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No toques a Cuppy - DiceCup cómic dub (sub english) - Duration: 0:22.
This is my Cuppy
Cuppy says "hi"
Hiya!
If you touch Cuppy
I will f*cking murder you
Hey Dice, just chill out and kiss me
Aww, Cuppy
-giggles-
Your mustache tickles
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All the Pritzker Prize winners The Architecture Nobel! - Duration: 23:42.
The names you are about to hear they may be badly pronounced
All opinions and criticisms are proper except in those a quote
is specified
in the box description you will find links with more information
the images may or may not have the name of the work and may or may not
be synchronized with the mention of it
sharing is recommended
Hello World. I am Miros Peace
and this is a counting of all Pritzker to date.
The Pritzker Prize, in case you do not know
is the highest recognition in the architecture
The first was awarded in 1979 to Philip Johnson
an American whose most famous work
is the glass house
He worked with Mies van der Rohe
and they made together
the Seagram building
he was a graduate of harvard
In 1980 the prize is awarded
to the architect Luis Barragán
the first and only Mexican in history
and first Latin American prize
he studied in the free school of
engineering in Guadalajara
and he didn't have an architect's degree as such
this story is a bit long and complicated
Soon a video of Luis Barragán is coming
Most of his work were homes
is internationally recognized by the use of bold colors within his work
besides creating an architecture spiritual and symbolic
In 1981 Sir James Stirling
a British graduate of Liverpool gets the prize
Stirling rebels against the modern movement
and gives more importance to aesthetics than functionality
says the building must talk about what it represents
something similar to
to the architectural concept which is currently managed
In 1982 Kevin Roche is the lucky one
an American born in Ireland
graduate of the University of Dublin
studied with Mies van der Rohe
and has designed many buildings
that are considered national moments in the United States
uses a lot of glazed elements to express themselves
and search for a functional beauty
Ieoh Ming Pei
in 1983 he was the winner
is an American architect of origin Chinese
graduated from the Technological Institute of Massachusetts
the famous MIT
and without a doubt a work that we all have in mind of him
is the pyramid of the Louvre Museum in Paris
which is totally glazed
and it's beautiful
his architecture is very rich in cold elements
and very clean lines as we see it
in that building
Richard Meier wins the award in 1984
he is an American
self-proclaimed Le Corbusier disciple
most of his works are white
and with very defined volumes
although different
he always prints his particular stamp and gives them a lot of light
In 1985
the Austrian Hans Hollein
gets the prize and the jury says of him
"an architect is also an artist
one, that with vleverness and eclectic is inspired
by the traditions of the new world
so easily like those of the old
a magnificent teacher who motivates the young people with his example
and at the same time make sure that the design is the most important
not the designer. "
1986
Gottfried Bohm
German born in an architects family
married also with an architect
couple from which the jury says:
"their work is
highly suggestive
combines a lot of what that we have inherited from our ancestors
with a lot of what we just get
a surprising and stimulating marriage
which the Pritzker Prize of Architecture is pleased to honor. "
The Japanese Kenzo Tange
get the coveted award in 1987
He is a graduate of the University of Tokyo
Among his works stand out the Olympic stadium,
the Cathedral of Santa María,
the memorial museum of peace
as an urbanist, he helped transform the postwar Japan
He himself speaks of his work in this way:
"As an architect, I do not want to repeat what
I already done
I think that every project is a bridge for the next
so it's very important to rescue the past
to change the future. "
In 1988
we have two winners ex aequo
the American Gordon Bunshaft
who created the SOM study
and from whom the jury said:
"his astute perception of architecture
is a joint venture
between client and designer
has generated mutual respect and creative collaborations
that produce large buildings
with a fusion of humanity and functionality
for the people who live
and use his structures
And the other winner
was Oscar Niemeyer
Brazilian architect, Le Corbusier disciple
that transformed Brasilia
when it was consolidated as the new capital of Brazil
brought organic forms that had never been seen in Latin America
and adapted them to the environment
giving it the festive character that it has currently the metropolis
The controversial Frank Gehry is awarded in 1989
is a Canadian graduate of the University of Southern California
it is controversial
both for his acting and for his work
He's also the maximum exponent of currently deconstructivism
and a pioneer in the use of technologies
that make his capricious forms possible
undoubtedly his most famous work is the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao
that by itself transformed a complete city
1990
Aldo Rossi
Italian
graduated from the Polytechnic of Milan
from whom the jury said:
"He has obtained recognitions like theorist, philosopher, artist and teacher
his words, as well as his drawings and buildings
has been distinguished him as a great
he is a master draftsman
inscribed in the tradition of art and italian architecture
his sketches and representations
of buildings
have often achieved the international recognition
long beforeitalian were built. "
The Princeton graduate Robert Venturi
in 1991 gets the prize
for his work together with his wife Dennis Scott Brown
who was denied the prize in that moment
and years later
when it was requested that it be considered as a joint prize
this architect openly criticized the modern movement
particularly the famous phrase of Mies van der Rohe
when proclaiming less is a bore
wrote a manifesto of great transcendence called complexity and
contradiction in architecture
could be considered a rebel with cause
since he worked to break
minimalism and the tendency of the form
follow the function
1992 Alvaro Siza, Portuguese
architect with the soul of a sculptor
Reminds me of Luis Barragán for the poetry and the mysticism that
encloses in their constructions
each work not only establishes a
conversation with the environment
but is part of it
it seems as if it had always existed there
the environments that it generates in his
architecture can not be described
rather, they feel, it is a living and rich architecture
Fumihiko Maki
Japanese graduate of the University of Tokyo
who was born on 6 September
same as me
and curiously wins the prize in 1993
year in which I am born
nothing relevant, curious fact
he is an architect that seems to always have a duality
conjugates western culture with Oriental
and also talks about that the
architecture must have a vernacular side and a rational side
a technical architecture
and another artistic
always merged and working together
makes a comparison with the Japanese language
talking about kenji and kana
to exemplify that duality
1994 Christian de Portzamparc
It's a French
so I spelled it terrible
graduated from the National School of Fine Arts of Paris
and in the words of the architect in question:
"I always consider a building as part of a whole
a piece that creates a collective action
the city."
Seeking to satisfy his gifts artistic
Christian studied architecture
but he felt very limited by the trends of his time
so he decides to create his own rules
impregnating their creativity to buildings
that fits
not to a specific style
but to a solution of
specific problems
that is, a project ata a time.
Tadao Ando obtains the award in 1995
he is a Japanese
who, surprisingly
didn't have formal studies in architecture
he himself is called self-taught since
he was learning through books
and travel
visiting essential works in Europe
is without a doubt the teacher of light par excellence
element that gives life
to its simple volumes ofcleansed concrete
is able to create beauty without
no ornament or pretense
Besides
masterfully manipulates
natural elements
and cold materials
to achieve spaces
unequaled
endowed with a very japanese ceremoniosness
1996
Rafael Moneo
is a Spanish graduate from the Polytechnic University of Madrid
and quoting Pritzker:
"Moneo not only practice architecture in the sense
most real designing buildings
taking into account all aspects of his
building
but also teaches his theories
using all his experience and knowledge
holding in fact these parallel efforts enriching each
one with the other."
1997 Sverrre Fehn
it was a Norwegian who studied
at the Oslo School of Architecture
and very poetically Sverre
brings Scandinavian architecture to the contemporary architecture
his friend Christian Norberg Schulz
(you may heard from him in a well-known book Intentions in architecture)
says of him:
"It's not the abstract forms that Fehn has
discovered in morocco
but the constructed realities
the essential of architecture is the art of building
The Italian graduates from Polytechnic of Milan
Renzo Piano
gets the prize in 1998
one of his phrases:
"If you lack the ability to create emotions
then it doesn't work
It is insufficient
despite being known as an exponent of high tech
Piano never forgets the humanistic sense of architecture
he uses technology
only as a tool of expression
even to say:
"Computers are a bit stupid."
