Thứ Ba, 28 tháng 3, 2017

Youtube daily report Mar 28 2017

It's a big universe out there, and even though astronomers have been studying it for

hundreds of years, there's still a lot we don't know.

We've already talked about planets and galaxies that shouldn't be possible, based on our

understanding of the universe.

But with over 100 billion stars in just our galaxy alone, there are also plenty of stars

out there that are so mind-bogglingly weird, astronomers aren't sure how they exist.

Here are three of them.

There's a faint star about 4000 light years from Earth, in the constellation Leo, named

SDSS J102915+172927.

We'll call it J1029 for short, since that's kind of a mouthful.

When J1029 was discovered, astronomers found that it had the lowest concentration of heavy

elements that we'd seen in any star.

Ever.

In astronomy, all the elements heavier than hydrogen and helium are considered heavy elements.

And all these heavy elements are called metals, I guess because astronomers like to make things confusing.

After the Big Bang happened around 13.8 billion years ago, the first elements that formed

were hydrogen and helium and small amounts of lithium.

And a couple hundred million years later, the first stars began to form out of those elements.

Since these stars only contained hydrogen and helium and a little bit of lithium, astronomers

would classify them as "metal-poor".

Heavier elements didn't even exist yet — they were made in the cores of stars later on,

then spread through the universe by exploding supernovas.

We know that J1029 is more than 13 billion years old, and astronomers would expect a

star that old to have concentrations of hydrogen, helium, and lithium similar to what existed

in the universe right after the Big Bang, plus maybe a few heavier elements.

But J1029 has just a fiftieth the amount of lithium you'd expect, making it so metal-poor

that stellar formation models say it shouldn't even exist.

The second star on this list is the most massive star we've ever seen.

It's called, R136a1, and it's 265 times the mass of the Sun — almost twice what

astronomers thought was even possible.

They used to think that any star heavier than 150 times the mass of the Sun would radiate

so much energy that it would blow itself to smithereens.

But somehow, R136a1 managed to get a lot more massive than that.

Researchers calculated that at one point, it would have had 320 times the mass of the

Sun, and it's lost some of that mass over time.

Extra-massive stars like this are rare, probably because they don't live very long.

More massive stars have shorter lifetimes because they tend to generate more heat and

blow up faster.

R136a1 has been around for about a million years, so it's already halfway through its

estimated 2-million-year lifetime.

So we still don't know how this star is possible, but we do know that we're lucky

we caught it while it was alive.

A third unexpected star was born when another star died.

SN 1987A gets its name because it's a supernova that was first detected in 1987.

It's what's called a type II supernova, a kind of supernova that's supposed to end

up with either a neutron star or a black hole at its core.

Based on the size of the exploding star, 1987A should have formed a neutron star.

But it didn't.

When we look at the supernova, we don't see anything.

And that has astronomers stumped.

One possibility is that instead of forming a neutron star, 1987A formed a quark star,

a type of star that hypothetically could exist, but we've never seen before.

A quark star starts out kind of like a neutron star: the collapsing stellar core condenses

to the point where the protons and electrons combine to form neutrons.

But then, the neutrons break down into their components, aka quarks.

A quark star would be tinier and denser than a neutron star, so if 1987A really does have

a quark star at its center, it makes sense that we wouldn't be able to see it.

But that's just one possible explanation, and we haven't been able to confirm it.

All we know for sure is that 1987A is really strange.

Like all these stars, it's another reminder that we have a lot left to learn about the universe.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space, and thanks especially to our patrons

on Patreon who help make this show possible.

If you want to help us keep making episodes like this, just go to patreon.com/scishow

to learn more.

And don't forget to go to youtube.com/scishowspace and subscribe!

For more infomation >> 3 Stars That Shouldn't Exist - Duration: 4:37.

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Wiz Khalifa Visits Pablo Escobar's Grave and Gets Dragged For It - Duration: 1:28.

What's good guys!

For Complex News, I'm Beija.

Everyone knows Wiz Khalifa as being mad chill and for his marijuana excursions.

A lot of guys in the rap game like to make references to drug lords in their lyrics or

pay respects to a Kingpin obviously without knowing the damage and blood on their hands.

The rapper dropped some pictures on social media of a grave with flowers and has caused

upset after paying tribute to Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar in his hometown Medellin.

Wiz still has three images up on Instagram of him posted up near the grave burning a

joint.

The rapper was called a "scoundrel" by Medellin's mayor Federico Gutierrez arguing he should've

brought flowers to the victims during Pablo Escobar's reign.

"It shows that this guy has never had to suffer from the violence inflicted by these drug

traffickers."

Escobar terrorized Colombia in the 1980s and 1990s when he was the leader of the Medellin

cartel.

About 4,000 people died during the cartel's supremacy and apparently 80% of all the cocaine

shipped to the US was during Pablo's reign making him amongst the 10 richest people in

the world.

A number of Columbians took to social media commenting on how they feel about this situation:

Do you think Wiz knows the history of Pablo Escobar or not?

Tell us your thoughts in the comments and subscribe to Complex on Youtube today for

more Wiz Khalifa updates.

For Complex News, I'm Beija Velez.

For more infomation >> Wiz Khalifa Visits Pablo Escobar's Grave and Gets Dragged For It - Duration: 1:28.

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Character Catch-Up: Sara Tancredi | Season 5 | PRISON BREAK - Duration: 1:12.

[music playing]

Sara, she has moved on with her life.

You're talking about a woman that

had this profound life-changing relationship

with a man seven years ago that lasted less than two years.

She's a different person than she was before.

She was never a wife and mother on the show,

and she certainly was never a widow.

I don't know that Sara would have made it,

were it not for her son.

I think her son has become the center of her universe.

Somewhere along the way, without looking for it,

she met a man who was willing to take what she had left to give,

which isn't a lot.

Jacob Ness is a professor of game theory

at the University of Ithaca.

He's a really good guy.

He's basically there for her in her moment of need.

And he has stepped in to raise a child who is not his own.

The reintroduction of the possibility that Michael might

be still alive starts to threaten that relationship,

because she's very conflicted, because the man she's

married to is a wonderful guy.

But, you know, of course, we as "Prison Break" fans

are like, well, but you've got to get

Sara and Michael together.

[music playing]

For more infomation >> Character Catch-Up: Sara Tancredi | Season 5 | PRISON BREAK - Duration: 1:12.

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Cookie Helps Jamal And Tory With Their Music | Season 3 Ep. 11 | EMPIRE - Duration: 1:38.

Can you turn it down?

[music playing]

But it feels so good.

I feel like we should just take everything

out except the horns.

It's too messy.

Look, I get that you want perfection.

But just because you cleaned yourself up doesn't mean

you need to do the same thing to your music.

Oh my lord-- please, Dory.

Oh, come on.

Being dirty can be fun.

OK, so first of all, it ain't that deep.

Second of all, I damn near lost everything from being

too dirty, and so did you. - Yeah.

You know, you're right. I did.

That's where we are right now.

So we just got to deal with it, OK?

Whatever-- just shut your mouth.

And just listen to this, OK?

Check it out.

[guitar playing]

OK?

Check what out?

Oh, come on.

That is like musical heroin.

So you still like drugs, crack head?

Well there's the door.

Ma, it's a joke.

Calm down.

Yeah.

Well, I don't find it funny.

I was listening to what y'all doing.

And it's-- it's hot.

You on to something, but something's missing.

So y'all got to mess some more.

Mess it up.

Did you hear what your mama said?

Mess it up.

[guitar playing]

For more infomation >> Cookie Helps Jamal And Tory With Their Music | Season 3 Ep. 11 | EMPIRE - Duration: 1:38.

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Let's Just Say It – Republicans Hate America - Duration: 5:25.

In all of the Years that I've been Covering American politics specifically with a focus

on covering what the Republicans are trying to do, I Have come to one conclusion that

at this point really is Irrefutable.

That conclusion is that Republicans hate America, no matter which way you slice it.

No matter how you define the word America, Perhaps America means our system of government.

The same government that Republicans are trying to currently destroy, by cutting back government

jobs, by slashing funding for government organizations to the point where they can't do their jobs,

by repealing regulations giving these government agencies even less to do.

Destroying the government means that you hate America.

Maybe America doesn't refer to the government, maybe it refers to land itself, the physical

being of America.

Well if were talking about the environment Donald Trump this week Alone Has repealed

Obama era climate protections, He's opening up more areas for drilling and Coal exploitations,

he's promised a full repeal of the Obama clean Power plan that reduce the emissions allowable

from coal-fired power plants and Overall just allowed even more pollution to spew Into our

land, our water, and our air Over the United States.

If you Loved America, if you loved the environment, you wouldn't do that.

But if you hate it, yeah, you would.

But maybe America is not a government or a piece of land, maybe it's the people.

The people really do make up the United States.

So what have the Republicans done to the people?

They're trying to cut Medicaid So low income people no longer have health insurance, they're

trying to privatize Social Security so our grandparents, elderly in the United States

don't have any form of secured, dedicated, Promised, retirement money because the majority

of them do not have individual retirement Funds.

Most Americans can't afford that.

They're trying to raise taxes on the middle-class.

They're trying to keep college tuition the same if not expanded, so students have to

pay even more.

They're not doing anything to solve the student loan crisis so banks are charging higher interest

rates, making Kids pay even more and stay in debt for 30 or 40 years after graduating.

They're shipping our jobs overseas so that these kids who go to college with 30 worth

of debt under their belt, can't get a job when they get out.

All of this adds up.

This is not all uniquely Trump, this is what Republicans in the United States have been

doing for decades.

It's because they hate America.

I challenge anyone to deny that, because you can't.

When you look at it in black and white and see what Republicans have done to this country

for decades, there is no denying the fact that they hate it.

They hate this place.

They hate the government, they hate the environment, they hate the people, they love the corporations,

they love the top 1%, but everything else screw it.

Let it go to hell, Let it burn down, Let people die because they don't Have health insurance,

as long as we keep those corporations happy and as long as we Republicans keep our job

in the federal government that those idiot taxpayers are paying us a yearly salary to

do.

That's the way government works today and the only question I have is why anyone in

the country would vote for a Republican Unless you happen to make more than half a million

dollars a year and qualify to be in that top three or 4% of income Earners.

Because in reality If people really understood what they were voting for, If they took the

time to research it, They would understand that the only people who benefit from the

policies of the Republican party are the top 1% of income earners in the United States.

So really get in any given election Republicans should never get more than 1% of the Vote.

The rest of the government would be filled with people that actually do care.

Maybe they don't have the same core belief system as you, but they do think that you

shouldn't die because you can't get health insurance or they think that you shouldn't

die because the water coming out of your Faucet is tainted With lead, And Mercury, And Arsenic,

And fracking chemicals.

Or maybe just maybe they think that you shouldn't lose your entire life savings because we let

criminal bankers get away with those kinds of crimes.

Republicans hate this country and they're voting records prove it.

The only question is, how long the voting records of the American public going to allow

these America haters to continue to hold office?

For more infomation >> Let's Just Say It – Republicans Hate America - Duration: 5:25.

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Tráiler: Sacrificio - Duration: 1:29.

For more infomation >> Tráiler: Sacrificio - Duration: 1:29.

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Roman Reigns Acts Like A Heel! Seth Rollins Finally Turns Babyface! | WWE Raw, Mar. 27, 2017 Review - Duration: 5:09.

Goldberg and Brock Lesnar get physical!

Braun Strowman finally gets a match at Wrestlemania.

And Pitbull and Flo Rida are going to be performing.

I do know who that is!

Unfortunately.

I'm Oli Davis, and this is the 27th March 2017 edition of Monday Night Raw...in about

4 minutes.

