Chủ Nhật, 27 tháng 1, 2019

Youtube daily report Jan 27 2019

Hello, how are you?

Hello, welcome.

How are you?

Fine, thanks.

Hello

Please have a seat there

Thanks

Do not forget to Like and Subscribe, thanks in advance :)

I will wash your hair at first..

For more infomation >> ASMR SLEEP | SKIN CARE | ASMR MASSAGE BARBER | ASMR HEAD MASSAGE, EAR MASSAGE | ASMR NO TALKING - Duration: 24:00.

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Injured, Stray Puppy Actually Came From A Big Family? | Kritter Klub - Duration: 4:10.

Overprotective parents?

Come here, you

One would easily be led to believe that she's the offspring of Dongdong and Sue

I love you as if you're my own, biological puppy

During mealtime,

They even let the puppy eat first

Watching you eat makes me happy

Like mother, like daughter

The puppy showed up at their door one night

And they've been caring for her ever since

Her leg was bleeding when found

kill em with kindness

uwu

She's full of cute charms

So I don't think she was born as a wild dog

But must've had an owner

Where did you come from?

Receives a checkup at the hospital

Her leg was struck somehow

Whether it was by a big animal or snare

She needs to be taken into surgery to fix the bones

Please take care of her, doctor

During surgery, we get a phone call

We were walking Dongdong and Sue in the mountains

There were puppies that were Soojung's size

I followed the sound, and found another puppy

Resembles Soojung in both size and appearance

As if telling them to come along

So many puppies just like Soojung

Asks around

Hello

Owner : The dog gave birth to many puppies

One went missing

Because I leave them untethered

The mother is kept on a leash

I had no idea this would happen

The owner's been coming to feed them every day

The owner didn't know what to do with all dem puppies

The producers offer help

Builds a temporary shelter

I hope they get adopted by nice people

Three of them join Soojung

I'll take care of them until they get adopted

Despite them being wild dogs, they're in fine condition

As for Soojung,

who successfully completes surgery

Are you okay?

Let's go home when you fully recover

We'll be waiting!

For more infomation >> Injured, Stray Puppy Actually Came From A Big Family? | Kritter Klub - Duration: 4:10.

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Victim of MEXICAN LIFE HACKS - Duration: 3:04.

My name is Anthony and I'm a victim of

Mexican life hacks.

Don't get me wrong, I love that my parents like to save money.

But there's a difference between saving money and living life miserably.

Have you ever tried looking for butter in a Hispanic household?

It's almost impossible.

You open a container and it's beans. You open another and it's salsa.

There is no reason why it should take over 10 containers to finally find the one

with butter in it.

And it doesn't stop there.

For some reason, my parents think that you store pots and pans in the oven.

So whenever I need to use the oven I have to empty it out first.

But when I go to my friend Jake's house, his family hangs their pots and pans.

So he never has trouble using his oven.

Well, at least my family has cookies.

Oh wait, that's right we don't.

Because instead of cookies my abuela puts her sewing kit in there.

Do you know how it feels to be excited to eat cookies

only to open up a container of disappointment.

And don't even get me started on the hand soap.

Mom, adding water to a little bit of soap

doesn't make more soap.

It just makes water, with a little bit of soap.

But all of that is nothing compared to my mom's favorite Mexican life hack,

vaporu.

It doesn't matter if I have a flu, a headache, or even a broken leg.

My mom thinks that vaporub is the cure to everything.

If you're also a victim of Mexican life hacks

I wish I could tell you things get better,

but they don't.

But I do want you to know..

You're not alone.

For more infomation >> Victim of MEXICAN LIFE HACKS - Duration: 3:04.

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Guerra na Ucrânia - Soldado de Donetsk fala sobre fé e luta pela verdade - Duration: 4:06.

For more infomation >> Guerra na Ucrânia - Soldado de Donetsk fala sobre fé e luta pela verdade - Duration: 4:06.

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Urban Lapajne: Kaj investicija v MojMojster pomeni za startup ekosistem? - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> Urban Lapajne: Kaj investicija v MojMojster pomeni za startup ekosistem? - Duration: 1:02.

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Doing This Will Destroy Your Car's Wheel Bearings - Duration: 5:04.

rev up your engines, mark Biltz says does bad ground driving over potholes cause

wheel bearing wear, it sure does, you hit potholes and you hit bad ground

all the time, the wheel bearings are gonna get jolted and yeah they're made

out of solid tempered steel but still, they're gonna wear when I hit bumps and

jumps, and then of course what happens is if your front end alignment gets knocked

off and it's going to the side, then that wears the tires and when they're wearing

at an edge then there's more strain on the bearings inside and they're gonna

wear out fast, so yes you want to stay away from bad roads and potholes

whenever possible, tech guy gaming says, I have a 2000 Ford explorer with one hundred

seventy eight thousand miles, when it's cold I hear a belt squeaking, when it's

warm I don't hear anything any ideas, when they get old they make noises, make sure

that they're tight enough, if they are tight those serpentine belts wear and the

grooves actually get deeper, which is a bad thing, because they're supposed to

sit where the grooves are in the pullies and they're perfectly set, as the grooves

get deeper, then they kind of bottom out and they don't grip right, just change it

now if it still makes a noise after you change the belt, then if you have

automatic tensioners, it can be an automatic tensioner, or it could be like

the alternator pulley is making a noise only when it's cold and when it warms up

and quiets down, but most of the time it just means you need a new belt, start

with that because that fixes it almost all the time, works not for me asks

Scotty what are your thoughts on a 2011 Chevrolet HHR, my opinion is stay away

from one if you're thinking about buying a used one, that was one of the

worst vehicles that Chevrolet ever made, I don't know what they were thinking when

they made those things, I mean what is it supposed to be, and the customers of mine

that had them, they had head gasket problems, they had electronic problems if

they had automatic transmissions, a lot of them had automatic transmission problems

stay away from the Chevy HHR, I don't know I guess they were trying to compete

with PT Cruiser type stuff I don't know, I don't know what chevy was

thinking with that vehicle but it was a massive failure, junior Linares Scotty I

got a 05 BMW 330xi, it just hit one hundred and one thousand miles, is it

safe to drain and fill the automatic transmission fluid, I bought it with

ninety eight thousand miles, you do want to change the fluid because very

high-tech transmissions the problem is, you got to use the correct BMW fluid

now do a little research on yours and see what kind of fluid it has, some of

those you got to go to the BMW dealer, because you can't buy the fluid, one

BMW last year,a customer want me to change the fluid, I saw well it's got to have this

special BMW fluid, so I go to the BMW dealer and they said well sorry Scotty we

can't sell you that fluid, I said what do you

mean, they said we buy it in these like 50 gallon drums for thousands of dollars, we

can't sell it a quart at a time to you because we're not licensed to resell the

stuff, you gotta use the right fluid and if you can't buy that fluid, you're gonna

have to pay a BMW dealer to do it cuz they wouldn't sell me the fluid they said

you'd have to buy 50 gallon drums, so find out which one you have to have, Josh

you Navarro 84 says Scotty what are your thoughts on a 2012 Maserati Quattroporte,

thanks their called quattro because they

have four doors, and they're the only like exotic sports car that has four

doors on it that's Italian manufacturers they're Maseratis okay they're fast cars

there's no arguing that, but they're also endless money pits, now if you don't mind

forking out one hundred and twenty seven thousand dollars for a car that gets

twelve miles a gallon, its value drops faster than the water going over Niagara

Falls, go ahead and get it, they go like scalded apes, but they also fall apart

like Rodney Dangerfield used to say, like a Chinese motorcycle as they age so,

it's your money if you would have a unique vehicle that no one else has, and

you don't mind throwing money away go ahead and get one

bluffington tiger says what's your opinions on a ten-speed

automatic tranny designed by Ford and GM, I

have one of my 18 Ford f-150 platinum I loved them, I thought they

shifted fine, I'm not an automatic fan I like standards myself, but I have to

admit that it shifts better than any human being can, I had one it was in a

Ford Expedition, that thing got 25 miles a gallon on the highway and that's

something for some big heavy giant thing I'm impressed by them and my costumers

that have them in their f150's they all like them

the only problem that I saw was, they had to reprogram the software

on the early ones, and after they did that I haven't seen any real problems

with them, I think it's a very interesting technology, like I say

the ones that my customers have had haven't had any serious problems yet, you're not

gonna know until years go on in terms of time and longevity of course, but they

seemed pretty rugged from what I've seen, so if you never want to miss another one

of my new car repair videos, remember to ring that Bell!

For more infomation >> Doing This Will Destroy Your Car's Wheel Bearings - Duration: 5:04.

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Things Go From Bad To Worse As Cliff Vmir Hosts His Lace Wig Class Ep. 3 | Wig Out - Duration: 9:47.

While I felt like hair was always an interest to me,

hair, to me, was something incredible.

I knew that I was an artist,

and I knew that doing hair was for me.

♪ Boss bitch, boss bitch ♪

♪ All I ever be ♪

♪ Boss bitch, boss bitch ♪

♪ Fendi, Louis V ♪

Today at my class, people are flying in,

paying for tickets to come see me perform a service.

Yes, it's a hair concert. Duh.

All of my students will learn how to apply a full-lace wig.

A lace frontal is basically a machine-wefted hairpiece.

I mastered them from trial and error.

I'm at the seminar today, and my role is to make sure

that all the students are registered,

make sure that the class is being facilitated

as well as possible,

and just to kind of keep everything under control.

So, where's Cliff? I don't know.

Last time I talked to him, he was getting his makeup done.

I texted him for ETA, but he still hasn't updated me yet.

And it's 9:30. He'll probably get here soon.

[ Horn honks ]

[Bleep] you half asleep?

I've never seen it be this empty.

Yeah. He'll be shocked.

I'm kind of nervous for Cliff

to find out how many people we have here in the class

because it's 10:00, and the room is half full.

People aren't there.

What the [bleep] she mean ain't nobody there?

Literally, I can go crash my car right now.

This is what I be talking about. This is why I always snap out.

Like, every single time, nobody can do nothing right,

ever -- ever.

Late last night, Eboyné called me

and said that everyone was e-mailed the wrong address.

I just want to take a gun and bust it up in the air.

How hard is it to read something

and send it out to a whole bunch of mother-[bleep] people?

I need to pray right now.

Heaven-- Ooh [bleep] I'm driving.

Heavenly Father, Lord, don't let me have to slap

the [bleep] out of nobody today, Lord.

[ Horn honks ] [Bleep] bitch.

Hi, how you doing?

