With so many new Netflix originals hitting the service in August, you'll have more to
watch than ever in the coming month.
From wild new series to new stand-up specials to a laundry list of original films, there's
a lot to look forward to.
Let's take a look at what's arriving and what's worth getting excited about, starting with
the Netflix originals.
Switched
August is kicking off with Switched, a suspenseful Japanese drama about a high school girl whose
life gets stolen by another student.
And not just her life, her rival snatches her physical body, leaving her fighting to
restore everything to the way it was.
Take a look when Switched premieres on August 1st.
I Am a Killer
True crime is blowing up all over Netflix, and the latest piece of fallout is the upcoming
series I Am a Killer.
In this show, the cameras are going into death row for interviews with convicted murderers.
Some are remorseful.
Others...a little less so.
"I don't feel bad about it.
Hah hah hah."
Take the dive into darkness when I Am a Killer drops on August 3rd.
Long Live Brij Mohan
Stuck in a loveless marriage and struggling under a mountain of debt, Brij Mohan doesn't
have a whole lot going for him.
So he takes the only way out he can think of, he fakes his own death and restarts his
life with a new identity.
But he can't run forever, and it isn't long before his past catches up with him.
Take a look when it arrives on August 3rd.
Cocaine Coast
In this Netflix series, a poor fisherman sets out to live the dream by shuttling drugs between
Spain and Latin America, getting filthy rich in the process.
It's a story that's been told plenty of times before, but Cocaine Coast looks like it has
enough charm to pull it off at least one more time.
Check it out on August 3rd.
Like Father
This Netflix film sees Kristen Bell starring as an altar-dumped bride who heads out on
a cruise to do a little soul searching.
What she doesn't remember is getting black-out drunk with her estranged dad after the wedding
disaster and inviting him onto the cruise with her.
"Somehow I dragged him onto this cruise that was supposed to be my honeymoon."
Now, they're stuck on a ship with nowhere to run except into their tangled emotions.
It's just too bad they hate each other.
Like Father sails onto Netflix on August 3rd.
Marching Orders
You've sweated right through the dramas of Last Chance U; you've witnessed the ups and
downs of Friday Night Tykes and cheered a young team into greatness with Coach Snoop.
Now get ready for a brand new emotional journey with Marching Orders.
When the players leave the field, the marching band take center stage.
Marching Orders follows the Marching Wildcats of Bethune-Cookman University, one of the
country's biggest college bands.
Marching Orders takes the field on August 3rd.
Mr. Sunshine
This emotional series made its Netflix premiere in early July 2018, but hasn't made much of
a splash with Western audiences quite yet.
The historical drama follows a Korean soldier who lives in the U.S. for years before returning
to South Korea and falling in love with the daughter of a high-class aristocrat.
With both drama and thrills, it's no wonder that Mr. Sunshine has been gaining popularity
in Korea.
August will see a new episode land on Netflix every Saturday, starting on the 4th.
On Children
With its strong Black Mirror vibes, On Children looks like an intriguing new show.
The trailer is full of technological terror, parallel universes, and memory swapping, and
we honestly can't tell what's going on half the time, but it seems like a lot of fun.
Give it a shot when On Children drops on August 4th.
72 Dangerous Animals: Asia
Netflix's 72 Dangerous Animals series takes an admittedly goofy approach to nature commentary.
"A villain with a killer sting, but one that can also use its powers for good."
The idea is, each episode picks a handful of similar dangerous critters, runs through
their strengths and weaknesses, and then ranks them in order of danger.
"Part the flames to make way for the FIRE ANT."
The newest entry in the series is set to explore the rich world of Asia, and all the creepy
crawlies who live there.
Look for it on August 10th.
The House of Flowers
Equal parts telenovela and Six Feet Under-style dysfunctional family comedy, La Casa de las
Flores, or "The House of Flowers," follows a family that owns a flower shop.
Even though they all look perfect on the outside, each one of them has a dark secret just waiting
to come to light.
When the father's mistress hangs herself at the family store, it opens the floodgates,
sending all those secrets flooding into the open.
It definitely looks like a fun, darkly comedic ride, and you can check it out on August 10th.
Million Pound Menu
Yet another collaboration between Netflix and the BBC, Million Pound Menu is sort of
like a spin on Shark Tank where all the hopeful entrepreneurs are going into the restaurant
business.
It's high stakes, flame-broiled fun, and the whole first season hits the pan on August
10th.
Zion
This heartwarming documentary follows Zion Clark, a wrestler at Kent State University
who was born without legs.
But Clark's motto is "no excuses," so he's made it his life's goal to not let anything
hold him back.
With Zion, Netflix is taking a long, intimate look at Clark's life and the inspired optimism
that drives him to continue to excel as a wrestler.
Tune in for the emotional journey on August 10th.
Insatiable: Season 1
After getting picked on her whole life for being overweight, Patty gets the chance to
get back at her bullies after spending a summer slimming down.
That's the premise of Insatiable, a dark revenge comedy that's already garnered some online
controversy.
Based on the trailer, Insatiable looks like a violent, comedic tale where anything goes
and the normal rules of the world don't apply.
Take a look when it lands on August 10th.
All About the Washingtons
Fans of the hip hop group Run-DMC are no doubt familiar with Reverend Run, aka Joseph Simmons,
who's also an on-again-off-again reality star.
It looks like 2018 will be another on-again year for the Rev, because he's coming back
to the small screen with the sitcom All About the Washingtons.
Simmons stars as Joey, an ex-rapper who's easing into retirement, giving his wife a
chance to be the entrepreneur she always dreamed of being.
Along the way, they'll have to figure out how to keep their wild family in check.
Look for it on August 10th.
The Package
If we're being completely honest, Netflix's comedies can be really hit or miss.
For every one that's actually funny, you're bound to come across five that just leave
you groaning.
Which one will The Package be?
All indications point toward the former.
The dark comedy sees a gang of teens heading out into the woods for spring break, only
for things to go horribly wrong.
Tune in for all the hijinks on August 10th.
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society
Based on the book of the same name, this mouthful of a movie is about a writer who decides to
pen a book about a literary club that formed during World War II.
While she's researching her novel, she gets caught up in the story of the young men who
survived the occupation of the Guernsey islands, falling in love with one of them.
If the Netflix film is anything like the book, you can look forward to a whirlwind historical
romance about the power of courage and loyalty.
Find out when it premieres on Netflix on August 10th.
Magic for Humans
Caught somewhere between a magic act, reality show, and comedy series, Magic for Humans
sees magician Justin Willman traveling around performing illusions and telling jokes in
a new spin on street magic.
It sounds like a great time, and it premieres on August 17th.
Stay Here
From cooking shows to travelogues, Netflix has been flooding their service with great
reality programming.
On August 17th, they're adding to that lineup with Stay Here, a property fixer-upper reality
show that sees an interior designer working with homeowners to spruce up their rental
properties.
The Motive
Every writer needs inspiration, and in The Motive, it comes from some pretty dark places.
The movie focuses on Alvaro, a wannabe writer who moves into a new apartment after a divorce.
There, he begins manipulating his neighbors to use them as inspiration for the characters
in his book.
As you might expect, things get out of control pretty fast.
Part comedy and part thriller, The Motive arrives on August 17th.
Ultraviolet
This Polish drama centers on Ola, a woman who watches a bizarre accident unfold.
Unable to accept the police's verdict that the accident was a suicide, Ola begins to
dig into it on her own, leading her to stumble across a secret online community called Ultraviolet,
a group of internet vigilantes who tackle the cases the police can't solve.
Tune in for all the twists and turns on August 17th.
Disenchantment: Season 1
By the time the first teaser for Disenchantment dropped, the internet was already buzzing
about the show.
From Matt Groening, creator of The Simpsons and Futurama, Disenchantment is set in a fantasy
world and promises all the same humor fans of Groening's other shows have come to love.
"Whew, I'm a good butcher."
"This is a pet shop."
Take a look when the first 10 episodes of Disenchantment land on August 17th.
To All the Boys I've Loved Before
This teen drama follows Lara Jean, a high school girl who has an unfortunate habit of
writing long, secret love letters to all her crushes.
It's unfortunate because out of nowhere, all those letters end up getting mailed out to
the boys in question, turning Lara's high school life into a circus of unexpected attention.
The upcoming movie is based on the popular book of the same name, and drops on August
17th.
The Investigator: A British Crime Story: Season 2
Netflix's popular true crime offerings like Making a Murderer, The Staircase, and Evil
Genius tend to get all the attention, but the real crime is how overlooked some of their
other series are.
Case in point: The Investigator.
This British true crime series dives into some of the most enduring mysteries of the
UK.
With the second season, the show is honing its focus on two serial killers and their
possible connection to a rash of unsolved murders.
Take a look on August 19th.
Deadwind
After this series swept Finland and became something of an overnight sensation, Netflix
swooped in to grab the international distribution rights, like they often do.
In this case, it looks like a great decision.
The series follows a grieving detective who gets caught up in a murder investigation just
two months after the death of her husband, leading her down a spiraling path of violence
and grief.
For anyone looking for a dark, suspenseful show to get caught up in, Deadwind looks like
it's just the ticket.
Tune in on August 23rd.
The After Party
Get ready for a musical roller coaster with The After Party.
California rapper Kyle Harvey stars in this hip hop-infused comedy about a rapper on the
outs with his fans who gets one final chance at redemption.
Check out The After Party when it drops on Netflix on August 24th.
The Innocents: Season 1
Netflix has been dropping teasers for The Innocents for months now, but none of those
trailers have revealed a whole lot about the series' actual story.
Apart from some hints of a bizarre plot involving a girl who turns into someone else, we really
have no idea what to expect.
"Look, it's me.
Harry, it's me."
Regardless, The Innocents looks like a seriously twisted show, with amazing production design
and a fantastic cast.
Take a look on August 24th.
Ghoul
It's been awhile since a good new horror series showed up on Netflix, and it looks like Ghoul
is set to break the dry spell.
The show is set in a secret government center, where one of the prisoners may be a little
more demon than human.
Blumhouse, the company behind movies like Get Out and The Purge, is producing the three-part
horror extravaganza, which lands on August 24th.
Ozark: Season 2
It's been a long, bitter wait, but fans of Ozark can finally see a glimmer of hope on
the horizon.
The show, which stars Jason Bateman as a financial advisor caught up in the underworld of drug
trafficking, was nominated for a Golden Globe and quickly built a legion of dedicated fans.
It's both dark and humorous, violent and surprisingly heartfelt, and we're all hoping for more of
the same when Season 2 floats onto Netflix on August 31st.
The Laws of Thermodynamics
Written and directed by Spanish filmmaker Mateo Gil, The Laws of Thermodynamics is your
typical boy-meets-girl scenario, but with a science twist.
The core romantic story is wrapped up in theories about how scientific laws also affect relationships
and emotions.
It's a strange genre crossover, sure, but one that looks like a decidedly interesting
viewing experience.
Look for it on August 31.
Ultimate Beastmaster: Survival of the Fittest
Strap on your sweatbands and settle in for the ride as Ultimate Beastmaster: Survival
of the Fittest leaps onto your streaming queue.
The fit-and-fun competition will see a whole new lineup of contestants facing some of the
most challenging obstacles to date, with plenty of dramatic commentary to keep it exciting.
"It's like a Transformer and Godzilla had a baby or something."
You can catch all the new episodes on August 31st.
New standup comedy
Keep your eyes open for a handful of brand new comedy releases hitting Netflix throughout
the month.
On August 10th, Demetri Martin takes the stage with The Overthinker, riffing on topics ranging
from road rage to horoscopes to being the kind of guy who overthinks everything.
Then, on August 24th, look for Bert Kreischer: Secret Time, followed by Part 2 of Netflix's
recent comedy series The Comedy Lineup, which sees multiple comics taking the stage for
short 15-minute sets.
You'll be able to stream that on August 31st.
That's all the Netflix originals arriving in August.
Now let's take a look at all the other movies and TV shows hitting the streaming service.
New movies
The best part of each month's Netflix lineup is invariably the addition of a brand new
slew of old favorites, and August is bringing plenty of classics.
On the action front, look for films like Batman Begins, Constantine, and 1985 Western Silverado,
all of which show up on the first.
"You can't do this."
"Really?"
There are also plenty of laughs to look forward to this August, with classics like Steel Magnolias,
Clerks, and Stripes shouldering their way onto Netflix on the first.
"Razzle dazzle, hut two three four."