Bayley & Sasha Banks beat Charlotte & Nia Jax

In the last few weeks, the Raw Women's Championship match has changed from Bayley vs Charlotte

to Bayley vs Charlotte vs Sasha Banks, to Bayley vs Charlotte vs Sasha Banks vs Nia

Jax.

So what's another random stipulation change?

Raw's interim General Manager, the official WWE twitter account, announced it was now

an elimination match.

Bayley won the following tag match, which probably means she's losing at Wrestlemania.

The Sasha heel turn teases is the real hook going into this Sunday.

Austin Aries beat Noam Dar.

After what seemed like half and hour of recaps and backstage segments, we finally got the

night's second match: Austin Aries vs Noam Dar.

You've gotta have time to change the rope colour.

Which was really worth it for a five minute match.

Seth Rollins/Triple H Contract Signing After almost nine months since Triple H first

turned on Seth Rollins, the two had a sit-down face-to-face confrontation and spoke about

their feelings.

This was their Batman/Joker interrogation scene from The Dark Knight.

Triple H both went first and seemingly forever, but then came Seth promo time to shine - where

he finally shed his botched half-babyface, never apologised character.

Rollins confessed this isn't about revenge on Triple H anymore, it's about redemption.

The fault isn't with Triple H for betraying Seth - it's with Seth for trusting The Game

and turning on The Shield in the first place.

Rollins is fighting to get his morality back, not just to beat up Triple H.

This is the story they should've told when Seth first came back from injury last year.

If he cut this promo back then, he could've been the company's top babyface by now.

Over The Top Nonsense Big Show squashed Raw's mid card roster

in this over the top challenge thingy before Braun Strowman came out to announce he'll

be entering the Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal.

This means we'll get another chance at that tantalising heavyweight match-up - Strowman

vs Big Show vs Mojo Rawley.

Neville beat Jack Gallagher Jack Gallagher tapped to Neville in this abridged

version of their WWE Fastlane match.

It was the best they could do with the Cruiserweight's five-minute match limit.

Austin Aries is so good, he still felt serious enough in his post-match Aries Report promo

with the New Day gyrating all around him.

Roman Reigns Promo Roman Reigns cut a great heel promo here.

It's a shame he's the company's top babyface.

The Undertaker played mind games, revealing he's literally dug Reigns a grave, complete

with bespoke tombstone.

Most people just want to beat their opponent.

If it's a serious blood feud, like Rollins and Triple H, you might want to end the other

person's career.

Undertaker is threatening to kill someone for eliminating him fairly from the Royal

Rumble match.

And it was freaking great.

Galanderson Beat Up Everyone Enzo and Big Cass cut a hot promo before their

planned match against Galanderson, but Sheamus and Cesaro - who had been taken out by the

Good Brothers backstage earlier - took out everyone with a ladder.

Going by how these things usually go, Raw's interim General Manager WWE's official Twitter

account, will probably make this a ladder match before the weekend.

Sami Zayn beat Kevin Owens Not only was Sami Zayn's career on the line

in his match against Kevin Owens courtesy of Stephanie McMahon, but so was his place

in the prestigious Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal pre-show match.

Even though the career stipulation made the outcome totally predictable - Zayn was never

going to lose his job - the two still had a really good match.

The Samoa Joe and Chris Jericho run-ins were both fun too.

Brock Lesnar/Goldberg Face-To-Face Paul Heyman cut a typically great promo - full

of fantastic one-liners like Brock doesn't fear the spear; you can't survive the F5

- but there's only so many typically great promos a feud can have.

Which is probably why Goldberg and Lesnar had a brief bit of physicality, with Bill

taking out The Beast with a spear.

It wasn't quite the cliffhanging go-home set-piece Raw needed - as this was exactly

the same as Survivor Series and Royal Rumble - but remember, it's much, much better than

the two of them just playing tug of war over the belt.

So that was this week's Raw in about four minutes.

Here's the usual ratings recap, from top to bottom - In Awe, Cor, AVERAWGE, Poor and

Bore.

This week's Raw is AvRAWge.

The show only really had four matches - I'm not counting the Over-the-Top stuff - which

was spread rather thin over three hours.

But all the major angles did deliver - particularly Seth Rollins and Triple H. But for the go-home

show to your biggest event of the year, this episode of Raw was lacklustre.

What did you all think?

Let me know in the comments down below, and make sure to vote in the poll above my head

to give it your own rating.

I'll announce the results on tomorrow's WrestleTalk News.

Check out WrestleTalk's Wrestlemania predictions for both the Raw and Smackdown matches by

clicking the videos to the left and press subscribe.

I've been Oli Davis and that was wrestling.

For more infomation >> Roman Reigns Acts Like A Heel! Seth Rollins Finally Turns Babyface! | WWE Raw, Mar. 27, 2017 Review - Duration: 5:09.

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The History of the Mockbuster - Duration: 22:48.

Hi John Hess from FilmmakerIQ.com and today we'll dive in to the history of knock-off

cinema and the mockbuster.

We'll start our story at the close of the silent era.

By 1927 the Hollywood studios system was a well a defined industry dominated by a handful

of vertically integrated players that owned both the equipment and manpower to create

the movies as well as the theaters that screened to an eager public.

The average cost per film ranged from $190,000 at Fox to $275,000 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer - but

that was only an average as major event movies could cost upwards of a cool $1 million while

cheaper productions could be turned around quickly for only $50 grand.

These cheaper films allowed the studio to maximize the value from facilities and personnel

- to keep stages in constant use generating product while also serving as a training ground

for new talent.

Smaller major studios like Columbia Pictures and Universal Pictures focused mainly on these

smaller productions with shorter running timesaimed at small-town and urban neighborhood venues.

Below these major studio playors were the minors - even smaller production studios known

collectively as "Poverty Row".

These production houses focused on films where costs might run as low as $3,000.

Unlike the Majors who owned their own distribution and theaters, these productions sought profit

wherever they could, booking in small independent movie houses around the country.

When sound arrived, these independent movie houses began to adopt a new programming scheme

that would come to dominate in the 1930s.

Now keep in mind, this was long before the era of multiplexes,

most movie theaters had only a single screen.

Your ticket would buy you a newsreel followed by a short, serial or a cartoon and then a double feature.

The first film of the double feature was the main event -usually a film rented from the majors.

Being that these were independent theaters they couldn't get a shot at the first run

of these big films.

That was reserved exclusively for the studio owned theaters.

So these "A" pictures were second run screenings…

But that's where the second film in the double feature comes into play.

The "B" pictures, often the product of Poverty Row studios, were really inexpensive

- even cheaper to rent by the minute than the cartoons or shorts.

But they extended the amount of movie your ticket affords you - allowed the theater to

advertise on the quantity of entertainment - rather than the quality.

And during the Depression of the 1930s, this was a winning strategy.

Despite early resistance to this programming scheme, even the major studios theater chains

began to adopted this bifurcated model and established "B" units to provide films

for the double feature market.

Out of this came a practice known as Block booking.

To get access to a studio's prestige "A" pictures, these independent exhibitors had

to buy a block of B-pictures rented out as a flat fee often sight unseen.

The price of these B-pictures could be set to ensure profitability of the film regardless

of the quality or demand.

Now these weren't great films - theaters would rotate the billing every few days to

keep patrons coming back.

Even with the major studios in the game the demand for B-films was insatiable.

By 1935, B movie production made up 50% of Warner Bros' output - Fox joined ranks also

dedicating half of it's output to B films.

Counting the 300 or so films made annually by Poverty Row studios, 75% of the Golden

Era of Hollywood's output was low budget B movies.

In other words three out of every four movies of this so called

Golden Era of Hollywood were straight up cash grabs.

Most of these were Westerns but the out of this we also did get the hard boiled pulp

fiction crime movie - the basis of film noir.

Now, no one sets out to make a bad film, a theory that we might put to the test later,

but as long as the money was all but guaranteed, there isn't much, outside pride, to making

the films better.

Then two major changes shook up the industry effectively killing the cash cow.

The first was a 1945 Supreme Court Ruling in United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc.

which forced the Big studios to divest their holdings in theaters and change the practice of selling films.

The guarantee of profit through pre sold theaters was over and the independent theaters could

at least have access to the big prestigious films during their first run..

And then came Television.

This double whammy sent movie ticket sales into a spiral dropping 50% in the decade after 1946.

The majors countered with spectacle - lavish color, 3D, widescreen, surround sound - things

you couldn't get on your set top at home.

The minors turned to sensationalism and exploitation - films that tackled the taboo, underserved

niches, or just a popular special interest..

And sometimes that popular special interest happens to be another popular and sucessful big movie.

A mockbuster is a low budget film designed to exploit the marketing and buzz surrounding

a large prestigious studio film.

Now we can't be sure when the first mockbuster hit movie theaters as B-pictures during the

Golden Age of Hollywood were rarely written about.

But this mockbuster practice of copying big hit movies probably got it's legs at the

end of the 1950s especially in the horror and sci-fi genres which at the time were staples

of low budget productions.

One of the earliest examples is The Monster of Piedras Blancas from 1959 - a direct knock

off of Creature from the Black Lagoon of 1954 from the so called "Gill Man" horror cycle.

The Monster of Piedras Blancas even produced by Jack Kevan who worked on the suit for Creature

from the Black Lagoon as well as other monsters when he was under contract Universal-International.

Kevan was able to score some sweetheart deals for equipment from his former employer as

Universal was going through money troubles and wanted to help their former technicians

find work in independent film.

Well after a couple unsuccessful movies Kevan left the film business and started a cosmetic company.

Another example of early mockbusters comes in 1965's Village of the Giants which capitalized

on the giant woman craze started with 1958's Attack of the Fifty Foot Woman.

Combining elements of beach party, Village of Giants was directed by Bert I. Gordon who

has a string of shrinking or giants B films in his filmography which is ironic given his

initials are B.I.G.

In the late 70s with the rise of grindhouse cinema - named so after converted burlesque

theaters that used to feature bump and grind dances - we see a whole ecosystem of exploitation

B-films coming into being with the erosion of the Production Codes and censorship.

Roger Corman, the king of B-pictures, produced a Piranha in 1978 one of the many many shark/fish

films aimed at capitalizing on 1975's Jaws - which many considered the first modern blockbuster.

Then came Star Wars in 1977 which ushered in a series of space operas including Starcrash

in 1979 and Battle Beyond the Stars 1980.

On the heels of Ridley Scott's 1979 Alien, the director of Starcrash Luigi Cozzi offered

his take in the mockbuster Contamination.

Steven Spielberg's unparalleled track record means he often finds his work the subject

of mockbuster throughout the eighties and nineties: ET, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and

Jurassic Park all spawned mockbusters but none perhaps as lauagably memorable as Mac

and Me in 1988.

These films, and many more which we won't list, at best could be said to be merely copying an idea.

It wasn't until the 90s when you had a fully matured home video market did companies started

to use mockbusters to draft off the marketing event film.

The first target was Disney's Second golden age.

GoodTimes Entertainment, founded in 1984 by Kenneth, Joseph and Stanley Cayre began originally

as a distributor of public domain films but by the 90s their business strategy comprised

of knock-off straight-to-video animated movies like Cinderella (1994), Leo the Lion: King

of the Jungle (1994), The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) Alice in Wonderland (1995) Pocahontas:

The Legend (1995) Hercules (1995) and Jungle Book (1995).

There must not have been that much money in it because the company folded in 2005.

But mockbuster animation has been alive in will with Video Brinquedo - a Brazilian CGI

animation studio that picked the slack producing The Little Cars (2006), Ratatoing (2007),

The Little Panda Fighter and Tiny Robots.

And now we come to the company that all of you are waiting for me to talk about: Asylum.