Here you go. You're all set.

Cliff like to make a grand entrance,

and he likes for his room to be packed, ripe and ready.

And right now, it's none of that.

Ooh. All right.

Your main balance is $88. Hi.

Oh, my God, mamas, how are you? Good. How are you?

You finally came, huh? Bitch, I been here.

Is there supposed to be more people here or what?

Yes, there's supposed to be 150 people here,

but we had an address change last night,

so everybody's coming in slowly.

I literally could smack the [bleep] out of any bitch in my way.

Where are we at right now?

We have, like, about 30 people

who still haven't shown up.

Actually, might be a little bit more than that.

What was the total amount of people? It was a total of 153.

All right, so, there's 85 people here.

That's like half of the [bleep] class.

Yeah.

This mistake means possibly people cannot show up,

people can be late, people gonna want refunds.

I don't have time for that. The address that was sent --

In the e-mail, the first one. Yeah.

Yeah. We apologize about that.

We received the wrong location at first.

But we're glad you're here now. Yes.

I have never seen a seminar this empty.

Whose fault was it for the wrong address?

It wasn't my fault, and it wasn't Nkenge's fault,

it wasn't Eboyné's fault.

What happened -- Whose fault?

It was the lady who I originally booked with.

You're out of here. This is too much.

I just feel embarrassed, but however,

the show must still go on.

Ny, you're the model, of course.

Kaila, just make sure everything is running smooth.

Shaq, I need you to get the dancers together.

Zion, make sure Shaded is getting her sales in.

Yeah! Wow, are you excited?

I don't get excited till the class is over.

I cannot start halfway full, 'cause guess what?

When the others come in,

they are going to need the same information

I went over in the beginning.

So, yes, it will be delayed.

Can one of y'all go on this side and one of y'all go on this side

and just let them know that we're getting ready to start

maybe between 10:45 and 11:00

and we're just waiting on people?

Class is running a little bit late.

We're gonna start 10:45 to 11:00.

Around 10:45 to 11:00.

It's definitely gonna be worth the wait

if the seminar runs a little late.

It took me about a little bit over eight hours to get here.

We came so far for Cliff

because he's one of the leading stylists in the game.

If I go to one location and he's not there,

Imma go to the next one.

I'm gonna find this class.

It was like a 15-, 20-minute drive.

It wasn't no biggie. It's okay.

The way he melts the lace and then lays the baby hair on top,

it just looks so real.

Cliff. Cliff: Yeah.

Come on, we're behind. We got to get started.

And people that are here deserve you now.

Monique is kind of feisty sometimes.

I feel like Monique is like the big, bad wolf.

Like, she'll huff, she'll puff,

and she'll blow a mother-[bleep] out.

Is all my hair stuff up there?

The people that are here are ready for you.

All of your products and stuff like that is up there.

Yes, girl! Calm down!

So, Nkenge. Yes, how may I help you?

I am cracking up.

Nkenge is, like, the sweet girl,

but I feel like if you push her to the edge,

she definitely will snap out.

I'm serious because we're in a professional setting,

and I don't care how -- listen.

Professionalism is not a problem for me.

I've been here since everybody. I know.

Girl, if you don't mind your business...

If we're gonna have that conversation,

I would probably have it with the other person.

I'm gonna have it with him, too. Oh, just making sure.

I just want to make sure that everybody's good.

Girl, I am -- I'm good. You're good.

Okay. This is about business, baby.

♪♪

Attention!

Welcome to the Frontal 102 Look & Learn class.

Wig Out!

Give it up for Cliff Vmir!

[ Cheers and applause ]

Hey, y'all!

Hey!

Are y'all ready to learn some wigs, some glueless wigs?

All right, y'all!

Today I'm gonna teach you how to maximize your income,

and I'm also gonna teach you how to save a lot of time.

As a stylist, time is money and money is time.

All right? Please write this stuff down.

I'm gonna give you a lot of knowledge.

There are two different types of wigs.

There is a full-laced wig.

The second type is called a glueless full-lace wig.

That does not mean you don't need any glue to install it.

That just means that it has straps

and it has clips and it has combs.

These ones, all you're glueing is just the front.

This is what a lot of celebrities nowadays get.

No one is glueing their whole head down.

I feel like girls are coming to my class

because they want to make money

and also because they want to learn how to do frontals.

Who wouldn't want to learn how to do a frontal?

I'm sure you would.

I'm gonna give you all a little education about lace.

Lace comes in transparent, light brown,

medium brown, and dark brown.

You order them according to your client's skin color.

This is what helps the install look completely flawless.

It makes it look like skin.

We're just gonna spray some glue around the hairline

because you don't want to get bleach on any of the hair.

And then you can start bleaching the knots on it.

In order for your frontal to lay very flawless,

you have --

and this is a secret -- to bleach your knots.

You have to pluck it.

And you have to have a nude, sheer stocking cap underneath.

Now, any time you're mixing up your bleach,

you're gonna make sure that you have a sour-cream,

cream-cheese, toothpaste type of consistency, okay?

Y'all, these are very important,

so I want y'all to write this stuff down.

That is what we're bleaching, those knots right there.

You're going to start from the inside of the wig.

You don't want to put a lot of pressure

because it will really seep through the knots

and get on the hair.

What's your advice for just kind of, like, starting off?

you have to start off little.

As it goes up in demand, you bring the price up.

Then what happens is people is like,

"Girl, everybody got that wig.

I need that wig.

It's $500 now, but Imma pay it."

Find somebody who has, like, a big following,

do their makeup, do their hair, make them post you

at least like five times, and watch your following grow.

These are $13.

Ambitious Girl's my favorite one.

You just want the highlighter?

Yeah.

Oh, my God, look who we have here.

Trouble, trouble. What's wrong?

So, usually, during his classes,

Nkenge collects the money and helps with registration.

Ny is his hair model.

Tonie runs around helping everybody with everything.

And Jade, she sits her ass in the back

and tries to sell her products.

I'm not sure how all of this got set up here.

But after this, me and you are gonna have to talk.

Why? This has nothing to do with me and you, though.

It does. It does. It does. It doesn't. It doesn't.

Monique, I feel like you're overreacting right now.

Your issue is not with me.

It is with Clifford not listening

to the orders that you are giving him.

At the end of the day, me and him are best friends,

and no business could tear us apart.

You got to take that up with Clifford, not me.

I was told to vend here, and that's what I do.

Okay, so, he told you that it was okay to be here.

Yes, absolutely. And we've had conversations, he and I,

over and over again about conducting the business properly.

But that's my best friend, so you guys got to talk about that.

I understand that's your best friend.

I got to make this money, mama, so I'll see you later.

I'm not gonna be rude in front of your clients,

but I'm just saying after this... Mm-hmm.

...you and I are gonna have to sit down and talk.

I don't think we're gonna talk. I think you two should.

Well, I'm gonna talk to Cliff,

and then I'm sure that he'll talk to you.

We'll see you later, mamas. Okay, that's fine.

She's just messy.

Here you go, babe.

We're gonna take a five-minute break.

Imma go and shampoo this out.

I'll be right back, y'all.

So, I'm taking a break.

I'm going to the bathroom.

And literally, when I come out the bathroom,

some bitch gonna walk up to me and serve me some papers.

I was in the mother-[bleep] bathroom.

So when I come out, this old-ass bitch

gonna come up to me talking about,

"Is your name Clifford?" I said, "Yes, it is."

She's like, "Well, I'm serving you papers."

Coming up on "Wig Out"...

Ooh! You ripped the papers up?

I wanted to tell my parents about me being gay.

When I was a kid, my dad stumped me out one time

to the point where there was blood coming out of my mouth.

♪ Get it ♪ ♪ Boss bitch, boss bitch ♪

♪ All I ever be ♪

♪ Boss bitch, boss bitch ♪

♪ Fendi, Louis V ♪

♪ Boss bitch, boss bitch ♪

For more infomation >> Things Go From Bad To Worse As Cliff Vmir Hosts His Lace Wig Class Ep. 3 | Wig Out - Duration: 9:47.

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Make this Year Count - Halo SFM - Duration: 0:30.

Hey ya'll

Just want to say

Happy new year!

Make it magical

make it count

Make every moment count, savor every moment.

because...

you know

Today is the first day of the rest of YOUR life.

For more infomation >> Make this Year Count - Halo SFM - Duration: 0:30.

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1 dead after serious collision in New Haven Saturday night - Duration: 0:19.

For more infomation >> 1 dead after serious collision in New Haven Saturday night - Duration: 0:19.

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MDOT prepares for snow and extremely low temperatures - Duration: 2:38.

For more infomation >> MDOT prepares for snow and extremely low temperatures - Duration: 2:38.

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VENEZUELA MADURO ASISTE A MANIOBRAS DE LAS FUERZAS ARMADAS Y REBAJA TENSIONES CON EE.UU - Duration: 15:02.

For more infomation >> VENEZUELA MADURO ASISTE A MANIOBRAS DE LAS FUERZAS ARMADAS Y REBAJA TENSIONES CON EE.UU - Duration: 15:02.

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Super Bowl-bound Rams to host send-off rally Sunday at Inglewood stadium site - Duration: 2:29.

For more infomation >> Super Bowl-bound Rams to host send-off rally Sunday at Inglewood stadium site - Duration: 2:29.

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Bridgeport police investigating Sunday morning homicide - Duration: 0:31.

For more infomation >> Bridgeport police investigating Sunday morning homicide - Duration: 0:31.

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Pine Rescue, The 24ft Tiny House Crib Absolutely Stunning | Lovely Tiny House - Duration: 3:13.

For more infomation >> Pine Rescue, The 24ft Tiny House Crib Absolutely Stunning | Lovely Tiny House - Duration: 3:13.

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Granville man arrested after allegedly causing a disturbance, resisting arrest - Duration: 0:40.

For more infomation >> Granville man arrested after allegedly causing a disturbance, resisting arrest - Duration: 0:40.

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Tin Nóng BBC 28/1/2019 - BẤT NGỜ CÂU HỎI LẠ KIM JONG UN HỎI NGUYỄN PHÚ TRỌNG THƯỢNG ĐỈNH #183 @E4U - Duration: 24:44.

For more infomation >> Tin Nóng BBC 28/1/2019 - BẤT NGỜ CÂU HỎI LẠ KIM JONG UN HỎI NGUYỄN PHÚ TRỌNG THƯỢNG ĐỈNH #183 @E4U - Duration: 24:44.

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Man shot multiple times outside trucking school, police say - Duration: 0:19.

