Thứ Hai, 1 tháng 10, 2018

Waching daily Oct 1 2018

You suck, breast cancer

Thief in the night taking whats not yours

Call we won't answer

You're a hurricane knocking down our door

We'll fight the good fight baby, roar like a panther

We're together here side by side

Cause you coward you don't fight fair

OOOHH (Chants)

Yea Yea

OOOHH (Chants)

Yea Yea

You come here uninvited

Shoo, go away don't nobody here likes you

Your heart is blacker the night is

If you were locked away won't nobody here write you

Without you this world would be a better place

Got a list of things I'll never get to say

Maybe a hello or a goodbye

Won't make that mistake twice

You suck, breast cancer

Thief in the night taking whats not yours

Call we won't answer

You're a hurricane knocking down our door

We'll fight the good fight baby, roar like a panther

We're together here side by side

Cause you coward you don't fight fair

OOOHH (Chants)

Yea Yea

OOOHH (Chants)

Yea Yea

For more infomation >> St. Leroy II - You Suck, Breast Cancer - Duration: 2:13.

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

BHAVI - TE NECESITO (Official Video) - Duration: 4:32.

For more infomation >> BHAVI - TE NECESITO (Official Video) - Duration: 4:32.

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

Darwin and Natural Selection: Crash Course History of Science #22 - Duration: 13:10.

If you only remember one name in the entire history of modern biology, it should be…

two names.

Because the first biologists were a pair of freaky intellectual twins, just like Newton

and Leibniz.

But with more barnacles and monkeys.

Let's meet Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace.

[INTRO MUSIC PLAYS]

In the early 1800s, England was already moving

away from the traditional way of thinking about life, which was then called "natural

theology."

In this belief system, the living world was created by a kindly but hands-off God.

And there were four aspects of Creation: One, there was a divine Creator.

But simply believing in God didn't prevent you from asking how life works.

Two, there were species that didn't change, ever.

This idea was known as the fixity of species.

But keep in mind, the French had already worked out that species do change over time and

go extinct.

They just hadn't figured out how.

The third aspect of natural theology was a short creation, in which the world was only

about six thousand years old.

But geologists had pushed the age of the earth back to millions of years.

And the fourth idea was the one that was still contentious in 1800—a perfect design for

each species.

The idea went: if God made, say, a turtle, he knew what he was doing.

Even if that turtle was stupid or ugly, it was still a designed-by-God original, and

there wasn't too much sense trying to understand the mechanism, the how, of that design process.

(Note: we here at Crash Course love turtles!

There are no stupid ugly turtles!)

Today, natural theology is associated with philosopher William Paley,

perhaps because he wrote a book in 1802 called... Natural Theology.

This book influenced a young scholar named Charles Darwin.

But wanted to understand the "how."

Young Chuck originally wanted to become a physician, but he hated the sight of blood.

So he went to Cambridge to study beetles but skipped a lot of lectures.

He earned Gentleman's Cs and graduated at twenty two with no direction in life, just

a huge collection of beetles.

Which, to be honest, is more than I had.

So Chuck's family did what any rich family with a beetle-obsessed son would do: they

sent him to South America on a ship with a cute name: The HMS Beagle.

Chuck was seasick the entire five years.

But the voyage was more than worth the lost lunches: it turned Darwin from a mere collector

into an extraordinary theorist.

For one, the voyage gave Darwin time to read the geological theories of Charles Lyell and

think about gradual change over long ages.

Wouldn't it be nice to like get on a boat with a couple of books and just think for

5 years, and puke a lot?

Near Concepción, Chile, Darwin saw a volcano and felt an earthquake:

he got to live through Lyell's theory of how geological changes happen!

The voyage also gave him lots of opportunity to collect and compare fossils.

For instance, Darwin found fossils of a species that looked like a giant sloth, one like a

giant capybara, and one like a giant armadillo.

And Darwin thought, what if these giant creatures did not just coincidentally look like modern

animals, like sloths, rodents, and armored mammals, but were actually ancestors of them?

But the main thing the voyage did was give Chuck access to hundreds of specimens from

similar-looking species that lived close to each other, but in slightly different environments.

The most famous examples, of course, come from the Galapagos Islands off the coast of

Ecuador, home to land and marine iguanas, diverse mockingbirds and thrushes, tortoises

by the dozen, and—say it with me—finches!

