1. Switch on the ignition. Pull the windscreen wiper stalk to the downward position.
2. Switch off the ignition. In the service mode, the wipers will be in the upper position.
Required tools: Flat Screwdriver
3. Pull the wiper arm away from the glass surface until it stops.
4. Press the clip. Remove the blade from the wiper arm.
AUTODOC recommends: When replacing the wiper blade, take caution to prevent the spring-loaded wiper arm from hitting the glass.
5. Install the new wiper blade and carefully press the wiper arm down to the glass.
AUTODOC recommends: Don't touch the wiper blade at the working rubber edge to prevent damage to the graphite coating.
6. Switch on the ignition. Pull the windscreen wiper stalk to the downward position.
By doing so, you will switch the windscreen wipers from the service mode to the operation mode.
AUTODOC recommends: Ensure that the blade rubber strip fits tightly to the glass along the entire length.
7. Pull the wiper arm away from the glass surface until it stops.
8. Press the clip. Remove the blade from the wiper arm.
AUTODOC recommends: When replacing the wiper blade, take caution to prevent the spring-loaded wiper arm from hitting the glass.
9. Install the new wiper blade and carefully press the wiper arm down to the glass.
AUTODOC recommends: Don't touch the wiper blade at the working rubber edge to prevent damage to the graphite coating.
10. Switch on the ignition. Pull the windscreen wiper stalk to the downward position.
By doing so, you will switch the windscreen wipers from the service mode to the operation mode.
AUTODOC recommends: Ensure that the blade rubber strip fits tightly to the glass along the entire length.
For more infomation >> How to replace front wipers blades / front window wipers VW CADDY 3 (2KB) [TUTORIAL AUTODOC] - Duration: 2:13.-------------------------------------------
QUEEN IN LOVE - Valentine's Day Look - Duration: 15:22.
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Memory Book Tag [CC] - Duration: 15:00.
Hello everybody, my name is Cara, and today I'm here to do the Memory Book Tag.
This tag was originally created by Katie from aseaoftomes and she was also the one
who tagged me so I will link her down below. #1: Early years: What's the
first book you can remember reading by yourself? I actually had a really hard
time with this so I'm gonna go with one of the first books I remember like
seeking out in class and reading by myself, I'm sure I read books by myself
before this but for some reason the one that kept popping into my head was the
Junie B. Jones series *laughs*, I don't remember the author at all [Barbara Park], I just remember that
this was one of those series where I would go to our little like book area in
first grade and seek out like if there were new books there and yeah, Junie B.
Jones! Specifically I remember the fruitcake one for
some reason, that like really stuck in my mind, but I know I was reading books by
myself before that, like in kindergarten and before, but that's my answer.
#2: School: Discuss a book you had to read for school that you have strong
memories about. So I'm gonna do something a little different, I'm gonna go with a
poem actually and please forgive my Latin, I do not speak Latin, but it was
Dulce et Decorum Est, and I think that was by Wilfred Owen, and we read
that actually in 12th grade and one of the poems [my teacher] chose was Dulce et Decorum
Est, and the reason I have so many strong memories about this is because
for the longest time like basically my whole life up to that point, I had
thought I really didn't like poetry and I have no reason for that,
I don't--I don't remember a particular experience that made me decide I didn't
like poetry I just always had it in my head that like "I'm a book person,*laughs* like
poetry is not for me, it's very pretentious and it doesn't mean anything"
and like I just didn't like it, and then I read that poem and it stuck with me
for so long to the point where like actually this year I was working on a
project that involved searching-- searching out World War I poetry and I
remembered that one specifically and I looked it up. Reading that poem was just
such a visceral and powerful experience and the fact that it--that that poem is
what convinced me that I could enjoy poetry, like it changed my mind about an
entire range of written work that I had thought I--like I had made up my mind I
didn't enjoy, and like that poem is just so incredible and it's--it's bleak but
it's beautiful in the way that it's written and I just...I cannot say enough
wonderful things about it, I'm definitely going to link it
down below and I encourage you to read it because it really did change the way
I viewed certain kinds of literature. #3: Family: Talk about a book
you remember reading with your parents. I was very lucky, my parents read a lot
with me and my brother and sister but I'm gonna go with one that I think--I'm
pretty sure our mom was the only one who ever read this one to us even though my dad
did read to us and that was The English Roses and it's by Madonna, and I chose
this one because I just have...like this is one of the coziest, coziest read aloud
memories I have and the illustrations [by Jeffrey Fulvimari] were so beautiful and the story was so
beautiful; it's about female friendship so I think
that was definitely an important establishing moment for me as a young
reader!, but it was about not judging people based on appearances and how you
never know what's going on in someone's life and I loved the art and I just--I
just remember sitting down with my sister, and my mom reading this book to
us and it was just such a like warm memory. #4: Midnight: Talk about a
book you remember staying up late to read or finish. Um I probably have more
answers for this than I should have *laughs* but I'm just gonna go with one and that is
Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling, but specifically I'm talking about the
first one, and I think--I think it was even--I think it might have even been me
rereading this book so I didn't really have an excuse for why I had to stay up
late and read it. I have such a specific memory about when this happened because
I would be reading, I think I had...I don't remember if I had a flashlight or if I
had already had my light installed by my bed or whatever but I was--I'd be reading
it and then I could hear my mom like start to come down the hall and I would
like flip off the light and I would like pull the covers over and I'd hide the book under
the covers, like *laughs* you know in like TV shows where they always show kids reading
under the covers, like I actually kind of did that *laughs*
except not all the way under the covers and I specifically remember I was at the
part of the first book where the troll incident happens, like that was the part