For more infomation >> Man shot multiple times outside trucking school, police say - Duration: 0:19.

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A Digital Culture Of Fear (w/ Scott Malcomson) | Interview | Real Vision™ - Duration: 51:00.

Hey, everyone.

Just wanted to let you know about our new video on cybersecurity.

We got to check out a cybersecurity control center, so that's where they screen for massive

worldwide cyber attacks.

We also got to speak to a bunch of hackers, and actually see a hack happen live.

But before we get into that, we wanted to share some of our previous videos on cybersecurity

from some experts in the field.

So this episode originally aired on August 18, 2016.

Hope you enjoy, and remember to also check at RealVision.com to watch the new season

of Discoveries, where we dive into the implications of the internet of things.

That's everything from smart thermostats to internet connected cars and Wi-Fi coffee makers.

It's definitely something you don't want to miss.

So make sure to sign up for your 14 day free trial.

I was a foreign editor in the New York Times Magazine and then I've been an oped editor

there as well.

But I really started in college and really came up through alternative journalism, which,

whatever else might say about The New York Times, it's not really alternative journalism.

But I was at the Village Voice for like 12 years and it was all deeply anti-authoritarian

and mostly cultural, sort of, rather than political.

So needless to say, we didn't draw much of a distinction between those two in alternative

journalism.

But that's really what where I came from.

And my interests were divided between more cultural things like novels and film and that

kind of thing.

And then foreign cultures, but foreign politics and foreign affairs.

And so I just kind of stuck with those two.

And those were really my guide posts.

Once I had children I needed to make an actual living.

So I resisted full time work up until my first child was born.

When I was well into my 30s.

And that was when I went to the Times, actually.

But prior to that, I pretty much never had a full time job, except maybe for a couple

of months.

And I'd save my money and then I would go overseas once I saved up enough and I had

some story in mind.

So the first big overseas story I did was in 1984.

I was fascinated by the coal miner strike in the UK.

And so I spent several months running around to coal mines and talking with miners and

then with Mrs. Thatcher and Peter Healthfield and different people who were in the union.

Ian McGregor, who was sort of the point person for the government.

He was the head of National Coal Board, is that right?

So that was really my introduction to being a foreign correspondent.

And for years and years I just kind of arranged my life so I could go back to New York and

edit.

And I was in essentially a kind of a left wing counter cultural world.

And then when I had enough money I'd go off.

So I worked in Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean.

Eventually in the Middle East, Central Asia, across most of Europe.

North America, Canada.

Eventually I got to China as well.

Eventually, I went into college.

I was always interested in writing and at that time in the late '70s and '80s, the only

way that you could hope to make a living at writing was to be a journalist.

And so I went into journalism with that in mind.

I went to the University of California at Berkeley because of its counter cultural heritage.

Its new daily newspaper-- student so-called newspaper-- was an independent corporation.

It was an off campus corporation because there had been a rebellion by it.

I think the paper was at that point almost 100 years old, which is pretty incredible

in itself.

But a few years before I got there, the staff had rebelled against the administration.

And so there was a battle over it.

And so they took all the typewriters and desks and then walked a few blocks down Dwight Way

and put them in a rented office, which is where I came into the picture.

So that's really where I learned to be a journalist.

And it hadn't been what I intended to do, but I really, really loved doing it.

And at that point, we still had-- partly because we didn't have very much money-- but we use

manual typewriters.

I think there might have been one or two electric ones.

We did each story-- when you wrote it, it was done on what's called a half sheet, which

is a piece of paper about that big.

Usually taken off of the roll from the AP machine.

And we would slice out these pages and then you put one paragraph on each page.

So then the editor would then look at it and say, no, this paragraph is more important.

And then there was like a physical re-stacking of the order the paragraphs.

So I learned to journalism in a very low tech or early tech way.

Slightly anachronistic, but not by much.

And I've basically seen both the profession change technologically and in many ways, go

downhill ever since.

And in fact, most industries that I get in seem to fall apart within a couple of years

of my getting involved with them.

And that was the case with journalism too.

It's been a long sad decline.

Which isn't to sound anti-technology at all.

In fact, I did some work with the Chairman of Google, for example.

And I recently wrote a book about technology.

And I've worked on helping journalism to adjust to changes in technology.

Nonetheless, I think there were a couple things that have really been lost in the course of

that trajectory.

The main thing really was it in the United States, and to a lesser degree in other countries--

very much also in Latin America-- journalism came up as an industry that was based with

a lot of different newspapers in different towns.

And each newspaper was quite distinct.

And in a kind of pre-globalized information situation, each of those became powerful.

They were essentially monopolies.

Even if there was a morning or an evening paper, they were just sharing a monopoly.

And so first of all, if it had that kind of political power and significance, which brought

with it a sense of responsibility.

Local responsibility.

And local responsibility is, obviously, very different from the kind of diffused responsibility

you get in the internet period.

You're immediately answerable to people whom you know and who know you.

It's a different kind of responsibility.

. And then secondly, because literacy was not

a secret, it was hardly even a skill actually-- there was no professional journalism.

And there's barely a professional journalism now.

It sort of became professionalized, I think, largely at the instigation of universities,

who saw a kind of additional source of revenue that would be possible.

But basically, the brilliance to me of journalism, in that kind of political economic sense was

that someone like me, who came from a very modest background, who only had a bachelor's

degree and had to really struggle to get that, could succeed in it through work.

And yet it was a relatively esteemed profession.

Not like a doctor or a lawyer, but nonetheless, not like a landscape laborer, which I have

also been.

Or a construction site worker, which I've also been.

So journalism had this intense appeal in terms of social mobility among other things.

But it was generally in the US and elsewhere organized as an industry.

And so there's a great deal of on the job training.

I mean, it was never really seen as a profession, but it was seen as a kind of pretty intensely

trained vocation.

And that appealed to me a lot.

The social fluidity of it.

And that pretty intense sense of responsibility.

But also a certain rashness as well, which is very appealing, up to a point

Part of the way you get trained in it was through its own culture and through the responsibility

to other people within the profession.

I never thought of it as a profession, quite.

But anyway, in practice, you are answerable to the other practitioners.

And you built a reputation.

A good reputation or a bad reputation.

And then you sort of lived on that.

And that appealed to me.

That's what made it open to social mobility-- is that you had a chance to live on a reputation.

And I think that structure has really broken down.

There's a lot of good journalism that goes on now.

I find that in the sort of the more traditional media setups, the pressures are so great to

generate so much content in a short period of time.

That, with some exceptions, kind of overwhelms the practice.

And I know it's a huge frustration for people who are in it.

Somebody who used to spend a couple of days working on a story now has to deliver something

every few hours.

And it's not that they couldn't do it, so to speak, in the old way.

But they don't get the opportunity to do it in the old way.

What sort of fills in, to some extent, for that is you do still have real talent kind

of coming up.

And it shapes itself more than the industry shapes it now.

So there's a different kind of personality that thrives in a situation like that.

But some of them are really great.

They tend to be-- not so much today-- not so much in any kind of general media.

They tend to be on sites that are devoted more to a particular topic.

Like things that I'm very interested in are cyber security, foreign affairs generally,

but in a particular, parts of the world and everything.

American foreign policy.

But some of the best stuff that I read on American foreign policy is on websites like

this one called War on the Rocks that most people wouldn't have heard of.

And that don't get marketed particularly.

And US Policy Defense One is another site.

There are these sites for pretty much whatever you're interested in.

But it's a very, very different journalistic world.

And in some ways, it's barely journalism.

But the quality level tends to vary quite a bit, even within a quality site.

I think it's been difficult for journalism and investigative journalism to deal with

the Great Recession-- the period after it-- for several reasons.

One is that traditionally, there's been such a distinction drawn between the business press

or the financial press and the rest of the press.

And the business world tends to listen to the financial press or the business press

and not to the rest of it.

And so the non-business press, so to speak, approaches those sorts of issues, particularly

on that scale, a global scale-- tends to approach them in a way that very rarely gets at the

essential dynamics.

Because the people in the non-business press world aren't really accustomed to thinking

about those things.

So they'll tend to put them, for example, as Michael Lewis did, into a more, what is

sort of fundamentally a magazine journalism frame.

His work is really great but there was a lot else going on in 2008.

Or there's a kind of moral frame that comes naturally to non-business people when they're

thinking about business.

To me, judgment is probably more inappropriate than appropriate.

Which isn't to say that there isn't a good, sort of morally driven in some way or ethically

driven journalism done about business issues and economic issues.

But it does tend to close off the avenues that you would go down to investigate those

issues.

Because you have a moral point in mind already, probably.

So that stuff is really surprisingly difficult to write about.

And because the Great Recession had such an international quality to it-- the press is

still local in the sense that the French press is demonstrably different from the German

press.

And they're both demonstrably different from the American press.

And so early on in the Great Recession, there were several institution, states, people who

were seen as the possible likely people to blame.

Or institutions to blame.

And the press treatment of the Great Recession quickly started to break down along those

lines.

Did it originate in the United States.

Did it have to do with savings.

Did it have to do with Chinese surpluses.

And these issues.

So I think that kind of derailed a lot of that discussion.

Because it's very hard to be at both an investigative person and 30,000 feet.

It's very difficult to combine those.

Particularly at the time, there was sort of, in a way, more blame to go around than possibly

that could have been assigned.

And I think that made writing about and investigating that quite a bit more difficult than you might

think at first blush.

One of the processes that I've witnessed in looking at journalism over the last 30 years

is the rise of a kind of highly politically opinionated journalism to a point where it

could really shift things.

Now that was not so much of a novelty as we sometimes think.

I mean, the golden age of establishment journalism when you listen respectfully to whomever,

I think, is a bit of a myth constructed in retrospect.

And it's interesting to think about why it would have been constructed in these different

times.

At least with American journalism, if you're familiar with it, it tended to be very highly

partisan.

Pretty much up until the Second World War.

And a lot of the sort of model for very high minded civic journalism is really a post World

War Ii thing.

And I don't think it is a coincidence that it corresponds with a level of American felt

global responsibility, which had not pre-existed World War II, or even like 1943.

So it was a bit of a myth, which reached its apotheosis in the early '70s with the Watergate

case.

That said, there are bad myths and good myths.

And there are myths that make you work harder to do better things and there are myths that

make you not.

So it's an attractive myth and I think, probably, a useful one.

To me, the point when that started-- if I had to pick one-- to decline, it was really

with the rise of talk radio and in particular, the rise of Rush Limbaugh in the United States.

And tapping into a feeling that there was a sort of center liberal not ideology, maybe

conspiracy.