In 1999 Norman Foster is recognized for his career
This architect
was armed knight obtaining the title of Lord
for his career
(not for being silly)
Foster and Partners
that is his company
is one of the most prolific offices
and Norman is one of the starchitects
most acclaimed of these times
it has become the maximum referent of high tech architecture
using it
for
in the last years
pursue the utopian
large-scale sustainability.
The Pritzker of the year 2000 goes for another
bad boy, the dutch
Rem Koolhaas
he is one of the most completed
architects of the last times
visionary
philosophical
and formally deconstructivist
has helped to form
if not that pushed the
architecture
until what is today
not only for their constructed works and theories
but because of the influence exerted in young architects from around the world
Among those who are Zaha Hadid
and Bjarke Ingels
that name
Pritzker 2001
Herzog & de Meuron
Swiss group integrated by
Jaques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron
his most famous work is the bird's nest of Beijing
and of them the jury exclaimed:
"Their architecture combines the art of a
old profession with the new approach
of the technical capabilities of this century."
The Australian Glenn Murcutt
he was the 2002 Pritzker
an incredible lonely architect
that the jury of this year defined in this way:
"In an era obsessed with celebrities
the brightness of our starchitects
supported by large offices
and profuse public relations
in total contrast
Murcutt
works in an office from one person to another side of the world
even so
has a waiting list of customers
which he intends to provide
the best project
that he can produce
he is an innovative professional of architecture
who is capable of directing his sensitivity so the environment and what
regional
and produce works of art totally honest and humble
In 2003 for the first and only time proclaims posthumous winner
Jorn Utzon
a Danish
which little time before dying
was chosen as
winner of this year
and he was notified
However, he died a few weeks after
the award
so it had to be overtaken the awards ceremony
this was the architect of the famous Sydney Opera
leaving aside the disappointments in the live of this architect
he had the opportunity to
translate his talent into a global icon
of which Louis Kahn exclaimed:
"The sun did not know how wonderful its light was
until it was reflected in this building. "
The winner of 2004
deceased few years ago
my favorite personal
Zaha Hadid
It was a Anglo-Iraqi architect
mathematical before
architect
built from the hand of deconstructivism
successions of
hyperbolas brought to a three-dimensional plane
she was the first
and only woman in lonely in winning the prize
although many of his designs were not constructed
he left us a legacy of
sculptural buildings
who dominate not only the landscape
but the mind of that one
to visit them wherever they are.
2005
the American
Tom Mayne
Harvard graduate
which the jury said:
"His architectural vision
his philosophy
nor of the modern style
nor of Asian influences
not even the classics
Americans of the last century
his career has always been characterized
for his desire to create an architecture original
one of the few that represents
perfectly
Southern California style
and especially from Los Angeles. "
2006
The Brazilian Paulo Mendes da Rocha
of whom Thomas Pritzker said in the announcement of the award:
"... has shown an understanding
deep of space and scale
through the great variety of buildings
that he've designed
from residences private, housing complexes,
a church,
museums and stadiums
even plans for
public urban spaces
while few of his buildings were made out
of Brazil
the lessons learned by from his work
as much as active architect as well as a teacher
are universal. "
Richard Rogers
Pritzker 2007
british born in italy
he is passionate about
British policy as well as the town planning
quoting Thomas Pritzker again:
"in his writings during his post as
counselor for formulation groups policies
as well as his work to great
urbanism scale
Rogers is a hero of urban life that believes in the
city's potential as a catalyst of a social change. "
2008 French
Jean Nouvel
the resulting architecture from the mind of this architect is very
diverse and exuberant in creativity
since he isn't limited to a typology or a
precise formula
but it addresses each project without pretensions or ideas
preconceived
originating well
a unique work after another.
The Pritzker of 2009
it was for the Swiss Peter Zumthor
this cabinetmaker together with
others have a very special place in my mind
they are part of
which for me is the elite
they've reached the splendor of the profession
Zumthor is
beyond materiality and vulgarities policies
has the peculiarity of
choose his projects by affinity
and not for economic interest
each of them develops until the minimum detail
his works are some of those that are admired with all the senses.
The SANAA office 2010
Lord Palumbo said at that time:
"... for a unique
architectural language that blooms from a collaborative process that is both
unique as inspiring
for his nobles finished buildings
and the promise of
new projects
together
Kazuyo Sejima
and Rihue Nishisawa
are the recipients of the Pritzker 2010 award. "
In 2011, the prize went to Eduardo Souto de Moura
repeating the words of Lord Palumbo:
"his buildings have a
unique ability to transmit characteristics
seemingly contradictory
power and modesty
the bravado and
the subtlety
the bold public authority
and a sense of intimacy
All at the same time."
In 2012 the award was won by the doctor in urban planning
Wang Shu
the Pritzker Prize winner too
Aravena
says of him:
"The Ningbo Museum
has a power that undoubtedly deserves to be called a
masterpiece
one does not visit the building one is
hit by the building
being
beaten
for a building
rarely happens in the
architecture
because this kind of experiences belong rather to
field of music or cinema
where the Experience of a work can excite
to the point of modifying
the state of mind in a deeply positive sense
Regrettably
none of this can be transmitted by the photographs. "
Pritzker 2013
Toyo Ito
the jury justified the prize
Talking about Toyo's architecture:
"for his synthesis of the structure
space
and how to create welcoming places
for his sensitivity to the landscape
for infusing his
designs with a spiritual dimension
and for the poetics that transcends all his
works."
Nevertheless
Ito
like good japanese
is in continuous improvement
for that reason when receiving the prize proclaimed:
I will never stay at my architectural style and I will never be totally satisfied with
my job."
2014
Shigeru Ban
is a Japanese worried about
the environment and society
a unique architect in his class
as he build with paper tubes
use this technique
mainly for offer decent homes
comfortable, well planned
in response to emerging needs
how are naturals
disasters
defends this technique of building
against the detractors
claiming
the relativity that can have
the duration of a building
for example, mention the case
of a religious building that originally
it was meant to be temporary
however, the community liked it
so much and I love it so much that they asked to become permanently
and it is also the case
of concrete structures that were designed
thinking
that will last 50, 70 or more years
a natural disaster arrives
and the next day it's
already gone
In 2015 we can already perceive a trend
when choosing German
Frei Paul Otto
as prize winner
of which the jury said:
"...practiced
development and advanced ideas from sustainability
even before the word was coined."
For 2016 we find ourselves with
the Chilean Alejandro Aravena
who despite having projects of
various characters
he acquires his fame and prestige for his social work
works to meet a growing need
especially in Latin America
after listening to his emotional acceptance speech
the commitment we have with society
feels even bigger
because before be architects
we are humans
Last year
the Spanish office RCR arquitectes won
of which it was said:
"The jury has selected three architects who have worked in
collaboration
for almost three decades
Mr. Aranda, Mrs. Pigem and Mr. Vilalta
they've had an impact on the discipline far beyond their immediate area
their works go from public and private spaces
to cultural places and educational institutions
and his ability to
intensely relate the specific environment to each site is a
testimony of his process and his deep integrity."
And finally in this year on March 7 for the first time an Indian
is proclaimed winner
the architect Balkrishna Doshi
who worked with Le Corbusier in his youth
and from which we can observe an
architecture that is reflection of his
culture and a dialogue with nature
for him, the materials with which he works are extremely important
acquiring a
almost spiritual dye
he goes beyond integrate the building to the environment
as
according to his philosophy
the building emerges from the earth.
Do you want to know more about these or others architects? let me know in
comments
See you in another video
Peace.
1994
unintelligible things while I try to pronounce
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Yubikan, located in Miyagi, consists of a small, yet gorgeous house surrounded by a pleasant garden and pond.
Unfortunately, Yubikan was totally destroyed by the Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011.
Originally built in 1677 as a retreat for Munetoshi the second-generation head of the Iwadeyama Date Family.