I specifically remember almost getting caught because my mom came in and she
actually--she might have caught me one time when I did that, probably more than
one time but at the time I was like "Mom you're being so unreasonable I just want
to stay up and read!" and of course she was like "you have school the next
morning, like I want to take care of you, you shouldn't be doing this" but you know
I clearly knew better. #5: Holiday: Talk about a bookish memory
from the holidays and I chose Christmas and the book I chose was The Nutcracker
by E.T.A. Hoffmann, and this is the one that is illustrated
by Maurice Sendak. I think I've mentioned this briefly before um the reason I have
so many good memories associated with this book is for one thing Christmas is
my favorite time of year, it's my favorite holiday. Like the funny thing
about this memory is I'm not actually sure we ever finished this book at
Christmastime, but I remember multiple years in a row like we would--we would
figure out these fun things we wanted to do over the winter break and like for
Christmas specifically, and um we almost always had this book as like on that
list and like this idea that it was gonna be this really fun like family
read aloud and every year *laughs* we wouldn't finish it! like we would get distracted
by other Christmas books or we would just be--we would just be like doing
other things with our family so I loved that this was like this eternally
hopeful like "we're gonna get to it this year!" but I did eventually read this
by myself and I did end up really enjoying it and
I just want to show you some of the illustrations, and if you read the
original Nutcracker story it's very different I think from a lot of
adaptations, it's really strange and surprisingly dark. An unusual kind of
memory to think of fondly, but yeah, I loved almost reading this book! *laughs*...
we even got multiple chapters into it and it just never happened like all the
way through. #6: Passion: Talk about a book that helped shape you, ie, a
career path, an area you enjoy, etc. And do you guys remember the Magic Tree House
nonfiction companion books? because I think it was the third one, I don't
remember what it was called if it was like Ancient Egypt or like Mummies and
Pyramids or what, I'll insert a picture, but I loved that book,
I must have reread this thing...I don't even know how many times. We had a--we had
the first few non-fiction books but this was the one I kept coming back to and
even if it didn't create my love for ancient Egyptian history and culture and
and myth and all of that I think it definitely solidified it and I just--I
really enjoyed reading that book multiple times. #7: Travel:
Discuss a book you read on vacation or a trip that brings up fond memories. I'm
gonna go with Cheaper by the Dozen by Ernestine Gilbreth Carey and Frank B.
Gilbreth, Jr., I think. So this is like actually a nonfiction kind of a
biography of their dad and he's like--he was an efficiency expert [and so was their mom!] and their whole
family is just so interesting and for some--like this is a very cozy
feeling book, I remember years ago I brought it with me to reread because
this is a book I reread over and over because I just enjoyed it that much, I
brought it with me when my mom and I went to visit family of hers like in the
Midwest and normally our whole family would go but my brother and sister had
like a commitment that they had to stay for so my dad stayed with them so it was
just me and my mom and the reason I had such a good memory associated with this
is because this is one of the first times I remember my mom and I reading
the same book. She ended up picking this up because I had kind of casually mentioned
what it was about and that I really enjoyed it and she just like, she read I
think the whole thing in one or two days and my mom is like so busy and she's
always--she's always running around like making other people's lives easier so
for her to like devote that much time to a book, even--like to doing something for
herself like that, that was a really big deal and it was just so much fun to get
to discuss it with her and I think that was--like I said I think that was one of
the first books that we had read that was the same 'cause our reading taste didn't
really overlap too much before that so I just--I just have good memories
associated with that, of like spending time with my mom and getting to talk
about books with her. #8: Hideaway: Discuss one of your favorite places
to read and why it's one of your favorites. So I'm gonna go with um my
bunk bed from when I was younger, I actually had a bunk bed for a really
long time and I slept on the top bunk because I was the big sister and I
wanted to *laughs* and specifically I'm gonna talk about when I got a nightlight, like
a reading light actually, installed that was like on the wall and that I could
reach over and turn on so I could read up there and I just--I loved that because
my house was like pretty loud *laughs* so whenever--whenever I wanted to read it's
like I had to find somewhere where there wasn't a TV on or where people
weren't talking or like things like that, and even though I liked some background
noise I really liked having kind of my own space where I could just like--like
it was my bed, like nobody else could come up here, it was my bed, so I really
really enjoyed that, having my own kind of cozy little like reading nest, it was
really nice. #9: Life changes: Name a book that helped you with a big
life change, i.e., going to college, dealing with a breakup, etc. I'm gonna go with
kind of a recent one and that is the poetry of Mary Oliver. More than like a
specific life event, her poetry found me at a time I really really needed it, I
was going through some really bad things over--over the summer, this last summer of
2018, I was just going through a really hard time. Like specific poems of hers
kept finding me at moments when I needed them, like I think this happened one or
two, possibly even three times, and it wasn't until very recently that I
realized they were all by the same poet which inspired me to
seek out more of her work. If you're interested a couple of the poems I mean specifically
were I think Wild Geese, which is a very famous one of hers, and another famous
one of hers which is When Death Comes, which is surprisingly uplifting and
beautiful despite the title, and I just really appreciated her style of writing
and actually she just died a couple of days ago and even though I had
discovered her so recently I felt--I felt such an immense sense of loss because I
had only discovered how important she was to me recently and I remembered I
was at work when I found out and I just-- I just sat there for 10 minutes like
crying at my desk off and on, because of how much her work meant to me and um...
