expensive-looking

décor.

All it takes is a little know-how and an eye for design to turn a standard piece of furniture

into a truly unique part of your home.

Here are some IKEA hacks to try for yourself or inspire your own original design.

1.

Ikea Apothecary Cabinet Hack.

This Ikea hack using the TARVA dresser is such an amazing DIY furniture project!

It looks like an apothecary cabinet that would cost a fortune at West Elm or Anthropologie,

but no!

This DIY apothecary cabinet is perfect for any budget.

2.

Ikea Tarva Hack.

With IKEA, it seems that furniture they sell in light shades should be dark, and the dark,

light.

Case in point, Kalie of Little House Big Plans recognizes that in its natural hue, the STORNÄS

looks like a cup of menacingly black coffee or a really big smudge on your computer screen.

Paint and styling later, the Big Planner has herself a lovely and attractive dining room

buffet.

3.

Easy Ikea Hack Desk.

It is not easy to find a desk that offers great storage, great looks, and great price

all in one, unless you D.I.Y. to make it just the way you love.

The Ikea Alex and Helmer drawer units are the perfect height for a desk, add an ikea

table top, you can have a beautiful Ikea hack desk here for under $100.

4.

A Built-In Billy Bookcase.

Custom built-ins don't come cheap, we put three of IKEA's popular Billy bookcases together.

A solid baseboard and crown molding were added so it blends perfectly with the period style

of this home.

5.

D.I.Y. mid Century Credenza.

A credenza is a great addition to any room for convenient, hideaway storage.

Use it in the dining room to store dining and entertainment essentials or in the living

room or bedroom to conceal extra blankets or your movie collection.

6.

Copper Kitchen Pendant Lights.

the spray paint does it again.

How much more high-end do these pendants look in their new shade of copper?

It's tough to justify expensive light fixtures after you've already renovated an entire

kitchen, so it's nice to know you can cut corners and still get an amazing result.

7.

Gorgeous Rustic Sideboard.

How gorgeous is this rustic sideboard?

I want to make it so badly!

This is a perfect example of how you can use an Ikea hack as the foundation and then add

details or a facade like this to customize it to look like one of a kind.

This beautiful piece is made out of the Ikea BESTA cabinet.

8.

Gold Leaf Console Table.

Sometimes the simplest changes make the biggest impact.

The "gold leaf" legs on this baby look so good your friends will never believe you

when you tell them it's a D.I.Y.

Plus the kit to achieve the same look is only $11.

9.

Simple Rast Dresser Upgrade.

A chest with storage for under $50 that looks this good?

This works as a nightstand or as a stand alone storage piece in an entry or hallway.

10.

Upgraded TARVA Dresser.

How good does the TARVA dresser look painted in this powdery blue color?

It's the perfect balance to the more masculine tan leather pulls.

That's all for now.

Don't forget to subscribe, like, and give your comment if you like this video and share

to your friends.Thanks for watching and see in the next video.

For more infomation >> 10 IKEA Hacks 2018 - Duration: 11:21.

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¡Hacer la cuenta de la vieja! - Duration: 0:55.

Literal translation : To do the old woman's count!

To do the old woman's count!

When someone calculates mentally, slowly or using their fingers,

it's said...

they do the old woman's count!

If you liked, subscribe!

Example 1:

- "Here's the bill. How much each?" "€15."

"Do you have a calculator?"

"No, I did the math in my head!"

Example 2:

- I told the cashier she had short-changed me

and we counted the money all over again.

For more infomation >> ¡Hacer la cuenta de la vieja! - Duration: 0:55.

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BUBBLES - Vorbilder, Helden, Idole mit Coldmirror, Simon Will und Franca (iam.serafina) - Duration: 4:57.

For more infomation >> BUBBLES - Vorbilder, Helden, Idole mit Coldmirror, Simon Will und Franca (iam.serafina) - Duration: 4:57.

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TV Roles That Were Recast After The Pilot - Duration: 5:45.

When it comes to television, getting a pilot greenlit by the network is usually good news

for everyone involved.

Unfortunately for these stars, though, their appearances in the first round of filming

for an eventual hit show didn't pan out because they were replaced before their series went

into full production.

Whether it was professional conflicts or personal matters, these actors lost what became pretty

iconic small screen roles, despite filling them first.