Like beetles before and barnacles later, finches became an absolute obsession for Chuck.

He had to catch them all.

Lucky for him, the people who lived near the Galapagos even explained to him that the different

species seemed to vary according to island.

This turned out to be one in a number of clues that would lead Chuck to developing the theory

of evolution by natural selection.

When he got back to London, Darwin wrote up his meticulous fieldnotes.

He published the Zoology of the Voyage of HMS Beagle in volumes from 1838 to 1843.

This alone made Darwin a serious naturalist.

His generous sharing of specimens made him not only a member of the London scientific

world, but a leader in it.

He sent specimens to naturalists including John Gould, who helped Darwin confirm that

his finches were actually different species, and not just varieties of one species.

Major clue!

And then Darwin read the Essay on the Principle of Population by a cranky reverend named Thomas

Robert Malthus.

Malthus argued that population increases geometrically, but food only increases arithmetically: the

logical result must be famine.

This was the final clue—a relationship between the environment and the reproduction of populations.

Darwin reasoned that living beings compete over resources, and only the most fit for

a given region survive.

It's as if nature selects them.

Hence his choice of the term "natural selection," for the primary mechanism of evolution.

Compare this to natural theology: there's no Creator involved.

Species aren't fixed.

The process takes aeons.

And design—what design?

Useful traits emerge over time.

At the same time that he was solving the biggest problem facing the study of "what is life?",

Darwin was also busy performing Victorian gentleman-ness: he married his cousin, Emma

Wedgwood, in 1839.

He had babies and moved to a manor in Kent.

He got REALLY into billiards.

But, what Darwin was not doing?

Publishing a complete theory of evolution.

What was Darwin's next move?

Pigeon fancying.

He bred pigeons in order to understand artificial selection, or how humans design organisms.

Because breeding pigeons is a lot faster than watching finches change over millennia.

And then?

Eight years studying barnacles.

He worked on his theory, writing to his friends for advice about it.

But he didn't publish it.

Darwin wanted to wait until he had incontrovertible proof.

Then in 1858, Darwin received a letter from one Alfred Russel Wallace.

Wallace had also discovered natural selection.

He sincerely wrote to Darwin for advice: would he be interested in, uh, an evidence-based

theory explaining how organisms evolve?

Darwin's mentor, Lyell, told him that he had no choice now.

So Darwin and Wallace published a joint letter in the Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean

Society of London.

And then Darwin wrote a compelling, five hundred-page book detailing his theory.

In one year.

In 1859, On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or just "the Origin,"

debuted as a modest edition of twelve hundred copies but soon became a smash hit.

It was a scientific bestseller, intended for a wide audience.

No footnotes!

The book explained how "descent with modification" or "transformism" actually works.

In any population of the same species, you can see a natural variation in traits: some

finches have longer beaks; some have shorter beaks.

Over time, small changes in the environment add up, favoring some traits over others.

Natural selection modifies the population: the fittest survive and reproduce, passing

on their traits.

Say, the long beaks get to more food and survive when food becomes scarce.

Unfit species die out.

Populations diverge into new species!

Darwin's writing, influenced by Malthus, shifted away from a harmony of nature and

toward a competition for resources—a war.

But Darwin's theory wasn't perfect.

In fact, he included a chapter on the "difficulties" facing natural selection.

These included a lack of transitional forms in the fossil record: how do we get from fish

to amphibians?

Even more basically, where do variations come from?

How are they passed on from one generation to the next?

We have answers to these questions today—stayed tuned!—but Darwin didn't, and he admitted

as much.

This was… refreshing.

He didn't claim to be a genius.

He didn't bash earlier theories.

The Origin didn't even mention God, much less where humans come from.

Instead, Darwin focused on what he knew: variation in beetles, finches, pigeons, barnacles, and

fossil animals.

His theory, backed by so much evidence, accounted for how new species evolve.

Even more importantly, Darwin united many branches of natural history into a single

synthetic theory and proposed a bunch of clear and important questions for future research.

In fact, Origin marks a kind of evolution of natural history, which was focused on observation

and description, into biology, which is more focused on testing theories about living things.

Darwin's skill as a writer is one reason his name eclipsed Wallace's.

Another is that my dude was rich!