Yubikan was built in the traditional Japanese style of architecture (shoin-zukuri) with a thatched, hipped roof.
It is only several years later that Yubikan was used as a school until it was decided
to turn this beautiful house and garden into a small museum.
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BREAKING: Stephen Hawkings Used Final Breath To Make Chilling Prediction About Trump. - Duration: 7:15.
BREAKING: Stephen Hawkings Used Final Breath To Make Chilling Prediction About Trump.
Stephen Hawkings was considered to be one the greatest minds of our time, with thoughts
derived from his exceptional understanding of science and physics.
While many of his predictions, assessments, and opinions were controversial and erred
on the side of liberal beliefs, there's no denying his incredible intelligence, even
if you disagree with his ideas.
The world-renowned physicist made a lot of big and but wild predictions at the end of
his life – from a robot apocalypse to the demise of planet earth.
They drew a lot of criticism and conversation.
However, perhaps his most controversial prediction he saved until the end.
Practically using his final breath on this planet to share a chilling announcement about
President Trump, before descending into wherever he feels he was going after he died as a man,
who was vocal about not believing in God or the afterlife.
This fact alone is a chilling thought, but his prediction about Trump was not much better.
Hawking feelings about Trump were not well known and not positive, based specifically
on their differences in the category which the physicist was most focused on.
He had recently referred to Trump as "a demagogue" and in the same sentence, insulted
the mass majority of Americans who voted for him, and support him still by claiming that
Trump only appeals to "the lowest common denominator."
Exactly a year before he died, he said that he does not feel welcome in "Donald Trump's
America," which after insults doesn't take a genius to realize where they're not
welcome.
However, he left this planet expecting to enter outer space with one final insult to
the president and Americans' intelligence.
Metro reports:
Stephen Hawking was one of the world's greatest minds, there are few who would dispute that.
When he spoke, the world listened.
Now we hope that the world will continue to listen, particularly to this stark warning
he gave about Donald Trump.
The President of the United States withdrew from the Paris climate accord last June, saying
it was detrimental to the American workforce.
Before Donald Trump was even elected as president, Hawking described him as "a demagogue who
seems to appeal to the lowest common denominator."
But the most intelligent man on earth told the BBC the Republican's decision on Paris
could eventually see Earth turn into a planet, like Venus with a temperature of 250°C.
Hawkings' prediction, which was more of a warning based on his own beliefs about climate
change which seem to have been mostly unfounded, was that Trump's supposed ignorance on the
issue will be the end of the world.
"We are close to the tipping point where global warming becomes irreversible.
Trump's action could push the Earth over the brink, to become like Venus, with a temperature
of 250C, and raining sulphuric acid," the frail physicist said.
"Climate change is one of the great dangers we face, and it's one we can prevent if
we act now.
By denying the evidence for climate change, and pulling out of the Paris Climate Agreement,
Donald Trump will cause avoidable environmental damage to our beautiful planet, endangering
the natural world, for us and our children."
The Cambridge professor, who has suffered from motor neuron disease since his twenties,
also said our days on earth were numbered.
"I fear evolution has inbuilt greed and aggression to the human genome," he said.
"There is no sign of conflict lessening, and the development of militarised technology
and weapons of mass destruction could make that disastrous.
'The best hope for the survival of the human race might be independent colonies in space."
Like most of what Hawkings has said over the past five decades, it's extreme, and not
to be taken as gospel simply because he's technically a brilliant man.
He formed his own opinion based on science, but science isn't everything that determines
the fate of our being – God is as the ultimate creator of our planet.
It seems that the most brilliant and honest thing Hawkings has ever said is one quote
he's well known for, which is ironic today: "The greatest enemy of knowledge is not
ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge."
Perhaps this highly intelligent physicist is actually a great illusionist.
In attempting to validate Hawkings' final prediction of Trump, one must consider the
other predictions he made within this past year which are nothing short of insane.
Newsweek provided a list of the most preposterous predictions Hawkings made from 2017-18:
We Have Only 100 Years Left On Earth.
Thanks to modern day healthcare, 100 years is nearly a lifetime, but this May, Hawking
proposed that this is how long humans have left on Earth, Wired reported.
This is a stark shift backward from the 1,000 years time limit that Hawking had predicted
in 2016.
According to Hawking in his BBC science series, Tomorrow's World, climate change, overdue
asteroid strikes, epidemics and population growth are to blame for the new century-long
doomsday clock.
Humans Have To Colonize Another Planet ASAP.
In a BBC documentary released earlier this year, titled Stephen Hawking: Expedition New
Earth, the physicist explained his prediction that soon, the human species will have to
leave Earth and repopulate somewhere else in the universe, either on a spacecraft or
on another planet.
The physicist warned that if humans don't become a multi-planetary species and settle
on other worlds, our species could die out within the next century.
Earth Will Glow Red And Become As Hot As Venus
In July, Hawking told the BBC that humanity is at a "tipping point" where global warming
would become so bad that Earth will "become like Venus, with a temperature of 250 degrees
celcius, and raining sulfuric acid."
Sounds lovely.
By 2600, Earth Will Not Be Able To Keep Up With Population Growth
In November of this year, at a Tencent WE Summit, an annual forum where top scientists
and professionals gather to share ideas on science and technology, Hawking predicted
that due to the increasing human population, by 2600, the world's electricity consumption
will make our once-blue planet glow fire-red, Geek Wire reported.
According to Hawking, the global population has been doubling every 40 years, and our
planet can only take so much.
"This exponential growth cannot continue into the next millennium," explained Hawking,
Geek Wire reported."By the year 2600, the world's population would be standing shoulder
to shoulder, and the electricity consumption would make the Earth glow red-hot."
AI Will Replace Humans And Take Over The World
In 2017, Stephen Hawking has been quite vocal with his concerns regarding robots and artificial
intelligence.
This November, Hawking explained he believes that AI will reach a point where it will ultimately
become a completely new form of life that will outperform and eventually replace humans,
CNBC reported.
Why do the Democrats favor non-Americans over Americans.
What do you think about this?
Please share this news and scroll down to Comment below and don't forget to subscribe
Top Stories Today.
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Opel Agila 1.2 16V 94pk Edition Echte Automaat!!! - Duration: 0:56.
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Audi A4 1.4 TFSI 150pk Sport - Duration: 0:55.
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On a beautiful Sunday morni...
For more infomation >> On a beautiful Sunday morni...-------------------------------------------
Terry Crews On Going Public With Sexual Assault Allegations: 'Once I Decided To Get Rid Of The Sh… - Duration: 4:09.
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THEY SAID WHAT?! I WAS "SMASHED OR PASSED" BY THESE YOUTUBERS! - Duration: 9:21.
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Teacher Leader - Part 1 - What I do and how much I make - Duration: 4:40.
I'm Paul Clifton, I'm 30 years old.
I am a sixth grade teacher leader,
and my salary is about $60,000.
I'm a new teacher leader, and so I get to coach
other teachers, fellow math teachers, and work on a team.
I get to observe teachers teach, co-teach with them,
and get into other classrooms instead
of just working in my own.
A lot of times, at McGlone, we collaborate so much,
and it's a great opportunity to be a part of that.
I'm an ELA-S teacher, so that means, in the classroom,
I use Spanish and English to teach.
A lot of times I'll trans-language, which is,
I'll go back and forth between English and Spanish
just to help everyone understand.
We have a lot of language learners at our school,
so there's so many students that have the potential
to be bilingual and bi-literate,
and so it's so important that we're using both languages
and helping them understand that Spanish
has just as much value and validity as English.
With a lot of the students that I teach,
I've been with them for four years now.
As either their classroom teacher, and now,
a great opportunity the last two years, been their advisor.
And being an advisor is a really important role,
'cause you're like the go-to person
for that student and for that family.
After school, I love staying after school,
and I try to stay after school as much as I can
just to spend time with kids.
But I feel like, as a teacher, I teach math,
and I teach ELD, but I feel like I have even more to offer
and I want to contribute more to the community.