Founded in 1997 by David Michael Latt, David Rimawi and Sherri Strain, Asylum started in

the direct to video horror business.

Competition was fierce and the company could never get a solid foothold.

In 2005 Asylum produced a low budget adaptationof H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds - which

happened to be released the same year as Steven Spielberg's version - Spielberg keeps popping up.

On the title alone Blockbuster Video ordered 100,000 copies, significantly outselling all

their company's previous films - Latt and Rimawi began to reconsider their business

model in favor of mockbusters or what they called "tie ins"

And boy did they tie in: Asylum would go on to produce.

Snakes on a Train

The Da Vinci Treasure

Pirates of Treasure Island

Transmorphers

AVH Alien versus Hunter

I am Omega

100 Million BC

2012 Doomsday

Allan Quartermain and the Temple of Skulls

Death Racers

Journey to the Center of the Earth

Monster

Street Racer

Sunday School Musical

The Day the Earth Stopped

The Land the Time Forgot

The Princess of Mars

The Terminators

Transmorphers 2:The Fall of Man

2012 Supernova

Paranormal Entitty

6 Guns

Megapiranha

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes

Battle of Los Angeles

The Amityville Haunting

Grimm's Snow White

Bikini Spring Break

Abraham Lincoln vs Zombies

American Warships

Nazies at the Center of the Earth

AE: Apocalypse Earth

Atlantic Rim

Hansel and Gretel

Age of Tomorrow

Android Cop

Apocalypse Pompeii

Mercenaries

Hercules Reborn

Jail Bait

Sleeping Beauty

Z Nation

Avengers: Grimm

Bound

San Andreas Quake

Roadwars

Martian Land

Izze's Way Home

and In the Name of Ben Hur

And that's only the ones we have so far but Asylum has seen some success in original

films like the classic Sharknado,

Sharknado 2: The Second One

and Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No.

While American mockbusters a great source of cheesy fun, it's the international mockbusters

that take the cake for pure daring and boldness when it comes to knock-off cinema.

Low budget foreign produced illegitimate remakes or sequels are often only known to the locals,

never to be released outside of their original country - that is until the internet happened.

These mockbusters come from all over: from Denmark's only monster movie - Reptillicus

was made to capitalize on the Godzilla craze in 1961:

From Indonesia, we have the classic Lady Terminator released in 1989 about an Indonesian spirit

using the body of her enemy's granddaughter to fulfill a 100-year-old curse of death and destruction.

To mockbusters of Bollywood in 1993's Mahakaal - India's take on Nightmare on Elm Street.

And even Nigeria which has no film industry to speak of and electricity is spotty at best

- a small cottage industry made possible by digital video gives us Masoyiyata in 2003

which is a retelling of James Cameron's Titanic.

It's hard not to have at least a soft spot for some of these as they are not much more

harmless than fan films for local audiences.

But when it comes to international knock-offs - one country reigns supreme - Turkey.

From Turkish ET, Turkish Superman, Turkish Spiderman, Turkish Star Trek, Turkish Wizard

of Oz and even a Turkish Psycho - spoilor alert - it's a musical.

For economic reasons the Turkish are kings of the Hollywood mockbuster.

But to me, nothing approaches the sheer brilliance of 'The Man who saves the World' - otherwise

known as "Turkish Star Wars" - I promise I did not doctor any of this clip:

Oh, I guess we can't show you a clip.

You see there's this Turkish network on YouTube that claims they own the rights to this movie

despite the fact that original director blatantly ripped shots from Star Wars: A New Hope for their rear projection.

Oh and the soundtrack is literally just the Indiana Jones theme - not a cover of it - the actual recording frome Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Mind you it's not the original copyright holders disputing - it's the guys that claim to own the mockbuster.

So if you want to see what is possibly the worst film ever created - google Turkish Star Wars.

There is a free English subtitled version out there which, unlike the official version from the Turkish network, is shown in the proper 4x3 aspect ratio.

So the obvious question is: How is this all this even legal?

The success of these mockbusters are based on "drafting opportunity" - a term borrowed

from aeronautics which means you ride the slipstream behind a larger object to save energy in this

case riding the marketing of a popular movie to generate sales.

In animation, a big studio could spend four years in production with hundreds of artists

whereas a small studio can ride that success churning out a film in six months by a handful of artists.

Large tent pole Live Action movies today have the same multi-year production schedule which

gives small nimble studios the same drafting advantage.

How do they get away with it?

Well the most basic answer to the legal question is you can't copyright an idea or a title.

If you wanted an animated movie about Aladdin, you can because it's a public domain story.

However you can't start pulling in details from the Disney classic.

And that was the subject of a lawsuit between Disney and Goodtimes Entertainment who released

their version of Aladdin in Videocassette a few months before the Disney version hit the theaters.

Well the federal court settled in favor of Goodtimes noting such differences as the golden

mustachioed genie as opposed to a blue goateed genie in the Disney version.

So as long as the stories and productions are substantially different and in most cases

that's a necessity because of budget - there is no legal complications.

However, producers of mockbusters have to be weary of walking the fine line into false advertising.

In 2013 Phase 4 Films retitled their animation "The Legend of Sirilla" to ride the wave

of a Disney bohemeth: calling the French animated feature "Frozen Land".

The move landed the film in court with Disney rightfully arguing that the logos were too

similar - and if you look at them side by side - they have a pretty strong case.

The case was settled in 2014 with Phase 4 reverting back to the original title, paying

$100,000 and promising to make "all practicable efforts" to remove copies of Frozen Land from

stores and online distributors.

And it's not just animation.

In 2012 Warner Bros. took everyone's favorite mockbuster studio to court over "Age of

Hobbits" - unlike fairytales, Tolkein's writings were exclusively licensed to Warner Brothers.

Asylum claimed that they were justified in using the word "Hobbit" as it was a generic name.

But Warner's provided evidence in the form of surveys done by Nielsen National Research

Group that showed approximately 16 to 24 percent of survey respondents were confused about

the source of Age of the Hobbits.

The evidence against Asylum was strong enough to win over the judge and Asylum released

the film under the name Clash of Empires.

Now in the case of those foreign knock offs with wholesale infringement… well you can't

squeeze blood from a stone.

The Mockbuster is a self referential sign of a mature media culture - Where there is

a large culturally important film and there is money to be made, there will be mockbusters.

But in our little exploration of the history of film, I hope you've learned that cash

grabs are not unique to our or any time period.

And even sometimes in the least likely of places, you can see the indomitable human

spirit yearning to tell and hear stories.

Stories that eventually become legends and part of our shared human experience.

Be a part of that legend or just be part of the narrative of humanity - go out and tell

your story - make something great.

I'm John Hess and I'll see you at FilmmakerIQ.com

For more infomation >> The History of the Mockbuster - Duration: 22:48.

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Soy Luna 2: Spoiler Alert 1 - Duration: 0:36.

For more infomation >> Soy Luna 2: Spoiler Alert 1 - Duration: 0:36.

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How To Growing, Planting And Harvest Lemongrass - Gardening Tips - Duration: 5:35.

For more infomation >> How To Growing, Planting And Harvest Lemongrass - Gardening Tips - Duration: 5:35.

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[HD][VOSTFR] IU-Through the Night - Duration: 4:43.

For more infomation >> [HD][VOSTFR] IU-Through the Night - Duration: 4:43.

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Golden Retriever Stole the LAST Cookie!!! Ollie Shouldn't be on the couch... - Duration: 2:58.

What.

Ollie's grumpy and he wants a cuddle.

Hello Toby.

Commer here, you want a cuddle?

come on.

Up!

[Mon laughs] up come on.

You know what to do.

You gonna come up? come on.

come on.

come on.

come on.

Come on, up you come.

Lay down, lay down.

good boy.

this is what the ladies taught him.

yup. we love cuddles when you're not home.

[laughing] don't we ollie?

Dad doesn't let you on the couch.

no

this is the secret stuff that happens while I'm working.

whats up baby.

he's like, but I like being on here!

He wants to make sure that I'm okay with it.

cause you know you're not meant to be up here.

I think he just wants my attention.

he doesn't care about you.

He wants to make sure you're alright.

He loves dad.

Go on.

My cookie.

Do you want my cookie ollie.

You put your mouth on my cookie! you put your mouth on my cookie!

Do you want half? you can have half with me.

hey!

Steady! alright you can have half with Toby.

Go on, bite it.

go on toby. you can have my cookie.

It was going to be mine, but I love you both more, so you can have it.

Is that good?That's a peanut butter cookie, all gone, all gone.

You gotta clean up the mess you made now, no more cookie for you.

Tea and cookies for me, I'm going to see if we have anymore.

Did we finish all the cookies?

Yeah I gave them to mum. [laughing] You got my last cookie!

Tea and no cookies.

You're lucky I love you so much.

I didn't realise that that was the last cookie!

So mean, oh well the boys at least get some love.

On Saturday we are doing the announcement of who won that competition and we are doing

a live stream.

It's April fools so we are going to have some fun with the boys, we have got some really

exciting stuff.

Don't forget to tune in, it is going to be at 11am Australian time, 5pm PST time and

8am US eastern standard.

I think that's right.

But we'll see you guys on saturday

For more infomation >> Golden Retriever Stole the LAST Cookie!!! Ollie Shouldn't be on the couch... - Duration: 2:58.

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Enlisted Women in Submarines Program - Duration: 1:23.

For me it was a lifelong dream to join the family I experience growing up with a submariner

father.

I grew up with submarines as a sort of playground for my imagination.

Running between the missile tubes and swinging between the water tight doors.

What really stuck with me though, through my adolescence, were the ties that bound the

entire family together.

We're a small force.

Team oriented and well trained.

We rely upon one another, we look out for each other, and we support one another.

Submarines truly take care of their own that is difficult to explain until you have experienced

it firsthand.

Being somewhat confined from the outside world we relied on one another, technically and

personally.

The entire crew really knows one another.

The mission sets and the challenges are incredibly unique.

We are looking for motivated and hard-charging female Sailors from other communities to join

the submarine force.

For more information please visit our website.

If you have further question don't hesitate to reach out to your command career counselors,

the women in submarines coordinator, or submarine non-nuclear enlisted community managers.

For more infomation >> Enlisted Women in Submarines Program - Duration: 1:23.

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Jeep Wrangler TruShield FullShade Top (2007-2017 JK 4-Door) Review & Install - Duration: 6:09.

I'm Ryan from extremeterrain.com, and this is my review and installation of the Barricade

FullShade Top, fitting all 4-door 2007 and up JKs.

Today, we're gonna talk through the installation of this top which is a very simple one out

of three wrenches, this will install on your Jeep in under a half an hour.

This is designed to come on and off when you want to take it on and off, and it just installs

with some bungee cords, so no tools necessary, but we'll talk a little bit more about the

install in just a minute.

We're also gonna talk about the construction and a few of the features of this top.

A mesh top like this is for those of you who like to run without your top on, who want

to have that open-air driving experience, but want a little bit of protection from the

direct sun for you and your passengers.

This will cover the entire area from the top of the windshield all the way to the back

of the rear seat passengers.

There is also a half-shade top if you're just looking for protection for the front seat

passengers, but again, this is the full-shade top that gives you a full coverage.

A mesh top like this will let the air in, it will let some sunlight in, but it will

cut down on some of the sun and some of the UV that would otherwise be beating down on

the top of your head and your shoulders, which can make it a little bit uncomfortable on

those especially hot days.

So, if you want that open-air driving experience, but a little bit of protection, a mesh top

is a great option.

And I do like this mesh top because it's a little bit less expensive than some of the

other ones on the market, while still offering these zippered pockets which give you a spot

for some additional gear, which is especially nice if you're running without doors on.