On the 16th, you can sit back and watch Steve Carell build a biblical boat in Evan Almighty,
and on the 21st, witness Jack Black's and Michael Cera's epic journey across prehistory
with the slapstick comedy Year One.
"Hey guys, I'm trying to enjoy the sacrifice with my family.
Do you mind?"
Chances are none of those will tickle your terror bone, but don't worry.
August is also bringing Dreamcatcher, which you can catch on the first along with Chernobyl
Diaries, about some mutant tomfoolery at the Chernobyl nuclear plant.
Finally, follow that up with the 2015 horror film Emelie on the second.
What's not to love?
New television
It'll be a good month for bingeing your favorite shows this August.
Highlights for this month include Season 5 of The Originals on August 9th, Season 5 of
The 100 on August 15th, and Season 5 of Young & Hungry on August 24th.
Fans of the heavenly comedy The Good Place will also have a reason to look forward to
August, which sees the arrival of the second season of the Emmy-nominated show.
When she's accidentally sent to "the Good Place," Eleanor decides that there's never
been a better time to try to be a good person and actually earn her spot there.
Look for the second season on August 28th.
For more infomation >> Everything Coming To Netflix In August 2018 - Duration: 14:38.-------------------------------------------
The History of Spider-Man Games Part 3: At the Movies | Playing With Powers | NowThis Nerd - Duration: 10:41.
Hi, I'm Moose,
and on the last episode of 'Playing with Powers,' we explored Spider-Man's final gasps of the 16-bit era,
the awesome animated series,
and the 3D game that showered us in fanservice and free unlockable costumes,
a tradition that, yes, the new game from Insomniac will indeed continue.
This week, we're looking at Spidey's cinematic tie-ins,
and the games inspired by the new wave of Spider-Mania.
So, step into the squared circle,
strut like you've got a symbiote,
and deliver us from evil,
because this is
Part 3: The Movie Games
Sam Raimi's 'Spider-Man' perfectly captured Peter Parker's plight,
the conflict at the heart of his character,
and the corniness that makes Spider-Man so endearing.
Cheese!
I would have liked to see him crack a few more jokes,
but considering this was 2002,
I was just thankful Spidey wasn't swinging around in a black leather jumpsuit.
The movie shattered box office records,
and outside of the theaters,
Spider-fans were showered with a huge wave of movie tie-ins.
While I'd love to do a whole video just about the toy webshooters,
we're here to talk about games.
Specifically,
'Spider-Man: The Movie: The Game'
'Spider-Man: The Movie' was built off the bones of the 2000 Neversoft title,
and the core gameplay loop is extremely similar.
You alternate between webslinging sky chases,
and awkward interior levels with frustrating stealth sections and a crappy camera.
The sixth-gen graphics are technically a step up,
but it's a little dull compared to the comic book colors of the 2000 game,
and the unenthusiastic voice acting from the movie's star doesn't help.
I should be able to get back out the same way I got in. And only a couple zillion heavily armed androids between me and it. No prob.
Tobey Maguire was never the most dynamic Spider-Man,
but he sounds like he's on valium throughout the whole game.
Scorpion? Disappeared. I feel bad for him but I--
Willem Dafoe does a decent job,
Meeting you today is an unexpected bonus!
but Kirsten Dunst and James Franco didn't even bother to show up,
and neither did Macho Man Randy Savage.
BONESAW IS READY!!!
The only standout is Raimi mainstay Bruce Campbell,
who steals the show as the smarmy narrator in all three movie adaptations.
Well, I'm gonna let you in on a little secret. If you press the left trigger while crawling on a wall, you'll web zip in the direction you're crawling.
Eh? Who's your daddy?
The game itself is nothing to write home about,
but it's always interesting to see movie-universe versions of characters that never made it to the screen.
Long before 'Homecoming,' we got to battle the Shocker, the Vulture, the Scorpion,
and, if you had an XBox,
Kraven the Hunter.
There was also a cool bonus mode where you could replay the game from the POV of Harry Osborn as a good guy Green Goblin,
and unlockable skins based on Alex Ross's unused concept art.
It was decent for the time, but today, the game has largely been forgotten,
thanks to the shining success of
'Spider-Man 2'
Raimi's filmic follow-up improved on its predecessor in nearly every way,
unless you prefer Chad Kroeger and Josey Scott to Dashboard Confessional.
For me, it's Dashboard... Hands Down.
And similarly, developer Treyarch's second 'Spider-Man' game blew the first out of the water.
Three years after 'GTA 3' ignited the open world revolution,
'Spider-Man 2' introduced superpowers to the wide-open sandbox.
Instead of individual levels,
the game gave you a massive map of New York City to explore with the all-new webslinging engine created by Jamie Fristrom.
In earlier games, you just shot webs up into the sky.
They never attached to anything or affected the way you swung,
you might as well be flying.
But for 'Spidey 2,' Fristrom developed a system that shot invisible lines out of Spider-Man every time he fired off a web.
The rays scanned all the physical objects in the environment around them,
kinda like how a bat uses echolocation,
and selected the optimal point for the most cinematic swing.
Top that off with an awesome arsenal of moves and in-air tricks,
especially the classic web catapult,
and you have a game that's an utter joy to navigate,
with inertia, physics, and raw speed that give a real sense of urgency to moving across the city,
even if you're just delivering a pizza.
Unfortunately, the rest of the game hasn't aged as well as the webslinging.
Yeah, uh. Well...
The open world feels pretty empty compared to the heavily-populated sandboxes of the modern age,
and it forced you to complete repetitive sidequests in order to rack up the hero points you need to continue the story,
most of which boiled down to chasing a car,
beating up bad guys,
chasing a car and THEN beating up bad guys,
or rescuing balloons for hundreds upon hundreds of crying children.
I LOST MY BALLOON!!!
Speaking of the story, it sticks fairly close to the plot of the film,
but we do get a few more non-movie cameos,
like Black Cat, Rhino, and my favorite,
a subplot involving Mysterio,
who engineers an alien invasion of the Statue of Liberty,
and gets taken out with one punch despite his hilariously long life bar.
I will destroy you utterly! You will bear witness to the majesty and glory of my power!
Woah! That was sick, dude!
For all the game's faults, Spider-Man 2's webswinging has never been matched,
not even by the spiritual sequel 'Energy Hook' made by Fristrom himself.
Future Spidey games would simplify the mechanic,
since its complexity could be a barrier to pressing start and immediately feeling like the
'Ultimate Spider-Man'
Released a year after 'Spidey 2,'
'Ultimate Spider-Man' was an interesting experiment in adaptation.
Instead of being based on a comic book storyline,
this game tried to add to the canon of the alternate universe Ultimate series.
This is how it all began. Which, of course, leads to nonsense like this.
It opens up with an awesome flashback reliving Peter's football field battle again Venom,
who you later get to control,
with a moveset that lets you fling cars and eat innocent people to recharge your power.
And, if Venom's not evil enough for you,
you can play as the Green Goblin himself in 'Battle for New York,' a sequel to the DS version of the game.
On consoles, when you're in Spidey's shoes,
you web around the city in a simplified take on 'Spider-Man 2,'
but it's dragged down by a baffling mechanic that makes you climb the web mid-swing to gain height.
Still, the cel-shaded graphics are a stylistic improvement over 'Spidey 2,'
the gameplay is solid enough,
and the story oozes with love for the Ultimate universe.
Ya don't say?
'Ultimate Spidey' creators Brian Michael Bendis and Mark Bagley were heavily involved in the production,
and the game was intended to be a canonical entry in their legendary run.
It would take place somewhere between issues 71 and 72,
and explain how Eddie Brock gained control over the Venom suit and incorporated the cool white logo.
The stuff that we're doing in this is going to be carried on. He's going to make sure the stuff
that's happening in the comics is at least tangentially related to what's going on in the game.
Unfortunately, the realities of monthly comic book production meant that the story evolved beyond compatibility with the game,
and future issues would ignore developments like Silver Sable's knowledge of Spidey's secret identity,
and Peter Parker's transformation into Carnage.
YOU! PARKER!
The plot was very loosely adapted as the 'War of the Symbiotes' storyline two years later,
leaving the 'Ultimate Spider-Man' game as a intriguing, but ultimately failed experiment.
Speaking of failures,
let's talk about
'Spider-Man 3'
Well, first I should mention Spidey's appearance in 'Ultimate Alliance,'
although we'll probably save that for an 'Avengers' series down the road.
This video is already pretty packed,
and when it comes to 'Spider-Man 3,'
there's nowhere near enough time to air all my grievances about this movie here,
Llet's just say I had way less of a problem with scene-kid Peter dancing,
than I did with the Sandman murdering Uncle Ben.
What are you doing?!
NOO!!!
Instead, I'm just going to hate on the game,
although there's not really a whole lot to say about it.
I bought it for the my 360 thinking it would be a stunning, next-gen successor to 'Spider-Man 2,'
but the game disappointed me almost as much as the movie.
Superficially, it's similar to the previous entry,
with the same wide-open world and webslinging,
but bugs and glitches turned the silky smooth aerial acrobatics of '2' into a janky, awkward mess.
The mission variety is a little better,
especially with the new symbiote suit,
but the story is just as lame as the movie,
even with the addition of Rhino, the Kingpin, and the Lizard,
paying off the setup the movies never would.
Parker? You got something to add?
No, sir.
This was also the first Spider-Man game to incorporate quick-time events,
because nothing makes you feel more powerful than pressing a button and watching the game play itself.
Could he have survived that fall? Welp, I'm done here either way!
There were actually three different versions of this game,
the main one for seventh-gen consoles,
a 2D portable game,
and a downgraded port with different gameplay for PS2,
with some obligatory waggle controls thrown in for the Wii.
Yeehaw! Git along, little dogie!
But honestly?
You'd be better off playing 'Spider-Man Friend or Foe' instead of any of these.
It was a stylized, kid-friendly take on the movieverse,
with colorful graphics,
awesome co-op,
and appearances from heroes like Blade and Iron Fist in a globetrotting adventure that's a nice change of pace from New York.
Aesthetically, it almost feels like Kingdom Hearts set in the Raimiverse,
and it was a breath of fresh air compared to the slog that was 'Spidey 3.'
After the lackluster reception to the movie, Raimi was burnt out,
and Sony cancelled his 'Spider-Man 4' in favor of a short-lived reboot.
The Mark Webb movies got a couple games too,
but not before we got our first glimpse into a much larger Spiderverse.
On the next 'Playing with Powers,'
How did 'Shattered Dimensions' set us up for the Spiderverse?
Did the less-than 'Amazing' reboot at least have a good game to redeem it?
And how will Insomniac's 'Spider-Man' live up to the legacy that came before?
'Spider-Man: The Movie' PS2/Xbox/GCN/PC, Activision (2002) Footage: Spazbo4 via Longplays.org
'Spider-Man 2' PS2/Xbox/GCN/PC, Activision (2004) Footage: Spazbo4 via Longplays.org
'Ultimate Spider-Man' PS2/Xbox/GCN/PC, Activision (2005) Footage: RangoVidsOfMangoO12 via YouTube
'Spider-Man 3' PS3/360/PC/Wii, Activision (2007) Footage: ynSection via YouTube
'Spider-Man: Friend or Foe' Activision via PS3/360/PC/PS2/Wii, (2007) Footage:
casualgamerreed YouTube [a]Split
-------------------------------------------
The Lone Wanderer vs The Dragonborn - Who Wins? - Duration: 6:56.
Fallout 3 and Skyrim are two of the most popular RPGs of all time, and while they are both
Bethesda-made, their settings couldn't be any more different.
So what would happen if the playable character from each game got into a fight?
Who would win?
The Lone Wanderer from Fallout 3 or the Dragonborn from Skyrim?
A few things to mention before we start looking at each character.
1) I know a lot more about Fallout than I do Skyrim or Elder Scrolls in general.
Hopefully I won't get anything wrong, but it could happen.
2) We'll be looking at each of the character's after the main quest line of their game has
been completed.
The assumption is that any DLC was completed before the main quest line.
3) No companions or factions will be involved, just the characters themselves.
4) Lastly, in order to have some semblance of order, each character will be limited to
a single set of armor and two weapons.
Let's start with the Dragonborn, just because.
Skyrim's playable character is the latest in a long line of individuals who have been
born with the blood and soul of a dragon but the body of a mortal.
It falls on the Dragonborn to put a stop to Alduin, a legendary dragon that once ruled
Skyrim, all while being the deciding factor in Skyrim's Civil War.
Alongside several ancient Nord warriors, the Dragonborn is able to defeat Alduin and bring
some semblance of peace to Skyrim.