So we do music production, or kids will come in
to get extra help with math, or sometimes
we'll even shoot some videos or something like that
just to kind of find out what kids are interested in
and then make that a reality.
I'd say, overall, the best thing that someone
who wants to become a teacher, one thing that you must have
is a growth mindset, and being willing to fail
and adjust and succeed and continue that cycle
over and over and over again.
And you have to love what you do, and if you don't
like what you're doing, the kids will know it,
kids can see that like so clear and so quickly.
And so, I mean there are times when the lesson isn't fun
and if it's not fun for you, it's not gonna be fun
for the kids, and so it's always a challenge
to find that way to engage students.
And growing up, when I told people
that I wanted to become a teacher, it was always like,
oh man, teachers don't make a lot of money.
But I, that's just what I wanted to do,
so yeah, I'm gonna do that.
It's public what teachers make in every state,
every county, every school district.
So I definitely knew what I'm getting into, financially,
and definitely understand like with student loans
and everything that it's a struggle.
I mean, it's a struggle to make ends meet.
At our school, where we have innovative status
I'm an ELA-S teacher, it's what's considered like
a hard to serve, hard to staff position.
So that means that I do make a few thousand dollars
more than an average teacher in DPS.
And we're also eligible for growth, high growth bonuses
based on student test results.
This year I'm going to make around $60,000
but my first year, I think it was somewhere around
between $50,000 and $55,000.
Sometimes at the end of the month you don't know
exactly how much you're going to get paid,
it's kind of a "Hooray you got bonus!"
or there's this, or you didn't get anything extra this month
so things are a little short.
As a teacher, I wouldn't say that nobody's here for money,
I mean it's a job, it's something that we need
to make a living but the satisfaction
that we get as teachers when things are going well,
after a day when you feel like you really killed it,
I mean there's always things that you could have improved
but you feel like you made a real strong connection
with your kids and they learned.
That feeling is priceless.
He's thoughtful.
Fun.
He works with us.
Good teacher.
Awesome.
The best.
He treats us with respect.
He's responsible.
He's caring.
He's respectful.
He perseveres through hard moments.
Hero.
-------------------------------------------
Why Do I Store Fat So Easily? The Science of Body Fat (Part 1) - Duration: 10:02.
hey today I'm going to teach you how your body metabolizes dietary fats and
how you can use that knowledge to make better health decisions and achieve your
health goals even faster okay hey in just a second I'm gonna teach you
exactly why understanding fat metabolism inside your body is going to equip you
to better achieve your health goals but also protect you from a lot of the BS
out there in the health diet weight loss industry but first before I get started
I want you to click on that little bell next to subscribe button so that you
never miss one of these videos putting them out every week maybe even more than
one a week but you won't know if you don't subscribe and hit that little bell
so let's begin okay so there's three main sources that
your body can go to to metabolize fat or fuel
now you have triacylglycerols in your diet that you're eating you have
triacylglycerols that your liver can synthesize if you have extra energy
inside your body and then you have the triacylglycerols that are already stored
inside of your body's fat tissue called adipocytes or adipose tissue so we're
going to be focusing on the dietary fat okay and it all starts right here with
this nice juicy beautifully illustrated cheeseburger so you eat the cheeseburger
and the first thing that happens is your stomach is going to break this down into
fat protein and carbs but we don't care about the protein or the carbs and I
just realized that that is backwards on your screen I apologize for that all we
care about right now is this guy which looks like staff on your screen because
it's backwards I promise you it's fat so the interesting thing about fats is they
don't get broken down in the stomach they are actually what's called
insoluble so they're really hard to break down so when they are broken down
out of your cheeseburger you go back to these triacylglycerols which is
basically just fatty acids bonded to a glycerol
which is a thing that we won't get into right now
so those bad boys because they actually can't
broken down inside of the stomach they are going through travel through the
small intestines and what actually happens is if you can see this on your
screen and because of the polarity of these triacylglycerols they make these
little circles because of the polar bond it's make them wanna go like that and
then what happens is your gallbladder is going to secrete some of these what are
called like they even have a fancy drawing for this one bile salts so these
are the bile salts they're gonna go and kind of surround this and start to break
this down and what this turns into is what's called a me cells these are this
whole thing the triassic bliss are all surrounded by the bile salts it's called
me cells not Micelles me cells now again to breakdown me cells also takes a
certain lipase so that can't happen right here where it's at it's going to
head on down to the lower part of the small intestine where it's going to run
into something called a pancreatic lipase
now what pancreatic lipase does is this is a scissors if you can't tell from my
beautiful illustration but this little scissors which is my pancreatic lipase
is going to cut those Triacylclycerols
into glycerol and fatty acids so earlier when I said that Triacylclycerols is a
glycerol bonded to fatty acids it's going to go ahead and just cut that or
cleave that into you smaller parts alright and so we get down here to the
intestinal epithelial cells and these are the cells on the intestinal wall and
I have some details here that aren't super important but I still have them up
here just in case what we're looking to do is get just a you know a broad
understanding and I don't say broad because that makes it seem like we're
not going detail but we are we're we want to get a good understanding there
you go we want to get a good understanding of how fat is metabolized
but we don't necessarily need all these little tiny biochem details
but I have them in here just in case you want to see them so some magic happens
and suddenly our free fatty acids our glycerols are combined with some other
things into a chylomicron now the chylomicron picks up some other stuff in
the lymph system and ultimately gets absorbed by the blood and it's now it's
in your bloodstream and that's exciting because that's a little happy face
because now they can either be used up as fuel or be stored away for future use
now that's storage is what we would call body fat and that's well I want to get
ahead of myself so and so now we have our chylomicrons inside of the blood
chylomicrons are carrying what? triglycerides, cholesterol and some other
fun fun things right well the interesting thing is when they get when
they get next to say a muscle or a fatty tissue they're going to be broken down
or or cleave these triglycerides that are inside of these pala microns are
going to be pulled out by this thing called LPL or lipoprotein lipase and
this is going to pull out the fatty acids pull out is not the scientific
term but for today and it's either going to put them into your muscle cells or if
it's down here it's going to put them into your adipocytes or your fat cells
and now here's what happens in each one after the LPL does its business so here
if it's going to your muscle right this is me flexing you can't see but it's
amazing if it goes into your muscle it goes through something called abit
oxidation these are the better oxidation turned into a settle coal and through
the TCA cycle ultimately into ATP which is what makes me get to go like this I
shouldn't have put my muscles in frame now it's not nearly as impressive or
here's the rub here's the thing that we don't want to happen but kind of happens
a lot and that's down here the thing is this whole process
takes about an hour after your eating meal hour to two hours now if you're not
actively exercising your muscles in that time then your muscles are just fine
they don't need to use a bunch of that energy so what's going to happen to it
it's going to go down here to our little friend with a bit of a tummy if you can
see that because your body is going to say hey we don't need this right now
but we might need it later let's go ahead and store it and so that is going
to the fatty acids can be pulled out and they're going to go into the adipocyte
your fat cells and they are going to be bonded with glycerol 3p to form
triglycerides and then stored in little little fat droplets basically inside of
yourselves and as those fat droplets accumulate that's how you end up with
stored body fat now stored body fat in moderation is what obviously not a bad
thing because your body actually will go back and pull some of those out however
it's not gonna pull much out because once it's inside of your adipocytes
what's your those triglycerides are stored inside of those fat droplets it
doesn't really want to let go of them because in a lot of ways that's its
emergency storage like it's just in case right I mean if you were hungry you
wouldn't and you had like to say a bomb shelter out in the back stocked with
food if you were hungry you just go to the fridge right and get the food there
you wouldn't go out to the bomb shelter open the door crawl down unpack you know
everything and grab yourself some dehydrated fish or whatever you put in a
bomb shelter no you just go get the most easily accessible energy that's
available to you which in today's modern diet is glucose because we eat lots of
carbs we eat lots of refined sugar we're doing just fine giving ourselves almost
all the energy we need just from what from our dietary intake not tapping into
our fat cells or maybe even not tapping into our diet area try glycerols that
we're eating so in the next video we're going to go a little more in-depth and
we're going to talk about this whole process right here fatty
entering fat tissue and being stored the next thing we're gonna look at is how
does the body actually go in and decide to pull those things back out what does
that look like on a molecular level and also how can we try and stimulate that
process so that we can lose body fat so now we have a general overview of what
fatty acid or fatty metabolism looks like inside of your body so the next
time someone says hey I've got this new pill that blocks fat or does this or
does that you'd say oh really out where does it block it is it block it and your
small intestines does that stop your intestinal epithelial cells from
absorbing fatty acids and glycerol you know you're armed already with with more
knowledge that you had hopefully at the beginning of this video and you are
armed with the knowledge you need to make some better decisions and I tell
you what come back next week because I'm going to keep throwing everything that I
have at you so that I can guide you to be what to be your own hero all right so
this is Eric Brom thanks for watching
-------------------------------------------
DIUEN - SUU - Duration: 2:53.
