Thứ Bảy, 15 tháng 12, 2018

Waching daily Dec 15 2018

William and Kate WILL spend Christmas Day with Harry and Meghan under the Queen's watchful eye at Sandringham.

Prince Harry and Meghan and Prince William and Kate will be spending Christmas day together at Sandringham,

Kensington Palace has confirmed.

Despite rumours of a rift between the couples,

the Duke and Duchess of Sussex will be joined by Prince William and Kate to celebrate the festive day with the Queen in Norfolk.

The news comes amid reports of a significant falling out between Kate and Meghan and a growing strain between the two couples.

Kensington Palace today confirmed the couples would be spending the day at the royal estate

but could not confirm where they would spend the remainder of the festive period.

Last month rumours began to surface of a growing tension between Kate and Meghan

after the Duke and Duchess of Sussex announced they were moving out of Kensington Palace to live in Frogmore House in Windsor.

There were also reports of a falling out between Meghan and Kate during ­Princess Charlotte's bridesmaid dress fitting before the royal wedding earlier this year.

It had previously been claimed that Prince William and Kate, both 36,

would spend Christmas day with the Middleton family in Berkshire as they did in 2016

while Prince Harry, 34, and Meghan, 37, would spend it with the Queen.

However in spite of the reported rift and rumours of the couples going their separate ways,

Christmas at Sandringham this year will mark a show of solidarity between the royals.

Christmas day at Sandringham House is a highly traditional affair with Royal biographer Christopher Wilson calling it an 'ordeal'.

The family traditionally follow the German tradition of Heiligabend Bescherung,

which sees the royals open their presents on Christmas eve.

On Christmas day, the women of the house opt for a light breakfast of sliced fruit while the male royals head downstairs for a hearty English breakfast.

'Sandringham is Downton Abbey on speed'.

Diana's butler Paul Burrell offers advice to Meghan Markle ahead of 'intense' Christmas full of 'egos',

warning her to stay close to Harry and the Queen because other royals will be out to get her.

When Meghan Markle sits down with the rest of the royal family for their traditional Christmas dinner,

it will be like being transported into 'another reality'.

That's the opinion of Princess Diana's longtime butler Paul Burrell, who believes, based on his own experience,

that the Duchess of Sussex will not be used to the intense four-nday period she'll go through at Sandringham Palace.

After the year Meghan has gone through with her own dysfunctional family;

from her father Thomas Sr partaking in staged paparazzi photos to half-sister Samantha's stream of vile public outbursts;

she'd be entitled to think that a glass of sherry with the Windsors would make a welcoming change.

Yet 60-year-old Burrell warns that other royals will be out to trip her up at Christmas, and offers the advice:

'Stay close to Harry and his granny… or you're in trouble!'

Burrell, who served as a footman to the Queen and butler to Diana for a total of 21 years,

feels great sympathy for the baptism of fire that Markle, 37, has so far faced.

Although this will be nothing compared to what will hit her on Christmas Eve when she travels up to the country estate in Norfolk, England.

Burrell explains that the festive period has always been used by the royal members to curry favor with the monarch

and Meghan should seize the opportunity to talk to Her Majesty about what's on her mind after a tumultuous few months

where she's been saddled as 'difficult' and blamed for a rift with sister-in-law Kate Middleton.

Burrell said: 'It's the most intense period of the year, I've been there for so many Christmases,

this house is occupied by some of the biggest personalities and egos in the country.

'All these people are members of the royal family, they are all larger than life, have character to go with it.

Everyone is jostling for position and attention, and they're bouncing off the walls after four days.

It's like a pinball machine.

'They all want to please the Queen and want airtime with her,

it's the one time that they can sit down with the head of the family and make an impression.

'It's what I said to Diana when she first came into the family, try to get airtime with the Queen, speak into her ear.

'The best time to do it is when she's seated at her card table, before and after dinner,

she will sit and play Bridge or Canasta and she'll always ask people to join her,

that's your chance to get quality time and tell the monarch what you're thinking and feeling.

'That's the time Meghan should grasp, don't be talking dresses and jewels with other royals, head for the Queen.

The Queen is the most humble, approachable and kind person you'll ever meet, she's a great listener,

nothing will shock her, she's heard everything, and you can tell her everything, and it will be safe.

'The Queen has to be informed from the horse's mouth, if you don't do that, you're doing an injustice,

I hope that Meghan will get this advice from Harry, that granny knows best.

'If you speak your fears, she will take it onboard and speak to the right person.

She will change the rules, she did it for William and Harry, she can do it, but only if she knows about it'.

Burrell, who quit being a royal butler after Diana's death in 1997 and now runs a florist shop in Farndon,

Cheshire, understands the pressure cooker royal environment more than most.

He adds: 'I personally think she's finding it tough in there, no one could prepare her for it, not even on a film set, but this is the real world.

Imagine Downton, but ramp it up. Sandringham is Downton Abbey on speed.

'It is daunting as everyone around that table is a very famous person on the world stage,

there's not many times you can look at a dining room table and think: 'Oh my goodness'.

'I am sure Meghan will sit at that dining room table with her heart beating double time, thinking:

'Pinch me, is this real?' It's far from reality, so detached from our world.

'From the minute she arrives, she'll be met by a valet and a dresser,

who will unpack her suitcase and wash and lay out her clothes every morning, then pack her bag up again when it's over.

'This will be an intense period until the minute she leaves,

she'll have to give up her time completely as it's about the royal family, she'll have to understand that'.

Burrell isn't surprised about the recent negative press surrounding Meghan;

stories that she demanded air fresheners at her wedding in the 'musty' Windsor chapel

and apparently made sister-in-law Kate cry over daughter Charlotte's bridesmaid's fitting.

It's exactly what happened to his old boss, the tragic Princess of Wales.

Burrell said: 'The Queen will be very aware of the media attention [on Meghan], she reads every single newspaper, every morning.

'She scans each one, then sees what they say, and makes an informed decision,

based on what she reads with what she knows. She can then know if it's truth or fiction.

'She will try to resolve it, she will take her grandsons to one side, and ask:

''Is there any truth in this?'' Or: ''I've heard this, how can I be of help?''

