hello everybody this is Ariane Arsenault from La Fille de la Mer and today I'm not
making soap, I am going to show you the process of distilling some fresh
coriander that is freshly picked from my garden. I have a beautiful copper
still, this one is a column rotating Alembic and I got it from Candles and Supplies
from Cindy Rumpf Novack and I've been using it quite a lot since I got it
this summer and I want to share this process with you, as I did show a couple
pictures and people are really interested! Now I am NOT a specialist at
distilling plants, herbs and botanicals but I'm having a lot of fun doing it,
I am learning so many things and I want to share that with you. I have this great
book called Harvest to Hydrosol by Ann Harman and this is where I got most of
the information on how to distill and also Cindy from Candles and Supplies has
guided me and helped me a lot. So let's get to the first step of distilling some
botanicals this is the first batch of coriander that I've distilled this
summer so what we did this morning we just cut the green seeds from the garden
and we cleaned them out and what we're gonna do now is we're gonna put them in
a stockpot with warm water because of the waxy outside of the coriander seeds
they need to be pre soaked in a warm distilled water for 24 hours before
distillation if you could be here and smell the hydrosol coriander has a very
sweet green and kind of a zesty lemony scent it smells so great and I'm gonna
be using it to make some coriander soap so let's take apart the copper still so
this is the head and the gooseneck and here is the column so we're gonna open
this up and here is the pot this is where the herbs are gonna go with the
warm water and you can use this lymbic to do a hydro distillation
meaning that the herbs and botanicals will be in the water you can also do a
steam distillation using this part to the still and the water being in the
bottom or you can do a combo so a hydro and a steam distillation at once now for
the coriander I'm only going to be using the pot and the hydro so I'm not going
to be using this part and I'm actually going to be closing it just like so and
then connecting it to the condenser this will be filled with cold water that will
allow the steam to go through the gooseneck and then cooling down making
the gas go back to liquid state and we will collect the hydrosoul from its part
so here we go and with the Alembic on a scale and I tared my scale and we desire
to introduce the commander into still and it's only the green seeds and some
you know leaves and the stems but that's all that is going I've cut off all of
the roots and everything else okay thanks
and I know that I have about a kilo of coriander and I'm gonna fit into this is
still I already have five hundred and thirty six grams for my first bowl and
let's go ahead with the second bowl
we have 1198 grams of coriander and I will add a three-to-one ratio of
distilled water to the Olympic and here is my warm distilled water I'm going to
pour it on top of the cilantro or more the coriander because cilantro are
actually the green leaves and the coriander are the seeds so I'm pouring
this over my coriander and I'm just gonna close it up and let it soak for 24
hours and I will be back tomorrow to the still it has been 24 hour and coriander
have been soaking in the water and it's now ready to distill so here's my setup
I have removed the column from the Alembic I have also sealed with teflon
tape right here and right here my pipes so that none of the steam escapes before
actually being transferred from the condenser into my collecting recipient
so how this works is that the pot will boil the temperature will rise and steam
will be collected here through the head it will go through the gooseneck and
when it goes back down into the condenser this is cold water it will go
from steam to liquid and the hydrosol will come out right here now this needs
to be kept at a cooler temperature than the steams so that it goes from you know
being a gas to being a liquid or a steam so I have my little setup here so I have
two pipes so this one is hooked to a little aquarium pump with a valve that
will adjust the speed of the water going up so water was gonna go up this way and
then out this way and then we will keep recycling the same water
for the whole process so it will always be cooler than this team also one thing
to have on hand is a distillation log and this one was provided to me by shady
from candles and supplies so I've got all of my information in here and it's
important to take notes so that you have you know everything you need after doing
your distillation you have all of your information correct and then as I still
I will note the time and then my total yield I will fill up this part as I go
let's fire up this Olympic
I can hear a rolling boil in the pot from this Olympic and from the
thermometer you can see that it is at 70 degrees Celsius so the bottom of course
is boiling but here it's not as hot yet so I can still touch it with short
Rutley without burning myself but it's getting really hot and I'm thinking that
the steam is gonna start to go through the condenser very soon oh it is seeing
we have our first drops so when this happens so it's 10 20 9 so I'm gonna
note the time so we have the first drops of hydrosol that are exiting B just like
literally I started filming they weren't coming out and now they are so I'm gonna
now plug in my little aquarium pump so that we get this fresh water rolling and
that we don't overheat the condenser I really like this little pump it is very
very quiet for a pump so you can see the water is going up I just need to adjust
whoops I need to adjust so that the water flow goes in as the same at the
same rate and it's going out and just so you know the water that is in the
condenser is just cold tap water it will never be in contact with the hydrosoul
the hydrosoul is made with distilled water while the condenser is just cool
water from the tap okay and you can see that it's steaming so it's getting hot
and that's why it's important to have the cold water coming in from the bottom
so the heat rises up and then the hot water exits right here
here we have the tube where the hydrosoul is exiting so I have this
little fine mesh strainer just in case there would be any particulates coming
up with the steam so that they get caught up in there and they don't end up
in the hydrosoul it's also a very hmm magical moment as this is also when all
of the beautiful aroma from the hydrosol starts to fill up the room
coriander's smells really green it smells really fresh and zesty I really
love this herb all of our hydrosols are bottled in glass clear bottles and we
keep them in the fridge at cool temperature and away from direct
sunlight the whole process of distilling this hydrosoul took a little over an
hour and a half and I'm now going to show you the finished product and here
is 2 liter of beautiful hydrosol of course there's essential oil floating on
top I'm not gonna bother separating the essential oil from the hydrosoul because
in made such a small quantity that I would have I don't know like not even 5
ml of the essential oil so I'm just gonna bottle it and leave it in with the
hydrosoul I have these two glass containers that I really like to borrow
hydrosol this one is a 750 milliliter and the other one is a 2 liter so we're
gonna be using the big one but for smaller quantities and we like this one
both were purchased from SKS bottles in the US and I clean them with 70% grain
alcohol and let them dry upside down before storing any hydrosol in them
I will now label these so that I remember the date they were made I will
also write the lot number on the label that is corresponding to my distillation
log sample and now I need to disassemble the Alembic to clean it out and because
I have some warm water in there from recycling my water the water from the
distillation that was used for the condenser is now really hot and I'm
gonna be able to reuse this water to clean out my Alembic using hot soapy
water and then I'm gonna do a an alcohol rinse in everything everything is gonna
be rinsed with alcohol dried up sealed up and we need to go again I've added
the label to this beautiful hydrosol I will now put it in the fridge so that it
stays good for a long time usually the shelf life of a hydrosol kept in the
fridge is about one year we don't use any preservatives in those until we use
them in our products either soap screams emotions or other cosmetics if you would
like to learn more about making Hydra cells and using a copper Olympic I
highly recommend that you get an Harmons book harvested hydrosol you can also if
you're in the Pennsylvania area in our near candles and supplies I'm sure Cindy
would be happy to let you know her schedule for distilling classes and she
also sells the Olympics so you can get one I didn't take a private class with
her but she has guided me using this Olympic and getting my setup perfect so
that I would be able to distil at home and were thousands of kilometres away so
it's really something that is possible I hope you've enjoyed this video
thanks for watching if you have any questions please leave them down below
in the comment section and I will see you again very soon
For more infomation >> Distilling Coriander in a Copper Alembic - Duration: 12:45.-------------------------------------------
How I Launched Affiliate Outrage - Duration: 29:35.
- Boom, what's going on, everyone, it is Steve Larsen.
Today I'm gonna talk about how I actually set up
affiliate outrage, and I'm actually super excited.
It's launched.
I've spent the last four years learning
from the most brilliant marketers today.
And now I've left my nine to five to take the plunge,
and build my million dollar business.
The real question is, how will I do it
without VC funding or debt, completely from scratch?
This podcast is here to give you the answer.
Join me and follow along as I learn, apply, and share
marketing strategies to grow my online business.
Using only today's best internet sales funnels.
My name is Steve Larsen, and welcome to Sales Funnel Radio.
(guitar riff)
What's up guys, hey so today,
we're gonna go through it, and I,
I just wanna share with you guys why I got started
on Affiliate Outrage.
Some of you guys might know, I actually started this
in college, not the program,
but like the first, the first money I ever actually made
online was with affiliate money.
And, and I went out, and I was it was,
I guess I had a ton of fun with it, 'kay?
But it was out of desperation.
I had been trying so many things, I was like,
"Hey, I'm gonna go try this, I'm gonna try that," okay?
Literally, it was like seventeen businesses that I tried,
and I'm not saying like tried, like I was actively in them,
you know what I mean?
I was cutting things out, just doing that thing,
whatever that business idea was for a solid three,
three to six months, 'kay?
And so if you do the math on that,
like it took me a few years, right to figure this stuff out.
And that's pretty normal, all right?
Just as if you're gonna get really good at anything else,
like you're not gonna be amazing right off the bat.
So transitioning from employee over to business owner,
right, entrepreneur, creating value, marketer,
that's not an easy task.
And it's not one that usually happens
quickly for most people.
And so what I wanted to do,
is I wanted to make this program,
okay, for many reasons, okay, one of them is because,
I don't, I have my little like, need to give back,
I wanna share with you guys the strategies
that got me my first cash, okay?