For more infomation >> DIUEN - SUU - Duration: 2:53. -------------------------------------------
News Conference: Kentucky, Arizona, Davidson, Buffalo - Duration: 2:57:21.
For more infomation >> News Conference: Kentucky, Arizona, Davidson, Buffalo - Duration: 2:57:21. -------------------------------------------
News Conference: Houston, Michigan, San Diego St., Montana - Preview - Duration: 1:50:47.
For more infomation >> News Conference: Houston, Michigan, San Diego St., Montana - Preview - Duration: 1:50:47. -------------------------------------------
Teacher Leader - Part 2 - How I got my job and where I'm going - Duration: 6:15.
There are a lot of paths to become a teacher.
My path, I went to a teaching school in college,
and what I studied was elementary education.
I have a K through 6 license to teach general education.
There are a lot of teachers now
that go through alternative paths to licensure.
They come from another career and then they realize,
oh, teaching would be cool, which is also great
because they come from a different perspective,
a different career maybe is business
or corporate America.
Even though I went through the teaching college
and everything like that, took all the courses,
like that first day I was still super nervous
and I can't say I was fully prepared.
Still progressing every day but I don't think
that it's possible to be fully prepared
to become a teacher.
I remember that first day I had
this like huge nervous feeling
and scared and fear and those are always
the best times for you to grow.
Being able to get through not even that first day
but the first week after that it was like,
aww man, okay, this is what I'm supposed to be doing.
Employers and principals are looking
for people who are really reflective
and really on their practice
and have a growth mindset
to continue to grow and progress.
We have such a big emphasis in our school
around coaching and that progress you make as a teacher.
Definitely in the interview that's one
of the main questions that is asked,
do we feel comfortable being video taped,
do we feel comfortable with in the moment coaching
and a lotta times you're gonna be asked
to teach a lesson and then a few minutes after you teach it
reflect on that lesson and pick out things
that you did well and what you could improve on
so definitely principals are looking
for people that reflect on their practice
and are willing to grow.
I feel like being a black male teacher
in the elementary, going into becoming an elementary teacher
really gave me an advantage in finding a job,
being bilingual, so there was a lot
that I brought to the table naturally
that helped me find a job,
but I do recognize that it can be tough for teachers.
Especially is you're not a math or a science teacher
to find a job and maintain it.
I know historically in our area,
here in Montbello, where schools like closing
and definitely schools in turn around
and things like that, a lotta teachers
they go from school to school every year
and so I've been super fortunate
to be in a school for my fifth year.
I know that it's so important
for kids, especially now a days where they have access
to so much technology, that they have experiences
with black males who are positive
and that are in schools, that are serving kids,
and that are teaching with love.
I feel like without that it can be really tough
for the kids to see themselves being more
than what is shown to them on TV or through music.
Long-term aspirations?
I aspire to stay in this community here in Montbello
and build on the connections that I've made
with families and kids and my colleagues.
The typical career path for a teacher
has definitely changed over the generations.
I mean a lotta teachers that I had
were teachers for 30 years or 20-something years
and really experienced and really good at what they did
and they were happy being teachers
and I think things have shifted
where teachers aren't being teachers
for as long as they were before,
so it's important to develop leadership
among teachers who have experience.
Like in my position I'm a new teacher leader this year
and it's been really fun and challenging
and continues to be a challenge
but at our school we've done a lot of growth from within
and empowering teachers to move up
and become administrators.
There are so many jobs in the main office
and there's some teachers kinda fall back
and do like a liaison role with parent engagement.
There are definitely online opportunities to teach online.
Opportunities to teach college level courses
and share your teaching experience
with adults who are becoming teachers.
The amount of drive that you have to have
to become a teacher, you would be successful
at anything right, but definitely having
that passion for teaching, it's not easy,
it's really difficult, you have to think
and change your instruction as you go.
You have to be humble every day
because what you're teaching isn't working
so you have to change it up in some way.
There are so many things that you have
to think about as a teacher every day that we are powerful.
My colleagues are super powerful
and so knowledgeable about the world
and about people and all those things.
Aw, man, it's frustrating,
I mean of course it's frustrating,
as far as what we're making we don't feel respected
and in general a lotta people
say disrespectful things about teachers
and kids being in good classrooms
with good teachers but yet they are discouraged
from becoming teachers.
It's frustrating.
Great teachers are going to drive
and influence the future more than,
I believe, any other profession.
-------------------------------------------
News Conference: Texas Tech, Florida, Stephen F. Austin, St. Bonaventure - Preview - Duration: 2:49:02.
For more infomation >> News Conference: Texas Tech, Florida, Stephen F. Austin, St. Bonaventure - Preview - Duration: 2:49:02. -------------------------------------------
Why This 2018 NBA Draft Prospect Is The NEXT Russell Westbrook - Duration: 4:34.
A lot of people are talking about DeAndre Ayton, Michael Porter Jr, and Trae Young but
not many people are talking about this one NBA prospect that will shock everyone next
season.
What is up dudes, dudettes, ballers, players.
It's ya boi MJ.
Today I want to talk about Collin Sexton, the NBA prospect that is the next Russell
Westbrook and will shock everyone next season.
Let me know in the comments if you think Collin Sexton is the next Westbrook and also if you
think he will be a future NBA star.
Alright let's get into it.
I wanted to make this video before the SEC tournament but Collin Sexton helped my case.
First, take a look at this.
(game winner) I see Collin Sexton as a freak athlete who has an attitude.
His stock has rose after the tournament, but I feel as if people aren't giving the man
enough attention.
He's averaging 19 points per game and is leading Alabama to wins for godsake.
He led them to a win over Texas A&M and Auburn.
He played in a crazy 3 v 5 game where he scored 40 points!
Seriously 3 v 5, how does that even happen?
Of course Sexton was a savage.
He scored over everyone, triple teams didn't even matter.
He's led Alabama back into the NCAA tournament after 5 years.
But those are results.
I want to talk about why his game translates to the NBA.
Collin Sexton is a 6' 3" guard with a reported 6' 8" wingspan.
Not only that but he is one of the quickest players in all of college basketball with
raw athleticism and a change of speeds that is just nasty.
He finished at the rim through contact and draws fouls.
He doesn't really have a consistent jumper, but he can still knock down the three ball
and midrange shot.
And most importantly, Collin Sexton's got flair to him.
He plays with an edge.
Remember he went from a nobody in high school basketball to staring down other players souls.
Does that remind you of anyone?
Oh yeah Russell Westbrook.
I mean anytime you get the death stare from Westbrook, you need to start praying, but
you don't gotta pray with these cases protecting your phone with dope sports designs so check
out athletic cases.
And of course they got Russ dunking.
But seriously Westbrook came out of a bigger college program but he had a similar skill
set.
Raw athleticism, emotion, finishing ability without a consistent shot, and he was a nobody
in high school.