But a kind of chloroform that the mainstream media were applying to all debate.

And in the media world, Rush Limbaugh is sort of tip of the spear with that.

Newt Gingrich in the House was the political equivalent of that.

And this was a sort of fairly coherent movement.

It all predates the internet.

And it possibly doesn't have anything to do with it.

The way in which the internet kind of undermined that sort of really strong central authority

of the journalistic business, I think, was exacerbating existing trends.

And also, with the rise of cable TV, just the fact that you used to have three channels

when I was a kid.

And then you had 50.

And people could access it.

And it was all kind of crap at first and then it got better and better.

So the advent of somebody like John Oliver as a really important political elucidator

is the point where we're at now in a pretty long development where there's a style of

a highly opinionated and even quite sarcastic delivery of information.

And it tends to be built off of, from left to right, an idea that there's a kind of center

that is pretending to be wiser than it is.

Now having worked in that center myself, and if not in its heyday, then pretty close to

it.

I can say that yes, indeed, there was a kind of endemic smugness to that culture.

There was a lot about it that was great.

But you could hardly maintain that that kind of smugness wasn't there as well.

What I like about some of the more non-right wing people in that world is that they are--

and I think John Oliver is, I think, a good example-- coming out of Jon Stewart.

But Jon Stewart really didn't do this particularly.

He was just like a particularly well read and smart guy.

But the John Oliver show and some others actually really devote a fair amount of time to research.

And I think there's a kind of sense of social responsibility that sort of creeping in the

back door after essentially two decades of that really being in decline.

And so you know, we'll see you will see what the next stage is.

But I don't think it's just a downward slope at all.

It changes form.

Well, I mean I've gotten into this private intelligence work in kind of interesting way

with respect to the history of journalism.

Because there's now-- and generationally, this will disappear, but for this window of

time-- around the world, a network of people who went into journalism, were trained in

it to the degree that you get trained, and devoted to-- not to sound sentimental-- to

actually discovering the truth and the facts of a situation, who have a really hard time

making a living.

And what I do now when I work for investors who are trying to-- basically, I try to find

out if something that they're interested in putting money into-- a company, people-- if

those are what they represent themselves to be.

And if they're a bit more subtly, even if they are honest about who they are, are their

ambitions for themselves actually corresponding enough to reality.

And those are fundamentally things that journalists do all the time.

And often, when I need information from a place, I found that there's this kind of--

I call it the League of Ex-Journalists-- who all basically know each other and are sympathetic

to the fundamental plight of not being able to do quite what it was you wanted to do when

you were 20.

And so it's like an international network of people.

I mean, I can find somebody anywhere within-- well, so far it hasn't taken more than a few

phone calls to find somebody.

Because it's sort of a shared culture.

But as I say, it's a shared culture that I doubt will last very long.

But it's lasting right now.

It answers a need because the world of investors-- let's say in a pre-globalized era.

So let's say before 1990.

In the majority, you lived within a relatively circumscribed world.

You may deals on the basis of people who were known to you or known to your family.

There's a kind of degrees of separation thing.

But the number of people who were going into fresh markets that they didn't know and gaining

command of them and then making investments in them and having them do well and so on--

that was just really a negligible percentage of the people who were in the kind of investor

world, right?

So with globalization, you both had an opportunity to enter markets.

It was much easier to enter them than it would have been earlier.

You'd have more information about them.

Roots were created for the flow of money.

Money could be transferred so much more easily across borders.

Profits could be repatriated all that kind of stuff.

So capital became much more global.

And on the whole, that worked out pretty well.

I mean, you'd have these immense private capital flows to places that had not gotten them before

because it wouldn't have entered the minds of the people who were in control of the capital

to move them to the given place.

Anyway, that's making a very complicated story in a very brief.

But the point I'm trying to make is that investors and capital became globalized and they enjoyed

10, 15 years or so of it being relatively hard to make a mistake.

Relatively hard.

Not that people didn't lose lots of money.

But relatively hard to make a mistake.

And confidence was built because the sense was that there was a kind of gradual but steady

convergence of political structures and a kind of understood global culture, which can

be easily mocked.

But for people who wanted to move their money to new places in the hopes of greater returns,

it was kind of necessary.

It all kind of formed a confidence building thing.

And really, from 2007, 2008 on, that has gradually fallen apart.

And not all of it.

But some really significant elements.

At this point to maintain that the political structures, at least of the major states,

and the relationship between those structures and economic practices, legal practices, and

so on-- the sanctity of contract, blah, blah, blah, never be another nationalization again--

that would be foolish to think that now.

And maybe someday, every country will be a democracy.

But nobody actually believes that anymore.

Or that there will never be another nationalization.

All this kind of stuff.

So even the idea that there's a kind of, OK, not on democracy grounds, not on cultural

grounds, possibly not on moral grounds or international human rights grounds, but there's

still a kind of shared capitalist rules of the road pattern that we can all rely on.

Even that isn't really true anymore.

And so you have a generation now or maybe two of globally minded investors who came

up in a period when they thought things are in a certain direction.

Now, the returns that you can get here in the developed world are relatively low.

Just this week, if you wanted to fly to safety with your capital, you could go into German

bonds, and after 10 years of them basically storing your money, you get a little bit less

than that back.

So you have two things going on.

You have a class of global investors who are used to a certain rate of return.

I think it's achievable and feel that as they move around the globe, they should be able

to kind of find it.

But at the same time, you have all these systems falling apart actually made that possible.

So what I do in that context is find information in order to sort of recreate some of that

level of confidence which can't be taken for granted for the reasons that it had been taking

for granted for quite a while.

So what it usually amounts to is, on a given investment target, just really looking very

closely at the people.

The companies, but also very much the people.

What seems to me at least to really keep it stability in a period of instability is personal

relationships.

And so if you want to understand a group of companies-- why they might work-- you really

need to look at how the people in them work with each other.

It's very often family ties of one sort or another.

But it takes awhile, especially if you're looking at Saint Vincent and Grenadines, BVI,

all these different shell companies, it takes a lot of figure that out.

And then to put that in the context of a political, sometimes definitely an economic and commercial

situation.

Very frequently, also, a political situation.

You need to know how those people especially, but also the companies, fit into the larger

social context.

And it's not that hard to do, but it takes a fair amount of work.

And you need to know what you're doing.

And investors can't really do that themselves.

What they tend to do is they find a sector or companies or very often, individuals whom

they'll meet.

And they'll say, OK, this person I discussed it, this looks like a reasonable business,

they've done well in the past.

And then that's kind of it.

I don't want to actually move to Singapore or Ghana or Columbia or wherever and really

find out.

I just want to feel like I've got a shot at 10% rather than 1%.

So where I come in is trying to not just prevent mistakes, but create a kind of level of knowledge,

which is only aimed at creating a level of sound judgment, really, on the part of the

investor.

So it's all kind of the aspect of globalization and the relative deglobalization that we're

undergoing now, and [INAUDIBLE] the expectations of investors that were created in a somewhat

earlier period.

I think that investors have naturally focused on balance sheets and annual reports of financial

information and these sorts of disclosures and everything For good reason you can't you

can't ignore any of that.

But you also can't let it be a kind of token of stability.

You can't invest it with the power that it doesn't really have.

And any the company can do other things with balance sheets and you know and it's very

hard to know whether resources actually exist.

One of the things that we do it is fairly frequently misrepresented.

It's just like what are your actual assets.

And it's sort of like the equivalent of resume padding.

We've secured this magnificent property or whatever.

And there'll be a property, but it won't be that magnificent.

And one of the things that we do is send somebody to go look at a property.

It sounds simple but people don't expect you to actually do that.

It's just classic investigative-- it's sort of the binoculars counting the ship's kind

of thing.

But you learn you learn a lot that way.

The proliferation of information that's available relatively easily online has some interesting

benefits in terms of what we do.

And it can also be really misleading.

Some of the benefits are that you can get to know personalities.

Right now, and this will probably change, some people put a lot of information about

themselves still on the web and social media and sort of vaguely field that only their

friends will look at it.

And so you can find out a fair amount about people that they might prefer that you wouldn't

know that's of business relevance.

But it varies enormously.

And in some ways, I actually don't feel like there's that much of an information glut.

Partly because I just don't think there.

I think it's a bit overrated-- that there's you can find out all this information.

Secondly, if there's anything that somebody doesn't want you to know, the chances are

fairly high they'll go to some trouble to not make it available.

And so, in this sort of let's say relative information glut, the key thing if you're

trying to understand situation is not to be fooled into thinking that the information

that's in front of you is the information.

It's only the information in front you.

And so you go back to classic intelligence analytical work of trying to find patterns

of that, assuming that you know what they are and looking for correspondences without

imposing a pattern.

And letting the information kind of speak a little bit.

Because otherwise, you'll just be misled.

Maybe not deliberately, but it'll be as if it were deliberate.

I tend to break cyber security down and do a couple of different boxes.

Because at this point, there's so many different social actors-- I don't want to say exploiting--

for whom cyber security is a way to get some other goal, whether it's fear of one thing.

It's usually fear.

There's an enormous amount of fear marketing in the cyber security world.

And so from the perspective of some of that world, the more fear the better.

And their incentive is not to kind of break it down.

But I do you can really differentiate between several aspects of it.

There's the personal aspect, the social media aspect.

The pictures of you when you were 15, smoking a joint and throwing up that seemed so amusing

at the time and now you can't get a job.

That kind of thing.

And I think that sort of is taking care of itself over time in some interesting ways.

I think that, certainly for younger people-- and by younger I mean under 25, maybe-- at

this point there's a realization that who you are online is not your true self.

It's a constructed self.

Which, for someone of my age, is a little sad, because I can remember the point when

your online self was actually much truer than your real life self.

And that was, in many ways, the kind of deep exhilaration of the early web.

All the things that people assumed about you because they knew from the street and you

went to the same elementary school.

You have the idea in your mind that yes, that's all true, but the reason I'm like that is

because I resent something you did earlier-- two years before.

Whereas online, I'm going to be my kind of ideal, truest self.

And then people will flock to that self.

They'll make friends with that self.

Because inevitably, I'll be attractive, right?

Which is another wonderful delusion of the early internet days.

I think it's really, somewhat painfully, been reversed to where most people now think of

their online self as something that has to be somewhat circumscribed and kind of protected

or done temporarily.

One of the fascinating things is watching the last couple of generations come to the

realization online of what's perfectly obviously and traditional offline, which is that their

self when they are 10 is not their self when they are 13.