How I actually was able to go make money.
It was through affiliate marketing,
and I wanna teach you guys that kinda stuff.
But what I really want you to do, though,
I want you to notice what I'm doing, 'kay?
Watch from it, watch from like a 30 thousand food view
what I'm doing, 'kay, so if you have launched something,
one of the biggest questions that I get,
and something that's made a scene, I've been emailing a lot
about this lately, and it's been, been a lot of fun,
but one of the challenges that, that,
and when I hear this guys, I cringe on the inside.
"Stephen, I've launched my thing,
"how do I get traffic to it?"
Gah, (chuckles) right?
Oh my gosh, that sucks, oh man, I'm so sorry.
Because there's a bunch of stuff that you should,
first of all, you should take it down, 'kay?
Because what I wanna teach you real quick is,
is how I've been able to launch, the last six, seven funnels
this year, okay, that I've built, that I've put out,
and every one of them has been successful, 'kay?
Now, that means different things, varying amounts, 'kay,
but a lot of money came in, 'kay,
on each one of them, 'kay, lots of it.
And, and what's super fun, is I wanna just, real quick,
I just wanna walk you guys through
why they were successful, 'kay?
It's all about this concept called the prelaunch, 'kay?
Now, I love movies, I love going to movie theaters.
I don't really stop and watch movies
in the evening here much.
Sometimes I like sitcoms, Seinfeld, still a big fan,
definitely a big fan of The Office. (chuckles)
Anyway, Psych, love that show,
'cause I'm a goofball, and so is he.
Anyway, so if you guys,
if you guys go to like a movie though, okay?
You go to a movie theater, I want you to imagine,
how successful would a movie be, right, now imagine,
Hollywood, right, they dump out,
they dump a $100 million bucks into a movie.
And, and, and you're going to see a movie,
and let's say you don't know quite, know what it is.
And let's say that you get to the movie theater,
and you walk on up, and the first time you have ever heard
of a movie ever is on the day the movie gets released
to the theaters.
What do you think the success rate
of that movie is gonna be?
Not that good, right?
Not nearly as good as it could be, is if there was
a lot of pressure built up before hand.
Guys, that's what marketers do, they build up pressure.
They create events, 'kay?
For lack of a better term right, it's a campaign,
that's a campaign, setting up a Facebook ad,
they call it campaigns, they're destroying that term, 'kay?
Campaigns are events that you orchestrate,
you built pressure around product launches,
certain things, right?
You open and close release, sorry you open and close
access to public, 'kay?
Now you watch what Hollywood does,
and you watch what they do, right?
When you go in and you actually create,
you're creating a product, just as important, you guys,
just as important as your product's ability to deliver
on what you say it will, it is just as important
for you to think through the launch strategy,
your go-to market strategy
that you're actually gonna go say,
"Hey, what's up, market, what's up, here's my thing.
"Here's my thing," right?
How do you go, and you actually create and orchestrate
all that pressure ahead of time, right?
Anticipation, "Oh my gosh, I've gotta have that,
"That is so crazy cool," right?
What's that study that said, there's a study that said like,
anticipation for vacation, the amount of excitement and joy.
In the mere anticipating of a vacation, is just as exciting
as the vacation itself, right,
which is fascinating, right?
And so if you're gonna go on a trip,
or there's something you're gonna go through,
and let's say it's an event, or you're gonna come
to my OfferMind, or whatever it is, 'kay?
If you orchestrate that correctly, let's say it's family,
right, I got three kids, three amazing little girls,
incredible wife, and we go in, and let's say we're gonna go,
"Hey, let's go to," I don't, like we went to Disney, 'kay?
We went to Disney in April, and family had never been there
before, my wife had never been there before,
obviously the kids hadn't, that's, it took,
took the family there, I was very careful to make sure
that I was talking about Disney a lot,
well before we were ever gonna go.
Well, well before we ever got in the car
and went to the airport.
Well before, why?
Because I'm building anticipation.
Oh, have you seen the maps that are over there, right?
Because I know, and, you guys will be like,
"Stephen, you need to use marketing principles
"on your own family?"
Of course I do, come on, right?
You should too, right, marketing is just the act
of shifting and affecting people's beliefs.
Why on Earth would I not built anticipation
for something that we're gonna do as a family.
Of course I'm gonna do that.
Of course I'm gonna do that, right?
I'd be stupid not to, right?
So I was like, "Hey, check out this map.
"Oh, look at this, we could go eat here, we could do this.
"Check out these hotels, did you know there's a monorail?
"We could ride the monorail, did you know we could do that?
"Holy crap," you know what I mean?
And I'm talking about the cool things,
and I'm future pacing, okay?
I'm not trying to manipulate.
That's not what I'm talking about at all.
But I am, I am trying to lace in a whole bunch of things
prior to the event happening, right?
Whether that event is an actual event,
you going somewhere, a product launch, 'kay?
So what I want to do real quick, is ultimately,
I want to talk to you about affiliate outreach,
but I, I want you to know how I've been leasing this out.
Right, how I built up pressure ahead of time, okay?
If you look at my very first product I launched
at the beginning of this year,
it was on January 4th.
January 1st, I did not even have the idea for what
the offer was going to be.
January 4th, I had cash in hand from it, from the idea, hm.
Fascinating, right, big lesson there, 'kay?
So I went in, and here, this is, guys,
there's like several plays that I run,
one of the plays that I'll run
has everything to do with publishing.
I will publish, publish, publish, meaning off of a podcast,
a blog, Facebook, whatever it is.
I marry that platform,
and then I just start talking about it.
It's not even out yet.
I'm on the, I might not even know
what the thing is going to be.
In fact, most of the time, I don't, 'kay?
Most of the time, I have no idea
what the thing is going to be, 'kay?
I have an idea, meaning like, okay it's gonna probably
sit in this part of the ecosystem of the market.
I kinda want it to be like this over here,
and let's toss in this other, but I don't really know
everything that's actually gonna be inside of it.
What I'm doing, is I'm testing to see how people react to,
to the idea, right?
Did anticipation build when I said that idea?
Oh it didn't, huh, maybe that's a crappy idea, hm.
Or, oh they did awesome, maybe I should progress this
a little bit more, let's drop another little,
little bit of prelaunch content, right?
If you've ever read the book, Launch,
it's funny I'm talking about that right now,
I didn't realize that's part of where I got some of this.
Oh, I first read the book, Launch, by Jeff Walker
at our kitchen table when I was in college.
It's freezing, and it was winter time,
and that's the first time I read it,
and I was like, that makes a lot of sense, right?
I literally just followed certain elements of that book,
certain elements of like dozens of others I've read
on this concept, and starting doing it,
and since then, I've kinda developed my own repertoire
of how to get this done, 'kay?
So I'll go out, and I might, I might create a prelaunch,
I don't, I'm not gonna say might.
I, every product, major product that I put out there,
I always make sure there's a publishing engine behind it.
Okay, so what I do, is I make sure, and I know
some of you guys are gonna be like,
"Stephen, you talk about this it kinda a little in the past"
I know I have, 'kay, but listen to this, 'kay?
I wanna, I'm trying to point out the pattern
of what I'm doing, 'kay?
I'm trying to point it out, 'kay?
Funny enough, this is when a few people have been like,
why are, why on earth, I gotta turn the camera
a little bit here,
"Why on earth would you,
"why on earth would you tell your market about
"the actual marketing that you're doing?"
Right, why would you tell the people
that you hope to purchase?
Well guys, I teach marketing, so I'm trying to point it out
in what I'm doing, 'kay, 'kay?
So when you look at the, when you look at the product
I launched at the beginning of the year,
there's several things that I did to make it,
make it successful, you understand?
Hope is a terrible marketing strategy.
I do not hope for my products to be successful.
I ensure that they will, 'kay?
I, I, hope is a terrible marketing strategy, 'kay?
Someone put that on a t-shirt, staple that on my face, 'kay?
That's a good one, 'kay?
Hope's a terrible marketing strategy.
I don't wanna make a product, and be like,
"I hope people buy it."
Are you kidding me?
Or, "Stephen I made this thing, I'm not getting any traffic,
"I hope we can get traffic."
Like, oh, blah, ah gosh.
It gives me anxiety, thinking about that.
That is like the most terrible strategy ever,
for getting something out the door.
Don't hope your way into product sales, 'kay?
This is the way, it has everything to do
with the prelaunch, 'kay?
So again, I'm kinda goin all over the place,
but just follow me for a second here, 'kay?
The first thing, like one of the, it is
one of my first moves, I try to publish stories about it.
And if I can tell that, that,
that the idea of the product is insatiable enough,
or, or interesting enough,
or controversial enough, or I've thrown rocks
in the red ocean enough.
And it's starting to create like a reaction?
I almost think of it like,
like I'm standing in a blue ocean,
and I'm hucking rocks in the middle of the red.
Did that ripple really carry through the rest of the red?
Or, was it boring?
Huh, that doesn't mean my product was bad,
maybe the idea about the product was bad.
Hm, okay, okay here's another one.
Ready, there's another rock, bam.
All right, did that hit?
Is that a ripple effect, are people talking about it?
Is there, I'm not trying to create controversy
for controversy's sake, I think that's not cool.