She's their granny. She loves them very much and wants them to be very happy. The Queen is their best friend.

'At least Meghan has the support of Harry, he's been there, done it, it's part of his world.

This is the way granny does it, we pay respect to it.

'She's already the same age as when Diana died, so is a mature woman, who comes from a mixed race background,

and is American - these are positives that the royals should embrace to go forward in my eyes.

'But she's going to come up with opposition within the four walls of the royal household and they will be seen as negatives, like Diana did'.

Burrell continued: 'Because Kate came from their [sort of] background, Meghan isn't like that.

They are going to set traps, there will be pitfalls along the way, but Harry will catch her, so stay close to him.

Nothing will happen if you're close to the Queen's grandson.

'But if you stray away from him and start to do things by yourself, that's when there could be problems'.

This Christmas will be like nothing she's experienced - a British royal family that is 'entrenched in history,

tradition, protocol, timetables - it's a strict world, it's a world Meghan's not used to,' says Burrell.

In years gone by with the Markle family as a child, she'd be delivering turkeys to homeless shelters in Skid Row,

a square mile of downtown Los Angeles riddled with thousands of destitute people packed in dirty tents on the sidewalks.

But that didn't stop the Markle family from helping those in need with her now divorced parents Thomas Markle

and Doria Ragland insisting on handing out turkeys at holiday times.

At one stage, Markle even volunteered at Hippie Kitchen, a long-standing Skid Row soup kitchen.

In an essay on her humanitarian work, Markle later wrote:

'My parents came from little so they made a choice to give a lot:

buying turkeys for homeless shelters at Thanksgiving, delivering meals to people in hospices,

giving spare change to those asking for it'.

In an exclusive interview, her nephew Tyler Dooley explains that she's always had the 'common touch'.

He says: 'Not coming from a royal background, but very humble beginnings, she was just a commoner - as the Brits would call it.

She was just a normal person, but she has always had this ability to help people and the power to change things.

'She wants to put smiles on people faces, she's happiest when among people who haven't got anything'.

Dooley remembers fondly Christmases with his aunt Meghan, especially on one occasion, with Markle's father and his grandad, Thomas Sr.

'I remember one Christmas, my grandfather would take me, my brother and Meghan,

and we'd go to the mall in Los Angeles, and he literally said you can get anything you want in the store.

My brother and I looked at each other, and were like: ''How cool is that?''

'My grandfather is like a big teddy bear. It was so cool, all the Christmas lights, music playing,

we ran into the toy store and got whatever we wanted, it was an amazing experience,' says Dooley.

Thanks you for watching! Please to Like and Share if you feel the video is useful.

And don't forget to leave your thoughts in the comment section below.

For more infomation >> Palace Confirm: Harry & Meghan spend Christmas Day with Kate & William under Queen's supervision - Duration: 10:10.

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Bão Bóng Đá ĐT Việt Nam Vô Địch ,Chung Kết AFF Cup 2018, Đồng Hới 10 năm mới có 1 lần ? - Duration: 10:41.

For more infomation >> Bão Bóng Đá ĐT Việt Nam Vô Địch ,Chung Kết AFF Cup 2018, Đồng Hới 10 năm mới có 1 lần ? - Duration: 10:41.

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Thái bình quê lúa//Cảnh nuôi vịt 4000k con ở quê - Duration: 11:31.

For more infomation >> Thái bình quê lúa//Cảnh nuôi vịt 4000k con ở quê - Duration: 11:31.

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Dimmer Switches: Secretly Strobe Lights - Duration: 3:23.

Thanks to Skillshare for sponsoring this episode.

[♩INTRO]

Imagine you're sitting in a movie theater chomping down on popcorn,

and the newest blockbuster is just about to start.

To get ready for the action, the theater decides it's time to dim the lights.

This might seem like a simple adjustment, but inside those light bulbs,

there's actually a small rave going on.

Because although you'll probably never notice it,

dimmer switches are basically strobe lights

and are way cooler than you might have thought.

Until the 1950s, dimmer switches used to work how you might expect:

They limited the amount of energy getting to a light by using some of it up.

They did this by running the electricity through a resistor

which, like the name suggests, resists the flow of electrical current.

That burned off the extra power before it reached the bulb

and made the light fainter.

But it also wasted lots of energy, and generated a lot of heat.

Then, in 1959, an inventor named Joel Spira came along

and changed the game when he made the first dimmer switch for homes.

And while there are now multiple kinds of them,

most use Spira's original strategy:

They manipulate alternating current, also known as AC.

AC is what's supplied by the electrical sockets in your walls, and it's referred to

as alternating because the current periodically changes direction.

It might not sound that efficient, but the constant shifting makes it easier for the

current to be transformed from the high voltages made in power plants to

what's needed for your hair dryer.

Countries use different standards for the frequency at which it switches,

but in the U.S., it reverses 120 times a second.

Normally, that means your wall lights flash just as often.

But dimmer switches change that.

See, when the current reverses direction,

the dimmer switch actually turns off the light.

Then it stays off for a tiny fraction of a second.

When you lower the slider on the wall,

you're telling the switch to keep the light off a little bit longer.

And with longer gaps in between flashes, the light looks dimmer.

By staying off for more of each AC cycle, the bulb gets less energy

all without the extra heat loss the old designs had.

But clearly, it's not like you notice all this flashing.

If you did, it would give mood lighting a whole different mood.

Some of this depends on the lightbulb.

Some older bulbs that use filament don't have enough time to cool down

in between flashes, which helps the glow appear constant.

But more generally, you don't notice the switching because, no matter how dim

the light gets, it still crosses what's called the flicker fusion threshold.

This is the frequency at which lights need to flash

for the average person to see them as continuous.

It's the same phenomenon the affects the number of frames per second

movies need to play at to look smooth.

Things like your age and how tired you are can affect your threshold,

but in general, dimmer switches always stay above the limit,

so you never notice them turning on and off.

So if you're ever in the mood for a party, just get your dimmer switches ready.

They're basically the most chill strobe light you'll ever find.

We care a lot about lighting here on the SciShow set.

It's what makes our hosts and our green screen look so good.