Like, born rich, invested well, married rich…

He was doing all right.

And Wallace?

Introduce him, ThoughtBubble:

Al was born to a family with money problems.

He quit school at sixteen to work surveying canals with his brother.

And at twenty, he quit surveying to teach.

Wallace read Malthus.

He also read Darwin's details of his American voyage and became a lifelong fan.

Wallace met Henry Walter Bates in 1844.

They became science besties and decided to figure out how evolution works in order to

apply that knowledge to human society and save people from greed and individualism.

Wallace and Bates went to the Amazon from 1848 to 1852 to collect specimens for museums

in London.

And he was super successful… until he set off back to England.

His boat, brimming with specimens, caught fire and sank.

Wallace watched from his lifeboat as all of his hard work—his carefully trapped and

cataloged monkeys and his parrots—sank into the dark waves.

He was not rescued for ten days.

But, like Galileo after his trial by the Inquisition, Wallace never gave up.

In debt, Wallace decided to continue collecting more specimens to pay the bills, this time

in Southeast Asia in 1854.

He sent specimens back regularly, developing a brilliant reputation.

And Wallace was doing a more than collecting: traveling from island to island across what

is now Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore, he observed that different environments seem

to produce different populations of organisms… perhaps even new species.

While sick in bed in 1858, Wallace suddenly recalled the essay on populations by Malthus,

and an entire theory clicked into place.

In his words: A "self-acting process" meant that, for any species, "the fittest

would survive."

The colleague he thought would most appreciate this wild new theory?

A slightly older naturalist in London…

Thanks ThoughtBubble. After the joint paper with Darwin, Wallace

continued working in Southeast Asia until 1862.

He published his major work, The Malay Archipelago, in 1869.

Wallace observed that there is a sort of invisible line—"Wallace's line"—in Indonesia:

to the west, species resemble those in Asia.

To the east, they resemble those in Australia.

In fact, Wallace invented the discipline of biogeography, or the study of plants, animals,

and geological formations together.

So, between them, Darwin and Wallace were reaching a lot of people with their ideas.

And it's true that some people with conservative religious values were outraged at the public

acceptance of a Creation that had no elegant design, just random variation.

But the reaction to natural selection was mostly acceptance.

Darwin's writing, and the depth of his and Wallace's evidence, settled the matter for

many readers.

In fact, in some ways, Darwinism was accepted too easily.

Darwinism quickly became equated with the term "survival of the fittest," which

was coined in 1864 by biologist Herbert Spencer and appeared in the fifth edition of Origin.

This term isn't a bad summary of natural selection, in terms of animals and plants.

But it was increasingly applied to human society, as "social Darwinism," in a way that Darwin

and Wallace would not have approved of.

An Industrial Revolution has just brought radical change to England.

A new class of capitalists saw themselves as more "fit" to govern the world than

the nobles they replaced or the workers they controlled.

Next time—Darwin's cousin, Frank Galton, will try to apply Chuck and Al's theory

to society.

Yes, it becomes strange, and even tragic.

So be sure to come back.

Crash Course History of Science is filmed in the Dr. Cheryl C. Kinney studio in Missoula,

Montana and it's made with the help of all this nice people and our animation team is

Thought Cafe.

Crash Course is a Complexly production.

If you wanna keep imagining the world complexly with us, you can check out some of our other

channels like Scishow, Eons, and Sexplanations.

And, if you'd like to keep Crash Course free for everybody, forever, you can support

the series at Patreon; a crowdfunding platform that allows you to support the content you love.

Thank you to all of our patrons for making Crash Course possible with their continued support.

For more infomation >> Darwin and Natural Selection: Crash Course History of Science #22 - Duration: 13:10.

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

Geminis a quien conocerás en Octubre? Nuevo Amor + Consejo - Duration: 12:05.

For more infomation >> Geminis a quien conocerás en Octubre? Nuevo Amor + Consejo - Duration: 12:05.

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

How to Get Super Sleek + Shiny Straight Hair Feat. IGK Hair's Good Behavior | ipsy U - Duration: 5:00.

- Hey Welcome to ipsy U Beauty 101!

I'm Chase Kusero Co-Founder of IGK Hair.

I'm here with our newest product

Good Behavior

a spirulina protein smoothing spray.

It's like a keratin treatment in a can.

