Thứ Năm, 29 tháng 11, 2018

Youtube daily report Nov 30 2018

Duchess Meghan Markle just lost a key staff member - and her hubby Prince Harry's temper

might be to blame.

The former Suits actress' personal assistant, Melissa Touabti, quit her royal post suddenly

in early November 2018, the Daily Mail reports.

An insider from Kensington Palace called Touabti, a, quote, "hugely talented person," adding,

"She played a pivotal role in the success of the royal wedding and will be missed by

everyone in the royal household."

The Daily Mail noted that Touabti "happily" worked for former "Take That" singer Robbie

Williams - a wedding guest and friend of Princess Eugenie and her husband, Jack Brooksbank - before

scoring her highly coveted royal gig.

As of the making of this video, the palace and Markle herself have yet to publicly comment

officially on losing Touabti.

But it's been widely speculated in the UK press that the duchess' highly publicized

family drama, the stresses of royal wedding planning, and a protective Prince Harry were

likely all major factors.

The prince was supposedly, quote, "petulant and short-tempered" with palace staffers ahead

of their big day, according to claims made in royal biographer Robert Jobson's book,

Charles at Seventy.

As Jobson alleged,

"Raising his voice on occasion, Harry would insist: 'What Meghan wants, she gets.'"

"In my wildest dreams I never thought that would actually come to fruition."

Harry's papa Prince Charles reportedly finds it difficult to gauge either one of his sons'

occasionally, quote, "unpredictable moods."

Jobson cites one insider on the matter who told him,

"In that aspect of their nature, both princes are very much like their mother [Princess

Diana]."

Markle and Harry were both so stressed prior to their nuptials, in fact, that Jobson says

they booked a series of appointments with Ross Barr, known as "the acupuncturist to

the stars."

"The Glorious Adventures of Freckle-Faced Meg!"

Meanwhile, Markle's strained relationships with her father and half-sister, Thomas and

Samantha Markle, have dominated headlines for the better part of 2018.

Thomas made headlines in tabloids on both sides of the pond over staged paparazzi photos

he tooks the week of the royal wedding, and was later unable to attend the ceremony after

undergoing heart surgery.

While Thomas began to slam the British royals in the press, Samantha, who was apparently

upset over not receiving an invite to the royal nuptials, has continually spoken out

against her famous half-sister on social media.

The latest shake-up came in early October 2018, when Samantha was reportedly turned

away by palace security after showing up unannounced.

"I apologize, and I wish things could be different."

Plus, a number of reports surfaced in late-November 2018 claiming that the royal pair were allegedly

feuding with the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, Prince William and Kate Middleton, as they

prepare to move out of the palace to Frogmore Cottage on Windsor Estate.

A source cited by the Daily Mail revealed,

"Kate and Meghan are very different people.

They don't really get on."

But another insider told Vanity Fair,

"[Kate and Meghan] don't have a lot in common but they have made an effort to get along.

Any issues are between the brothers."

Indeed, as a separate source told The Sun, there's reportedly, quote, "been a bit of

tension" between the two princes.

"[...] Harry and Meghan don't want to live next to William and Kate and want to strike

out on their own.

They need more room and hope Frogmore Cottage will be ready in time for when they have the

baby."

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex officially announced in mid-October that they're expecting

their first child together in the spring of 2019.

Hopefully the drama swirling around this pair will subside in time for the royal baby's

arrival.

For more infomation >> Why Meghan Markle's Personal Assistant Suddenly Quit - Duration: 3:24.

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Uproar - Lil Wayne | Brian Puspos Choreography | STEEZY.CO - Duration: 1:53.

Thank you guys for watching my video!

You can actually learn this choreography at STEEZY.CO

Yeah...go now :)

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6 Reasons Why You Shouldn't Make A Movie - Gina Gomez Dunn & Scott Dunn - Duration: 11:17.

