Thứ Ba, 25 tháng 9, 2018

Waching daily Sep 25 2018

Look at the sky.

Aren't the stars beautiful?

Twinkle, twinkle, little star

How I wonder what you are

Up above the world so high

Like a diamond in the sky

Twinkle, twinkle, little star

How I wonder what you are

When the blazing sun is gone

When he nothing shines upon

Then you show your little light

Twinkle, twinkle, all the night

Twinkle, twinkle, little star

How I wonder what you are

Aren't the stars wonderful?

Let's sing once more.

Twinkle, twinkle, little star

How I wonder what you are

Up above the world so high

Like a diamond in the sky

Twinkle, twinkle, little star

How I wonder what you are

When the blazing sun is gone

When he nothing shines upon

Then you show your little light

Twinkle, twinkle, all the night

Twinkle, twinkle, little star

How I wonder what you are

For more infomation >> Twinkle Twinkle Little Star | Nursery Rhymes Songs | Kids Songs by Farmees - Duration: 16:45.

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Как правильно расти по деньгам - Duration: 1:36.

For more infomation >> Как правильно расти по деньгам - Duration: 1:36.

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Prema Thatake (Three Different Versions) | W.D. Amaradeva | Sinhala Songs Listing - Duration: 11:17.

Prema Thatake | Pandith W.D. Amaradeva & Vajira Balasooriya

Lyrics: Sri Chandrarathna Manawasinghe | Music: Pandith W.D. Amaradeva

Prema Thatake | Pandith W.D. Amaradeva & Nanda Malini

Prema Thatake | Pandith W.D. Amaradeva & Rashmi Sangeetha

Subscribe For The Best Sinhala Songs

For more infomation >> Prema Thatake (Three Different Versions) | W.D. Amaradeva | Sinhala Songs Listing - Duration: 11:17.

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MUHTEŞEM GERİ DÖNÜŞ !!! FİFA 18 YENİ KARİYER #5 - Duration: 22:03.

For more infomation >> MUHTEŞEM GERİ DÖNÜŞ !!! FİFA 18 YENİ KARİYER #5 - Duration: 22:03.

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Myclub Avrupa 12.si ile Maç Yaptım | Pes 2019 myclub online maç özeti - Duration: 5:41.

For more infomation >> Myclub Avrupa 12.si ile Maç Yaptım | Pes 2019 myclub online maç özeti - Duration: 5:41.

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Liên quân | Đây là lý do Rourke luôn bị cấm chọn trong các trận đấu trong đtdv mùa đông 2018 - Duration: 11:52.

For more infomation >> Liên quân | Đây là lý do Rourke luôn bị cấm chọn trong các trận đấu trong đtdv mùa đông 2018 - Duration: 11:52.

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School Bus | Formation And Uses | Cartoon Videos For Children - Duration: 1:01:13.

School Bus Formation And Uses

For more infomation >> School Bus | Formation And Uses | Cartoon Videos For Children - Duration: 1:01:13.

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The Answer Is Games - Duration: 4:16.

What started a long time ago?

Games have been around for quite some time.

They date back thousands of years.

There wasn't much to do hundreds of years ago so you can imagine that thousands of years

ago there definitely wasn't much to do.

People were bored, so they invented games to pass the time.

That's why they're called board games.

I'm joking.

But they did play games on boards, and the first of these games date back thousands of

years.

In Egypt, they played a board game known as Senet

That game is about 5,000 years old.

What do you play?

Games give you control.

In a world where life can sometimes seem crazy and out of your hands, games put a controller

in your hands and help you take back that control.

They help you unwind, strengthen your mind and give you a way to escape.

When you play games, you are in control.

What challenges you?

Games stimulate your mind.

They present you challenges and invite you to solve them.

This might sound like it's all in good fun, but games can and have served a more practical

purpose.

Chess is a board game that gives you an army to command.

It's a simple game with simple rules and simple pieces but it teaches you how to conquer

an enemy without getting conquered yourself.

Values that are invaluable during a war.

What you might call strategy games today were simply tools for war throughout history.