sorry! and like how much it had gotten me through things and I felt like I had
missed out because it I had discovered it so late but anyway I'm really *laughs* I'm
gonna stop before I get too emotional about it but I just think she was an
incredibly talented poet and it really--it really angers me that she is written
off [by some critics] as being too sweet or too positive and I think there's a lot of misogyny
tied up in that as well but I think for her to have such a talent for describing
the beauty of life with the suffering too, I think that is a really powerful gift
and something that not a lot of people have and I just, like the way that she--
the way that she meets you where you are, you know, if you read her poetry when
you're--when you're feeling very bleak and hopeless and she kind of lifts you
out of that not by making you feel like you're silly for being upset about
things but by kind of like acknowledging that bad things happen but there are
also good things, and I don't know if I'm describing any of this competently at
all but um, Mary Oliver is wonderful. And finally #10 is Stone: Discuss three
books or series that imprinted on your soul and impacted you in many ways.
I'm gonna go in chronological order and one of the first was The Secret Garden
by Frances Hodgson Burnett. This is the book that got me into reading, it was one
of the first things I remembered rereading over and over and over and I
love that it kind of--I think it kind of protected me from being intimidated by
classics um because like I didn't--I didn't know
what a classic novel was when I started reading this. I love the message of hope
but I also love that Mary Lennox like, she doesn't just turn into this perfect
sweet little girl, like she keeps her--her spunk and her fire
and I love that. I love the message about-- about how people can make the decision
to become better people and how people's circumstances can affect the way they
grow up but that doesn't absolve you of responsibility for the choices you make
and I just--I love this book so much. Next is a series and that is the Artemis Fowl
series by Eoin Colfer. Um this is my tabbed copy as you can see, I'm currently
rereading it for the Artemis Fowl readalong that I am co-hosting and this was
such an influential series for me and I think I'm only realizing as I get older
how much of an impact it had on me, like not just I really enjoyed this series
and it was um, it was one of the first series I remember like actively
anticipating the next books for along with Harry Potter, but I just--I just love
this series so much and I think that this was one of the ones kind of along
with The Secret Garden that from a young age made me realize like character
development and by extension people's development, like people can become
better, people can change, and I think *laughs* this also kind of set me on my path
of loving anti-heroes or kind of like complex character arcs and I just can't
say enough wonderful things about this series, every time I reread it I am still
astounded by how much I love the characters and how--how much I enjoy
the world and the story, and just the really complex issues these books deal
with about things like--things like morality and how far you're willing to
go to protect people you care about, like the things that you might do that are
bad but if you're doing them for good reasons does that make it okay? and
things like that, and I just really love this series and it was definitely a
formative one. And I could have gone with Harry Potter too [for my 3rd one] but I think that's a
very formative series for a lot of people and I wanted to be a little more
specific so I'm actually gonna go with a book that I read relatively recently in
my reading life compared to those other two and that is The Book Thief by Markus
Zusak. And I have talked about this book before, as with those other ones. This
book was one of the things that made me realize that I'm never gonna stop being
surprised at how much I love stories, because I came across this book at a
time when um I think I was pretty confident about the fact that like "I
already know that books are wonderful, like I'm already a reader," not that I
couldn't find books I loved but I was kind of convinced that I probably
wouldn't find another book that really surprised me with how much it affected
me? I don't know if that distinction makes sense
but in my head that's kind of where I was, and then I read this book and I
understand it's a very polarizing book, I know that a lot of people have been
reading it lately and [been] disappointed because it doesn't live up to the hype,
and I understand that: the writing style, the concept, the characters, they're very
out there and I think for a lot of people they wouldn't work but for a lot
of people they do, and I was one of those people, and this book just...I...oh my God, I--
I don't even know how to talk articulately about this book because it
means so much to me and because the--the compassion and the honesty and the way
it talks about humanity, the kind of the highs and lows like the--the terrible
things that people can do but also the really beautiful and wonderful things
people can do, and the things it says about storytelling and how much
storytelling matters, and some of these characters that I just like love so
deeply and I just...everything, everything about this book really just speaks to my
soul on a very very personal, fundamental level, and that's why I'm including it on
this list. Okay everybody, so that was the Memory Book Tag, um...I got a little
unexpectedly emotional for some of that, uh...*laughs* but those are some books that I
have very strong memories for. Please let me know down below if you have read any
of these books what you thought of them or let me know in the comments if you
guys have a book or series that you are only realizing now as an adult like how
fundamentally it changed you or influenced you, kind of like I was
talking about with Artemis Fowl. I will tag a couple of people in the
description so please be sure to check that, but if you want to do this tag
definitely do it, I really really enjoyed it, thank you again Katie for tagging me.
Thank you guys so much for watching, I will see you soon with another video, and
I hope you love the next book you read. Bye!