But what I am trying to do, is I'm trying to point out
the pain points in the red ocean
that people have just may have gotten used to, right?
That, that's what I'm really doing,
I'm trying to bring attention to things that people
have become accustomed to dealing with in red oceans.
That's one of the major keys
to making a good prelaunch campaign.
So what I like to do, is I go in and start creating
these ideas, right?
And I've got these white boards all over,
I've got five white boards, one two, three four five.
Yeah, I got five white boards in here, right?
And I'll just start listing out story lines,
I'll start listing out different controversial hooks,
things that would take people in the red ocean,
and shake 'em, right?
I'm not trying to be polite, all right?
I'm trying to create value,
that's not the same thing, right?
So as a marketer, if you're like,
"Well, people aren't gonna like that I say that."
You gotta like get over that,
or find another profession, 'kay, 'kay?
And market, go read, one of my favorite books is,
is a book called Trust Me I'm Lying by Ryan Holiday.
That is a fantastic book, and oh my gosh so good.
Anyway, that'll help you get over the fear of,
of getting people to, anyway, some of the things he says
in there is extreme, but you know.
That's why it sells well.
Okay, anyway, okay so one of the things I like to do, right.
Number one, publishing, and again, what I'm publishing
about is this major core idea, this big idea.
Todd Brown talks about, okay.
It's this major core idea where, if I can drop it in there,
does it cause people to get suddenly aware
of the problem that was already there?
I don't need to create problems in a red ocean.
There's already problems in a rod ocean,
that's why it's a red ocean, one of the reasons, right?
I just need to bring attention to the fact
that there is an issue that they've been comfortable with.
And when I start to make, when I know I have hit that idea,
I can move forward and both starting
lightly to design the product,
and lightly starting to design the prelaunch campaign.
Does that make sense?
That is like prerequisite to everything.
I will not even create a product,
I will not try to sell you anything, I will not do,
unless, unless I've got this, this idea, right?
And the idea is the thing that you're putting in their head,
through a story, I'm putting an idea in their head
like, "Holy crap, why do, why do I put up with,
"with walking everywhere, or on a train, or in a boat?
"You know what, let's freakin' fly, yeah."
What's up Wright Brothers right, they're gonna go drop in.
"OH man, that is a problem, right, what?"
If you read the book, Play Bigger, talks all about that.
Talks about whoever can define the problem best
is usually the one who owns the solution the best, 'kay?
I'm trying to figure out what problem I can best define
in the red ocean.
When I do that, we're gonna roll forward
into a prelaunch campaign, 'kay?
And so, I go in, and I start doing things, like I said,
I aways create a publishing platform.
I will start listing out all of the red ocean influencers
who are also selling or providing
something similar to what I am.
I will go in, and I'll start looking,
I look at, to see who also is publishing,
that's very key, right, who's publishing?
Because if I can listen to their podcasts,
if I can read their blogs, or I can listen to their shows,
and they're the major publishers in that red ocean?
I now know what major beliefs are being shoved into
the throats of the red ocean, right?
I know now exactly where their current beliefs are,
'cause story upholds belief, right?
And I know what the stories are they're consuming,
therefore I know what beliefs that they are upholding,
and now I know what to go change and shift to a blue ocean,
does that make sense?
I'm not trying to get too deep into this.
Does that make sense?
But I need to know what their current beliefs are, right?
So I'll go in, and I look at the red ocean producers.
What are the products?
I look at the red ocean, it's, guys,
one of the easiest ways for you to start dominating
in a space, if you have not yet, get intimate.
Get incredibly knowledgeable on your red ocean.
A lot of guys just have no idea
who the freak you're selling,
and that's why your marketing doesn't work.
Because it's not actually written for any person.
It's not written for a market,
it's not written with a single customer in mind.
Instead, you'll like, it could sell this person,
this person could buy it, you know who,
this person could buy it, that's crap.
That's the fastest way to failure, okay?
I'm not asking who could buy it, anybody could buy it.
I'm looking at who should.
I'm looking at my dream customer.
That's a very different question to answer
than who should buy my thing, who should,
who could buy my thing, who could,
that person could buy it, of course they could buy it,
if they have the cash, they could buy it.
Who do you want to buy it, right?
And a lot of that has to do with getting intimate
and understanding more about the red ocean iteself.
Who is in inside that red ocean?
What are they believing, what are they reading,
what are they consuming?
You have got to know, guys if there is more,
I mean I design a blue ocean, 'kay?
When I start designing, right, it's been really fun,
guys, I've been a part, I've been able to do that
a couple times now, okay?
I accidentally become category king in a few places
without realizing it, and then when I look back and realize,
it's like, "Oh my gosh, this is what I did," right?
When I am designing a blue ocean, 'kay?
I am, there is more fill in the blanks about the red ocean
that I'm filling out, rather than designing the blue ocean
itself, does that make sense?
There are more questions I have to answer
to get to know the red ocean, than the blue ocean.
Does that make sense?
There, there is far more for me to understand
about where people currently are, and how they got there,
than where I'm taking them.
That part's easy, right?
Most of the people skip the who, who are you selling?
Okay, so you're like, Stephen,
this is about affiliate outrage,
what does this have to do with affiliate outrage, 'kay?
Well, what I started realizing,
what I started doing was, there's a few things that I wanted
inside of affiliate outrage.
I wanted to teach more about, okay they,
the affiliate campaign for, if you guys saw,
there's a book called 30 Days, and it's what we,
right, and it's really, I was really honored, okay.
Russell asked that I would write a chapter in that book.
What would I do if I lost it all, and what would I do
to get it, get everything back,
or back on my feet, in 30 days, day by day.
Day one, what would you do, day two, what'd you do,
day three, what'd you do, right?
I am absolutely murdering that campaign, 'kay?
I have almost doubled the sales of, of affiliate number two,
okay, out of everybody, I'm number one, okay?
And you know, I'm excited, I'm gonna be pumped about it,
it's cool to celebrate your wins, woo,
I'm gonna celebrate that.
But I know why I'm, I'm number one, okay?
This is a play, it's like a football play, okay?
And I've practiced running it enough times now,
that 20 minutes before the affiliate contest started,
I was like, all right, I'm just gonna run the play.
That's all I did, to think through what I was gonna do
to make this successful, and be number one.
20 minutes, you guys, 20 minutes, it was 11:40, and at noon,
at noon the thing was launching.
And all I was doing was working the framework, all right.
This is what companies hire me to go do now,
which is really fun, okay.
Go fly in, work the framework with him for an entire day,
it's an intense day, it's about 12 hours, okay.
We go in, and it usually causes a complete restructure
of their marketing, and what they deliver.
But at the end of it, the outcome,
they're able to over deliver for the customers,
and over deliver to their wallet, okay.
I don't believe in you bleeding
for your thing anymore, 'kay?
Get paid what you're worth.
If not, you gotta contact me, 'kay.
I've been talking a lot, my voice is kinda shot, anyway.
Back to affiliate outrage, okay?
So what I did, right, and the reason I'm so stoked about it,
and I, the point of this episode is to tell you
that it's launched, it's live.
You can go to affiliate outrage.com, and you can learn
number one, how do you create affiliate offers.
Just because you didn't make the program,
just because you didn't make the product,
does not mean you do not need to make the marketing.
Does that make sense?
Just because you, does that make sense?
That's like a huge fallacy with affiliate marketing, right?
"Oh, somebody else made the product,
"somebody else made the product, I'm able to go in
"and just toss people out to the affiliate link."
Screw that, everyone does that, okay?
You are literally doing a red ocean activity in marketing,
with somebody else's product, okay?
Just because it's not your thing, doesn't mean
you don't need to create marketing for it, okay?
That's what you're gonna learn, I think it's
lesson one and two, those are the first two days.
And I'm gonna teach you guys how to create affiliate offers,
okay, so I'm super stoked about it, so if you guys can go to
affiliateoutrage.com, it'll take you straight into a spot
where you can go and, it's a, I think it's like 26 days,
okay, they're not, some of them are a little bit longer,
but most of them are a little bit short.
But what I did, is all like,
how can I make it an extra level of awesome, okay?
What if I created all the share funnels for all the things
I'm building for you, in the course for free, sweet,
so it's in there.
Oh, I know, what if I was to go, and I was able to get
all the, because I'm not a, not an expert in YouTube,
I love YouTube, but what if I got my personal YouTube
expert, right, she's freakin awesome, okay?
We just found out if you go type in Russell Brunson,
on YouTube, I'm video number three (laughs)
for that keyword in all of YouTube, okay?
She's really good, 'kay?
What if I got my personal person, for Facebook ads
to come in and teach you guys why our Facebook ads
do so well, okay?
What if I was gonna, so I did, right?
What if I was gonna go get my personal writer, so I did.
What if I was gonna, 'kay, guys, I got my phone right here.
I'm gonna read you guys the list of the people
that I'm super excited to introduce to you guys.
Some of you guys don't know that I've been working.
If they're not on my team, then I, then I at least just know
that I, they're awesome, super appreciate them,
endorse them, so, so check this out, right?
Chris Benetti, he's a great funnel designer.
He's gonna come in and teach you how to make design awesome
without getting distracted by it, and thinking that's
what's gonna sell, right, in your funnels.