If you've ever wanted to learn more about studio lighting,

but didn't know where to start, Skillshare has a great class about it,

taught by cinematographer Matt Workman.

He teaches you the basics of lighting a seamless paper background,

which is a pretty cheap and easy way to get some professional-looking shots.

And if lighting isn't your thing, Skillshare has more than 20,000 other classes

about everything from cooking to music, so there's a lot to explore.

Right now, Skillshare is offering SciShow viewers 2 months of unlimited access

to all of their classes for free!

So whether it's cinematography or something else,

you can pick up a new skill all while supporting SciShow.

Just follow the link in the description to check it out for yourself!

[♩OUTRO]

For more infomation >> Dimmer Switches: Secretly Strobe Lights - Duration: 3:23.

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Top 8 Games of 2018 - LambHoot - Duration: 44:54.

Ah, you know, it's like they say, "the years keep coming and they don't stop coming",

and here's come and gone yet another year, this one, the two thousand and eighteen for

any of y'all keeping count, and uh, I don't know I guess a few good games came out?

Lets uh, let's take a look at the best ones.

[woman I paid on fiverr's voice]: "These are the top 8 games of 2018"

[woman I paid on fiverr's voice]: "Number 8, Hollow Knight."

Hollow Knight didn't technically come out this year, but this is the year I played it

so shut up.

Uh, it's pretty good, if uh, if you can get passed all the… the bugs [wheeze].

I don't actually really like or dislike metroidvanias, like, none has ever really

left a major impression on me.

I don't know.

But this one is cool cause, check this, you can let yourself die, then come back to where

you died, and then you can use your ghost as a platform to go somewhere higher.

That's pretty cool, not that, like, I ever did this at all, but it was nice to know you

could.

Uh, otherwise yeah it's just pretty good I guess.

[woman I paid on fiverr's voice]: "Number 7, Spider-Man."

Spiderman, spiderman, does whatever a spiderman can.

This isn't by far the only game that's come out this year with a photo mode, it's

been a really weird trend recently that I haven't understood.

That is until now because this is the first game that made me care about.

Like, I guess there's something to be said about the quantity and quality of a game's

content when it drives players to wanna take pictures of it.

The game is really good, and uh, it'd definitely make it way up higher on the list if it weren't

for one major game breaking issue.

So in the game sometimes there are points of interest that you need to activate with

a press of a button, and as you approach them a little icon appears hovering over them,

but right as you get close enough to interact, the indicator what looks like circle suddenly

transforms into a triangle, leading you to press the wrong button every single time.

Now yes, I'm playing this off for comedic effect but what isn't funny is when you

sit down and realize this is a triple A game, how the fuck did this make it out?

Fuck right outta here with this weak shit.

Spiderman?

Would'a been higher but WHOOPS pressed the wrong button, #7 only loser.

[woman I paid on fiverr's voice]: "Number 6, Splatoon 2's Octo Expansion, except for

the grinding levels."

Except for the grinding levels, Splatoon 2's Octo-expansion is the gnarliest of all gnarls.

It's got that fire hip-hop aesthetic, these popping and bumping tunes, this minimal story

that still manages to pull it all together and end with an impact, but most important

holy hell do these levels rock!

The levels starts even before it starts, you gotta pick a loadout for it, some giving you

more points at the end aka, they're difficulty levels, and then when you go in you have to

pay with an in-game currency to play the level, and you don't start with very much and you

don't get very much for clearing.

So it's like, you've alway got doom looming over you.

It motivates you to clutch your absolute hardest to every stage.

All the twists and turns, all the combat, all the puzzles, hell man there's just so

much in these stages I can't even describe it all.

It's funny I was playing this game around the same time I was working on that video

about Metal Gear Solid's VR Missions, and I was really thinking of trying to work in

there a bit about how Octo-Expansion honestly feels like more of a sequel to MGS's VR

stages than any other game in its own series, but hey, I guess it was worth saving for now

instead.

You have Splatoon 2 and you like yourself some good fucking level design, you owe it

to yourself to check this this out... except… except for the grinding levels jesus christ

how come sometimes you jump ya got no freaking forward momentum?

What's going on here?

[woman I paid on fiverr's voice]: "Number 5, Hamish Black."

Hey coming it at #5 it's ya man, Hamish Black.

Full disclosure, if you consider the combined packaged of Hambo and Nico a single title,

definitely would be game of the year.

[Nico]: "This is a dumb thing" [Hamish]: "Goddamnit"

Sadly, they're sold separately but hey, don't hate the player, hate the "writing-on"

game.

So I don't know into how much detail wanna go here, I mean, after all, my final Patreon

goal is to write a sociotechnical analysis of the man, but uh.

Look, Hamish is one of the purest-hearted game video bois you can meet, and he'll

be your dad if you let him.

What do I mean by that?

Look, man's got style, man's got grace, man's even got a really funny podcast he

runs with the aforementioned Nico Bleackley.

[Nico]: "I've been called a hipster in the past, accused!"

And the deal is, look, if you subscribe to Hambo's channel, Writing on Games, you'll

be satisfied enough.

You'll regularly be fed delicious pieces, sometimes on actively relevant games Hambo's

bustin' his ass on to get a word out to read ya in on, a word that ain't nobody

else in time for embargo lift's gonna have prepped in time.

Sometimes they're on the goldy oldies, hearing Hambo take a retrospective look-back at something

that happened some time ago, that hey, maybe you never thought about.

And sometimes it'll be Hamish fucking Black just reflecting on certain components of the

industry he writes about, from his point of view, standing in the middle of sweaty crowds

of gamers at events, brain on.

And for most viewers, for me even for a while, that's more than enough.

He's real, he constantly makes clear that a lot of his takes come from his personal

experiences, he's personable and relatable and transparent as all hell, and that's

exactly what you want out of a games writer.

I mean, even though, let's be real, he'd have every right to be at this point, Hambo

doesn't come it slinging slash from atop some high horse.

He justifies everything he says, every conclusion he makes is the product of a thousand thoughts

juggled and juggled and juggled and that his video serve the purpose of showing us the

filtered view, the presentable version, the tip of the iceberg of.