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hello on the run he exuded telephone for the governors from Cybertron is comin in
terrible disarray what can't a mile a key i partially get I'd like to let you
know how many days I have on soap on the waters as one would say active abstract
away video garage testing overnight it happened then put everybody
come on the wall I want a visual to power like now I will show you don't
take the like / subscribe / they won't comment will Donovan Peter Holmes
private video Charlie Palmer down just terrible
I wonder what are some easy throughout
only one fatality in Australia say fatalities follow us directly old fella
the news a lot Anabella but it in our face
so going on I might be up to the holidays with the overjoyed you know
Dixie like them comment Burton Peter home video time ourself a step possible
gonna ask a vote on a pilot
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Adding Plywood Walls to a She Shed - HGTV - Duration: 1:16.
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SEXY KOREAN DANCERS! (Subtitulos en Español) - Duration: 14:41.
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LETTING KIDS ON YOUTUBE?! | Joel & Lia Go Deep! - Duration: 12:37.
(glasses clinking)
- Oh, do you know what?
It sounds like a seance is about to begin.
- Bong, yeah.
- Bong.
(laughter)
- Oh I love it.
- Enter.
(laughter)
(robotic scat tune)
- We're here.
Hi, I'm Joel.
- Hi I'm Lia. - She's Lia.
- [Both] Um--
(mocking pronunciation)
- We're YouTubers.
I'm a libra.
- I'm a cancer and let me just read my horoscopes
for January and see what my predictions are for this year.
- So funny.
We're doing another questions thing.
What is it?
Ask yourself.
- Ask yourself, Joel. (mouse clicking)
- I love it.
I love this series.
- We love it when people go
(lips smacking)
yourselves. - Yourselves, yeah.
- So we should call this question
- [Both] Ask yourselves.
(laughter)
- Yeah, ask your--
- It's just ask yourse-- (burping)
- Did a Prosecco burp, I'm so sorry.
- Darling.
- One must never do that when drinking Prosecco.
- No, you literally must never burp during Prosecco.
- I know, only after.
- Only after.
- Right, where did we get to? - Right.
Okay.
- Did we do a teaser?
We didn't, did we?
- No, but that's fine - That's fine.
- 'cause this is gonna start on a high.
So as Joel said, welcome back to the series
where you ask yourselves a question.
This is where we ask ourselves stuff,
discover more about our morals, moral compass.
- Yeah.
- You know, our opinions on things
and it's also where you can sort of
ask yourself the same question and think about your answer.
- Yeah, and we can all chat with each other down below
in the comments and exchange ideas and thoughts and beliefs.
It's just a really cool place. - Just something to do really.
- Yeah it is. - Just something to do.
- Something to do.
- We like to our drinks, just relax a bit
whilst we're doing it.
Right, this one's juicy.
Ready? - Okay, go on.
- Would you rather be, I love a would you rather,
- Yeah.
- extremely successful professionally and have a tolerable
yet unexciting private life,
- Okay.
- or have an extremely happy private life
and only a tolerable and uninspiring professional life?
- I know immediately my answer.
- I know what your answer is.
- You know what my answer is.
I know what your answer is.
- Yeah.
- Mine is to have a very-- - Wait what's mine?
- I think yours is the opposite of mine.
- Same.
- Oh, I want have a tolerable and
unexciting personal life
but a very successful professional life.
Because I think you spend most of your life at work
- Yeah, you do!
- and I feel like just because you're,
it's not saying you have a bad personal life,
it's saying it's tolerable and unexciting and actually
our professional life is very exciting.
- Yeah.
- So I quite like the unexciting parts
of my private life, because we do have our--
- 'Cause we just indulge in the
every day-- - Um hmm.
- I think it's the sort of magic of the ordinary.
Like, yeah, I'm just gonna go home and cook dinner now.
- Yeah.
- Like, we've just been at an amazing thing all day
and we're really lucky and grateful to be around
the people that we get to be around and stuff,
but then we just go and we do something just really ordinary
- Yeah. - or have very--
- And the ordinary then becomes really fun
'cause once we've been to events and in a row
if it's like a premier and then a press launch for something
and then this, they're amazing things that
we're so grateful for, but then you just are like,
I just wanna have a night in that's literally do nothing.
- Get takeaway and do nothing.
- Yeah.
- Yeah, definitely.
- So I thought you were gonna say the other way around.
- I don't know, Joel.
I would love to have an extremely happy private life
but I don't want an uninspiring professional life.
- Yeah, no one does.
- No one does, 'cause I know what you said is true
that you spend a lot of your time at work.
- Yeah.
- So if the majority of your time is spent at work unhappy,
and it's sort of like uninspiring
(lips vibrating)
job, but then your private life,
you end up living for the weekends
- Yeah.
- and living for those happy times when--
I don't know, it's a really hard one but I think
- It is.
- overall I'd prefer a really exciting professional life.
- I think so 'cause I know we don't do these,
yeah but I would then do this,
we don't pick it apart.
(sneezes)
- Please excuse me.
(laughter)
- You haven't sneezed all night
and you do it when we're in a rush.
(laughter)
- [Lia] So sorry darling.
- It's okay.
- [Lia] I have to just,
I had to take a moment.
- At least it wasn't on the live stream.
- [Lia] Do you know what, that's so true.
- Yeah.
I know we weren't gonna pick it apart and say,
yeah but what if I do this. - Yeah.