Their shooting percentages are nearly identical but Sexton is averaging more points since
he is the main player on the team.
When I hear of how deep the 2018 draft class is, I don't hear Collin Sexton's name
too often, but he's a guy who can make an impact right away.
His athleticism along with his big wingspan will get him buckets at the rim.
And he's capable of carrying a team to wins as Collin has shown with Alabama.
I don't see many point guards in the NBA being able to stay in front of him.
Remember, Russ averaged 15 and 5 his rookie season.
Collin Sexton, he could do that.
His work ethic is also second to none.
As a high schooler, he would workout starting at 6 am everyday and have 3 workouts throughout
the day so that he could be more than an unranked player.
Sexton's emotion is my favorite part about him because he uses it to his advantage.
It fuels him and he kinda shows an old school "I'm gonna destroy you" mindset, the
same way Russell Westbrook just comes at you.
So when he comes into the league next season, Collin Sexton is going to bring all this with
him and shock everyone with his play, and if he realizes his full potential, he just
be the next Russell Westbrook.
But what do you think?
Do you think Collin Sexton is the next Russell Westbrook?
Will Collin Sexton make an impact right away?
Let me know in the comments down below.
Drop a like if you like this video and if you like this savagery.
The instagram shout of the day goes to Holden Carter and the ALLDAY notification squad shout
out goes to Igor Felix.
Thanks for the ALLDAY support.
Make sure to hit the bell for ALLDAY notifications and if you're not a sub, hit that subscribe
button to join the ALLDAY community for more fire content and ALLDAY support.
It's ya boi MJ.
We Out!
-------------------------------------------
Nissan Juke 1.6i 16V ECO ACENTA SPORT PACK | NAVI | NL AUTO | DEALERONDERH. - Duration: 1:02.
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Nissan Pixo 1.0i LOOK | AIRCO | 1E EIG. | NAP | NL AUTO - Duration: 1:00.
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Terry Crews Admits He Once Felt 'More Valuable' Than His Family, 'Simply Because I Was A Man' - Duration: 1:54.
For more infomation >> Terry Crews Admits He Once Felt 'More Valuable' Than His Family, 'Simply Because I Was A Man' - Duration: 1:54. -------------------------------------------
Citroën C3 1.4I 16V CARACTERE SENSODR ST&ST - Duration: 1:00.
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Nissan Pixo 1.0i ACENTA AUTOMAAT | AIRCO | LMV - Duration: 0:57.
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Hyundai ix35 1.6i GDI Blue 135pk StyleVersion - Duration: 0:56.
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Hyundai Tucson 2.0 I 2WD Dynamic, zeer netjes! - Duration: 0:58.
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HomePod — Welcome Home
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Banda Som e Louvor - Não Negocio Com o Pecado - DVD 24 Horas - Duration: 3:40.
For more infomation >> Banda Som e Louvor - Não Negocio Com o Pecado - DVD 24 Horas - Duration: 3:40. -------------------------------------------
O que é Ser AVATAR, Naédja Alves, Terapêuta Holística Reikiana. - Duration: 4:59.
For more infomation >> O que é Ser AVATAR, Naédja Alves, Terapêuta Holística Reikiana. - Duration: 4:59. -------------------------------------------
Why This 2018 NBA Draft Prospect Is The NEXT Russell Westbrook - Duration: 4:34.
A lot of people are talking about DeAndre Ayton, Michael Porter Jr, and Trae Young but
not many people are talking about this one NBA prospect that will shock everyone next
season.
What is up dudes, dudettes, ballers, players.
It's ya boi MJ.
Today I want to talk about Collin Sexton, the NBA prospect that is the next Russell
Westbrook and will shock everyone next season.
Let me know in the comments if you think Collin Sexton is the next Westbrook and also if you
think he will be a future NBA star.
Alright let's get into it.
I wanted to make this video before the SEC tournament but Collin Sexton helped my case.
First, take a look at this.
(game winner) I see Collin Sexton as a freak athlete who has an attitude.
His stock has rose after the tournament, but I feel as if people aren't giving the man
enough attention.
He's averaging 19 points per game and is leading Alabama to wins for godsake.
He led them to a win over Texas A&M and Auburn.
He played in a crazy 3 v 5 game where he scored 40 points!
Seriously 3 v 5, how does that even happen?
Of course Sexton was a savage.
He scored over everyone, triple teams didn't even matter.
He's led Alabama back into the NCAA tournament after 5 years.
But those are results.
I want to talk about why his game translates to the NBA.
Collin Sexton is a 6' 3" guard with a reported 6' 8" wingspan.
Not only that but he is one of the quickest players in all of college basketball with
raw athleticism and a change of speeds that is just nasty.
He finished at the rim through contact and draws fouls.
He doesn't really have a consistent jumper, but he can still knock down the three ball
and midrange shot.
And most importantly, Collin Sexton's got flair to him.
He plays with an edge.
Remember he went from a nobody in high school basketball to staring down other players souls.
Does that remind you of anyone?
Oh yeah Russell Westbrook.
I mean anytime you get the death stare from Westbrook, you need to start praying, but
you don't gotta pray with these cases protecting your phone with dope sports designs so check
out athletic cases.
And of course they got Russ dunking.
But seriously Westbrook came out of a bigger college program but he had a similar skill
set.
Raw athleticism, emotion, finishing ability without a consistent shot, and he was a nobody
in high school.
Their shooting percentages are nearly identical but Sexton is averaging more points since
he is the main player on the team.
When I hear of how deep the 2018 draft class is, I don't hear Collin Sexton's name
too often, but he's a guy who can make an impact right away.
His athleticism along with his big wingspan will get him buckets at the rim.
And he's capable of carrying a team to wins as Collin has shown with Alabama.
I don't see many point guards in the NBA being able to stay in front of him.
Remember, Russ averaged 15 and 5 his rookie season.
Collin Sexton, he could do that.
His work ethic is also second to none.
As a high schooler, he would workout starting at 6 am everyday and have 3 workouts throughout
the day so that he could be more than an unranked player.
Sexton's emotion is my favorite part about him because he uses it to his advantage.
It fuels him and he kinda shows an old school "I'm gonna destroy you" mindset, the
same way Russell Westbrook just comes at you.
So when he comes into the league next season, Collin Sexton is going to bring all this with
him and shock everyone with his play, and if he realizes his full potential, he just
be the next Russell Westbrook.
But what do you think?
Do you think Collin Sexton is the next Russell Westbrook?
Will Collin Sexton make an impact right away?
Let me know in the comments down below.
Drop a like if you like this video and if you like this savagery.
The instagram shout of the day goes to Holden Carter and the ALLDAY notification squad shout
out goes to Igor Felix.
Thanks for the ALLDAY support.
Make sure to hit the bell for ALLDAY notifications and if you're not a sub, hit that subscribe
button to join the ALLDAY community for more fire content and ALLDAY support.
It's ya boi MJ.
We Out!
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Goldie and Bear Cute Moments Best Cartoon For Kids & Children Part 541 - Lauren Baker - Duration: 15:49.
PLEASE LIKE, SHARE, COMMENT & SUBCRIBE video! Thanks you very much!
Spike's on the loose few kids you have a friend who makes stuff like this
You should visit him more often. Well. I don't know about that the woods. There are full. I don't know oh
Sure is neat looking sure is
hmm, I guess it would be okay to just
Stand on it right you want to try now. Uh okay? Yes
Hey Goldie that really was fun
I'll take
Red what's wrong?
Forest well they must have hopped on while I was leaving sprite Valley. Oh, I told the kids I needed to double-check
Sorry
Whoa
I
Am never digging my feet off you again oh
Into the basket
Oh how she gonna stop, oh, hello, what have we here?
Huh, be careful on it, try it on steady right below me
Now let's get you back to sprite Valley where you belong?
Goldie tell your dad, I'll be back in time for dinner
See what it was like Oh
Goldie we didn't mean to take it anywhere, but I
Guess we really should have just waited how do we like to have our night back?