The thing is, if you give yourself to him, he'll dish you out more.

Listening to him and Nico's podcast, the Writing on Games cast, gives you excellent

context weeks in advance to the final video projects he drops.

I don't know if he realizes it or not, but, like, listening to the podcast you'll hear

him express feelings about games or events that are still partly recognizable post-process

of making them points in a video.

It's like, sitting on a couch with a dude who's just shooting the shit with out about

a game, and then next week he comes back all suited up with a full on powerpoint deck of

focused slides and a conclusion, or a really personal expression, it's like, it's so

dope.

There's also the fact that you've got this whole, I don't know, I'm gonna call

it narrative, but you've got this narrative where this dude who never really asked for

much is now suddenly finding himself in the big leagues.

He's getting invited to press events as a personality, he's on busses chatting up

with voice actors from game's he's criticized, but like, he hasn't lost anything, he hasn't

changed, he's super humble but he's committing to that bit out of what seems like genuine

and honest curiosity.

It's like, we all get to experience this wild ride he's on through him because he's

not taking advantage of it or anything, he's just letting it happen because he wants to

know what comes next.

And it's like, I don't know man, it digs dude.

And on a personal note, as far as my experiences have gone with the, uh, video game, Hamish

Black, this year.

Like, okay, I won't bore y'all with the details cause every time I stream these days

it always devolves into me just sitting down and singing this tune with y'all over chat.But

I have what we'll call audience issues, and by what I mean is that my channel's

only growth comes from videos that attract the sorts of people who are the same sorts

of people who unsubscribe in mass every time I upload something new I've worked really

hard that's not like the sort of video that attracted them in the first place.

I know I've said before that I'm in this to have fun and that I'm basically completely

self-motivated, but uh, I kinda had to come to terms recently after being unable to put

my hands to writing for over a month straight that I was lying to myself.

At least, during that time, recently, it really felt like it was demotivating me.

And it's not that I'm bothered by the fact that I'm not growing, because technically

I am, but it's more I'm bothered that I could be and instead I keep having spongebob

fan sent to my doorstep who don't wanna hear any what I'm preaching these days.

Like, I feel like I'm being bullied by a video suggestion system beyond the scope of

my effect, and that, recently, made it really hard to get any work done.

But hey, if youtube's suggestion system is my bully, then Hamish is the bigger kid

on the playground what fucks bois up.

You won't believe what's, what's interrupting my vo right now.

It's literally, I'm gonna try to film it.

There's a tractor piling leaves up literally right outside the window, look at this.

Oh my fucking god they're still fucking with these leaves!

[shower curtain rustling]

Hamish is immensely generous and basically most of my positive growth this year has come

from a couple a shoutouts he made that he really didn't have to.

It really makes a difference, cause here he is, this dude who's assembling a crowd of

people who wanna listen to him, and here's a couple of us trying to rally up our own

around our messages, and Hamish is just like yo I got you guys, he just directs people

to us, to people like me and my friends, and it, it makes a big difference.

It makes as much… you know what? you know what?

Its very much like this fucking tractor right now, like, yo what the fuck!?

That's what this is all about!

Hold on I gotta film it!

See, see this truck right here, this tractor?

See how it's carrying all the leaves?

That's Hamish.

And see that truck?

That's its uh, it's, I can't focus on it, but, see that truck?

Yeah there's a truck.

So Hamish is this tractor holding all the leaves, and that

truck that currently only has a few littles leaves in it, that's me.

That's me and all my friends.

That's me and all my friends ok?

And see what Hamish is doing is he lifts, he takes all, he's like "you want these

leaves" and we're like "well I mean okay" and he's like "please, take them,

take them all, take them, please, you're my friends and I like you very much".

OOOOuf and he dumps them all over there.

Eh, uh, right there, like that, that's exactly what he does.

It's really, it's incredible symbolism.

You see, you see this little, this little loser tractor over here, this little tractor?

Over there there's Hamish, and there's this little tractor all alone.

It's just total lonely little tractor and it's got no real friends.

That's uh, that's TurboButton right there.

This year in particular was pretty bad for me, a couple of big name youtubers who'd

never made spongebob videos before decided this to, which meant hey I got a ton of traffic

in from those guys making spongebob relevant again.

So Hamish was like the counterbalance that kept things from tipping over.

And I only bring this up because I know he's gonna watch this, and I know that to him it's

selfless, it's thoughtless, he's just does things cause he wants to do them, and

he doesn't really get to see the impact of it and I kinda wanna share that with him,

and it's hard to do so without basically explaining it.

So uh, Hamish, thanks for fighting off these bullies dude, it uh, it really means a lot.

And uh, fuck it I'm gonna spoil the rest of the Game of the Year list here but there

ain't a human on this list passed this point, so uh, as far as people go, Hamish is Game

of the Year, so it give it to him ladies and gentlemen.

Um, but, not actual game of the year, sadly, he uh, he easily gets trumped and bumped by

our next entry, check it guys.

[woman I paid on fiverr's voice]: "Number 4, the Instant Pot."

The Instant Pot is a pressure cooker my dad got me for Christmas last year.

It was at the center of at least one stream that ended in the BK Joe disaster of freaking...

whatever, guys, listen, you can make fresh, piping hot applesauce in 5 minutes with this

thing.

Watch, I'm even gonna play the whole thing out, look.

Can Hamish do that?

No.

Can anyone is Scotland do that?

Nah, not a chance.

This machine is better than everyone in an entire country, sorry Hambo, but ya didn't

stand an apple of a chance.

Now on the topic of doing really important things really quickly, let's check out the

next entry on our Games of the Year list.

Ok, full, full disclosure, I know I said it's like two minutes, technically it is, I left

out some things, obviously.

Um, there was some setup time, cutting the apples notably, um putting them in, filling

it with a little bit of sugar and cinnamon.

Um, and also so the pressure cooker doesn't start right away, some people don't understand

that you you, it has to build pressure, uh, and then once its done building pressure,

then it cooks for 2 minutes, and then you, um, you leave it some time to let the uh,

the pressure release, you might have seen some steam, the camera doesn't really pick

it up very well, um.