In other adventures, the last Dragonborn travels to Raven Rock and eventually Apocrypha to
battle Miraak, the first Dragonborn.
He also becomes a vampire or a vampire hunter in the Dawnguard DLC.
Moving onto skills and perks, the Dragonborn is unique in that his power theoretically
has no limit.
After a skill reaches level 100, it can be reset to 15 by making it "Legendary".
This means that the Dragonborn's Health, Magicka, and Stamina levels are endless.
They are restricted only by time itself.
The Radiant quests in Skyrim would allow someone to keep playing the game and increasing skills
for as long as they desired.
In practice, there would be some limit for how high Health, Magicka, and Stamina could
get based on what data types were used in the game's code.
What this all means is that the Dragonborn can be a master in all forms of combat, armor
and weapon forging, magic manipulation, and more.
As for weapons and armor, there are a lot of options.
Because of the Dragonborn's Smithing and Enchanting skills, he can create weapons and
armor that are more powerful than anything found in Skyrim.
But that makes things boring.
One of the best weapons available is Windshear, a unique scimitar obtained after completing
the Dark Brotherhood questline.
It's unique ability is that it has a 100% chance of staggering an enemy, which takes
several seconds to recover from.
Basically if the Dragonborn is within melee weapon distance, any opponent has no chance.
And because close range is taken care of, we might as well give him a Nightingale Bow,
one of the most powerful ranged weapons in Skyrim, as a second weapon.
Another option instead of the bow would be to summon a Flame Thrall.
It's not a companion, it's a Flame Atronach that is not restricted by time, meaning it's
by your side until it dies.
The obvious armor choice is Daedric Armor.
It's heavy as all hell, but it's the strongest armor set in the game and, come on, look at
it.
If someone shows up to fight you in that, you're gonna question every decision you've
ever made that's led you to that moment.
And before we get to the Lone Wanderer, I know what you're saying.
Why not use this magic spell or this other weapon or this or that.
It's because this is what I went with.
Next, the Lone Wanderer.
By the end of Fallout 3, The Lone Wanderer is a Capital Wasteland legend.
Despite growing up in the safety of Vault 101, he still manages to shape the Capital
Wasteland around his own ideals.
His quest is far less grandiose in scale than the Dragonborn's, but is still important.
After escaping Vault 101, he tracks down his father and helps bring a source of clean water
to the wasteland while getting involved in a power struggle between the Brotherhood of
Steel and Enclave.
DLC sees him defeat aliens after being abducted by Mothership Zeta, participate in a simulation
of the liberation of Alaska during the Sino-American war, infiltrating a slave trade operation
in Pennsylvania, and uncover the secrets of Point Lookout State Park.
Being released before Skyrim, it makes sense that Fallout 3's perks and skills are more…
basic.
When you level up, you assign points to skills and pick perks.
Even if you never touch a first aid kit, you can be a master class surgeon.
Skills are capped at 100 and the game's level cap is 30.
There is also the SPECIAL system, a group of 8 unique stats that effect various aspects
of your character, from how much they can carry, to how intelligent they are.
It is possible to get 100 in every skill through some planning and utilizing skill books.
Perhaps the best perk available is Nuclear Anomaly, which causes a violent explosion
to erupt from the Lone Wanderer every 10 seconds while his health is below 20.
Weapons and armor are a lot simpler this time.
The best weapons at his disposal are Experimental MIRV and Alien Blaster.
The Experimental MIRV is a mini-nuke launcher that fires 8 miniature nuclear warheads each
time it's fired.
The Alien Blaster is a powerful handgun type weapon that has a 100% chance of landing a
critical hit, allowing it to one-shot all but the most powerful of foes.
The best armor is the Hellfire Enclave Armor, a unique set of heat resistant power armor
developed by the Enclave.
It's capable of withstanding more punishment than the standard T-51b Power Armor, which
was the best mass-produced armor humanity ever created.
Now, the showdown between the Lone Wanderer and the Dragonborn.
Before we go any further please keep in mind that this video is just my opinion.
This isn't the definitive answer to the question being posed in this video.
You're more than welcome to disagree with me.
To be perfectly honest, if you've been paying attention, the winner should be fairly obvious.
The Lone Wanderer is no pushover by any stretch of the imagination, but the the Dragonborn
is almost otherworldly powerful.
He's literally legend made flesh.
He's traveled to other dimensions and defeated world-ending foes.
The Lone Wanderer, for all of his accolades, just can't compete that kind of a being.
Alright, that's gonna do it for this video about the Lone Wanderer vs The Dragonborn.
If you enjoyed the video or learned anything leave a Like.
Leave a Dislike if you didn't enjoy the video or didn't learn anything.
Follow me on Twitter @MittenSquad.
My name is Paul of Mitten Squad.
Have a wonderful day.
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Child Among 4 Dead In Apparent Triple-Murder Suicide In Queens - Duration: 1:58.
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Woman Who Once Dated Accused Killer Speaks Out - Duration: 2:03.
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"Лесник. Своя земля". 34 серия - Duration: 52:16.
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Shady Things Everyone Just Ignores About Kim Zolciak-Biermann - Duration: 4:41.
Viewers of The Real Housewives of Atlanta have watched as Kim Zolciak-Biermann evolved
from being a single mom of two who was dating a mysterious married man to being swept off
her feet by NFL free agent Kroy Biermann.
She has since starred in her very own Bravo TV spin-off series, Don't be Tardy, and added
four more little ones to her family.
Sure, some of the scenes on these reality shows may be nothing more than scripted drama,
but she has also been entangled in a few real-life incidents that have definitely raised some
eyebrows.
Bills, bills, bills
While the ladies who star in the Real Housewives franchise live seemingly lavish lifestyles,
Zolciak-Biermann has faced plenty of legal drama for supposedly not paying her bills.
When she and her family overstayed their welcome in a house they were renting in 2012, the
landlord fined Zolciak-Biermann $600 for each day she and her family allegedly squatted
in the home.
Zolciak-Biermann initially denied that her lease had ended, but later came clean to the
tab after TMZ obtained the lease, pledging to pay the fine in a lump sum when she finally
moved out.
In December 2017, she made headlines once again over an unpaid bill from Christmas 2016.
Back then, Zolciak-Biermann reportedly hired a company to deck the halls of her humble
abode with thousands of dollars worth of seasonal decor, but she allegedly refused to fork over
the cash for months.
According to Page Six, the decoration company slapped her with a lawsuit to force her to
pay the bill.
Married sugar daddy
Prior to marrying Kroy in November 2011, Kim Zolciak-Biermann was entangled in a truly
scandalous relationship.
"He prefers to remain a mystery so I just refer to him as Big Poppa."
It was this mystery man who financed a lot of her luxury goods, from designer handbags
to cars.
Her big spending on Big Poppa's dime only made internet sleuths more curious as to the
identity of her sugar daddy, who was later revealed as real estate developer Lee Najjar.
Zolciak-Biermann was even allegedly engaged to Najjar at one point, which doesn't make
a lick of sense since he was already married to someone else.
Crappy situation
During her wedding special, Zolciak-Biermann became agitated when her mom Karen asked to
borrow a pair of shoes prior to the wedding ceremony.
The nerve!
But that was nothing.
During the wedding reception, the poo really hit the fan.
The mother of the bride and the bride actually got into a tiff over the bride forcing her
mother to use rented facilities in the backyard instead of the restroom inside the home.
When Karen decided to sneak into the house and use the restroom anyway, the groom confronted
her.
The bride then had her mother escorted out of the house by security guards.
Lovely.
Family feud
As Zolciak-Biermann's brood continues to grow, there are two people who have been noticeably
absent from her family life: her parents.
While the rocky relationship was on full display during her wedding, according to TMZ, things
got so bad that her parents alleged that Kim was unfairly blocking them from visiting her
children.
Her dad, Joe, told TMZ his daughter is a "pathological liar" who is "trying to make a mockery" of
their family.
He added: "She has been married twice and has three
different fathers of her four children.
Let's face the facts."
On an episode of Don't Be Tardy, Zolciak-Biermann revealed that the relationship with her mother
is broken beyond repair.
She said:
"My children, I will always be in their life.
But my mom?
I will not let her back into my life, let's just be clear."
Only the nose knows
On an episode of Watch What Happens Live, host Andy Cohen grilled Zolciak-Biermann about
changes in her appearance, particularly the shape of her nose.
After her husband, Kroy, insisted it was the "exact" same nose from years ago, Zolciak-Biermann
added:
"If I'm going to have a nose job, it's going to be a hell of a lot shorter, okay."
While she admitted to a boob job and a tummy tuck in an interview with E! News, questions
about the noticeable changes to her face have always been a touchy subject for the star.
She told People magazine:
"It's frustrating but it's a battle I'm not going to win.
People can say what they want to say."
She told the publication that her face had naturally "thinned out a little bit" over
the years before adding: "But I have nothing to hide, and also I have
nothing to prove!"
We'll just have to take her word for it.
Shifting the blame
During part three of Real Housewives Of Atlanta's Season 10 reunion special, Zolciak-Biermann
was called out by her cast mates for her shady actions, in particular, an incident where
she said her costar, NeNe Leakes, lived in a "roach nest."
Many of her cast mates felt the term was fueled with racist undertones associated with black
women who live in the projects.
After storming off-stage, Zolciak-Biermann released a string of profanities and implied
that her co-stars were just trying to make things about race.
She was pummeled by intense backlash from viewers, and issued a written statement to
shift the blame.
It read, in part:
"I made a comment that confused and offended people.
I sincerely apologize.
Edited out of context, I understand why my remark angered people."
It's not like she had ever been accused of racism before.
"Well people always said I should have been black anyway."
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2 Men Charged With Murder In Deliveryman's Death - Duration: 0:27.
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The problems behind Trump's capital gains tax cut - Duration: 6:50.
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This Binge-drinking Tree Shrew Could Probably Outdrink You - Duration: 4:34.
This episode is supported by NordVPN.
Right now, NordVPN is offering SciShow viewers a chance
to set up your own Virtual Private Network
and start protecting your internet experience with 77% off a 3-year plan.
Use the code "SCISHOW" at NordVPN.com/SCISHOW.
[♩INTRO]
Humans are far from the only animals that drink booze.
But, like us, they usually pay for it after.
That poor Swedish moose is never going to live down
that whole drunkenly-getting-stuck-in-a-tree thing.
But there's a mysterious little tree shrew in Southeast Asia
that basically lives on palm wine.
And somehow, it never gets drunk.
Lots of animals will occasionally down a spiked drink if given the chance.
Some even show a preference for it.
But none are so well adapted to binge-drinking as the pen-tailed tree shrew.
They're small, nocturnal mammals
and they spend their nights drinking bertam palm nectar.
The spiky plant is a tough sell for most species,
so being able to consume it
gives the tree shrews an abundant, reliable food source.
But the sugary juice it produces is frothy and stinks like booze, for good reason.
It's fermented by yeast, and it can contain as much alcohol as a light beer,
up to about 4%.
That doesn't seem to matter to the tree shrews, though,
who can spend spend more than two hours at a time slurping away.
Scientists have calculated that they drink their body weight equivalent
of about 9 glasses of wine several nights a week.
But they never seem drunk!
No stumbling around, falling out of trees,
or dialing their exes because they need closure.
And that might be because of the way they break down alcohol.
When we drink, most of the alcohol we consume
is broken down by an enzyme called alcohol dehydrogenase,
eventually becoming acetic acid, aka the stuff in vinegar.
But a very small amount is bound to a glucose derivative
to make a compound called ethyl glucuronide.
And tree shrew hairs contain about 30 times the level of ethyl glucuronide
that indicates excessive drinking in people.
Researchers think that's because tree shrews are
up to 30 times more efficient than us at breaking down ethanol this way,
which could explain their tolerance.
But lots of ethyl glucuronide is also thought to be
one of the drivers of blinding hangover headaches,
as well as the pain associated with withdrawal in alcoholics.
So we don't yet know how they avoid being perpetually hungover…
or why they aren't grumpier
if they do spend every morning with a splitting headache.
Of course, pen-tailed tree shrews aren't the only animals
that can handle their liquor.
Several bat species can apparently drink until their blood alcohol is 0.3%
nearly four times the legal driving limit in the US
and they still hunt and fly just fine.
But biologists don't think that kind of drinking is a nightly activity for them.
And other species, including primates like the slow loris,
also drink alcohol regularly, they just don't drink as much.
Tree shrews are the only animals we know of that binge drink all the time…
other than some humans.