Strategy games might be played to win a fictional battle but many play strategy games to win

real battles.

What can be simple?

Games weren't always played on Xboxes, PlayStations or computers.

Early games involved no technology.

They were just sticks, stones, other miscellaneous objects and a little imagination.

What can be complex?

Games have evolved over time.

Pong and Tetris marked the beginning of the videogame era.

The first attempts at mixing technology with games.

In only a couple years, these attempts would become so much more.

What help you pass the time?

Games are to blame for why you're up late at night, why you're sleeping in the afternoon

and why you're questioning if it's really 3 A.M. when you only played for, what you

thought, was a couple hours.

It wasn't a couple hours.

It really is 3 A.M.

You need to go to bed, c'mon what are you doing?

You ever hear the saying "Time flies when you're having fun"?

Well people have fun when they play games so that basically means games are time machines.

And your destination is the future.

What have many forms?

Games are different from each other.

There are board games, card games, video games, playground games, sport games and so many

more.

There are games that people take seriously and others that people don't.

Sports are forms of games.

People take them very seriously.

Then there's games like Tic-Tac-Toe.

Very few people take that game seriously.

What can immerse you in a whole new world?

Games can place you in a different reality.

A virtual reality.

One that looks and sounds real but isn't.

Just like a well-written movie or book, games can draw us into worlds, lives and stories

far different from our own.

And we can experience all of this as if we were those characters ourselves.

Whether it's from a third-person view, first-person view or VR view, we become these characters.

We can choose their actions, their looks, their roles in life and see how their stories

unfold right in front of our eyes.

What starts friendships?

Games are great for parties.

They can inspire laughter, competition and excitement which are all great for a social

setting.

Grab Mario Kart, Cards Against Humanity or Fuzion Frenzy and you're ready to get the

party started.

What will always exist?

Games will not always look the way they do now.

But you can bet that as long as there are humans, there will be games.

And that's how the answer is games.

For more infomation >> The Answer Is Games - Duration: 4:16.

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Bella Fawzi - Rama Shinta (Teaser) - Duration: 2:03.

For more infomation >> Bella Fawzi - Rama Shinta (Teaser) - Duration: 2:03.

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"น้ำแดงมะนาวโซดา" เมนูเครื่องดื่มทำง่ายๆที่บ้าน | Pam Studio - Duration: 3:55.

For more infomation >> "น้ำแดงมะนาวโซดา" เมนูเครื่องดื่มทำง่ายๆที่บ้าน | Pam Studio - Duration: 3:55.

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Samantha Bee's Work as a Waitress Prepared Her for Donald Trump - Duration: 7:07.

-I want to ask, on a day like today,

where there is so much news --

-Oh. -You have a show on Wednesday.

-We do. -Are you happy to have the time

to process it, or are you chomping at the bit to do one?

-Well, we -- I felt so sorry for you today.

-Yeah. -I did.

You know, because it roils the news, and then --

But it's nice for us to be able to sit back

and kind of be a little more analytical

and just kind of wait to see what's happening.

We get to take a step back a little bit.

-Of course, stuff then also --

It's not like things don't happen on Wednesday

that tip your apple cart over, as well.

-Yeah, I know.

Well, you know, you have to be nimble.

The news changed within every hour.

-He's made us very fit. He's made us so aerobically fit.

-Flexing such fun muscles all the time.

-You addressed Kavanaugh last week in your show.

-We did. -And obviously I'm gonna assume

you're going to address him again this Wednesday.

-For sure. -Because that will be the eve

of this testimony that we don't quite know

how it's gonna look. -Yep.

-Is it -- Have you found it

a difficult thing to write comedy about?

-We have. You know, it's something

that we're all really wrestling with at the show.

I think it's really been very upsetting

and triggering for a lot of people who work in the office.

I'm sure it has here, too.

I think that women, in general, are just furious.

We totally took -- We took to the streets today.

We were, like, wearing all black.

We were like, "Let's just go and walk around the block."

And that's what we did, and it felt good for a moment.