Hi I'm Scott Dunn and I'm Gina Dunn and you know I was thinking about something

today um the kitchen looking at salt it made

me think about today's video I just thought about the first person who's the

first person who's like this I should sprinkle this on my food you know it was

probably I thought to myself it's probably a caveman right a caveman which

means this is this is gonna taste good on my meat and then I thought there was

probably another caveman who came up to him and it was uh which is you can't do

that that's a rock looking thing you can't put that on your food and imagine

if the first caveman listened to that negative caveman we wouldn't have salt

all right it wouldn't have salt these things taste

better with salt how are you fast-forward to today and

2018 in Hollywood and there's cavemen all over Hollywood who keep telling you

you can't do that you can't do this you can't do that and a Saracen and we want

to talk to you today about our our second feature film and a low of the

Dead and all the things people say you can't do and we did them anyway and if

we hadn't we wouldn't you know be sitting here with a second feature film

so let's start

can't make a movie or especially a genre movie for anything less than a hundred

thousand or they won't take you seriously

well our production budget for Amanda of the Dead was just shy of thirteen

thousand that's it I round it up you know it's one of those things where you

have to work with what you got and tailor your script to fit your

budget and tailor your script to things that you have available resources that

you have available to you so like our co-producers chesil Melman and Ian

Sumner graciously lent us their apartment so we saved a lot of money on

the location say half the movie was shot there so right there you know saving a

lot of money when I was writing the script for Mandel I made sure that you

know we we stayed within the confines of I I knew how about how much money we had

to spend on this feature film right and I thought well I can write it in very

few locations but it doesn't but we didn't sacrifice any fun I think it was

about as fun it was as it was ever gonna be and I actually think that the

limitations made it a better movie and even our crew our our sound mixer had

all his own equipment our DP had it's all his own equipment and our associate

producer Oscar Munoz he lent us his camera gear so it was like just see

finding different ways to save money without sacrificing quality

number two can't be done in nine days not a feature film yeah and they were

right it was done in ten days so in that tenth day was really just a pick-up day

a pick-up day with a couple of additional scenes after editing and I

saw that there needed to be a few things to fill in and ten days is still crazy

but again caveman you bad caveman you said we couldn't do it no no we we were

actually the reason why we were able to do that is we kept our crew cast and

crew really small so we were able to move fast and we also rehearsed prior to

shooting we've rehearse with an actor this is something that I'm very gung-ho

about always get the rehearsals going before you movie that's where you know

that's where you get to work on it cuz when you're shooting you don't have time

to explore as much you should know what you're doing and you know you there's

plenty of room for improvisation on set I'm just saying do a lot of that work in

the rehearsals the third one this is a personal experience I I had been in

contact with a producer in Hollywood and we were talking and we had this sort of

disagreement and he said to me you're not a writer you're not a director I

mean you're barely an actor and I remember hearing that it was you know

obviously it's painful you'd painful to be told that you you're not something I

had just done in the feature film our first feature film schlep and it hadn't

gotten into any festivals yet he's like what festivals was it has it gotten into

yeah that's right nothing yet and I and weirdly enough a week later we

got accepted to our first glance Film Festival and we had a great showing and

yeah the audience loved it and it was just a nice thing where you know I'm

glad we didn't listen to people saying no you mean no one knows anything no one

can tell you that you can't do anything I mean they can say it but don't don't

believe it for a second it's it can be really good I will say after all the

time I've been in Hollywood it's been you know like 10 years and I will say

this it's about how you receive words like that if you people say you can't do

it you have really two options believe them or show them and I think it was

actually I'd like to thank that guy because it pushed me to really prove him

wrong the fourth thing this is an interesting one I edit my features we've

done - I've edited both okay so so just to recap he Scott wrote directed starred

and now edited man Day of the Dead Angela and I like doing it but also it

saves money you know you obviously you know how what our budget is it helps

save money but I also enjoy doing it I think that who could know the movie

better than me at this point but a lot of people were you know when I was

asking on slep like what should I do is my slap was my first movie so I was like

oh should I edit I get someone else and a lot of people like you shouldn't edit

your own you know you'll be too close to it and no it's just not how it's done

and I remember thinking yeah but I want to I feel like doing it

it's not like I ever felt burdened by it and it's like who knows the movie better

than you right exactly and so going into this mandel feature I I felt galvanized

incompetent in editing it and and I think this is something I'll be carrying

forward to future features because it's just fine and and you know editing

really it's direct writing is one thing directing is another thing

editing is another thing like if you can do all that that as a director the more

I think you'll be more enriched as an artist it's also staying true to your

own voice like how did you envision this movie well if you're the writer director