- But like you would then naturally probably involve--
Your personal life would become your professional life.
- Yeah I get that, I feel that
and one of the books I'm reading, it's like,
don't make your life so compartmentalized.
- Oh yeah. - It's like,
that's your work life, this is your home life,
when it's all just your life, really.
- Yeah. That's a good way to think of it.
- It's like us going on a work trip
but then we've done our work and we extend our holiday
- Yeah.
- And have like a personal life holiday.
- Yeah.
- So we're in L.A. but just like,
alright cool, our work's done, an extra week.
- Yeah yeah.
- It can be fun, can't it?
- It like melds together, yeah.
- Yeah.
That's what you get for sneezing out your live.
- Okay.
- Okay?
Oh, what should I wish?
- Blow, make a wish.
- Um...
I have to be more specific.
- We're in a rush.
(laughter)
So we take forever.
(blows)
- It's not working. - Oh its stuck.
It's stuck, it's not gonna come true.
(blows)
Joel, if it doesn't blow off its not coming true.
(blows)
Oh it's never gonna happen! (laughter)
- Come on!
(blows)
Yes, it's gone. - It's gonna happen.
- Right, it's ready to be hoovered up by the maid.
(laughter)
Not our maid.
- She calls her cleaner "the maid", its so funny.
- But not "the maid", "my maid".
- "My maid's not coming 'til Tuesday."
- She's not your maid, she's probably lots of people's maid.
- Yeah. - I know, let me ask you one.
Right, so, this is a juicy one.
- Mmm.
- If at birth you could select the profession
your child would eventually pursue, would you do so?
- If I had the choice to say that
my child could be a
- Yeah. - a successful
- Yeah.
music artist or a--
(sighs)
Do you know what, morally it's wrong isn't it?
Because you need to let the child grow up,
decide what they're into and then do it.
- Yeah.
- But on the other hand, most people don't really know
what they want out of life anyway.
- Yeah.
- So imagine if you said,
I know decisions are hard,
I struggle with decisions
so you're probably gonna have my genetics
so I've decided you're gonna be the next Adele.
- There you go.
- Congratulations on your number one album!
- Yeah 'cause how could they complain about that?
If you were like,
you're gonna be the most successful sporting person
in the world, you'd be like, or whatever it is--
- You're gonna be an olympian gold medalist.
- Yeah, how could they complain about that?
- You're gonna be amazing at swimming.
They might just be like I hate water.
But we wouldn't know that until they're older, would we?
- No, you would just still
push them in the swimming pool, swim!
- It's like pushy parents, what would you do?
- I don't think I would.
I would like to because I think part of the joy for me
was that I chose my profession of what I wanted to pursue
and it was so different to anyone in my family
had done before and I really love that.
- Yeah.
- But the fear, I guess for all parents, is that
your child will just be uninspired and unambitious
and will just settle for the bare minimum
and I wouldn't want that.
So if my child was gonna be like that,
I would want to choose their profession.
- Yeah.
- But I would hold out for the fact
that my child would be like me
and they'd be a bit ambitious.
- Really? - Um hmm.
- For instance, I personally would never let
my child be a YouTuber.
- Oh, I wouldn't not let them.
If they wanted to I'd let them do it.
I wouldn't say you can not be it.
But I wouldn't be like,
yeah, be a YouTuber--
- Joel, would you struggle if they were
more successful than your platform?
- Absolutely, my child can not be more successful than me.
(laughter)
- So they can't be a YouTuber then?
- But you know how every parent
wants their child to be more successful
than them and they're rooting for them?
I don't think I'd be that parent.
I'd be like, you can not be more successful than me!
Thank you!
- I'd just be a bit like,
can't you just go and be a doctor or something?
- But I would never once be one of those parents though
that bothers about their career.
I love that my parents don't really care what job
I wanted to do, they would just support me
in whatever it was.
- Yeah, same.
I'm literally just the opposite of what my parents--
My parents are like,
"do whatever you want, we believe in you, go and do it!"
And I'm going like, nah.
My kid needs some security.
(laughter)
My kid needs a job and a mortgage one day.
- It probably repeats generations
'cause our grandparents were probably like that
- Yes exactly.
- with our parents which is why our parents
weren't like that and then it just repeats.
It's like on again, off again, on again, off again,
through the generations. - Yeah that's so true.
Right.
Would you be willing to become extremely ugly, physically,
if it meant you would live for 1000 years
- No!
- at any physical age you choose?
- No, no, no. I don't care about living long, do you?
I care about quality of life, not quantity.
Imagine living for a thousand years.
I'd be dead, all your friends would be dead,
your partner would be dead, everyone would be dead.
- Oh, okay yeah.
Everyone would be dead but you may--
- And you've lived.
- You right, but, it says
living for a thousand years at any physical age,
does that mean you stay an age?
- No I think it just means your body.
- Right.
- As in you'll be--
Yeah so you choose an age like,
ah 21 was a good age, and physically like that.
- [Both] I'll be 21 for a thousand years.
- But probably everyone else around you would die.
- That would be horrific.
- I don't want to live for a thousand years.
- I can't think of anything worse.
Would anyone actually go with that?
- Yeah.
- I'd be really intrigued just to know
if anyone would live for a thousand years like that.
- But, see you have the body of whatever age you want,
but you'll be extremely ugly physically.
No!