And then after that you kinda gotta wait for it to cool down, but my camera right now says

35 minutes, a lot of that time was wasted.

Takes about, I wanna say 7 to 10 minutes to build up the pressure plus the uh, the, the

2 minutes to cook, you know what?

Very, very highballing estimate, lets say its uh, 15 minutes and you've got steaming

hot, steaming hot like so hot you can't even eat it right now.

I've brought it to a couple of parties, nothing slays people better then when you

have some ice cream to put on top cause then you can eat it cause then the temperature

is fine.

You can put it even in a paper bowl, oh.

It's unbelievable, you can just do this in the morning man.

Oh, it's way too hot.

Sometimes in the morning you have leftover fruit from the week you wanna get rid of,

you just chuck em in the thing and you just make like fruit stew, done!

Done!

Maybe you make some oatmeal on the side but you don't even have to man, you just have

like, pulverized, pressurized freaking fruit flesh.

Mmmh.

I'm gonna go actually edit this part of the video while I eat the rest of this.

[woman I paid on fiverr's voice]: "Number 3, Quitting a Job"

Last year you may remember that #3 on this list was "Getting a Job", I mean it was

the best collectathon in the year of the revival of collectathon platformers.

Well it turns out its success was short lived because it's sequel, #3 this year, "Quitting

a Job", totally diverges along every vector.

Genre, gameplay, story, everything is different, and as it turns out it's objectively better

than what came before it.

Listen, here's something I've learned.

Just because you're having fun, just because you like the people you work with, you feel

mostly respected and you mostly respect everyone else, it doesn't mean you owe anyone anything.

You should be able and allowed to recognize when you're getting the raw deal, and you

shouldn't have to wait over a year for the right deal to come following a promise.

I know a few people here are aspiring programmers, folks studying computer science and software

engineering.

I've talked to quite a few of you guys, trying to help with advice and whatever.

Well, now that I've been in the market, outta school, here's my advice for when

you get here.

Someone offers you a contingent contract position with a promise to make you permanent after

a few months?

I don't care if you're just starting your career and don't feel confident in yourself,

but turn it down.

If someone's not committed enough to fully hire you right off the bat, you shouldn't

be committed enough to accept they're offer.

Move on, keep applying, you'll find something better.

Otherwise you risk working and getting very comfortable and happy somewhere where nobody

is prioritizing your employment but is expecting you to be a little bellhop and you have to

end up taking your job security into your own hands and hey, yeah, eventually you'll

have to quit.

I mean, it's not like it's all that bad, you'll gain some great experience, you'll

have some fun, but ultimately it'll only be to help to fluff up your resume and make

you look better to the next guys.

Which hey, maybe you coulda tried starting at in the first place.

Look, make sure you're taken care of, don't let yourself get hassled too hard, not that

it exactly happened to me, but don't let anyone take advantage of you because you don't

know yet how valuable you are, and if nobody's looking after you and it's time to quit,

it's time to quit.

Hold yourself up, you'll be alright, it's just, if you grow to love the people you work

with, damn it can be tough to have to leave.

Anyways, sequel owns the prequel, enough said.

We're down to the line now, top 2 baby.

[woman I paid on fiverr's voice]: "Number 2, Having Friends"

Last year #2 was "Making Friends", a game with a few easily exploitable strategies that

could be used to progress through it pretty easily once you got passed its rather excessive

opening segment.

But that's what's great, the intro being so long is like a barrier to entry that keeps

in only the most dedicated players, and seeing as how some of it's chapters are co-op,

it guarantees that you'll always be matched with other interested players.

And this year that's where we're at.

Second place Game of the Year 2018 goes to "Having Friends".

Kevan, last year's Game of the Year, passed me forward this saying, "Commit to the Bit",

which living by for the past year has not only helped in making friends and but also

in keeping them and enriching my relationships with them.

In my school years I kinda dropped a lot of NOs.

People invited me somewhere to something, default response I'd just kick it in, NO.

And so what happened was people stopped inviting me to crap.

In my defense, for a while I lived in the sorta place that without a car wasn't really

the easiest to get around, you needed like a full week's notice just to plan how to

get to a friend's house.

And getting downtown, yeah it was mostly easy, but busses in my town ended earlier in the

night than the city, so I always had this curfew spotting me that caused me to bail

on a lot of invites.

So I'd kinda just end these early nights and study from home a lot.

Basically, my living situation and school workload didn't really accommodate the sort

of lifestyle I have now.

These days I've just been popping it, making friends, saying YES, ending up weird places

at weird times, talking to people for hours over a few drinks, changing plans last minute,

setting up plans last minute.

I'm living much more Ad Hoc than I ever have.

Living on-island definitely helps, but not being in school has had just as big of an

impact, not only in terms of the workload from actual professional job being less than

school projects, but in terms the sorts of friends I've been having and making.

So there's this observation from network studies that individuals in any sort of dynamic

graph will tend to be more closely connected to nodes that are more similar to them than

nodes that aren't.

This is called homophily, and one of its impacts is that where you'll find one entity of

some type, you'll likely find many more closeby.

Now there are a whole slew of reasons this happens which I won't go into, but this

why, for instance, many large cities have class and cultural divisions; you have your

rich westmounts, your unincorporated communities like chinatowns and little-italys, and why

a lot of people in specific highly focused university programs happen to have a lot in

common.

Now, not to trash my friends, they're all great, but finishing school getting really

close to the same few folks for so many years, I was worried that down the line my friendscrape

would remain a social enclave, that I'd be a software guy who's only friends were

other software guys.

Getting a Job last year helped because I went from sitting in auditoriums full of hundreds

of software engineering students to being one of two programmers in a marketing team.

So when I played last year's "Making Friends", I focused a lot on building friendships with

people from circles that I didn't have any experience with prior, and not in a malicious

or cold or bad-natured sort of way, but more in a sort of way that aligned more with "wanting

as many different kinds of people to have an impact on my life and help me shape it,

just as much as I'd like to help them and be a small part of their lives and maturity".

Doing this and allowing this to happen naturally for a while, this leveled up my character,

so to speak.

I mean this is a video game after all.