Here are some TV characters who were recast after the pilot.

The Incredible Hulk

Lou Ferrigno became a household name thanks to his successful run as the mean green monster

in the classic '70s TV series, but it was originally Richard Kiel who'd signed up to

star as the Hulk.

The eventual James Bond villain was hired to film two movies of the week that were to

serve as the pilot for the proposed series.

However, Kiel, who was blind in one eye, was uncomfortable in the full contact lenses that

the part required, and also didn't like the green body paint.

Producers also felt that Kiel didn't fit perfectly in the part, since even though he was over

seven-feet tall, he didn't boast a bodybuilder physique.

The role was eventually given to Ferrigno, but Kiel's turn is still briefly visible in

the scene in which Hulk saves a young girl from drowning.

Danny Tanner

Full House almost had a different dad.

John Posey was initially brought on to play the role of Danny Tanner on the popular sitcom,

but he was replaced by comedian Bob Saget after filming the pilot.

Posey had just two credits to his name when he signed on for the pilot and said he was

actually on his way from Atlanta to Los Angeles to work on the series when he got the call

saying he had been replaced.

Show creator Jeff Franklin wanted either Saget or Paul Reiser from the beginning, but they'd

both been tied up with other potential shows.

"Neither Paul nor Bob were interested.

We went through a casting process, we ended up casting a complete unknown."

When Saget became available, however, Franklin decided to give Posey the ax.

"I just, I don't know, as soon as I created this character, I thought of Bob."

Posey still went on to have a very successful career as a small screen guest star.

However, he's nowhere near as well-known as the man who became America's dad on the beloved

sitcom.

Sookie St. James

Before she became such a big screen sensation, Melissa McCarthy was perhaps best known for

her role as the sweet Stars Hollow chef Sookie St. James on Gilmore Girls.

However, the actress almost wasn't chosen to wear Sookie's signature smock.

In the series' unaired pilot, comedic actress Alex Borstein originally appeared in the role,

but had to back away due to her contract with MADtv.

Borstein still got to appear on the show, just in a much smaller role.

Instead of playing Sookie, the actress made a couple of cameos as the sharp-tongued harp

player Drella, and then reemerged as the family's stylist Miss Celine.

Willow Rosenberg

Buffy the Vampire Slayer's original pilot has actually surfaced, which means that fans

can go back and watch the original Willow Rosenberg in action to see why another actress

was brought in to play her.

Alyson Hannigan would famously go on to take over the part, but it was Riff Regan who starred

in the short pilot creator Joss Whedon [made for the network in a bid to get the show picked

up.

The network had a few issues with the pilot, and one of the big points was Regan, who played

a much more quiet and subdued version of the character than the one fans would come to

know in the show's full run.

Daenerys Targaryen

Emilia Clarke's portrayal of Khaleesi is a major part of why Game of Thrones is one of

the most popular shows on TV, but she wasn't the first actor brought on to play the part

of the Mother of Dragons.

That honor instead went to Tamzin Merchant, an English actress known for her role in The

Tudors.

While we don't know exactly why Merchant was let go after the pilot, Game of Thrones showrunners

Dan Weiss and David Benioff have been pretty open in their discussions about the shortcomings

of the original pilot, which had to be almost completely re-shot so that it could eventually

become such a massive cultural phenomenon.

"So, thank you."

Catelyn Stark

Daenerys wasn't the only Game of Thrones role to be recast after the pilot.

Actress Jennifer Ehle was initially set to play Stark family matriarch Catelyn, but she

ended up dropping out of the role, which eventually went to Michelle Fairley.

Ehle stepped away from the role because it involved a seven-year contract and, at the

time, her daughter was just a few months old.

The show's producers ended up having Fairley reshoot all of the scenes involving Ehle,

and the rest is history.

Jenna Maroney

Jane Krakowski earned four Emmy Award nominations for her role as 30 Rock's resident diva Jenna

Maroney, but it turns out that the character was originally supposed to be a little different.

Creator Tina Fey originally cast her former Saturday Night Live co-star Rachel Dratch

in the role, but the part was given to Krakowski after NBC saw the show's unaired pilot.

Dratch's version of the role was still Liz's best friend and the star of The Girlie Show,

but the series would've originally focused more on sketches.

Dratch was later told the series style was moving more toward that of a sitcom, meaning

that they needed an actress who could fit that bill.