Who would want to live for a thousand years
- [Both] Extremely ugly?
(chuckling)
- I'm sorry, that's not shallow.
That's just common sense.
- That's unfortunate, isn't it?
- Oh this is interesting,
it's gonna take a bit of thinking.
- Alright. - Yeah, alright.
- Mm, I'll try.
- If you can wake up tomorrow having gained
any one ability or quality, what would it be?
- Oof.
- That's too broad a question.
- [Both] Any ability or quality.
- Okay quality,
I would love to be more patient.
I'd like to just be the most patient person.
- You're really patient. - No, I'm not.
- You pretend to be really well.
- Yeah probably pretend to be.
I'm so impatient and so intolerant of
idiots
and I wish I could be the most zen,
patient person on the planet. - Okay.
- But ability, I don't know what I would want.
- I wish I had the ability to give
no beeps about what anybody thinks
- Mm.
and just continue to live my life
but with a who cares what anyone else thinks attitude.
- Yeah. - And then ability--
- So can it be like super powers and stuff?
- Ah, maybe.
I'd love to just stop time and catch up
on all the box sets that I need to watch.
- Oh yeah, to have Bernard's Watch.
- Bernard's Watch, Bernard's Watch.
I think that's better than invisibility or flying.
To be able to fly or something.
- Yeah.
- Bernard's Watch is amazing 'cause
you stop time, get stuff done.
- Yeah.
I do like that but do you know what--
- And you could travel, time travel.
Time travel!
- Yeah but think how much time you might waste if you--
- Right!
not time travel, but if you could stop time.
I'd like to be invisible so that no one would bother me.
(laughter)
- That's amazing, yeah, just go invisible.
- But if I was super patient then I wouldn't
need to be invisible because people wouldn't bother with me.
- No, you'd just be like tolerable of them.
- Yeah.
Or I'd like the ability to turn water into Prosecco.
- Yeah that's amazing. - Yeah.
- Cheers for that, hunn. - Cheers to that.
(mouse clicking) (glasses clinking)
- Right, should we do a teaser for next week?
- Yeah!
- What's coming, okay.
Love this game so much!
Come back next week to find out
if we would rather be around men or women.
(laughter)
Do your closest friends tend to be men or women?
- Oh, come back next week and we'll reveal all.
Let us know your thoughts on these questions that we've had
down below, we'd be really intrigued.
We were just discussing off camera actually
how much we can't wait to read all the comments
and what you guys think of these questions.
- 'Cause I genuinely think people
start to get engaged with these videos.
- Yeah.
- So, really looking forward to that.
- Yeah.
- If you're new here, we're Joel and Lia.
- Hello.
- We post videos thrice weekly.
Hello!
- [Both] Hello.
(mocking pronunciation)
- We do this.
(laughter)
- So subscribe, and post videos thrice weekly,
which means
- [Both] Three times a week.
- On Tuesday's,
- [Both] Thursday's, Sunday's.
- 3pm UK time usually.
(chuckling)
- We'll see you soon, bye.
- Bye darling, going to bed darling.
- Going to bed darling.
(glasses clinking)
From now.
-------------------------------------------
الطماطم مصدر جديد للكهرباء | اكتشف كيفية توليد الكهرباء من الطماطم الفاسدة - Duration: 2:51.
Tomato is a new source of electricity | Discover how to generate electricity from rotten tomatoes
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Daha Yeni Başlıyoruz - (Motivasyon Videosu) - Duration: 3:56.
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SHOCK WWE TITLE CHANGE! WWE Star Called Down To NXT?! | WrestleTalk News Jan. 2019... - Duration: 5:58.
Hello and welcome to the WrestleTalk News.
Laurie Blake @ElFakidor I am El Fakidor Laurie Blake.
HEADLINE: Becky Lynch Birthday Tweets The Boss!
And I'd just like to take this moment to wish a happy belated birthday to Becky Lynch,
in a place where she hopefully will never see it, and won't use it as a springboard
to say mean things about me on the internet.
Because yesterday was The Man's birthday and how did she spend it?
On Twitter having a pop at Ronda Rousey.
It's her party she can troll if she wants to.
"Ronnie, wish The Man a happy birthday you little weirdo."
Needless to say Ronda didn't but she was probably thinking about birthday bumps.
Plenty of others wished Becky a HBD though, including the CEO of the company, Vince McMahon,
who wanted to hobnob, or should that be Kimberley, with the man.
"Unflinching, uncompromising and unmistakably The Man.
Happy Birthday to @BeckyLynchWWE!"
To which, as you might expect, Becky had something to say: "Got some new earrings to match
that brass ring I own."
Brass ring, brass earrings, brass neck.
With all that brass and ability to stick the knife in she's turning into Roberto from
Futurama.
SPOILER WARNING!!!
Speaking of Futurama, NXT is the land where the future of WWE is fostered.
And there has been a bunch of interesting stuff coming out of the recent set of tapings
in the post TakeOver Phoenix world.
It is physically impossible to deliver this news without spoiling it, trust me Andy Datson
tried and had one of those Liar Liar the pen is blue moments, so if you don't want to
know skip ahead right now.
Drew Gulak Makes Surprise Appearance On NXT!
At the tapings at Full Sail last night there was a surprise guest from 205 Live - Drew
Gulak.