See, a big part of Having Friends, as I've hinted, is learning from them and their experiences,

and sharing your own with them.

Your save file from the previous game gets carried over though, so the quality of that

learning turns out is actually dependent on your progress in the previous game.

And so while it might seem unfair to give the #2 Game of the Year spot to "Having

Friends" mostly for reasons having to do with my progress in the previous game, to

consider Having Friends the second best part of my life this year only because the friends

I made last year were so good, well, frankly I don't care, it's my list I can do what

I want.

Like any good game from a long-standing series, the best way to take it forward is to rely

on the best parts of its prequels and expand upon them, and clearly, Having Friends does.

Well deserved, the developers and everyone involved in its creation should be very proud

of themselves and I can't thank them enough.

They've allowed me to finally experience a lifestyle I've been missing out on for

way too long, they've helped me grow and mature in a direction I'm proud of and wouldn't

have without them, and they've allowed me the opportunity to, in turn, be trusted by

them and help just as they have me.

I've made some pretty good friends, I've had some pretty good friends.

Godspeed y'all, come back and visit some time.

But now, and on the subject of "visiting", the moment you guys have most certainly been

waiting for.

In a year of, eh, I don't know, some pretty ok games, one stood out.

One video gaming experience I had this year went above all the rest, went so far above

that there's nothing really to compare it against.

Almost unfairly I'd say, there's no way to properly measure this game, and that's

why it's gotta be the winner.

Without further ado, the Game of the Year 2018 is...

[woman I paid on fiverr's voice]: "Number 1, ShrekFest"

Shrekfest is a festival held every labor day weekend in Madison Wisconsin now for the last

5 years, and happily, I attended its fifth installment this year.

Now first, some mentions are in order, shout out to ya bois Matt aka MML's Commentaries

and Zac Frazier aka… uh, Zac Frazier.

Oh also Zac's friend John, he doesn't have a youtube channel so uh, he's definitely

the most well adjusted of the crew.

So ye, check em, definitely gonna be stealing some footage from em since this game was so

huge I could only capture a bit of gameplay myself, we'll see what's happening.

Now, here's the fucking thing about Shrekfest 2018 and in particular my experience there.

See, the whole way home, back to Montreal from freaking Madison Wisconsin, I knew I

had just participated in a moment of personal history, one of my own and no doubt for many

other attendees.

So the first thing I did when I got home was starting writing about while it was still

fresh in my mind.

I decided that night in the uber home that Shrekfest would be topping my Game of the

Year list, so I wanted to give as good a retelling of it as possible and my best recommendation

to you all.

I wrote an 11 page piece on my experience at Shrekfest 2018, but over those 6 and a

half thousand words something happened.

I began to overanalyze things, spend more time on the downs than the ups.

I mean, it's no secret, it's much easier to talk at length about flaws than it is a

working system, but in my writing I let it get to me.

I came out of writing about Shrekfest less satisfied with my spent time there than I

was on the plane rides home, and that was fucked.

So fuck that script, I'm not going to give you the history or the context of this game,

I'm not gonna tell you how the fest originally came to be or how we came to be there 5 years

later.

I'm just gonna give you the facts; that there is indeed a Shrek themed festival every

labor day weekend in Madison Wisconsin, I know some people still don't believe it

but it's true, and that three of us youtube video essay bois +1 managed to get there,

and that while nothing may have really gone according to plan, the three of us managed

to make it one of the best times ever, certainly worthy of the title of Game of the Year.

Based on previous years and marketing for the event, we had only a few expectations.

The public and free event would have contests of the roaring, costume, and onion eating

variety, there'd be live music covering most of the Shrek soundtrack, lots of sick

merch, lots of goofs, lots of gaffs, and of course the night would be topped off with

a screening in the park of the film Shrek itself, not to be confused with the monster.

[Shrek cover band]: "Disappointment haunted all my dreams"

There was also rumor on the facebook page for the event that there'd be a pub crawl

proceding all of this and we were definitely looking to get shreked that night so aaay.

I was also stoked at the chance to meet the 3Gi, a comedy troupe from Milwaukee who you

should remember from last year's Game of the Year list and some dudes I've been a fan

of for ages now.

I mentioned last year how when you order shirts from their website, they alway include a random

piece of trash or prop from one of their videos, and I've had in my posession for a few years

now this cutout paper they used for a practical transition effect one time, so coming to Shrekfest

I actually brought it with me hoping they'd find it cool that it made it all the way to

Canada and back, and I was gonna ask Grant to sign it, but, ouf, uh, here we go.

Now when it came down to it, Shrekfest failed to deliver on most of those back-of-the-box

promises.

As far as expectations go, all us gang missed out on all but two of the contests and kinda

the pub crawl.

See, shortly after being interviewed by youtube channel TheDeShrektives on some live stream

and then entering a dance pit for about two songs, the sky just opened up and let it pour

on us.

Recent floods in the area left the venue was ill-prepared to handle this many people inside

its little shelter, so this ass, who coincidentally was also an ass, got up and told us all that

we were officially rained out and the fest would continue at a bar in town called HopCat,

going as far as to start a chant to make sure we all knew what was up.

[crowd chanting]: "HOPCAT HOPCAT HOPCAT HOPCAT HOPCAT HOPCAT HOPCAT WOOOO!"

So the three of us figured hey let's head there early and beat the crowd.

We ended up hitching a ride with a man who we're convinced is actually Shrek.

He and his wife offered us a ride in their van and we immediately accepted.

These guys were absolutely dedicated.

This by the way is the same dude you've probably seen from this viral image going

around of a shrek being stopped by cops, got to talk to him quite a bit over the ride to

the bar, turns out that they were here on a late honeymoon they never took following

their marriage which was actually conducted in a real swamp.

I'm not gonna drop this dude's personal facebook pictures and stuff in here, but trust

me, I've seen evidence, these dudes were the ultimate Shrek-heads.

So anyways to make a long story much shorter than what it actually was and to cut out a

lot of legitimate frustration, what ends up happening is we show up to this bar and they

tell us to leave because whoops, turns out there was no official deal between them and

Shrekfest to host us and even if there had been, there's sure as hell wasn't any

place left seeing as how not only was this weekend host to Shrekfest, but it was moving

weekend for all the college kids coming back AND Metallica was in town kicking off a tour.