and editor you know you get the last say in everything so it really the film

really became Scott's voice and also they said don't do don't use Final Cut

Pro I mean everyone's using Adobe and I again or avid and and that's true a lot

of people are using that and and there's no problem with that and the only

problem is when people say you don't use Final Cut Pro I'm like hi yeah if you

can tell me why great if not then that kind of information that it's just so

because I don't do it but we did it anyway and it turned out great

number five oh yeah you can't make money self distributing your film or in other

words you need a distributor to make money making your film that's just not

true so for the majority people if you're really indie you're making your

first feature it behooves you to self distribute because each platform like

iTunes Amazon etc they take a percentage of all the sales that you make then the

distributor takes another 30 percent 20 30 whatever yeah after that it's like

then you start seeing some money and by that point it's like that's a long time

that's a lot of percentages to be taking out before you see any money and and and

in this case of man Day of the Dead and schlep we are putting our own money into

it we're putting our time sweat equity all these things into it and it's like

why give that percentage away especially in a day and age where you can

distribute yourself yeah you may I think we're trying to out Blum House the Blum

House model they they make movies for very cheap right and then they make

between like they make a ton back I mean the margins on their profits are I mean

they're it's amazing so we're doing that but crunching it down even further we're

talking like $13,000 that's insane but it also means that you have more of a

chance of making your money back and going into black you know I'm making a

profit with your money and that's me that's attractive to me so I would

suggest let's not let's not let people tell us no when they don't even they

haven't even tried it try it you'll see for yourself

number six film school now it's not like people said you can't do this you didn't

go to film school but it's not like we didn't feel that I mean I'm survival

like oh you guys didn't go to film school so like yeah I'm just gonna make

a movie I'm not gonna say sit here and say don't go to film school cause if you

went there that's great you're gonna learn so much and it's it's probably

really good to go to film school however don't let that stop you if you haven't

been there be smart surround yourself with people who who

know what they're doing who brings something to your movie don't don't be

so in your own head about you know I'm the director only I have I had the last

say of course you have the last say but everyone on your set is it if you got

the right people they're artists they have good ideas they're smart you

they're not trying to screw with your they're trying to help you bring your

vision get a good team together so that you can make the best product that's

that I give credit to everyone on our movie yeah I mean the vast majority of

our crew went to film school so they have that technical knowledge and stuff

thank goodness teachers which is great we needed it but they it was fun to

collaborate with them so yeah so if you haven't been in a film school so yeah

you know if you have a passion you have an idea if you have something you can't

get rid of from your head go make it surround yourself with smart people yeah

I will say that there's just no excuse you can make your own movie you can

shoot it on an iPhone you can get really really micro budget India and make a

really good movie it just all depends on what resources you have available to you

what kind of people will kind of do you have it comes back to there's a

lot of cavemen in Hollywood mm-hmm don't let those negative cavemen tell you no

okay otherwise well we wouldn't have salt right if we listen to all the times

people said you can't do that this world would be one boring place to live all

you filmmakers out there who who are waiting for permission I would ask you

just don't wait okay bad caveman bad listen to the caveman who made the salt

you

For more infomation >> 6 Reasons Why You Shouldn't Make A Movie - Gina Gomez Dunn & Scott Dunn - Duration: 11:17.

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Who Was D. B. Cooper And Why Was He Never Caught? - Duration: 13:16.

This episode is brought to you by Skillshare. Get 2 months of Skillshare free and learn

new skills by using the link in the description.

The person known as D. B. Cooper may have pulled-off one of the greatest feats of criminality

known to man, not just because of the crime but more the subsequent, literal, vanishing

into thin air. Some criminals go down in history as almost heroic, they become to the stuff

of folklore. We have noble highwaymen; we have people that robbed the rich only to share

their spoils with the poor. We have bank robbers such as John Dillinger, who became a legend

after stealing from the big bad banks and being very kind with the swag. Then we have

outlaws such as Jesse James, whose legend appears to be somewhat overblown in both books

and movies. But in today's show we will focus on a man whose actions were certainly

not fiction. Welcome to this episode of the Infographics Show, Who was D.B. Cooper?

Before we start sleuthing, we must know what it is this man did. We should also tell you

that the name D.B. Cooper was a given name by the media, who he really was, is still

up for speculation. We'll get around to the theories later.