Gulack appeared besting Eric Bugenhagen in a squash match, though he certainly lost the
surname competition, Bugenhagen, it's so satisfying to say, say it with me: Bugenhagen.
Lovely stuff.
With that out of the way the master of the Gulock then requested another match, offering
to stretch anyone in the back who fancied it.
And it turned out to be Matt Riddle who was after a free sports massage, and he got a
happy ending too, besting Gulack in what people have said to be a very good match.
I'm super excited to see it when it ends up on NXT TV, and I love them having these
surprise appearances from stars off different brands.
It makes perfect use of the massive, talented WWE roster.
More SPOILERS Ahead!
We're going even further into spoiler town now, in fact it's a spoiler within a spoiler,
spoilception.
Because to do this next story I'm going to have to spoil the results of the Worlds
Collide tournament.
So if for some reason you do want NXT spoilers but not spoilers for that, you are going to
have to skip on.
New North American Champion Crowned!...
Maybe?!
At the taping last night the Velveteen Dream challenged Johnny Gargano to a North American
Title match.
Dream cashed in his victory in the World's Collide tournament to get the title shot.
And this is confusing so hang tight but the 'finish' air quotes came when Dream hit
Gargano with two dream valley drivers and the purple rainmaker to score the 1,2,3 and
become the new North American Champion.
Or did he.
Because after celebrating Gargano came back out, attacked Dream, scooped up the title
and went and posed on the ramp with Tommaso Ciampa, sneaking a little look at Goldie in
the process too.
And this left people on social media speculating as to what the actual finish was, is Dream
the rightful champion?
And has a delusional Gargano stolen his title back?
Or will they edit the thing together to make it look like Johnny wins, or alternatively
gets DQed and leaves with the belt still?
This could just be a massive swerve by the production crew who know full well that everything
gets spoiled from these tapings by the fans in attendance, so it keeps us on our toes,
and means that to know the actual outcome of the match you're going to have to watch
the show.
Which you should have been doing anwyay because it's really good.
But it also begs the question which would you prefer to see?
Johnny as champion going forward or the Velveteen Dream?
Leave a little comment down below to let us know who your pick is for North American Champion.
Mine's Johnny.
For a little bit longer at least.
WrestleCrate Discount Code: 'WTTV' As a special treat for the SWAFT Nation, if
you visit WrestleCrate.co.uk and use the discount code WTTV, you'll get a free autograph bundle
- including one from a WWE Legend, a current WWE star and one from Oli and Luke in your
first box!
None from me because the only picture I'm in lives in my attic and stops me getting
old.
And now out US viewers can enjoy this offer too, by using the same discount code WTTV
at WrestleCrate.com - where you'll get a welcome bundle offer of an autograph from
a WWE legend, one from a current star and an exclusive enamel pin!
WrestleCrate is a monthly mystery box full of loads of wrestling goodies, which has items
from the biggest promotions in wrestling.
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A Week in Norway Bergen - Duration: 18:30.
Hello and welcome to the TranslatorsCafe.com Channel. Thank you for joining us on this
trip to Norway. Bergen is the gateway to the fjords of Western
Norway. The city center is surrounded by the Seven Mountains. We will visit several of
them later in this trip. Note that Bergen means mountain dweller in German.
We are landing at Bergen Flesland Airport.
The airport is located in Flesland, a village with the population of some 3 hundred people
near Bergen. With a population of 280 thousand, Bergen is Norway's second largest city.
It is in the county of Hordaland on the west coast of Norway.
Bergen is also the capital of Western Norway, which generates around 70%
of the total gross national product of Norway.
We rented the room in this Alkoven Guesthouse through AirBnB and stayed seven nights in
the Red room. It is situated almost directly in the city center only 5 to 10 minutes walk
to Bryggen and to the airport bus. Elizabeth, the owner, is very helpful with everything.
You will find the link to her guesthouse in the description of this video.
The view of the city and the sea from the window and the porch is amazing!
The kitchen is very convenient and well-maintained. There is a good grocery store just 5 minutes
from the house. The old wharf of Bergen called Bryggen is
a historic harbour district in Bergen. It is a reminder of the town's importance in
the Hanseatic League, which was a commercial and defensive confederation of merchant guilds
and their market towns. The Hanseatic League dominated Baltic maritime
trade from 1400 to 1800 along the coast of Northern Europe.
Many fires have ravaged the houses in Bryggen, which traditionally were made from wood. The
last such fire was in 1955. The houses were later rebuilt using old methods. Around a
quarter of the buildings are at least 300 years old. Other buildings in Bryggen are
younger. Their stone cellars date back to the 15th century.
The girl is playing a nyckelharpa, a traditional Swedish bowed string musical instrument.
In the 21st century, there has been an increased focus on maintaining original building materials
in the restoration. The fish market is located in the heart of
the ci ty. They sell not only seafood there, but also fruit, vegetables and souvenirs.
The market is probably the most crowded place in the city. And overpriced too. Giant lobster,
crabs, all kinds of fish. One can taste meat of elk, reindeer and whale here. It looks
like people working here can speak every language in the world.
It is interesting to note that, unlike in Canada or the USA, no one was objecting when
I aimed my camera at local people and buyers.
We've never seen such selection of fresh fish and sea products — from giant crabs to lobster, shrimp, caviar, fish and clams!