You wanna make sure that your pocket stays empty so you don't lose anything out the doorway,

so those zipper pockets do come in handy.

Now, this is going to be less expensive than some of the other mesh tops on the market

that don't use bungee cords to attach to the Jeep.

There are some that use clips that are adjustable, and the only downside that I ever see to these

bungee cords is that, eventually, the elastic can stretch out a little bit and this won't

be held quite as taut, and the fact that you can lose these bungee cords if you're not

careful where you put them.

Now, storing them in this pocket when the top isn't on the Jeep is a good way to not

lose them.

However, if you are interested in one of these tops that has buckles and straps instead of

the elastic, those options do exist on the market.

However, they are going to be a little bit more expensive.

As far as the construction goes, this is woven PVC material that is going to hold up well

in the sun, it's gonna hold up well over time to flapping while you're driving on the highway,

and overall, it is a well-built piece that is going to be strong.

And of course, it has a polyester material, webbing material around the outside to ensure

that nothing is going to fray, and of course, that's where you have your metal grommets

which are where the elastic bungee cords are going to go through.

As I've mentioned before, this does have these different pockets which isn't completely unique

to Barricade.

There are a few other brands that have these zipper pockets, but it is a nice place to

put some additional gear, as I said before, especially if you're running without your

doors.

This will also come with all of the bungee cords.

Now, the nice thing about a mesh top like this is there's no header, it doesn't wrap

around the roll bars, so you can leave this installed underneath of your hardtop or your

soft-top if you choose to.

You can install this once leaving underneath any other top, that way you just pop your

other top down and this is already in place.

That's a really nice feature, especially when you compare this to a more traditional safari

or bikini top that is solid, most of those do require header.

With this, if you don't have that header, you can leave this on all the time.

As I said before, a very simple one out of three wrench installation for this top, only

going to have to give yourself about a half an hour, probably less after you've done this

once or twice, or, of course, if you're only installing once and leaving it on, this is

going to be something that goes on very quickly, very easily, and you can take it on and off

if you choose to.

Now, all you have to do take this out of the package, unzip your pocket, get the rest of

your bungee cords out and start from the front attaching this to the sport cage with the

bungee cords that are included, work your way toward the back making sure everything

is nice and tight.

Hit every grommet with a bungee cord and that's really all there is to it.

As I said before, no tools necessary, less than a half hour time, very easy to install.

As I mentioned, I do think this is a well-built mesh top and especially for the price.

This is right around $125 for a mesh top that's going to cover you from the top of the windshield

all the way back, covering your rear seat passengers as well, and it is well-built.

Now, there are certainly less expensive mesh tops that still provide the same amount coverage

that are less expensive.

However, I think, at that point, you're probably getting a lower quality material and it may

not hold up quite as well.

Now, if you're not going to be using this top very often, if it's going to be a couple

of times a year, maybe you can get away spending a little bit less money for a little bit lower

quality.

However, if you are going to be using this with any regularity, you're gonna want something

that's built pretty well and is pretty solid, so that's why I like this one for the price.

Now, there are also more expensive mesh tops on the market, ones that are going to be of

a higher quality material, and the ones that have those buckles instead of the bungee cords,

and have some other options as well.

So, if you're looking for that upper end mesh top, those are also available on the website

for a few more dollars.

So, if you're looking for a well-built and moderately priced mesh top that you can leave

installed underneath your hardtop or your soft-top, and will give you that open-air

driving experience while still not beating some of the sunlight down, I think that this

is a really nice option.

So, that's my review of the Barricade FullShade Top, fitting all 4-door 2007 and up JKs, that

you can find right here at extremeterrain.com.

For more infomation >> Jeep Wrangler TruShield FullShade Top (2007-2017 JK 4-Door) Review & Install - Duration: 6:09.

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5 Most Horrifying Workplace Accidents Ever Happened - Duration: 5:25.

5 Most Horrifying Workplace Accidents.

Number 5.

Edgardo Toucet Echevarria, a temp worker from Puerto Rico was really thrown in the deep

end when he first started his temporary job as a peeler at Future Foam.

Despite not being able to speak or read a word of English, Edgardo was put straight

on to the peeling machine.

The purpose of this monstrous mechanism was to remove the rough edges from strips of carpet;

it did so by whirring its deadly sharp blades at a furious speed.

It goes without saying that this was quite a daunting task for Edgardo who had no experience

whatsoever with such a machine and was unable to spot the fact that the safety guard had

been removed.

During the process of using the machine, something went horrendously wrong and the worker had

his entire penis and testicles severed by the sharp, spinning blades of the peeler.

Echevarria survived the accident and got away with a severely mutilated member.

He filed a lawsuit shortly afterwards, claiming compensation for a dramatic loss in the capacity

to enjoy life.

Number 4.

Did you ever have a fight in primary school that resulted in a bit of hair pulling?

Maybe just the memory of your mum combing your hair too hard as a child brings tears

to your eyes.

If the intense pain of having your hair pulled makes you cringe, then spare a thought for

the 14 year old girl in 1933 who worked full time in a box factory.

The teen was on her usual shift, scrubbing the floor on her hands and knees when her

long ponytail got caught up in the mechanism of a whirring shaft.

The machine kept on revolving at high speed, with the girl caught up in it and then proceeded

to drop her to the ground, all of her that is, apart from her scalp and long locks.

After being rushed to hospital, the unfortunate victim received medical care and doctors attempted

to return her hair to her head, however, the medical notes from the day say

that "the scalp arrived half an hour later and was too large and dirty to be sutured

on."

The girl later received a skin graft and lived the rest of her life wearing a wig.

The scalp itself was perfectly preserved and today lives in a jar alongside thousands of

other morbid curiosities which can be seen at Barts Pathology Museum in London.

Number 3.

We've all heard of murder mysteries where it turned out that a disgruntled coworker

was the responsible culprit.

But what about when the killer colleague is a robot?

In 1979, 25 year old Robert Williams was working as an assembly line work worker at a Ford

Motor factory in Flat Rock, Michigan.

Robert went to retrieve parts from the same spot in the storage facility where the robot

was working.

The mechanical monster slammed him with such brute force that he was killed instantly.

As if being the only ever human victim of "death by robot" on record wasn't already

the stuff that sci-fi nightmares are made of,

an extra eerie element to this tale is the fact that he was killed on the 58th anniversary

of the opening of the play which first coined the term "robot".

Karel Capek invented the word for his futuristic play Rossum's Universal Robots.

Number 2.

Garry Hoy was a successful lawyer at Holden Day Wilson law firm in Toronto, Canada.

He was exceptionally proud of the high quality glass in his 24th story office in the Toronto

Dominion Centre and would regularly launch himself against at full velocity to prove

to colleagues and visitors that the glass was completely

unbreakable.

Every time Garry had performed this stunt he had bounced back off of the glass to the

amusement of his impressed audience.

This is exactly what happened in 1993 during a boardroom meeting, however as we were not

content with this stunt on the first try, Mr Hoy tragically decided to give it a second

go.

This time around, he was proved right as not one shard of glass was cracked, unfortunately

the entire window pane popped straight out of its frame, plunging itself and the unlucky

lawyer down 24 floors down to the street below.

This fatal plunge has been the subject of documentaries and adapted for fiction since

and will perhaps be remembered as the most unfortunate workplace accident.

Number 1.

Death by meat grinder might sound like something that exists only in bad horror films, but

tragically for Hugo Avalos Chanon in 2013, this horrifying demise was all too real.

Hugo was working as part of a sanitation crew at a meat packing factory in Oregon when something

went really, really wrong.

It has never been established whether the machine Hugo was cleaning was meant to be

switched on or whether it was accidently started during the cleaning process.

Whatever might be the case, it did happen.

Brace yourself for one of the most disturbing deaths you've ever heard of: as Hugo fell

headfirst into the running machine.

The job of this industrial grinder was to separate the excess fat from ground beef.

His fellow worker rushed to his aid and tried desperately to switch the machine off and

pull Hugo from it, but it was sadly too late.

He died from crushing and chopping injuries and will go down in history as one of the

worst workplace accidents to have ever take place.

For more infomation >> 5 Most Horrifying Workplace Accidents Ever Happened - Duration: 5:25.

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English (General American) Pronunciation, Video 1: English (GA) Phonetics and Spelling - Duration: 18:26.

Hi! This is Gabriel Wyner from Fluent-Forever.com.

In these three videos, I'm going to show you the bare essentials of English phonetics

and spelling.

If you're using one of my pronunciation trainers, don't worry about memorizing any

of this; the trainer will do that for you. Just watch and pay attention. Everything you

see here will show up sooner or later within the trainer.

I'll be going through English using the International Phonetic Alphabet, or IPA.

This lets us simplify this discussion a lot, since I only need to talk about 38 symbols,

many of which you may know already, instead of trying to wade through nearly 170 spelling

rules.

So lets get started.

We'll break this up into three parts - the first will cover the English consonants, the

second will cover the vowels, and the third will cover a few of English's spelling rules.

We'll be discussing the General American dialect of English throughout this video.

That said, if you're interested in learning British English, specifically Received Pronunciation

or BBC English, then I'd suggest you watch these videos first, and then watch a 4th video

I'm making on the differences between General American and Received Pronunciation.

American English has 25 consonants.

Now usually when I make these videos, I compare the language you're learning to the sounds

of English,

but that's not really going to work here.

Instead, I'm going to assume that you know a small set of sounds that tend to show up

in most languages, and then we're going to use those sounds to explain the rest of

the consonants you need.

So, let me start by introducing you to a few sounds that you probably already know, and

then briefly mention where they're made in your mouth. We'll start in the front

of your mouth and move backwards:

So first, we have [b] as in Boy And [m] as in Man

These two sounds are made in the same place, by touching your lower lip to your upper lip.

B. M.

Then comes [f] as in Father. This one is made by touching your lower lip to upper teeth.

FFF.

Next, we have [d] as in Dog, [s] as in Snake and

And [n] as in Nail

These three sounds are made by touching the tip of your tongue to your alveolar ridge

- that hard ridge right behind your upper teeth. D - S - N.

Here, I'll make one comment about that D sound for English.

In many languages, you make a "D" sound with the tip of your tongue touching your

upper teeth, and then the blade of your tongue - the part that comes right behind the tip

- is the part that touches your alveolar ridge. In English, you'll pull your tongue a little

further back, so that the tip is at your alveolar ridge, which gives that consonant a more percussive

sound. You get "Dee d Dee" instead of "di d di", like you might find in Italian

or Spanish.

Moving on, we have [j] as in yellow.

This one is basically the same tongue position as the [i] vowel - the middle of your tongue

is raised up near the hard palate. [i]. yellow

Last, we have [g] as in gopher. This one is made by pulling the back of your tongue up

to your soft palate. [g] Gopher.--

At this point, we're going to revisit some of those sounds we just discussed

and use them to generate a few more consonants.

Let's start with [s] as in snake. This sound, as we discussed before, is made with the tip

of your tongue near your alveolar ridge. Now there is another sound in English, made

in exactly the same location,

which sounds like this: "zzz" [z], which shows up in words like "zebra"

The difference between /s/ and /z/ is something called "voicing",

which basically just asks whether your vocal cords are vibrating or not during the consonant.

You can get a feel for this by putting your hand on your throat and saying "SSSS".

You shouldn't feel much beneath your hand. /s/ is an unvoiced consonant, and so your

vocal cords aren't vibrating at all.