Twas the night before Thanksgiving, November 24, 1971, when through the doors of the busy

Portland International Airport a man went up to the check-in counter for Northwest Orient

Airlines. Throughout the USA people were travelling back home or already drinking the festive

hooch; turkeys were thawing, corn pudding had been made in the morning. The man checked-in

under the name, Dan Cooper. He was to take a half an hour flight to Seattle. A short

trip home presumably, to spend time with loved ones. That was far from the case. He was about

to create criminal history.

He walked onto a Boeing 727-100, some people say he sat in seat 18C, but others dispute

that. Whatever the seat, it seems our Mr. Cooper was in the mood for merriment. He sat

back, lit up a smoke and imbibed a bourbon and soda. According to witnesses who were

later interviewed, he wore a dark suit and a black tie, decorated with a mother of pearl

tie pin. From the sketches you could say he looked not unlike Don Draper from the series

Mad Men. And a madman the man known as Dan Cooper certainly was. He was later described

by flight attendants to be 5 feet 10 inches (1.78 meters) to 5 feet 11 inches (1.80 meters)

tall, 170 to 180 pounds (77 to 82 kg). It's said he had tanned skin and was likely in

his early 40s.

Not long into the flight this smartly-dressed man handed a note to a flight attendant. Her

name was Florence Schaffner and she was probably used to single guys handing her phone numbers,

so she just put the note in her purse. According to New York mag this 23-year old "cute,

perky," and sexy stewardess was not unaccustomed to guys hitting on her. This time was different.

Cooper then leaned over to her and said, "Miss, you'd better look at that note. I have a bomb."

She looked at him and knew that he wasn't fooling around. The note read, "I have a

bomb in my briefcase. I want you to sit beside me." She did just that and the man showed

he wasn't kidding, offering her a glimpse of some sticks of dynamite and lots of wires

attached to a battery. He then apparently told her, "I want $200,000 by 5:00 p.m.

In cash. Put in a knapsack. I want two back parachutes and two front parachutes. When

we land, I want a fuel truck ready to refuel. No funny stuff or I'll do the job." $200,000

in today's money is about $1.2 million. He wasn't too greedy it seems.

According to Schaffner, she was reeling with fear. Was the plane about to explode; were

a lot of people about to grilled in mid-air before the turkey was even roasted? She was

confused, too. This smartly-dressed guy had been polite; he'd even given her a $20 bill

for the whiskey and told her she should could keep the 18 bucks change. He wasn't a political

terrorist, one of the sky-pirates she'd heard about. Another flight attendant later

remarked, "He wasn't nervous. He seemed rather nice. He was never cruel or nasty. He was

thoughtful and calm all the time." She went to the cockpit and told the news

to the crew, after which the pilot informed Seattle–Tacoma Airport air traffic control,

and the authorities were alerted. The plane circled in the air for around two hours, with

the passengers not knowing what was going on. They were told the plane was experiencing

a "minor mechanical difficulty." What was really happening is that the authorities

had decided to meet the hijacker's demands and they were putting together the list of

things, including the money, he had asked for. The man stayed calm and even started

talking about what he could see down below, meaning he obviously knew the area well. He

ordered another bourbon and again told Schaffner she could keep the change. Down below the

money was being put together in unmarked bills, although it's said Cooper wasn't happy

with the military-issue parachutes. He wanted civilian parachutes and they had to be taken

from a nearby sky-diving school.

The aircraft landed at 5.39 pm at Seattle-Tacoma Airport. Cooper told the pilot to taxi to

a brightly lit area of the airport and for all the window shades to be lowered lest a

sniper try and take him out. Northwest Orient's Seattle operations manager, Al Lee, delivered

the cash and the parachutes to the aircraft. Cooper then told the passengers they could

go, as could two of the flight attendants, including Schaffner. One remained. He then

told the cockpit crew that they would all be going on a trip to Mexico City, except

he wanted them to fly at the lowest speed possible. He also told them to fly at 10,000-foot

(3,000 meters) altitude. The pilots told him they would need to refuel once more, and Nevada

was chosen. Cooper told them to keep the landing gear down and for the cabin to remain unpressurized.

He told authorities that no one could come on board during the refueling while they were

still in Seattle.