And when you're 10, you're very attached to your 10-year-old self.

You take it quite seriously and rightly so.

But no 10-year-old wants to think, I hope when I'm 14 I'll still be like me when I'm

10.

You have a sense of your development over time that you're going to change and that

you're going to change profoundly.

And that if you're not, something is actually quite wrong.

And so the process of growing up, you're used to shedding selves.

So we've had a couple of generations now who have kind of done that online.

And I think that the current generation of, let's say 14 to 15 year olds are aware that

these selves are temporary.

What the adult self is probably like the next shoe to fall in terms of how we define ourselves

online.

The next show to drop, rather.

But we'll see what shoe is like when it's dropped.

So people have become used to security practices.

They become used to keeping information off.

They become used to sort of curating their own public personalities, OK?

So that's one thing.

And that relates to other mundane but important cyber security stuff, like don't take a picture

of your credit card and put it on Facebook or things like that.

People used to do that.

So that's one category.

There's another category, which is cyber crime of the $100 million out of the bank in Bangladesh

via swift sort.

That might or might not become eased over in the coming years because the number of

criminal practices online-- while there is real innovation among hackers, a genuine innovation

among criminal hackers and noncriminal hackers in coming up with methods-- there are a couple

things to bear in mind.

The distributed denial of service attack, the famous DDoS, attack is pretty much like

an evergreen.

It's been going on.

It's like mace or the halberd or whatever-- the pike of cybercrime.

And it hasn't really changed much.

You just continue to do it.

And there have predictions of a cyber Pearl Harbor now for, I think, close to 25 years.

And yet the cyber Pearl Harbor never quite happens.

I mean, you don't want to give hostages to fortune.

But at the same time, it's not quite to the mysterious world of constant criminal innovation

that it's sometimes made out to be.

The other element in it, and we'll see if this happens or not, is the major states that

have online operations that are in a position to both identify and attribute responsibility

for this kind of thing when it's really sophisticated-- we kind of know what the states are.

And they're beginning really in the last year to talk seriously to each other about, despite

their differences, essentially gradually suppress truly criminal, stealing money kind of, selling

drugs kind of online activity.

Whether that cooperation really goes anywhere not is not really a money question.

It's really a political question.

And that brings me to the third box, which is the one that I'm a bit more specialized

in, which is the state power related cyber security box.

Like in the case of China for example.

But it everybody blames China and it's not entirely fair, but everyone picks on China,

really.

But any of the major states have had very sophisticated infiltration operations.

Some states are more likely to use that for purposes of what amounts to commercial espionage

than other states.

And this breaks down according to, more or less, traditional lines.

The French have always been famous for being willing to do commercial espionage on behalf

of French companies.

It predates the internet.

It's a cultural thing, I guess.

And certainly the Chinese have been very willing to do that.

That's not sustainable.

I mean it can't quite go on in that vein and states know this.

But it's hard for obvious reasons to separate a states' capacity to engage in political

espionage or aspects of cyber warfare, so to speak, which is another kind of abused

term.

And to be able to do what amounts to more commercial kind of crime.

And for the stability of the planet, it would be a good thing if ongoing efforts to separate

these boxes out so that the major states with the capacities to suppress crime can figure

out how to do it.

And they can bracket off those areas that are really more purely devoted to their competition

with each other.

Now that area of cyber security where states compete with each other and try to undermine

each other systems and try to create weapons that will enable them, in the event of conflict,

to prevail over enemy.

To make sure that their missiles don't hit their target.

To disrupt their command and control systems, which is what a lot of cyber warfare is really

devoted to.

That area is very concerning because it's not only not regulated, it's probably not

regulateable.

And my view is that different states recognize that situation but they are used to competing

with each other, essentially militarily.

And they don't know how to not do that.

And because the cyber sphere-- in terms of this kind of security-- involves weapons that

have had very few results, they, in a way, in and really imperfect and mostly misleading

metaphor, kind of resemble nuclear weapons in the sense of well, we all know we'll never

use them.

Except they're also the opposite.

Because they don't actually seem to do much of anything, the temptation is to use them

in a kind of experimental sort of way.

Which is basically what the major states do that with a lot of their cyber weaponry.

They just use it thinking that they won't need it.

But at some point they might need it if there's an actual conflict.

And it's a kind of form of arms race that's really need to cyber.

And nobody really knows where it works out.

My biggest worry is nobody really knows how to stop it.

The people in a position to make decisions about these things-- you can't know what your

enemies capabilities are.

And to be responsible, you should probably kind of assume the worst.

They do the same thing.

And there's no exit from that.

My additional great concern is that the stability of nuclear systems, strategic systems, is

coming.

Or at this point is coming and will depend much more on cyber systems, which kind of

control the weaponry and control defenses against attacks on the weaponry.

And so at that point, the logic of mutual assured destruction, which is so survivable,

second strike, and so on and therefore nothing will ever happen-- that will fall apart.

Both because the decision making windows will get so short.

And because by the time you can figure out what the other side's capabilities are, it's

kind of too late.

And therefore, you're going to be constantly trying to anticipate it.

So I really wish that the post-Cold War settlement had gone a little further along the road of

disarmament.

I mean it when a significant distance there, but the main countries still have stockpiles

that exceed the sort of destroyable part and therefore preserve this kind of second strike

capability.

All of which is theoretical.

But I really wish that all those weapons, before everything kind of went to hell, we

could have really reduced those stockpiles a lot more.

Because that's a true danger now.

Because the relationship between cyber and nuclear is very worrying.

it's not very well thought out.

My immediate reaction to the Snowden revelations was kind two fold.

Like a lot of people in my business, there was a sort of, well, you knew this kind of

thing was going on anyway.

And so don't get too wound up about it.

But it was the other reaction that really mattered more.

Which was it was now established as a kind of mutually recognized fact that this kind

of thing and had been going on and was likely to continue going on.

In other words, in the immediate aftermath of Snowden, there were denials and that sort

of thing.

But there was very little in the way of, yes, you're right, we need to rethink this on almost

anyone's part.

On Silicon Valley's part, there was an increasing anger, really.

I think there was a kind of feeling of betrayal, which maybe is partly a testament to the possibly

necessary level of naivety that you need in order to put in the hours and the effort and

the money to build companies the way that people do in Silicon Valley.

But they're basically been a kind of quiet agreement without any of the parties being

fully informed between the Valley and DC in terms of this kind of surveillance.

And with the GCHQ and some of the other players and the Five Eyes, the Commonwealth.

The kind of Anglo-Saxon world of intelligence sharing.

None of that relationship had been negotiated and it wasn't particularly transparent.

And the players didn't really know what they were doing.

So once Snowden exposed that from a Valley point of view, they though, oh my god, we

were actually kind of being used as tools here.

And we didn't realize that.

And that's certainly not how we envisioned ourselves and our role in the world.

Those to the degree that companies in the Valley want to be or are multinational or

international companies-- it raised it, and still does-- that kind of horrifying prospect

that their control over the security of their own systems would be, if not always compromised,

always potentially compromised, even by the US.

And that's attention that still is unresolved.

I mean the idea of building in back doors or redoing the code in iOS so that you can

get information off of the driver of a phone.

From a technical and from a Valley point of view, all this amounts to is making their

existing systems weaker and more vulnerable.

And at one level, that's inarguable.

It does make them more vulnerable.

And so all this was set in motion by Snowden.

And then the other thing that was set in motion by Snowden, in my view, is that the rest of

the world was like, oh, actually, these sort of sunny reassurances from either the big

US companies or the United States government or the British government-- that they would

kind of somehow just not do bad things really aren't worth very much.

And I mean it doesn't take a lot in most parts of the world to inspire a feeling of distrust

vis-a-vis American power, or vis-a-vis American-based multinationals.

And so that this was increased.

And this had, among other things, the effect of making other governments, at least larger

governments, feel like we need some protections here.

We need some protections for our possibly nascent IT sectors.

We need protections for our own command and control system so that our weapons continue

to work.

Maybe we don't want to only be using a system like GPS, which is still you administered

by the US Air Force and was a government project.

Maybe we don't want to have all of our commercial airliners dependent on that for their successful

functioning.

And so you have these other centers that are growing up, whether it's China and Russia

building their own GPS systems and trying to get their neighbors pulled into them.

It's laying your own cables.

All this kind of stuff, which on one view, if you look at the early days of the internet

and digital computing, you could say, well, the beauty of the internet is it's an open

system and anyone can come on to anyone could build onto it.

So why are we now having to build replicas of it.

And it's really almost entirely for political reasons.

And also for commercial reasons.

But I think mostly for political reasons.

And again, not to lay all this at Snowden, he was exposing some that existed.

But I really think it was a watershed moment in its different ways.

For the Valley.

For DC.

For China.

For Moscow.

For Delhi.

For all these different places.

Started in Brazil.

Started to reconfigure their view of what the internet and what this interconnected

world actually meant.

And to me, if, I were to pick one kind of line of development that I see now, it is

towards this kind of a Splinternet.

Where you're having sort of overlapping similar systems being constructed in order to preserve

certain kinds of political power.

To me, a very interesting development with this are these efforts by Facebook, Microsoft,

and Google to lay their own cable as companies.

Not as American companies, but simply as companies.

To build balloons and satellites that will be able to, essentially, if you put it all

together, it kind of amounts to an attempt to build a smaller, private, global internet.

Kind of like the internet of 15 years ago, that will not be subject to this kind of growing

sovereign restriction by nation states.

But I'm not sure that that's the solution either.

I mean, do you really want three or four companies to be the ones who control the non-subjective

state power internet.

I'm not sure that is necessarily the solution either.

For more infomation >> A Digital Culture Of Fear (w/ Scott Malcomson) | Interview | Real Vision™ - Duration: 51:00.

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Thousands gather at Gillette Stadium to attend Patriots Super Bowl sendoff rally - Duration: 1:51.

For more infomation >> Thousands gather at Gillette Stadium to attend Patriots Super Bowl sendoff rally - Duration: 1:51.

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How To Choreograph a Dance Routine | Dance Tips | STEEZY.CO - Duration: 3:06.

Hey guys this is Jessie and Clay

and in this video you're gonna learn how to choreograph your very own dance routine using these 6 easy tips.

Tip number one

know your purpose.

Not like in life or anything, but why are you making this dance routine in the first place

and who are you performing it front of?

Are you making it for a solo ballet recital?

Is it for a team competition?

Are you making a concept video for YouTube?

Are you performing at your Grandma's 80th birthday party?