Which is especially interesting, because
they're considered one of our closest living non-primate relatives,
having veered off from our line some 60ish million years ago.
Their boozy behavior adds to the growing evidence
that our relationship with alcohol began long before
we learned how to ferment it for ourselves,
and may even suggest there are benefits to regular drinking.
But … it's important to remember that their bodies have
adaptations for excessive alcohol consumption that ours don't.
So it's probably best to leave the binge drinking to the tree shrews.
Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow,
and thanks to NordVPN for sponsoring this episode.
I'm on the internet all the time for work, but in my free time,
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Even secure sites aren't always completely safe.
And while watching a SciShow video anywhere is great…
let's say you needed to check your bank statement on that same wifi network.
That's not information that you want to share with just anyone,
so, a public network is not the best way to do that.
With a VPN, that sensitive information would be encrypted
and routed through a trusted server before being sent to the bank.
And your bank statement would be encrypted by the server on the way back,
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by people on the public wifi.
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[♩OUTRO]
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Baking a Cake with Science! - Duration: 4:20.
♩
You're just in time!
Today, Squeaks and I are baking!
[Squeaks squeaks] You're right, Squeaks.
When you put batter into the oven, and take out a cake, it does kinda feel like magic!
But it's really a lot more like … science!
When we combine our ingredients and mix them, they'll change to become liquidy batter.
And then when we put that batter in the oven, the heat will change it into a cake!
And that cake is going to be delicious.
Alright, Squeaks! What ingredients do we need to make all those changes happen?
[Squeaks squeaks] Great idea! Let's check out our recipe!
Well, first we're going to need 3 cups of flour!
When we mix that flour with water, it makes a stretchy batter.
Since it's stretchy, when our cake goes in the oven, it can rise!
That's when the cake gets bigger and taller as it bakes.
In a cake, the ingredients that help with rising are usually baking soda or baking powder.
That's this white stuff we have here.
When you add baking soda or baking powder to the other ingredients, they create little bubbles of a gas called carbon dioxide.
The bubbles are trapped inside the cake.
Then, when the batter goes in the oven, the heat makes those bubbles get bigger … and bigger …
taking the cake batter with them, until the whole cake is spongy and puffed up!
Next is butter, which we're using as the fat for our cake.
Now, when we say fat, we don't mean the fat we have on our bodies. We're talking about a type of food.
You already know that this cake is going to be made up of all the ingredients in our recipe.
Butter is one of them!
But butter is made of its own list of ingredients, too … and fat is one of them.
Lots of foods have fat in them, like oil, which some recipes use instead of butter.
No matter what form of fat you're using, the fat's job is to coat the flour, which keeps it from mixing with the water too much.
That will make our cake soft and fluffy!
Most recipes use eggs, too – for a few different reasons.
Our recipe calls for two eggs.
Eggs are fun to crack, but make sure a grown-up is helping you!
One of the things eggs do is help the batter turn from a liquid into a solid cake once it's in the oven.
And they can also help the cake rise!
Whipping egg whites will fill them with air bubbles, and if you can be careful to get the egg whites with those air bubbles into your batter … that air will help the cake rise.
We're also using sugar in our recipe, and I bet you can guess why … it'll make everything taste terrific and I can't wait!
Alright, Squeaks, let's put all of our ingredients together, and put our cake in the oven!
Our cake has been baking in the oven for a little while now!
We measured everything perfectly, so our flour, butter, baking soda, eggs, and all the other ingredients are reacting to each other to turn the batter into a cake.
We've set a timer so we know when it's done baking, and it should be any minute now!
We also preheated our oven earlier – which means we turned it on before we started our project, because the oven takes some time to warm up.
And it needs to get very, very hot in there!
Right now, our oven is at 175 degrees Celsius, or 350 degrees Fahrenheit.
That means it's more than hot enough for all those bubbles in the batter to get bigger, helping it rise.
Other ingredients are breaking down and mixing to make yummy flavors, while the eggs and flour help hold it all together!
Baking is a great activity for kids and grown-ups to do together!
But using the oven – pre-heating, putting pans in, and taking them out – is definitely a job for your grown-up.
[timer dings]
It's time!
Squeaks, let me go get the cake out of the oven!
Hey, Squeaks!
The cake is ready!
Hey… what's going on here?
Bill, Webb, and Sam: Happy birthday, Jessi!
Oh my goodness, thank you everyone! I forgot it was my birthday!
This is awesome! I'm so glad we're celebrating with baking science!
Thanks for joining us!
If you want to keep learning and having fun with Squeaks and me, hit the subscribe button, and don't forget to check us out on the YouTube Kids app.
Thanks, and we'll see you next time, here at the Fort!
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Here & Now Monday July 30 2018 - Duration: 1:03:04.
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Facebook is doing a lot to address its privacy scandals: Mark McLaughlin - Duration: 4:54.
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Prosecutors Won't Pursue Sexual Abuse Case Against Les Moonves | Katy Tur | MSNBC - Duration: 4:19.
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التوبة النصوح ◆ أبشر أيها التائب ◆ كلام لايقدر بثمن للدكتور محمد راتب النابلسي - Duration: 13:26.
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ROF Rewind: How Corporate Greed Inspired Mike Papantonio's New Novel Series - Duration: 26:59.
Trial lawyer, national media personality and novelist Mike Papantonio on this edition of
Conversations.
Mike Papantonios courtroom prowess has made him one of the nations preeminent trial lawyers.
His winning verdicts reach well into the millions.
Papantonio has earned a reputation for taking on tough and complicated cases against defendants
with abundant resources.
Many of those adversaries have found out the hard way Papantonios passion, determination
and legal flair is ha rd to combat.
In 2015 Mike Papantonio joined an elite group, he was inducted into the National Trial Lawyers
Hall of Fame.
Outside the courtroom his is known for astute political commentary.
He created Ring of Fire Networks, a multimedia platform which includes a national radio show.
His analysis is often heard on cable news outlets like MSNBC and Fox News.
Papantonio has authored several books, his latest a novel entitled Law and Disorder,
a suspenseful story that draws on Papantonios extensive legal career.
We welcome Mike Papantonio to this edition of Conversations.
Thank you for joining us.
Good to be here Jeff.
Tell me about the book.
For years I've handled cases that have had a lot of political overlays to them.
Whether it is a case against a pharmaceutical company, a case against Wall Street, whatever
it may be they've always had those kind of political intrigued sides to them.
I had enough people say you know you ought to write that sometimes and rather than writing
a non-fiction I thought it was best to put it into fiction.
My goal really has been Jeff, to somebody can pick up the book and they can read a chapter
and be entertained, but at the same time they come away from just being entertained they
learn something.
That's what these books, there's three of them that are in line here and this is the
first of them, and the whole idea is to kind of tell the back stories about the practice
of law and some of the politics and cultural and social issues that all tie into that.
Hopefully you can read it on the beach, walk away and say it was a good story but I learned
something.
What would the average person be most surprised about the back end of what goes on in the
law field?
I think probably they'd be most shocked at the pharmaceutical aspect of that particular
book.
The pharmaceutical story, what happens when a drug goes on the market, what happens when
a person actually takes a drug that they believe that the FDA had overseen and the FDA had
given approval on.
The stories it's not the type of thing that corporate media typically can tell, they have
advertisers whether it's whatever the pharmaceutical company is, they have advertisers that do
business with that pharmaceutical company.
Those back stories are rarely told, they'll see the headlines where maybe Merck of Pfizer
or one of the big pharmaceutical companies is hit for a big verdict, but they really
don't know why, they don't understand what took place.
Who is it that destroyed documents?
Who is it that tampered with the clinical data?
How did they sell it to the media?
Why did the media ignore it?
How did the FDA ignore it?
How did they make their way through an FDA bureaucracy in such a way that basically they
get everything they want when they want it?
Those aren't the kinds of things that people hear about, but that's one part of the story.
I don't think you'll find a book that explains that, certainly not in a fiction.
Grisham, I've always thought Grisham is very good at telling a story, but at the same time
he's telling the story you walk away and say gee, I didn't know that that's how judges
were appointed.
I didn't know that a judge had that much authority to do X, Y or Z.
I didn't know how you remove a judge from the bench.
Those types of things Grisham would always pack into his novels and that always captured
my interest because although he was an attorney he really didn't try cases, he wasn't a trial
lawyer.
These series of books take on the aspect of what does it really look like at ground zero.
It's one thing to describe a courtroom scene but it's another thing to take a courtroom
scene that actually took place and you go my gosh that can't be real and it is real.
There's courtroom scenes in this particular book and you'll go surely that didn't happen
and they really did happen.
Tell me about the characters in here, the main character Deke right?
Yes Nicholas Deketomis he's an attorney that handles basically big products cases all over
the country.
His goal in every one of the cases is to be able to get to trial and obviously get a result
for the claimant.
Most of the time what he's trying to do is if there's a product out there and it ought
to be off the market his goal is to get it off the market.
He's operating on all four cylinders in the right way, he wants to accomplish the right
thing for the right reason and he does well doing that.
He's a composite character in the sense that I looked around the country and I said I've
worked with really some of the finest trial lawyers in the country and I've borrowed a
little bit here and borrowed a little bit there.
I've put the barnacles on them when they needed barnacles, and so certainly he's not a whitewashed
character.
You don't end it say oh my gosh, this guy's perfect, he's far from it.
As the books continue you learn that each one of the characters in there kind of have
a little darker side than what you might think when you read it initially.
I was going to ask you how much of Mike Papantonio is in Deke?
Well I think it's impossible to write a book like that without drawing on your personal
experience.
I mean the old adage is write what you know about and certainly you know yourself and
you certainly know the topics well.
It's impossible for me to say that there are no part of that that's there.
I obviously used this area heavily.
I think anybody reading it is going to say ... I changed the names, I gave the characters
different names, I changed the areas, gave them different names.
At the end of it, the reading, they're going to know what it's about.
I think every author does that somewhat.
If you take a look at Baldacci or Grisham, any of the thriller writers they always start
off with the thing that they know.
It may be their home town, it may be some experience they had in some aspect of law
and so that's what this is.
There's certainly a little bit of me there but I didn't intend to say Deketomis is my
Papantonio, that's not my intent.
I'm always curious how novelists, I'm always curious about their process, what was your
process of putting this together?
I think anybody that writes fiction will tell you that the most difficult thing, and it
shouldn't be difficult, but the most difficult thing in the narrative, the conversations.
How do you go back in there and you and I are talking right now and how do we capture
what's happening here cleanly, quickly, in a way that actually means something?
What is interesting and unique about that conversation.
The story lines in these books are fairly easy because they really happened, but you
take what really happened and you put the fiction aspect, you add the intrigue to it,
you add the thriller aspect of it, you add the aspect of my gosh I hope this works out
for the character.
You take all of those things but the real trick to me is trying to take that character
and say how would they talk, how would they interact with their children, how would that
character interact with his wife, how would these two lawyers interact?
It sounds like it's fairly easy because all you do is say well people talk this way but
when you're writing a book and space is an issue, brevity's an issue in getting the idea
across quickly is an issue.
Those narratives are very important.
How long did it take you to massage this character into the person you wanted him to be?
I think every author ends up getting really angry with the editor because when I finished
that I would say to the editor, "Well I kind of like this part, why did you take it out?"
These are professionals, they understand because you want them to turn the page.
You don't want to get bogged down on the nuances to where they say ... Michener excelled at
taking a pineapple and he would say well what's the story of the pineapple?
Michener could tell you every aspect of the pineapple, but that wasn't intrigue.
These types of thriller novels, the reason I think I was so upset about what was cut
is those were parts of the stories I really liked but you have to.
At the end of all of it you have to have some trust in good editors and that's what I did
here.
Who's your favorite author?
Well I think the classic author would be Steinbeck.
I remember one time before I went to law school there was a great lawyer by the name of Perry
Nichols, he was an attorney down in Arcadia, Florida, one of the places I lived growing
up.
He had a cattle ranch down there and I was getting ready to move into journalism, I was
going to be a journalist and hopefully do foreign correspondence.
I think everybody at University of Florida in the journalism program wanted to do that
when they were coming through.
Somebody said to me, "You know Mike, you really ought to think about going to law school."
I said, "I really don't have any interest but I'll go talk to this person you want me
to talk to."
Perry Nichols was, at the time, Melvin Bell like quality, I mean he was truly the Clarence
Darrow of his time.
He was a wonderful lawyer.
His home was out of Miami, Florida but he gravitated and ended up kind of settling up
around north Florida.
I went to meet him and kind of in an artful way I said, "Mr. Nichols what do you think
made you such an important lawyer?"