'Cause design is not what makes things sell, right?
Dan Havey, he's the man, he's gonna go,
and he's gonna teach you, he's a crazy good,
I call him the ninja hacker. (laughs)
He is gonna teach you guys more about a strategy
Using members areas, super awesome, so he hacked it all out,
and you guys get the share funnel of this pre hacked out
precur, he's a great coder, anyway,
so you guys are gonna get that.
Derek Wilson, he is the high ticket closer
at Clickfunnels, literally.
And he's gonna teach you guys how to do affiliate sales,
when a lot of you guys ask questions to me, like,
"How would you do this if you were high ticket?"
Okay, no different, but here are the script
that he talks about, it's really cool.
Helen Henley, she's fan, absolutely fantastic,
in fact a blog that, if you're reading this from the blog,
she's the one writing this right now to you, okay?
She is not just my incredible blog writer,
she's also helping me create my first book
which is coming out, which is all the lessons I learned
sitting next to the desk of Russell, okay?
Crazy awesome, she's super cool.
Josh Forti, Josh Forti is the man.
If you don't know who Josh is, he's the absolute rockstar
at social media in general, he specifically though,
he's gonna come in and teach you guys more about Facebook
platform itself, and also do more on Instagram.
See, and with Josh Ryan.
With Josh Ryan, if you guys will notice my Instagram,
I now have 35 thousand followers, they are not bots,
they are not fake people, how did we do it?
He's the guy that has done that with me as well,
which is crazy cool.
Julia Taylor, she's my WordPress expert.
She's the one who has completely redesigned,
and redone the sales funnel radio blog.
If you guys go to blog.salesfunnelradio.com,
we just barely launched and rolled out the new blog,
it's freakin awesome, okay?
It's way better than the clunky one that was on there
last time, the last one got it done,
the last one, like it made it work.
But anyway, blog.salesfunnelradio.com, boom,
that one's in there for you.
Kevin Anson, Kevin Anson, if you don't know who that is,
he's one of my good buddies,
he is the guy who films everything for funnel hacker TV.
We have an amazing line up here, anyway, I'm still going.
Is that okay, is it okay if I over deliver, is that okay?
Is it okay if these people over deliver?
Please go thank them for teaching you guys.
So each one of these guys has a day, okay?
Each one of these people has a day,
and they are teaching you concepts,
so I introduce them, then they're gonna teach you
the inner workings of the platforms that they're experts on.
All free, is that okay, right (laughs).
So Kevin Anson, he's gonna teach you how to actually create,
he's gonna teach you how to create promotion videos
in a good method.
Leslie Black, she is my crazy amazing accountant.
She, she's gonna actually teach you guys,
again, we are not legal advisors, disclaimer, disclaimer,
does everybody feel disclaimed, sweet, she's gonna go in,
and she's gonna teach you guys how to set up enough legal
structure to keep you guys protected while you're starting
to make your affiliate cash come in, okay?
Marley, okay, Marley Baird, absolutely incredible,
she is my YouTube expert.
Give all of these people all of your money, okay.
YouTube is one of my favorite platforms ever.
Out of all social media, I think YouTube kind of
is social media, (laughs) right?
But it's also a search engine, which is really cool.
Anyway, she is absolutely amazing.
My cool video intro, for those of you guys
watching my youtube, she's the one that made that.
She's the one cutting all the video for everything,
she's absolutely incredible.
Nathan Sheer, he's one of my good buddies, okay.
What I ask Nathan to come do, he's a great funnel hacker.
It's hard to find funnel builders who are also marketers.
It's easy to find funnel builders.
It's pretty easy, ish, to find marketers.
It's very challenging to find
a funnel building marketer, okay?
There's not many out there.
Nathan is one of those other people that is like that, okay?
He's got the crazy twitch in his left eye,
and he's awesome,
okay, he's sort of, he's gonna teach you guys,
there's a checklist he's gonna walk you guys through
to make sure your funnel's ready to rock
before you launch it.
Is it okay if I keep going, cool.
Nico, Nico Moreno, he's my chat bot expert, okay.
He's the one, he's co-created some products with me,
and he's helped me create some cool things with chat bots.
Him as well as Josh Forty, and so he's gonna teach you
to use chat bots to get affiliate sales, what?
Okay, Semma, Semma is my absolutely incredible Facebook
person, I call her the Facebook ads whisperer. (laughs)
Okay, she's the one who's been doing,
running all my Facebook ads, she's absolutely fantastic.
Each of these people, just so you know, they're not
fair game to go and like just promote your stuff to 'em
automatically, just know that all of them
charge a lot of money, and I'm not joking, okay,
I'm talking like base fees of multi-thousand dollars
just to even do like a normal consultating session
with them, okay?
And what each one of these guys have done,
the reason I'm telling you that,
is because I want you to go in, and at least thank them.
Okay, they have gone in, and they are grabbing a day
where they're gonna teach you their skill set,
and how to sell another person's product
with their skill set.
Regardless of platform, or regardless of whatever it is.
So I'm super excited to launch affiliate outrage.
This has been a fun thing.
This is one of the plays that I'm making,
it's gonna look, one of six,
and in order to ake over a certain realm that I'm going for,
that's kind of undisclosed yet. (laughs)
So for me, it's a very strategic, for me in order to
teach a whole lot of people how to be affiliates, okay?
So I'm creating an affiliate army.
And I'm excited affiliate outrage is out,
it is ready, you guys are ready to have it,
but watch specifically what we'll be doing next, okay?
There's a lot of cool things,
we got a few more episodes coming out here,
I had to do a lot of stuff in order for affiliate outrage
to be done, which is probably why
it took a little bit longer
to get out than I expected, which is pretty normal
for any entrepreneur. (laughs)
Any funnel hacker especially.
But anyways, I'm very excited for you guys to have this.
Hopefully it's been helpful to you.
And if, if you really want an awesome education
of what marketers actually do, watch the prelaunch
that I went through in order to launch this thing.
Even though it was free.
I still had to sell it, okay?
Look at how massive the sales page is
for this free product, okay?
Look at it, watch it.
I encourage you to consume this slowly, all right?
You're now buying anything, so I was gonna say, buy slowly.
Okay, it's free, okay, but buy, go through it, slowly.
Okay, watch what I'm doing.
Why am I doing what I'm doing in this.
Why would I introduce to you all the people in here?
Why would I tell you about all the things that I, right,
why would, if you notice, I have brought you through
multiple epiphany bridge stories.
I have published my face off about it,
I've co created it with a lot of people.
We've done a lot of pressure ahead of time
on this thing, right?
Even when I knew it wasn't quite ready yet, or going to be
for a little bit, I'm like, "Hey, it's coming out soon.
"I'm not telling you when, but it's coming out soon.
"It's coming out soon, it's coming out soon."
And you guys, if you guys go look at the group,
you guys are like, "Oh my gosh, I'm so excited.
"This is gonna be so cool."
And I'm like, "Yes, it's working."
Right, and a lot of you have told me,
this is way better than any paid one that's out there,
when you haven't even had it yet.
Fascinating, think about that, okay?
This is better than anyone's paid stuff.
Are you sure, because I haven't even gotten through mine yet
you know what I mean, I'm sure it is,
it's really incredible, okay,
I've assembled quite the team here
to come do this for you guys for free,
so please go thank them.
But watch what I did.
And it is as much of an education as the lessons themselves
inside of affiliate outrage.
Anyways, I wanna thank you so much,
I appreciate you guys being here, I appreciate you guys'
support in this, I am, I am actively trying to help people
not just make money, but call themselves on their own BS
for not doing things that they know they should be, okay?
And I'm trying to do it in a way where,
I never wanna yell at a person.
I'm not yelling at an individual, but I will yell
at your behavior, right?
I will yell at my behavior.
I will yell at my habits, right?
I have false beliefs about my ability to go achieve things,
just like a customer has false beliefs to go buy my product.
Okay, and the better that I can get at calling my own
false beliefs out, like I would for a customer,
and shift the stories in my head, the faster I can approach
the goals I'm actually looking for.
And so you're gonna see, inside of affiliate outrage,
a combination, this is why I took a while
for me to get it out there.
It's not just like, money money money money money money,
right, and that's a huge part of it.
But what it really is, also, it is, it is the ability,
for you, if you go through and start,
I hate the term mindset training, okay,
but that's part of what it is,
is, I've found that people suffer more,
and do not take action more, because of,
it's not because they don't know what strategies to go for,
it's because their brains
can't handle an actually go achieve
and take down and conquer the thing I'm telling 'em to do.
Right, so there's just as much like,
there's just as much like "Hey, this is the strategy,
"this is why it works,
"and here's a whole bunch of case studies."
As much as there, there's a whole bunch of like,
"Look, here's how to handle it when,"
because a lot of you guys I know that follow me,
you really haven't made any money on the internet yet.
And I wanna call, I want you to call yourself out on that,
and expect something different.
Why, why have you not?
Right, go in, and you, that's why I like affiliate stuff.
Because you have the ability to go in and practice marketing
without, without the intense, intense,
I don't know, experience it is to create the product itself.
Some people get so wrapped up on the product,
that they forget that this other thing, that
is completely isolated called marketing exists, right?
And you gotta go learn that.
And that's why I love the training wheels
that affiliate marketing really is.