If you do the exact same thing, but say "ZZZZZ" instead, you'll find that there is buzzing

beneath your hand. ZZ is the voiced version of SS. These two sounds - S and Z - make for

easy to follow examples of voicing, because you can sustain them for a long period of

time. SSSS, ZZZZ. We can use this concept of voicing to add another consonant

to our repertoire - [v] as in "vote" - /v/ is the voiced version of /f/. You'll use

the exact same mouth position - your bottom lip comes up to your upper teeth - /ffff/,

only this time, you're going to engage your vocal cords. /vvvv/..vote.

Now voicing can get a bit more complex and interesting when we start talking about consonants

like B or D - consonants that can only last for an instant

Place your hand on your throat again and

say "B". When you do this, a few things happen in a very particular order.

First, your lips are going to be closed.

Then you'll start to feel buzzing in your throat, and air is going to build up behind

your lips. Mmmb. Then your lips will pop open-- mmbi! - and

you'll hear your B. The thing that makes B a voiced consonant is the fact that there's

buzzing going on BEFORE your lips pop open.

Now the letter B - which makes the /b/ sound in English - has an unvoiced partner - P.

To make that sound, 1. First, there's going to be no buzz and

your lips are closed. - it starts the same as B.

2. Then, air starts building up behind your lips without any vibration in your vocal cords

3. Then your lips pop open with a "p" sound

4. Then air starts to rush out for a tenth of a second - making a kind of exhalation

sound - HHh - And THEN, once you've heard that "H" sound, you'll start to feel buzzing

in your throat as the vowel - [i] - starts. "P!"

So using these same examples of B and P, let's talk about a new topic, aspiration.

Let's say both of those letters, but this time, put your hand a couple of inches in

front of your mouth when you do it. B. P. If you're making that P sound right, you're

going to feel a big puff of air when you say it

"P" - and that puff of air is aspiration. P is an aspirated consonant. And to be really

precise, the aspiration happens in that tenth of a second between when your lips pop open

and the vowel - i - starts. It's when you're making that "H" sound.

And unlike voicing, which only has two options - voiced or unvoiced, depending upon whether

there's buzzing going on before your lips pop open or not - aspiration can come in different

amounts, depending upon how long you wait between when your lips pop open and you start

the vowel. If you wanted to sound especially strange, you could take a really long time

before you started the vowel: Phhhhi -

In that case, you'd be making a P sound with MORE aspiration than the one in English.

And, if you wanted to sound especially French or Italian,

you could start the vowel immediately, as soon as your lips pop open: PI! PI! - in that

case, you'd be saying a voiceless P without any aspiration at all. PI! I'm going into

this in a lot of depth, because aspiration varies a lot between languages and affects

3 really important consonants in English -

The one we just mentioned - P, which makes a [pʰ] sound as in Paper.

T - which makes a [t] sound, as in table. T is the voiceless, aspirated version of our

[d] sound.

Note here that the tongue position of T and D are the same - you're using the tip of

your tongue against your alveolar ridge, so it's going to sound more percussive than

a lot of other languages - you get "T" /t/ "T" instead of "ti"/t/ "ti",

like you might find in Italian or French.

The last of our aspirated consonants is K, which makes a [k] sound, as in cape. It's

a voiceless, aspirated version of /g/. We can kind of squeeze one more consonant out

of this aspiration discussion,

since there's one consonant in English that's basically ONLY aspiration - if you exhale

and say 'hhhhh', then you've made the English consonant [h] as in Hang. There's

nothing happening in your mouth, and all that's really happening is that you're letting

air flow through your open vocal cords before you start whatever vowel comes next. Hang.

While we're on the topic of consonants made at your vocal cords, we can add in a strange

little consonant known as a glottal stop. This consonant is basically what happens when

you try to say a vowel with your vocal cords closed. As air comes through, it's going

to pop them open and make a [] sound. We use it in English before words that start in vowels,

in phrases like "Uh oh" and "it _IS_ true". We don't go "uhoh"...we go

"uh oh" - with a sudden start to that "uh" and another glottal stop before that

"oh". Uh oh! For phrases like "It IS true", really strong glottal stops can make

the difference between a very emphasized phrase: "It IS true" and a more matter of fact,

unemphasized phrase: "it is true". We only have a few consonants left to discuss.

First off, let's cover a pair of dental consonants. These are consonants made using

the tip of your tongue against your upper teeth.

There is a voiceless one - θ as in think. And a voiced one "[ð]" as in there.

If you have trouble making this consonant, try starting with the consonant /s/ and then sticking

your tongue a little further out to touch your teeth - /ssss/ - tthhhhh. /sss/ -/thhh/.

There are even word pairs that can

contrast those two sounds, like sink and think. Sink, think.

You can use the same concept to go from /zzz/ to /THHHH/ - zzzz THHHH. Zen, then.

We can make another pair of consonants by starting with /s/ or /z/ and then going in

the other direction with our tongues.

Instead of going forward from /s/ - /th/, we can go back /s/ - [ʃ]. [ʃ] as in shack

is made with the tip of your tongue just a bit behind your alveolar ridge. /SH/ shack,

which you can compare to "sack" - sack, shack.

There's a voiced version of this -[ʒ] as in beige, which you can find in the exact

same way. /zzzz/ /Zhhhh/. Beigge.

One little nuance I'll add for these two consonants is that you'll make these sounds

a little more accurately if you also round your lips just a little bit.

It's not "Sshhhhh" (open mouth), it's "shhh" - rounded lips.

These two consonants show up a lot in combination with /t/ or /d/, giving you the unvoiced [tʃ]

as in in Chew, which is literally just a combination of /t/ and /sh/ - /t/ /sh/ /ch/ chew.

And there's the voiced [dʒ] as in Gel. Which is just /d/ and the /zh/. /d/ /zh/ /dzh/

gel. We only have 4 consonants left.

We'll start with [ŋ], as in song or hung.This is a pretty common consonant across a lot

of languages, so more likely than not, you have this one in your repertoire. It's basically

just an N that you make with the back of your tongue instead of the front. So you close off your

mouth using the back of your tongue, as if you were about to say g, and then allow the

air to come through your nose, and you get this NGGG sound.

So here's son, with a normal, front N, and sung, with that back, NG sound.

Next up, we have [w] as in water or wet. Most languages have an /u/ sound of some sort,

and the /w/ in "water" is basically just a very short, very intense /u/.

The important ingredients here are as follows:

First, your lips - they need to be in a tight circle, like this:

And second, your tongue - it should be pulled up and back, so that the back part of your

tongue is close to where you'd say /g/ or /k/ - way back there. /u/ /w/ /water/.

Our final two consonants are the English L and R - which can be really problematic for many speakers.

Let's start with [ɫ] as in Leak or Lee.

Many languages do have some kind of L sound - usually, the tongue position looks something

like this: The tip of your tongue touches right behind

your upper front teeth, and the rest of your tongue is further down, allowing air to escape

on both sides of it. It sounds like /l/, /li/ - which you'll find in Italian, French,

Dutch, Cantonese, Portuguese, German - lots of common languages.

The L in English is a little bit different. The tip is in a similar place, but the big

difference happens with the back of your tongue - in English, it's raised up,

so instead of /li/, you get /Lee/. Li [li], Lee [ɫi]. li, Lee. The English L has an ULLL

sound in it, coming from the back of your tongue. For most people who have trouble producing

this consonant, the most helpful thing you can do will be ear training. The better you

can hear this consonant and exactly how it differs from other consonants, the better

you'll be able to produce it.

With that said, let's move on to a closely related and equally challenging consonant,

the English R - [ɹ] as in rat.

A good sounding R has three different ingredients, relating to what you're doing with the back

of your tongue, the front of your tongue, and your lips.

Now I said that that R is a closely related consonant to L, and I said that because the

back of the tongue is in nearly the exact same position for both consonants. LLL-RRR-LLL-RRR

- The back of the tongue for R is potentially a little bit higher but only barely.

Let's look at what you should be doing with the front of the tongue - that is naturally

quite different from L - with L, the tip of the tongue touched your alveolar ridge. For

RR, you're going to bring the tip down a bit, so it's hanging out right in the middle

of your mouth. RR. So... if you do those two things - keep the back of your tongue way

up and the front of your tongue in the middle of your mouth, you're going to get an "eerrr"

sound, which is most the way there.

But you can get a bit more accurate with your R sound, by also paying attention to your

lips. Specifically, look at what happens when you round them, as if you were about to say "oo"

"eerrr"...RRR…"eerr"...RRR - that lip rounding is going to make that RR sound

just a little bit more clear and more native sounding.

Once again - this is a consonant that you need to learn how to hear before you can really

work on producing it well. So work on ear training first - ideally with minimal pairs

- before you worry too much about what your tongue and lips are doing.

With that, we've covered all of the consonants of English.

To quickly review... We began with 8 sounds you likely already

have in your native language:

There was [b] as in Boy

And [m] as in Man. Both of these consonants were made with your lips pressed together.

Then came [f] as in Father - bottom lip to upper teeth

Three alveolar consonants, with your tongue against your alveolar ridge:

[d] as in dog, [s] as in Snake And [n] as in nail.

[j] as in yellow, made with the middle of your tongue up near your hard palate

And [g] as in Gopher, with the back of your tongue up against your soft palate.

Then we talked about voicing and introduced you to [z] as in zebra, the voiced sibling

of [s] And [v] as in vote, the voiced sibling of [f]

Then we got into a big discussion about aspiration and covered 3 consonants in English that tend

to be more apirated then you're probably used to:

[pʰ] as in paper.

[tʰ] as in table And [kʰ] as in cape.

Then we covered a couple of consonants that occur way down in the vocal cords - the simple

exhalation , [h] as in hang.

And the glottal stop [ʔ] as in Uh oh!

Next, we started from [s] and then went forward or back to create 4 more conosonants. Bringing

the tongue forward to the upper teeth, we had [θ] as in think.

And a voiced sibling, [ð] as in there.

And pulling the tongue back behind the alveolar ridge, we got to [ʃ] as in shack,

and its voiced sibling[ʒ] as in beige.

There were also two combination sounds, adding a [t] or a [d] to get [tʃ] as in chew.

And [dʒ] as in gel.

Then we did an N at the back of the throat, [ŋ] as in song.

And a short version of an [u] vowel, [w] as in water.

Finally we covered the hardest consonants in English, [ɫ] as in Leak , made with a

raised front and back of your tongue.

And[ɹ] as in rat, made with a raised back of your tongue, and rounded lips.

And that's it for English's consonants. Next up, the English vowels.

For more infomation >> English (General American) Pronunciation, Video 1: English (GA) Phonetics and Spelling - Duration: 18:26.

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The Most Oddly Satisfying Video Ever | Best Satisfying Video 2017 to Watch - Duration: 10:01.

Thanks for watching

Hope you have a great time

Please, like, comment and subscribe for more!!

For more infomation >> The Most Oddly Satisfying Video Ever | Best Satisfying Video 2017 to Watch - Duration: 10:01.

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Why Temple? - Duration: 1:35.

[music]

[Why did you choose Temple?]

I chose it because it's in the city,

um, so there's a lot of diversity.

There's a lot of places to go.

It's pretty close to a lot of cultural events,

so I like that.

I'm an engineer, so the engineering programs,

and I'm a resident of PA, so also

it had a great amount of those programs for the cost,

and then, also for the great ROTC program, as well, that's also here.

I'm studying media production,

and Temple has a--

I know Temple has a great program for that,

so, it just seemed like a good choice.

I'm from St. Louis, Missouri, so

I wanted to go kind of far from home,

try and spread my wings a little,

and it was just a different city, like I had never

been to Philly before I visited to come here,

and I fell in love right away.

[What's your favorite thing about Temple?]

I think my favorite thing about Temple University

is being able to be so close to Center City,

and I could just get on a subway and do whatever I want in the city, really.

It has to be the athletics.

I love the football games.