I didn't know that I really wanted to hear the answer but the answer was spectacular.
He was in a wheelchair sitting in front of this wall and the wall was full of books.
On there was Steinbeck, Kafka, Conrad, Hemingway, all of the great novelists, and he said, "Well
to answer your question," he said, "first of all it started with me reading all those
books up there."
What he was trying to say is there's really no new ideas.
For a trial attorney not to have a real big, big background and a lot of interstitial information
about other ideas, other concepts I think is a big mistake and that's what Perry Nichols
was trying to tell me.
My reading coming up were those people, they were Kafka, Conrad, Hemingway, Steinbeck,
on and on that you would say are kind of the classic writers, not classical writers but
well known writers that moved me.
Was he the turning point in your life that made you say I want to be an attorney?
He had a big impact on it Jeff, a big impact.
There were other issues, again I think I was really committed more to journalism.
I remember reading To Kill a Mockingbird and there's no way that a young person comes out
of reading To Kill a Mockingbird to say you know I'd like to do something like that, I'd
like to end my life and career in a way that it has some substantial impact on somebody
or something.
Well you've certainly had a big impact and I know a lot of the cases that you've worked
on have been geared towards environmental issues.
Yes they have been.
What I've always tried to do is I've tried to take on a big environmental case every
few years.
They're just so overwhelming that you can only do so many and the results I've had have
been good there's no question.
You can't get those kinds of results by taking on too many, they have to be the kind of case
where you say my gosh, if I don't solve this the latent aspects of damage to people is
going to be huge.
I'm involved with a project like that up in Ohio right now against DuPont where they poisoned
the drinking water of 70,000 people.
They poisoned it with something called C8 and they knew when they did it, they'd been
doing it for 50 years they've been dumping millions of pounds of this into the Ohio River
and it ended up in people's drinking water.
They knew when they were doing it that the product caused cancer.
In the last two cases I've tried up there have been horrible cancer cases.
That's the type of thing that I walk away and I say well are we going to accomplish
anything by this?
It's not just can we clean up the stream, it is can we save lives?
Can we let people know that this stuff is in the environment for five million years,
this C8, that it's in your human body for 25 years.
This is the kind of stuff that I believe does have an impact, but in reality if you're going
to have a life, when you have a child, when you have a family that's such an important
priority and you have to say well I can't do them all well, I'll pick them carefully.
What is it about these big companies or anyone once they realize that they're doing something
that is causing a great deal of harm, why don't they stop, why does it continue on,
when do the cover ups come on?
There's a quick answer to it.
First of all you're talking to somebody who believes that capitalism is the best system
in the world.
If you look all over the world capitalism works when its regulated, where there's common
goals, let's do well for everybody, let's do well by doing some good.
It used to be 25, 30 years ago a CEO would move through a company and that CEO might
be there for 20 years.
They might begin their career there and end their career in the large company.
Then what ended up happening in MBA school was what we call quick profits big risk and
those are my terms, I don't know they teach those terms in MBA school.
Here's what it is, you're moving through in three years.
You're going to go to a company like DuPont, you're going to be there for three, five at
the max and what you're going to do is you're going to maximize that 10K at the end of every
quarter, you're going to say did I raise that 10K even one-eighth of one penny?
Because if I did I'm going to make more money.
The whole system is built around that, the way that we pay CEOs is built around that
way.
The compensation issue has changed all that.
We don't really have a CEO that says, "You know I've been here for 20 years, I want to
end my career by not passing something on to the next CEO that has the potential to
do horrible damage to people."
That I think is one of the biggest things and then I think probably the next biggest
thing is that you don't have media really asking the tough questions.
You've got somewhat of a corporate media now and corporate media is driven by how many
advertising dollars do they sell.
Because of that they don't go and ask the tough questions and the CEOs know they can
get away with it.
The investigative journalism's not what it used to be.
No, there are no more Ed Morrows.
There are no more Walter Cronkite or Huntley and Brinkley.
We've moved to, again just like the quick profits big risk same thing with corporate
media, exactly the same thing.
I want to come back to media in just a moment because you're involved in that as well, but
before I do so what case are you most proud of?
I would say probably it just happened to be a local case around here, it was a case against
a company used to be called Conoco.
For so many years Conoco and it's predecessor and everybody in charge of the decision making
had really polluted bio tar and some areas around.
There was never a time when anybody really looked to find out how bad it was, to find
out really what was actually going on.
I think I vested my first effort into an environmental case there knowing that I was taking myself
away from other cases such as pharmaceutical cases and security cases, those types of things
that I do.
I was most proud of that because we got a good result and we got something done that
was meaningful, and it meant that people were at least aware that for 40 some years bad
government had allowed this to take its own life.
There was a lot of reasons I was proud of that, I don't know that that is the single
most important but that was an important case to me.
There's been many single cases where I've handled cases for individuals and you just
love these people, you work with them for years, you invest everything you can as far
as your effort with them and they do the same to you.
You feel like family and when you get a good result, the jury comes back and finds for
your client it is a big deal.
It's a big deal because it validates your efforts there.
You've had six to 12 people hearing your story and say yes, you should have been here, what
you're saying here is right and what has happened here just needs to be corrected.
You're known for mass torts and as I understand it you were instrumental in bringing the whole
mass torts line of business so to speak for lack of a better term to your law firm, to
Levin Papantonio Law Firm.
First of all what are mass torts and what makes you so good at it?
Mass torts, people always confuse mass torts with class actions and they're not even close
to the same thing.
A mass tort is simply, it's a description of a case where it may be one pharmaceutical
case, it may be one drug that has been put on the market and the FDA hasn't done their
job, and because of the FDA not doing their job sometimes it's so dysfunctional that they
let these things get through.
It ends up effecting not just two or three people, it ends effecting thousands of people.
I mean I could go on forever about the cases, the best description of a mass tort case probably
would be the YAZ case.
YAZ was a birth control pill and it was put out there in competition with 50 to 60 other
birth control pills, but the problem Jeff was is they couldn't make enough money just
selling a birth control pill.
If it was just a birth control pill it really didn't mean that much because there were so
many competitors, everybody was selling birth control.
What they did is they figured out a way to market it to appeal to young women, to say
if you take this birth control pill you're going to be slimmer, you're not going to have
acne, you're going to be able to fight weight problems if you take this pill.
In fact they never had tested any of that to know that it was actually true.
It was a pill it had a six time higher risk of causing a DVT or a stroke than the other
competitors.
That pill was out on the market for years and there were lawyers that kept saying you
know Mr. Media, ABC, CBS, you ought to go cover this story, this is important, my daughter's
taking this, this is what happened to her, my wife took it, this is what happened.
That's how a mass tort case develops.
I'm typically hired and our firm is hired to handle cases for other lawyers throughout
the country.
You may have a lawyer who is an advertiser, 1-800 drug whatever it is.
They're more of a marketer and I don't mean that in an awful way, I just mean that's what
they focus on.
You've got people that just market, they're right around here in this town and so and
so and so and so.
How many cases have you tried?
We end up going and actually trying cases for those people.
The point is you just have to be able to do it all in mass torts.
You have to understand I have to educate people, but once they're in my office I got to be
able to say I can take your case and I can try it in California if I have to, I can try
it in New York or Chicago, wherever.
Right and it's an expensive, complicated scenario.
Yes absolutely, a typical mass tort will cost a law firm, I mean if they're the ones actually
doing all the work will cost anywhere from $6 to $18 million, somewhere in that area.
Let's switch over to media.
You have a pretty strong media background.
You've been doing it for what, close to two decades now.
Right at two decades yes.
Tell me about Ring of Fire.
Ring of Fire was an idea that really sprung up out of ... Bobby Kennedy and I have been
friends for a very long time and we were actually asked to do a show on something that used
to be called Air America.
It was an attempt by progressives, I mean it was Janeane Garofalo, Chuck D, Al Franken,
Rachel Maddow, Lizz Winstead and so were all in there and we were asked do some programming
for this entity called Air America, so that's where we started.
Then Air America it didn't hold together.
First of all the finances of it didn't hold together, but what came out of it was brilliant
because everybody went their own way and they did their own thing and that was critical.
You have another television project you're working on right?
Yes I do, right now RT International it's an international network.
If you go to RT International, to any country in the world you're going to see RT International.
They're making a move into the United States and they've asked me to do a program called
America's Lawyer where we interview lawyers who have these huge cases from all over the
country.
They tell the back stories, they name names, they say this judge did this, this legislator
did this, this FDA person did this and here was the net result of it.
I'm going to start that in October and it runs out of Washington, DC but we're going
to do it right here in Pensacola.
They've built a studio here and it's going to run right here, and it'll show in every
English speaking country in the world, that was just part of the arrangement.
I'm excited about doing it.
I'm a little bit tired of doing politics, I've started off doing politics all the way
back to Fox News where I was the only progressive or liberal on a panel and it would be me against
three other people and they'd yell at me for about four minutes and I tried not to yell
back but I found I had to just to be heard.
I did that a couple of years and then I did a little bit of CNN, not real regular.
MSNBC ended up doing pretty regularly, and so Ed Schultz who's been a friend for so long
I guess I did his show more often than anything else.
By the way he's on the RT Network along with Larry King, so it's a good lineup on RT Networks.
Larry King, him, Thom Hartmann, it's just a wonderful lineup of people.
I have just a very short period of time left here.
Must have been quite an accomplishment for you to be inducted into the Trial Lawyers
Hall of Fame, that's a pretty big deal huh?
It was a big deal.
There's only I think in the state maybe there's five of us, something like that.
Fred Levin of course, my partner was also in the hall of fame so it's a very big honor,
I can tell you that.
Got about a minute and a half left, what's next for Mike Papantonio, more books?
That's what I enjoy doing now and I think my family likes me doing that.
They'd rather have me at home writing a book than they would traveling around the country
trying a case.
I'm going to probably be trying cases but I'm going to be focusing a little bit on telling
these stories, both through the media as I've done for years and through these books.
Hopefully people will appreciate that there's a lot of truth, there's a lot of truth to
what happens in these books.
The only thing that's not true in that one is the murder scene.
If there's one thing you would like for people to kind of remember you by or when they think
of Mike Papantonio what would you like for them to think about just quick?
I tell young lawyers if you can't stand in a room of 1,000 people where everybody disagrees
with you and still maintain your position if you think you're right then you should
not be a trial lawyer, it just is not suited for you.
You got to be able to handle rejection, handle disagreement.
Great, Mike Papantonio what a pleasure to talk with you, thank you so much.
Well thank you Jeff I appreciate it.
The name of the book Law and Disorder, Mike Papantonio.
It's a legal thriller, it's a novel, first one in a series, worth a read for sure.
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Destiny 2: Forsaken – Legendary Collection Trailer - Duration: 1:01.
Well this…this is awkward I,
hey you got a gun I can borrow?
This is going to hurt
a lot.
The line between light and dark is so very thin.
Do you know which side you're on?
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Officer Moreno's Mother Speaks at Service - Duration: 13:41.
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'Sounded Like A Dumpster Dropped': Firefighters Search Parking Garage Collapse - Duration: 2:14.
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Moonves is prepping for questions about misconduct allegations: Charlie Gasparino - Duration: 3:35.
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Replay! Remember Me #03/23 - Antoine's Journal - Chapter 1 (Part B) - Duration: 12:37.
At some point Memorize will have to control the means of delivery, the infrastructure
that will need to be created in order to deliver our products.
Information, much less knowledge, doesn´t transmit itself through thin air,
well it does, but not for nothing!
This is for me the real 2.0 thinking.
Antoine receives an e-mail from Anonymous. Check out this article from MRC cognition brain
sciences unit at Cambridge.
Yeah I hacked it.
It´s amazing.
They talked to a patient in a coma using magnetic imaging scans, measuring the surge of bloodflow
that accompanies neural activity.
Now that´s proper data mining.
New England Journal of Medicine wrote about it a few month ago, but they remarked on the
electrical signatures that accompany same neural activity.
If you could correlate both then communication becomes mappable…
By the way, maybe you remember the article about the men in coma I provided to you in
the last episode.
This was happened in 2012.
You can still watch the last episode and download the article if you want.
As we experienced in the last episode Antoine had a loose connection to underground groups.
But more for the sake of Molly, than for his own interest.
First batch of sensors arrived today from laboratory.
Expensive but worth it.
Can´t wait to test the software.
Stayed up till 3am as I took Molly through a list of simple question/answer responses.
Very slow work as software device is very rudimentary.