Naturally, she was upset about the decision.

"When you think about planning your SNL exit, you don't think, 'I know, I'll leave and the

have a big public face plant."

But Dratch did go on to hold a number of other roles on the show, including the overwhelmed

cat wrangler Greta, the Happy Days-obsessed cleaning lady Maria, and the imaginary Blue

Man.

Sarah Braverman

After becoming America's hippest mom Lorelai on Gilmore Girls, Lauren Graham again captured

the hearts of small screen audiences everywhere as Sarah Braverman on NBC's Parenthood.

However, ER star Maura Tierney originally occupied that role before having to drop out

under terrible circumstances - after filming the pilot, she learned that she had breast

cancer.

The show's producers tried to accommodate her treatments by pushing back production

and sending the show's premiere to mid-season, but, in the end, it was too much for her and

she had to leave the show.

In her place, Graham was brought on to take over the part, and after Tierney recovered,

she went on to nab an award-winning role on the hit Showtime series The Affair.

For more infomation >> TV Roles That Were Recast After The Pilot - Duration: 5:45.

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How Airports Make Money - Duration: 11:00.

This video was made possible by Squarespace.

After this, watch the video I made for their channel.

More about it after the video.

Airports are incredibly complex and challenging businesses but, in many cases, they're businesses

that make money.

Many airports are owned by governments but still then, they're often operated as businesses—just

businesses that are publicly owned.

The majority of airports make their money through what they earn from passenger carrying

commercial flights using their facilities.

Some airports are cargo focused and fund their operations through cargo flights but the ones

that you've most heard of, such as London's Heathrow Airport, rely almost entirely on

passenger flights.

While the amount of cargo going through Heathrow is significant thanks to passenger aircraft

transporting cargo in their holds, the number of dedicated cargo flights is low in proportion

to the airports 650 daily flights.

They make their money off of the 78 million passengers flying through each year.

Heathrow is the busiest airport in the world that is fully privately owned—the UK government

owns no stake in it—and so it is perhaps the best example of an airport built to turn

a profit.

It costs $1,485,650,000 per year to run Heathrow airport.

This includes costs like the $494 million Heathrow pays in salaries to its 6,500 employees.

Now, 76,000 people actually work at Heathrow but only those 6,500 actually work for Heathrow.

The company that runs Heathrow, Heathrow Airport Holdings, is only really responsible for the

oversight and administration of the airport.

Within Heathrow's walls, though, there are hundreds of other companies operating.

Those 70,000 other people work for the airlines, the baggage handling companies, the air traffic

control company, the restaurants, the rental car companies, the bus companies, and all

the other different employers at the airport.

There are, of course, plenty of other costs involved in running the airport from the $232

million per year in maintenance to the $113 million yearly utility bill for water, electricity,

internet, gas, and more, but overall, that number, $1.5 billion, is what it costs to

run the sixth busiest airport in the world.

That's more than it costs to run the 1.3 million person country of Swaziland.

So how do they pay for that?

On a per passenger basis, it costs $19 to run Heathrow Airport.

Essentially, that means Heathrow needs to make $19 from each passenger that passes through

its doors in order to break even.

Of course, some passengers are more profitable than others.

Arriving passengers generally just get off the plane, go through customs, and leave immediately

without buying anything while connecting and departing passengers generally have more time

to shop at the airport.

Retail is incredibly important to the profitability of any airport.

This is part of the reason why its in the airports best interest to make the check-in

and security process as quick as possible—so passengers have more time to shop.

Heathrow makes money through retail by receiving a cut of every sale made.

On average, restaurants earn the airport 95 cents per passenger, retail stores earn them

$5.15 per passenger, the parking lots add on another $2.03, then all the other smaller

sources of retail revenue such as rental car companies and VIP lounges account for another

$3.04.

Rather uniquely, Heathrow also operates the express train from the airport to Paddington

Station in London which makes them another $2.15 per passenger.

All in all, the airport makes $13.32 from passengers through purchases on top of their

actual airplane ticket and, its worth pointing out, this doesn't mean that passengers spend

$13.32—this means that Heathrow makes $13.32 per passenger.

This is their cut—actual spending at the airport per passenger is much higher.

Now, you may think that this amount of retail revenue per passenger is high and you'd

be right, it is.