So I encourage you, if you're like,
"Oh, I don't know, I already have a product,"
or whatever, that's totally fine.
Okay, but the strategies alone
that you're gonna hear the team,
all these people who are incredible that came in.
It's like 16 people, okay.
They came in, they're dropping out
all this incredible stuff,
you're gotta learn more strategies of marketing,
not product creation, okay?
And marketing is what pays you, okay, okay.
Not the product, the product just delivers value
that the sales message promised.
The product, does that make sense?
The product just delivers the value
that the sales message promised.
It's the sales message that does the selling, right?
It's the marketing that changes the mind,
it's the marketing that sets up a new style of belief
in the person's head.
This is getting deep.
Anyway, I'm not trying to make this like this crazy thing
but I want you to know why affiliate outrage, for me,
has been such an awesome, kind of near and dear project
to my heart, and why I've spent so much time on it.
And what it really can do for an individual,
if they let themselves do it.
Guys, so thank you so much, I hope you enjoy this,
I hope you guys enjoy why I've done this.
Hopefully I've been able to explain a little bit more
about why I am doing what I am.
Use affiliate marketing as a training set, right.
As training wheels to learn what marketing actually is.
It is not the act of setting up a freakin' ad.
That can be part of it, but it's not marketing itself, okay.
And I want you to learn how to do that,
and I want you to use this program to do that.
And if you so choose, promote my products,
we give out fat commissions for doing so, and I think you.
Guys, thank you so much, hope you guys enjoy this.
You guys can go to affiliateoutrage.com and go
and get started on the free program.
Thank you guys very much, and I'll see you guys
in the program, bye.
(clapping rhythmic music)
Woo hoo, hey, thanks for listening.
Hey, many don't know that I actually made my first money
online as an affiliate marketer.
If you wanna know how I funded my entire company
without using any of my own money ever,
you can learn to do the same for free
at affiliateoutrage.com.
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Elyse – Billie Jean Cover (Michael Jackson) - Duration: 3:41.
She was more like a beauty queen from a movie scene
I said, "Don't mind, but what do you mean, I am the one
Who will dance on the floor in the round?"
She said I am the one
who will dance on the floor in the round
She told me her name was Billie Jean As she caused a scene
Then every head turned with eyes that dreamed of being the one
who will dance on the floor in the round
People always told me, "Be careful of what you do
And don't go around breaking young girls' hearts"
And mother always told me, "Be careful of who you love
And be careful of what you do,
'cause the lie becomes the truth"
Yeah... Billie Jean is not my lover
She's just a girl who thinks that I am the one
But the kid is not my son
She says I am the one,
but the kid is not my son
For forty days and for forty nights,
the law was on her side
But who can stand when she's in demand?
Her schemes and plans
'Cause we danced on the floor in the round
So take my strong advice,
just remember to always think twice
Do think twice!
People always told me, "Be careful of what you do
And don't go around breaking young girls' hearts"
And mother always told me, "Be careful of who you love
And be careful of what you do,
'cause the lie becomes the truth"
Yeah... Billie Jean is not my lover
She's just a girl who thinks that I am the one
But the kid is not my son
She says I am the one,
but the kid is not my son
Michael, you were the one
And the kid... could be your son.
-------------------------------------------
FIFA 19 CAREER MODE HANDS ON REVIEW - Duration: 5:07.
What's up guys, Alex from FIFA Scouting Tips here. Welcome to my hands on look at
FIFA 19 career mode. The months leading up to FIFA 19's launch have been
nervous ones for career mode fans, with FIFA producer Matt Prior saying
and no major new
features to speak of - aside from the Champions League branding - a lot of
people have been braced for a disappointing experience. But now that it's here, what
is FIFA 19's career mode actually like to play? Is it the same old story from
years past, or has it improved on FIFA 18's formula? Let's start with the good
news: this is not just a rebranded version of FIFA 18. While it's lacking a
big marquee new feature, it has a lot of small tweaks here and there that add up
to a much more enjoyable career mode experience. Here's a perfect example: for
years, loyal career mode players have been asking that your team's sleeve
badges and name and number styles update when you get promoted or
relegated, so you wouldn't end up with Premier League sleeve logos when playing
in the Championship, for example. Well, that's now finally been implemented. It's
a tiny change, and one that should have been fixed in years ago, but one that
makes a big difference to the immersion of your save. Here's another example: if
you finish a season with millions left in the bank, you now get a proper budget
the year after, rather than seeing all those savings vanish into the ether.
There's now an incentive to stash your spare cash in case you need it next year,
rather than splurging it on expensive signings because you know you'll just
lose the money anyway. There are improvements elsewhere, too: the scouted
player mini faces have been overhauled and look a lot more realistic now, plus
they actually look the same on the pitch as they do in the academy - no more
jarring mismatches. There are new training drills, including ones to let
you train strength and sprint speed for the first time. Gameplay has been
improved and Ultimate difficulty has made it across from Ultimate Team. There
are new dynamic tactics which let you change your tactical approach mid-game
without even having to pause. Yes, you could do something similar in the past,
but that just gave you generic options like defensive or all-out attack. This
year you can define your tactics in depth beforehand and assign them a
shortcut, giving you much more control over
tactical changes on the fly. And what about the Champions League package, which was
the headline feature of career mode this year? Well, I personally love it.
It looks fantastic and everything feels on point - the music, the graphics, even the
fonts. There's even a special Champions League mode separate from your career,
which lets you dive straight in with one of the teams in this year's competition.
Of course, it's not all good news this year. For one thing, scouting is still
very basic. You can't scout any new countries
(sorry Wales fans), and you still won't find any strikers when looking for
attackers or center-backs when searching for defensive-minded players. You still
get unrealistic transfer offers, such as a random Argentinian team offering to
take your 16-year-old prospect on loan when you're playing in the Premier
League. It's only a minor thing, but it definitely feels jarring and breaks the
immersion. Perhaps weirdest of all, the number of save slots in career mode has
been reduced from 8 in FIFA 18 to a mere 4 in FIFA 19. I've reached out to EA's
press people in an attempt to find out why it was done and if it will be fixed -
fingers crossed for now. So while EA did well to fix a bunch of long-standing
issues this year, there are still problems that persist. While none on
their own are definitively game-breaking, they can add up to create a feeling that
career mode still doesn't get the love and attention it deserves from the
developers. EA got a lot of stick this year for claiming to be "listening to the
community" while bringing nothing new to career mode but, that seems a little
unfair to me. Yes, it is disappointing not to see a big new feature dropping in
FIFA 19 like training did a few years ago, but the small changes - specifically
to things the community has been asking for - show that EA isn't completely ignoring
us. With the journey wrapping up in FIFA 19 there are hopes that EA will have
more budget and time to develop career mode ready for FIFA 20. While we can only
speculate at this point, we feel FIFA 19's career mode is not a total
write-off - far from it, in fact. The many small changes here and there really do add
up, and while there are plenty of things we wish were in this year's game - a
much more in-depth, realistic youth academy for one thing - we don't feel it's fair to
totally trash FIFA 19's career mode. So is FIFA 19 worth buying for career mode?
I'd say that it is thanks to the more immersive experience that's seen bugs
squashed and long-requested features finally implemented. It's a much more
mature mode than last year's offering, and those small changes add up to make
it much more enjoyable. It's not a wholehearted recommendation - there are
still plenty of frustrations and shortcomings - but it's definitely not the
rebranded FIFA 18 that many of us feared. Thanks for watching my hands-on review
of FIFA 19, I'll be back with more FIFA 19 videos soon and I aim to start
streaming on Twitch as well soon. If there's anything you want me to do next,
just leave a comment below and I'll see you next time.
-------------------------------------------
Day Out With The Family! - Duration: 8:38.
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SONOYUNCU'DA 2 OYUNCU TIPI ! - MINECRAFT - Duration: 10:23.
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অন্ধ সাহাবী উম্মে মাক্তুমের ঘটনা || Ondo Sahabi Omme maktomer Gotona quran theke || Motiur Rahman - Duration: 27:41.
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The TARDIS Down Under - Duration: 4:01.
[TARDIS whirring]
G'day everyone. I'm back!
The TARDIS. The vehicle of choice for the thrilling and timeless Doctor Who.
However, this is not quite our time traveller's exact vehicle...
- rather a remarkable replica!
The phenomenon that is Doctor Who has spawned several inspirations in Australia over the years, with several alone in the National Capital region.
It really is bigger on the inside!
Enter Whovian's Ann and Bruce. They are the proud owners of this amazing creation.
A few years ago, Bruce took to the workshop and made this replica for Ann as a special gift.
Let me introduce you to my companions!
Ann and Bruce, welcome to the series.
So, Bruce, why did you decide to build a full-scale replica TARDIS?
Well Tim, I was asked to do it by my wife for her 40th birthday.
And what was the biggest challenge of the build?
The size of it. It's huge!
What do you plan to do with it? What are your plans for this amazing creation?
Well, you better ask the owner that question Tim.
Ann, what have you got in store for the TARDIS?
Well, I love a party!
And I envisioned having my own personal TARDIS to take with me to every party that I went to...
but it's a little bit big and it's a little bit heavy,
so I'm going to be content with having a few photo-shoots with it, and then setting it up in my backyard as my place of peace.
