10.2.1
-------------------------------------------
Suzuki Wagon R+ 1.3 GLX Automaat & Airco - Duration: 0:53.
For more infomation >> Suzuki Wagon R+ 1.3 GLX Automaat & Airco - Duration: 0:53. -------------------------------------------
Booba - Cartoon for kids
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Five Little Monkeys
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BATMAN | POR QUE BEN AFFLECK NÃO VAI DIRIGIR O FILME? - Duration: 4:57.
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Viagem surpresa para PARIS - Duration: 10:56.
For more infomation >> Viagem surpresa para PARIS - Duration: 10:56. -------------------------------------------
Estuvimos en la celebración de los 13 años de Facebook junto a Mark Zuckerberg - Duration: 3:32.
For more infomation >> Estuvimos en la celebración de los 13 años de Facebook junto a Mark Zuckerberg - Duration: 3:32. -------------------------------------------
Un nuevo dispositivo viene al rescate de quienes sufren apnea del sueño - Duration: 2:21.
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Especial Wonca - médico Indiano Dr. Pratyush Kumar - Duration: 5:39.
For more infomation >> Especial Wonca - médico Indiano Dr. Pratyush Kumar - Duration: 5:39. -------------------------------------------
Overwatch - Symetra traveco - Duration: 8:39.
For more infomation >> Overwatch - Symetra traveco - Duration: 8:39. -------------------------------------------
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds / O' Children - Duration: 6:44.
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Booba - Cartoon for kids
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Vitacost - the best-kept secret...
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Renault Clio 1.5 dCi Limited (R-link/Climate/Cruise/PDC/16''LMV) - Duration: 1:42.
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10.2.1
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Suzuki Wagon R+ 1.3 GLX Automaat & Airco - Duration: 0:53.
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Rings - In Theatres this Friday
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Build Your Dreams With Lego
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Audi Moon Rover 'Audi lunar quattro' Going To Investigate Apollo 17 Moon Landing Site - Duration: 7:03.
Hi, welcome, I'm Heathcliff of Lions Ground and I hope you're doing well.
Good news for NASA skeptics.
PTScientist, an international assembled team, will go to the moon next year in cooperation
with the car brand Audi, says electronics development and integration Karsten Becker
of PTScientists.
Before I continue, in my video "Secureteam10 debunked" I asked, Do you think ST10 is fraud
or a hoaxer?
The large part of Youtube users believe He's fraud or a hoaxer.
75% voted yes and a lousy 25% voted no.
In 2009, a group PTScientist came up with the plan to send a rover to the moon.
This rover is from the car brand Audi, it's called the "lunar Audi Quattro,"
an ultra-modern
four-wheeled drive electrical vehicle, solar panels that can move, rechargeable batteries
and science grade HD cameras.
The rover will deploy and operate technological payloads to demonstrate and explore new shortcut
to space exploration.
And if you want to bring your own payload to the moon with them, that's possible.
A small payload up to ,99 kilogram cost 800.000EU, from 1 to 1.99 KG 750.000EU and from 2kg,
700.000eu according to their website.
The final destination of the lander and rovers: the landing site of Apollo 17.
They will land at about five kilometers from the landing site of Apollo 17, according to
Becker.
The following thing I'm going to say to you shows who's got the power.
PTScientist have discussed extensively with NASA about the mission, according to them
there are strick rules, because the landing place is a cultural legacy or there things
we are not allowed to know?
For example...
They can not land within a radius of 2 kilometers of the Apollo landing and they are 'only'
allowed to approach the landing place up to 200 meters.
What kind of message does this give? think about it.
In fact, the moon is nobody's possession.
Once the've land on the moon, they will check if everything is working properly.
Then they head for the moon buggy from the Apollo 17 mission.
They want to see the conditions of the buggy after 45 years.
Is this pulverized by micro-meteorites or affected by radiation?
How much dust covers the buggy?
That is scientifically very interesting "Not only for NASA -who owns the moon buggy - but
also for other space agencies such as ESA.
The European space agency dreams about a base on the moon.
"But then you have to know what the effects are on the material through time."
The mission to the moon will take a little more than ten days, expects Becker.
"Then night falls and temperatures drop to around -180 degrees Celsius.
And then it gets interesting.
They expect that the rover then dies."
According to the Audi USA website, The trip cost around between the 24 million euros and
48 million euros.
It will travel over 380,000 kilometers (236,121 mi) to the moon.
The time is ripe for private missions to the moon.
For years exploring of space was the domain of world powers.
But that has to change.
"The area must be accessible.
If you're a small country and want to go to the moon, you have to cooperate with other
countries.
But those other countries have their own political agenda.
Therefore, it's nearly impossible if a university in Morocco wants to do a research on the moon.
Private space agencies have no political agenda.
It does not matter to them which experiments goes to the moon, as long as they are significant.
" While the team eagerly looking forward to
the launch in 2018, they are already dreaming of the next mission.
And that will lead to the moon again.
"There are plans for a mission in 2020.
Then they will go to the South Pole.
It is difficult to land there, but it is a very interesting area because it is suitable
for the construction of a settlement.
Are you excited to Audi's lunar mission?
Yes or no?
Use the voting poll, click the label in the top right corner now.
I will continue about this topic and othern stories on my Patreon page.
So, Join my Patreon page at patreon.com/lionsground For more information read the video description.
Don't forget to subscribe to my channel so you never miss the daily alternative news
they don't want you to know.
Like this video and give this story a voice by sharing this video with your friends.
Click the videos next to me to watch more of my videos.
I'll see you at Patreon.
I'm Heathcliff, your host, lionsgroundnews.com
-------------------------------------------
Dad's Super Heart Helps Power His New Lease On Life - Duration: 2:39.
THERE'S A LOT TO READ ON THAT
GRAPHIC.
PAT: YOU CAN'T WIN.
SORRY.
RICK: SOMEONE CALLED RONALD
SPEARS A SUPERDAD WITH A
SUPERHEART, THANKS TO A POWER
PACK HE CALLS HIS PARTNER.
HE'S A MAN WITH A NEW LEASE ON
LIFE.
THEY SEEM LIKE LITTLE THINGS.
DRIVING, PICKING UP THE KIDS.
HELPING OUT IN THE KITCHEN.
BUT THIS 56-YEAR-OLD HUSBAND
AND FATHER OF THREE WOULDN'T BE
ABLE TO DO ANY OF IT
THIS.
ALWAYS WITH ME.
REPORTER: JUNIOR IS A LEFT
VENTRICULAR ASSIST DEVISE KNOWN
AS L-VAD.
WHAT IT DOES, IT'S ABLE TO
PUMP THE LEFT CHAMBER, WITHOUT
THE MACHINE, IT DON'T FUNCTION
AT ALL.
WITHOUT THIS, I WOULDN'T BE
ABLE TO TALK TO YOU RIGHT NOW.
REPORTER: THAT WAS ALMOST THE
CASE IN 2010 WHEN INCIDENT AND
AT HOME NEARLY COST HIM HIS
LIFE.
I COLLAPSED IN THE KITCHEN
RIGHT THERE.
MY FATHER-IN-LAW, HE HAD TO
GIVE ME CPR TO GET ME BACK UP.
WHEN THE PARAMEDICS CAME OUT TO
THE HOUSE.
I DIDN'T HAVE A PULSE OR BLOOD
PRESSURE, I WAS PRETTY MUCH
DEAD.