I love the basketball games...

The food trucks.

[laughs]

Uh, definitely the diversity of people you meet here.

There's so many different types of people here,

different types of professors that come from everywhere,

so, it's just, like, a really integrative experience.

There's always something going on.

Never a dull moment, really, on campus.

[Describe Temple in one word.]

Awesome!

[laughs]

An adventure.

Exciting.

Diverse.

Lit.

Opportunity.

Fun.

Temple is a fun school.

[See yourself here.]

[Choose Temple.]

For more infomation >> Why Temple? - Duration: 1:35.

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How to Play Steam Park in 5 Minutes - The Rules Girl - Duration: 4:57.

I'm the Rules Girl, and this is Steam Park, a fast-paced game of robo-carnivals for 2-4

players.

In Steam Park, players build rides and attract robotic tourists, competing to make the best

theme park in Roboburg.

The goal of the game is to win, and you win by making the most money, typically earned

by filling your rides with guests, achieving bonus objectives, and avoiding heavy pollution

fines!

Your carnival is in town for six days, and during each day you'll do three things:

Roll dice to select your actions, Add polluting dirt to your park,

Perform your actions, and Collect income.

Your theme park starts off humbly as this empty patch of land, and a collection of 3

bonus objectives.

First up is the roll phase.

Simultaneously, each player grabs six dice, and rolls them.

These dice represent the actions you'll take later in the day, including things like

building new rides, cleaning your park, or attracting new visitors.

Take any of the results you like and place them on your pig board, then take the rest

and reroll them.

Keep doing this, as fast as you can.

Once all your dice are on the pig board, grab the best turn order token left.

If you finish rolling first, you'll get to go first later in the day!

When only one slowpoke is left, she only gets to roll three more times before she takes

the last place token.

Some of these actions, like construction, require polluting.

So during the dirt phase, for each die you rolled with this symbol on it, add 1 dirt

to your dump.

Once you have visitors in your park, each one of them will generate one dirt as well.

If you're stuck with the last turn order token, you get 2 extra dirt.

But if you were quick enough to get the 2nd place token, you can remove 2 dirt, and if

you were the fastest player, you get to remove 4.

Now it's time for the Action Phase.

In turn order, players use all of their dice in any order.

With this symbol, you can build rides.

Rides come in 6 colors, and 3 sizes, costing dice equal to their size.

You can buy as many rides as you can afford this turn as long as none of them are the

same size.

When building a new ride, it can't touch any other structure in your park, even on

a corner!

If you're expanding a ride by buying another ride segment of the same color, it can touch

on exactly one side at precisely one space.

Now that you have rides, you'll need riders!

This symbol lets you try to attract patrons that match the colors of your rides.

For each die you spend, add one visitor from the visitor pool into the bag, shake it up,

and draw that many visitors out.

Any visitors matching an empty space on one of your rides will strap themselves in, riding

until the end of the game!

Every other visitor you drew finds your park boring and leaves, going back to the visitor

pool.

This icon lets you play 1 bonus card from your hand, earning cash depending on how well

you achieve its objective.

This icon simply cleans up two dirt.

And finally, this icon lets you construct a stand, a single square tile that gives you

special powers, such as making cleaning or attracting visitors easier.

You can build one stand per die, as long as you don't build 2 of the same type this

turn.

Like rides, stands can't touch any other structure.

Need more space?

Instead of performing their respective actions, any die with a symbol can be spent to add

an additional ground tile, connected by at least two squares.

And no, you can't use blank faces for anything, even building additional grounds.

Now that actions are over, it's time to make money!

Each visitor in your park hands over 3 dollars.

If you have less than 3 bonus cards, draw 2 and choose 1, repeating until you have 3

again.

Hand your turn order token back in and start rolling for the next day!

And that's the game!

At the end of the 6th day, your carnival closes up shop.

If you left any dirt behind, the citizens of Roboburg fine you.

If you have 30 or more dirt, you lose all of your money!

The player with the most money leftover wins the game!

Ready to play?

Organize the components as shown and add one visitor of each color to the visitor bag.

Give each player six dice, a pig, their starting ground tile, and six bonus cards.

Pick three, shuffling the others back into the deck.

Place the turn order tokens in the middle, depending on the number of players.

Start a countdown and get ready to roll!

If you're still iffy on the rules, your group can make the game simpler: instead of

having special abilities, each stand is simply worth 3 dollars at the end of the game.

If you like Steam Park, you might also like Unfair, an upcoming theme-park building game.

You might also like Escape: The Curse of the Temple, another real-time dice-rolling game.

If you enjoyed this video, considering like it and subscribing to the Rules Girl for more

ultra-concise rules explanations.

For more infomation >> How to Play Steam Park in 5 Minutes - The Rules Girl - Duration: 4:57.

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Mercedes-Benz B-Klasse 180 CDI BLUE EFFICIENCY EDITION NAVI/LED/2xPDC - Duration: 1:03.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz B-Klasse 180 CDI BLUE EFFICIENCY EDITION NAVI/LED/2xPDC - Duration: 1:03.

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The History of the Mockbuster - Duration: 22:48.

Hi John Hess from FilmmakerIQ.com and today we'll dive in to the history of knock-off

cinema and the mockbuster.

We'll start our story at the close of the silent era.

By 1927 the Hollywood studios system was a well a defined industry dominated by a handful

of vertically integrated players that owned both the equipment and manpower to create

the movies as well as the theaters that screened to an eager public.

The average cost per film ranged from $190,000 at Fox to $275,000 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer - but

that was only an average as major event movies could cost upwards of a cool $1 million while

cheaper productions could be turned around quickly for only $50 grand.

These cheaper films allowed the studio to maximize the value from facilities and personnel

- to keep stages in constant use generating product while also serving as a training ground

for new talent.

Smaller major studios like Columbia Pictures and Universal Pictures focused mainly on these

smaller productions with shorter running timesaimed at small-town and urban neighborhood venues.

Below these major studio playors were the minors - even smaller production studios known

collectively as "Poverty Row".

These production houses focused on films where costs might run as low as $3,000.

Unlike the Majors who owned their own distribution and theaters, these productions sought profit

wherever they could, booking in small independent movie houses around the country.

When sound arrived, these independent movie houses began to adopt a new programming scheme

that would come to dominate in the 1930s.

Now keep in mind, this was long before the era of multiplexes,

most movie theaters had only a single screen.

Your ticket would buy you a newsreel followed by a short, serial or a cartoon and then a double feature.

The first film of the double feature was the main event -usually a film rented from the majors.

Being that these were independent theaters they couldn't get a shot at the first run

of these big films.

That was reserved exclusively for the studio owned theaters.

So these "A" pictures were second run screenings…

But that's where the second film in the double feature comes into play.

The "B" pictures, often the product of Poverty Row studios, were really inexpensive

- even cheaper to rent by the minute than the cartoons or shorts.

But they extended the amount of movie your ticket affords you - allowed the theater to

advertise on the quantity of entertainment - rather than the quality.

And during the Depression of the 1930s, this was a winning strategy.

Despite early resistance to this programming scheme, even the major studios theater chains

began to adopted this bifurcated model and established "B" units to provide films

for the double feature market.

Out of this came a practice known as Block booking.

To get access to a studio's prestige "A" pictures, these independent exhibitors had

to buy a block of B-pictures rented out as a flat fee often sight unseen.

The price of these B-pictures could be set to ensure profitability of the film regardless

of the quality or demand.

Now these weren't great films - theaters would rotate the billing every few days to

keep patrons coming back.

Even with the major studios in the game the demand for B-films was insatiable.

By 1935, B movie production made up 50% of Warner Bros' output - Fox joined ranks also

dedicating half of it's output to B films.

Counting the 300 or so films made annually by Poverty Row studios, 75% of the Golden

Era of Hollywood's output was low budget B movies.

In other words three out of every four movies of this so called

Golden Era of Hollywood were straight up cash grabs.

Most of these were Westerns but the out of this we also did get the hard boiled pulp

fiction crime movie - the basis of film noir.

Now, no one sets out to make a bad film, a theory that we might put to the test later,

but as long as the money was all but guaranteed, there isn't much, outside pride, to making

the films better.

Then two major changes shook up the industry effectively killing the cash cow.

The first was a 1945 Supreme Court Ruling in United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc.

which forced the Big studios to divest their holdings in theaters and change the practice of selling films.

The guarantee of profit through pre sold theaters was over and the independent theaters could

at least have access to the big prestigious films during their first run..

And then came Television.

This double whammy sent movie ticket sales into a spiral dropping 50% in the decade after 1946.

The majors countered with spectacle - lavish color, 3D, widescreen, surround sound - things

you couldn't get on your set top at home.

The minors turned to sensationalism and exploitation - films that tackled the taboo, underserved

niches, or just a popular special interest..

And sometimes that popular special interest happens to be another popular and sucessful big movie.

A mockbuster is a low budget film designed to exploit the marketing and buzz surrounding

a large prestigious studio film.

Now we can't be sure when the first mockbuster hit movie theaters as B-pictures during the

Golden Age of Hollywood were rarely written about.

But this mockbuster practice of copying big hit movies probably got it's legs at the

end of the 1950s especially in the horror and sci-fi genres which at the time were staples

of low budget productions.

One of the earliest examples is The Monster of Piedras Blancas from 1959 - a direct knock

off of Creature from the Black Lagoon of 1954 from the so called "Gill Man" horror cycle.

The Monster of Piedras Blancas even produced by Jack Kevan who worked on the suit for Creature

from the Black Lagoon as well as other monsters when he was under contract Universal-International.

Kevan was able to score some sweetheart deals for equipment from his former employer as

Universal was going through money troubles and wanted to help their former technicians

find work in independent film.

Well after a couple unsuccessful movies Kevan left the film business and started a cosmetic company.

Another example of early mockbusters comes in 1965's Village of the Giants which capitalized

on the giant woman craze started with 1958's Attack of the Fifty Foot Woman.

Combining elements of beach party, Village of Giants was directed by Bert I. Gordon who

has a string of shrinking or giants B films in his filmography which is ironic given his

initials are B.I.G.

In the late 70s with the rise of grindhouse cinema - named so after converted burlesque

theaters that used to feature bump and grind dances - we see a whole ecosystem of exploitation

B-films coming into being with the erosion of the Production Codes and censorship.

Roger Corman, the king of B-pictures, produced a Piranha in 1978 one of the many many shark/fish

films aimed at capitalizing on 1975's Jaws - which many considered the first modern blockbuster.

Then came Star Wars in 1977 which ushered in a series of space operas including Starcrash

in 1979 and Battle Beyond the Stars 1980.

On the heels of Ridley Scott's 1979 Alien, the director of Starcrash Luigi Cozzi offered

his take in the mockbuster Contamination.

Steven Spielberg's unparalleled track record means he often finds his work the subject

of mockbuster throughout the eighties and nineties: ET, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and

Jurassic Park all spawned mockbusters but none perhaps as lauagably memorable as Mac

and Me in 1988.

These films, and many more which we won't list, at best could be said to be merely copying an idea.

It wasn't until the 90s when you had a fully matured home video market did companies started

to use mockbusters to draft off the marketing event film.

The first target was Disney's Second golden age.

GoodTimes Entertainment, founded in 1984 by Kenneth, Joseph and Stanley Cayre began originally

as a distributor of public domain films but by the 90s their business strategy comprised

of knock-off straight-to-video animated movies like Cinderella (1994), Leo the Lion: King

of the Jungle (1994), The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) Alice in Wonderland (1995) Pocahontas:

The Legend (1995) Hercules (1995) and Jungle Book (1995).

There must not have been that much money in it because the company folded in 2005.