-Yeah, I mean, you also find --

I mean, I know we found as a writing staff,

when things happen in the news that are depressing,

it is nice to be in a room full of comedy writers.

-Yes. -You must find that, as well.

-For sure. I do think that we achieve

some kind -- we achieve catharsis within the office.

Like, I don't know that there is another job

that all of us could be doing.

It's kind of the only job we're capable of now,

and we help each other. -Yeah.

There's no matching skill sets outside of comedy right now.

-We are definitely useless in every other endeavor.

-Yeah. We would all be the worst person at any other job.

[ Laughter ] -Oh. Definitely. Yes.

-But I want to talk, 'cause we've -- we had

previous jobs, like a lot of people in comedy,

which is that we -- I know I waited tables.

You also waited tables. -I definitely did.

-I've heard you say, and I would think anybody would assume

your time at "The Daily Show" has made you very --

helped train you for what you're doing now.

-Sure.

-But that being a waiter was very helpful for Donald Trump.

-Very. Don't you think that --

Well, I mean, you see the best and the worst of humanity

when you work in the service industry.

And I feel like when I see him I'm like, "Oh, I know you."

[ Laughter ] Like, "I've seen you."

You're 100% the guy who comes in, and he's like,

"I'm an amazing tipper.

Take care of all of my friends."

And all his friends are like, horrible,

and they're all gropers, and then, right at the end,

he gives you, like, a nice 8% tip.

[ Laughter ]

For sure, like a lot of talk.

Lots of talk, very little rock.

[ Laughter ]

-You have a new app that is a game.

-We do! We're so excited about it!

-This is very exciting. -It's very fun.

-And this is to encourage voter registration.

-Yes. Well, okay.

I had this idea that we should apply the principles

of gamification to incentivize voter turnout.

Because as we are discovering, voting is extremely important.

[ Laughter ]

And so, I went to Silicon Valley,

and I met with a bunch of geeks,

and they helped us to craft this amazing game,

which I really don't know if it's ever been done before.

It's really a political comedy game,

and you win cash prizes,

and you sign up for voting reminders,

and it's all meant to trick you into caring about voting,

and I think it's working. -That's very exciting.

-We have 200,000 users, and, actually, when we launched,

it was very -- it was very successful

right out of the gate.

And so the game crashed a little bit,

but we're very much working on the bugs,

but people are winning money, and it's very cool.

It's really funny. -Well, it's great,

because the two things that are true about Americans...

-Yes. -...one, we don't like voting,

and, two, we're easily tricked. -Easily tricked.

-So, if you can lure us into anything...

-Oh, we love to win a prize. -Yeah.

What is -- I want to ask,

'cause that would be intimidating to me.

You have an idea, and then you go to Silicon Valley.

I have never sort of entered that room with an idea.

Was it intimidating for you? -It was very intimidating,

because they work in such a different way.

I mean, they literally -- we started at nothing,

and we assembled a really amazing group of people.

But the way that they work --

And I know that there's a term for it,

but I don't remember what it is.

You all sit in a room, and you do these massively long

brainstorming sessions with, like, props,

and somebody's got dice, and there's a bunch of bananas

and post-it notes, and they all just

throw out the worst ideas humanly possible,

and it's a very humiliating process.

You really just -- You have to give over

to the process and let everybody share

everybody's horrible ideas.

And you end the day, you've been humiliated,

and you're like, "Why are we doing this?"

And then, a year later, you have a game.

-Wow! -Yeah. That's how it's --

It's just that simple.

-Okay. So that's also helpful to hear.

If you want to have an app,

you can't just think about it like a day.

-No, it's a very long process.

It's been a really interesting journey.

It's been an incredible learning curve.

I'm ultimately incredible happy with the product.

I think it's so funny.

It's in the voice of the show. -That's great.

-Yeah, super shrill. -And I know it's --

You can win cash prizes. -Yes.

-But it does not count as gambling,

which would be illegal, because you cannot lose money.

-You cannot lose money. -You cannot lose money.