REPORTER: WHILE RONALD SURVIVED
THAT INCIDENT, ANOTHER LED TO A
CAR ACCIDENT AND SURGERY AT
KECK HOSPITAL AT USC.
HE HAD ARRYTHMIAS SUCH THAT
IT CAUSED HIM TO PASS OUT AND
HE HAD A CAR ACCIDENT BECAUSE
HE PASSED OUT.
THIS IS THE PUMP THAT RONALD
HAS, THE HEARTWEAR H-VAD.
THIS IS IMPLANTED INTO THE
HEART, AND BLOOD IS PUSHED BY
IMPELLER THAT SPINS AND EXITS
THIS PART INTO A PLASTIC TUBE
CONNECTED TO THE AORTA, TO THE
PATIENT'S BODY.
REPORTER: THOUGH HE FELT BETTER
AFTER SURGERY, RONALD HAD TO BE
CONNECTED TO ELECTRONIC DEVICE.
SOMETIME I HEAR --
I TRY TO SLEEP AND HEAR THE
MACHINE GOING OFF.
IT TOOK A WHILE TO GET USED TO
THAT.
REPORTER: HAD TO ADJUST GETTING
TAKEN CARE OF AFTER YEARS ON
THE JOB, TAKING CARE OF
EVERYTHING.
MY WIFE TOOK CARE OF
EVERYTHING, WORKED 12, 13 HOURS
A DAY TO MAKE SURE I WAS ABLE
TO FUNCTION, THE KIDS EAT.
REPORTER: IT'S THE LOVE OF HIS
FAMILY AND JUNIOR'S HELP THAT
KEEPS HIM GOING.
THE DEVICE HAS SIX RECHARGEABLE
BATTERIES, EACH WITH A LIFE OF
FIVE HOURS.
PLENTY FOR HIS NEEDS.
THERE IS NO FEAR AT ALL.
RICK: RONALD HOPES JUNIOR IS
ONLY A TEMPORARY SOLUTION WHILE
HE WAITS FOR A COMPLETE
TRANSPLANT.
10,000 PEOPLE IN THE UNITED
STATES HAVE AN L-VAD UNIT, MANY
OF WHOM ARE WAITING ON A HEART
TRANSPLANT.
-------------------------------------------
VIDEO: Investigators interview father of children found on pueblo - Duration: 2:25.
PREPORTER: DOUG AND SHELLY
PLET'S BE CLEAR, THE FBI HAS
PNEVER SAID MURPHY BECENTI IS A
PSUSPECT.
PTHE FBI SAYS NO FOUL PLAY IS
PEVEN SUSPECTED IN THESE DEATHS.
PBEFORE THAT DETERMINATION WAAS
PMADE, INVESTIGATORS PUSHED
PBECENTI HARD ON WHY HE DIDN'T
PTAKE HIS KIDS WITH HIM WHEN HE
PRAN OFF.
PMURPHY BECENTI SAYS HE WAS
PPLEADING WITH HIS GIRLFRIEND,
PVANESSA GEORGE ON THAT RURAL
PAREA OF THE SANTA ANA PUEBLO.
P>> YOU NEED TO STOP THIS YOU'RE,
PYOU'RE REALLY SCARING ME AND
PYOUR SCARING THE KIDS AND SHE
PSTARTED RUNNING TOWARD ME
PLAUGHING AND THAT'S THE LAST
PTIME I SEEN HER BECAUSE I WAS I
PAIN'T LOOK BACK AFTER THAT I WAS
PJUST RUNNING FOR MY LIFE.
P>> DO YOU KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO
PTHE KIDS?
POR TO HER?
P>> I DON'T KNOW.
PTHAT'S WHAT REALLY SCARES ME I
PDON'T KNOW WHERE THEY'RE AT .
PREPORTER: INVESTIGATORS WANT TO
PKNOW, WHY HE DIDN'T STOP AT THE
PPUEBLO'S VILLAGE ONCE HE GOT
PAWAY?
P>> LIKE I SAID MY MOM CALLED THE
PCOPS AND I THOUGHT THAT WAS GOOD
PENOUGH RIGHT THERE.
PREPORTER: BECENTI SAYS HIS
PCOUSIN PICKED HIM UP.
P>> DID YOU ASK HIM TO GO DRIVING
PBACK IN THERE TO SEE IF THEY
PWERE OK?
P>> NO.
PNO.
PREPORTER: INVESTIGATORS TAKE
PBECENTI TO THE LAND SO HE CAN
PSHOW THEM WHERE HE WAS.
P>> YOU LED US HERE AND KNEW
PEXACTLY WHERE TO TURN AND WHICH
PGATE WAS WHERE, LIKE YOU LIVE
POUT THERE.
P>> I RAN
PI CAME IN FROM THIS.
PREPORTER: THEN, BECENTI IS ASKED
PABOUT LEAVING THE KIDS BEHIND.
P>> MAN TO MAN, MR. BECENTI
PI'M GOING TO TELL YOU THE HONEST
PTO GOD TRUTH, I WOULD DIE BEFORE
PMY KIDS EVER GOT HURT.
POK?
PI DON'T CARE WHO IS OUT THERE.
PTHEY COULD HAVE A GUN, A KNIFE,
PWHATEVER.
PTHEY'D HAVE TO KILL ME FOR MY
PKIDS TO, TO BE IN A SPOT WHERE
PTHEY COULD DIE.
PAND I UNDERSTAND YOU WERE
PAFRAID.
P>> I NEVER GOT IN TROUBLE WITH
PTHE LAW MISTER.
PI NEVER GOT THROWN IN JAIL.
PI WAS JUST SCARED TO GO BACK IN
PAGAIN.
PREPORTER: BECENTI SAYS HE HAD
PBEEN RECENTLY ARRESTED AND KNEW
PHE SHOULDN'T BE ON THE PUEBLO.
PHE SAYS HE WENT OUT THERE,
PBECAUSE GEORGE SAID IF HE
PDIDN'T.
PHE WOULDN'T SEE HIS CHILDREN
PAGAIN.
PROYALE DA, KOAT, ACTION 7 NEWS.
PWE STILL DON'T KNOW THE OFFICIAL
PCAUSE OF DEATH FOR THE GEORGE
PSISTERS AND THEIR CHILDREN.
PTHE LAST AUTOPSY CAME BACK
PINCONCLUSIVE AND TODAY THERE'S
-------------------------------------------
Palencia St Augustine Fitness Center - Duration: 2:43.
hey guys welcome back to another portion
of the polenta tour right now we're at
the workout center the fitness center of
the pool area the childcare area
what a beautiful facility they take
great care of it they've done a really
great job with it and as you as as you
move into your new home in Palencia ST Augustine
this is all your for you to use tonight
so get sharing I appreciate you guys
tuning in to our tours and are walking
tours night this is again we're in the
fitness center palencia st. Augustine ok
let's take a little walk through what a
great facility
nice entrance great workout area lots of
different machines types of exercise
equipment wait
bicycles treadmills they have it all
very nice well maintained classrooms at
all for yoga pilates I'm sure anything
else they might do here still lots of
different stuff childcare area so if you
bring the little enjoy working out can
have a great place for them to hang out
lots it looks like there's lots of cool
things to do in there okay
again this is part of that work out the
rooms at all before yoga and other
classes they may hold ok let's go and
take a look at the pool that what areas
here as well restrooms things to get
cleaned up and dried off and all that
cool stuff
ok we appreciate you tuning in to our
community tours love giving you guys all
the cool information check out that
pulls huge nice lap lanes what a great
way to cool off on a hot summer
afternoon right very nice in restrooms
outside as well myself sitting areas and
a sitting area right over there
very nice ok as a homeowner here in PALENCIA
front is this is all available to you to
use ok take another quick tour through
what a beautiful day it is out here
today sunny and 70 in florida i would
say definitely in St Augusitne think it's a
great color the club here at Palencia is a
great facility they do a great job with
it
ok your own private club
ok take a quick peek at that workout
area what a beautiful area they get a
lot of great equipment in here you can
get healthy living in Palencia I like it
alright again we appreciate you guys
tuning in another exciting episode of
community tours here at valencia and st.