But mockbuster animation has been alive in will with Video Brinquedo - a Brazilian CGI

animation studio that picked the slack producing The Little Cars (2006), Ratatoing (2007),

The Little Panda Fighter and Tiny Robots.

And now we come to the company that all of you are waiting for me to talk about: Asylum.

Founded in 1997 by David Michael Latt, David Rimawi and Sherri Strain, Asylum started in

the direct to video horror business.

Competition was fierce and the company could never get a solid foothold.

In 2005 Asylum produced a low budget adaptationof H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds - which

happened to be released the same year as Steven Spielberg's version - Spielberg keeps popping up.

On the title alone Blockbuster Video ordered 100,000 copies, significantly outselling all

their company's previous films - Latt and Rimawi began to reconsider their business

model in favor of mockbusters or what they called "tie ins"

And boy did they tie in: Asylum would go on to produce.

Snakes on a Train

The Da Vinci Treasure

Pirates of Treasure Island

Transmorphers

AVH Alien versus Hunter

I am Omega

100 Million BC

2012 Doomsday

Allan Quartermain and the Temple of Skulls

Death Racers

Journey to the Center of the Earth

Monster

Street Racer

Sunday School Musical

The Day the Earth Stopped

The Land the Time Forgot

The Princess of Mars

The Terminators

Transmorphers 2:The Fall of Man

2012 Supernova

Paranormal Entitty

6 Guns

Megapiranha

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes

Battle of Los Angeles

The Amityville Haunting

Grimm's Snow White

Bikini Spring Break

Abraham Lincoln vs Zombies

American Warships

Nazies at the Center of the Earth

AE: Apocalypse Earth

Atlantic Rim

Hansel and Gretel

Age of Tomorrow

Android Cop

Apocalypse Pompeii

Mercenaries

Hercules Reborn

Jail Bait

Sleeping Beauty

Z Nation

Avengers: Grimm

Bound

San Andreas Quake

Roadwars

Martian Land

Izze's Way Home

and In the Name of Ben Hur

And that's only the ones we have so far but Asylum has seen some success in original

films like the classic Sharknado,

Sharknado 2: The Second One

and Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No.

While American mockbusters a great source of cheesy fun, it's the international mockbusters

that take the cake for pure daring and boldness when it comes to knock-off cinema.

Low budget foreign produced illegitimate remakes or sequels are often only known to the locals,

never to be released outside of their original country - that is until the internet happened.

These mockbusters come from all over: from Denmark's only monster movie - Reptillicus

was made to capitalize on the Godzilla craze in 1961:

From Indonesia, we have the classic Lady Terminator released in 1989 about an Indonesian spirit

using the body of her enemy's granddaughter to fulfill a 100-year-old curse of death and destruction.

To mockbusters of Bollywood in 1993's Mahakaal - India's take on Nightmare on Elm Street.

And even Nigeria which has no film industry to speak of and electricity is spotty at best

- a small cottage industry made possible by digital video gives us Masoyiyata in 2003

which is a retelling of James Cameron's Titanic.

It's hard not to have at least a soft spot for some of these as they are not much more

harmless than fan films for local audiences.

But when it comes to international knock-offs - one country reigns supreme - Turkey.

From Turkish ET, Turkish Superman, Turkish Spiderman, Turkish Star Trek, Turkish Wizard

of Oz and even a Turkish Psycho - spoilor alert - it's a musical.

For economic reasons the Turkish are kings of the Hollywood mockbuster.

But to me, nothing approaches the sheer brilliance of 'The Man who saves the World' - otherwise

known as "Turkish Star Wars" - I promise I did not doctor any of this clip:

Oh, I guess we can't show you a clip.

You see there's this Turkish network on YouTube that claims they own the rights to this movie

despite the fact that original director blatantly ripped shots from Star Wars: A New Hope for their rear projection.

Oh and the soundtrack is literally just the Indiana Jones theme - not a cover of it - the actual recording frome Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Mind you it's not the original copyright holders disputing - it's the guys that claim to own the mockbuster.

So if you want to see what is possibly the worst film ever created - google Turkish Star Wars.

There is a free English subtitled version out there which, unlike the official version from the Turkish network, is shown in the proper 4x3 aspect ratio.

So the obvious question is: How is this all this even legal?

The success of these mockbusters are based on "drafting opportunity" - a term borrowed

from aeronautics which means you ride the slipstream behind a larger object to save energy in this

case riding the marketing of a popular movie to generate sales.

In animation, a big studio could spend four years in production with hundreds of artists

whereas a small studio can ride that success churning out a film in six months by a handful of artists.

Large tent pole Live Action movies today have the same multi-year production schedule which

gives small nimble studios the same drafting advantage.

How do they get away with it?

Well the most basic answer to the legal question is you can't copyright an idea or a title.

If you wanted an animated movie about Aladdin, you can because it's a public domain story.

However you can't start pulling in details from the Disney classic.

And that was the subject of a lawsuit between Disney and Goodtimes Entertainment who released

their version of Aladdin in Videocassette a few months before the Disney version hit the theaters.

Well the federal court settled in favor of Goodtimes noting such differences as the golden

mustachioed genie as opposed to a blue goateed genie in the Disney version.

So as long as the stories and productions are substantially different and in most cases

that's a necessity because of budget - there is no legal complications.

However, producers of mockbusters have to be weary of walking the fine line into false advertising.

In 2013 Phase 4 Films retitled their animation "The Legend of Sirilla" to ride the wave

of a Disney bohemeth: calling the French animated feature "Frozen Land".

The move landed the film in court with Disney rightfully arguing that the logos were too

similar - and if you look at them side by side - they have a pretty strong case.

The case was settled in 2014 with Phase 4 reverting back to the original title, paying

$100,000 and promising to make "all practicable efforts" to remove copies of Frozen Land from

stores and online distributors.

And it's not just animation.

In 2012 Warner Bros. took everyone's favorite mockbuster studio to court over "Age of

Hobbits" - unlike fairytales, Tolkein's writings were exclusively licensed to Warner Brothers.

Asylum claimed that they were justified in using the word "Hobbit" as it was a generic name.

But Warner's provided evidence in the form of surveys done by Nielsen National Research

Group that showed approximately 16 to 24 percent of survey respondents were confused about

the source of Age of the Hobbits.

The evidence against Asylum was strong enough to win over the judge and Asylum released

the film under the name Clash of Empires.

Now in the case of those foreign knock offs with wholesale infringement… well you can't

squeeze blood from a stone.

The Mockbuster is a self referential sign of a mature media culture - Where there is

a large culturally important film and there is money to be made, there will be mockbusters.

But in our little exploration of the history of film, I hope you've learned that cash

grabs are not unique to our or any time period.

And even sometimes in the least likely of places, you can see the indomitable human

spirit yearning to tell and hear stories.

Stories that eventually become legends and part of our shared human experience.

Be a part of that legend or just be part of the narrative of humanity - go out and tell

your story - make something great.

I'm John Hess and I'll see you at FilmmakerIQ.com

For more infomation >> The History of the Mockbuster - Duration: 22:48.

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How to hang pictures and photos on wall. Ideas - Duration: 7:33.

How to hang pictures and photos on wall. Ideas

See more videos! Subscribe to the channel!

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Fast N So Long - Duration: 41:34.

For more infomation >> Fast N So Long - Duration: 41:34.

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For more infomation >> Fast N So Long - Duration: 41:34.

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

Qué es KiStyle? - Duration: 0:48.

KiStyle is an image consulting and fashion production company.

In the field of image consulting, we are targeting women and men.

The message we want to pass on our customers? Specially, we want to enhance the image of women,

we want every woman to feel she can be the leading role of her life, with her body, with the body she has, and that she doesn't have to change it

to be beautiful and feel pretty. At KiStyle we want fashion to fit your body, not the other way around.

We want you to learn to know your body so that according to it, you can make the most out of what you buy,

and everything you have in your wardrobe.

For more infomation >> Qué es KiStyle? - Duration: 0:48.

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For more infomation >> Qué es KiStyle? - Duration: 0:48.

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How To Growing, Planting And Harvest Lemongrass - Gardening Tips - Duration: 5:35.

For more infomation >> How To Growing, Planting And Harvest Lemongrass - Gardening Tips - Duration: 5:35.

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For more infomation >> How To Growing, Planting And Harvest Lemongrass - Gardening Tips - Duration: 5:35.

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Swae Lee From Rae Sremmurd – I'm Over Malia Obama | TMZ TV - Duration: 2:04.

WELCOME TO PART TWO OF "TMZ"

LOVE CONNECTION, WHERE LAST TIME

SWAE LEE FROM RAE SREMMURD WAS

LOOKING TO SCORE A DATE WITH

MALIA OBAMA.

ALL RIGHT, LET'S FIND OUT HOW

THAT'S GOING.

>> HAVE YOU HEARD ANYTHING BACK?

>> NAH.

>> OH, MAN.

>> APPARENTLY NOT VERY WELL.

>> IT'S BEEN LIKE A MONTH.

BRO.

>> OK, YES, PLUS THE TIME HE

ASKED HER OUT BEFORE THAT.

BUT IT'S POSSIBLE MALIA COULD

STILL GO SO DON'T GIVE UP.

SWAY.

>> I GIVE UP.

>> YOU GIVE UP?

>> YEAH.

>> WHY THROW IN THE TOWEL?

>> BECAUSE HE'S BEEN TURNED DOWN

TWICE.

>> HOW MANY TIMES HAVE YOU SEEN

A PERSON WIN THE OTHER PERSON

OVER?

>> BY ATTRITION.

WEAR THEM DOWN.

>> HOE ROMANTIC.

>> I'M A LITTLE FORWARD.

>> TALK ABOUT NOT HAVING A TYPE.

>> HE HAS HIS EYES SET ON SOME

LITTLE FOREIGN CHICK.

>> OH, OK.

BUT WAIT, ANOTHER WOMAN SO SOON?

HARVEY: ISN'T THERE SOMEBODY

WORTH FIGHTING FOR?

>> NOT OVER AND OVER AGAIN.

HARVEY: MAYBE SHE'S GOT PRESSURE

RIGHT NOW, HER DAD IS SAYING

IT'S NOT A GOOD IDEA.

YOU DON'T KNOW.

VAN: I DON'T THINK OBAMA IS THE

TYPE OF DAD THAT WOULD STOP HER.

>> YEAH, HE'S A COOL DAD.

JUST LOOK AT THE LEATHER JACK.

DON'T TURN IN THE MALIA TOWEL

YET.

>> IF ANYBODY STILL WANTS TO

PICK THAT UP, THE OFFER IS STILL

ON THE TABLE.

>> BUT DON'T WORRY, THINGS

PROBABLY WON'T WORK OUT BETWEEN

THESE TWO AND THEN YOU CAN SWOOP

BACK IN.

For more infomation >> Swae Lee From Rae Sremmurd – I'm Over Malia Obama | TMZ TV - Duration: 2:04.

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I'm Competing In Comedy Brawl! - Duration: 1:01.

Hi Everyone My name is Vishal Rose and I'm going to be performing at the Toronto Comedy

Brawl this Year!

My date is April 13th it's a Thursday at the Fox & Fiddle Wellesley, right across from

Wellesley Station

I'll Be going on anywhere between 8:30pm and I believe the show goes until 10pm

so if you can make it out to Toronto on that day- Mark you calendars, because I'll be performing

for 5 minutes to try and make it to the 2nd round of Toronto Comedy Brawl, which is hosted

by Imperial Comedy

Catch me every week on Wednesdays at the Green Leaf Vapour Lounge in Brampton because those

guys are dope because they give us stage time to practice our sets AND give us exposure

with a great audience

if you want to see a great family and a vibe GO TO Green Leaf Vapour Lounge for great comedy

So, catch me in Toronto on Thursday April 13th @ The Fox & Fiddle Wellesley and until

then I'll Catch you late guys!