-Got it. -Techni--

No, you cannot lose money. [ Laughter ]

We will not take your -- We will not take your --

-"I voted, and then I went back to my app,

and I had lost $1,000!" -I know!

-We will not take your money, and we will not abuse your data.

We know how that goes. -Oh, yes, absolutely.

People like that. -Yeah.

-You actually did have -- You briefly --

You ventured a little down the path

into a life in the gambling industry.

-I did. I worked --

I trained when I was in college --

Um, I trained to become a blackjack dealer

in an illegal casino in an industrial park.

-Wow! -Yes.

-So the kind of illegal casino where truly

only really shady people even knew where it was.

-Definitely. And you have to pay with your limbs.

I don't really know. I could not do it.

I actually -- How far down the path

to being a blackjack dealer did you get before you realized?

-Like, three days in. And then I was like,

"This is not --" -That's a lot of days.

-It was a lot of days. It was --

-What was the day where they were like,

"And then, if they can't pay, you need to hold their wrist

like this, and then someone else will have the cleaver"...

-It was a very scary and very serious crowd of people.

It really was not --

It did not speak to my strengths.

You should not -- I didn't want to go to --

I was like, "This job starts at midnight.

Over here is a factory where they make

wooden pallets for boxes."

So it did not -- It was not safe.

-Do you ever wonder -- 'Cause you did three days there.

You probably met some other trainees.

-I did. -Do you ever think that

there's like, at the illegal gambling warehouse,

somebody goes, "You know, she used to be here."

[ Laughter ] -"She's one of us."

-Yeah! -"She was incompetent."

I've been terrible at every job I've ever done.

-They're like, "I tell you, when she was here,

I would not have said she'd make an app."

[ Laughter ] -That's right.

Yes. Yes.

I hope that everybody is connecting those.

-Always so great to see you.

For more infomation >> Samantha Bee's Work as a Waitress Prepared Her for Donald Trump - Duration: 7:07.

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One Two Buckle My Shoe | Monkey Rhymes | Nursery Rhymes for Toddlers by Kids Baby Club - Duration: 16:58.

""One, two,

Buckle my shoe;

Three, four,

Knock on the door;

Five, six,

Pick up sticks;

Seven, eight,

Lay them straight:

Nine, ten,

A big, fat hen;

Eleven, twelve,

Dig and delve;

Thirteen, fourteen,

Maids a-courting;

Fifteen, sixteen,

Maids in the kitchen;

Seventeen, eighteen,

Maids a-waiting

Nineteen, twenty,

My plate's empty.'

""One, two,

Buckle my shoe;

Three, four,

Knock on the door;

Five, six,

Pick up sticks;

Seven, eight,

Lay them straight:

Nine, ten,

A big, fat hen;

Eleven, twelve,

Dig and delve;

Thirteen, fourteen,

Maids a-courting;

Fifteen, sixteen,

Maids in the kitchen;

Seventeen, eighteen,

Maids a-waiting

Nineteen, twenty,

My plate's empty.'

For more infomation >> One Two Buckle My Shoe | Monkey Rhymes | Nursery Rhymes for Toddlers by Kids Baby Club - Duration: 16:58.

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How to know the number of unique visitors on your Youtube channel - Duration: 1:45.

For more infomation >> How to know the number of unique visitors on your Youtube channel - Duration: 1:45.

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268. City Wind Turbine - Duration: 0:51.

Hey guys and welcome to goodness!

Today's goodness is about a tiny wind turbine!

Nicolas Orellana and Yaseen Noorani

from Lancaster University

are the creators of the O-Wind Turbine,

a small wind turbine that is able to turn

using wind from any direction.

Typical wind turbines only take winds

that comes from sideways.

However, in a city, the winds often travel

in any direction.

Up, down, back, forth, whatever.

So, they made the O-Wind Turbine,

that is able to funnel air from any direction,

through it's vents, and still spin,

which can then be hooked up to a generator

to create electricity!

With the slogan "clean energy for the

urban lifestyle",

they hope that one day they will be able to

introduce a new way for people in cities

to live eco-friendly lifestyles!