Are you looking forward to the next season of Doctor Who?
Oh, I sure am!
It's been a long hiatus, and I'm really excited about having a female doctor.
I think it was a really bold decision by the series...
and I think that everybody is looking forward to seeing how it all works out!
What do you actually think of the first female Doctor?
Well, Doctor Who as a series has always given women fantastic roles.
They're heroes, they're creative, they're mysterious.
They've always had a lot of fun.
And I think that Jodie Whittaker is going to do the same thing to the role of the Doctor.
And bringing in that humanity, that genius, that adventure. So it's gonna be great.
It is going to be great!
Ann and Bruce, thank you for sharing your full-scale replica TARDIS with the series!
It's quirky stories like this that show what passion and dedication really looks like.
I'm Tim the Yowie Man...
and as always, thanks for watching.
Allons-y!
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Hate Working At A Job? We "Get It". L@@K! - Duration: 2:55:15.
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Harry Strange - Signs (Lyrics in CC) - Duration: 3:22.
You're holding on for peace of mind You're standing strong all through the night
With the lights down low
Your fingers crossed, your head held high The tears that linger in your eyes
Just talk to me
And I can feel it sitting on your shoulders Do you believe your mind would never falter
And I can see you're slowly growing colder You're growing older
I can see the signs, what's on your mind?
Cos I'm calling out your name, we're lost on time
And I will let you let me in I'll lay them bare my sins
They're dragging me under, dragging me under And I'm treading water
And I'll surrender onto you The things you used to do
Still dragging me under, dragging me under And I will remember
I'm overused you're all alone I'm breaking down you'd never know
I'm calling out just answer me
I'm tired of you I close my eyes And let you fade into the night
I'm lost on you you're lost on me
And I can feel it sitting on your shoulders Do you believe your mind would never falter
And I can see you're slowly growing colder You're growing older, you're so much colder
And I can see the signs, what's on your mind?
Cos I'm calling out your name, we're lost on time
And I will let you let me in I'll lay them bare my sins
They're dragging me under, dragging me under And I'm treading water
And I'll surrender onto you The things you used to do
Still dragging me under, dragging me under And I will remember
And your back is slowly breaking and my, my heart is melting
And I, I fear for what I could find, cos you are lost and so am I
Oh you are lost and so am I
And your back is slowly breaking and my, my heart is melting
And I, I fear for what I could find, cos you are lost and so am I
Oh you are lost and so am I
-------------------------------------------
Top 10 Most Isolated Prisons That Shouldn't Exist - Duration: 11:39.
Hello and welcome back to the Most Amazing Top 10 Channel on the internet.
I am your host Rebecca Felgate and today we are talking about the Top 10 Isolated Prisons
that Shouldn't Exist!
Often prison geography is such that those in charge want to keep dangerous criminals
away from the rest of society.
Are these prisons too much and is enough done to ensure people who aren't guilty aren't
sentenced for crimes they didn't commit and are forced to live desolate and dismal
lives.
A couple of the prisons on this list are no longer functioning jails but still exist as
buildings with dark histories.
As you watch this video I want you to think about which of these prisons scares you the
most and you would least like to be imprisoned in.
Let me know in the comments section down below.
Also – thumbs up etc.
10 - Alcatraz Often referred to as the Island of Evil, Alcatraz
is one of the most famous prisons in the world, known for being one of the first modern-day
maximum-security prisons.
The island of Alcatraz is in the middle of San Francisco Bay in California, United States.
Some of America's most ruthless criminals called Alcatraz home, include the notorious
gangster Al Capone.
The prison was known for being brutal Being able to see San Francisco so near yet so far
across the water must have been a huge temptation for prisoners.
None the less, Alcatraz claimed to be inescapable in its time as a max prison, which ended in
1963.
Despite 14 attempts, it is thought that no prisoners ever manage to successfully get
out alive – the cold water and strong currents made that neigh on impossible…and then,
there were the rumours of sharks.
Inmates in this facility have reportedly been made to walk naked on Dog leashes in the freezing
cold, at number 9 we have the Spring Creek Correctional Center
So this prison is in Alaska, already a far flung state of the USA.
Some parts of Alaska are reasonably populated, but this prison is amid 328 acres of national
park.
The inmates here will likely spend the rest of their lives in prison, unlikely ever to
feel warm climes again.
The dog leash incident came in 2013 and In 2015, a hysterical woman approached the prison
with a gun and demanded the prisoners be freed.
Guards refused and she shot herself in the head in front of them.
The prison is said to at times have no running water.
8 - The Mamertine, Italy Luckily this prison is no longer in use, but
when it was it was a total and utter abomination and one of the scariest isolated prisons around
- the romans were savage.
A lot of isolated prisons are on rocks on islands… but this was below ground, which
terrifies me.
Sentencing people to a life without human interaction or sunlight, the Romans built
this prison in 614 BC…which is an insane amount of time ago.
The building is still standing though and if you wanted to you could visit the place
that, according to legend, saints Peter and Paul were imprisoned.
7 - Robben Island Robben Island is infamous for being the prison
that held South African President Nelson Mandela for over 18 years of his life.
The prison was founded off the coast of Cape Town by Dutch Settlers in the 1970s.
The penal isle has been home to many prisoners over the years and all survivors who have
discussed their treatment have said that the prison was grueling.
In Mandela's autobiography, he said he was welcome by a prison guard who told him that
he would die on the island.
He also said that he and other prisoners were forced to work in a lime quarry and the relentless
glare from the sun caused them permanent eye damage.
Mandela spent his time in a 6 square foot cell – not only was he isolated from the
mainland of South Africa, he was mostly isolated from other prisoners in a tiny space.
How he stayed sane is another testimony to his character.
Prior to Mandela's time incarcerated there, the island was a place where people were banished
and exiled – the rocks and choppy water made sure that swimming to freedom wasn't
not an option.
Countless people drowned in their attempts.
The brutal prison closed in 1999 and now, nearing 20s years on, you can visit the island
as a cultural heritage site.
6 - Guantanamo Bay Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp is staying open
for the foreseeable future – Trump signed and order to keep it that way.
Gunatanamo was opened in 2002 by George W Bush as part of his War on Terror.
The detention camp is in a far flung part of Cuba and is surrounded by ocean on one
side and waste land on another.
The most terrifying thing is that within Guantanamo, US government agents and soldiers can do what
they want to prisoners without worrying about the law.
The operations in Guantanamo Bay detention camp are considered a major breach of human
rights by Amnesty International as the inmates are detained indefinitely without trial.
People have died here, some by suicide, and minors have been detained.
It is a scary, desolate, isolated and inescapable place.
If you ever wind up here, you had better hope you are guilty of the crime you are accused
of… as you'll be treated as if you are…but you wont be treated like a human.
Often referred to as The Alcatraz of the Rockies, 5 - ADX Super Max
ADX Max is a max security facility in the Colarado mountains and, like Alcatraz, holds
some of the worst criminals in America.
Currently residing here is the surviving Boston Marathon Bomber, as is the Oklahoma City bomber,
as well as a FBI agent who became a soviet spy – basically some of the people most
hated by the American Government.
One former inmate, a Black Power militant called Travis Dusenbury, was locked up there
for ten years and said – I quote I've been locked up in some isolated, rural places,
but at least at those places I could always see a highway, see the sky.
ut at the ADX, you can't see nothing, not a highway out in the distance, not the sky.
You know the minute you get there you won't see any of that, not for years and years.You're
just shut off the world.
You feel it.
It sinks in, this dread feeling.
It seems in ADX prisoners are locked in the cells, already in the middle of nowhere, and
are allowed out for two hours a day, 5 days a week.
Oh, we have a Gulag at number 4 Penal Colony 56
Penal Colony 56 is one of the most remote and impenetrable prisons in the world, let
alone Russia.
Sometimes also known as the Black Eagle Penal Colony, the prison is a max security institution
specifically for murderers.
Penal Colony 56 is home to 260 killers who between them are thought to have extinguished
800 lives.
Maybe this prison should exist, as that is pretty absolutely terrifying.
The Gulag is 7 hours from civilization deep in the middle of a forest.
In the Winter, temperatures drop to minus 40 degrees Celsius, which to be honest I have
experienced in Canada, but I live in a cozy home and have a cozy coat.
This place is no picnic, conditions are harsh and inmates are kept inside 23 hours a day,
with just one hour to walk in a roofless room.
3 - Nauru Regional Processing Centre According to Amnesty International and the
souls who have managed to get free of Nauru, this refugee centre on an Australian owned
Island nearest Papua New Guinea is a prison.
Australia has a process for mandatory detention if people living there do not have visas – if
you are found without a valid visa in Australia there is a strong chance you could be exiled
to Nauru and have to live amid squalid conditions that you are not allowed to leave.
This is also the place Asylum seekers are sent, some of which are genuine refugees who
have escaped war, only to find themselves in a far-flung detention centre.
The island is in a remote part of the pacific ocean and those stuck in the centre have no
choice but await their fate.
According to a news article on the Al Jazeera website, the residents are stuck with insufficient
shelter, little food and safe water and that some of the detainees have suffered sexual
abuse in the centre.