For more infomation >> I'm Competing In Comedy Brawl! - Duration: 1:01.

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BMW 6 Serie 640i High Executive High Executive M Pakket Softclose Head up Stoelvent. FULL! Zondag a. - Duration: 1:05.

For more infomation >> BMW 6 Serie 640i High Executive High Executive M Pakket Softclose Head up Stoelvent. FULL! Zondag a. - Duration: 1:05.

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Introduction - Duration: 2:41.

For more infomation >> Introduction - Duration: 2:41.

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Golden Retriever Stole the LAST Cookie!!! Ollie Shouldn't be on the couch... - Duration: 2:58.

What.

Ollie's grumpy and he wants a cuddle.

Hello Toby.

Commer here, you want a cuddle?

come on.

Up!

[Mon laughs] up come on.

You know what to do.

You gonna come up? come on.

come on.

come on.

come on.

Come on, up you come.

Lay down, lay down.

good boy.

this is what the ladies taught him.

yup. we love cuddles when you're not home.

[laughing] don't we ollie?

Dad doesn't let you on the couch.

no

this is the secret stuff that happens while I'm working.

whats up baby.

he's like, but I like being on here!

He wants to make sure that I'm okay with it.

cause you know you're not meant to be up here.

I think he just wants my attention.

he doesn't care about you.

He wants to make sure you're alright.

He loves dad.

Go on.

My cookie.

Do you want my cookie ollie.

You put your mouth on my cookie! you put your mouth on my cookie!

Do you want half? you can have half with me.

hey!

Steady! alright you can have half with Toby.

Go on, bite it.

go on toby. you can have my cookie.

It was going to be mine, but I love you both more, so you can have it.

Is that good?That's a peanut butter cookie, all gone, all gone.

You gotta clean up the mess you made now, no more cookie for you.

Tea and cookies for me, I'm going to see if we have anymore.

Did we finish all the cookies?

Yeah I gave them to mum. [laughing] You got my last cookie!

Tea and no cookies.

You're lucky I love you so much.

I didn't realise that that was the last cookie!

So mean, oh well the boys at least get some love.

On Saturday we are doing the announcement of who won that competition and we are doing

a live stream.

It's April fools so we are going to have some fun with the boys, we have got some really

exciting stuff.

Don't forget to tune in, it is going to be at 11am Australian time, 5pm PST time and

8am US eastern standard.

I think that's right.

But we'll see you guys on saturday

For more infomation >> Golden Retriever Stole the LAST Cookie!!! Ollie Shouldn't be on the couch... - Duration: 2:58.

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veronica&logan || love k i l l e r - Duration: 1:59.

For more infomation >> veronica&logan || love k i l l e r - Duration: 1:59.

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Fiat Panda 1.1 actual - Duration: 0:41.

For more infomation >> Fiat Panda 1.1 actual - Duration: 0:41.

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This game F#%ed me! | Shadows 2 game gameplay part 3 - Duration: 13:35.

Yo thanks for joining me everyone its

GalactiK and we're back in shadows too

now if this is your first time on the

channel be sure to hit that subscribe

button because I would love to have you

be part of the crew now we have three

floors left in this game and we are in a

real bad way walk from behind okay yeah

cuz we're oh it's my glow stick green

now what the hell that was weird okay I

did not expect that let's run down

that's why I can't see jack get soda of

my mental health doing better now ok so

we want to go back here I'm guessing

cool need to hide quickly or I think I'm

hidden that's not

yeah we're going to try again we only

got three four is left but we're

definitely going to try again okay I'm

trying to make it that make a strategy

so when that thing starts coming after

us again there we go close my eyes too I

don't know if that does anything okay I

think we lost it I'm gonna be super

pissed I turn around and it comes and

grabs us ok it ran that way ok so i

think we want the right direction I

really just want to get on the elevator

right now I really don't want to deal

with anything else oh you fucking

mannequins they can break them with

something heavy like a bulldozer that

would be kind of cool fuck and I'm all

out of battery juice there's the

ballerina thing shadow I need to shut

this door I will just in case nothing

yes I should check the toilet I mean I

could find something awful in here or

key

now I know that when I shut my eyes I'm

supposed to call me down but I don't

really feel like that's helping me a

whole lot to be honest you guys oh maybe

did shit okay what hell out of my way

hopefully the keys in here ha shit I'll

take a base old man that is friggin

gnarly-looking beat the shit out of some

mannequins now fuck out of my way now

don't drop the back keep it with you

jackass like you could have been armed

when he had the crowbar right but then

he dropped it for whatever reason my

developing film here wait I just beat

the shit out of mannequins with that bat

because that really felt good door huh

doesn't work huh I can't see a thing

this is bullshit

okay all right there's my hand Thank

with a fuck am I

Jesus Christ ok can I like maybe get

some batteries or somethin I have my

friggin glow stick works nothing thank

God Jesus the door is locked for safety

reasons please use the following code 25

times three plus five so 80 staff only

on look door code is 80 unless I'm

really pissed poor with math good good I

hear stuff behind me and I can't see

anything in front of me so if this game

is going to get a jump sorry lad

jump-scare outta me it's going to do it

now fuck

yeah I'll just step over the bodies fine

or not get help

ok

please look every some batteries or

something over here because I can't see

shit what is that oh why does that do I

can use this drone to search for meds I

feel dizzy as hell I can't go past these

mannequin myself the drone should do the

job oh that's very unexpected I did not

woohoo the jump nope but it can go

through the venting system may but leg

is not having a good time

you take the flashlight dickhead no all

right fine I would have totally try to

get the flashlight too because

apparently doesn't work let me see is

there something behind me there you go

cuz I get the measure know what is going

on by playing metal gear solid into

trouble again chaffin aid signs of that

how do i do that i say because i don't

think the vent being screwed off of the

wall and laying on the floor is and it's

dead giveaway where I see how do you see

what it was I get the hell out of here

now please well like this game is a trip

this is crazy what's going on in here

for one you guys we can make it through

this we're golden there's any of our

stuff work I would it I'm almost done I

know that feeling oh do do I know that

feeling I won't let you go you were my

prom date not hers you're mine this is

like an elaborate troll from some

asshole friend those don't want to open

sir why they'll die in agonizing pain

huh I'm really digging the like John

Carpenter style music going on in the

background right now

I missed a key or so come here drink a

soda get your shit together there keep

dime SI quis that what i did sure did

let's save that flashlight you didn't

see that guy till the very end my bad

all right we can do this you guy you

know do I guess I gotta read that I'm

cool no I don't know if I have to read

all the notes or not I'm just doing it

anyway in the same spot sure is cool we

can get here

lamprey good oh is this the stairs lose

the chair what chair okay looks like

what the hell are you talking about okay

here the police the hell if the game

freeze up on me holy shit are you

fucking serious oh that's a load of shit

what the fuck yeah I can do it I did it

now I'm stuck in the floor Wow alright

well I don't know if I'm going to end

this game cuz I'm fucking stuck yeah

well I think that's the end of my

experience with the shadows to fuck this

game I can't believe it did that to me

at the very end thanks for watching

everyone i hope you liked it we've got a

good laugh out of me getting fucked

right there anyway thanks for watching

I'll see you guys in the next video bye

for now one restarted the game and saw

there was a continued option so that's

what we're going to do and luckily let

me continue from the first floor so the

hell head up here the time guys

hopefully we'll get hung up or stuck on

anything that was bullshitting last one

there we go we moved it so we done quick

episode I know you guys there is police

everywhere they took me with them and I

feel safe now I don't know if I would

it's a miracle I escaped

the

so all right guys there's there's the

end of Joe's story thanks for watching

King I do hope you enjoyed this small

series if you want me to play the second

character let me know down in the

comments below thank you again everyone

hit the like button I love you all I

will see you guys in the next video or

the next series see you later

For more infomation >> This game F#%ed me! | Shadows 2 game gameplay part 3 - Duration: 13:35.

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Identity Issues - My Personal Struggles (CS:GO Gameplay) - Duration: 5:38.

Hello people my name is seven and today I want to give a small update about what's

been going on lately on life and spoiler alert: it's not a good one.

So over the past I'd say 3 months I've been having what I'm going to call as Existential

issues.

Or, in other words, I'm just fucking sad and I don't want to talk about it issues.

This isn't anything new, I've been having these issues for about 3 years now but it

has always been on and off.

Some weeks were better than others but for the most part I'd say I was coping very

well with it and it wasn't anything out of the ordinary.

Everybody has existential doubts and feeling down every once in a while wasn't bad.

That is until 3 months ago were, I don't know why (maybe it's because I'm getting

older), my moodiness started to because more frequent.

This channel completely depends on me being on a good mood.

I cannot work when I'm sad so I completely avoid my channel and any type of work for

that matter when I'm not feeling well.

So that's why there hasn't been that many videos lately.

I try to grab the little time were I'm not contemplating the meaning of life to develop

my channel but they haven't been as frequent as I'd like.

Why do I feel sad?

Well, my entire life has been me trying to discover myself and failing.

I have this belief in my head that I've had since ever that I exist for a reason.

That there's something out there that I was made for.

An activity, another person, something that would identify me.

I tried sports, quit.

Amazing school grades?

Very good in fact, but not exceptional.

Maybe a musical instrument!

Guitar?

Quit.

Piano?

Quit.

Swimming, football, handball.

As soon as I realized that I wasn't exceptional at them, I would just stop.

I even tried juggling, took me weeks to do it reliably and I'd heard people picking

it up in just 3 days.

I wanted to find my gift, the thing I was exceptionally good at and not just average.

There had to be something.

I wanted something that would identify me, like: hey, I'm seven, I'm the best swimmer

in the district or I'm the best musician in town or I'm the best juggler in the country.

Okay, I admit, the juggling thing was more of curiosity and it wasn't going to bring

me anywhere.

And that brings me to 15-year-old me.

The time which marks, thanks to all my previous failed attempts to discover myself and a little

bit of experience with the L word, the beginning of this existential issues that I'm still

Dealing with

A few years later I started making videos and it was one of my final attempts to discover myself

This channel is probably one of the few things I haven't quit.

I promised myself I wouldn't no matter what and that's why I'm still here.

I feel like THIS is the thing.

The thing I was waiting for.

However, I feel like I haven't had the chance to prove myself.

This is weird because even though I feel like I'm exceptional at it, I still feel like

I haven't completed my goal.

I'll explain it with an example: let's say that I have found my gift and I play the

guitar.

Even though it's my gift and I know that I'm especially good at it, it all won't

matter if I'm just playing the guitar in a random corner of the subway.

It's the same thing here.

At the end of the day, I still have the same problem.

I'm sad.

Worried that I'll never leave the same corner of the subway.

I'm still having the same identity issues that started 3 years ago and even though I

have accepted this channel as my identity, it's just more psychological pressure on

me because I don't want to play in the subway for my entire life.

And that's the worst part, knowing you're good at something but never proving yourself.

These past 3 months have been really though on me because of that.

Because I only realized that now.

It's like knowing an entire school subject by heart, but succumbing to the pressure on

the final exam and failing the subject.

This is what It feels like.

But anyways, that's just something a wanted to get out of my head.

I've been thinking a lot about this over the last 3 months.

Also note that this is not going to change anything on my channel whatsoever, so don't

worry.

I know this was a big confusing info bomb so:

Tldr; Spent my entire life searching for something and now that I have it, it still feels like

I don't.

This makes me sad because now that I have found it and realized this channel as it,

it puts a lot of pressure on me because I don't want this to became another failed

life project.

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