Augustine you guys have a fantastic day
thanks
-------------------------------------------
Arts Upload | Season 4, Episode 10 - Duration: 26:54.
female announcer: Production funding
for "Arts Upload" has been provided
in part by:
- Hi, I''m Randy Mason. - And I''m Vanessa Severo,
filling in the next few weeks for Maris Aylward.
- Our show''s called "Arts Upload," and this week,
we''re here at the Arabia Steamboat Museum.
- To steer you towards stories about
fiber art the City Girl way.
- Plus another favorite fountain, and a guy
who just loves playing the drums.
- All that and more ahead on the "Upload."
[DJ Shadow''s "Midnight in a Perfect World" playing]
-♪ Ahh, ooh ♪
♪ ♪
♪ I don''t love you ♪
- The first thing to know about City Girl Farm
is that it''s not actually a farm.
- Ah, but it does yield something
you might find in a barnyard,
and no, it''s not a cow.
- The City Girl Farm is a place
from which chicken footstools emerge.
- And they don''t go for chicken feed either.
They''re serious pieces of fiber art
probably best described simply by showing you.
[laid-back music]
♪ ♪
- Okay.
I''m really in the finishing process of this chicken.
Just going around and making all the final passes.
And Mom is working on basting on her chicken,
making sure everything''s covered,
and you''ve got a head on.
Great.
♪ ♪
- Yep, poultry parts.
Being, for lack of a better term, upholstered,
inside a small storefront just west
of the Country Club Plaza
by the mother-daughter team
that''s at the heart of the City Girl Farm.
- Mom gets a lot of credit for
being involved from birth on.
[laughs] Creatively.
So, yeah, I grew up on a farm in central Kansas,
in Lyons, and I was given the gift of chickens,
I think, sometime in middle school.
And so I had a lot of
happy childhood chicken experiences
and loved collecting the eggs,
and just watching them around the farm,
and I think they''re so ridiculous
and quirky and unique, each chicken,
that they make me feel better about
my own quirks and uniquenesses.
- The story moves onto Sally''s
graduate studies at Kansas State,
where she majored in interior architecture.
Inspired by the French artist Francois Lalanne''s
sheep footstools, she introduced
a product of her own.
- Henny and Penny were the result of a semester
of designing how to, um, how to make a chicken.
What''s the essence of a chicken? What parts need to be there?
And I was honestly just hoping
that they would stand up. [laughs]
- They stood.
And an idea was hatched. Sorry.
Teaming one newly minted college graduate
with her mom''s skills at the spinning wheel
and her father''s abilities to build.
The first chickens were white and basic.
They sold.
So did the next batch.
And the next.
As have the increasingly not found in nature
varieties which continue to emerge.
- We create our own rule.
We''ll look at each other, and we''re like,
"There''s nobody to ask, we have to solve this,
"and we may do it wrong; we may do it right;
and we''re just taking that risk."
One of the first shows we went to,
there was somebody that looked in our booth,
and they said, "Are you taxidermists?"
They looked at it. They knew it was a chicken.
Their minds told them, then the second later,
they realized, "Oh, well, there''s no chickens
that big running around any farmyard."
But it was the scale of it that she created
that, I think, made it real.
But yet, they knew they weren''t real,
so it was a real play on, you know, their--
what their mind and their eyes
were telling them at the same time.
- Our goal is always to create a chicken,
but the way that we get to the end result
is always changing based on the fiber,
based on the feather-making processes,
and then what we-- what we pin on the chicken
and how we decide to stitch it.
- So far, the roughly 500 chickens
that have gone out the door have
at least one thing in common:
they''re sturdily constructed.
With bronze legs and beaks,
and a solid wooden egg at the core.
They are, after all, footstools.
Expensive footstools that take weeks to create.
- People will say, "I wouldn''t buy this
and put my feet up on it," and--or they ask us,
"Do people use it that way?"
And we''re like, we really have no idea.
It''s up to them, you know?
But they are engineered as a footstool,
and the price is, you know, reflects that.
We did recognize, kind of, a couple years ago,
that these chickens were going
to some pretty cool homes.
And I was--I was starting to get a little jealous.
There''s one we know of that-- that has
the view of the Pacific Ocean
every single day, and I''m thinking,
that isn''t quite fair!
- While there may not be an ocean view here,
Susan does get to see something
that many parents would envy her for:
her daughter, nearly every day,
as they tackle this task
for which there is no manual.
- I don''t know, somehow,
our differences
and our strengths have made this work.
As long as I don''t comment about her hair,
or what she''s wearing. [laughing]
- Okay. - We have a similar work ethic.
I think that''s really big.
We will push and put in, you know,
to the midnight hour
without even questioning it,
and that''s hard to find people,
pay people to put in that kind of,
you know, effort.
- Except, perhaps, for this group of chickeners.
Among them you''ll find architects, nurses,
students, and friends-- even friends of friends.
They come together nearly every week
for conversation and camaraderie,
some snacks, and no matter what their sewing skills may be,
to play some small role
in the unfolding tale of the City Girl Farm.
- They do get compensated for their stitches.
We do our best to decide
how much of a chicken they''ve stitched,
and then pay them accordingly.
- So what I''m trying to do is...
Sally is very good at directing
and teaching, but then she allows you
to have, like, flexibility
and your own creative look on things,
and that''s, I think, how you can get so much,
and then if you''re nervous, she''s like,
"No, you''re doing such a good job!"
And she''s just very positive,
which I think is great.
You get...you get her today. [laughs]
- It''s tempting to say that the chicks are in charge,
and apparently I just did,
but there are some guys involved at the farm too,
including Dave in the back room.
He''s the designated felter,
transforming raw fibers like wool into fabric
using the powers of water and heat,
and a process that falls somewhere
between science and magic.
- Look at that. - Then there''s Joe.
Recently added to the CGF team
to help Sally keep a more vigilant eye
on those pesky numbers.
- Definitely learning more this year, particularly,
about the business end of things,
which was not my forte and never has been,
but I''m learning a lot, so it''s a beautiful mix
of, like, production that needs to--to happen,
and, um, just wanting to protect the culture
of flexibility and spontaneity
and--and creativity in the making.
- We never get bored.
I mean, it''s like, you know,
we''ll look at each other and just kind of,
"Really?" You know? "We get to do this?"
[laughing]
- We''re having a lot of fun,
and I''m really, really thankful
for the idea, um, and just the joy
and delight that it seems--
that they seem to spread into the world.
♪ ♪
- Here on "Arts Upload," we like to say we''re out
to prove Kansas City is America''s creative crossroads.