Often referred to as the Alcatraz or Russia, we have Petak Island Prison at number 2
Petak Island Prison is in the middle of a lake in a far-flung part of Russia.
This Russian Gulag is home to some of Russia's scariest and most notorious killers – not
just murderers, but cannibals and pedophiles, too.
The regime in this prison is so tough, and the conditions are so bleak, that inmates
are known to completely break down.
The only way in or out of the prison is by boat or on foot over two shaky wooden bridges…it
is kind of medieval.
Oh, and the whole lake is surrounded by watchtower so even if you managed to get out, you would
wither be drowned or shot.
Security is so tight that nobody in living memory has ever escaped.
The Prison Psychologist said: This place destroys people.
The first nine months or so they spend adapting.
After three or four years their personalities begin to deteriorate.
Finally coming in to number one…
1 - Camp 22 Camp 22 in North Korea is probably as close
to hell on earth as it gets.
North Korea is already a hermit nation, but Campy 22 is a new kind of remote – it is
in a remote region called Hoeryong in the far North of Korea near China.
This maximum security prison is actually very much a concentration camp and is completely
isolated from the rest of the world.
Three lucky souls have managed to escape, but how far they got, we don't know.
From what we know of Camp 22, it contains prisoners of war.
Rumour has it that inmates are deprived of food and forced to eat frogs or rats to survive.
In the day, prisoners have to perform hard labour.
Prisoners are only allowed one set of clothes which they will live in and die in – by
which time they are nothing more than rags.
Guards patrol with rifles and dogs, and there is also a high 3,300 volt electric fence.
WELL that was intense wasn't it!
-------------------------------------------
The Beach Episode - Anime Crimes Division S2, Ep. 4 - Duration: 12:17.
This is the beach episode!
Yeah! Beach episode!
Yo!
Welcome to Prestige Television City!
Thanks! "I am the danger!"
Yeah!
Heh heh.
Breaking bad. - I know.
Well, if you like big budgets
pretentious drama, and gratuitous one-take hallway fight scenes
This is the place for you.
Want some salsa for that chip on your shoulder?
Sorry.
This is your new home. I should be happy for you.
Right now,
getting my back will do.
Something wrong?
Um... sorry.
I just...
I'm not used to feeling this way.
About what?
Uh... the case! Um...
The serial killer case. - Oh, yeah.
The case, right. Obviously. The case.
Why? What did you think I meant?
Uhhh...
The, the symbol.
You're worried about the symbol, right? The, the symbol.
You're worried about the symbol, right?
Oh... yeah.
How did you know?
I can feel you drawing it on my back.
Oh.
Yeah, it just...
keeps showing up everywhere.
The photo with you and Hideki,
the package that blew up Officer Vink. The photo with you and Hideki,
the package that blew up Officer Vink.
That gun in your apartment.
It's probably just a random doodle.
Like that 'S' fifth-graders draw so you know they're hardcore gangbangers.
Something just doesn't feel right.
You must feel it too, I mean, you're so...
Tense.
Can you blame me?
I've got the interview with the housing board any minute.
Now that sounds like a setup for a new character to enter the scene!
We love that around here!
Ms. Prestige!? - Mom!?
Mom!?
これしかない "I'm taking my place"
星空を仰ぎ "Up in the stars"
That's right.
Mom.
Diesel's the "Lost" of the family.
So promising.
But then she got all up in her head and forgot everything that made her interesting.
Lovely to see you too.
And the polar bear. In the jungle?
In Lost. Right?
Weird.
Like Diesel.
She's weird.
Like how Lost is weird. - Thank you, Joe.
So. Diesel's told me you're ready to leave behind
the childish anime and join the ranks of adulthood.
Yes. I love being an adult.
The economy,
First question:
What are your intentions with my daughter?
I... - Oh, no, no. It's not...
We're not... we're just friends - It's just...
We work together, it's a friendship thing - Purely platonic.
I see.
And what is your favorite television show?
I love Game of Thrones because it deftly weaves political intrigue and deep character development
together with low fantasy and Shakespearan tragedy. I do not consider its protracted storylines tiresome
and my first daughter will be named "Khaleesi."
Yes, but that's what we all love about Game of Thrones.
So tell me: what is your favorite thing about it?
The...
The, uhh...
...thrones?
Good answer.
The thrones are delightful.
I also love Mad Men and Breaking Bad,
and other shows about grown men getting away with terrible behavior.
That's my favorite genre too!
He's a real catch, mom.
I mean, for the city, he's, uhh
You would be proud to have him.
Well.
Based on my daughter's recommendation,
and everything I've seen here today...
Welcome to Prestige TV City!
Glad to be here.
One more question...
Have you seen Dragonball?
I, uhh...
I looked at it once but I didn't read the subs.
Oh, no no no dear. Not the anime.
The remake.
Dragonball: Evolution?
The live action American remake.
I, uhh... - I think it works so much better as a 90 minute movie than a full series, don't you?
Y...Yeah. - And the casting.
It's so much better to see the emotion
on a human actor's face, don't you think?
You're a-it's a valid opinion.
And when I think of Goku - Uh huh...
I can't imagine anyone other than Justin Chatwin.
Me... too...
Welcome to your new home.
Happy to be here.
I'll catch up with you after we've assigned you an apartment.
I will talk to the two of you later.
I think that went really well!
No...
I knew it. Even the thought of this place churns your stomach.
No. No. I love the way they handled Piccoloouhghgh
Oof. Drink up, buddy!
Looks like someone's been watching the latest American Horror Story.
Sorry. He's new here.
I figured. Like we say around here...
"Give it a chance! It gets really good after the first two seasons!"
Well! See you around citizens!
That was no 'S' symbol...
Let's investigate.
The hour of victory is at hand.
Neo Otaku City is nearly within our control.
Isn't that right, Chief Brody?
Yes. With the mayor dead, nothing stands in our way.
Even the Anime Crimes Division is completely under our control now.
And you have control of the fiber connection?
All of the anime in the city will soon belong to TOXIC.
To the true anime fans.
They've installed a limited onto the city's fiber connection.
TOXIC will control it all,
and anyone they consider a fake anime fan will be left with nothing but Family Guy!
Of course, we have to thank our benefactor in Prestige TV City for partnering with us.
Of course.
Once you've purged your city of all the fake anime fans,
Prestige City will gobble them up and they'll have no choice but to entertain themselves
with our multi-season dramas that ultimately go nowhere.
Oh no. That makes perfect sense.
I must ask - what will you do with Detective Diesel when she returns?
Convince her to join our side.
Don't worry. I'm not going to hurt her.
Good. Because while she may be misled,
She is still...
My daughter.
They're getting away!
Diesel! You gotta get out of here!
I'll hold them back! - No! We've gotta run!
The door's solid. It'll hold!
I thought I was solid once...
But then I met you.
What?
Get out of here Diesel. Get back to Neo Otaku City.
Gather anyone who still truly loves anime.
You've got to start a revolution.
I thought you didn't care about anime?
I don't. But I care about...
Anime... fans.
Like...
Like me? - We can talk about this later.
Now go!
But...
What if we don't get a third season?
Fall? - What if we never get to say how we feel?
Then what?
What if we do say how we feel?
And then all the tension goes away.
Like on Friends.
God, I hate what this city does to people.
I miss being two aesexual cops in an anime town.
That's not the only thing I'll miss.
What... who will you miss?
God dammit. We're doing it again.
Just go. - Right.
Going...
Here I go...
Are you sure you want to do this, Joe?
We don't go for your adorable little quick cut fights around here.
We do everything in a single take.
The only cuts are going to be from our knives.
You got this.
Call me when it's done.
You know...
I once watched the first episode of The Wire...
It was boring.
"It's a one take hall fight, we only got one shot"
"Redirect a knife into this random guy's soft spot"
"Judo throw, bro, hit the deck"
"Block your blows and then I slit your neck"
"Ahh woo wee, gotta catch my breath. Syke!"
"Using your knife for a double knife death!" "Ahh woo wee, gotta catch my breath. Syke!"
"Using your knife for a double knife death!"
"Moves like The Matrix, I'm Neo Otaku"
"There ain't no spoon here's my fist about to sock you"
"Thought you could beat me in your home turf corridor"
"You may be live action but you're dead on the floor boards"
"Hide your stunt doubles with a whip pan, you're in trouble"
"Try to stop me I'm the real deal muscle here to rumble"
"I'm super, just sayin', feel like I'm going Super Saiyan"
"You're insane for fightin' over 9000"
"Blasting off like Team Rocket, knock you over high mountains"
"You goons are cancelled, cut your program off the air."
"I'm here to pull the plug, you thugs better beware because"
"I'm here to crush (kill) decimate"
"Never pick a fight with Japanese anime!"
"Leanin' against this wall..."
'Yo, walkin' up the stairs"
"Oh noo"
You should've just stayed out of it, Joe.
Go ahead. Kill me.
Oh I'm not going to kill you.
Take him to the binge chamber.
Now you're going to learn what real TV is...
Nao~~~!
-------------------------------------------
Computer From Congress Edits Wikipedia Page On "Devil's Triangle" To Match Kavanaugh's Claim - Duration: 3:35.
During the hearing yesterday at the Senate Judiciary Committee with Brett Kavanaugh,
Americans learned a lot of new words and phrases, words and phrases that most of them didn't
want to know anything about.