In fact, it's one of the highest retail revenues per passenger of any airport worldwide.

In comparison, Washington Dulles Airport makes $5.68 per passenger, Auckland Airport makes

$7.71, and Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport makes $10.92 per passenger through retail.

Heathrow is an expert in making passengers spend.

They use all sorts of tricks and tactics to increase passenger spending.

For example, in Terminal 3, to get from security and to the gates, all passengers have to walk

through duty free which increases sales enormously.

Heathrow also doesn't display the gate for flights until around 45-90 minutes before

departure.

This is common in European airports, but uncommon elsewhere.

Because of this, passengers wait in the central area where shops and restaurants are until

just before their flight which leads to more time with passengers exposed to the retail

environment.

Being one of the very few airports with non-stop service to all six inhabited continents, Heathrow

also has the advantage of being an airport focused on long-haul service.

These flights tend to carry the wealthiest passengers and, while worldwide passengers

arrive an average of 2 hours and 17 minutes before their flight, Heathrow passengers arrive

2 hours and 51 minutes before which means they have more time to shop at the airport.

As mentioned, though, the airport needs to make $19 per passenger and retail only earns

them just over $13.

The rest of it comes from flights.

Each plane that lands at Heathrow pays the airport an average of $9,500.

Of course it varies hugely by aircraft—a 76 seat FlyBe Dash 8 isn't paying the same

as a 345 seat British Airways 747—but $9,500 is the average per visit to Heathrow.

That goes to pay for things like gate space, a check in area, and the runway time itself.

The airport charges a fixed amount per aircraft landing—for the small Bombardier Dash 8

it would be $999 while for the large 747 it would be $11,600.

On departure, airlines are then charged again this time per passenger.

For each passenger flying to a destination outside of Europe the airline is charged a

base of $58 but this charge is reduced if a passenger connects through Heathrow rather

than originating or if the aircraft is parked at a remote stand rather than a gate.

All in all, a fully loaded 76 seat FlyBe Dash 8 flying a domestic route to Edinburgh, for

example, would be charged about $2,400 for its whole visit, arrival and departure, while

that British Airways 747 flying a long-haul route to New York, for example, would be charged

$31,700.

It's worth noting that these are the published prices—in reality, many airlines with significant

numbers of flights at Heathrow have agreements with the airport that reduce their costs.

Breaking it down, what those numbers mean is that Heathrow gets, on average, $29 of

the cost of every passenger's ticket.

As you can see that means that Heathrow makes a fair bit more than it costs to run the airport.

The company mostly uses this operating profit to pay off debt from prior projects and to

pay taxes so in the end, they're only truly making about $8.20 off of each of their passengers,

but what these numbers also mean is that, by design, Heathrow is incentivized to attract

long-haul flights.

The airport is currently at capacity.

Their maximum number of flights per day is 657 and they currently have 650.

They really have no more capacity which means one of the only ways for them to grow financially

is to bring in larger planes.

The 76 seat FlyBe Dash 8 takes up the same time on the runway that could be used by another

345 seat British Airways 747 while the airport would make vastly more money by having that

747 land.

This is no doubt part of the reason why Heathrow is so poorly connected to the country that

it's in—the UK.

The airport only has flights to eight airports in the UK which means the airport has exactly

the same number of destinations in the UK as it has in China.

Meanwhile, Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, in the Netherlands, has flights to 25 destinations

in the UK.

That means that for the vast majority of UK residents living outside of London, it's

easier to connect to wherever they're going through Amsterdam than the airport in their

capital city.

The reality is that Heathrow is a commercial company.

While most UK residents would likely want to see domestic flights to their largest airport

it just doesn't make commercial sense to operate short and cheap flights to Heathrow

in the place of highly lucrative long-haul flights.

It's not only less lucrative for the airport, it's also more costly for the passenger

than flying to other smaller airports.

Of course, not every airport is like Heathrow.

Not every airport is a commercial company.

That's just because, in many cases, running an airport the way the public wants it to

be run is bad business.

About two thirds of all airports worldwide lose money.

In many cases that's because they're government run and just not that focused on making money.

The US is a country that has not yet gotten around to airport privatization like the UK.

There is only one single privately owned and operated airport in the US with commercial

passenger flights—that's Branson Airport in Southern Missouri.