- But it''s also still the City of Fountains,
which, we think they kind of go together.
- That''s why we created My Favorite Fountain,
where people tell us about the one they particularly like,
and then Dave Burkhardt goes out and shoots pictures of it.
- This week, newscaster Lara Moritz explains
why the Firefighters Memorial Fountain
means so much to her.
[serene music]
♪ ♪
N- This is my favorite fountain in the city because
to me, it speaks to me, and it makes me reflect
and just find a place of gratitude
for our public servants.
31st and Broadway is always busy,
yet this place, with the water,
and the firefighters, is a place of calm.
NYou see a fire truck and you-- you may even be
irritated if they''re going on a call.
But you come here, and it makes you
realize how intent and how determined they are
to keep you and your family
and your--your home safe.
I think that''s a lesson that I learned
as a little kid when we had
our family barn burn down,
and I remember, as a little girl,
watching these big firefighters
in all their garb go running
into our barn to save our animals.
It never dawned on me that they could be hurt,
or they could die doing that.
On that night in October of 2015,
when Larry Leggio and John Mesh died,
Kris Ketz and I were on the set.
We''d been covering the fire.
We learned, as we''re covering this on set,
that they had passed away.
It was a heartbreaker.
Knowing how everybody reacted and felt so deeply,
I think that the community--
the firefighters and the community as a whole
needed to have something that was permanent,
and this fountain is permanent.
And when you think about it,
I mean, how beautiful is the fact
Nthat you have two firefighters
determining, in my mind,
what--how they''re going to attack this fire,
and you have water, their greatest weapon,
all around them.
I think that if you come here
and if you just pause,
you will reflect on
how firefighters try and keep us safe,
and keep us alive.
And I don''t think anyone could
not walk by and stop,
and not think about firefighters.
♪ ♪
- All right, that particular fountain, like most,
is turned off for the winter, but, hey,
positive thoughts for warmer days ahead.
- And speaking of the future, next week on "Arts Upload,"
we''ll share a story about how the UMKC Conservatory
gets ready for the big Crescendo program.
- And judging from what you''re about to see,
they also do a good job teaching media and filmmaking.
- It''s a student-made project about Arny Young,
a jazz drummer we often see
quite a bit of around Mardi Gras time.
- All right, let me see what I can do with the names.
Julian Schempf is the director/editor,
working along with Kyle Womelduff
and Justin Longmeyer.
[frenetic drumming]
♪ ♪
- I''m Arnold Young.
I play drums and cymbals
and other various instruments.
Percussion, flute.
Mainly that''s just for composing.
That''s how I compose, but mainly I play the drum set,
which consists of drums and cymbals.
It''s called the drums, but it''s really the drums and cymbals.
Cymbal''s a big part of it.
I''m from, uh, um,
Paola, Kansas.
That''s it. That''s where I''m from.
[jazz music]
♪ ♪
You know, I moved here when I was 17,
so, man, during the time,
I''ve been here ever since then.
That was like 1963.
You know, and like, but-- but in that time,
I''ve also spent about 12 or 13 years in other cities.
Like, I lived in San Francisco for eight years;
I lived in New York for a couple of years,
I lived in LA a little bit.
You know, I''ve moved around.
You know, so, but I end up back here.
It''s kind of like a whirlpool or something.
I don''t know.
And I''ve been here 27 years now.
This last stretch.
[lively jazz music]
♪ ♪
I started playing professionally when I was about--
I guess I was 15 then?
And I played in terrible bars out in Kansas.
There was a guy my stepdad knew who was a guitar player.
And he''d come pick me up,
and I had a pituitary deficiency,
so I looked like I was like seven or eight years old
even though I was in high school,
and I''d go play in these horrible dives out in Kansas.
Just terrible, I mean, biker bars and stuff.
♪ ♪
Well, my style is--is also,
uh, it''s a group effort, you know?
It''s not just me.
It''s like I have a group with, uh,
really great musicians,
and they''re not necessarily jazz musicians, per se.
Some of them are; some of them aren''t.
Some of them go out and play straight-ahead jazz gigs.
Other guys don''t.
Like, Patrick Alonzo Smith Conway
is this fantastic musician-- now, he''s not a jazz guy.
But he plays alto sax in my band, and he''s--
now he''s playing bassoon too.
Through effects, man. That''s awesome.
And then, like, he happens to be the best conga player,
AfroCuban conga player, in--in Kansas City.
So we have percussion in my group.
Sometimes the whole group--my group''s called the RoughTet.
We''re dedicated to rough jazz.
We don''t like smooth jazz.
You know, we think jazz should be rough.
And it''s not just jazz-oriented.
We use a lot of different kinds of music in our music,
like, sometimes, we might all be on percussion.
Sometimes we might all be on bamboo flutes.
So we use traditional, non-Western instruments,
but mainly, we use, like, uh--
and we got a guy that does electronic music.
See, that''s-- that''s important to me.
To have something that fits the sound profile
of this time we''re living in.
I''m not trying to recreate what happened
in 1965 or something.
You know, that''s great, I was-- back then, I was,
but it''s not 1965.
[upbeat jazz music]
♪ ♪
You know, if there was even 10 or 20--
I mean, if you go back and look at the ''30s,
the heyday of Kansas City jazz?
Kansas City was the top place in the nation
in the ''30s-- swing was invented here.
Swing is Kansas City''s gift to the world.
Today, because of Bobby Watson
coming back 16 years ago and taking over
the jazz program at UMKC,
has become a magnet for all these
great young musicians to come here, and guess what?
Like, for instance, Ben Leifer.
He''s one of the finest bassists anywhere, I think.
He moved to New York for a year and a half.
He didn''t like it, he came back and lives here.
People are moving here from other towns
because the scene is so hot.
But what we don''t have is clubs.
We don''t--there were five jazz clubs.
Take Five, there''s, uh, the Majestic,
there''s the Blue Room, and there''s, uh,
Green Lady, they have jazz like seven nights a week,
I think, upstairs and down, that''s a good thing.
And that''s--that''s really-- but then there was
Broadway Jazz, that''s gone.
Take Five''s gone.
And so there''s just nowhere
for all these great young musicians to play.
It''s really tragic-- I mean, like I say,
if there were ten jazz clubs in town, even I''d be working.
Somebody needs to step up, and get some balls,
and open a couple of jazz clubs.
If there were a few more clubs here that had jazz,
and there are--there are a few opening up,
and it''s getting better, you know,
but there''s just not enough places
for all these great young
musicians that live here to play.
♪ ♪
I think jazz is very much alive.
I mean, it''s been shot full of holes
for the last 100-some years,
and it''s still going, man.
♪ ♪
- Well, the Arabia Steamboat Museum isn''t devoted to art,
but I''d say there''s an art to the way the Hawley family
and their associates put this place together 25 years ago.
- Well, first they had to dig up the boat.
It was covered under tons of mud
sitting in a field near Parkville,
sitting where it sank in 1856
while heading up the mighty Missouri.
- The amazing thing is how much of what was on board
the Arabia is still intact.
And so much fun to look at.
- The colors and the details on the clothing,
a true time capsule.
Even some of the canned food was still edible.
- Maybe the coolest part of this whole story,
they think they''ve now found another boat, the Malta.
- They''ve run tests, and they are encouraged
and are hoping to start the big dig
maybe even as soon as this fall.