Yes, no, good, bad, funny sad… and that took two hour, cross checking, recording fifty
readings within a micron of similarity before moving on and then feeding in a randomized
control question.
Basically took all night.
At last a project I can work on!
If we take the minute but readable heat changes that take place with thought I can make an
app that communicates simple colour coded messages directly from the brain.
A mind reading app basically, little more than a tarot reading gimmick at this point,
but the possibilities…
In the future we can map this empathy circuit in the brain.
Via electricity, or even vibrating frequency, giving grammar to our heat and temperature readings.
These new quartz-ceramic heat sensors are so finely tuned they can pick up at least
ten more discernible variations of brain activity.
The more these develop the bigger our language will get; we grow exponentially with this
technology, but for now we have limited control over it.
Here we can see some pictures of Antoine.
Molly gave me the first ring she made for my sensation engine.
I can fit the sensor inside and it will look just like a normal ring, all silver reflections
and sci-fi angles.
Very cool but temperamental, so I´m sticking with the headset for now.
In the future I can imagine implants, but that´s inhuman, right?
To be able to read the anterior cingulate (ACC) is how to understand how we respond
to pain, our own and that witnessed in others!
And we can do this now.
The ACC triggers the Anterior Insular (AI) which literally lights up when pain is encountered.
In strictly neurological terms it defines pain.
From waterboarding to mass shootings, this thing lights up like a Christmas tree.
An emotional lighthouse!
The Amygdala is the part of the brain that regulates emotional learning.
And what is emotional learning if not the interpretation of memory?
My aim is for the next gen of sensor rings
to have wifi and transmit moisture readings, as well as temperature, remotely to the software engine.
Currently making great strides in my research with my Emotiv EPOC headset.
My brain says hungry.
It says sweet.
My memory of sweet things flashes (via heat/moisture recognition pads) crème brûlée
and pain au chocolat.
The geotagged database on my computer suggests three local outlets for these products.
Simple and crass it my be, but this is the beginning.
From hunger to taste to product all through mapping of brain function…the road ahead
is mind boggling.
If the sensation engine could map all of our
fears and desires, track our emotions and communicate them, give us the self knowledge
of what our body and mind are telling us at least we will have the opportunity to change.
It could match up desire with desire, cancel fear with happiness.
It would be like Linear programming for emotion,for the soul!
That´s it for today guys!
We´re witnessed how Antoine´s idea of the Sensation Engine slowly comes to life.
He created a bunch of first tests to spot particular regions in the brain.
Within the technical restrictions he added a headset to his software and the Sensen emerges
to a usable prototype.
If you are new to this channel please let me make one note at the end.
The background of this series is to collect money for the fight against Alzheimer disease.
For more information please check out the first Episode or check out cashformemory.org.
You can also support us on patreon.
Please subscribe and share this.
I´m looking forward that'll you join me next time, when unpredictable events will
happen that will change Antoine, and maybe history forever.
As some of you might already know there were some Easter eggs hidden in the last episodes.
Unlike in the last episode I won't solve all of them today.
Instead I will give you some clues and you can watch the last episode again and
see if it helps you to find all references.
Maybe I will give you the full answer at the end of the next episode.
Or maybe not.
There were only three Easter eggs hidden last time.
You may have found the object which actually supposed to stand in the Wildlands.
If you're a child of the nineties you probably remember some action movies of this decade.
Interesting that Nicholas Cage played in every one of the three biggest action movies
of this time a lead role.
And all this movies consists of just two words in the title.
With only one vocal in each word.
What does that mean?
Anyway, the second and the third Easter egg are quotes from a movie with an impressive performance of John Malkovich
…playing a virus.
Thank you for watching.
I would be happy if you join me next time, when we will cover Antoine's Journal Chapter 2
My name is Alex Rise and I am a Video Game Aficionado
Have a great night. Bye.
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Breaking Barriers in B-More: Dante Barksdale & Col. Melvin Russell Come Together to Heal Baltimore - Duration: 4:59.
Friday through Monday, 22 people were shot, five people killed, and there were four triple
shootings...
He's now going to be arrested.
Here we go...
But we just gotta try something innovative, man.
Because the trauma is real. People are living in post-traumatic stress!
Today we're joined by Colonel Melvin Russell and Dante Barksdale to help address a very
real tension that exists not only throughout the city of Baltimore, but across the United
States.
Policing during my era is way different than what it is now.
We all grew up in Baltimore, so playing cops and robbers when we were little, and now I'm
doing it for real.
When I looked like Tay and like that... that was like my little brothers, my nephews.
Tay, you breaking the law, I'm going to have to put my foot up in your behind.
Watch out for Melvin Russell!
He fast, man, you better not run!
Colonel Russell actually arrested Dante many years ago, and he went on to spend eight years
in prison.
They cornered me like right by the laundry bin.
I had on this big sombrero, like, a big hat from Mexico.
We used to put the pills and stuff like in the poles.
The poles and holes in them.
He came straight to the damn thing, got the pills out of the holes and said, "You just
stupid.
You out here, selling drugs with a sombrero on.
You just stick out like a sore thumb"
Back in the day when we were policing and getting our hustle on, there was not only a mutual respect.
There was an absolute love between us and some people say that's really weird how can
a police love a hustler and how can a hustler love a police, but if I was to really get
hurt, them dudes would care about that, and I didn't wanna see them get hurt.
We had to coexist in the same neighborhoods.
I had a role to play and they felt like they had a role to play and we were getting it
on every day.
My mother made me promise her that I was gonna finish school.
When I came home from jail, it was like a little bumpy road, I'm working, I'm going
through what I'm going through, but it was always that since like I ain't doing enough.
I went back to school and got a Master's degree, I got a Bachelor's degree, and it was harder
for me because as you get older, you know, you forget stuff.
At '91, '92, I had arrested over five thousand people, and mostly for violence and drugs.
Then it got to a point where I was arresting not just the sons, but I was arresting the
fathers and the grandfathers.
Three generations in the same family.
These dudes are doing stuff to each other, all day, every day.
He's running to get something from him, mess his package up.
Go to the next person, mess his package up.
By the time you look up, you've been hustling 10 years, you done messed up 20 dudes', 30,
40, 50 dudes' packages.
You don't know which one of them's gonna get you.
Violence has been perpetuated in games.
We see that music has become more illiterate, more gangster-oriented than ever, but it can
fundamentally, what is the desire, what is the urge that's pushing people to focus on
that rather than focus on the future?
How can you focus on the future when you're hungry?
A person doesn't maintain their basic needs that they can't move to the next level.
These kids are stuck at eating, shelter, and safety.
Don't nobody in this society feel safe.
Don't you see him running?
They caught me down there with a sombrero on.
There is no more relationship, not like the way we grew up.
There's no more relational equity.
We are bankrupt in that area.
Emotionally, physically, spiritually, man, we are bankrupt, we are drained.
Each one get one.
Little people got to take care of themselves, right?
You don't even have parents being parents.
Even if you grew up in the so-called projects.
Your parents were taking care of you, man.
Now these kids are raising themselves.
I'm rounding up the kids where everybody else gave up on them, they walk around homeless,
they ain't going to school.
We take them out to the woods, it's the first time they've seen the stars.
We take all their cell phones away, and then we're doing stuff they ain't never heard of,
"Zip line?
What do you mean 'zip line'?" and from the moment they come in, all day, every day we're
saying, "I love you.
I love you.
I love you," "Don't nobody love me.
Ain't nothing love me but the streets.
What are you talking about you 'love me'?" and it's that demeanor and that attitude.
About day 2, 3, all of a sudden there's a crack in the armor.
Prison reform.
When you get sentenced, you're sentenced to working yourself out of prison.
When you come out, you're going to be a skilled, certified carpenter.
You're gonna be able to build a house.
If you don't learn how to build a house, you will not get out of prison.
And if you can't do that, that means you ain't ready for society cause out here,
people are gonna be living regular, social lives.
Just Humanize em'.
They've been dehumanized.
So you humanize em'....
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EVERYDAY DEWY MAKEUP FOR DRY SKIN - Duration: 10:22.
Hello my fellow humans and welcome to my Youtube channel. My name is Angela. And this is...
this be it. Yeah. So for today's looking I am going to be doing my everyday natural makeup.
It's really dewy and it's perfect for dry skin. To start off, I'm gonna prime my face
with the Laura Mercier Hydrating Primer.
I made sure to put on sunscreen. And I am a
Fool and I use like, actual sunscreen. Because it's like really high SPF. I'm lucky enough
that it doesn't make me break out or anything so that's why I just... I use it even though
I shouldn't. I don't recommend if you have acne prone skin. I use my Maybelline Fit Me
in color 118 because they finally have warm shades. And I just dab. Sorry, I have a mirror
back there, that's what I'm always looking at. Bring it down to your neck. I use two
different ways to blend this. I use this Morphe brush, that came in a kit. So, it doesn't
have a number, it's one of the pretty ones. It was cheaper to get that than to buy the
individual brushes. And i am cheap so... I am going to go over it with a beauty blender
just to blend everything together. For concealer, I'm using the Too Faced Born This Way Concealer
in the shade Almond. And a little goes a long way with this stuff. So, I just wipe off the
sides and do a little dot under here and here... and here and then little bit there because
I'm breaking out a little bit. I really like the concealer because it blends super easily
and as long as you don't use a lot, it gives you a nice airbrushed finish but without looking
crazy heavy. And that's why I think it's good with the Maybelline Fit Me, because the Maybelline's
really light. To set it all, I use my Laura Mercier Translucent Powder. So, I take a bit
on my beauty blender. Like that much and go under my eyes where the concealer is and just
pat it in. Just so this area is more matte and not super shiny and it doesn't crease.
And then I use a fluffy brush also from Morphe and just pat around my face, just to "set"
everything. The Laura Mercier Powder is really good for dry skin cause it doesn't quite set
everything. I noticed it's kind of... like it leaves my foundation feeling tacky. Like
it's not quite.... matte-fying. I don't know, I guess, i don't need matte-fying. But it's
one of those things. So for my neck and my forehead, I use my Cody Airspun Powder, and
I just put it on my neck. And I found this really helps set my neck so it doesn't get
on my clothes anywhere. Next, I am going to bronze my face. And I use my New York Color
Bronzing Face Powder. I'm pretty sure it's one of those dupes for the Hoola Bronzer by
Benefit. But I haven't used that so *I don't know noise*. And I made sure to bronze like
right on my cheekbones so it gives my face a more elevated look. These lights make my
makeup look great! Oh gosh. And then I also put some on my forehead and jawline. I do
not like my jawline at all but sometimes that's just how it's gotta be. Also my acne is showing,
I don't care. This is a natural makeup look. So for blush, I am using the Tarte Paaarty
and this Morphe brush. Perfect! I forgot to contour my nose. So to contour my nose, I
use the same bronzer powder. And I just follow my nose line. And then I blend with the same
brush I used to blend my neck. To set my eyes, I'm gonna being using the Maybelline Pressed
Powder. I got a really dark shade so that I can use it as a bronzer because my bronzer
is rough. I just get it on there and then I take this fluffy Morphe brush and just blend
it all out. And then I go in with a clean blending brush and I just blend it all out.
I am also gonna add a little bit of highlight. I have this Becca Opal highlight travel size.
And the cupid's bow. And I am taking Champagne Pop with a fluffy brush and highlighting my
cheekbones. And then under the eyebrows, above eyebrows. I also do chin just to... y'know
keep the high points glowing. So, now since I already did my eyebrows and I used the Anastasia
Brow Wiz in medium brown and dark brown, I do them before I do my foundation and everything.
To make them look more natural, I actually use this really old mascara. I just brush
it through like brow gel. But I find it better than brow gel because brow gel is expensive
and this was like 99 cents. I'm gonna set my face with my Too Faced Hangover Setting
Spray. And that just really dewifies everything. For lips, I'm going to be using this little
Tony Moly Cherry Lip Gloss(?) Now I am going to set my eyebrows, I use hair spray and a
spoolie. I use the L'oreal Telescopic. *Whispers* L'oreal. And I really hate the brush on this
one so I actually put it on my eyelashes with this and then brush it out with the *drops
mascara* with the brush from my Too Faced little travel sized mascara. I found that
using this makes them look more natural and separates them more while the telescopic clumps
them together. And I am going to the Lake™ today. I should've used my waterproof mascara.
Shoot! Ok, well, it's too late. Anyway. Since I'm going to the lake I'm not wearing falsies.