Unlike Heathrow, which turns a considerable profit, Branson airport is loosing money and

has struggled to keep airlines flying there for more than a few years.

It's not like Branson was the only attempt at running a private airport in the US—National

Express, a UK based transport company, took over Newburgh airport 60 miles north of New

York City in 2000, but it too failed and sold the airport back to the government.

The difference between airport privatization in the US and the UK is that in the US, the

smallest airports went private while in the UK, the largest airports did.

In the UK, ten of the fifteen busiest airports are privately owned and operated.

Meanwhile, only four of the fifteen least busy airports in the country are privately

owned.

That's because small airports, in most cases, just don't make money.

Smaller airports being government run and unprofitable in the US allow for a sort of

indirect subsidy for airlines to operate there.

In these cases, airports are willingly charging airlines less than it costs to run the airport

to operate there in order to attract them to fly there.

City, county, or state governments are willing to do this because they view air service as

a stimulant to economic development.

The merits of private versus public airport ownership can be debated, but proponents of

publicly owned airports will argue that they're essential pieces of infrastructure while those

for airport privatization will argue that commercial ownership leads to lower costs

and better service.

Even in the UK public opinion is split on whether airports are better off public or

private.

What's sure, though, is that running an airport, whether public or private, is not

easy and that the fact that a few hundred aircraft taking off per day is all it takes

to fund the multi billion dollar business of Heathrow is almost as impressive as the

planes themselves.

Now that you've finished this video, there's another one I made for you to watch.

Squarespace asked me to make a video explaining why, "design is not a luxury."

That phrase might not make sense now but the whole point of the video I made is to explain

it so make sure to watch it.

You can either click the annotation on-screen now or it's linked at the top of the description.

Oh, and fair warning, I go on camera in it.

Thanks for watching and we'll see you again in two weeks for another Wendover Productions

video.

For more infomation >> How Airports Make Money - Duration: 11:00.

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Nhà Mày Giàu Ăn Cơm Với Cá...Nhà Tao Nghèo Hai Lá Gì Ta...| Sirius Tem NANO Độ Kiểng | Hội Xe Việt - Duration: 3:52.

For more infomation >> Nhà Mày Giàu Ăn Cơm Với Cá...Nhà Tao Nghèo Hai Lá Gì Ta...| Sirius Tem NANO Độ Kiểng | Hội Xe Việt - Duration: 3:52.

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Washindi wa Droo ya Nne ya Tusua Maisha ni Hawa - Duration: 26:18.

For more infomation >> Washindi wa Droo ya Nne ya Tusua Maisha ni Hawa - Duration: 26:18.

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June 2018 Wrap Up: #ReadingWomenMonth + More [CC] - Duration: 9:10.

Hello everybody, my name is Cara, and today I am here with my June Wrap Up.

So I kind of participated in the Reading Women Challenge month, which had a bunch of wonderful

challenges about reading female-centered books by female authors...primarily, books by female

authors.

And I did not read very many of the ones I was hoping to; you guys have already heard

about how like I got sick and life and all of that so I won't get into it.

Also if the books did count for a particular challenge, I will be sure to note that down

below in case you guys are curious.

So first I finished Instead of Three Wishes: Magical Short Stories by Megan Whalen Turner.

Megan Whalen Turner is the author of the Queen's Thief series, which I am loving.

I am only 2 books in and I just adore those books, so I was really excited to read some

of her other fiction.

And like with most short story collections, this was a very mixed bag for me.

Just a quick run-down of the ratings I gave for each story: A Plague of Leprechaun I gave

3.5 stars, Leroy Roachbane I gave 4 stars, Factory I gave 3 stars and that story also

has a trigger warning for suicide, Aunt Charlotte and the NGA Portraits I gave 5 stars, Instead

of Three Wishes I gave 4.5 stars, The Nightmare I gave 2 stars--that was by far my least favorite

story, I really don't recommend that one, it was super freaky and just not what I'm

into--and The Baker King I gave 4 stars.

So I would recommend this collection; all of them were pretty quick and like easy to

get through and the gems that I did find I think made the whole collection worth it.

I think overall I gave the short story collection 3.5 stars.

I didn't love Megan Whalen Turner's writing style quite as much as in her Queen's Thief

series, but I did like how creative the story ideas were.

I like how good she was at crafting characters in such a short space of time.