Thinking about these things will help you choose your song, length of the piece,

and also the type of movements that you'll want to incorporate.

Yeah, you don't want to be twerking at your grandma's 80th birthday party.

Unless she's into that.

Tip number two

pick a song , cut it or mix it.

You don't have to hire a DJ or anything crazy

but you just gotta pick out which part of the song that you enjoy

and which ones you may want to cut and bring together or just change out.

This going to help you map your piece out.

Speaking of, tip number three: map out your routine.

Decide the major section of choreography or moves that you want to do.

So maybe the intro starts off slow, smooth, and sexy

and the chorus gets really, really hype

and the closer, you just gotta kill it off.

You know? Just, just...

meow

Meow?

Meow! ;)

And then you can fill in those in-between sections.

What I generally do, is that I'll pick out out my song

pick out my favorite beats, moments, or sounds inside the song

and then I will freestyle and record it, so that I can watch myself later

and go "Oh was a cool move!" then I'll keep that move and put it in my choreography.

Tip number four: use some old moves and then try out some new ones.

You might feel lost on how to even start choreographing a piece

because you're sitting there expecting some crazy, new unique movements to just come to you

and they're not coming to you.

So just start by doing moves that already feel comfortable to you

and we'll explain how to spice them up a little bit later.

Once you have the base of comfortable moves, then it's time to come up with some new ones.

We have a whole video on how to use concepts to create moves

so make sure you click that link in the description to watch it.

Tip number five: embelleish and edit.

Ok, let's go back to your comfort moves now.

You can give them a little flavor by playing with different elements in choreography.

For example, take this harlem shake

now let's switch up the timing

or change your body placement

or play with your textures.

Aside from switching up those elements, you can also switch some little details like

changing up a hand placement, maybe a look

you can even do dimple moves.

These things will make your moves more interesting and more dynamic.

And last but not least, tip number six: practice, practice, practice.

Even if you know exactly what you want your piece to look like in here

the only way it'll actually look that way on your body is if you practice it.

Think back to our first question of "Why are you making that piece?"

Imagine yourself in that setting

put yourself onto that stage

in that party

in that concept video and practice the way you want to perform it.

Thank you so much for watching this video.

If you feel a little more ready to start choreographing then give this video a HUGE thumbs ups.

and make sure you write in the comments about what helps you choreograph a better dance routine.

Anyways guys, see you later!

Italian waiter.

For more infomation >> How To Choreograph a Dance Routine | Dance Tips | STEEZY.CO - Duration: 3:06.

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Injured, Stray Puppy Actually Came From A Big Family? | Kritter Klub - Duration: 4:10.

Overprotective parents?

Come here, you

One would easily be led to believe that she's the offspring of Dongdong and Sue

I love you as if you're my own, biological puppy

During mealtime,

They even let the puppy eat first

Watching you eat makes me happy

Like mother, like daughter

The puppy showed up at their door one night

And they've been caring for her ever since

Her leg was bleeding when found

kill em with kindness

uwu

She's full of cute charms

So I don't think she was born as a wild dog

But must've had an owner

Where did you come from?

Receives a checkup at the hospital

Her leg was struck somehow

Whether it was by a big animal or snare

She needs to be taken into surgery to fix the bones

Please take care of her, doctor

During surgery, we get a phone call

We were walking Dongdong and Sue in the mountains

There were puppies that were Soojung's size

I followed the sound, and found another puppy

Resembles Soojung in both size and appearance

As if telling them to come along

So many puppies just like Soojung

Asks around

Hello

Owner : The dog gave birth to many puppies

One went missing

Because I leave them untethered

The mother is kept on a leash

I had no idea this would happen

The owner's been coming to feed them every day

The owner didn't know what to do with all dem puppies

The producers offer help

Builds a temporary shelter

I hope they get adopted by nice people

Three of them join Soojung

I'll take care of them until they get adopted

Despite them being wild dogs, they're in fine condition

As for Soojung,

who successfully completes surgery

Are you okay?

Let's go home when you fully recover

We'll be waiting!

For more infomation >> Injured, Stray Puppy Actually Came From A Big Family? | Kritter Klub - Duration: 4:10.

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FREE | FUTURE x Lil Uzi Vert Type Beat - "Crystal" Free Trap/Rap Beat - Duration: 2:02.

hope yall like this beat

For more infomation >> FREE | FUTURE x Lil Uzi Vert Type Beat - "Crystal" Free Trap/Rap Beat - Duration: 2:02.

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🔴urgent Donald Trump à invité pape mbeye goor djigiéne😱😱😱 - Duration: 2:25.

For more infomation >> 🔴urgent Donald Trump à invité pape mbeye goor djigiéne😱😱😱 - Duration: 2:25.

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For more infomation >> 🔴urgent Donald Trump à invité pape mbeye goor djigiéne😱😱😱 - Duration: 2:25.

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Hotel à Mérida - Duration: 7:38.

So welcome in my home in Mérida for the next..

three days, it's really basic (I know I used rustic but wrong choice of words)I know some of my little princesses that wouldn't enjoy it

but it's only to sleep, I checked the mattress and no bedbugs. The only thing I found was a ant

So Hakuna Matata, so I took this room, one of the two owner

the owners are brothers, Roberto and Rodrigo

I met Roberto, the beautiful Roberto and he gave me the choice between 2 rooms

I have chosen the private room

with the private bathroom

and the Air conditioning

the other room doesn't have A/C

and the weather is hot

also the other room is in the front part of the building where the street is

the is a lot of street traffic and noises

here I'm like in the backyard

like in a other building, so it's less noisy

so...

I'm in the corner of the room

that is the room

listen, it do the job

it could use more light

but it will do the job

this is the bathroom, with the shower

of course, this wasn't design for short people

because the light switch is up there

so

it's a little bit like in Japan

or south korea

where the toilet is with the shower

so that is it

I also have acces to a kitchen

on this side

I think I'm the only customer also

I have put my bottle of water and my juice in the fridge

If I wanted to I could cook some food

like I said if I wanted too

but I don't want too

wait a minute

like I have said

I think Roberto is gone

so there is no one in the main building

I think there is no other guest

So there is the terrace upstairs

so it means I have a terrace all for me

so the place is

in need of renovation

Roberto was really honest about it

they are aware of it

but

He was telling me that it is complicated to obtain a renovation permit

from the city

for now

that's it

there is a access from the front of the building to come on the terrace

it's like my private access in the back

so you can come here and chill

omg with a cushion it would be marvelous

like I was saying

it's a very busy street

but one thing positive is

the bus from downtown drops me right on that corner where is the sign

I need to take it a little bit further that way

but it brings downtown

where is the cathedral, where I went earlier

so listen

it's not luxeurious

but for 600 pesos for three nights

that is something like

I think 50-60$ (CAD)

for three nights

it's not the most impressive place

Like you can see it's starting to get dark and it's

6:25 pm

there is a time difference

between

here and

tulum

it was the same thing in Valladolid

Valladolid also have a time difference

so at home (Montreal) it should be around..7:30 pm

so that's it

I can chill on the terrace

there is light

ok I am very accident prone lately

it is getting scary

a little bit

Roberto have shown me where the light were

I can also put some music on

again the light switch is not place for a small person

they are like up there

So I would have to climb on a chair and I don't feel like it

there is Bathroom up here

so that's it

in case of evacuation (I'm reading the sign)

so...

good night

For more infomation >> Hotel à Mérida - Duration: 7:38.

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For more infomation >> Hotel à Mérida - Duration: 7:38.

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I'M BACK - Duration: 1:30.

(super high-pitched, annoying scream)

(I'm sorry)

Everything has to be perfect!

Hello my

446 people! I'm Laura, welcome back to this channel

AHH It's been so long!

So I don't know if you noticed but I posted a video last week

Youtuber of the year right here

Am I right?

But honestly, wow, it's been five months good job, but this time I'm back for good

She's says with all the hope in the bo (wat r english?) world because I'm done film school

and I've got nothing better to do.

Well, I actually since I'm finally done with school for like ever

wow

(strangled animal sounds)

I've been having to adult a little bit. I got a job and not a single one of the agents I've emailed have responded to

my emails...

So that's my life now

So any who..

I'll be back to posting a video every single week. You're welcome. Thinking, uh, Sundays or Wednesdays

You'll figure it out you're smart people

aaaAAAAHHH

So thumbs up subscribe, I got some cool people coming on this channel in the next couple weeks that aren't just other versions of myself

I'm very lonely.

But I have friends!

So they're coming.

So have a great week and see you next time

yeah!

For more infomation >> I'M BACK - Duration: 1:30.

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will you marry me? - Duration: 2:18.

For more infomation >> will you marry me? - Duration: 2:18.

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Doing This Will Destroy Your Car's Wheel Bearings - Duration: 5:04.

rev up your engines, mark Biltz says does bad ground driving over potholes cause

wheel bearing wear, it sure does, you hit potholes and you hit bad ground

all the time, the wheel bearings are gonna get jolted and yeah they're made

out of solid tempered steel but still, they're gonna wear when I hit bumps and

jumps, and then of course what happens is if your front end alignment gets knocked

off and it's going to the side, then that wears the tires and when they're wearing

at an edge then there's more strain on the bearings inside and they're gonna

wear out fast, so yes you want to stay away from bad roads and potholes

whenever possible, tech guy gaming says, I have a 2000 Ford explorer with one hundred

seventy eight thousand miles, when it's cold I hear a belt squeaking, when it's

warm I don't hear anything any ideas, when they get old they make noises, make sure

that they're tight enough, if they are tight those serpentine belts wear and the

grooves actually get deeper, which is a bad thing, because they're supposed to

sit where the grooves are in the pullies and they're perfectly set, as the grooves

get deeper, then they kind of bottom out and they don't grip right, just change it

now if it still makes a noise after you change the belt, then if you have

automatic tensioners, it can be an automatic tensioner, or it could be like

the alternator pulley is making a noise only when it's cold and when it warms up

and quiets down, but most of the time it just means you need a new belt, start

with that because that fixes it almost all the time, works not for me asks

Scotty what are your thoughts on a 2011 Chevrolet HHR, my opinion is stay away

from one if you're thinking about buying a used one, that was one of the

worst vehicles that Chevrolet ever made, I don't know what they were thinking when

they made those things, I mean what is it supposed to be, and the customers of mine

that had them, they had head gasket problems, they had electronic problems if

they had automatic transmissions, a lot of them had automatic transmission problems