And off they went, into the skies, bounty in the bag, flying at a snail's pace for

the plane. They weren't alone up there, with five military planes following them.

It's said the last person to see Cooper was a 22-year old flight attendant called

Tina Mucklow. She said he told her to go back to the cockpit and the last thing she witnessed

was him tying something around his waist. It's said she later never talked much about

that evening, and later in life became reclusive and partly lived in a nunnery. With the crew

all in the cockpit they heard an alarm indicating that the aft airstair apparatus had been deployed.

Apparently, the pilot sent a warning that this was very dangerous. It was around 8 pm.

Just over two hours later the aircraft landed, and the mysterious bourbon-quaffing hijacker

was not one of the occupants of the plane. Here's a little song about what likely happened

sometime after 8:

Out a little service doorway In the rear of the plane

Cooper jumped into the darkness Into the freezing rain

They say that with the windchill It was 69 below

Not much chance that he'd survive But if he did, where did he go?

Indeed, where did he go?

The Feds looked all over for him, for the parachutes, for anything. They went through

every bit of forest where he might have landed; a submarine scoured lakes, but the man had

vanished. It was the largest search ever by law enforcement and in the end all they found

were the remains of a girl that had been abducted and murdered. For years the police searched

for the money as all the bills had serial numbers, but that never showed up, either,

except when a couple of swindlers tried to get a $30,000 reward from Newsweek by counterfeiting

bills with the serial numbers. The press had a field day, and it was a mistake

made by a reporter which gave him the name D.B. Cooper. It stuck. As for the American

people, most folks loved the story of the handsome, well-spoken, James Bond-like character.

People rooted for him, likely to the chagrin of law enforcement. He was like a noble highwayman

of modern times, a Robin Hood of the skies. What the cops did know is that this guy knew

how to parachute; he knew planes, he knew the area. How hard could it be to put the

pieces together? Very hard is the answer. The FBI had lots of leads that came to nothing,

changing their story a few times. For instance, the FBI later said that he was likely not

someone who knew a lot about parachuting, "We concluded after a few years this was

simply not true," they said. "No experienced parachutist would have jumped in the pitch-black

night, in the rain, with a 200-mile-an-hour wind in his face, wearing loafers and a trench

coat. It was simply too risky." It was concluded by some that the man had simply died, and

authorities had failed to find the body.

He even had copycats, such as Richard McCoy, a former Vietnam helicopter pilot who tried

to do the same. He was arrested in a matter of days and he swore that he was not Cooper,

just a guy trying his luck. But was it him? While he was serving a 45-year sentence he

made a courageous and cunning prison escape, only later to be killed in a shoot-out with

the cops. The agent that killed him said this. "When I shot Richard McCoy. I shot D.B.

Cooper at the same time." However, that doesn't quite work as McCoy's family told

police while Cooper's air heist was going on McCoy was with them having a party for

Thanksgiving eve.

Then in 1980 an 8-year old boy on holiday made a discovery when he was on the riverbank

of the Colombia river. The boy pulled $5,800 from the bank all in $20 Federal Reserve notes.

This was part of the ransom. Many theories were put forward as to how the bills ended

up there. Did they float there, were they buried there? No one really knew.

Some people thought it was Ted Mayfield, a skydiving teacher with a history of criminality

including stealing a plane and armed robbery. Mayfield even called the FBI four hours after

the heist to give them a list of skydivers who might have done it. But there is no cogent

evidence to say Mayfield was D. B. Cooper.

What about Kenneth Christiansen? He was a spitting image for the sketch of Cooper; he

was a former paratrooper and he'd even spent time working as a flight attendant on Northwest

Orient. He was usually broke, but then in 1972 suddenly had bags of cash and bought

a house. It gets better. On his deathbed in 1994 he told his brother, "There is something

you should know, but I cannot tell you." The brother then discovered that in his bank

he had around $200,000 and he had also been left gold. Meanwhile, Flight attendant Schaffner

said he was a dead ringer for Cooper. The brother wrote in 2004, close to death himself,

"Before I die I would like to find out if my brother was D.B. Cooper. From what I know

I feel that he was and without a doubt."

We very much doubt it was Barbara Dayton, a trans woman who had once said she did it

to get back at the airline for not being able to get a commercial pilot's license. She changed

her tune anyway when she found out she might actually be charged for the hijacking.