So the whole town was littered with like, young students and old white-haired white

dudes.

Onion's chance in a swamp we'd be making it into any bar as a group of a few hundred.

Not only that, but the organizers of Shrekfest start streaming the onion eating contest live

to facebook now, still happening back at the same park under the tiny shelter that we were

told to leave, and we're missing it.

Basically what it felt like was they'd directed a bunch of people away to thin out the crowd

enough so that they could all fit under the little roof they had, and hey I guess it worked.

They never told us to come back, never told us where to finally go, the facebook event

was flooded with message from people looking for direction from the organizers who just

weren't helping.

So after a good long while of bumming around downtown Madison and reading posts from other

stragglers who left the park when they were told and left the bar when they couldn't

get in, we had an idea.

We were feeling down because we were missing out on something, we had all come a really

long way to be here and now it was just kind of ogre.

But, that's exactly how everyone else was feeling.

If only, say, there was something else to do, maybe all us stragglers could band together

and still make a night out of this.

So that's exactly what we did.

The four of us started responding to people on facebook with unanswered requests to the

organizers for instructions on where to go next, and we started just telling them to

meet us as the bar.

Once we'd assembled a pretty decent crowd we took a picture, which sadly doesn't do

it justice as most folks were standing on a sidewalk out of frame but whatever, we posted

this to the page telling people what was up, and that hey, maybe the official event was

a bust but there was a sizeable amount of people down to hang out anyways at this bar.

So we all went back to the bar, one by one, and made our own reservations, we slowly but

surely filled the place up.

And the more of us there were the more confidence other lost shrek folk had to trek out and

join us.

[Zac]: "Matt, explain exactly what's happening."

[Matt]: "Okay.

Denis is taking charge of Shrekfest right now.

It got, it got rained out, and then they were saying go to HopCat but HopCat doesn't know

anything about Shrekfest.

So now, we waited outside, and now we're just getting everyone to make table reservations

and just come on.

And now he's trying to get them to seat everyone in the same spot."

[Denis]: "I gotta do it!

I gotta do it!"

[Zac]: "You're the savior, thank you."

[Denis]: "Ye, we're gonna try our fucking best."

We got to just hang out for a good few hours with a ton of folks, talk about who were were,

how far we'd traveled, why we were there.

This is where we met these dudes, and this dude, and this dude, who won the onion eating

contest by the way after finishing three fucking onions cause he tied twice, dude looked like

he wanted to die right there.

And of course, these dudes, we actually hung out with them for most of the rest of the

night, even chilled in Matt and Zac's hotel room for a bit since it turned out we were

all bunking under the same roof.

But that's one of the reasons Shrekfest had to be game of the year this year.

There's definitely something to be said about the quality of a game that fails so

hard to meet the expectations its set for itself but still has strong enough interconnected

systems to allow for player driven emergent gameplay scenarios so open-ended that players

can actually design their own games within it.

Shrekfest is a game where the right players with the right motivation can fuck off with

the broken main quest and fumble together their own levels for themselves and other

players to play, all to everyone's benefit.

You thought Breadth of the Wild was were things were at?

Ouf, get outta my swamp.

Over breakfast the next day the four of us kinda brought up how wild it was that, like,

if it weren't for us being there, that wouldn't have happened.

We were the right people and we were enough people on our own to convince people it was

worth hanging out with us.

We were a gang of four, already a party, we had a neat story about how we all met online

that people dug, and of course I was fully decked out repping my home and native land

of Canada so it was an consistently effective ice-breaker.

There were definitely a lot of people who's nights would've ended short if it weren't

for us, and that made us really happy.

It was dope, we got a real big crew, we chanted shrek, we made some noise.

[us chanting]: "SHREK SHREK SHREK SHREK"

It was hours until the actual organizers made it back to their own party, but at this point

it wasn't really their party, it was kind of ours.

Our collective desire to crawl pubs outmatched any loyalty we felt for the hour or two we

got to spend at the actual fest before we were told to leave.

But anyways, we met a lot of really cool people.

[pubcrawlers singing]: "You'll never know if you don't go!

You'll never shine if you don't glow!

SHREK!

Hey now!

You're an all-star!

Get your game on!

Go!

Play!

Hey now!

You're a rockstar!

Get the show on!

Get paid!

And all that glitters is gold!

Only shooting stars break the mold!"

Surprisingly to me at least, turned out most folks really weren't there for the Shrek

crap at all, if fans of anything, most were actually just fans of 3Gi.

Nobody else there could really pinpoint an exact reason as to why there were there, I

mean, neither could I really.

After totally commandeering the party, hitting up a few bars and getting to know some people

better though, I kinda realized what it was for most people.

Nobody was there because they actually cared that much about Shrek, I'm almost convinced

nobody on earth is truly a fan of Shrek.

That's why when asked at the fest about it, people overreact, clearly exaggerate their

appreciation for it.

So here's the thing, Shrekfest isn't actually about being a fan of Shrek, and even though

it looks like I'm headed that way it's not even about being a fan of pretending to

be a fan of Shrek.

No, Shrekfest is a festival for goofy-ass people to hang out with other goofy-ass people,

and the barrier to entry being pretending to be a superfan of anything is just like

a giant filter to keep in only the dopest folks.

Shrekfest has nothing to do with Shrek and everything to do with the sorts of people

who would go to something called Shrekfest, if that makes any sense.

It's about knowing the sort of person you are and knowing you'll find others like

you there.

Here's one of my craziest stories from the fest.

So, last year BobbyBroccoli won game of the year, and his life motto he left me with was

"Commit to the Bit", yada yada I've been living it by it for quite a while now

and reciting it to anyone who asks why I do certain things I do.

You could imagine, I gave it as a reason to quite a few people at the fest.

[Deshrektive]: "What's your real stated reason for being out here today?

Do you, do you worship at the altar of shrek, or is it a more casual sorta thing?"

[Denis]: "Commit to the bit dude."