Words such as boof and boofing.
Phrases like Devil's Triangle.
Now, when Democratic Senator Sheldon Whitehouse asked Brett Kavanaugh what the Devil's Triangle
was because that was something that Kavanaugh and his buddies had joked about back in school,
Kavanaugh actually took way too long to respond, sitting back kind of thinking of what would
be a good answer because he knew the truth of what it was.
He leans forward.
This is exactly ... Because I'm not ever going to forget what happened here.
He's asked, "What is Devil's Triangle?"
And he goes, "Drinking game."
That's not the body language, those are not the actions of a man telling the truth.
Those are the actions of a man trying to think of a good answer that's not going to implicate
him in sexual assault.
Senator Sheldon Whitehouse asked him, "Okay.
Well, what kind of drinking game?"
Again, took him another few moments.
He's like, "Have you ever played Quarters?"
Senator Whitehouse says, "No."
And he goes, "It's played with quarters."
Waiting for Senator Whitehouse to be like, "I don't know what that is either."
"Oh, well, it's like that then."
This man lied through his teeth about what the Devil's Triangle is and everybody saw
it.
I don't think even the Republicans on that panel were able to watch him do that and think,
"Well, this guy's being super honest right now.
Right?"
No.
Body language experts, psychologists, sociologists have all come out and said that his reaction
there was 100% not true.
The reason that I say that even Republicans know this is because shortly after that, the
group Congressional Edits found that on Wikipedia a computer from the U.S. House of Representatives
edited the Wikipedia entry for Devil's Triangle.
Someone in the officers at the U.S. House of Representative got on their computer to
change the Wikipedia entry for Devil's Triangle so that it didn't only refer to a threesome
with two men and one woman, which is, unfortunately, what the meaning of that is.
Kavanaugh knew that, but he tried to say it was a drinking game.
So the Congressional Edits people found an IP address, traced it back to the U.S. House
of Representatives, and they made this edit to the Devil's Triangle Wikipedia page.
It says, "A popular drinking game enjoyed by friends of Judge Brett Kavanaugh."
Now, based on what they said there, we actually don't know if it was a Democratic staffer
or Republican staffer.
Maybe they were covering for him.
Maybe they were mocking him.
But nonetheless, this entry was put in there to try to reflect, in case anybody wanted
to look it up, that this was, in fact, Brett Kavanaugh's correct answer, which it wasn't.
You can go ahead and just add that Devil's Triangle game description to the list of lies
that Brett Kavanaugh told on Thursday.
As we've already pointed out, the sad thing is no matter how many lies that guy told,
no matter how many people he yelled at, no matter how many women on that panel he demeaned,
it didn't change a single vote.
-------------------------------------------
مسلسل الحب الاول الحلقة 12 القسم 1 - مترجمة للعربية - Duration: 13:05.
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Month after flooding, road repairs continue - Duration: 1:11.
-------------------------------------------
An Autistic Student's Journey into a STEM Career - Duration: 8:16.
Journey into Stem and Finding Academic Voice.
An Autistic Researcher's insight.
Hello everyone.
My name is Laura Gilmour and I'm a PhD candidate at the University of Alberta in Canada and
an autistic self-advocate.
Today I am going to delve a little bit about my journey into STEM while also making you
think a bit about the definition of STEM and some options that combine STEM with other
disciplines such as the arts.
Early years.
Early on, I wanted to be a vet.
You can see me in that picture in early university with a collection of my pets.
I loved animals since early childhood and signed the 7th grade yearbook with messages
about neutering cats to prevent pet overpopulation.
However, by high school I began to have an interest in helping others with disabilities
and realized my poor fine motor skills were not a good match for veterinary medicine.
For instance, I struggled to assemble lab equipment in high school chemistry and required
a lot of assistance from lab partners and teachers, despite understanding the concepts.
I entered university knowing I needed a few accommodations such as a computer for typing
short answer questions or essays, and an assistant for assembling lab equipment.
I excelled more in STEM courses that did not involve math or work which required a high
degree of motor skills such as assembling machinery. For instance, I took great joy in
science psychology courses such as neuropsychology or perception.
A few of my psychology instructors noticed my strengths in psychology courses and with
research ideas and asked if I would consider going to graduate school but I was still undecided.
Hurdles along the way.
It wasn't all an easy ride.
I entered education with the hope of being a special education teacher after two years
of bachelor of arts.
Despite an overall good GPA, my difficulties with moving about in space well, facial recognition,
and recognizing body language made it so teaching in a classroom of children wasn't the best
option.
In addition, I realized my math abilities had a ceiling and a straight science degree
wasn't the right path.
At one point I reduced my academic course load to part time due to stress level and
as a student with a disability I was still considered a full-time student if in at least
1/3 course load.
In Alberta, I was allowed to pay tuition for the number of courses I was enrolled in rather
than having to pay tuition for a fulltime course load.
However this likely varies from region to region and country to country.
In all, I made three program switches for various reasons including my need to find
just the right academic supervisor who would understand my unique needs once I decided
research was the route I wanted.
Finding a Supervisory Match.
In fall of 2008, I approached, a psychology professor Dr. Melike Schalomon who always
encouraged me as a student and asked if she had any research opportunities available.
We were able to combine her expertise in neuroscience and sexuality with my research interests in
autism to create an online survey on sexuality and autism.
She was a supportive mentor who challenged my thinking and had high expectations but
also set boundaries as needed.
For instance, if I was in her class and dominated a class discussion she would speak
to me discreetly.
I also benefited as a student from her direct "say it like it is" feedback as a literal
thinker.
She is still an academic colleague and an important influence, as well as in recent
years a friend who is further along in her academic journey who I can ask for advice.
She is pictured beside me at my bachelor's graduation and she also attended my Master's
graduation as a guest and hope to see her at my PhD graduation.
Emerging Researcher.
I was not an official honor's student due to having a reduced course load but I conducted
an honor's equivalent study and took the honor's courses.
I also had my first experience with data collection where I spent the summer of 2009 recruiting
survey participants online and realizing I had a strength for use of social media and
online engagement in data collection.
Our article was published in a top autism journal (research in autism spectrum disorders)
right before graduation and also involved collaboration of my current research supervisor
Dr. Veronica Smith on the project.
Dr. Schalomon, my undergraduate supervisor wrapped the published article up like a gift
and handed it to me on my bachelor's graduation and said it was a graduation present.
It took me 7 years to do a bachelor's degree but I got there and graduated with distinction
(A- average) despite a couple of Cs in math courses and a handful of withdrawals without
academic penalty from courses and situations that weren't a good match for me.
Transition to Flying Solo.
One big difference I've noticed with graduate school and it has been a big step for me is
that my supervisor, Dr.Veronica Smith after guiding me for the first few years, began
to tell me I needed to decide on my own how to design a methodology or choose a measure
and that I had to be effective at communicating that back to her and my committee in writing.
Theory of mind is sometimes a barrier for me in writing when dealing with a new methodology.
I sometimes assume things which are in my head are common knowledge to everyone and
the process sometimes becomes tricky.
Even in undergraduate, I chose my research questions but there was a lot more guidance
on developing methodology and data analysis.
I had Dr. Smith in my Master's and in my Master's there was somewhat more support
but the doctoral program is really different in that they encourage you to be even more
independent.
Doing things on my own and making decisions was terrifying at first, and sometimes I made
bad choices at first and would have to be steered back in the right direction.
I am still getting there but will be ready when I graduate to do research on my own.
Finding my Academic Voice.
Even though I think my supervisors are both highly intelligent academics and excellent
researchers, the voice that has emerged in my work in the last year has been my own,
even if influenced some by teachings and ideals I learned from both my supervisors.
Much like adult children form worldviews separate from their parents.
I developed views on autism from the literature I read, interaction with my own autism community,
and academic conferences I selected and my emerging views somewhat challenged traditional
ones and my supervisor is open to this as long as I am able to justify my position and
back it up with research.
The cultural neurodiversity theory my PhD dissertation is based upon supports the idea
that therapy for autistic individuals should teach communication and self-help skills and
reduce harmful behaviors (for instance aggression).
However, autistics should not be forced to give up stimming or special interests or
be somebody they are not.
Concluding Thoughts.
The research I am involved in now is qualitative research.
In the current project I am actually developing a children's book that creates an analogy
that compares the experience of a child living with autism and learning social skills to
the struggles of a new immigrant child as a way of letting people explore my theoretical
concept of cultural neurodiversity in a school setting.
Quantitative research deals with numbers (often cause and effect) whereas qualitative research
looks at the lived human experience (which is more of a process/lived experience question).
Sometimes they are combined to look at the same question in difference ways and this
is mixed methods research.
The acronym STEM stands for science, technology, engineering, and math. However, there is debate
on whether social sciences should also be considered under science and if an "A"
should be added to the acronym for arts-based methods to understand scientific conditions.
Really, science is about asking questions and some of these questions may be cause and
effect and some may be understanding the process.
When starting a journey, you need to find a path that best fits your cognitive style
both in coursework and supervisors and instructors who you are able to work with well.
Also know that you may change your mind a few times and that is typical of all students,
not just autistic ones.
You will get there eventually.
Bye for now.
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