That's bad enough
Big bad
You're next bear 114
And this is not a good look hey, I can't do my oven puffs practice
I wasn't born with these loans. You know yeah watch this here we go
Hey, wait a minute everyone we can't just leave big bads like this. Yeah, no
That's not a bad idea we can test out our new half and path proof technology by building them a house
Think about it if they're so to build it what?
Am I supposed to live don't look at me. I've got to figure out how to get these leaves
Yeah, we're just trying to figure out a place where hey I can help you with that big bad
Wait a minute. Maybe he could stay with you. What do you have in here? Oh?
Come on in a big bad, I'll show you around ah
I'll let you two get settled in but what got any comics. I don't believe so
I'll just move this ogre town game out of the way wow that was delicious
Hey gotta keep these Lipson pufn pufn shape
Okay, okay all done with my Lipper sizes time for my howling warmups
Everything go okay last night. Not really but since he's moving out today. I'll be fine well
I'm sure the pigs are going to be finished anything my house is done. No more yummy food
No more chocolate cake no more cozy. Bed I
Don't think so
I
Really do but standard Humpty's is a sweet deal, and he loves having me there, too
So his houses gotta go
I don't know
I want to stay with Humpty forever
But maybe
He doesn't want you to stay with post to be for one night
And I don't know if I can take much more than one night. What do you mean?
We had a great time. Are you delusional you saying? You don't want me to stay with you?
Well you you do have a brand-new house
Oh yeah, then you can make me another one of those
Wow that's pretty good bear, can you do four?
But we know someone who knows all about eggs hmm
So what do you think Humpty? Well, it's
Somewhere out there. There's a mama bird wondering what happened to her egg. We gotta find a way to get it back to her
Well, I wish I could help you
But I saw it in a nest on misty mountain when I was climbing the giant Beanstalk the other day come on. I'll show ya
Then you and I jump on one end and launch jack and the egg up to the nest
Why me Hey somebody's got a hold the edge? Yeah? Yeah, oh?
Boy, we'll finally find out what kind of baby bird it is
Did I say bird, I meant I think he likes you
Get this guy back up to his nest it's going to make a flying machine
So dragon, what do we do now?
One another one
Hey guys sorry to bother you what's the best color?
Boy Skippy you sure can e oh
We could ride the rapids you could sit on my knee we'd be happy and fancy free my dragon
and me
There guarantee what sure buy your pal feed my dragon and me
My dragon and me
How about we just say that everybody helped, huh?
I guess do you think it's strong enough to lift a baby dragon you should be fine as long as you don't pop the balloons
Pretty fun tactic, huh
Now we can get the baby dragon back up to his nest um
actually
He's pretty tired. It was a big day for the little guy. Maybe it'd be better to wait until tomorrow to take him home
If he pops the balloons we won't be able to get him home
Did you hear that Skippy if you pop the balloons we can stay together?
Yeah, I think so
What's that thing I don't know I
Sure wish mama bear was looking for me right now
See bear everybody needs their parents you got a look. Let's pass the peas let's go go on
Come on we got a long walk home
Suddenly spots I
Guess the two-person pogo stick works better with two persons
That's okay, hey
Really
Look at your fur whoa
And I'm not itching or sneezy good now. Let's practice the mushroom cap toss
And then it started again when you came to help me
It's almost like I'm the one giving you these I was right
Whenever I'm away from you. The itchy sneezy spotties
disappear boo why
Did you say it see just like you well? What are they gonna? Do oh? Nothing they can do?
Hmm if we stay in these boxes when I'm close to you, maybe we need a different idea I got another idea
one giant bubble coming right up
I hope this really works
Let's go
Oh, no not again. I'm sorry Goldie a
Sunny day feels gray as can be
If I don't have my best friend with me. I wish I were playing with you I
Wonder where she's going on our Pogo hey, there's the woodsman, what's he doing?
Again
No spots why
Don't use the shampoo I gave you
I may have mixed up the magic a little who could cause some itsy-bitsy
Problems for anyone that gets too close to it must have washed out the smell of the magic shampoo
Well at least we know how to fix the problem you might want to tell bo-beep and Gretel just in time for fairytale field day
On your marks get ready get set
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All the Pritzker Prize winners The Architecture Nobel! - Duration: 23:42.
The names you are about to hear they may be badly pronounced
All opinions and criticisms are proper except in those a quote
is specified
in the box description you will find links with more information
the images may or may not have the name of the work and may or may not
be synchronized with the mention of it
sharing is recommended
Hello World. I am Miros Peace
and this is a counting of all Pritzker to date.
The Pritzker Prize, in case you do not know
is the highest recognition in the architecture
The first was awarded in 1979 to Philip Johnson
an American whose most famous work
is the glass house
He worked with Mies van der Rohe
and they made together
the Seagram building
he was a graduate of harvard
In 1980 the prize is awarded
to the architect Luis Barragán
the first and only Mexican in history
and first Latin American prize
he studied in the free school of
engineering in Guadalajara
and he didn't have an architect's degree as such
this story is a bit long and complicated
Soon a video of Luis Barragán is coming
Most of his work were homes
is internationally recognized by the use of bold colors within his work
besides creating an architecture spiritual and symbolic
In 1981 Sir James Stirling
a British graduate of Liverpool gets the prize
Stirling rebels against the modern movement
and gives more importance to aesthetics than functionality
says the building must talk about what it represents
something similar to
to the architectural concept which is currently managed
In 1982 Kevin Roche is the lucky one
an American born in Ireland
graduate of the University of Dublin
studied with Mies van der Rohe
and has designed many buildings
that are considered national moments in the United States
uses a lot of glazed elements to express themselves
and search for a functional beauty
Ieoh Ming Pei
in 1983 he was the winner
is an American architect of origin Chinese
graduated from the Technological Institute of Massachusetts
the famous MIT
and without a doubt a work that we all have in mind of him
is the pyramid of the Louvre Museum in Paris
which is totally glazed
and it's beautiful
his architecture is very rich in cold elements
and very clean lines as we see it
in that building
Richard Meier wins the award in 1984
he is an American
self-proclaimed Le Corbusier disciple
most of his works are white
and with very defined volumes
although different
he always prints his particular stamp and gives them a lot of light
In 1985
the Austrian Hans Hollein
gets the prize and the jury says of him
"an architect is also an artist
one, that with vleverness and eclectic is inspired
by the traditions of the new world
so easily like those of the old
a magnificent teacher who motivates the young people with his example
and at the same time make sure that the design is the most important
not the designer. "
1986
Gottfried Bohm
German born in an architects family
married also with an architect
couple from which the jury says:
"their work is
highly suggestive
combines a lot of what that we have inherited from our ancestors
with a lot of what we just get
a surprising and stimulating marriage
which the Pritzker Prize of Architecture is pleased to honor. "
The Japanese Kenzo Tange
get the coveted award in 1987
He is a graduate of the University of Tokyo
Among his works stand out the Olympic stadium,
the Cathedral of Santa María,
the memorial museum of peace
as an urbanist, he helped transform the postwar Japan
He himself speaks of his work in this way:
"As an architect, I do not want to repeat what
I already done
I think that every project is a bridge for the next
so it's very important to rescue the past
to change the future. "
In 1988
we have two winners ex aequo
the American Gordon Bunshaft
who created the SOM study
and from whom the jury said:
"his astute perception of architecture
is a joint venture
between client and designer
has generated mutual respect and creative collaborations
that produce large buildings
with a fusion of humanity and functionality
for the people who live
and use his structures
And the other winner
was Oscar Niemeyer
Brazilian architect, Le Corbusier disciple
that transformed Brasilia
when it was consolidated as the new capital of Brazil
brought organic forms that had never been seen in Latin America
and adapted them to the environment
giving it the festive character that it has currently the metropolis
The controversial Frank Gehry is awarded in 1989
is a Canadian graduate of the University of Southern California
it is controversial
both for his acting and for his work
He's also the maximum exponent of currently deconstructivism
and a pioneer in the use of technologies
that make his capricious forms possible
undoubtedly his most famous work is the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao
that by itself transformed a complete city
1990
Aldo Rossi
Italian
graduated from the Polytechnic of Milan
from whom the jury said:
"He has obtained recognitions like theorist, philosopher, artist and teacher
his words, as well as his drawings and buildings
has been distinguished him as a great
he is a master draftsman
inscribed in the tradition of art and italian architecture
his sketches and representations
of buildings
have often achieved the international recognition
long beforeitalian were built. "
The Princeton graduate Robert Venturi
in 1991 gets the prize
for his work together with his wife Dennis Scott Brown
who was denied the prize in that moment
and years later
when it was requested that it be considered as a joint prize
this architect openly criticized the modern movement
particularly the famous phrase of Mies van der Rohe
when proclaiming less is a bore
wrote a manifesto of great transcendence called complexity and
contradiction in architecture
could be considered a rebel with cause
since he worked to break
minimalism and the tendency of the form
follow the function
1992 Alvaro Siza, Portuguese
architect with the soul of a sculptor
Reminds me of Luis Barragán for the poetry and the mysticism that
encloses in their constructions
each work not only establishes a
conversation with the environment
but is part of it
it seems as if it had always existed there
the environments that it generates in his
architecture can not be described
rather, they feel, it is a living and rich architecture
Fumihiko Maki
Japanese graduate of the University of Tokyo
who was born on 6 September
same as me
and curiously wins the prize in 1993
year in which I am born
nothing relevant, curious fact
he is an architect that seems to always have a duality
conjugates western culture with Oriental
and also talks about that the
architecture must have a vernacular side and a rational side
a technical architecture
and another artistic
always merged and working together
makes a comparison with the Japanese language
talking about kenji and kana
to exemplify that duality
1994 Christian de Portzamparc
It's a French
so I spelled it terrible
graduated from the National School of Fine Arts of Paris
and in the words of the architect in question:
"I always consider a building as part of a whole
a piece that creates a collective action
the city."