So we're at our second bar and I'm talking to this girl who turned out was in this inflatable

shrek outfit, she kinda became our mascot for the pub crawl definitely left an impression

on us all.

So she's telling me about how her and her girlfriend are larpers and they made fun of

some dude's ogre costume at a convention one time, and then he told them about shrekfest

and whatever, so I asked her, like, why she took it so far.

Like, most people there were there goofing, but fully embodying the life of the party,

she was taking it to the next level so I asked her why.

And then she just goes to me "you know man, just commit to the bit", and that kinda

stopped me dead in my tracks.

I mean, I had a few drinks in me at this point so I just kinda asked her "wait, have we

been speaking before this" and she's like "no why?" and I'm like "are you sure

I didn't tell you about commit to the bit?" and she's like "nah, I've been saying

that for years, I live by it" and I was just like "whohohoooa" and I told her

the whole story about commit to the bit and everything, but what I think the Bud Lights

I had in me were preventing me from realizing at that exact moment was that this is what

Shrekfest is about.

Shrekfest is the sort of party that's able to bring people who live by the same motto

together, and that's fucking unbelievably dope dude.

So uh, that's really that.

That was Shrekfest, Game of the Year 2018, the most memorable time I've had this year,

a pure time with cool friends, an awesome game that allowed us to immerse ourselves

in so completely as to become it and transform ourselves and it into our own image, an image

of a party with a lot of fun.

Also, the looks on all those old white haired white dudes' faces when they came back after

the Metallica concert and we'd already loaded Smash Mouth and Hallelujah into all the fucking

jukeboxes as many times as we could ahahaha holy fucking shit.

So, Shrekfest 2019, you gonna be there?

Cause I'll be there.

Matt's gonna be there.

Zac's gonna be there.

I hope Jon's there.

Hamish, Nico, you guys gonna be there?

You better be there.

Shrekfest, uh, here's the deal.

So this is what we're doing, we are turning Shrekfest into the anual video essay community

meet-up.

If you're a video essay family member, uh, come to Shrekfest.

Listen, every labor day weekend, you know you have it off, you come to Shrekfest, we're

gonna do it, we're, look!

We're just, that's what it is!

We're looking for an excuse to meet each other, fucking Madison freaking Wisconsin,

labor day weekend, every year, its guaranteed.

Um.

Yeah.

So, let's do it.

Maybe it'll be game of the year next year, who freaking knows, whooohooooooooaaa.

[Zac]: "Is that… is that Matt?"

[Matt]: "It is!"

[Zac]: "Oh my god!"

[Matt]: "Oh my god!

Whaa..."

[Zac]: "Whe!"

[Matt]: "I'm, I'm meeting you for the first time and have never met you before,

and definitely did not get a car ride from you at all."

[Zac]: "Nonono, wait" [Matt]: "Hoh!"

[Zac]: "Who is?"

[Matt]: "Who is that?

I thought he was on your shirt."

[Zac]: "Oh!"

[Matt]: "Hahaheeehehahaha" [Zac]: "No it was no, it was no one.

Oh wait.

Is that Mario?"

[Matt]: "Dadadatdada" [Denis]: "Hey guys it's me, the HatWearingGamer!"

[Matt]: "HAHAHA" [Denis]: "Hey how you guys doing?"

[Matt]: "Oh my god, nice shirt."

[Denis]: "Thank you, how you doing?"

And last but not least, uh, we gotta one more thing because, so many good games, gotta highlight

a bad game.

It's the all time worst game of 2018 is…

[woman I paid on fiverr's voice]: "Hamish Black is the worst game of the year for deleting

his twitter account"

Yeah so you know, as it turns out, you know, maybe even a game that is already nominated

can also be a bad, the worst game.

Listen, Hamish, you were a very good game this year, a very good game, but, uh, you

made one critical mistake and you deleted your twitter account and now you can't even

come up, do all these antics and stuff.

I'm just delaying a little bit.

Why?

Maybe you've noticed there's a change of setting here, I'm back at my, I'm back

in my mother's house, I'm in my mother's basement right now, uh, here to record, there's

a microphone set up, maybe you think there's a little bit something fishy going on.

Let's be real, you know what's happening.

I'm here at my mother's because I need to make some fucking noise Hamish.

I'm gonna a Hamish Black a Hamish heart-attack.

[woman I paid on fiverr's voice]: "Final Fantasy XV Pocket Edition it's actually

poopoo"

Actually no the real worst game of this year is Final Fantasy XV Pocket Edition.

It's such a freaking disappointment on every level!

Like, who is this game for?

Who is it for?

Whooooo?

Whooooo wants this?

It's so fucking baaaad.

Like, okay look its really cool, its really cool that they were able to do this and it

really speaks a lot to the quality of the software they did, everything I've said

about this game in the past still applies and this only brings that, it brings my arguments

even to a better, arg, uh, state of argumentation, but listen!

It's fucking ridiculous!

Oh my god I can't.

I really can't, I was like, su, I was like aaaahh bee play it, pffffft, listen!

This game is, this game is poopoo caca dude.

This game is, is diarrhea.

This game, ooooooouuuu.

This game makes a monkey cry into a banana.

This game makes me want to qwaaaaaa bambambaaba.

This gaaaaame is, uh, dude it's so freaking bad.

Hello Hamish Black, hold onto your bowbags you stinky boi.

Smelly daddy.

My name has been KingK and I certainly hope you have some well deserved fun today.

For more infomation >> Top 8 Games of 2018 - LambHoot - Duration: 44:54.

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

Arena of Valor - Rank Specialized Guides coming soon - Duration: 0:46.

So I basically put these videos off for a few seasons, but my first season I climbed the diamond in under 80 competitive games

But then I put off making these videos because I wanted to test the efficiency of these guides now this is going to sound complex

Don't worry. I'll create different playlists in order to keep it simple

So I'm making guides for each tier out in each tier is going to be at least three guides one for each role

Jungler mage, etc. i'll all create a separate set of guides for certain heroes

You

For more infomation >> Arena of Valor - Rank Specialized Guides coming soon - Duration: 0:46.

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

Far Cry 3 Adventure PART 6 - Duration: 11:30.

enjoy

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