A keratin treatment is a relaxing treatment.

A few different reasons why you would get it

it enhances shine,

it'll reduce frizz

but it could also be costly

it could take a lot of time

it could also damage your hair.

Although we can't mimic the keratin

that the hair is made up of,

we're using spirulina and keratin protein

to fill the hair shaft and make it stronger.

This product is best for curly hair

hair that tends to be on the frizzier side.

Hair that you have trouble managing on your own.

- Hey guys I'm Elizabeth Hernandez

- Hey guys I'm Canela

and we're gonna try out the Good Behavior product

to straighten my hair.

- So my hair type is real interesting

it's fine but thick and I have a lot of it.

It's wavy,

not supper curly.

It's like flat in some places

but as you can see underneath

has like a nice curl.

It's dry a bit damaged.

- I've never had a keratin treatment.

I've actually wanted to try one

I've wanted to get like some straightening but

I've never had the chance to try it.

- I've done a keratin treatment

I loved it because it smoothed out my curl

it wasn't frizzy

but just the time it took to get it done

was really time consuming,

frustrating was a bit of a love hate goin on.

- I would say I straighten my hair

around once every three months.

- I straighten my hair at least once a week.

For sure I wanna say probably like

three to four times a month.

- Today on Elizabeth I'm gonna prep her hair with

Thirsty Girl

which is our coconut milk frizz control

leave in conditioner.

Spray a little bit of this.

This is just gonna give me a little bit of

slip and moisture.

On damp hair we're gonna spray

really thoroughly

on top

and underneath each section.

Just like a keratin treatment

you wanna make sure you're really thoroughly

coating the hair

Strand by strand.

So after I apply this

I'm also gonna comb it through to make sure

that it's evenly distributed.

As you can see we have Good Behavior

on this side

and bad behavior

on this side.

I'm gonna blow dry her hair now.

This product is heat activated.

It's gonna give you 24-hour frizz control.

Heat protection up to 450 degrees

and it will cut your blow dry time.

(hip-hop music)

Now I'm gonna teach her how to do a few sections

of her own hair.

A good tip is to section the hair

with enough hair that you can control.

- Can I feel that?

- Yeah!

- And I normally do more than that.

- Yeah!

- It's probably why I'm messing up.

(R&B pop music)

So now just to give it a sleek

more finished

shine

it's really nice to kind a go over it

with a flatiron.

(R&B pop music)

This is Canela.

She has pretty fine hair

but she has a lot of it.

She has the curl that

can really easily be frizzy.

So I'm gonna section her hair

and really thoroughly apply the product to each strand.

She has virgin hair.

I don't think we're gonna have to use a flatiron

to polish her hair.

The product is heat activated

but you also can use it to sort of relax the curl

and to tame the frizz.

Okay so now I'm gonna blow dry her hair.

A good tip at home

when you're blow drying curly hair

is to not touch it so much.

If the hair is not cool it's gonna actually

cause more frizz.

I'm gonna start with using a pretty small section.

I really wanna control the hair.

Each strand of her hair is really fine

but she has a lot a hair.

So I'm gonna blow dry using a boar bristle brush.

There is actually a vegan option

for this brush.

These brushes compared to metal brushes

are a lot better for the hair

because it's it actually adds a lot of shine.

Hair on hair adds shine.

The metal brushes tend to frizz the hair out

and over heat the hair

so the hair in the long term

become more dry and damaged.

If you continue to spray the product

for the next couple of days after using it

you can keep your style

for as long as you want till you wash it.

Okay so now she's all blow dried.

And as you can see both sides are perfectly polished.

Really smooth no frizz.

How do you feel?

- I feel great!

My hair looks so good.

- I mean it's amazing!

Just to the touch it's real soft

it doesn't feel like there's any product in it.

And an easy way to maintain

and to extend your blow dry

is to use dry shampoo

in between the style.

You could also retouch

using the Good Behavior on certain sections.

Running the flatiron through it

to extend your style in between washes.

I hope you learned a lot about our new keratin

in a can and spirulina protein.

Thanks for watching

ipsy U Beauty 101

See you next time.

For more infomation >> How to Get Super Sleek + Shiny Straight Hair Feat. IGK Hair's Good Behavior | ipsy U - Duration: 5:00.

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

Learn Vehicle Names | Kids Learning | Video for Children - Duration: 32:30.