[upbeat music]
- No doubt about it, this is a true homegrown treasure,
so while we''re here, we decided to share with you
the story of how another city has devised a way
to look back at its past.
- Old Milwaukee isn''t just a yard beer.
It''s also a very popular exhibit
at the Milwaukee History Museum.
[upbeat music]
♪ ♪
- This is "The Streets of Old Milwaukee,"
and we''ve been calling it
"The Reimagined Streets of Old Milwaukee,"
because we''ve done a whole lot of new things within it,
but it still is, fundamentally,
the old, beloved Streets of Old Milwaukee.
♪ ♪
The Streets of Old Milwaukee was designed
and built 50 years ago.
It was the first major exhibition to be put on
in the museum''s new building here.
It was designed by Ed Green,
and he''s still around, still a Milwaukeean,
and, um, it''s actually rather rare
for an exhibit to last for 50 years,
especially one that''s as interactive
and well-used as this one.
So the idea that an exhibit
would last for 50 years really speaks to the quality
of the original design.
♪ ♪
Whatever we did had to make what was beloved
about The Streets of Old Milwaukee already
deeper, broader,
more of what people love The Streets of Old Milwaukee for.
And from asking both visitors and internal people here,
what people love about it is that sense
of going back in time,
so we wanted to enhance that sense
of really being there.
♪ ♪
So the first major experience that people will have
when coming into the exhibition
is one of the larger things that we''ve added.
We''ve added the streetcar that is traveling to Old Milwaukee.
And the streetcar starts in the present,
and as you walk through it into the exhibit,
you''re going back in time.
This is your time machine.
This is your wardrobe to Narnia, if you will.
Uh, this is the way that people go back in time
to experience what Milwaukee was like.
There''s a rumble underneath the floor.
There are buildings going past, and they''re--
they''re getting newer as they go past you.
So it''s that sense of walking back in time.
♪ ♪
We wanted to engage all of the senses
with our Reimagined Streets of Old Milwaukee,
to enhance that sense of being there, as I''ve said.
Um, we added the smell
of fresh-baked bread to the bakery.
We''ve added a number of interactive items.
Things you can put your hands on and interact with.
A high-wheel bicycle you can get on and ride.
We''ve repaired the old pump that used to work,
so it pumps real water again.
Uh, you can, uh, find a little butterfly
hidden in the fruit cart
and tap its jar to make it fly.
All of these little details
are to make you feel like you are there,
not just looking through the windows.
♪ ♪
The nickelodeon now will be open for, uh,
all visitors most of the time.
For the general store, we created a glass box inside.
So you can get really close to the artifacts,
uh, inside as well.
So there''s a lot of detail
in there for people to find.
I like to tell everybody that
all of your old favorites are still there.
It''s true, Granny got a little bit of a face lift.
50 years, you know, puts a little
wear and tear on just about anybody.
But it''s the same old Granny
rocking on her porch there.
And people can still buy candy
in the slightly spruced-up,
but still the old candy shop
that everybody loves.
So I think everything that we''ve added
is not taking away from what people loved,
but just more of it.
[whimsical orchestral music]
♪ ♪
Well, one last thing I''d love to tell you
about this exhibition is that
it will change over time.
We have numerous stories,
numerous characters we want to bring to life.
And periodically, the entire Streets will change
in subtle ways.
New movies in the nickelodeon.
New headlines on the newspaper.
New sounds that you hear as you go through.
Supporting new themes.
We''re starting with the theme of entertainment,
but we''re gonna go on to public health,
public safety, immigration,
all things which were important to people
in Milwaukee of that era,
and still important to people in Milwaukee.
But the most key part of that is gonna be
an app, a storytelling app, where you can follow
various characters who are telling their perspective
in what it was like to live in Milwaukee at that time,
through the streets, and it''s a very interesting app
that people can do.
People have told me stories after stories
about how, "Oh, my grandfather
used to work at that store,"
or "my great, great aunt
actually donated that particular object."
This really is the people''s exhibition.
There''s pieces of them, pieces of their history
embedded throughout this exhibit.
So there probably isn''t another exhibit
in the state of Wisconsin
that has so much of the public
invested directly in it.
The museum is engaged right now in
reimagining throughout the institution.
It''s an exciting time here.
We''re refreshing a lot of different things,
rethinking the way that we do it,
and listening to the public about what they want too,
so I hope people come back again and again
to discover what''s new at the Milwaukee Public Museum.
♪ ♪
- Well, while the big wheel keeps on turnin''
here at the Arabia Steamboat Museum,
our time this week is pretty much up.
- Next week on "Arts Upload,"
among other things, a trip to Hamilton, Missouri.
- Home of the crazy successful
Missouri Star Quilt Company.
- Until then, I''m Vanessa Severo.
- And I''m Randy Mason.
How ''bout some more chicken footstools?
- [laughing]
[laid-back music]
♪ ♪
announcer: Production funding for "Arts Upload"
has been provided in part by:
-------------------------------------------
City Girl Farms | Arts Upload - Duration: 7:50.
- The first thing to know about City Girl Farm
is that it''s not actually a farm.
- Ah, but it does yield something
you might find in a barnyard,
and no, it''s not a cow.
- The City Girl Farm is a place
from which chicken footstools emerge.
- And they don''t go for chicken feed either.
They''re serious pieces of fiber art
probably best described simply by showing you.
[laid-back music]
♪ ♪
- Okay.
I''m really in the finishing process of this chicken.
Just going around and making all the final passes.
And Mom is working on basting on her chicken,
making sure everything''s covered,
and you''ve got a head on.
Great.
♪ ♪
- Yep, poultry parts.
Being, for lack of a better term, upholstered,
inside a small storefront just west
of the Country Club Plaza
by the mother-daughter team
that''s at the heart of the City Girl Farm.
- Mom gets a lot of credit for
being involved from birth on.
[laughs] Creatively.
So, yeah, I grew up on a farm in central Kansas,
in Lyons, and I was given the gift of chickens,
I think, sometime in middle school.
And so I had a lot of
happy childhood chicken experiences
and loved collecting the eggs,
and just watching them around the farm,
and I think they''re so ridiculous
and quirky and unique, each chicken,
that they make me feel better about
my own quirks and uniquenesses.
- The story moves onto Sally''s
graduate studies at Kansas State,
where she majored in interior architecture.
Inspired by the French artist Francois Lalanne''s
sheep footstools, she introduced
a product of her own.
- Henny and Penny were the result of a semester
of designing how to, um, how to make a chicken.
What''s the essence of a chicken? What parts need to be there?
And I was honestly just hoping
that they would stand up. [laughs]
- They stood.
And an idea was hatched. Sorry.
Teaming one newly minted college graduate
with her mom''s skills at the spinning wheel
and her father''s abilities to build.
The first chickens were white and basic.
They sold.
So did the next batch.
And the next.
As have the increasingly not found in nature
varieties which continue to emerge.
- We create our own rule.
We''ll look at each other, and we''re like,
"There''s nobody to ask, we have to solve this,
"and we may do it wrong; we may do it right;
and we''re just taking that risk."
One of the first shows we went to,
there was somebody that looked in our booth,
and they said, "Are you taxidermists?"
They looked at it. They knew it was a chicken.
Their minds told them, then the second later,
they realized, "Oh, well, there''s no chickens
that big running around any farmyard."
But it was the scale of it that she created
that, I think, made it real.