I will accept my fate of runny mascara and runny makeup should I go in the water. But
not yet. So this is the finished look. I guess I should put my hair down so I don't look
shaggy. That was a bad idea. Just, just gimme a sec. Here's the look. *makeup montage* Thanks
for watching, if you enjoyed this video please like and subscribe. And follow me on my social
media accounts, if you want. Bruh.
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她出道9年,曾是广告界女王,上过春晚,是孙俪丫鬟,宋茜闺蜜! - Duration: 6:37.
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Sagittarius B2 - Duration: 3:48.
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Elle recueille un chat aveugle et quand il ouvre les yeux, elle n'en revient pas - Duration: 3:41.
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For more infomation >> Elle recueille un chat aveugle et quand il ouvre les yeux, elle n'en revient pas - Duration: 3:41.-------------------------------------------
Kent Mayor Memorial Service Remarks - Duration: 7:09.
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For more infomation >> Kent Mayor Memorial Service Remarks - Duration: 7:09.-------------------------------------------
Harry Potter House of Books Challenge | BookTube-A-Thon Day 2 - Duration: 4:05.
it is day two of booktubeathon which also means that it's challenge number
two and today's challenge is a house of books which I've decided to make a house
of Harry Potter books because I am all into the Harry Potter this month I don't
know what it is the newts came at the perfect time it's going to be happening
later this month and I decided why not go ahead and incorporate some Harry
Potter type themes into the booktubeathon I will be using all of the
Harry Potter books in the series as well as a double of the first book because I
had an illustrated edition let's see if this gets as good as my thumbnail or if
it is an utter disaster
two seconds
so that is it for the house of books challenge or the house of Harry Potter
the way that I did it I hope you enjoyed this I am shocked that I was able to
stabilize it in 30 seconds the last 7 seconds was just me placing that one
book and it looked like it was not gonna stay but it stayed I can even stick my
hand in between the books wiggle wiggle yes so lots of fun definitely an awesome
challenge let me know down below what you thought about this challenge do you
think it was cool that I did the Harry Potter books as part of it if you did
this challenge as well please let me know in the comments down below and I
will just click on your name and go find it and go watch that video and give it a
like I'm really excited to see what everyone else comes up with and if
anyone else did it kind of like series stack because I think that's just kind
of cool aesthetically and also I would like to shout out Rachael Marie's
channel today I forgot to do a shout-out in my last video so yes go check out
Rachel Marie's channel she does some reading vlogs every once in a while she
does a lot of discussions and that's kind of what I'm really liking on her
channel as well as tags and just personal storytimes which are also very
rare on booktube but I would like to see more of because you really get to know
the person so if you want to go see her then go check out her channel I will
link it down below also just a small side note for booktubeathon it is just
not feasible for me to do closed captioning on my videos but because I
still want the hearing impaired to be able to actually know what's going on I
am still doing closed captioning with less quality. So what
I'm doing is I'm making sure that every word is correct
but I'm not worrying about capitalization or punctuation so I hope it's
comprehensible and if it's not and there's someone that needs the closed
captions to be high-quality then let me know cause if I know if
there's someone that's actually benefiting from all of that time because
it can take me like three hours on a ten mintute video then I will put in that
time but if no one's benefiting or it doesn't make a difference then I will just check
to make sure the words were correct for those people
yes that is all I have today thank you so much for watching this
video please give it a like if you liked it or a thumbs down if you didn't so I
know what kind of content you want to see on this channel and I will see you
all in the next video share this with a friend if you think it'll give them a
smile don't forget to smile or at least smile with anger because this is my
happy face and I'll see you all in the next video bye :)
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For more infomation >> Harry Potter House of Books Challenge | BookTube-A-Thon Day 2 - Duration: 4:05.-------------------------------------------
Freestone Park, Gilbert to Bunker Family Funerals & Albersons, Mesa, Arizona, 30 July 2018 GP075955 - Duration: 26:05.
Serano
Lindsay Rd
Ray Rd
30 July 2018
Gilbert, Arizona
Settlers Point
Jiu Jitsu
Valero, 831 E Warner Rd, Gilbert, AZ 85296 valero.com (480) 813-4350
Warner Rd
CVS/pharmacy
Stamps Auto, 711 S Lindsay Rd, Gilbert, AZ 85296 stampsautolindsayrdgilbert.com (480) 497-6272
Mirador
Horse Trailers
Middle Finger Poke
Mercedes SUV Dance
Elliot Rd
Sierra Springs
Freestone Park
Town of Gilbert Public Works Department Field Operations Division
Canal
Sun Circle Trail, Heritage Trail
American Orchards, 765 N Lindsay Rd, Gilbert, AZ 85234 americanorchardsaz.com (480) 887-0599
Guadalupe Rd
Houston Ave
애리조나 한국 제 7 차 재림 교회
Church
Arizona Korean Seventh-Adventist Day Church
Personal Loans, Cash Time Loan Center
Baseline Rd
Suncrest Villas
US 60 Underpass
The Village at Lindsay Park
Lindsay Court
Without Walls Church, 1303 S Lindsay Rd, Mesa, AZ 85204 withoutwalls.tv (480) 838-2587
Southern Ave
Sun Valley High School, 1143 S Lindsay Rd, Mesa, AZ 85204 sunvalleymesa.com (480) 497-4800
Canal, Sun Circle Trail, Consolidated
Meadowgreen Park, 2821 E Pueblo Ave, Mesa, AZ 85204 (480) 644-2352
E Pueblo Ave
Walgreens
Alans Beer & Wine, 361 S Lindsay Rd #7, Mesa, AZ 85204 (480) 830-7867
Broadway Rd
Massage
Boost Mobile
United States Postal Service, Passports
TitleMax Title Loans, 2801 E Main St, Mesa, AZ 85213 titlemax.com (480) 981-8240
Main St
Big Lots
Ross Dress for Less
Mesa Spirit
Panhalla Metaphysical and Psychic Center, 355 N Lindsay Rd, Mesa, AZ 85213 panhalla.wix.com (602) 977-7770
Circle K
University Dr
Cricket
Mesa Spirit
Orangewood Shadows RV Resort, 3165 E University Dr, Mesa, AZ 85213, orangewoodshadows.com (480) 832-9080
Pilgrim Lutheran School and Church, 3257 E University Dr, Mesa, AZ 85213 pilgrimmesa.com (480) 830-1723
The Polo Club, 3319 E University Dr, Mesa, AZ 85213 poloclubrentals.info (480) 642-7656
Las Alegres, Adult Community
Val Vista Gardens
Canal, Eastern Canal Trail
Bunker Family Funerals & Cremation, 3529 E University Dr, Mesa, AZ 85213 bunkerfuneral.com (480) 830-4105
CVS/pharmacy
University Dr.
N. Val Vista Dr.
Fast Med Urgent Care
Super Cleaners
Holly's Nails
Tobacco 4 Less
Albertons, Osco
Cart
Mini-Cart
Cartman
Cart Man
F***,
F***, f***, f***!
Worker injures self.
-------------------------------------------
For more infomation >> Freestone Park, Gilbert to Bunker Family Funerals & Albersons, Mesa, Arizona, 30 July 2018 GP075955 - Duration: 26:05.-------------------------------------------
What does nigger gallery mean? - Duration: 0:38.
-------------------------------------------
For more infomation >> What does nigger gallery mean? - Duration: 0:38.-------------------------------------------
I'm Here Too - Short Film on Teen Suicide Prevention (2017) - Duration: 15:00.
(wolves howling)
(heart beating)
(serene music)
[Claire V.O] - I once thought it was
impossible to feel alone.
I mean, how could I?
I'm surrounded by people.
(group chatting)
I have the best group of friends
that anyone could ever ask for.
They are loyal and encouraging.
And my boyfriend, Jacob, is the sweetest guy I've ever met.
- [Jasper] What's been happening, bro? - Not much.
What are you guys talking about?
- [Claire V.O] My older sister, Brooklyn,
is inspiring and supportive.
My mum and dad are still together
and in love, which I admire.
And my younger sister, Emma, who despite her
typical sarcastic teenager attitude,
I cherish more than anything.
(group laughing)
I have the perfect life.
Or at least that's what other people see.
Or maybe it's just what I want them to see.
'Cause it's easier that way.
Easier than telling the truth,
and being judged and ridiculed,
and made to feel isolated and secluded.
Made to feel like I'm not normal, whatever that is.
(sombre music)
But the truth is,
I'm at a point in my life,
Where I'm tired of pretending.
I'm tired of feeling alone.
I'm tired of... living.
And I know what some of you are thinking.
She's just looking for attention.
What gives her the right to feel depressed?
But see, that's the funny thing about depression.
It doesn't give a fuck what you think.
(keyboard clicking)
Dad?
Dad? - Hmm?
- [Claire] Can I talk to you for a sec?
- Of course you can, baby.
Just give me like an hour, and then I'm all yours.
(keyboard clicking)
- It's kind of important.
- Well, so is this, Claire.
This actually puts a roof over
your head and food on the table.
Not just some argument on Facebook about some boy.
- It's not about some boy. - Claire, what did I just say?
(phone buzzing)
Hello, Patrick speaking.
Yeah, I'm aware there's a deadline, okay?
I'm doing the best that I can.
Claire, I'm sorry, okay?
We'll talk soon, I promise.
No, I'm here.
I'm sending it through as we speak.
(knife chopping)
- Mum?
Mum? - What?
- [Claire] Can I talk to you for sec?
- You can see that I'm busy, honey, so.
- It's kind of important.
- And cooking dinner for the whole
family after a long day isn't?
- I didn't mean it like that.
- [Eva] Not now, okay, just...
- [Claire] Can I help?
- You can help by getting out of the kitchen.
Look, honey, I'm sorry.
I've just had a really long day.
I'm stressed.
We'll talk later, okay?
- Okay.
- Go. - Em?
Emma? - What?
- Excuse me?
- What do you want?
You just made me lose.
- (sighing) It's just a game.
Why are you so angry all the time?
- Why are you such an idiot all the time?
- You know that if there's something that's
making you angry, you can always talk to me.
- No, I can't. - Why not?
- Because your an idiot, and I don't talk to idiots.
(knocking) - Brooke?
Brooklyn?
- What's up? - Can I talk to you for a sec?
- [Brooklyn] Of course, what are sisters for?
- Lately I've been feeling-- (phone ringing)
- Hold that thought.
Hey Cass.
Oh my god, tell me all about it.
No, I'm serious, I want to hear everything.
We'll talk later, okay?
- It's kind of important.
- Okay, well I'm on the phone right now.
So, it'll have to wait.
Stop being so selfish.
No, I'm serious.
No, No, tell me.
(sombre music)
- [Claire V.O] I don't want you to blame
anyone though, it's no one's fault.
Sometimes we just get so caught up in everything around us
we forget about who's right there in front of us.
♫ Too many liars
♫ Too many fires
♫ Someone to always start it
♫ Too many places
♫ Too many faces
♫ Used to take up spaces
♫ How many criers
- [Eva] Claire, honey, dinner's ready.
♫ Haven't I shaken
♫ Haven't you taken
♫ All the love I gave you, wasted
- No, I'm not kidding.
No, that is so true.
No, really.
- [Eva] How did you go with that deadline?
- Yeah, I got it in.
- They still gonna pay you?
- [Patrick] I'll have to wait and see.
As long as we're together, right?
- [Brooklyn] That's so true.
Oh my god.
(sombre music)
- [Claire Voiceover] Some of you will say this
is just a cry for help, but you're wrong.
You only cry for help if you
believe there is help to cry for.
- Not on your phone at the dinner table.
- [Brooklyn] Mum's being a phone Nazi again.
I've gotta go.
- [Patrick] Not at the table, you've been told.
- [Eva] Well, if I'm a Nazi, that makes your father Hitler.
- [Emma] I can agree with that. - Can you?
(repeated gasping)
(heavy breathing)
- Could you please go and get your sister?
- [Emma] She's right there.
- [Patrick] Your other sister, smarty pants.
- I don't know where she is.
She's probably still being an idiot somewhere.
- Don't call her that, she's not an idiot.
(loudly crying)
(gagging)
(crying)
- Claire!
- [Eva] Don't scream, I could have done that.
- Why didn't you then?
- Please just go and get your sister.
Okay, I'll get her.
(repeated coughing)
- You're so lazy.
- You're so ugly.
- You're so adopted.
- Dad.
- Don't tell her that.
She's not adopted.
- (knocking) Claire?
Claire?
Oh my, Claire, Claire, Claire!
Oh my god, Claire!
Oh baby, no, no, no, no.
Oh my god, oh my god, wake up, Claire!