stay away from the Chevy HHR, I don't know I guess they were trying to compete

with PT Cruiser type stuff I don't know, I don't know what chevy was

thinking with that vehicle but it was a massive failure, junior Linares Scotty I

got a 05 BMW 330xi, it just hit one hundred and one thousand miles, is it

safe to drain and fill the automatic transmission fluid, I bought it with

ninety eight thousand miles, you do want to change the fluid because very

high-tech transmissions the problem is, you got to use the correct BMW fluid

now do a little research on yours and see what kind of fluid it has, some of

those you got to go to the BMW dealer, because you can't buy the fluid, one

BMW last year,a customer want me to change the fluid, I saw well it's got to have this

special BMW fluid, so I go to the BMW dealer and they said well sorry Scotty we

can't sell you that fluid, I said what do you

mean, they said we buy it in these like 50 gallon drums for thousands of dollars, we

can't sell it a quart at a time to you because we're not licensed to resell the

stuff, you gotta use the right fluid and if you can't buy that fluid, you're gonna

have to pay a BMW dealer to do it cuz they wouldn't sell me the fluid they said

you'd have to buy 50 gallon drums, so find out which one you have to have, Josh

you Navarro 84 says Scotty what are your thoughts on a 2012 Maserati Quattroporte,

thanks their called quattro because they

have four doors, and they're the only like exotic sports car that has four

doors on it that's Italian manufacturers they're Maseratis okay they're fast cars

there's no arguing that, but they're also endless money pits, now if you don't mind

forking out one hundred and twenty seven thousand dollars for a car that gets

twelve miles a gallon, its value drops faster than the water going over Niagara

Falls, go ahead and get it, they go like scalded apes, but they also fall apart

like Rodney Dangerfield used to say, like a Chinese motorcycle as they age so,

it's your money if you would have a unique vehicle that no one else has, and

you don't mind throwing money away go ahead and get one

bluffington tiger says what's your opinions on a ten-speed

automatic tranny designed by Ford and GM, I

have one of my 18 Ford f-150 platinum I loved them, I thought they

shifted fine, I'm not an automatic fan I like standards myself, but I have to

admit that it shifts better than any human being can, I had one it was in a

Ford Expedition, that thing got 25 miles a gallon on the highway and that's

something for some big heavy giant thing I'm impressed by them and my costumers

that have them in their f150's they all like them

the only problem that I saw was, they had to reprogram the software

on the early ones, and after they did that I haven't seen any real problems

with them, I think it's a very interesting technology, like I say

the ones that my customers have had haven't had any serious problems yet, you're not

gonna know until years go on in terms of time and longevity of course, but they

seemed pretty rugged from what I've seen, so if you never want to miss another one

of my new car repair videos, remember to ring that Bell!

For more infomation >> Doing This Will Destroy Your Car's Wheel Bearings - Duration: 5:04.

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Remembering Liam, a Plea to Parents of Kids with Disabilities - Duration: 15:02.

For more infomation >> Remembering Liam, a Plea to Parents of Kids with Disabilities - Duration: 15:02.

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Weekly Entertainment Wrap Up #108 [CC] - Duration: 8:11.

[gestures for audience to wait a moment]

Pausing 24in48 to make my weekly video.

Hi, YouTube, it's Kathy, and this is my Weekly Entertainment Wrap Up for January 20th - 26th.

This week I read 3 books, I watched 2 shows, I listened to 2 podcasts, and I listened to 1 book.

As I just mentioned, I'm smack dab in the middle of 24in48.

I'm 19 hours into the readathon.

I need to read 5 more hours in the next 9 hours, type of thing, so I'm gonna try to

probably keep this brief because I still need to, you know, edit this, upload it, caption it,

and finish my readathon at the same time.

The first two books, I will talk about together.

It's Soulless and Soulless: The Manga by Gail Carriger.

I was actually given each of these books quite separately.

The manga I got first, and I actually got it from the BookSwapAThon, not last year,

but the year before, and then Soulless I actually picked up as my book swap book at BookNet Fest.

So I read Soulless first.

It was on my list for Read Yo' Shelves.

There's a space that's "choose your own category" and I chose something preposterous, and the

synopsis of this seems quite preposterous.

It's steampunk, it has to do with vampires, it has to do with werewolves, it's kind of

Victorian England era, and it has to do with a girl who is a spinster, half Italian, with

a dead father.

This is the beginning of a series and I really enjoyed it, and I think I'm going to have

to read the rest of the series now.

It's super fun.

Basically, Alexia goes to a ball and they said they were gonna serve food and they weren't

serving food, so she goes to the library to read a book and have some tea, and a vampire

just up and attacks her, which is not usual protocol.

And he accidentally ends up dead because he attacks her again.

So she's drawn into this investigation as to why this vampire is doing this thing, 'cause

it's not a usual thing in their society, and the investigation is headed by this werewolf

who... you learn pretty soon off has a thing for her.

It's a hate to love.

It's wonderful.

It's delightful.

If any of this is sounding good to you and you haven't read these yet, definitely do.

Basically, as soon as I finished the novel, I picked up the manga and went through, and

a lot of it is the exact same dialogue, which makes a lot of sense.

And it was fun to put pictures to what was going on.

If you've read one but not the other, I highly suggest reading both because they're both

a really good time.

The other book I read this week, I actually just finished on Friday night during the beginning

of the 24in48 readathon, and that is Reconstructing Amelia by Kimberly McCreight.

This one is about a woman who works as a lawyer and her 15 year old daughter.

Mother is at work when she gets a call from her daughter's school saying her daughter,

who is an over achiever, and an athlete, and an all around great person, has been caught

cheating, which doesn't make any sense.

However, by the time her Mom actually gets to her school to pick her up, she's dead.

Basically, this title comes from trying to figure out how this happened, and there are

so many twists and turns in this, as to why this child ended up dead, and there's so much

grief, obviously, because it's a single mother trying to find out why her daughter is dead

after she's already sort of processed that she might have done it herself.

This book was an absolutely delightful way to start off the readathon, because I'm not

really enjoying the book that I'm physically reading right now, but I'm getting through

it because the readathon is making me, and also I need to if I want to blackout the entire

bingo board for Read Yo' Shelves.

So, that's happening.

As for what I watched this week, obviously there was some more Survivor.

That idol came up, that was a fake idol, so that whole thing happened which was very,

very funny to watch.

And then the friend that I watch The Walking Dead with moved back into the country, so

we watched the first 8 episodes of the 8th season of The Walking Dead, which I swear,

has taken place over about the space of a day, maybe two at this point.

And I'm really enjoying it.

Obviously this show is always very highly fraught and there's always a lot of shit going down.

The only thing I can really complain about at this point is the cinematographer just

really likes having these sequences of, just, like, close ups of people's faces near the

beginning and near the end of the episodes, and I don't really know what's going on there.

If they were just trying to fill out the 42 minute requirement for television, or if they

were just trying to be extra arty.

I have no idea.

At PodCon last weekend, I listened to a couple of live episodes of shows, but then I also

listened to some episodes while I was in my hostel.

The first of which being What Should I Read Next? - which makes a lot of sense to talk

about on this channel.

This is a podcast in which people call in and tell the host about three books they like,

and one book they didn't, and the host will give them three reading recommendations.

I listened to the very first episode and I listened to the most recent episode, and then

I actually found out after all of this that my friend is actually the executive producer

of this podcast, so that's cool.

I really enjoy this format, and obviously if you're looking for things to read, if the

person is talking about books that you really like, you're probably going to like whatever

the host recommends.

The other podcast I listened to this week was the Anthropocene Reviewed.

I've listened to episodes before, and I've talked about it before, but these episodes

are delightful.

In these episodes, John Green talks about two different things and basically rates them

on a five star scale.

And in between, there's always an ad, which never feels like an ad until it gets to the ad part.

It's really well done.

In fact, he did a live taping at PodCon and the entire audience was just howling with

laughter over the advertisement.

If you're a fan of a deep dive into completely random subjects, and just beautiful writing,

this is a podcast for you.

The book I listened to this week was Broken Things by Lauren Oliver.

Now, it's funny because I've only ever listened to Lauren Oliver's books, even though I have

a physical copy of this one that I got at BookNet Fest.

And a lot of the reason for that is because the first time I ever read one of her books,

it was an audiobook, and then I realized that the voice on the audiobook was Sarah Drew,

who is on Grey's Anatomy.

I really like her voice.

She was one of the people narrating this book; there were three.

This book is about a couple of best friends whose other best friend, five years previously,

was murdered.

When that happened, people thought that they did it, but they didn't.

It doesn't matter that they didn't actually do it; the small town they live in has decided

that they were the killers and they just went free, so they've been treating them like crap ever since.

One of them has been in and out of rehab.

The other has been home schooling; however, her mom is a major hoarder and she's having

to deal with that situation because their house is completely full of stuff and now

she has to empty it.

Since this murder was never solved and Mia actually turns up a piece of evidence, it's

time for them to look into who killed their best friend.

This one was twisty.

This one was turny.

I enjoyed it.

I also really enjoyed listening to it because, again, Sarah Drew, but also different accents

for different characters and the two women who were doing the narration for the two main

characters worked really well together.

So Sarah Drew's character, Brynn, had more of a harsh voice, and then when the other

narrator was narrating that character, she would also, kind of, do a similar voice.

I appreciated this.

In addition, this book is a bookish book because the reason why all these three girls were

friends in the first place was this very, very obscure book, which also led into how

their friend died.

You should know by now that I love me a bookish book, so obviously, I was all over this, and

if you can think of any other thrillers that are also bookish books, please let me know

because I would love to read them.

I have to get back to my readathon now.

I will have a reading vlog of that up as soon as physically possible, but, uh, yeah, I really

need to finish the last five hours of my reading, so sorry that this was a little bit shorter

than usual.

And a little bit more compact, and I didn't actually write out any of my thoughts ahead of time.

But the one thing I wanted to say is: last week, I said this -

"I also wanted to make sure that I'd finished this one before I went to PodCon on the off

chance that I run into him, because he'll be there.

He's a founding member of PodCon.

That won't happen, but I always like to be able to say that "oh, yes, I have finished

reading that thing book that you just wrote".

And I really enjoyed it."

- And it turns out I did run into Joseph Fink and I did tell him I really liked his book,

so just wanted to update you on that.

It was nice.

It was just in a hallway.

I just said I liked his thing.

I didn't stop him for a picture because I know he has anxiety and that's not what I wanted from him.

I just wanted to tell him I liked his thing.

That's it for this week.

If you've read, watched, or listened to any of these, let me know about it down in the comments below.

On the way down to the comments, if you hit that Subscribe button, that would be very nice of you.