And that's today's goodness!

See you tomorrow!

For more infomation >> 268. City Wind Turbine - Duration: 0:51.

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7 English Words that make you sound Less Confident | Spoken English lesson with Niharika - Duration: 10:22.

For more infomation >> 7 English Words that make you sound Less Confident | Spoken English lesson with Niharika - Duration: 10:22.

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Ron Livingston's Office Space Character Inspires People to Quit Their Jobs - Duration: 7:24.

-I am very happy to have you here.

You are one of those people that have been in

so many iconic shows I have loved over the years --

and films, as well.

However, Peter Gibbons from "Office Space."

You are approached about this character a great deal, I hear.

-That's probably the one, yeah, that I get hit with the most.

-And people actually have told you

that character is inspiring to them.

-Yeah. I mean, people will come up to me from time to time

and say, you know, "This movie and you were the reason that I

quit my job and walked away from my livelihood."

-Wow.

-And I'm always a little --

I wait five seconds before I say, "Good for you,"

'cause I don't know which way it went.

And then, yeah, it's usually good or they

wouldn't they'd have just taken me out from behind.

-Yeah, exactly. -Yeah.

-And then, so, you're also on "Sex and the City."

-Yes. -You were Berger.

-Yes, I was Berger.

-And you had one of the great

somebody recognized you as Berger of all time.

I feel like being in that show, having a part in that show,

explain who recognized you at a Lakers game.

-It was so surreal.

The agency I was with at the time

had courtside Laker tickets.

And, for some reason, everyone else must have been out of town,

'cause I got the invite to go.

And, at some point during the second quarter,

there was a ball out of bounds,

and Kobe came over on the in-bound.

And he looked at me and did a double take and said, "Berger?"

I was like, "Wow!" -That's really great.

-Yeah. I'll always have that. -You'll always have that.

I was mentioning to you, backstage,

I've never seen the show.

My wife's making me watch it. I'm enjoying it a great deal.

I haven't come to Berger yet.

-I won't spoil it. -Okay, great.

Will I -- After I see the Berger arc,

will I think, "Man, Carrie --

I wish Carrie had ended up with Berger"?

-Only if you have a really messed-up idea of relationships.

-Okay, gotcha. Well, we'll see.

We'll see when that moment comes.

You have a 5-year-old, yes? -I do.

I have a 5-year-old and a 2-year-old, who's about to be 3.

-And you are -- you're raising them in L.A., obviously.

-Yes.

-How is -- Obviously, you have a new show.

You have billboards.

Your face is on while they're driving down the street.

How is that for them?

-It's kind of -- Well, first of all, I think kids today --

it's not quite so weird to see people on TV,

'cause they see themselves on TV.

Everybody can, you know, shoot everything.

But the billboards are a little bit different.

And, you know, the kids kind of respond to it.

But it is L.A., so, you know, a couple of

the other preschool dads were saying,

"Yeah, my kid came and said,

'Daddy, when are you going to be on a billboard?

I've seen three of them already

of other parents in the school.'"

-That is, yeah, raising a very unfair bar.

-Yeah, it's great values, great values.

-So, this new show -- I don't want to give too much away,

but this is something that has been in

the trailers and the promotion of the show.

Your character commits suicide. -Yes.

-And this is -- You are still in the show, from flashbacks.

-Yes.

-What made you choose to do a show

where your character so immediately dies?

-Well, my first thought was,

"I'm old enough to remember 'The Big Chill.'"

And I thought, "It worked out for Kevin Costner."

-Yeah. -Right?

-Jackpot for Costner. -Yeah.

And he didn't even say anything. -Yeah. He was, like, in and out.

-Yeah, right? -He had like two days work.

-Now he's dancing with wolves.

So I felt pretty good about it.

It's also -- I'm doing another show,

on Audience network, called "Loudermilk."

It's Season 2 of doing that. That's kind of my day gig.

-Uh-huh.

-So, this one -- it sort of had to be a limited thing

or it just wouldn't have been able to happen.