By far my favorite stories were Aunt Charlotte and the NGA Portraits, and Instead of Three

Wishes.

I think those were both so like magical and whimsical and with just a little bit of bittersweetness

but not too much and if you're only going to read a couple stories from the collection,

obviously I would recommend my favorites! *laughs* But I just think those were really

good.

Next I finished Naondel by Maria Turtschaninoff.

This is the sequel to Maresi, which is the first book in the Red Abbey Chronicles series,

this is the second book but it is actually a prequel.

This was such a brilliantly written book; it was very intense and upsetting for quite

a bit of it actually, but I think it was so well-done, so important, so engaging.

So when I talked about Maresi, I mentioned that one of the things I loved about it is

that it wasn't immediately obvious what the age range was for that book.

I think people who are really put off by certain...like age ranges like middle grade or YA or whatever,

I think anybody could enjoy that book, Maresi.

But for this one I definitely would say that's not true.

I would classify this book as an adult novel, maybe--maybe borderline YA into adult.

But it's so dark.

I would give trigger warnings for rape, for suicide, for self-harm, for miscarriages,

for abuse.

There's a lot of disturbing content in this book.

And even though it was very prevalent throughout the story, I wouldn't say that it was gratuitous

or that it was used for no good reason.

I think the author made a very conscious decision about what living in a world like this would

be like, you know she really wanted to tell that story and she didn't shy away from showing

how awful it was.

And this book--the plot really follows the founding of the organization that we see in

Maresi.

So there's like this sanctuary for women and girls who are fleeing hardship, basically,

especially that inflicted by men.

And this book shows us why the women left the country that they were from and why that

sanctuary was necessary.

I'm not gonna say I enjoyed reading all of it, because obviously there were some scenes

that were just--awful to read, but I think that this was a phenomenal book.

I ended up giving it 4.5 stars.

The author did such an amazing job of showing beauty and hope and friendship in the midst

of all of this suffering.

I think it's incredible how quickly and distinctly I was able to bond with all of the perspective

characters, because I think we end up with--is it like 7 or 8 different narrators?

But I never felt like that was too much; I felt like I got to know all of these women.

I feel like even the times when I didn't agree with the decision they were making I could

understand why they did it.

All of these women doing the best they can, or what they thought the best they could do

was, and just seeing them bond and finally, finally start to like work together and escape

this horrible situation was just beautiful.

I also loved the worldbuilding and the writing and all of the different cultures and backgrounds

of these women and how you could see they way they interconnected and it was so cool

and interesting to me to see the different cultures and the different beliefs and how

those differed but how they weren't mutually exclusive.

I think the fact that I enjoyed this book or thought so highly of it even though it

was a prequel, which I almost never like, I think that really speaks to this series'

quality as well.

If you can read it safely, you know like keeping in mind the trigger and content warnings,

I think it's so worth it.

This is just such a phenomenal series and I am so ready for the third book.

Next I finished Deathless by Catherynne M. Valente.

This is a retelling of the Koschei the Deathless story but there is also a lot of other Russian

folklore and stories mixed into this book as well.

And it also incorporates a lot of Russian history, mainly the Russian Revolution.

And this was such an interesting book.

I ended up really enjoying it, but it's a really strange one.

It's--it's the kind of book where I really don't know how to recommend it to people,

or who to recommend it to, except that if you tend to like dark and odd and just...weird

and creative fantasy books, I think you would enjoy this.

Catherynne M. Valente's writing is just incredible, it's--it's almost to the point of showing

off sometimes, but I mean that in the best way possible!

Every line, every paragraph, was just so--so well-constructed, but not in a way that felt

unnatural or anything.

I just really really clicked with her writing style and something I really appreciated and

enjoyed about this book is the cast of characters is--is so--unlikeable? in a lot of ways.

Many of the characters are ones where you're not sure if you should actually want them

to win or not, you know you don't know if you want to root for them.

But even the ones that I didn't like, or that I had a lot of problems with, almost every

single character I still enjoyed seeing.

Like I still understood them.

The romantic relationship in this book is definitely a twisty one, pretty messed-up,

pretty unhealthy in a lot of ways.

I don't know if I would necessarily call it abusive because it doesn't feel--it doesn't

feel as unbalanced as those relationships will generally do.

So I don't even know how to give a content warning for this, except that there's a lot

of war and starvation on top of that.