If You're happy and you know it Clap your hands,

If You're happy and you know it Clap your hands,

If You're happy and you know it and You really want to show it

If You're happy and you know it Clap your hands.

If You're happy and you know it Stamp your feet,

If You're happy and you know it Stamp your feet,

If You're happy and you know it and You really want to show it

If You're happy and you know it Stamp your feet.

If You're happy and you know it Shout hurray!

(Hurray!)

If You're happy and you know it Shout hurray!

(Hurray!)

If You're happy and you know it and You really want to show it

If You're happy and you know it Shout hurray!

(Hurray!)

If You're happy and you know it Snap your fingers,

If You're happy and you know it Snap your fingers,

If You're happy and you know it and You really want to show it

If You're happy and you know it Snap your fingers.

If You're happy and you know it Do all 4!

(Hurray!)

If You're happy and you know it Do all 4!

(Hurray!)

If You're happy and you know it and You really want to show it

If You're happy and you know it Do all 4!

(Hurray!)

The incy wincy spider Climbed up the water spout

Down came the rain And washed the spider out

Out came the sun And dried up all the rain

And the itcy-wincy spider Climbed up the spout again

The incy wincy spider Climbed up the water spout

Down came the rain And washed the spider out

Out came the sun And dried up all the rain

And the incy-wincy spider Climbed up the spout again

The incy wincy spider Climbed up the water spout

Down came the rain And washed the spider out

Out came the sun And dried up all the rain

And the incy-wincy spider Climbed up the spout again

Do you know your A-B-C's

A - B - C - D - E - F - G H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P

Q - R - S - T - U- V, W - X - Y and Z

Now I know my ABC's 26 letters from A to Z

A - B - C - D - E - F - G H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P

Q - R - S - T - U- V, W - X - Y and Z

Now I know my ABC's Next time won't you sing with me.

A - B - C - D - E - F - G H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P

Q - R - S - T - U- V, W - X - Y and Z

Now I know my ABC's 26 letters from A to Z

26 letters from A to Z

For more infomation >> Learn Vehicle Names | Kids Learning | Video for Children - Duration: 32:30.

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

November ballot initiative seeks liquor license changes in Minneapolis - Duration: 2:16.

For more infomation >> November ballot initiative seeks liquor license changes in Minneapolis - Duration: 2:16.

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

Itaunas - Espirito Santo - Duration: 11:47.

I'm not sure if it's due to the proximity of the state of Bahia

but Itaunas this village in the north of the Espirito Santo is extremely quiet

Extremely quiet,

indeed.

You don't hurry to eat

You don't hurry to have a walk

There's no one running at all,

anywhere.

also because the next village

is 30 or 40 Km far from Itaunas,

off road, with washbordings,

that makes the car shake a lot and go up and down.

So,

even if you want to run you wouldn't get that easily

Like most of touristic villages

Itaunas has plenty of attractions

but as we didn't have many time

because we also wanted to go to

Costa Dourada ( borderline between the states of Espirito Santo and Bahia)

before coming back home in Curitiba

we stayed close to the 'Trilha do Tamandaré' (Tamandaré's trail)

which is an attraction on itself

with different kinds of vegetation.

Almost in the end of the trail you have a bifurcation

where you can choose to go

towards the 'Tamandaré's house' first or directly towards the dunes.

We made them both.

The Mister Tamandaré's house

is the only house of the Old Village of Itaunas

that stood

after the whole village was buried by sand.

It's said that it was because he preserved

the 'restinga' the native vegetation around his house

that it stood

That's why we can see lots of signboards

warning on the importance of the preservation of the environment vegetation.

Preserve your life! Do not jump from bridge

Tamandaré's Trail - 700 m to the beach

Restinga is life

Who loves takes care

Itaunas has good food

coffee

the dunes

beaches...

The village has many other attractions

but we didn't have enough time to explore everything,

like the huts you can see in the distance

once you get to the end of the trail

you see these huts over there

far away

so far away

and say to yourself

'do I have to walk all this?'

so we avoid this long walk

and didn't get to these huts

because we wanted to enjoy the dunes

and the sunset on the beach.

The day after we had

a delicious breakfast and waited in the hostel

till the check-out.

Then we headed for Costa Dourada

but this is for another video...

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét