Thứ Ba, 9 tháng 10, 2018

Youtube daily report Oct 9 2018

-I love watching, 'cause you can act.

You can be funny. You can dance. You can sing.

-Yeah. -I didn't know until --

I think I was doing some Wikipedia research on you.

You can sing opera, or is that...?

-Uh, yeah.

Yeah, somebody else is snitching on me.

Um, I did that.

You know, I was known as the Ghetto Project Pavarotti.

-I did not know that. Wow. -Yeah, yeah.

I do a little --

I do a little -- I do a little opera.

-I mean, I wouldn't want to put you on the spot or anything.

-But you already have, Jimmy.

[ Cheers and applause ]

I mean -- I don't need that --

Can -- Can -- Can The Roots help me out?

I mean, it's not every day that a kid from Compton

gets to sing opera with The Roots.

-We have a candelabra here. -Okay.

-This is unlike any show. -Y'all ready for this?!

[ Cheers and applause ] Okay.

♪♪

♪ La donna é mobile ♪

♪ Qual piuma al vento ♪ -♪ Ay! ♪

-♪ Muta d'accento ♪ -♪ Yah ♪

-♪ E di pensiero ♪ -♪ Skert ♪

[ Singing operatically ]

♪♪

♪ Oh... ♪

[ Singing operatically ]

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

-Anthony Anderson, everybody!

"Black-ish" returns October 16th

at 9:00 p.m. on ABC.

We'll be right back with Shaquille O'Neal.

Stick around.

[ Laughter ]

♪♪

For more infomation >> Anthony Anderson Sings Opera over a Trap Beat - Duration: 2:14.

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EPIC Gyoza Ramen Onigiri Tonkatsu Sandwich - Duration: 11:11.

For more infomation >> EPIC Gyoza Ramen Onigiri Tonkatsu Sandwich - Duration: 11:11.

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Dinah Jane ft. Ty Dolla $ign and Marc E. Bassy: Bottled Up - Duration: 4:01.

-Performing her debut solo single "Bottled Up"

featuring Ty Dolla $ign and Marc E. Bassy,

give it up for Dinah Jane!

[ Cheers and applause ]

♪♪

-Jimmy Fallon, come on.

[ Cheers and applause ]

♪ I don't need no diamond ring ♪

♪ Baby, I got you ♪

♪ I can buy the finer things ♪

♪ Simple things will do ♪

♪ Say the best things in life are free ♪

♪ Now, I know why since you gave your love to me ♪

♪ Opened up my eyes ♪

♪♪

♪ I'm a bad chick ♪

♪ I need a bad one with me ♪

♪ Work from home but he gon' stay up with me ♪

♪ No sleep tonight ♪

♪ Yeah, you know what I like ♪

♪ If you ride for me, I'm gonna ride for you ♪

♪ Back to back, boy, we gon' make it through ♪

♪ No sleep tonight ♪

♪ Yeah, you know what I like ♪

♪ I'm drinking, baby, 'cause I'm bottled up ♪

♪ I'm smoking, baby ♪

♪ Yeah, I'm high ♪

♪ I'm drinking, baby, yeah, I'm bottled up, oh ♪

♪ I'm smoking, baby ♪

♪ Yeah, I'm high ♪

♪ -Bottled up, yeah, yeah, bottled up, yeah ♪

♪ Feeling like Bey and Jay ♪

♪ We're drunk in love, yeah ♪

♪ I put 50 on your wrist ♪

♪ That don't mean ♪

♪ When you tell me that you're mine I know you mean it ♪

♪ D'Ussé put it on the rocks ♪

♪ Little baby on that French vanilla ciroc ♪

♪ We could be anywhere in the world right now ♪

♪ But you're here with me, girl ♪

♪ -I'm drinking, baby, 'cause I'm bottled up ♪

♪ I'm smoking, baby ♪

♪ Yeah, I'm high ♪

♪ I'm drinking, baby, yeah, I'm bottled up, oh ♪

♪ I'm smoking, baby ♪

♪ Yeah, I'm high ♪

♪ I know that sex appeal is all they sell ♪

♪ I could get it with a one-night stand ♪

♪ But it won't be real ♪

♪ But he putting in the work ♪

♪ Let me feel like this is worth it ♪

♪ Gonna have to hit him with the...down ♪

♪ I'm a bad chick ♪

♪ I need a bad one with me ♪

♪ Work from home but he gon' stay up with me ♪

♪ No sleep tonight ♪

♪ Yeah, you know what I like ♪

♪ If you ride for me, I'm gonna ride for you ♪

♪ Back to back, boy, we gon' make it through ♪

♪ No sleep tonight ♪

♪ Yeah, you know what I like ♪

♪ I'm drinking, baby, 'cause I'm bottled up ♪

♪ I'm smoking, baby ♪

♪ Yeah, I'm high ♪

♪ I'm drinking, baby, 'cause I'm bottled up, oh ♪

♪ I'm smoking, baby ♪

♪ Yeah, I'm high ♪

♪ Baby, I'm bottled up, yeah ♪

♪ Baby, I'm bottled up ♪

♪ Baby, I'm bottled up, yeah ♪

♪ Baby, I'm bottled up ♪

♪ You know ♪

♪ I'm bottled up, yeah ♪

♪ Baby, I'm bottled up, yeah ♪

♪ Baby, I'm bottled up, yeah ♪

♪ Baby, I'm bottled up, yeah ♪

♪ Yeah, yeah ♪

[ Cheers and applause ]

♪ I'm bottled up ♪

♪♪

♪ I'm bottled up ♪

[ Cheers and applause ]

-Come on! Oh, my goodness! Come on!

Congratulations.

Dinah Jane!

[ Cheers and applause ]

Ty Dolla $ign! Marc E. Bassy!

"Bottled Up" is out now.

For more infomation >> Dinah Jane ft. Ty Dolla $ign and Marc E. Bassy: Bottled Up - Duration: 4:01.

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ЖЕЛЕЙНЫЙ МИШКА И КИК ЗЕ БАДИ ПРОТИВ ЗЕЛЁНЫЙ ЧЕЛОВЕК МУТАНТ ПОД ЗЕМЛЁЙ В МАЙНКРАФТ ~ НУБ МАЙНКРАФТ - Duration: 10:45.

For more infomation >> ЖЕЛЕЙНЫЙ МИШКА И КИК ЗЕ БАДИ ПРОТИВ ЗЕЛЁНЫЙ ЧЕЛОВЕК МУТАНТ ПОД ЗЕМЛЁЙ В МАЙНКРАФТ ~ НУБ МАЙНКРАФТ - Duration: 10:45.

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Citrus County storm update - Duration: 1:45.

For more infomation >> Citrus County storm update - Duration: 1:45.

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S. Sreesanth (Bigg Boss 12) Lifestyle, Family, House, Cars, Net Worth And Biography 2018 - Duration: 5:31.

S. Sreesanth (Bigg Boss 12) Lifestyle, Family, House, Cars, Net Worth And Biography 2018

For more infomation >> S. Sreesanth (Bigg Boss 12) Lifestyle, Family, House, Cars, Net Worth And Biography 2018 - Duration: 5:31.

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如懿传:震惊!海兰的真实身份,竟然是她! - Duration: 6:48.

For more infomation >> 如懿传:震惊!海兰的真实身份,竟然是她! - Duration: 6:48.

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Anthony Anderson Will Graduate from Howard with His Son in 2022 - Duration: 4:52.

-How's your family? How's your kids?

-Everybody is good, man.

Dropped my son off at my alma mater, Howard University.

[ Cheers and applause ]

Thank you. -He's in college?

-I dropped him off. He's a freshman.

Dropped him off one weekend.

I left on a Sunday.

On a Tuesday he called me and said, "Dad."

I said, "What's up, son?"

He's like, "I found my wife."

[ Laughter ]

I was like, "Son, it's only been two days."

[ Laughter ]

School hasn't even started yet.

You got another week before classes start.

-Pace yourself, man.

-That's why I said, "Son, you got to walk down the hill."

He was like, "Huh?"

I said, "Never mind. That's another conversation."

[ Laughter ]

But then I was like, "Son."

Fallon's got it.

And then I was like, "Son,"

I was like, "You may miss out on finding your wife

because you think you already found your wife."

-Yes, of course.

-But it's cool.

He's actually following in my footsteps,

because I found my wife at Howard, so.

-Is that right? -Yeah.

[ Cheers and applause ]

-I didn't know that.

-It was -- It was her first week, not my first week though.

All right. Yeah.

-How is -- But your daughter is older?

-She's older.

She graduated from the University of San Diego.

You know, people think we're empty nesters. Nope.

Found out a new term -- boomerang.

That's when you -- that's when one --

that's when your kid goes off to college

and you think they're gone, but they come back home.

[ Laughter ]

-They come right back.

-Yeah, so, obviously

I didn't throw that boomerang out far enough.

Because it's back already.

-What does she want to do?

-She wants to change the world, man.

You know, she got her degree in sociology and ethnic studies.

And she wants to write policy and change policy

and help disenfranchised people.

But I told her, I was like,

"Baby, first you got to secure the bag."

I was like, "Because you cannot help disenfranchised people

when you are disenfranchised."

[ Laughter ]

-You're a good dad.

-I offered -- This is what I did. True story.

I offered to get her a Chick-Fil-A,

and she turned me down.

-What do you mean, "get her Chick-Fil-A?"

-I was going to get her a restaurant.

I was going to invest in the company.

-Oh, I thought you meant

you were gonna get her a sandwich.

-No, no, no. [ Laughter ]

I was going -- I was going to invest in a restaurant

for her and have her, you know, own it and manage it.

And she's like, "No, I'm cool."

I was like...

-They want to do their own thing.

-Yeah, they want to do their own thing.

Man, I don't understand the youth of today.

-Now, you said Howard University.

That's your alma mater.

But is this true that you did not graduate?

-Who's snitching?

[ Laughter ]

And why you got to put my business

out on the street like that?

[ Laughter ]

I mean, in front of these fine people.

-I know, I'm just saying.

You told me that, I think.

-Yeah, I probably did.

I was paying for college myself.

And I ran out of money after my junior year.

I've been speaking with the university and Dr. Frederick,

who is the president of the university,

about creating a curriculum that I can take online and at home

and do some practical classes on campus

so I can walk with my son in 2022.

[ Cheers and applause ]

-Is that right? -Yeah.

-If you do that -- -Yeah.

-If you do that, I'm gonna be crying.

-Okay, no.

No, that's what I'm doing.

-No way. Good for you.

-Yeah. So, I have four years to finish one year of college.

-Yeah. -Yeah, yeah.

-That's fantastic. I think that's great, buddy.

-That's my plan. [ Cheers and applause ]

-I love it. -Yeah.

-Did you see Shaq backstage?

-I saw the big fella.

-Yeah, yeah.

-Shaq is agile for a big dude.

And especially since he's out of playing shape,

he can still move.

-Yeah, he can move. -He can still move. Yeah, yeah.

-You think you move better than him?

-Uh...I think I can as a big man.

You know, but Shaq, Shaq taught me some moves,

you know, back in the day.

-He did? -Yeah, he did.

-He didn't teach the one you did at Madison Square Garden?

-Madison Square Garden. Shaq taught me how to do that.

You got a picture? -I got a picture.

'Cause I want -- I think you should have this framed.

This is you at Madison Square Garden.

-Let me see.

-Someone put on a beat and asked you to dance.

And this is what you did.

-That's what I did. Yeah.

[ Cheers and applause ]

Big fella taught me how to do that.

-Shaq taught you how to do that?

-Shaq taught fat Anthony how to do that.

-Come on.

-Now imagine what husky Anthony can do.

-Yeah, exactly. Now, husky.

You look great by the way, man. -Thank you, brother.

-Congrats on everything.

Every time I see you,

you're up for these awards and see you everywhere.

I'm rooting for you, pal.

-Thank you. I appreciate that.

-What's happening with this season of "Black-ish?"

-Oh man, we're going into our fifth season.

-Hey, congrats, dude. -Yeah.

[ Cheers and applause ]

You know, we just shot our 100th episode a few weeks ago.

At the end of this season we'll be at 120 episodes.

-That's great man.

-It's a blessing, man,

to be able to do what we're doing on ABC.

-What a great cast. -Yeah, great cast.

Shout-out to my partner, Miss Kenya Barris,

who created our show. -Absolutely.

[ Cheers and applause ]

-And my wonderful cast.

For more infomation >> Anthony Anderson Will Graduate from Howard with His Son in 2022 - Duration: 4:52.

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Quang Vodka Và màn mở thẻ cực gắt nhất FO4 - Duration: 1:27.

For more infomation >> Quang Vodka Và màn mở thẻ cực gắt nhất FO4 - Duration: 1:27.

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Снятие печатей с сознания – обязательное условие в магическом развитии - Duration: 8:19.

For more infomation >> Снятие печатей с сознания – обязательное условие в магическом развитии - Duration: 8:19.

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Kickstopper - Duration: 4:00.

Erm, have you ever backed anything on Kickstarter?

Yeah loads of things.

What did you get

Oh I didn't get any of them, well not yet anyway.

Why, what's the oldest one that you are still waiting for?

Well, I backed a car cradle for a Zune. That's due to ship any day now.

Oh well, um, I was just thinking about backing something.

It looks good on the video

Send me over the link and I'll take a look at it for you.

I'm an expert me at spotting scams.

OK.

Thank goodness for shortcuts, you should have it now.

Oh right,

Oh this is interesting.

Let's look at this video then

Yep, I can't see anything wrong with that

That's great if I back it now, I'm still in time for the Early Bird price

Can you lend me two hundred fifty thousand pounds

For more infomation >> Kickstopper - Duration: 4:00.

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【今夜公開】高次元意識メソッド - Duration: 2:14.

For more infomation >> 【今夜公開】高次元意識メソッド - Duration: 2:14.

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EM YÊU TIỀN CỦA ANH - Truyện Ngắn Hay Kể Về Tình Yêu - Duration: 1:06:50.

For more infomation >> EM YÊU TIỀN CỦA ANH - Truyện Ngắn Hay Kể Về Tình Yêu - Duration: 1:06:50.

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THE KOREAN SPECIAL - Cowsep - Duration: 11:37.

For more infomation >> THE KOREAN SPECIAL - Cowsep - Duration: 11:37.

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5 Unknown Benefits of Being Bilingual - Duration: 6:08.

Hi there! It's Luca from MosaLingua... Today, I'm covering a very fascinating topic:

"What are the benefits of being bilingual or multilingual?" Watch the

video until the end because you'll see that that apart from the obvious ones there

are some advantages that are kind of unexpected. Before we get into today's

topic, do me a favor and subscribe to our channel so you won't miss out on any of our

great videos. If you're watching this video on Facebook, Instagram or another

social media platform like and/or follow us. And now, without further ado, let's

talk about the five benefits of speaking two or more languages. Benefit number one:

- being bilingual slows down the aging process. This is a big one. We are all

afraid that one day our brain might not function as well as it does today, not to

mention the possibility of developing Alzheimer's or other brain diseases.

A study published by the University of Edinburgh revealed that bilingual

people's brains age more slowly and therefore they live longer and more

satisfying lives. Benefit number two: - being bilingual makes you smarter.

You heard it right, you don't need to wait until you're 60 to reap the benefits of

having learned a second language because the same study proved that bilingual

people get better results in reading and intelligence tests. Another study proved

that bilingualism strengthens a part of the brain that plays an important role

in processes like problem-solving and task switching. Benefit number three:

- being bilingual helps you learn faster. Of course being smarter has a lot of

positive implications especially in terms of learning new skills, and I'm not

talking about the most obvious skills such as learning other languages.

A study published back in 2012 in an online neuroscience magazine revealed

that being bilingual makes you an overall better learner because it helps

you process information better and also has a positive impact on your attention.

Another study showed that, even before they learn to speak, bilingual babies, yes,

babies, perform better in speech and visual cue tests and show more

cognitive control than monolingual babies. Benefit number four: - being bilingual

helps you avoid distractions. One of the keys to being a better learner is to

avoid distractions. Nowadays, we need to develop specific skills to deal with

connective conflicts. It's harder and harder to stay focused on a task when

all kind of distractions such as mobile phones, music, and ads are out there

competing for our attention. Well according to another study published in

2011, bilingual children develop the ability of managing conflicting

information very early on. Why? Simply because they have to quickly select the

relevant language when they hear words or phrases. This ability even has

beneficial effects on their brain plasticity and helps them manage

conflicting situations and avoid distractions when several stimulants are

demanding their attention. Benefit number five: - being bilingual helps you

make better decisions. It seems that we process information in a very different

way when we read it in our native language than in a second or third language.

In particular, we are less affected by something called cognitive bias.

This is one of the topics in "Thinking Fast and Slow," a great book I read written

by the Nobel Laureate, Daniel Kahneman. Cognitive biases can result in errors in

our logic, for example when we think that flying is more risky after hearing about

a plane crash on TV. The probability and incident stats haven't changed, but our

perception has. A test conducted on 121 American students

revealed that they were less affected by these cognitive biases when they

processed the data in a foreign language (in their case, Japanese). In fact

scientists argue that second-language thinking can systematically improve

decision making because we are less influenced by emotions that can result

in cognitive biases. In a nutshell, learning a second language will not only

improve your cognitive abilities in old age but will also improve your life right now.

You'll be a faster learner, more focused on the tasks at hand and make

better decisions. In other words, it will result in a better you! In this video, I

chose not to present the most obvious benefits such as better job

opportunities or more satisfying travel because we covered those in another video.

Check out the link below to watch it. If you learned something new from this video,

please give it a thumbs up, then make sure you subscribe to our channel if you

want to get more hacks and tips. I recommend turning on your notifications

to be sure not to miss any of our videos. By the way, have a look around the

channel, too. We've published some interesting videos that might interest you.

And finally if you're watching this video on Facebook, Instagram or another

social media platform, please like or follow our page. Thanks for watching,

see you next time!

For more infomation >> 5 Unknown Benefits of Being Bilingual - Duration: 6:08.

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郎平张弛有度:女排姑娘们逛街去了!她们太累了,也该歇歇了! - Duration: 1:43.

For more infomation >> 郎平张弛有度:女排姑娘们逛街去了!她们太累了,也该歇歇了! - Duration: 1:43.

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Emma's story - Duration: 2:22.

I was absolutely terrified driving out to the farm for the first time,

and suddenly we turned the corner and went through a different gateway

and there was this absolute hidden gem.

We all kind of shuffled sheepishly out of the van and all of our faces just started to light up and it was wonderful.

Saddlescombe has been absolutely instrumental in my recovery.

It's built up my stamina. It's built up my sense of self again, and it's given me confidence

that I can do stuff in a way that it wasn't at all doable five years ago.

So Saddlescombe is a magic place as far as I'm concerned.

So this is a lovely field called the mead. I like it very much.

It's got that ancient trackway running through it which is apparently very old.

If you pause and turn round you can see the farm nestled away.

I recently looked after the farm for a week while the farmers went on holiday,

and I've done that for a few years now and it always feels like a massive responsibility

but also a massive privilege. It makes me feel useful and that's the best feeling in the world.

If I remember there is one of the lovely Rangers you had, Linda.

Looked at me one day when it was absolutely horizontal and said

I'm glad I'm going into a meeting, and I went I'm glad I'm going back outside.

For more infomation >> Emma's story - Duration: 2:22.

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唱生日快樂歌竟然會「被吉發函」?5 分鐘告訴你生日快樂歌的故事! - Duration: 4:52.

For more infomation >> 唱生日快樂歌竟然會「被吉發函」?5 分鐘告訴你生日快樂歌的故事! - Duration: 4:52.

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BMW 3-Series 2019: Công nghệ hỗ trợ lùi cực đỉnh khiến bạn phải ngỡ ngàng |AUTODAILY.VN| - Duration: 1:58.

For more infomation >> BMW 3-Series 2019: Công nghệ hỗ trợ lùi cực đỉnh khiến bạn phải ngỡ ngàng |AUTODAILY.VN| - Duration: 1:58.

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Spoiler Opel Vectra B. trunk Spoiler Opel Vectra B. the AOM Tuning. Tuning parts. Overview - Duration: 0:48.

For more infomation >> Spoiler Opel Vectra B. trunk Spoiler Opel Vectra B. the AOM Tuning. Tuning parts. Overview - Duration: 0:48.

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LÜTFEN BENİ ÖLDÜRME ! - MOMO.EXE 2 Türkçe Oynanış - Gameplay - Duration: 22:05.

For more infomation >> LÜTFEN BENİ ÖLDÜRME ! - MOMO.EXE 2 Türkçe Oynanış - Gameplay - Duration: 22:05.

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Peugeot 208 - Duration: 0:43.

For more infomation >> Peugeot 208 - Duration: 0:43.

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Toyota Verso-S 1.3 VVT-i Dynamic - Duration: 1:05.

For more infomation >> Toyota Verso-S 1.3 VVT-i Dynamic - Duration: 1:05.

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爲紅整成劉濤卻被陳思誠拋棄,今怒甩渣男逆襲成最美單親媽媽! - Duration: 7:29.

For more infomation >> 爲紅整成劉濤卻被陳思誠拋棄,今怒甩渣男逆襲成最美單親媽媽! - Duration: 7:29.

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特朗普尴尬了,美国国安部长:中国没有尝试破坏美国中期选举 - Duration: 2:18.

For more infomation >> 特朗普尴尬了,美国国安部长:中国没有尝试破坏美国中期选举 - Duration: 2:18.

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同樣是出軌,爲何他被大衆疼惜,而吳秀波卻無法被大衆諒解? - Duration: 2:57.

For more infomation >> 同樣是出軌,爲何他被大衆疼惜,而吳秀波卻無法被大衆諒解? - Duration: 2:57.

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杨紫参加新综艺自带男嘉宾,与邓伦撇清关系,网友:好样的 - Duration: 2:21.

For more infomation >> 杨紫参加新综艺自带男嘉宾,与邓伦撇清关系,网友:好样的 - Duration: 2:21.

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Trempez vos pieds dans du vinaigre pour soigner de nombreux problèmes de santé - Duration: 4:30.

For more infomation >> Trempez vos pieds dans du vinaigre pour soigner de nombreux problèmes de santé - Duration: 4:30.

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人胖點好還是瘦點好?為什麼?體重多少為標準體重? - Duration: 14:25.

For more infomation >> 人胖點好還是瘦點好?為什麼?體重多少為標準體重? - Duration: 14:25.

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Rome Diamond Lotus Quận 2 - Duration: 4:16.

For more infomation >> Rome Diamond Lotus Quận 2 - Duration: 4:16.

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WGL'18 Sep Qualifier TH000(N) vs Infi(N) Game 3【TH000 Stream】 - Duration: 19:31.

Of course, I had to go expanding and keep suppressing on him

I could suppress on him for long time

but my expansion would been force cancel for sure

With my professional opinion, the expansion will been force cancel

Why do you say POM is good on this map?

This shop is really hard to creep, and you say POM is good on this map?

KOG is better on this map, because Mercenary camp is hard to creep

however, he can creep the Mercenary camp directly

this is a targeted method, he may do this, so my Wisps is going to scout directly

start from Mercenary Camp to his base

If he creep Mercenary Camp, I will cancel KOG and summon Neutral Hero

If he didn't creep there, KOG is not bad, I have Entangling Roots and Treants

Argh? (What?)

F**k you, man

WHAT THE F**K!

What happen?

(sigh) How should I stay in this game?

I am really speechless

It's over, seems like I was passive playing

These acting skills aren't good enough

luckily he didn't creep here, so it's not bad, I can stay in the game

and he uses KOG too

yes, the Wisp may be stick by the pig, so it went closer to the creeps

Argh? The Wisp stick by a pig there (Yes) It's show-off

so your Wisp went to right and been Ensnare by the creeps

just slap on it, if not my BR will die

I feel I will been stuck

No, it scared me

can't get something here

send this Wisp to scout what units he is going to train?

Hippogryph Riders

this creep was stupid

I should say idiot

What wrong with this?

he didn't have not Dispels skills, so I tried more hero kill just now

thank for your donate, king of monton king

thank for your donate, Lexing

I had big disadvantage in early game

f**king big

but I have MG Daddy (means Mountain Giant is really strong)

and

Dryads aren't able to win against Hippogryph Riders, but they can Dispel

so I can get hero kill just now

For more infomation >> WGL'18 Sep Qualifier TH000(N) vs Infi(N) Game 3【TH000 Stream】 - Duration: 19:31.

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For more infomation >> WGL'18 Sep Qualifier TH000(N) vs Infi(N) Game 3【TH000 Stream】 - Duration: 19:31.

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Le référencement payant améliore-t-il le référencement naturel ? - Duration: 2:40.

For more infomation >> Le référencement payant améliore-t-il le référencement naturel ? - Duration: 2:40.

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For more infomation >> Le référencement payant améliore-t-il le référencement naturel ? - Duration: 2:40.

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New Kids On The Block announces Charlotte concert on Mixtape Tour - Duration: 0:21.

For more infomation >> New Kids On The Block announces Charlotte concert on Mixtape Tour - Duration: 0:21.

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For more infomation >> New Kids On The Block announces Charlotte concert on Mixtape Tour - Duration: 0:21.

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Redoine Faïd: La ministre de la Justice demande à Google Maps de flouter les prisons, dont celle Ven - Duration: 2:58.

JUSTICE - La ministre de la Justice a annoncé ce mardi 9 octobre avoir demandé à Google de flouter les vues aériennes de prisons disponibles sur Google Maps et Google Earth, dont celle de Vendin-le-Vieil où le braqueur Redoine Faïd est écroué

"J'ai écrit à Google pour demander qu'il y ait des mesures qui soient prises pour retirer ces établissements pénitentiaires" des services de cartographie de Google, a déclaré Nicole Belloubet sur RTL, regrettant que ses demandes n'aient pas encore abouti

"Je vais demander à rencontrer les personnes qui sont en charge de ces questions-là", a-t-elle ajouté

Google Earth et Google Maps permettent en effet de visualiser des prises aériennes de certaines prisons françaises

Les prisons de Réau (Seine-et-Marne), d'où Redoine Faïd s'était évadé en hélicoptère le 1er juillet, Vendin-le-Vieil (Pas-de-Calais) ou Valenciennes (Nord) étaient ainsi visibles mardi matin

En zoomant sur Google Maps on distingue nettement les différentes bâtiments qui les composent, les terrains de football, les cours ou les enceintes

En revanche, d'autres prisons sont floutées, comme celles des Baumettes à Marseille ou de Bois d'Arcy (Yvelines)

"Je trouve que ça n'est pas normal que des établissements sécurisés comme nos prisons se retrouvent sur internet", a encore réagi la garde des Sceaux

Condamné à 25 ans de prison pour son rôle d'"organisateur" dans un braquage raté en 2010 qui avait coûté la vie à une policière municipale, Redoine Faïd s'était enfui grâce à l'aide d'un commando armé qui avait auparavant pris en otage un pilote d'hélicoptère

Redoine Faïd est détenu à l'heure actuelle dans la prison ultra-sécurisée de Vendin-le-Vieil où il a entamé une grève de la faim pour contester l'incarcération de sa logeuse et de membres de sa famille et ses conditions de détention

À voir également sur Le HuffPost:

For more infomation >> Redoine Faïd: La ministre de la Justice demande à Google Maps de flouter les prisons, dont celle Ven - Duration: 2:58.

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For more infomation >> Redoine Faïd: La ministre de la Justice demande à Google Maps de flouter les prisons, dont celle Ven - Duration: 2:58.

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堂本光一&井上芳雄『SONGS』でミュージカル曲披露! 中山優馬ら共演者も集結 - Duration: 4:14.

For more infomation >> 堂本光一&井上芳雄『SONGS』でミュージカル曲披露! 中山優馬ら共演者も集結 - Duration: 4:14.

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For more infomation >> 堂本光一&井上芳雄『SONGS』でミュージカル曲披露! 中山優馬ら共演者も集結 - Duration: 4:14.

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MSP Voice: Weekly Show

For more infomation >> MSP Voice: Weekly Show

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Clarity M Stereo - Official Product Video - Duration: 3:57.

This is Clarity M Stereo.

Clarity M is an audio metering tool designed with musicians and producers in mind.

It's obviously not as important as your golden ears. But it's pretty close.

It measures all your essential mix data, such as loudness, true peaks, stereo correlation and balance.

It has a radar mode for loudness readouts over time, a real time analyzer

and a customizable vector scope.

You can add it to a single track or your master channel using the plugin.

Or you can connect via optical or coaxial SPDIF or AES

with support for sample rates up to 96kHz.

Either way, it doesn't take up screen real-estate in your DAW

and it's always there when you need it.

What we're looking at now is the radar.

It gives you a progressive visual representation of the loudness of all parts in your mix,

and the loudness range indicates how dynamic your mix is.

This is super useful when aligning levels across different track regions,

different parts of your song, making the lead vocal and solo sit perfectly

and figuring out when you need to slap on a compressor.

On the opposite side of the screen, the True Peak meter calculates the peak level

of the analog signal that will be rebuilt by your audio converter

instead of just measuring the level of the digital samples.

Monitoring true peaks is essential to avoiding unwanted distortion in DA-converters

and in encoders such as MP3 and AAC.

This makes your track ideal for all music streaming services.

Press a button and bring up the RTA and measure the frequency spectrum of your track

and quickly visualize how the individual frequencies behave.

Notice the boomy low mids on this track.

We'll fix that with a parametric EQ and add a subtle reverb on top to bring out some shimmer.

The vector scope is a way to view the stereo image of your mix.

This guitar is recorded in mono so all we see is a vertical line.

Let's throw on a stereo chorus.

This is the TC 2290 with two random modulations and a stereo pan.

While the vector scope shows samples, the Balance-o-Meter in the middle of the screen

gives you a visual representation of your overall stereo image.

If we modulate the chorus on the guitar further you will notice the stereo image

becoming wider and the correlation approaching zero.

The correlation meter just below shows you the left versus right channel phase of your mix.

A negative correlation means that some parts of the mix are cancelling each other out,

especially, when downmixed to mono as many bluetooth and phone speakers do,

so you might want to check your recording setup or revise your mix decisions.

You can customize the display to fit your needs whether it's tracking, mixing or mastering.

If you're really worried about the downmix capability of your mix, add a mono deviation meter,

or if you prefer a super clean layout, simply remove the unwanted display items.

For tracking a dynamic guitar part like this,

we probably don't need to measure the loudness range, so let's remove that.

So that's the Clarity M Stereo.

It's a great tool that allows your eyes to support your ears

when making crucial mix decisions in your studio.

For more infomation >> Clarity M Stereo - Official Product Video - Duration: 3:57.

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Yaşar Gülmez - MUCİZE'M - Duration: 3:27.

For more infomation >> Yaşar Gülmez - MUCİZE'M - Duration: 3:27.

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最新更新《波德申补选》20年后【敦马 安华】再次同台造势 - Duration: 11:25.

For more infomation >> 最新更新《波德申补选》20年后【敦马 安华】再次同台造势 - Duration: 11:25.

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OG 3THREE - About To Make A Million - Duration: 2:56.

[Intro: OG 3Three] I just hung up the phone

Said I was gonna make the motherfucker fucking wit' my brother

Nigga, huh, yeah, yuh (there's no cryin' , there's

no cryin' 3) Three!

[Chorus: OG 3Three] Hung up the phone, said I'm finna make a million

(make a million) Nowhere to run

But my main bitch steady trippin' (nowhere to run but my bitch)

I grabbed the gun Add the three scope just to go hit it (just

to go hit it) One phone call, bitch that's your ass

And we gon' send 'em, gang (and we gon' send) Hung up the phone, said I'm finna make a million

(make a million) Nowhere to run

But my main bitch steady trippin' (nowhere to run but my bitch)

I grabbed the gun Add the three scope just to go hit it (just

to go hit it) One phone call, bitch that's your ass

And we gon' send 'em, gang

[Verse 1: YoungBoy Never Broke Again] Yeah, one speculation and one altercation

I'm sendin' them hittas, aye (sendin' them dope)

These niggas be hatin' ain't no time for debatin' You know we don't feel 'em, aye (no feelin')

Move in they faces, move in they places And knock down the building, aye (brrrt)

I'ma 21 Savage, do work with the X, [?], yeah On the block wit' that rock like I'ma ball

on 'em (ball) Got some niggas gon' shoot, ain't gon' call

on 'em Got some F-15 bullets gon' fall on 'em (yeah)

They gon' hop out and run like a dog on 'em Aye, aye (bitch)

Think that I need to stop rappin' Hang up the phone, walk from the mic

Get the racks out the safe then we right back to trappin' (right back to trappin')

[Chorus: OG 3Three & YoungBoy Never Broke Again]

Hung up the phone, said I'm finna make a million (make a million)

Nowhere to run But my main bitch steady trippin' (steady

trippin') I grabbed the gun

Add the three scope just to go hit it (and it's a clip)

One phone call, bitch that's your ass And we gon' send 'em, gang (and we gon' send)

Hung up the phone, said I'm finna make a million (make a million)

Nowhere to run But my main bitch steady trippin' (nowhere

to run but my bitch) I grabbed the gun

Add the three scope just to go hit it (just to go hit it)

One phone call, bitch that's your ass And we gon' send 'em, gang

[Verse 2: OG 3Three] I teein' you and you teein' me

Teein' you forever, 10.3 Came from nothin', know you can see

Now they take pictures of 3Three Sellin' drugs like my nigga BB

100 Pounds of that purp in a week ( 100 pounds of that purp in a week)

Get 'em for the low-low, we got 'em for cheap (for cheap)

And errybody good, know we all gon' eat Let errybody turn up wit' the gang (gang)

No bitch we don't want change (we don't want change)

Lotta money make us go insane Lil' bitch just stay in your lane (in your

lane) You just wanna gimme lil' bread for the fame

All for the lane she gon' hang When I fuck her she say three names (3Three)

Send a bag to the main Shawty in desinger, she playin', woah

Hung up the phone, said I'm finna make a M (make a M)

These niggas worried, no I ain't worried 'bout them, shit

Feelin' like Scotty, bitch I'm shootin' above the rim, better

Better empty your pockets, if I come up off my hip I'm gang

[Chorus: OG 3Three] Hung up the phone, said I'm finna make a million

(make a million) Nowhere to run

But my main bitch steady trippin' (nowhere to run but my bitch)

I grabbed the gun Add the three scope just to go hit it (just

to go hit it) One phone call, bitch that's your ass

And we gon' send 'em, gang (and we gon' send) Hung up the phone, said I'm finna make a million

(make a million) Nowhere to run

But my main bitch steady trippin' (nowhere to run but my bitch)

I grabbed the gun Add the three scope just to go hit it (just

to go hit it) One phone call, bitch that's your ass

And we gon' send 'em, gang

For more infomation >> OG 3THREE - About To Make A Million - Duration: 2:56.

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LFC TRANSFER NEWS : Liverpool ready to sign for £30m Serie A goal machine - Duration: 1:27.

Liverpool and Tottenham have reportedly joined the race to sign prolific Genoa

striker kristef P attack in the January transfer window the poland's star has

made a stunning start to life in Serie A scoring 13 goals in just eight

appearances in all competitions leading to some of Europe's biggest clubs

showing an interest we reported on Monday the Chelsea were seemingly ahead

of Barcelona in the running to land the attacker but now Liverpool Spurs and

also Manchester City are said to have stepped up their interest in the player

Lea tech moved to Genoa from crackovia for just 3.5 million pounds over the

summer after backing 21 goals in 36 outings and Poland's top flight last

term's and has already proved to be a big hit in Italy however despite all the

interest the 23 year old is keeping his feet firmly on the ground as reported by

talkSPORT via diario Sports I have heard that Barcelona won

For more infomation >> LFC TRANSFER NEWS : Liverpool ready to sign for £30m Serie A goal machine - Duration: 1:27.

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5 Unknown Benefits of Being Bilingual - Duration: 6:08.

Hi there! It's Luca from MosaLingua... Today, I'm covering a very fascinating topic:

"What are the benefits of being bilingual or multilingual?" Watch the

video until the end because you'll see that that apart from the obvious ones there

are some advantages that are kind of unexpected. Before we get into today's

topic, do me a favor and subscribe to our channel so you won't miss out on any of our

great videos. If you're watching this video on Facebook, Instagram or another

social media platform like and/or follow us. And now, without further ado, let's

talk about the five benefits of speaking two or more languages. Benefit number one:

- being bilingual slows down the aging process. This is a big one. We are all

afraid that one day our brain might not function as well as it does today, not to

mention the possibility of developing Alzheimer's or other brain diseases.

A study published by the University of Edinburgh revealed that bilingual

people's brains age more slowly and therefore they live longer and more

satisfying lives. Benefit number two: - being bilingual makes you smarter.

You heard it right, you don't need to wait until you're 60 to reap the benefits of

having learned a second language because the same study proved that bilingual

people get better results in reading and intelligence tests. Another study proved

that bilingualism strengthens a part of the brain that plays an important role

in processes like problem-solving and task switching. Benefit number three:

- being bilingual helps you learn faster. Of course being smarter has a lot of

positive implications especially in terms of learning new skills, and I'm not

talking about the most obvious skills such as learning other languages.

A study published back in 2012 in an online neuroscience magazine revealed

that being bilingual makes you an overall better learner because it helps

you process information better and also has a positive impact on your attention.

Another study showed that, even before they learn to speak, bilingual babies, yes,

babies, perform better in speech and visual cue tests and show more

cognitive control than monolingual babies. Benefit number four: - being bilingual

helps you avoid distractions. One of the keys to being a better learner is to

avoid distractions. Nowadays, we need to develop specific skills to deal with

connective conflicts. It's harder and harder to stay focused on a task when

all kind of distractions such as mobile phones, music, and ads are out there

competing for our attention. Well according to another study published in

2011, bilingual children develop the ability of managing conflicting

information very early on. Why? Simply because they have to quickly select the

relevant language when they hear words or phrases. This ability even has

beneficial effects on their brain plasticity and helps them manage

conflicting situations and avoid distractions when several stimulants are

demanding their attention. Benefit number five: - being bilingual helps you

make better decisions. It seems that we process information in a very different

way when we read it in our native language than in a second or third language.

In particular, we are less affected by something called cognitive bias.

This is one of the topics in "Thinking Fast and Slow," a great book I read written

by the Nobel Laureate, Daniel Kahneman. Cognitive biases can result in errors in

our logic, for example when we think that flying is more risky after hearing about

a plane crash on TV. The probability and incident stats haven't changed, but our

perception has. A test conducted on 121 American students

revealed that they were less affected by these cognitive biases when they

processed the data in a foreign language (in their case, Japanese). In fact

scientists argue that second-language thinking can systematically improve

decision making because we are less influenced by emotions that can result

in cognitive biases. In a nutshell, learning a second language will not only

improve your cognitive abilities in old age but will also improve your life right now.

You'll be a faster learner, more focused on the tasks at hand and make

better decisions. In other words, it will result in a better you! In this video, I

chose not to present the most obvious benefits such as better job

opportunities or more satisfying travel because we covered those in another video.

Check out the link below to watch it. If you learned something new from this video,

please give it a thumbs up, then make sure you subscribe to our channel if you

want to get more hacks and tips. I recommend turning on your notifications

to be sure not to miss any of our videos. By the way, have a look around the

channel, too. We've published some interesting videos that might interest you.

And finally if you're watching this video on Facebook, Instagram or another

social media platform, please like or follow our page. Thanks for watching,

see you next time!

For more infomation >> 5 Unknown Benefits of Being Bilingual - Duration: 6:08.

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Pay yourself and profit first as a CREATIVE / HANDMADE / ETSY SHOP OWNER - Duration: 9:27.

Well, hello and welcome back to a new episode

of the Tizzit.TV show.

In today's episode I want to talk about money and more specifically how to pay

yourself as a handmade business owner, as a creative shop owner,

because let's be honest, it's not something that a lot of makers

actually do or know how to do and I'm sure you didn't start your shop just for

fun. In the end,

the goal is to make a living off it and that starts with cutting yourself a wage

and writing yourself a check. So let's dive in.

So why do makers really just don't know how to pay themselves because that's the

problem is. I'm sure most of you guys are like,

how am I supposed to do this? And it's not because you're stupid.

It's because society taught us that we go to school,

we get a job and then we have a boss and that boss pays us and no one really

teaches you at school how you're meant to pay yourself as an entrepreneur,

a sole trader (a sole trader is a word in Australia,

I think you guys in the US call that a sole proprietor or similar).

So when you work for yourself, how are you meant to pay yourself?

It's really uncomfortable because no one really taught us how to do it.

No one really loves doing math and all that stuff,

or you wouldn't be listening to me talking right now.

So a lot of makers simply don't pay themselves and if you don't pay yourself

well first you're going to start hating working on your business because at some

stage the passion stops because you can't pay your bills and you're like,

okay, why am I even doing this in the first

place?

And also if you don't pay yourself, that's simply not sustainable.

If you want to have a shop that's a full time living,

you've got to get in the habit of consistently paying yourself and I'm

even going to say, and we'll see that in the video,

pay yourself first. I know when I started working for

myself, it was very much a matter of all the

money in my business account and then when I could,

I took a little bit out of it. When I felt like there wasn't enough in

there, I would just leave it and not paying

myself for awhile and it was just a bit of this mysterious relationship between

me and my business money until I realized,

look, I have to pay myself every month.

I want to know exactly how much my business is going to pay me and I want

you to do the same.

So first point is - and I'm not going to dive really deep into this because I

have a full playlist of free videos around the topic of pricing on my

Youtube channel that you can go and check out - but I'm going to assume in

this video that you are pricing your product strategically with a decent

profit margins, that you're actually making money from

the sales you're making. That's just a prerequisite.

The second thing I want to talk about is this book:

'Profit First'. This is a book that I recommend everyone

that work for themselves or run a business read.

It's really, really accessible.

It's not, you know,

it's not numbers and math and all of that in there.

It's like words, so it's really easy to read and it is

going to blow your mind and it will change the way you see the money that

gets into your business and the way you pay yourself.

And so the idea behind this book is that you should take the profit out of your

business first. That means that you pay a profit with

your business before you even pay for your bills and your expenses - and that

works with paying yourself as well. So the idea is to not only have a

complete separation - obviously I hope you already have that in place between

your personal account and your business account,

meaning you're not going to go grocery shopping with your business card and

you're not going to go and buy office supplies with your personal card ever.

It's really, this book is going a step further than

that and it's saying we're not just going to have one bank account for my

business, but we're going to have five and so the

way this work and the way you pay yourself with this system is to have

this one big bucket.

That's your main bucket and that's one business account that has only one

purpose and it's getting paid. So this is the account that's linked to

your Paypal, your Stripe,

whichever card processor you're using, and that's where all of your income,

all of the money you make from your sales is being deposited in.

So that's the money you have to work with at the end of the month.

And what happens is that this is 100 percent of the money you have available

and then you'll decide on percentages, which I really recommend you for the

book to understand what percentage you should allocate for each bucket

depending on your business and your specific situation.

But after that you would take this 100 percent of money and distribute it into

four other bank accounts or four other buckets.

The first one, and that's why the book is called

'Profit first', is profit and this is a small

percentage.

It's not big, but it's important to still do it.

Even if it's $2 that month, even if it's only 50,

even if it's only a hundred. No matter how small.

You take a small percentage of your sales and you put it into a profit

account that you do not touch at all during the year.

The only moment you're going to touch this money is at the end of the year

when you will have accumulated and you get to decide if you want to take it for

yourself and just have a little bit more money for yourself or if you want to

reinvest it in your business. Before that year,

you're just accumulating money in this bank account and you're not touching it

so you're already making a profit and you haven't even paid your expenses yet,

which is fantastic. The second account or the second bucket

that you will distribute money in after you put money aside for profit is paying

yourself, and that's called owner's compensation

or wage or salary.

You can call it the way you want. The idea is that you take a percentage

of your income and pay yourself straight away from it.

The more money you make, the more money you take,

the less money you make with your business,

the less money you take. So now you have a profit on the side

already waiting for you and you've paid yourself - in every month you do pay

yourself. The third bucket or the third account is

the tax bucket, and that's the bucket in which you

deposit an amount (you have to work this out depending on where you live in the

world and again, your specific situation),

but how much tax you to be putting aside per sale that you're making and every

time you do your accounting, your bookkeeping,

at the end of the month, you put that money aside in that bucket.

And then finally, and it's surprising to most of us,

that is the last one. It's the last bucket,

the last account, and that's your operating expenses.

So what this means is that if you make $100 (I'm just going to keep it really

simple in terms of numbers because I don't really like to do math in the

videos); if you make $100 in your income bucket,

you can then distribute maybe two percent to your profit.

So there's two dollars there and then you take maybe 40 percent for yourself.

So there's $40 in the owner's compensation and the salary account,

and that's for your personal use. You're free to do whatever you want with

it. Then you want to put money aside for

tax. So maybe 30 percent.

So we're already at 72 percent and so the rest of fourth bucket is 28 percent

and that really becomes a budget for your expenses.

And the beauty with this system is that not only you've already made a profit

and you've already paid yourself, is that you're going to create a

business that's very lean and that's never really going to be bankrupt

because you know that what is in this expense account is the maximum money you

get to spend to run your business. So that forces you to,

you know, not get shiny object syndrome and start

hiring for this service and this service and try to subscribe to this product and

this tools if you can't afford it. So it's really putting in place a system

that won't let you go bankrupt because you can't.

You simply have this allocation of budget for your expenses and that's what

you use and you've already paid this off.,

you've already put aside for tax and you've already paid a profit as well.

So it's really a neat little system and I probably don't do it justice as well

as those 200 pages so I would really, really recommend that you read this.

And no, it's not just if you're already making a

gazillion amount of money. It's really even if you're just getting

started, even if you only put $1 aside each month

to pay yourself, that's a start.

The idea is to really get used to paying yourself and writing yourself a check.

Because I don't want you to wake up three years after you started your

business and go: "I'm

tired. I'm not making enough money"

because you didn't build that system to pay yourself in the first place.

I hope this was useful. Make sure to comment below and let me

know if you're going to get the book, if you read it already and if you liked

the concept of it and make sure if you don't have to book to go and get it.

I do not get paid to say that by the way,

I just really, really loved this book.

I'll also link below to the playlist with the pricing videos if you need help

with that, because that's the baseline you need to

make a profit from your product, as well as my free library of resources

for makers and handmade shop owners where you will find ebooks and

checklists and free workbooks to help you start,

grow and profit from your handmade shop. Thank you so much for watching and I

will see you next Tuesday. Oh,

and don't forget to subscribe.

For more infomation >> Pay yourself and profit first as a CREATIVE / HANDMADE / ETSY SHOP OWNER - Duration: 9:27.

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The Boo in the Shoe : Learn Esperanto with subtitles - Story for Children "BookBox.com" - Duration: 6:36.

The Boo in the Shoe

By Kuzhali Manickavel

Have you ever seen Boos?

They are playful creatures

you think you see

under your bed at night.

Some look like

orange zebras,

others like flying snails.

They can tease

or make you sneeze!

They can even

make chocolates appear

in empty pockets!

Puzzle the Boo looked a bit

like an elephant,

only he was

purple most of the time

and the size of a mouse.

Meera stumbled upon him

one morning by accident.

There he was, sniffing and moaning,

his backside firmly wedged

inside her shoe.

"I must be dreaming,"

she thought.

She poked him

to see what would happen.

"Ouch!" howled Puzzle.

"Oh! I'm very sorry,"

she apologized.

"I'm stuck!"

he bawled.

In fact, he had been stuck there

all night

and had given up

hope of ever getting free.

Meera examined him closely.

"Let me see if I can help,"

she said,

pulling him by the legs.

She pushed him from behind.

She even banged

the shoe on the floor.

"I could put you

in soapy water,"

she suggested.

No, Puzzle was scared of bubbles.

"What if I poured oil on you?"

she asked.

Puzzle began to squeak

and sob.

He certainly didn't want

oil poured on him!

"I know

how to stop you from crying!"

Meera shouted merrily.

She started to tickle Puzzle.

Boos are very ticklish,

and soon

he was squirming and giggling.

The more Meera tickled him,

the more he squirmed

until suddenly...

"Look! You're unstuck!"

cried Meera excitedly,

clapping her hands.

Puzzle blinked.

He wiggled his legs.

He wiggled his tail.

Then he wiggled

his whole self,

just to make sure.

"Yay! I'm free!"

he trumpeted

as he bounced

around the room.

He bounced onto her hand

and smiled,

"What would you like

before I go?

Chocolates?

Shall I make

your school disappear?"

"Do you have to go?"

asked Meera sadly.

"I wish

you could stay.

We could be friends!"

"Boos don't have

human friends...

But that's a great idea!"

he squeaked,

"Just say 'Puzzle the Boo,

I want to see you'

and I'll come!"

"Promise?"

she asked.

"I promise!" winked Puzzle.

The school bus

honked loudly.

"Okay,

we'll play after school.

See you later!"

she said

as she rushed outside.

After school,

Meera went to the garden,

shut her eyes

and murmured

the magic words.

There was a humming sound

and Puzzle

appeared in a flash!

They laughed and

played until sunset.

And from that day on,

Meera and Puzzle

became best friends.

For more infomation >> The Boo in the Shoe : Learn Esperanto with subtitles - Story for Children "BookBox.com" - Duration: 6:36.

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工作细胞恶搞版 Cells at Work/Hataraku Saibou on Crack - Duration: 6:13.

For more infomation >> 工作细胞恶搞版 Cells at Work/Hataraku Saibou on Crack - Duration: 6:13.

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Crochet ovals - How to crochet oval shape - Duration: 12:06.

Hi, dear crocheters!

How are you? My name is Fernando

welcome back to GanchiGurumi.

Some of you have asked me how to make

an oval shape,

instead of a regular circle as used for amigurumi.

I'm sure you've seen pattern, pics or whatever

for a piece or even an entire amigurumi

that is not round

but a bit flattened.

But they are also made in spiral!

Today we're learning how to make ovals,

but you can find a lot of patterns and ways

to make them.

If you want to design the oval by your own,

instead of following a pattern,

don't miss my tips to learn how to make it!

So let's begin!

If you want to crochet this cutie

go to my Etsy shop and get the pattern!

Ok, this was all!

It is so simple,

and you can decide the size of your piece

with the starting chains for the foundation chain.

Just remember:

in both ends, we're making 4 sc together.

From this point, we're making in the ends

the corners that will round the work into an oval.

And in both sides of the oval,

you have to make the same amount of stitches,

every round adding 2 more from 3rd round.

If you start your foundation chain with 8 ch,

you'll have 6 sc on sides plus both ends for R1 and R2.

From R3 and so on, you'll always add 2 sc on sides:

8 sc (R3), 10 sc (R4), and so on.

I'm sure you'll have no problems with these tips,

but if you still have any question, tell me in comments

and I'll try to do my best to help you.

As always, I'd thank you if you Like this video

and share it in your social media.

Don't forget to follow me in mine

to see all my pics and projects.

Subscribe to my channel and set notifications on

in the little bell below.

Thanks for watching and

see you in the next vid!

Bye!

For more infomation >> Crochet ovals - How to crochet oval shape - Duration: 12:06.

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Meg Ryan's son Jack Quaid just 'recently' saw When Harry Met Sally - Duration: 2:42.

 The 1989 film When Harry Met Sally is among the most beloved romantic comedies of all time

But one person who didn't rush to see it was Jack Quaid from Amazon's upcoming superhero show The Boys and the son of actors Dennis Quaid and When Harry Met Sally star Meg Ryan

Quaid revealed why he was late to the WHMS party in the course of Entertainment Weekly's Breaking Big panel at New York Comic Con on Sunday, where he was joined onstage by David Ajala (Nightflyers), Virginia Gardner (Halloween, Runaways), Melissa Roxburgh (Manifest), and Cailee Spaeny (Bad Times at the El Royale)

Lars Niki/Getty Images for Entertainment Weekly  "I saw When Harry Met Sally for the first time recently," Quaid told panel moderator and EW Editor at Large Lynette Rice

"Guys, when your mother has one of the most famous orgasm scenes of all-time, you do not jump to the film, okay? I saw it because I was doing a rom-com, and that's like the rom-com, and I watched it, and then afterwards I cried for so long, because I was so proud of her, and I immediately called her, and I'm like, 'I'm so sorry I missed this movie

' She's like, 'I've seen it like one time.' Anyway, that's my favorite of hers." Lars Niki/Getty Images for Entertainment Weekly  Quaid also discussed his mixed feelings towards Joe Dante's 1987 science fiction film Innerspace, the movie on which his parents met

 "That's an insane movie, and it's a very weird movie for me, because both my parents are in it, and Martin Short's character is named Jack, which is my name," said the actor

"It's just odd for me. I know they met on that movie too, so cosmically it's weird for me…It's good, it's weird, it's cool

I had nothing to do with it, but if it wasn't made, I probably wouldn't have been born, so I'd say, 'Good on that movie!' yes

"  Related content: Simon Pegg reunites with Karl Urban on Amazon's The Boys Meet a shirtless Chris Hemsworth and other rogues in exclusive Bad Times at the El Royale photos Marvel's Runaways train to face their parents in action-packed season 2 trailer

For more infomation >> Meg Ryan's son Jack Quaid just 'recently' saw When Harry Met Sally - Duration: 2:42.

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BMW M550XD Touring - Duration: 1:07.

For more infomation >> BMW M550XD Touring - Duration: 1:07.

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⛵ Life As Sailing On A Boat? #Analogies with #TheFreedomExplorer - Duration: 3:27.

ever thought about your life as sailing on a boat

more about this analogy right after the intro

welcome to analogies are ready to explore

I'm the freedom Explorer you can think of me as

that part of you who likes to see things from here

from here from here yeah from any angle

and while you get in touch to that curious adventurous

part of you I'll present you the analogy of the day

life as sailing on a boat are you ready for the adventure

are you ready for the journey let's jump right on

right on board the boat imagine yourself on the boat

do you feel the wind do you feel the weather

yes on the boat now think about it

what is the wind and the weather in our life

what is it in our analogy these are the stuff that

we cannot control why because we cannot control

the wind nor the weather so what is it in our lives

it is our circumstances yes our circumstances

this might be the country you live in

it might be even the town you live in or

the school you went as a child it might be even your parents

because we don't choose our parents these are

circumstances just like the wind the stuff that

we cannot control but let's go back to the boat

imagine yourself there on the sailing boat

what do we do control we control the set of the sails

yes think about it it's not the direction of the wind

but it is the set of sails that determines which way

we're going right so what is it in our life

what is it in this analogy it is our attitude

it is the stuff that we choose to do

this is our actions this is the strategies that

we implement in our lives this is the set of sails

and this is also what makes this analogy so empowering

because even though we don't control the wind

even though we don't control our circumstances

we still we control the set of the sails

the set of the sails determines where we're going

not the direction of the wind which is again

what makes this analogy so empowering so until next

episode I want you to think about other analogies

or even more ideas about this analogy that

you can share them below in the comments

or again other analogies so we can explore them

in future episodes of analogies

so share these ideas below and let's meet in the

next episode of analogies see you in the next episode

For more infomation >> ⛵ Life As Sailing On A Boat? #Analogies with #TheFreedomExplorer - Duration: 3:27.

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Depilazione uomo: come eliminare per sempre i peli sulla schiena? - Duration: 1:04.

For more infomation >> Depilazione uomo: come eliminare per sempre i peli sulla schiena? - Duration: 1:04.

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Without love we have nothing - Duration: 3:09.

For more infomation >> Without love we have nothing - Duration: 3:09.

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Steal This Film II 720p HD - Duration: 44:44.

Is it a good thing or a bad thing

that it's becoming harder maybe

impossible to encapsulate

information in discrete units and sell them?

The simplistic answer, the answer that you get from Hollywood

and the recording industry is - it's a disaster.

This is not a film about piracy.

The recording industry's been freaked out.

The movie industry's been freaked out.

The suits don't know how to think about this.

This is not a film about sharing files.

They put a lot of money into

making those movies making that music.

So they want to get something back.

but the way they're trying to stop the copying now

it's definitely not working.

It's a film that explores massive changes in the way we produce

distribute and consume media.

Ever since Napster, the music industry has been trying to kill file sharing

Napster was this huge global party of everybody suddenly had access

to the largest music library in the world. And what'd they do?

Well, they went after Napster and they shut it down.

Napster, Aimster, Audiogalaxy.

Grokster. IMash - Kazaa

All of these companies were sued.

And in the end - essentially - the entertainment industry succeeded

in driving that technology out of the mainstream commercial field.

The industry's turned to suing individuals, hundreds of individuals

ultimately thousands, now tens of thousands of individuals

for downloading music without permission.

Existing players are trying to

make certain things happen that

in retrospect will seem kind of barbaric.

If you're talking about the distribution

of cultural material, of music

and cinema, well there is a long history

of whatever the incumbent industry

happens to be, resisting whatever new technology provides.

Cable television in the 70's was

viewed really as a pirate medium.

All the television networks felt that taking their content

and putting it on cables that ran to peoples houses

was piracy pure and simple.

The video recorder was

very strongly resisted by Hollywood.

There were lawsuits immediately brought by the movie studios who felt

in fact, who said publicly that the VCR was to the American

movie industry what the "Boston Strangler" was to a woman alone.

New information technologies provide Hollywood and the recording industries

with fresh channels on which to sell products, but they can also

open unplanned possibilities for their consumers.

The sheet music people resisted the recordings.

The first mp-3 player by Diamond-Rio sort of the initial company

long before the iPod, they were met with a lawsuit.

The possibilities suggested by Peer-to-Peer technologies

have prompted the entertainment industries

to react in an unprecedented way.

Traditionally, copyright infringement has just been a civil matter.

If a copyright owner catches you doing something wrong,

they can sue you and force you to pay them money.

Criminal infringement liability, the ability to prosecute you and

throw you in jail, has been reserved for circumstances of commercial

piracy, circumstances where someone has made 500 copies,

is selling them on the street as competition for the real thing.

Well, in recent years, copyright owners have not been satisfied with that.

They've wanted to reach out and have criminal recourse

against people who are engaged in non-commercial activities.

We recognize and we know that we will never stop piracy.

Never. We just have to try to make it

as difficult and as tedious as possible.

And we have to let people know there are consequences.

If they're caught.

What they've sought to do, is sue a few people.

Punish them severely enough that they can essentially

intimidate a large number of other people.

It's really as though they decided to intimidate the village they would

just chop of the heads of a few villagers, mount those heads on pikes

as a warning to everyone else.

The fact that the DVD writer is the

new weapon of mass destruction in the world

is primarily for the fact that a 50 billion dollar film can be reproduced

at the cost of literally 10 or 15 cents.

There is a fantastic quote by Mark Ghetty,

who is the owner of Ghetty Images,

which is a huge corporate image database, and he's one of the largest

intellectual proprietors in the world.

He once said intellectual property is the oil of the 21st century.

It'a a fantastic quote, you could condense it to one word

that is, war.

He declared war with that saying we will fight for this stuff

these completely hallucinatory rights to

images, ideas, texts thoughts, inventions

Just as we're fighting now for access to natural resources.

He declared war.

Strange kind of war. I would take it serious.

But it's ridiculous and serious at the same time.

This is not the first war

that has been fought over the production, reproduction

and distribution of information.

People like to see the contemporary

and the digital era as some kind of a unique

break. And I think the important point to make here is

not to see it as a unique break, but really to see it as a moment

which accelerates things that have already happened in the past.

Before the arrival of the printing press in Europe in the 1500's,

information was highly scarce and relatively easy to control.

For thousands of years, the scribal culture really hand-picked the people

who were given this code to transmit knowledge across time and space.

It's an economy of scarcity

that you're dealing with

People are starved in a sense for more books

There are images from the 16th century

of books that were chained, and had

to be guarded by armed guards

outside a heavy, heavy door

because it was very, very dangerous for people to have access to that.

Print brought with it a new abundance of information

threatening the control over ideas that had come with scarcity.

Daniel Defoe tells of Gutenberg's partner Johann Fust, arriving in

15th century Paris with a wagon load of printed bibles.

When the bibles were examined, and the exact similarity of each book

was discovered, the Parisians set upon Fust

accusing him of black magic.

About to change everything, this new communications technology

was seen as the unholy work of the Devil.

All of the emerging nation-states of

Europe made it very clear that

they would control information flows to the best of their ability.

The printers were the ones who were

hunted down if they printed

the forbidden text.

So, more than we think of persecuting

the authors but it was really the printers who suffered most.

As print technology developed in Europe and America

its pivotal social role became clear.

Printing becomes

associated with rebellion and emancipation.

There's the governor of Virginia, Governor Berkeley

who wrote to his overseers in England in the 17th century

saying, "Thank God we have no printing in Virginia,"

"and we shall never have it as long as I'm governor."

This was a reaction to the English civil war and the pamphlet wars and

they were called paper bullets in that period.

The basic idea of censorship in

18th century France is a concept

of privilege, or private law.

A publisher gets the right to publish a particular text, that is

deny it to others, so he has that privilege.

What you have is a centralized

administration for controlling

the book trade, using censorship

and also using the monopoly of the established publishers.

They made sure that the books that

flowed throughout a society were

authorized - were the authorized editions - but also were within the

control of the state within the control of the king or the prince.

You had a very elaborate system of censorship

but in addition to that you had a monopoly

of production in the booksellers' guild in Paris.

It had police powers. And then the police itself

had specialized inspectors of the book trade.

So you put all of that together and the state was very powerful

in its attempt to control the printed word.

Bot not only was this apparatus incapable of preventing

the spread of revolutionary thought, it's very existence inspired

the creation of new, parallel pirate systems of distribution.

What is clear is that during the 18th century

the printed word as a force is just expanding everywhere

You've got publishing houses printing presses

that surround France in what I call a "fertile crescent"

dozens and dozens of them producing books which are

smuggled across the French borders

distributed everywhere in the kingdom by an underground system.

I have a case of one Dutch printer who looked at the index of prohibited books

and used it for his publication program

because he knew these were titles that would sell well.

The pirates had agents in Paris and everywhere else

who were sending them sheets of new books, which they think will sell well.

The pirates are systematically doing I use the word, it's an anachronism

market research.

They do it I've seen it in hundreds and literally thousands of letters.

They are sounding the market. They want to know what demand is.

And so the reaction on the part of the publishers at the center

is, of course, extremely hostile. And, I've read a lot of their letters.

They're full of expressions like buccaneer and private and

"people without shame or morality" etc.. In actual fact, many of these

pirates were good bourgeois in Lausanne or Geneva or Amsterdam

and they thought that they were just

doing business. After all, there was no

international copyright law and they were satisfying demand.

There were printers that were almost holes in the wall or down in the -

if they were printing subversive material

they could sort of hide their presses very quickly.

People used to put them on rafts and float down to another town

if they were in trouble with the authorities. It was very movable.

In effect, you've got two systems at war with one another.

And it's this system of production outside of France

that is crucial for the Enlightenment.

Not only did this new media system spread the Enlightenment, but

I won't use the word prepared the way for the Revolution.

It so indicted the Old Regime that this power - public opinion

became crucial in the collapse of the government in 1787-1788

In Paris, the Bastille had been a prison for pirates.

But in the years before the Revolution the authorities gave up

trying to imprison pirates. The flow of ideas and information

was too strong to be stopped.

And I think that's the dramatic change that was affected by

the printing revolution That all of a sudden

the emergence of a new reading public the emergence of an undisciplined

reading public which were not subject to the same norms of reading or

the same norms of relation to knowledge as it was in the past.

It was a dramatic shift.

The fundamental urge to copy

had nothing to do with technology.

It's about how culture is created.

But technology of course changes what we can copy

how quickly we can copy and how we can share it.

What happens when a copying

mechanism is invented? And you can

take the printing press or you can take bittorrent.

It shapes people's habits.

It gives people completely new ideas how they could work

how they could work together how they could share

what they could relate to what their lives could be.

There's no way that an absolutist political system

can totally suppress the spread of information.

New media adapt themselves to these circumstances.

And often, they can become even more effective because of the repression.

Why should improvements in our capacity to copy

be linked to social change?

Because communicating so fundamental to what we do in the world

is itself an act of copying.

The one technique that brought us to where we are is copying.

Sharing is at the heart of in some senses, existence.

Communication, the need to talk to someone, is an act of sharing.

The need to listen to someone is an act of sharing.

Why do we share our culture? Why do we share language?

Because we imitate each other. This is how we learn to speak.

This is how a baby learns. This is how new things

come into society and spread through society.

Basically what keeps us together is that we copy from each other.

When the spoken word was our only means of communication,

we traveled far and wide to deliver it to others.

Later, as we began to communicate in written form,

Armies of scribes multiplied our ideas.

Our urge to communicate is so strong

that we have always pushed the tools available to us to the limit.

then gone beyond them, creating new technologies

that reproduce our ideas on previously unimaginable scales.

In 1957, the USSR launched Sputnik.

In response, the American government authorized massive blue-sky spending

on science and technology overseen by a new

Advanced Research Projects Agency

It was ARPA developing the ideas of visionary

computer scientist Joseph Licklider.

that came up with the concept of networking computers.

It's been hard to share information.

For years. The printing press

of course was the great step into sharing information.

And we have been needing for a long time some better

way to distribute information than to carry it about.

The print on paper form is embarrassing because

in order to distribute it you've got to move the paper around

And lots of paper gets to be bulky and heavy and expensive to move about.

The ARPAnet was designed to allow scientists to share computer resources

in order to improve innovation. To make this vision work,

ARPAnet had to allow each machine on the network to reproduce

and relay the information sent by any other.

A network in which peers shared resources equally was part of a

massive shift from the corporate and commercial communications systems

of the past - in which messages radiated from a central point

or down through a hierarchy. There was no center

And no machine was more important than another

Anyone could join the network, provide they agreed to abide

by the rules, or protocols on which it operated.

Ever since, really, the 60's onwards

packet switch networks are the

predominant style of communications used today.

Increasingly so in both voice and data.

The western world was transforming itself from the rigid production systems

of Fordism to fluid work, lean production and just-in-time delivery.

A post-centralized, friction-free economy needed a

a communications system just like this.

We didn't build in the 1970's

networks of hierarchs.

The computers that existed in the

world were all multimillion-dollar

machines and they basically related to one another in very equal ways.

One of the really important characteristics of the internet is

that it's extremely decentralized

and that the services on the internet

are invented and operated by other network users

You know the network is built so that

there's nobody in charge that everybody has

control over their own communications.

In relying on the internet, society was bringing into its very center

a machine whose primary function was the reproduction

and distribution of information.

It's an inherent function of the

networks that we use today that

this data is stored, copied, stored, copied

normally transient, normally very fast, you know, in milliseconds

micorseconds

specialized pieces of equipment such as switchers, routers, hubs etc.

Do this all in the blink of an eye but it's the way networks WORK.

What ARPA's engineers had produced was the blueprint for a massive

copying machine without master.

which would grow at a fantastic rate into today's internet

So this entire area is bristling

with information transfer of one type or another

For instance the local council, Tower Hamlets and Hackney

we're sort of on the border here have some of the surveillance traffic

and security cameras linked via wireless networks themselves.

The spectrum environment is getting very dirty, or noisy

Every single packet that flies through the multitude of wireless networks and

through the internet is listened for stored in memory and retransmitted, ie

it's copied from one, what's called network segment, to the next

our immediate environment now, our immediate ecosphere is so

broad, so large that you cannot contain information

very easily anymore, you cannot stop or censor information or stop

the transmission once it's out there It's like water through your hands

It's like trying to stop a dam from bursting.

I would say right now, we are likely in range of wireless microwave

radio transmissions that are most likely breaching some sort of

copyright law right at this moment.

To try

on the back of modernism

and all this international law

to make profit out of his own

ungenerosity to humankind.

One of the main battlegrounds

in law, in technology now is

the extent to which it is possible

to exclude people from information, knowledge and cultural goods

the extent to which it's possible to enclose a bit - if you will

of culture, and say it's in a container

you have to pay me in order to access it.

You can make something property if you can build a fence

for it, you can enclose something, if you can build a wall around it.

In the American west, the range land was free, and

all could graze it because it was too expensive to fence it

barbed wire changed that and you could turn it into property.

Culture came in these boxes.

Control came naturally as part

of the process of the existence

of the medium itself.

There's a thing, a book

a record

a film that

you can hold onto and not give somebody else

or you can give it to them.

And the whole payment system was built around:

Do I give you this unit of information?

or don't I give it to you? And that was how the whole model

of copyright was built from the book on up.

What used to be property - music, cinema - now becomes

very, very easy to transmit across barriers.

We have today the ability to make

copies and distribute copies inexpensively.

If one copy leaks out on the internet very rapidly it's available to everyone.

One can always try to create artificial boundaries, technological boundaries

which prevent us from sharing files prevent us from sharing music etc.

But how do you create a wall or a boundary

against the very basic desire of sharing?

I think the war on piracy is failing for social reasons.

People like to communicate.

People like to do, to share things. People like to transform things and

technology makes it so easy that there's no way of stopping it.

The new generation is just copying stuff

out of the internet. It's the way they're

brought up. They started with Napster

music is free to them. They don't consider music being something you

pay for. They pay for clothes. They pay for stuff they can touch.

Intellectual property is - What the fuck is that?

I've never bought a piece of music in my life.

We don't think it's illegal 'cos everyone's doing it.

We can't really be blamed for just

downloading something that's already on the internet.

People think it's legal

'cos it's like copying, like, without the copyright or something.

If it's a crime, why put it on there?

So whether you're using a long-lost peer-to-peer system, like

the original Napster, or you're using Gnutella, or you're using bittorrent

the principle here is that you are actually engaging in internet

communication as it was originally designed, you are

able to serve content as well as consume.

Especially after the Napster lawsuit

we saw an emergence of a lot of more

decentralized file-sharing services.

Computer programs that people could run on their own computers that would

make them part of the network, without having any one place

where there's a master list or a master coordination.

What this means is that in fighting file sharing the entertainment

industry is fighting the fundamental structure of the internet.

Short of redesigning and re-engineering either the internet or the devices we

use to interact with the internet, there's nothing that Hollywood or

Washington or Brussels or Geneva can do anything about.

They shattered Napster into millions of little pieces, spread across computers

all around the globe and now if you want

to shut it down, you have to track down every single one of them and

turn it off. And they just can't do that.

They send out letters every month trying to shut down a couple

here and there but it just doesn't work. There are just too many.

It's out of the bag now.

Once it's that far distributed, it's really going to be hopeless.

You can sue people forever. You can sue a handful of

college students, university students in the United States

You can sue the investors of Napster. - and Napster - You can sue the company

that provided the software for Kazaa. But it doesn't shut anything down.

We recognize and we know that we will never stop piracy.

Kazaa lost a big case in the United States in the Supreme Court.

Kazaa and Grokster and a set of other companies.

So those companies no longer operate. But the network still

works, in other words, the interface is still

installed on millions of computers and people still use them.

never stop piracy

The music industry, if they want to stop file sharing, there's no

central computer for them to go to and shut it down.

They have to go all the way to the ends of every wire.

They have to snip all the cords across the globe.

So when the Pirate Bay got shut down

last year, and during the raid

Amsterdam Information Exchange, AM6

reported that 35% of all the European

internet traffic

just vanished in a couple of hours

The files have been shared. There's no way back.

You can't - it's not about shutting down bittorrent

it would be about confiscating everyone's hard drives.

The files are out there. They have been downloaded.

They're down, there's no up anymore. They're all down.

never never never

There's nobody you can go to and say: Shut down the file sharing.

The internet's just not built that way.

We're surrounded by images.

Every day, everywhere. There's nothing you can do about it.

But the problem with these images is that they're not yours

People's lives are determined by images that they have no rights to

whatsoever, and that's - I'd say it's a very unfortunate situation.

There's this work of mine that people have described as a series

of unattainable women, in fact it's

a series of unattainable images.

The one last mission of cinema is to make sure that images are not seen.

That's why we have DRM - copy protection - rights management

region coding, all that stuff but if an image is seen

then it tells you one thing: it's not your image

it's their image.

It's none of your business. Don't copy it. Don't modify it.

Just forget about it. You can't just say - hey it's just a movie

It is reality. It's a very specific reality of properties.

Radio. Television. Newspapers. Film. At the heart of all of them there is

a very clear distinction between the producer and the consumer.

And the idea is a very, very static one.

That here is a technology that allows me to communicate to you.

But it's not really a conversation that one has in mind.

It use to be, if you had a radio station or television station

or a printing press.

You could broadcast your views to a very large

number of people at quite a bit of expense

and a fairly small percentage of the population was able to do that.

The materials were produced by some set of professional commercial

producers, who then controlled the experience and located individuals

at the passive receiving end of the cultural conversation.

I'm John Wayne.

We believe in many things but I'm John Wayne.

If you wanted to change the way the television broadcast network

works - good luck

you're going to have to get the majority of the shareholders to

agree with you - or you're going to have to replace some very

expensive equipment.

In the world of that universe where you needed to get distribution

there were gatekeepers that stood in your way.

I know that there's gatekeepers out there at every level by the way

certainly production, funding, exhibition.

They can get fucked as far as I'm concerned.

You would need to satisfy the lawyer for the network or the lawyer

for the television station or radio station that what you've done is

legal and cleared and permissions have been obtained - and

probably insurance has been obtained before

you could get into the channels of mass media communication.

The number of people who could actively speak was relatively small

and they were organized around one of the only two models

we had in the industrial period to collect enough physical capital

necessary to communicate either the state or the market

usually based on advertising.

This is the question that faces us today.

If the battle against sharing is already lost - and media is no longer

a commodity - how will society change?

Those whose permission was required are resisting this transition

because control is a good thing to get if you can get it.

The control

that used to reside in the very making of the artifact is up for grabs.

Should we expect changes as massive as those of the printing press?

There's plenty of people who are watching, you know, the worst kind

of Soap Opera right now they're a planet and I can't save them.

As hard as I've tried, I can't save them.

But do we need saving? Will there still be a mass-produced

and mass-oriented media from which to save us?

Music didn't begin with the phonograph

and it won't end with the peer-to-peer network.

alright, listen

man, I couldn't give a shit if you're older this young'n's bin colder

give it ten years then I'm going to be known as a better than older I swear

now people stayin colder so don' try n tell me your older

you could be roller or be more music mix tapes promos and everythings

out there, so don't try tell me I don't

The panic of the movie industry and the music industry is that

people could actually start to produce

and that file sharing networks - file sharing technology

enables them to produce stuff.

To do this I'm colder better than most out older

I take out any that are younger

diss me, are you dumb you're an idiot you will never get this chip of your shoulder

this kid's colder than you were when you were this age [...]

please don't play - why you can't see that playtime's over.

playtime's over - since year six i been a playground soldier

dem days were lyrical dat lyrical G but now everything is colder

now there's content flows and everything - mix tape promos

everything - who'd you name your favorite MC, I'll write the sixteen

make him look like...

People have lamented much the death of the author

what we're witnessing now is far beyond -

It's the becoming producer of former consumers.

and that suggests a new economic model for society.

why? cos I'm going on show I move fast - goin on show

like your team be out for the ratings by my team be out for the do(ugh)

in the air tha show - eh what we're goin on show

so your put man pay me - I'm doin no less I got the vibes, that run down the show

It's not so much the fact that the Phantom Menace is

downloaded 500 times, or 600 times etc.

Yeah of course, there is an imaginary specter of economic loss that informs that

but the real battle or the real threat

lays in a shift in the ways that we think of the

possibilities of ourselves as creators and not merely as consumers.

It's like a whole network

This is something that I've given out and I've let people download it and

they can download it, do what they want I've made a blog about it

saying oh look, DJs you can play this where you want

There's this guy in Brooklyn and he's just

done a remix of it, just like - It's totally different to what I thought but

He's just - this guy from Brooklyn and I really respect that he came

back to me and said look and it's going on his mix album.

One of the things that intrigues me tremendously about the proliferation

of material that's out there in the world for

people to grab, is the potential creation of millions of new authors.

Thanks to the internet, thanks to digital technologies

the gatekeepers have really been removed.

People can take more of their cultural environment

make it their own use it as found materials to put together

their own expressions do their own research,

create their own communications, create their own communities when

they need collaboration with others rather than relying on a limited

set of existing institutions or on a set of materials that they're not

allowed to use without going and asking

Please may I use this? Please may I create?

Basically, in terms of samples not many

people go out of their way to clear samples

Right about now I've got the things on the

fruity slicer like this on different keys

it's just different parts of the sample actually just some Turkish shit i don't

even know who it's by - like it's just some random sample

I make mainly instrumentals so really I've made a tool for that

to sort of MC to anyway

It's good that people are ruthless

enough to use another person's tune

and record themselves spittin bars over it.

Look I'm takin over now but then the game says too free to october now

I'm fuckin it up - listen it's over now i'm settin the pace.

how they gonna slow me down? look - it's over clown

I got the skippigest flows in town plus - you niggas can't fuck wit my

word play - I switch it back - DJ bring it back

Sometimes you get the big artists freestylin your stuff

sort of put it out there on their CDs and you don't even know about it

We live in this world in which

absolute abundance of information

is an everyday fact for a lot of us and this means we have a certain

attitude towards the idea of information as property.

It's like you've heard, sharing is in our blood, so the struggle to hold

on to knowledge and creativity as a commodity by force it's

going to be met by our strong urge to share, copy and cooperate.

Kids, if they sample my music

to make their music, that would be

another good thing as well I would like that as well

I want them to do that. If I made an old tune,

take a bit from it, drop something over it and make it music

make it big - if you can do that - do that.

When you put primary materials in the hands of ordinary citizens

really, really interesting things can happen.

I ain't no musician - I just know how to make things sound good

I want to make people realize their own value - I want them to realize

that they are the masters of their own content, that they are

they create something, they can share it if someone else created something

they can contribute, they can help they can get it and use it

the way it's supposed to be.

So it's a terrorism of the mind that actually sustains concepts

like intellectual property it's a terrorism that's

grounded on an idea of

brutal repression of that which is actually possible.

If everything is user-generated it also means that you have to

create something in order to be part of the society.

I think one of the things that we are seeing coming out is culture where

things are produced because people care about it

and not necessarily because they hope other people will buy it.

So what we will see is things made by the people for themselves.

I don't think I know a person who just listens to it and doesn't try

and get involved in some way by producing or something

You know all these things that are taking the copyright industry

totally by surprise - and they're scrambling with and not able to

deal with - for the next generation it's just part of the media landscape

They're natives, they're natives in that media landscape absolutely.

And they're not alone.

I think of myself as a pirate.

We are pirates.

I'm a pirate

I'm proud cos I get my music free so it's alright - I'm proud

I think we need to have a broad conversation - it's probably gonna

be an international conversation where people who make things

and people who use things - I'm talking about cultural works -

sit together and think about what kinds of rules best serve these

interests, I don't know that we're going to agree, but I think we need

to ask a little bit more about utopia we need to really figure out what

kind of a world we'd like to live in and then try to craft regulations to

match that - being reactive doesn't cut it.

The future isn't clear for sure but that's why we're here, we're trying

to form the future, we're trying to make it the way we want it - but

obviously most people want it to be and that's why we're doing this.

Let's build a world that we're actually gonna be proud of, not

just a profitable world - for a few very large media companies

Making money is not the point with culture, or media - making

something is the point with media, and I don't think that

people will stop making music, stop making movies

stop making - taking cool photographs - whatever

Although it's difficult to believe it now, we can do without the

entertainment industries, we'll find new ways to get the stuff we want

made - we want a world in which we can share, work together and find

new ways to support each other while we're doing it. This is the

world we're tyring to bring into being.

A force like this, a power like this. Zillions of people connected

sharing data, sharing their work, sharing the work of others

this situation is unprecedented in human history, and it is a force

that will not be stopped.

People always ask us who are the League of Noble Peers?

And we tell them, you are. I am. Even your bank manager is.

That's why I'm a vague blur. It's kind of like: Insert yourself here.

Because we all produce information now, we all reproduce information.

We all distribute it. We can't stop ourselves. It's like breathing.

We'll do it as long as we're alive. And when we stop doing it,

we'll be dead.

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