Wake her up, wake her up! - Claire!
- Wake her up, please.
My girl, no (crying)!
No, no!
- [Brooklyn] Call an ambulance!
- Get her up! - Baby, wake up, wake up.
(group crying)
- [Brooklyn] Call an ambulance.
- Wake her up, wake her up!
Go baby, go baby, no, no!
Wake her up would you, please.
No, no (crying)!
- Claire, baby, please?
- No, no, no!
Get her up, wake her up!
Wake up, wake up!
No, my baby, no, no!
- Claire!
She's okay, Claire, please baby.
Baby, open your eyes.
- No, don't stop, wake her up.
No, no, no!
No, no, wake up, wake up!
No (crying) no!
My baby.
Wake her up, please, wake her up.
No, no!
(serene music)
- [Claire V.O] Pain is only temporary.
But the decisions we make are final.
(crying)
There are no second chances or do-overs.
And it's our family and friends
that have to live with those decisions.
A decision that I wish I could take back.
- Come on, that's really enough.
- I'm fine.
- [Claire V.O] A decision I wish, now, I didn't make.
- I'm fine.
- [Claire V.O] And although it may be too late for me,
it's not too late for you.
Because despite everything that has happened,
this isn't a sad story.
I don't want you to cry for me or feel bad.
I don't even want you to think
what you could have done to save me.
Because this story isn't about me, it's about you.
All of you.
And even if you don't see it straight away,
someone is always watching, listening, and caring.
So don't make the same mistake I did.
Don't ever give up.
And when you're at your lowest
and you think you can't go on anymore,
just remember, you're never alone.
It's not just you,
'cause I'm here too.
♫ I'm never alone in my mind
♫ 'Cause you're always here right by my side
♫ And I know it's true
♫ That I never loved anyone quite like you
♫ And I know it's true
♫ Wherever you go, I'm here, too
♫ Wherever you go, I'm here, too
♫ Wherever you go, I'm here, too
-------------------------------------------
Hamster who ate egg cake for the first time【Funny & cute hamster make your feel at ease】 - Duration: 1:55.
Thanks for subscribing to my channel!Please RT!
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Piko has a diary and a crisis ensues - Duration: 1:03.
Piko! I found your diary!
Piko! I found your diary!
Piko! I found your diary!
* DRAMATIC ANIME GASP*
Flower, give it back!
Piko, What is wrong?
Flower, Give it back to him.
nO!!!1!11111!!!!
What is going on?
shUt uP bRitisH b0i
* Majestic gay cri with noob vocaloid skills*
Oliver, it's okay. Flower is just being an idiot...
oI MUDAFUKA (Engrish 100%)
nAnI
Stop it.
Why am I the only english voclaoid here?
Hey!
truE engrish
Skrew u
*AGGRESIVE BABYSCREAM*
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Here's What I Think About Buying a Used Diesel Truck and More - Duration: 4:31.
rev up your engines, Chris Mill says, Scotty why do these
clowns with Diesel's with over 120,000 miles want so much for their trucks, the
rest of the truck is a regular truck, well because everybody wants a diesel
that can pull a lot of weight and still get decent gas mileage, you know if
you're pulling stuff with a gasoline engine, you're gonna get horrible gas
mileage, but a diesel doesn't it care if it's pulling itself or pulling a bunch
of weight, it's still gonna get about the same gas mileage and that's the reason they
sell them for so much money, it's just the way the market is and there's nothing
you can do about that, if you want one you're gonna have to pay more money because
that's just how the market is these days, Ali says Scotty I got a 1966 Rambler
Classic, any tips on bleeding the brakes, yeah it's an old car it's simple, all
you want to do is, get another person and have them pump the brakes, then bleed the right
rear tire, do it four or five times, then bleed the left rear tire, do it four or
five times, then bleed the right front tire, do it four or five times, then bleed
the other tire in the front, four or five times, that should do it, now if you can't
get the air out that way, then you got a bad master cylinder or something
that's sucking air in, those all cars are real easy to bleed brake, because it doesn't
have anti-lock brakes, all the modern cars with the anti-lock brakes you have
to have a fancy computer like I have in order to actuate the solenoids and bleed
the air out, but on that old thing it's so simple, just do one wheel at a time
like I said and you won't have any problems, Kay says, Scotty I
have 1997 Celica 1.8 160 horsepower manual around 300,000 kilometers, I think it
burns some oil are the 7af engines proned to burning oil, can it be the PCV
valve, okay change the PCV valve and after that there's nothing you can do
the engine is going to be worn, you got a lot of mileage 300,000 kilometers, if I were you
I'd switch to Castrol and use like their 2050 oil and see what happens, it won't
hurt an old engine like that, and a lot of times it'll burn less oil because
it's better engine oil, try that they're good engines, their very good engines, but
you got a lot of mileage so it's gonna probably burn a little bit of oil but
you put in the heavier weight castrol oil and change the PCV valve and see
maybe it'll burn a lot less that way, I often do that when I work on people's
cars like that, Gavin Vicar says,
my girlfriend's 2000 Yaris has a hissing sound from the brakes as they come
to stop, I change the brake booster, master cylinder, vacuum lines, but it
still hisses, okay did you change the check valve on the booster, if you've got
a bad check valve on the booster, it will hiss and you know that should fix it, now
you said you change the booster, but did you use a brand new one, or a rebuilt one
because if you use a rebuilt one, the rebuilt ones are often absolute junk
and they'll still hiss so it could just be that you used a rebuilt one and you
shouldn't have used a rebuilt one, you should have used a brand new one, I see
that all the time and of course check lines going to the booster to make sure
that there's no loose, you know they just fit on, you might want to put a little
radiator screw clamp where they go on instead of that cheap clamp that they
come with, DylanSand say, my dad has 49 Studebaker that blows the 50 amp fuses and
dies right in the tracks when you turn the wipers you know what's wrong with it
well it's got something wrong in the wiper system you know, if it only does it
when you turn the wipers on either the fuse that turns the wipers on or the
wiring go to the wiper or the wiper motor is shorted and dead, so you got to
start testing all that stuff, the easiest thing is first, unplug the connector to
the wipers, then if you turn it on and it doesn't blow it, you know it's the wiper
motor, if it still blows up then you know it's the fuse or the wiring going to the
wiper, you check it sections at a time, anytime you have electrical problems you
want to check it one section to the other, that's just how that stuff works, simple
always simplify stuff especially electrical work when you're working on it, Ed Colt
54 says, thoughts on cars going to these push start and buttons I hate them, I
hate it too because I have to fix them and it's such a pain, I have the computers that can
fix them but it's still a pain in the butt when it says well I gotta go to the
dealer and buy the special computer module and reprogram them and then
somebody you know get a new key for your car used to cost you a buck and a half
from the hardware store, I had a customer that lost their key that was one of
those keyless systems on a Toyota Prius and it cost his like 1200 bucks at the
Toyota dealer, so I hate him too, so if you never want to miss another one
of my new car repair videos, remember to ring that Bell!
-------------------------------------------
The Letter E Song | Alphabet Jam | Pevan & Sarah | Learn the alphabet - Duration: 1:43.
♫ It's Pevan & Sarah ♫
♫ Alphabet Jam by Pevan & Sarah ♫
Can you say the letter E?
E!
Can you say the letter E?
E!
Can you say the letter E?
E!
Excellent!
There's 26 letters that you need to know,
You can learn them, so let me show you
How to do it, there's really nothing to it,
Pevan & Sarah gonna get straight to it!
e...e....eggplant.
e...e...envelope.
e...e...eleven.
e...e...elf.
Your turn!
You rock!
Can you say the letter E?
E!
Can you say the letter E?
E!
Can you say the letter E?
E!
Excellent!
E makes an 'e' sound, e...e...e.
E makes an 'e' sound, e...e...e.
E makes an 'e' sound, e...e...e.
E makes an 'e' sound, e...e...e.
♫ Alphabet Jam by Pevan & Sarah ♫
-------------------------------------------
New American Funding Team Members Fare Well at Health Fair - Duration: 2:57.
Where does the general keep his armies?
Where?
In his sleevies.
Hello everyone, we are here at the NAF 360 Health Fair out here getting healthy and checking out
our vendors.
We are also going to be doing interviews today from our fellow employees so lets see what
they have to say.
My name is John Brugman.
I work in the video department along with this one.
My name is Sergio Alvarez, I've been with New American Funding for about a year and
a week now.
Been here for like a year and a half now.
I'm a senior loan consultant on Robert Gonzalez's team.
Alright, what is your favorite part of working here besides working with me.
Alright Sergio, why did you choose New American Funding?
My favorite part of working here is by far the people that I work with.
My dad always said a job is only as good as the people you work with and I work with amazing
people here.
It actually just fell in my lap, I graduated college from UC San Diego, didn't know what
I wanted to do, and this was something that very well interested me so I decided to take
it upon myself and make the most of it.
Okay, okay.
Yeah!
I'm here with my friend Ray. He's going to...
Raymundo.
Raymundo, ooohhh.
Hi!
I'm Daniel.
I've been here for about a year and a half or so, and now I'm in the Senior CSR department.
ILA sales, 9 years.
My favorite part of my job is, currently I think it's more just providing a solution
for potential homeowners.
Be more of that coach and not necessarily the sales person.
Someone in your department who has made an impact on you.
Chad Church.
Why is that?
Chad Church knows a lot about the industry, teaches me lots about lead acquisitions,
and CRS. I don't have a half hour to tell you how much.
Well shout out to you Chad.
First guy that came to mind.
Oh, you just won yourself two lollipops oh snap.
I just like the work environment here, it's always so friendly ever since my first day.
I just love the comradery.
What is one word to describe your department.
Cool.
Very fun, always trying to plan events for the employees once a month, the eating contests,
the sales floor.
That is just something I'll always cherish in my heart.
That's awesome, I agree.
It's a great environment here.
Well, thank you so much.
We're going to go get you a lollipop and then you're good to go.
Awesome!
Cool!
Thank ya.
Thank you!
Have a good one!
-------------------------------------------
Harry Potter House of Books Challenge | BookTube-A-Thon Day 2 - Duration: 4:05.
it is day two of booktubeathon which also means that it's challenge number
two and today's challenge is a house of books which I've decided to make a house
of Harry Potter books because I am all into the Harry Potter this month I don't
know what it is the newts came at the perfect time it's going to be happening
later this month and I decided why not go ahead and incorporate some Harry
Potter type themes into the booktubeathon I will be using all of the
Harry Potter books in the series as well as a double of the first book because I
had an illustrated edition let's see if this gets as good as my thumbnail or if
it is an utter disaster
two seconds
so that is it for the house of books challenge or the house of Harry Potter
the way that I did it I hope you enjoyed this I am shocked that I was able to
stabilize it in 30 seconds the last 7 seconds was just me placing that one
book and it looked like it was not gonna stay but it stayed I can even stick my
hand in between the books wiggle wiggle yes so lots of fun definitely an awesome
challenge let me know down below what you thought about this challenge do you
think it was cool that I did the Harry Potter books as part of it if you did
this challenge as well please let me know in the comments down below and I
will just click on your name and go find it and go watch that video and give it a
like I'm really excited to see what everyone else comes up with and if
anyone else did it kind of like series stack because I think that's just kind
of cool aesthetically and also I would like to shout out Rachael Marie's
channel today I forgot to do a shout-out in my last video so yes go check out
Rachel Marie's channel she does some reading vlogs every once in a while she
does a lot of discussions and that's kind of what I'm really liking on her
channel as well as tags and just personal storytimes which are also very
rare on booktube but I would like to see more of because you really get to know
the person so if you want to go see her then go check out her channel I will
link it down below also just a small side note for booktubeathon it is just
not feasible for me to do closed captioning on my videos but because I
still want the hearing impaired to be able to actually know what's going on I
am still doing closed captioning with less quality. So what
I'm doing is I'm making sure that every word is correct
but I'm not worrying about capitalization or punctuation so I hope it's
comprehensible and if it's not and there's someone that needs the closed
captions to be high-quality then let me know cause if I know if
there's someone that's actually benefiting from all of that time because
it can take me like three hours on a ten mintute video then I will put in that
time but if no one's benefiting or it doesn't make a difference then I will just check
to make sure the words were correct for those people
yes that is all I have today thank you so much for watching this
video please give it a like if you liked it or a thumbs down if you didn't so I
know what kind of content you want to see on this channel and I will see you
all in the next video share this with a friend if you think it'll give them a
smile don't forget to smile or at least smile with anger because this is my
happy face and I'll see you all in the next video bye :)
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