But yet, they knew they weren''t real,
so it was a real play on, you know, their--
what their mind and their eyes
were telling them at the same time.
- Our goal is always to create a chicken,
but the way that we get to the end result
is always changing based on the fiber,
based on the feather-making processes,
and then what we-- what we pin on the chicken
and how we decide to stitch it.
- So far, the roughly 500 chickens
that have gone out the door have
at least one thing in common:
they''re sturdily constructed.
With bronze legs and beaks,
and a solid wooden egg at the core.
They are, after all, footstools.
Expensive footstools that take weeks to create.
- People will say, "I wouldn''t buy this
and put my feet up on it," and--or they ask us,
"Do people use it that way?"
And we''re like, we really have no idea.
It''s up to them, you know?
But they are engineered as a footstool,
and the price is, you know, reflects that.
We did recognize, kind of, a couple years ago,
that these chickens were going
to some pretty cool homes.
And I was--I was starting to get a little jealous.
There''s one we know of that-- that has
the view of the Pacific Ocean
every single day, and I''m thinking,
that isn''t quite fair!
- While there may not be an ocean view here,
Susan does get to see something
that many parents would envy her for:
her daughter, nearly every day,
as they tackle this task
for which there is no manual.
- I don''t know, somehow,
our differences
and our strengths have made this work.
As long as I don''t comment about her hair,
or what she''s wearing. [laughing]
- Okay. - We have a similar work ethic.
I think that''s really big.
We will push and put in, you know,
to the midnight hour
without even questioning it,
and that''s hard to find people,
pay people to put in that kind of,
you know, effort.
- Except, perhaps, for this group of chickeners.
Among them you''ll find architects, nurses,
students, and friends-- even friends of friends.
They come together nearly every week
for conversation and camaraderie,
some snacks, and no matter what their sewing skills may be,
to play some small role
in the unfolding tale of the City Girl Farm.
- They do get compensated for their stitches.
We do our best to decide
how much of a chicken they''ve stitched,
and then pay them accordingly.
- So what I''m trying to do is...
Sally is very good at directing
and teaching, but then she allows you
to have, like, flexibility
and your own creative look on things,
and that''s, I think, how you can get so much,
and then if you''re nervous, she''s like,
"No, you''re doing such a good job!"
And she''s just very positive,
which I think is great.
You get...you get her today. [laughs]
- It''s tempting to say that the chicks are in charge,
and apparently I just did,
but there are some guys involved at the farm too,
including Dave in the back room.
He''s the designated felter,
transforming raw fibers like wool into fabric
using the powers of water and heat,
and a process that falls somewhere
between science and magic.
- Look at that. - Then there''s Joe.
Recently added to the CGF team
to help Sally keep a more vigilant eye
on those pesky numbers.
- Definitely learning more this year, particularly,
about the business end of things,
which was not my forte and never has been,
but I''m learning a lot, so it''s a beautiful mix
of, like, production that needs to--to happen,
and, um, just wanting to protect the culture
of flexibility and spontaneity
and--and creativity in the making.
- We never get bored.
I mean, it''s like, you know,
we''ll look at each other and just kind of,
"Really?" You know? "We get to do this?"
[laughing]
- We''re having a lot of fun,
and I''m really, really thankful
for the idea, um, and just the joy
and delight that it seems--
that they seem to spread into the world.
♪ ♪
- Here on "Arts Upload," we like to say we''re out
to prove Kansas City is America''s creative crossroads.
- But it''s also still the City of Fountains,
which, we think they kind of go together.
- That''s why we created My Favorite Fountain,
where people tell us about the one they particularly like,
and then Dave Burkhardt goes out and shoots pictures of it.
- This week, newscaster Lara Moritz explains
why the Firefighters Memorial Fountain
means so much to her.
[serene music]
♪ ♪
N- This is my favorite fountain in the city because
to me, it speaks to me, and it makes me reflect
and just find a place of gratitude
for our public servants.
31st and Broadway is always busy,
yet this place, with the water,
and the firefighters, is a place of calm.
NYou see a fire truck and you-- you may even be
irritated if they''re going on a call.
But you come here, and it makes you
realize how intent and how determined they are
to keep you and your family
and your--your home safe.
I think that''s a lesson that I learned
as a little kid when we had
our family barn burn down,
and I remember, as a little girl,
watching these big firefighters
in all their garb go running
into our barn to save our animals.
It never dawned on me that they could be hurt,
or they could die doing that.
On that night in October of 2015,
when Larry Leggio and John Mesh died,
Kris Ketz and I were on the set.
We''d been covering the fire.
We learned, as we''re covering this on set,
that they had passed away.
It was a heartbreaker.
Knowing how everybody reacted and felt so deeply,
I think that the community--
the firefighters and the community as a whole
needed to have something that was permanent,
and this fountain is permanent.
And when you think about it,
I mean, how beautiful is the fact
Nthat you have two firefighters
determining, in my mind,
what--how they''re going to attack this fire,
and you have water, their greatest weapon,
all around them.
I think that if you come here
and if you just pause,
you will reflect on
how firefighters try and keep us safe,
and keep us alive.
And I don''t think anyone could
not walk by and stop,
and not think about firefighters.
♪ ♪
- All right, that particular fountain, like most,
is turned off for the winter, but, hey,
positive thoughts for warmer days ahead.
- And speaking of the future, next week on "Arts Upload,"
we''ll share a story about how the UMKC Conservatory
gets ready for the big Crescendo program.
- And judging from what you''re about to see,
they also do a good job teaching media and filmmaking.
- It''s a student-made project about Arny Young,
a jazz drummer we often see
quite a bit of around Mardi Gras time.
- All right, let me see what I can do with the names.
Julian Schempf is the director/editor,
working along with Kyle Womelduff
and Justin Longmeyer.
[frenetic drumming]
♪ ♪
- I''m Arnold Young.
I play drums and cymbals
and other various instruments.
Percussion, flute.
Mainly that''s just for composing.
That''s how I compose, but mainly I play the drum set,
which consists of drums and cymbals.
It''s called the drums, but it''s really the drums and cymbals.
Cymbal''s a big part of it.
I''m from, uh, um,
Paola, Kansas.
That''s it. That''s where I''m from.
[jazz music]
♪ ♪
You know, I moved here when I was 17,
so, man, during the time,
I''ve been here ever since then.
That was like 1963.
You know, and like, but-- but in that time,
I''ve also spent about 12 or 13 years in other cities.
Like, I lived in San Francisco for eight years;
I lived in New York for a couple of years,
I lived in LA a little bit.
You know, I''ve moved around.
You know, so, but I end up back here.
It''s kind of like a whirlpool or something.
I don''t know.
And I''ve been here 27 years now.
This last stretch.
[lively jazz music]
♪ ♪
I started playing professionally when I was about--
I guess I was 15 then?
And I played in terrible bars out in Kansas.
There was a guy my stepdad knew who was a guitar player.
And he''d come pick me up,
and I had a pituitary deficiency,
so I looked like I was like seven or eight years old
even though I was in high school,
and I''d go play in these horrible dives out in Kansas.
Just terrible, I mean, biker bars and stuff.
♪ ♪
Well, my style is--is also,
uh, it''s a group effort, you know?
It''s not just me.
It''s like I have a group with, uh,
really great musicians,
and they''re not necessarily jazz musicians, per se.
Some of them are; some of them aren''t.