What about William Gossett, an ace parachutist who had survival training? According to an

attorney named called Galen Cook, Gossett had admitted he had done it. Gossett's son

believes his dad did it, saying he got very rich in 1971 and then went on a gambling spree

in Las Vegas. Still, the evidence is weak.

The there's Robert Richard Lepsy, whose car was found nearby the airport and who suddenly

decided to take off to Mexico. When his daughter saw the sketch of Cooper, apparently, she

shouted, "That's dad!" She gave the FBI a DNA sample some years later, but it

seems they didn't think Lepsy was their man. Still we might wonder if he's sipping

on Pina Coladas right now basking on an Acapulco beach at the expense of an American insurance

company.

Or could it have been Duane Weber, who told his wife just before he died, "I am Dan

Cooper." He was seen near to where the kid had found the money and he also looked like

Cooper. Again, the DNA wasn't a match, but it was also inconclusive as it was with others.

They got the DNA by the way from Cooper's tie, which he kindly left behind before he

leaped.

Jack Coffelt also claimed he was Cooper, to a cellmate no less. He apparently suffered

broken legs around the time of the hijacking and was also in the right place. Despite his

cellmate swearing it was him, and trying to make a few bucks from TV and movies, no one

really thinks it was Coffelt.

It was just as unlikely to be L.D. Cooper, a war veteran whose niece believed he had

done it. Again, there are some interesting implications but nothing solid.

Former-pilot and war veteran Robert Rackstraw had all the skills to pull off such a job,

and his face looked the part. Rackshaw denied it, his attorney said it was ridiculous, but

many believe it was him and that the FBI wouldn't release Cooper's case file under the Freedom

of Information Act because they were embarrassed some amateurs had uncovered the case.

War veteran Walter R. Reca also said he was D. B. Cooper. Before he died in 2014 he gave

details to his friend about the crime that had not been heard before. A fraud examiner

and forensic linguist examined the evidence the friend had, and it seemed it all pointed

to the fact that Reca could have been D. B. Cooper. Is this the most likely candidate?

The Washington Post in 2018 wrote about this, saying while the friend may have had compelling

evidence in regard to how the crime took place and the details the friend knew, the FBI would

not re-open the case if the money or the parachutes were not given to them.

And so, D. B. Cooper could have been one of those people, or someone else. He could have

died in the fall, or there could be a totally different story behind what happened after

that eventful flight on Thanksgiving eve.

We love that you enjoy our videos, but maybe you'd like to learn how to make your own?

No worries- Skillshare has your back with over 24,000 online classes for both the beginner

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skillshare and start learning today!

Now we'll turn this over to you and ask you who you think D. B. Cooper was. Tell us

in the comments. Also, be sure to check out our other video This is how Warren Buffett

Made $85 Billion. Thanks for watching, and as always, please don't forget to like,

share and subscribe. See you next time.

For more infomation >> Who Was D. B. Cooper And Why Was He Never Caught? - Duration: 13:16.

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 The curse of November has become the stuff of legend at Arsenal.  Year after year in north London, fans saw a promising start to the season ground to a halt as soon as Halloween had been and gone

 Statistically, November was Arsenal's worst month under Arsene Wenger when it came to average points gained in the Premier League

 They also lost 27 league games during Wenger's reign in the penultimate month of the year, far more than any of month in the football calendar

 So it's perhaps no surprise that just the mere mention of November has been enough to spark fear into even the most optimistic of Gunners fans in recent years

 But - and whisper it quietly - Arsenal may have now turned the corner under Unai Emery

 The Spaniard has certainly lifted the club since his arrival in the summer and now - following the 3-0 win against FC Vorksla in the Europa League - he has just guided the Gunners to their first unbeaten November since 2005

 It's been 13 years years of hurt in north London, but perhaps the tide is beginning to turn

 In 2005, Arsenal enjoyed a sensational November - winning all six of their games in all competitions, three in the Premier League, two in the Champions League and one in the League

 It may not have been so impressive this time around, with Emery's side drawing three and winning two of their five games, but the fact they have avoided defeat has not gone unnoticed with fans

 Roll on November 2019! Keep up to date with the latest news, features and exclusives from football

london via the free football.london app for iPhone and Android. Available to download from the App Store and Google Play

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