You can like a share this as you see fit, and I will see you very soon.

Bye!

[outro music]

For more infomation >> Weekly Entertainment Wrap Up #108 [CC] - Duration: 8:11.

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Warehouse Capacity - Are you Running Out of Warehouse space? - Duration: 3:11.

For more infomation >> Warehouse Capacity - Are you Running Out of Warehouse space? - Duration: 3:11.

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HI. - Duration: 3:05.

hi!

I'm Lee, and um...

it's been a minute.

I'm kind of here to talk about what I've done with my channel.

I've changed the layout, I've privated every video before this one

because of secondhand embarrassment, which is more like firsthand embarrassment

I just don't know the proper terms for anything.

I don't want to do speedpaints on here anymore

because I want to reserve that and video games for Twitch entirely

because I don't feel like I would be good at doing that on YouTube.

I like doing that in front of a live audience,

one that I can actually interact with more

rather than you seeing it secondhand.

because, it feels more...

It feels more connected when I do it on a stream

and I like talking to people while I'm doing it instead of afterwards.

as for this channel, I'm not exactly sure what direction I want to take it.

I don't want to do something that is strictly speedpaint art.

But I want to do something that's still related to art, so maybe I should go back into traditional

and do sketchbook tours?

I don't know!

(echoing whine)

or I can go into something like doing informational videos of some kind,

make that creative,

(blows raspberry)

do I look like I know things? I don't.

I don't know anything.

(smacks) there's nothing going on in here

at any time, at any point,

(echoing) EVER.

but I kind of need some assistance in figuring out

what I want to do with this channel, because...

I want to go back to doing YouTube of some kind, but I'm not exactly sure what.

I want to do something else, and I kind of want to expand out of my...

you know, like usual creative...

realm... I want to get out of this little creative bubble I have

and I want to expand it and I want to be able to do more things!

and even if that thing is just talking to a camera about random topics,

or, SOMETHING. I don't know. I have no clue.

there's almost 500 people here, and I don't want to just have this stagnant channel just sitting here

as, you know, there's people that are subscribed for a reason.

they want to see stuff.

and obviously I don't feel pressured to give anything, but I also kind of want to anyway

just as another creative medium because I post all of my art on Twitter

and I do streams on Twitch, and I have Instagram and Tumblr for whatever reason

but I want to be able to do more and I want to be able to express myself in different ways!

so, if any of you have suggestions for stuff that I should do, then send them my way.

please. I need it. I am running out of energy. I have no time left.

anyway, bye! (tongue click)

For more infomation >> HI. - Duration: 3:05.

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GETTING LOST IN NAPLES?! - VLOG - Duration: 12:02.

For more infomation >> GETTING LOST IN NAPLES?! - VLOG - Duration: 12:02.

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Gonzalo Higuain debut 'was not easy' admits Chelsea assistant manager Gianfranco Zola - Duration: 2:44.

 The Argentinian started against Sheffield Wednesday in the fourth round of the FA Cup on Sunday as the Blues convincingly won 3-0

 Higuain struggled to make an impact in the game, however, and seemingly turned down the opportunity to take the spot-kick which Willian eventually converted to open the scoring

 The 31-year-old was pulled in the 82nd minute for Olivier Giroud and came off to a warm applause from the Stamford Bridge faithful

 But those claps and cheers were merely a mask for disappointment on a day where Higuain did not do much to convince fans he was the solution to their striker problems

 Zola acknowledged as much after the game, saying: "We are pleased with Gonzalo Higuain's performance

 "He was trying to find the space and get on the ball. It wasn't easy as they had a lot of players round him

" The win over their Championship opponents secured Chelsea's spot in the fifth round, and Zola was content with the victory, which came three days after beating Tottenham to reach the Carabao Cup final

 "It's certainly a good result," he added. "We're very happy. We know how difficult these cup ties can be

 "Everyone made a really good effort. We performed very well against Spurs and again today after the first few minutes

" Higuain's true worth will be seen in his ability to facilitate more focus and cohesion in Chelsea's attack, which has been blunter than a butter knife in recent weeks

 And Zola did say upon the Higuain's arrival he believes the coveted marksman can be a success and deal with the pressure

 "Everybody knows his best qualities, the goalscoring record," Zola said. "He's a player who can score in many ways, so we hope that he can bring his qualities to this team and, at this moment, it's very much necessary

 "I'm sure there are big expectations. I'm also sure Gonzalo is used to it. He's played for big clubs - Real Madrid, Juventus, Napoli

 "I'm sure he can handle these expectations. He's always produced good numbers wherever he's been

"

For more infomation >> Gonzalo Higuain debut 'was not easy' admits Chelsea assistant manager Gianfranco Zola - Duration: 2:44.

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What is Cuisine Celine? - Duration: 2:21.

Welcome to Cuisine Celine

And... I am Celine...and this is my Cuisine

I come from France and I'm going to cook...with you

...or for you whatever you prefer.

My idea is that nowadays food is so loaded with guilt,

about...is it ethical? Is it vegan?

Is it healthy? Is it sugar free?

Is it fat free? Is it matching my diet? My detox, my whatever body target I have or whatever?

And actually...didn't we lose the flavour of food?

I think we kind of did.

I studied food my whole life. I had eating disorders and

I used to be very very big, and I lost 60 kilos

and I learned everything about cooking, about healthy eating...

about dieting...about all sorts of recipes

but what I enjoyed the most was learning about how

our elders were cooking. And...I watched a lot of cooking programs...

from France of course but also from the whole world and...

I learned a lot from them.

and what I noticed is that the food before was really...loaded with everything...

And you even wonder how the f*** did people survive this?

So... I decided to recreate it again.

To try these recipes again, because

the difference between the way we cook nowadays from the way we used to cook is so huge

that you're going to be surprised. And I'm going to be surprised too...

Because...I have to tell you I didn't try any of these recipes beforehand

So this is going to be like a full experience

We're just going to give it a try and...taste it.

and maybe we can compare it too?

with how we cook the food nowadays.

and yeah, maybe we'll see a difference.

And maybe we'll taste a difference as well.

My recipes are going to involve

...quite a lot of alcohol...

some fat, some sugar, some salt, whatever

but yeah...sometimes it's just good to indulge.

To just enjoy something and to go all the way

and yeah, taste it and enjoy it

So that's what we're going to do in Cuisine Celine.

We're going to try old, vintage, crazy recipes,

loaded with booze

...and we're going to see if it's better.

Thank you!

For more infomation >> What is Cuisine Celine? - Duration: 2:21.

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Parallel Profits Online Franchise | Parallel Profits Program - Duration: 9:09.

okay that's the sound of another 30-pack video review and this time we're

reviewing parallel profitsregistration parallel profits by Steve Clayton and ADM booth

now there's something interesting about Steve Clayton an ad in booth they

claimed to have brought their affiliates over five million dollars over the past

two years in affiliate bonuses so you may want to stay tuned to the end where

you'll also be able to get my bonuses and the insider scoop as what two

parallel profit actually is and how can you can profit from it the most here

with that let's get on with the review what I'm going to do is I'll be reading

through this and then at the end I'll give a summary to the insider scoop of

parallel profits parallel profits teaches a business model that is without

a doubt one of the fastest ways to generate a full-time living working from

home in fact you only need as little as seven sales to create $100,000 per year

or run rate

the business model is selling simple services to local businesses but with a

big twist that make this product and launch completely unique and different

to anything anyone has done before

people who follow the training will be invited to work together with parallel

profits as part of a team and a part of the franchise this means you won't need

to worry about creating a brand domain name or website neither will you need to

worry about copywriting or marketing materials everything will be already set

up and ready to go so you can secure your territory and start making sales

with immediate effect

when you secure local businesses as clients you won't need to perform or

even outsource any of the services that you will be offering to them

hi I'm glad you asked because there will be a full team in place to do all the

work for you eliminating the need of experience or expertise

thanks to the unique client capture system and as a benefit of partnering

with parallel profits customers are parallel profits won't even need to have

any face-to-face interaction with customers

or do any selling at all thanks to a variety of built-in lead generation

systems and processes

these three twists will remove almost all the usual the usual roadblocks that

people hit when trying to build a business make the model highly scalable

and subsequently will dramatically increase their chances of success thanks

for watching if you are interested to learn more about this amazing product

please click the link in the description below this video now ok so here is the

overview of parallel profits registration and the insider secret here parallel profits is

actually an ecommerce course this ecommerce course will be you'll be

actually promoting it to local businesses

now when local businesses realize that they will be able to sell their own

products online using e-commerce software such as Shopify it'll pique

their interest as far as into no selling part you will have to sell the idea to

the owner to the business owners and then from that point on you'll have to

get them interested enough to be for parallel profits to take over start

making the sales now as far as know face to face well it depends on what parallel

profits has in order once you send that client over to over to I hope they have

a presentation set up that they can show this client and that way they won't know

they won't have any idea that they're being sold without they'll be sold

online instead of offline and so then therefore you may not have to ever meet

the people that buy this product so it sounds like a really great opportunity

for people that want to have to leave first of all believe in e-commerce that

can show these owners what's possible by going online and selling

products on their products online so that's it that's the insider secret I

hope I made it all clear to you oh that's a pop up there and I'll get that

out the way and yeah it's just ecommerce an ecommerce opportunity for small

businesses you promote this to them let them know the possibilities how much

they can be making with your products and in and and then parallel profit

takes over does all the selling for you and they and they have a funnel it's a

funnel system in place that will help you make these sales okay so that's it

for parallel profits now if you missed my last review my last review was on

profit injector profit injector is a it's a Youtube profit maker that that

doesn't even require you upload a video I suggest if you want to see that review

that you click the link there'll be a link inside the description or there may

be a link on this video depending on where you're actually watching this

video from and you can get started with that also so that's it that's the review

for parallel profits don't forget the property injector

review that's also available and I just realized my volume was down so I hope

you helped me a little better now and that's it for another review for for

30-pack video and this is the gray wolf and I hope you enjoy if you buy it

through my page my bonus page you'll have bonuses that go along with this

product can help your product immensely help you make money immensely with this

one of my products is actually how to get in touch with how to get sales from

clients your first sale your first client so it goes along good with this

product here and so that's it and I hope you enjoy parallel profits registration

click the link below and get started

For more infomation >> Parallel Profits Online Franchise | Parallel Profits Program - Duration: 9:09.

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FREE | FUTURE x Lil Uzi Vert Type Beat - "Crystal" Free Trap/Rap Beat - Duration: 2:02.

hope yall like this beat

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