Some of them go out and play straight-ahead jazz gigs.
Other guys don''t.
Like, Patrick Alonzo Smith Conway
is this fantastic musician-- now, he''s not a jazz guy.
But he plays alto sax in my band, and he''s--
now he''s playing bassoon too.
Through effects, man. That''s awesome.
And then, like, he happens to be the best conga player,
AfroCuban conga player, in--in Kansas City.
So we have percussion in my group.
Sometimes the whole group--my group''s called the RoughTet.
We''re dedicated to rough jazz.
We don''t like smooth jazz.
You know, we think jazz should be rough.
And it''s not just jazz-oriented.
We use a lot of different kinds of music in our music,
like, sometimes, we might all be on percussion.
Sometimes we might all be on bamboo flutes.
So we use traditional, non-Western instruments,
but mainly, we use, like, uh--
and we got a guy that does electronic music.
See, that''s-- that''s important to me.
To have something that fits the sound profile
of this time we''re living in.
I''m not trying to recreate what happened
in 1965 or something.
You know, that''s great, I was-- back then, I was,
but it''s not 1965.
[upbeat jazz music]
♪ ♪
You know, if there was even 10 or 20--
I mean, if you go back and look at the ''30s,
the heyday of Kansas City jazz?
Kansas City was the top place in the nation
in the ''30s-- swing was invented here.
Swing is Kansas City''s gift to the world.
Today, because of Bobby Watson
coming back 16 years ago and taking over
the jazz program at UMKC,
has become a magnet for all these
great young musicians to come here, and guess what?
Like, for instance, Ben Leifer.
He''s one of the finest bassists anywhere, I think.
He moved to New York for a year and a half.
He didn''t like it, he came back and lives here.
People are moving here from other towns
because the scene is so hot.
But what we don''t have is clubs.
We don''t--there were five jazz clubs.
Take Five, there''s, uh, the Majestic,
there''s the Blue Room, and there''s, uh,
Green Lady, they have jazz like seven nights a week,
I think, upstairs and down, that''s a good thing.
And that''s--that''s really-- but then there was
Broadway Jazz, that''s gone.
Take Five''s gone.
And so there''s just nowhere
for all these great young musicians to play.
It''s really tragic-- I mean, like I say,
if there were ten jazz clubs in town, even I''d be working.
Somebody needs to step up, and get some balls,
and open a couple of jazz clubs.
If there were a few more clubs here that had jazz,
and there are--there are a few opening up,
and it''s getting better, you know,
but there''s just not enough places
for all these great young
musicians that live here to play.
♪ ♪
I think jazz is very much alive.
I mean, it''s been shot full of holes
for the last 100-some years,
and it''s still going, man.
♪ ♪
- Well, the Arabia Steamboat Museum isn''t devoted to art,
but I''d say there''s an art to the way the Hawley family
and their associates put this place together 25 years ago.
- Well, first they had to dig up the boat.
It was covered under tons of mud
sitting in a field near Parkville,
sitting where it sank in 1856
while heading up the mighty Missouri.
- The amazing thing is how much of what was on board
the Arabia is still intact.
And so much fun to look at.
- The colors and the details on the clothing,
a true time capsule.
Even some of the canned food was still edible.
- Maybe the coolest part of this whole story,
they think they''ve now found another boat, the Malta.
- They''ve run tests, and they are encouraged
and are hoping to start the big dig
maybe even as soon as this fall.
[upbeat music]
- No doubt about it, this is a true homegrown treasure,
so while we''re here, we decided to share with you
the story of how another city has devised a way
to look back at its past.
- Old Milwaukee isn''t just a yard beer.
It''s also a very popular exhibit
at the Milwaukee History Museum.
[upbeat music]
♪ ♪
- This is "The Streets of Old Milwaukee,"
and we''ve been calling it
"The Reimagined Streets of Old Milwaukee,"
because we''ve done a whole lot of new things within it,
but it still is, fundamentally,
the old, beloved Streets of Old Milwaukee.
♪ ♪
The Streets of Old Milwaukee was designed
and built 50 years ago.
It was the first major exhibition to be put on
in the museum''s new building here.
It was designed by Ed Green,
and he''s still around, still a Milwaukeean,
and, um, it''s actually rather rare
for an exhibit to last for 50 years,
especially one that''s as interactive
and well-used as this one.
So the idea that an exhibit
would last for 50 years really speaks to the quality
of the original design.
♪ ♪
Whatever we did had to make what was beloved
about The Streets of Old Milwaukee already
deeper, broader,
more of what people love The Streets of Old Milwaukee for.
And from asking both visitors and internal people here,
what people love about it is that sense
of going back in time,
so we wanted to enhance that sense
of really being there.
♪ ♪
So the first major experience that people will have
when coming into the exhibition
is one of the larger things that we''ve added.
We''ve added the streetcar that is traveling to Old Milwaukee.
And the streetcar starts in the present,
and as you walk through it into the exhibit,
you''re going back in time.
This is your time machine.
This is your wardrobe to Narnia, if you will.
Uh, this is the way that people go back in time
to experience what Milwaukee was like.
There''s a rumble underneath the floor.
There are buildings going past, and they''re--
they''re getting newer as they go past you.
So it''s that sense of walking back in time.
♪ ♪
We wanted to engage all of the senses
with our Reimagined Streets of Old Milwaukee,
to enhance that sense of being there, as I''ve said.
Um, we added the smell
of fresh-baked bread to the bakery.
We''ve added a number of interactive items.
Things you can put your hands on and interact with.
A high-wheel bicycle you can get on and ride.
We''ve repaired the old pump that used to work,
so it pumps real water again.
Uh, you can, uh, find a little butterfly
hidden in the fruit cart
and tap its jar to make it fly.
All of these little details
are to make you feel like you are there,
not just looking through the windows.
♪ ♪
The nickelodeon now will be open for, uh,
all visitors most of the time.
For the general store, we created a glass box inside.
So you can get really close to the artifacts,
uh, inside as well.
So there''s a lot of detail
in there for people to find.
I like to tell everybody that
all of your old favorites are still there.
It''s true, Granny got a little bit of a face lift.
50 years, you know, puts a little
wear and tear on just about anybody.
But it''s the same old Granny
rocking on her porch there.
And people can still buy candy
in the slightly spruced-up,
but still the old candy shop
that everybody loves.
So I think everything that we''ve added
is not taking away from what people loved,
but just more of it.
[whimsical orchestral music]
♪ ♪
Well, one last thing I''d love to tell you
about this exhibition is that
it will change over time.
We have numerous stories,
numerous characters we want to bring to life.
And periodically, the entire Streets will change
in subtle ways.
New movies in the nickelodeon.
New headlines on the newspaper.
New sounds that you hear as you go through.
Supporting new themes.
We''re starting with the theme of entertainment,
but we''re gonna go on to public health,
public safety, immigration,
all things which were important to people
in Milwaukee of that era,
and still important to people in Milwaukee.
But the most key part of that is gonna be
an app, a storytelling app, where you can follow
various characters who are telling their perspective
in what it was like to live in Milwaukee at that time,
through the streets, and it''s a very interesting app
that people can do.
People have told me stories after stories
about how, "Oh, my grandfather
used to work at that store,"
or "my great, great aunt
actually donated that particular object."
This really is the people''s exhibition.
There''s pieces of them, pieces of their history
embedded throughout this exhibit.