Many are still alive! You can try all these products, which are
cooked here. Lots of choice for every palate!
The Bergenhus fortress is located in the entrance
to the harbor. It is considered one of the oldest and best preserved castles in Norway.
There are buildings built in the 1240s as well as later additions built in the 20th
century. The Sverresborg is another Bergen fortress,
which was built by king Sverre Sigurdsson in the mid 1180s. It is situated just about
200 meters northeast of Bergenhus fortress. It was destroyed in several battles and later
rebuilt. The last known expansion of the fortress took place during the Napoleonic wars. In
the 1830s a park was laid in the area. The fortress is still used by the military of
Norway, but it is open to the public.
Tomorrow we are planning to go hiking from
Mount Ulriken to Mount Fløyen over the mountain plain, Vidden, which is the most popular hiking
tour in Bergen. The forecast is good for tomorrow and we are going to see the fjords, lakes
and islands around Bergen.
It's the morning after the mountain hike. We walked approximately 15 kilometers with
heavy equipment. Tired. Today is Saturday. Elizabeth, our host and her family are going
to spend their weekend cycling somewhere and we will simply walk around the city today.
The Port of Bergen is located in the centre of Bergen. The port is connected to the Bergen
Railway Line Bergensbanen. The port is handling all types of cargo and
is a supply base for offshore oil and gas drilling rigs and production platforms in
the North Sea. It is also a cruise port with more than 3 hundred cruise ship calls per
year.
This tall ship was built in Germany in 1914 and now serves as a school ship for the Royal
Norwegian Navy.
The fountain is dedicated to Ole Bull, a Norwegian violinist and composer. The statue of Ole
Bull was created in 1901 by Stephan Sinding, a Norwegian-Danish sculptor. At the foot of
the monument is the bronze sculpture of Skald playing the mythical harp. We are now approaching
Torgallmenningen square. The area was designed after the Bergen fire of 1916 when this area
was completely destroyed. The Seafarers' monument was created by Dyre Vaa in 1950.
It consists of 12 statues and four reliefs presenting the Norwegian sailors throughout
the history of Norway from Viking times to the 20th century.
I would call Bergen a Rhododendron City because of the striking number of rhododendrons throughout
the city in public areas and in private gardens alike.
Fløibanen funicular runs up the mountain of Fløyen. The final stop is 320 meters above
sea level. Two cable-connected cars pass each other approximately
at the center of the line. Western Norway produces 80% of Norway's
exports of crude oil and Bergen's International Airport Flesland is the main heliport for
the Norwegian North Sea oil and gas industry. From here thousands of offshore workers commute
to their work places on offshore oil and gas drilling rigs and production platforms. Bergen
is also home to strong and growing IT industries, media arts, education and marine research,
which is led by the Norwegian Institute of Marine Research.
The view alone is worth climbing the steep
streets!
The humid temperate oceanic climate helps a large variety of rhododendron species thrive.
Because of the Gulf Stream, the climate here is warmer than the city's latitude (60°N)
might suggest. From April until late June azaleas and rhododendrons are blooming in
Bergen. It looks like the soil in the city is just perfect for these kinds of flowering
shrubs.
I saw a lot of buildings with slate roofs
in Bergen. The natural slate or flagstone is suitable as a roofing material, requires
only minimal processing and can last for more than 100 years without any maintenance if
copper or stainless steel nails are used to fix them. Here I've never seen cheap asphalt
roofing shingles that are extensively used in North America.
Tomorrow we are going on the Norway in a Nutshell trip. We will experience the scenic train
route to Voss, then via hairpin bends to Gudvangen, then the fjord cruise on the Nærøyfjord,
spend a nightless night in Flåm, and return back to Bergen in the evening.
Yesterday we returned from the Norway in a Nutshell trip. A new cruise ship woke us up
this morning blasting its horn.
We are going to continue walking along Bergen's streets.
First, streets with tourists…
Now we will try to see different Bergen. We are going to explore the streets where tourists
can be seen only rarely. Only locals.
This road can be used to walk to Mount Fløyen instead of using the funicular.
We are again in the city center. St. Mary's
Church was completed around 1180 and it is the oldest remaining building in the whole
city of Bergen. After some rest we took the Fløibanen funicular
and returned to Mount Fløyen. The funicular has two cars, each of them can carry approximately
80 passengers. They have names: the blue car is Blåmann (бляман) (Blue Man) and
the red one is called Rødhette, which is the equivalent to Little Red Riding Hood.
It is interesting to note that although this is the time of white or nightless nights,
no one talks about this phenomenon in Bergen. The Russian city of St. Petersburg is at the
same latitude of 60°N and it is known as the "City of White Nights". I asked our
host Elizabeth if there is such a term in her native Norwegian language and she was
not able to remember one. Strange. The white night mean you can walk the streets of the city
after midnight enjoying the sights and taking photos, which we did in Bergen. We walked
until 1 am today and, as you can see, one can take photos without the tripod. The blue
hour period is not the usual 40 minutes in length here at this time of the year, but
several hours!
We are flying to Toronto with an overnight layover in Amsterdam. In this video, I will show what we saw in this great city.
Thank you for watching and I hope you've enjoyed our tour and found it interesting.
Until next time. Ha det bra!. If you liked this video, don't forget to subscribe to
the TranslatorsCafe.com Channel.
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