But as far as the relationship goes, I just don't know how--how to describe it or how

to like best prepare people for it.

Because Koschei the character is just such a fantastic antihero or even...not...not really

a villain...antiprotagonist?

I don't even know what he is, but even though he does so many awful things, there's a part

of you that wants to see more, you know, that like still wants to follow him and wants him

to succeed and like you're invested in him.

I guess--I guess that's what I'm trying to say with all of this rambling discussion about

characters is I was invested in this story and these characters and this world.

And also I want to point out that [the author] did a ton of research on this book before

she wrote it.

I have seen reviews from Russian readers who have basically said that her research and

her portrayal is flawless and just such a good representation of the stories and the

culture.

Also this is a very small, small side note, but she actually used the correct Russian

naming systems.

And I'm sorry I'm like throwing shade at the Grisha trilogy right now, but every time I

would read "Alina Starkov", I would get so pissed off like I am not very um, well-versed

in Russian history.

I really enjoy learning about Imperial Russia and mythology, I'm really interested in, but

I don't know that much.

But I DO know that you would never ever EVER have a female character whose name ends in

a consonant.

You just wouldn't!

That's not--that's not how it works, and this book didn't do that.

So anyway, I gave this 4 stars, um...it's really strange, I'm really glad I read it...I

don't know how I feel about some of it!

And the last book I read during the month of June was Jessica's Guide to Dating on the

Dark Side by Beth Fantaskey.

This was actually a reread, I read it for the BookTube Rereadathon Challenge to reread

a guilty pleasure book.

And paranormal romance is often considered a guilty pleasure genre even though like I

don't believe in shaming people for liking things that don't hurt people, basically.

Um, so anyway I picked this one.

*deep breath* First time I read it I gave it 4 stars, this time I gave it 2 stars.

So I have a lot of thoughts, I'm actually gonna do a full review and discussion on my

thoughts for this book so I will talk a lot more about the specific things I didn't like

in this book and the like 1 or 2 things I did, so definitely keep an eye out for that.

I will link my Tome Topple TBR down below because I also do a currently reading update

where I talk about the 5 books that I was reading at the time.

Please let me know if you guys have read any of these books what you thought of them.

I will see you guys soon with another video, and I hope you love the next book you read.

Bye!

For more infomation >> June 2018 Wrap Up: #ReadingWomenMonth + More [CC] - Duration: 9:10.

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Wimbledon 2018 Highlights | Winner, History & Main Events | Interesting Facts for RRB, Bank & SSC - Duration: 3:25.

Press the bell icon to never miss a video from Testbook.com

Hello friends and welcome to this video

Today we'll talk about the World's most famoust Tennis Tournament,

Wimbledon.

But before going further tell us in the comments section,

Whom did Novak Djokovic defeat to win the Wimbledon 2018.

Now let's know about Wimbledon.

Wimbledon is the oldest tennis tournament in the world and also the most famous.

This tournament is formally called The Championships, Wimbledon.

The very first tournament was held in 1877.

Since then all the tournaments have taken place in All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, London.

The Tournament takes place over 2 weeks in late June to early July.

Initially women were not allowed to play in the Tournament.

It wasn't until 1884 that The All England club agreed to open up the tournament to both men and women.

Wimbledon started gaining attention and became popular in 1889 .

when William renshaw sparked a rise in public interest with the first of his seven consecutive Wimbledon victories.

By 1990 it had become an international affair

A few changes have occurred in this tournament since its beginning.

A long term plan was revealed by The Club in 1993,

intended to improve the quality of the event for the spectators, players, Officials and neighbours.

Stage one (1994–1997) of the plan was completed in 1997

Stage two (1997–2009).

with the extension of the West Stand of the Centre Court with 728 extra seats

Stage three (2000–2011) has been completed with the construction of an entrance building

A new retractable roof was built in time for the 2009 championships

making the first time that rain did not stop play for a lengthy time on Centre Court.

There are 5 main events in the Wimbledon

1. Gentlemen's Singles which has 128 players

2. Ladies' Singles which also has 128 players

3. Gentlemen's Doubles which has 64 teams

4. Ladies' Doubles which also has 64 teams

5. Mixed Doubles which has 48 teams

Apart from the main events there are 4 Junior Events

and 7 Invitation Events.