So there probably isn''t another exhibit
in the state of Wisconsin
that has so much of the public
invested directly in it.
The museum is engaged right now in
reimagining throughout the institution.
It''s an exciting time here.
We''re refreshing a lot of different things,
rethinking the way that we do it,
and listening to the public about what they want too,
so I hope people come back again and again
to discover what''s new at the Milwaukee Public Museum.
♪ ♪
- Well, while the big wheel keeps on turnin''
here at the Arabia Steamboat Museum,
our time this week is pretty much up.
- Next week on "Arts Upload,"
among other things, a trip to Hamilton, Missouri.
- Home of the crazy successful
Missouri Star Quilt Company.
- Until then, I''m Vanessa Severo.
- And I''m Randy Mason.
How ''bout some more chicken footstools?
- [laughing]
[laid-back music]
♪ ♪
announcer: Production funding for "Arts Upload"
has been provided in part by:
-------------------------------------------
765 - Les Feldick Bible Study - Lesson 3 Part 1 Book 64 - But God! - (Kingdom of God) - Part 1 - Duration: 28:33.
For more infomation >> 765 - Les Feldick Bible Study - Lesson 3 Part 1 Book 64 - But God! - (Kingdom of God) - Part 1 - Duration: 28:33. -------------------------------------------
Portal 2 #14 | SUPER HARD TEST! - Duration: 23:59.
Hey there Bots, my name is Boss-Tron Bot and today I am playing more Portal 2!
-------------------------------------------
GREAT NOW IT IS THE ELITE WHO ARE FEVERISHLY 'PREPPING' FOR THE COLLAPSE OF SOCIETY - Duration: 8:05.
GREAT NOW IT IS THE ELITE WHO ARE FEVERISHLY �PREPPING� FOR THE COLLAPSE OF SOCIETY.
Once upon a time, �prepping� was something that was considered to be on �the lunatic
fringe� of society.
But in 2017, wealthy elitists are actually the most hardcore preppers of all.
This is particularly true in places such as Silicon Valley, where a whole host of young
tech moguls are putting a tremendous amount of time, effort and money into preparing for
apocalyptic scenarios.
So while interest in prepping among the general population has fallen extremely low right
now, the election of Donald Trump has given liberal wealthy elitists even more urgency
to prepare for what they believe is a very uncertain future.
In the January 30th, 2017 edition of the New Yorker, reporter Evan Osnos has done an extraordinary
job of profiling these wealthy elitists that are �getting ready for the crackup of civilization�.
One of the people that he interviewed was Steve Huffman, the young co-founder and CEO
of Reddit� Huffman, who lives in San Francisco, has large
blue eyes, thick, sandy hair, and an air of restless curiosity; at the University of Virginia,
he was a competitive ballroom dancer, who hacked his roommate�s Web site as a prank.
He is less focussed on a specific threat�a quake on the San Andreas, a pandemic, a dirty
bomb�than he is on the aftermath, �the temporary collapse of our government and structures,�
as he puts it.
�I own a couple of motorcycles.
I have a bunch of guns and ammo.
Food.
I figure that, with that, I can hole up in my house for some amount of time.�
According to the article, Huffman estimates that �fifty-plus percent� of his elite
friends in Silicon Valley have some form of �apocalypse insurance�.
Needless to say, that number would be far higher than for the general population as
a whole.
Another tech mogul that was interviewed by Osnos for the story was former Facebook product
manager Antonio Garc�a Mart�nez� Last spring, as the Presidential campaign
exposed increasingly toxic divisions in America, Antonio Garc�a Mart�nez, a forty-year-old
former Facebook product manager living in San Francisco, bought five wooded acres on
an island in the Pacific Northwest and brought in generators, solar panels, and thousands
of rounds of ammunition.
�When society loses a healthy founding myth, it descends into chaos,� he told me.
The author of �Chaos Monkeys,� an acerbic Silicon Valley memoir, Garc�a Mart�nez
wanted a refuge that would be far from cities but not entirely isolated.
�All these dudes think that one guy alone could somehow withstand the roving mob,�
he said.
�No, you�re going to need to form a local militia.
You just need so many things to actually ride out the apocalypse.� Once he started telling
peers in the Bay Area about his �little island project,� they came �out of the
woodwork� to describe their own preparations, he said.
�I think people who are particularly attuned to the levers by which society actually works
understand that we are skating on really thin cultural ice right now.�
As you can see, a lot of these liberal elitists are actually secretly stashing away lots of
guns and ammunition.
So don�t believe everything that you read about them being �anti-gun�.
Other big names in Silicon Valley have decided that having a property on the other side of
the planet is the best form of �apocalypse insurance�.
The following comes from a story about Paypal founder Peter Thiel in the New York Times�
Mr. Thiel�s admiration for New Zealand is longstanding.
�Utopia,� he once called it.
He has an investment firm in the country that has put millions into local start-ups.
He also owns lavish properties there, which his Silicon Valley friends hope to fly to
in the event of a worldwide pandemic.
And of course Thiel is far from alone.
So many wealthy individuals are buying up property in New Zealand these days that it
is actually becoming a significant political issue over there.
In fact, it is being reported that foreigners purchased an astounding 3500 square kilometers
during the first ten months of 2016� Statistics showed foreigners had bought over
3500 square kilometers of New Zealand in the first ten months of 2016, which is over four
times as much as they did in the same period in 2010.
LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman told The New Yorker that New Zealand had become the
hot topic among Silicon Valley leaders lately.
�Saying you�re �buying a house in New Zealand� is kind of a wink, wink, say no
more.
Once you�ve done the Masonic handshake, they�ll be, like, �Oh, you know, I have
a broker who sells old ICBM silos, and they�re nuclear-hardened, and they kind of look like
they would be interesting to live in.� Hoffman estimated that over half of the Silicon
Valley insiders were into preparedness � especially since anti-elite sentiment has risen around
the globe in recent years.
It was intensified by events like Brexit and the election of Donald Trump, he added.
So are these wealthy elitists ahead of the curve, or are they just being paranoid?
Only time will tell, but they didn�t become exceedingly wealthy in the first place by
being stupid.
As I discussed yesterday on The Most Important News, there are certainly reasons to be optimistic
now that Donald Trump has become president, but there are also lots of reasons to be prepping
harder than ever.
We should be hopeful for the future and working for a better tomorrow, but we also need to
understand that we live in a world that is becoming increasingly unstable.
And most of us think that it is just common sense to purchase insurance for our homes,
our cars, our health, our lives and so many other things, and yet most of the population
is completely unprepared for a major catastrophic event.
It is a good thing to have balance in life.
My wife and I are very proud preppers, and there won�t ever be a time when we aren�t
prepping.
But we also live our lives without any fear.
We know that the world is going to get crazier and crazier, but we do not believe that it
is a time to dig a hole and try to hide from the world.
Rather, now is a time to rise up and become the people that we were created to be.
This year my wife and I are going to be taking on some new adventures, and these new adventures
are going to give us a bigger voice than ever before.
Someone once told me that life is like a coin.
You can spend it any way that you want, but you can only spend it once.
We don�t want to spend our lives paying bills and killing time.
Instead, we want to do all that we can to make a difference and to change the world.
So unlike these wealthy elitists, let us not be in fear of what is coming.
There is no other time in history that I would have rather lived than right here and right
now, and I can�t wait to see what comes next.
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