-Gotcha. -So it was great.

-Are you in -- How far into the process of

Season 2 are you on "Loudermilk" now?

-I think "Loudermilk" -- we've shot all 10 of them.

And "A Million Little Things," we're up to,

I think, 106 or 107.

-And "Loudermilk" is -- For who don't know,

this is another sort of complicated character.

Explain that character a little bit.

And what made you want to do that one?

-He's basically the biggest A-hole in the world.

-Uh-huh. -I can say that, yeah.

-Yeah, you can say that. -Okay.

-You could say the whole word, if you want.

Go for it. Try it. See how it feels.

-No, no. I'm not gonna do it. -Okay.

-I don't want the fine.

-That shows how different you are than "Loudermilk"

that you won't even say it.

-That's right. -Yeah.

-And, you know, he's sort of, like,

this deadbeat, you know, misanthrope,

who's a recovery counselor,

a substance-abuse recovery counselor

for this group of misfits and numbskulls.

And it's just classic, you know, comedy.

It's the Farrelly brothers. Will Sasso is on it.

It's a blast to do.

-And you -- Obviously, you're working with

great television-makers, great filmmakers.

Matt Weiner -- "Mad Men" --

has a new show called "The Romanoffs."

-Yes. -You're in that, as well.

-Yes.

-That is a show -- very inscrutable trailer.

Very hard to tell what the show is about.

-Yeah.

-Can you understand what it's about?

-No. I was in it and I have no idea what it was about.

I don't know.

-You're confident we'll all like it?

-I am.

I think because Matt's a mad genius,

but he is one of those guys that just likes everything

to be secret so that it can, you know, do the whole thing.

And I respect that.

It's an anthology -- Well, I don't know.

I think it's an --

All I know is -- I'm in only in one of them,

so I assume -- I hope everyone else is not in all of them,

and I'm the only -- I don't know.

-Oh, yeah.

My fingers are crossed that you find out.

"No, everybody but Ron's in all of them."

-Oh. I'll be like, "Oh, gosh."

I looked really dumb on "Seth Meyers."

-You're not from Chicago,

but you lived there after college?

-Yes.

-And what brought you to Chicago in the first place?

-You know what?

It was just one of those things where I got out of school

and I was kind of floating around.

And I knew I was going to give acting a shot somewhere.

I was probably too chicken to come and try it in New York.

I thought about Seattle for a minute,

because I didn't really know

the difference between acting and music.

And then sort of decided on Chicago

because it was close to home and Steppenwolf was a big deal.

-Sure. -You know, had been a big deal.

So we were all chasing that.

-The first time I saw you was in "Swingers."

Did you meet those guys in Chicago?

Did you meet Favreau there?

-I met Jon in Chicago and I met Vince --

Jon and I moved to L.A. at about the same time

and became closer friends sort of by the fact that

we were the only two people that moved to L.A. in that month,

and so we only knew each other.

But he knew Vince from doing "Rudy" earlier, the two of them.

And they -- I mean, it's kind of

a documentary, "Swingers," really, of what it was like

to be 26 in L.A., starting out as an actor.

-I mean, you know, obviously, one of the legend

of that movie is, you know, you guys couldn't

possibly have known you were making this film

that was going to, again, like, sort of

be this indelible mark on that moment in time,

which it certainly is.

Did you have any sense that it was going to be

a film that people were gong to see and remember for this long?

-No. We didn't think it was going to be

a movie that we were in.

We rehearsed -- We did readings of it

for like a year, trying to help Jon sell it,

with the idea that, "Well, we're never going to be in it,

but maybe some producer will see us," you know?

-Right.

-And then it just worked out that we got to do it.

And it's, you know, lightning in a bottle, one of those.

-Yeah. A fantastic film.

And I was living in Chicago at the time,

and it was so cool to us that like, "Oh, my God.

Those guys who lived here went to L.A. and made a movie,

and now everybody's talking about it and stuff."

-Right. "What are we doing in Chicago?"

-Yeah. "We've got to get to L.A.

and do one of those producer tables."

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