Wimbledon 2018 ended on 16th July 2018.

Novak Djokovic has won the Men's Single's final, beating Kevin Anderson.

Since the 2016 French Open

Novak Djokovic has won his first Grand Slam title.

The Ladies' Singles Final was won by Angelique Kerber who beat Serena Williams.

Mike Bryan with Jack Sock obtained victory over Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus at Wimbledon

and won his 17th Grand Slam doubles title

In the women's doubles final, Barbora Krejcikovae.

and Katerina Siniakova

beat Nicole Melichar and Kveta Peschk.

Here given was a little detail knowledge of Wimbledon and Wimbledon 2018.

You can tell us how you liked the video in the comment section

Please like this Video and Share it with your friends

and don't forget to subscribe the Testbook YouTube Channel.

Click on the bell icon, if you haven't done it already and thankyou for watching this Video.

For more infomation >> Wimbledon 2018 Highlights | Winner, History & Main Events | Interesting Facts for RRB, Bank & SSC - Duration: 3:25.

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Things That Happen When You Take Cold Showers - Duration: 4:22.

Must check 13 Things That Happen When You Take Cold Showers

things that happen when you take cold showers if you have not yet subscribed

then first subscribe to my channel press the bell back noon to get latest updates

from how do taking cold showers provide surprising health benefits from burning

fat to depression relief in this video you will learn why you should turn your

shower handles to cold and take advantage of a ton of Awesome

health benefits if you're like most people you hate the idea of taking a

cold shower we've gotten so used to showering in

warm water that we only really notice it when it runs out warm showers can help

you warm up in our incredibly relaxing which is their greatest benefit but have

you ever stopped to think about the benefits of showering in cold water

that's what we're going to be talking about in today's video here are some

benefits of taking cold showers cold showers built strong willpower out of

all the other articles out there no one lists this as a positive of taking cold

showers but I personally think it's the most important cold showers built

massive willpower they improve emotional resilience do you get flustered anxious

or pissed off easily cold showers can help seriously cold showers train your

nervous system to be more resilient to stress they reduce stress along with

increasing your adaptation to stressful situations they will lower levels of

uric acid and boost levels of glutathione e in your blood making you

less stressed in general cold showers increase alertness if you're one of the

brave souls that have taken a cold shower already

then you will know that at first it is hard to breath they'll improve your skin

and hair if you're not motivated by feeling better

then be motivated by looking better one of the best ways to improve your skin

and hair is by taking cold showers plus it's free cold showers one of the best

anti aging secrets stimulate weight loss another way cold showers will make you

look better is by promoting fat loss most people don't notice but there are

two types of fat in your body brown fat and white fat white fat is bad it's the

body fat that we all hate so much brown fat is good its function is to generate

heat and keep your body warm cold showers increased testosterone one of

the coolest benefits of cold showers for men is that they will cause a rise in

testosterone levels cold showers and korone the theory of cool guns they

boost fertility and other interesting benefit of cold showers is that they

will boost your sperm count and increase fertility taking hot baths has been

proven to be an effective male contraceptive men who took a half hour

hot bath every other day for three weeks were rendered infertile for the next six

months cold showers improved circulation and if you're not motivated by feeling

better or looking better than be motivated by being healthier cold

showers improved circulation by means of sending blood down to your organs to

keep them warm cold showers speed up muscle recovery if you're an athlete

then you know that taking an ice bath after intense training is one of the

best things you can do to recover faster but you don't need a high tech training

facility with cold water submersibles to be able to achieve these benefits just

take a cold shower cold showers relieve depression one of the most noted

benefits of taking cold showers is that they offer relief for symptoms of

depression cold showers stimulate what is known as a blue spot which is the

brains primary source of noradrenaline a chemical which plays a role in

alleviating depression energized breathing step into a cold shower and

the first thing you are going to do is take a big deep breath after that you

will start panting and moving your breathing would become deep and erratic

cold showers improve immunity one of the most important benefits of cold showers

is the fact that they increase your immunity taking regular cold showers

increases the amount of disease fighting white blood cells compared to that of

those who take regular hot showers do try this and let us know on the results

in the comments section if you liked the video give it a thumbs up and share it

with your friends if you want more recipes home remedies and tips subscribe

to the channel don't forget to subscribe my channel

click the bell button to get notified directly for latest updates

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