Seeking to satisfy his gifts artistic
Christian studied architecture
but he felt very limited by the trends of his time
so he decides to create his own rules
impregnating their creativity to buildings
that fits
not to a specific style
but to a solution of
specific problems
that is, a project ata a time.
Tadao Ando obtains the award in 1995
he is a Japanese
who, surprisingly
didn't have formal studies in architecture
he himself is called self-taught since
he was learning through books
and travel
visiting essential works in Europe
is without a doubt the teacher of light par excellence
element that gives life
to its simple volumes ofcleansed concrete
is able to create beauty without
no ornament or pretense
Besides
masterfully manipulates
natural elements
and cold materials
to achieve spaces
unequaled
endowed with a very japanese ceremoniosness
1996
Rafael Moneo
is a Spanish graduate from the Polytechnic University of Madrid
and quoting Pritzker:
"Moneo not only practice architecture in the sense
most real designing buildings
taking into account all aspects of his
building
but also teaches his theories
using all his experience and knowledge
holding in fact these parallel efforts enriching each
one with the other."
1997 Sverrre Fehn
it was a Norwegian who studied
at the Oslo School of Architecture
and very poetically Sverre
brings Scandinavian architecture to the contemporary architecture
his friend Christian Norberg Schulz
(you may heard from him in a well-known book Intentions in architecture)
says of him:
"It's not the abstract forms that Fehn has
discovered in morocco
but the constructed realities
the essential of architecture is the art of building
The Italian graduates from Polytechnic of Milan
Renzo Piano
gets the prize in 1998
one of his phrases:
"If you lack the ability to create emotions
then it doesn't work
It is insufficient
despite being known as an exponent of high tech
Piano never forgets the humanistic sense of architecture
he uses technology
only as a tool of expression
even to say:
"Computers are a bit stupid."
In 1999 Norman Foster is recognized for his career
This architect
was armed knight obtaining the title of Lord
for his career
(not for being silly)
Foster and Partners
that is his company
is one of the most prolific offices
and Norman is one of the starchitects
most acclaimed of these times
it has become the maximum referent of high tech architecture
using it
for
in the last years
pursue the utopian
large-scale sustainability.
The Pritzker of the year 2000 goes for another
bad boy, the dutch
Rem Koolhaas
he is one of the most completed
architects of the last times
visionary
philosophical
and formally deconstructivist
has helped to form
if not that pushed the
architecture
until what is today
not only for their constructed works and theories
but because of the influence exerted in young architects from around the world
Among those who are Zaha Hadid
and Bjarke Ingels
that name
Pritzker 2001
Herzog & de Meuron
Swiss group integrated by
Jaques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron
his most famous work is the bird's nest of Beijing
and of them the jury exclaimed:
"Their architecture combines the art of a
old profession with the new approach
of the technical capabilities of this century."
The Australian Glenn Murcutt
he was the 2002 Pritzker
an incredible lonely architect
that the jury of this year defined in this way:
"In an era obsessed with celebrities
the brightness of our starchitects
supported by large offices
and profuse public relations
in total contrast
Murcutt
works in an office from one person to another side of the world
even so
has a waiting list of customers
which he intends to provide
the best project
that he can produce
he is an innovative professional of architecture
who is capable of directing his sensitivity so the environment and what
regional
and produce works of art totally honest and humble
In 2003 for the first and only time proclaims posthumous winner
Jorn Utzon
a Danish
which little time before dying
was chosen as
winner of this year
and he was notified
However, he died a few weeks after
the award
so it had to be overtaken the awards ceremony
this was the architect of the famous Sydney Opera
leaving aside the disappointments in the live of this architect
he had the opportunity to
translate his talent into a global icon
of which Louis Kahn exclaimed:
"The sun did not know how wonderful its light was
until it was reflected in this building. "
The winner of 2004
deceased few years ago
my favorite personal
Zaha Hadid
It was a Anglo-Iraqi architect
mathematical before
architect
built from the hand of deconstructivism
successions of
hyperbolas brought to a three-dimensional plane
she was the first
and only woman in lonely in winning the prize
although many of his designs were not constructed
he left us a legacy of
sculptural buildings
who dominate not only the landscape
but the mind of that one
to visit them wherever they are.
2005
the American
Tom Mayne
Harvard graduate
which the jury said:
"His architectural vision
his philosophy
nor of the modern style
nor of Asian influences
not even the classics
Americans of the last century
his career has always been characterized
for his desire to create an architecture original
one of the few that represents
perfectly
Southern California style
and especially from Los Angeles. "
2006
The Brazilian Paulo Mendes da Rocha
of whom Thomas Pritzker said in the announcement of the award:
"... has shown an understanding
deep of space and scale
through the great variety of buildings
that he've designed
from residences private, housing complexes,
a church,
museums and stadiums
even plans for
public urban spaces
while few of his buildings were made out
of Brazil
the lessons learned by from his work
as much as active architect as well as a teacher
are universal. "
Richard Rogers
Pritzker 2007
british born in italy
he is passionate about
British policy as well as the town planning
quoting Thomas Pritzker again:
"in his writings during his post as
counselor for formulation groups policies
as well as his work to great
urbanism scale
Rogers is a hero of urban life that believes in the
city's potential as a catalyst of a social change. "
2008 French
Jean Nouvel
the resulting architecture from the mind of this architect is very
diverse and exuberant in creativity
since he isn't limited to a typology or a
precise formula
but it addresses each project without pretensions or ideas
preconceived
originating well
a unique work after another.
The Pritzker of 2009
it was for the Swiss Peter Zumthor
this cabinetmaker together with
others have a very special place in my mind
they are part of
which for me is the elite
they've reached the splendor of the profession
Zumthor is
beyond materiality and vulgarities policies
has the peculiarity of
choose his projects by affinity
and not for economic interest
each of them develops until the minimum detail
his works are some of those that are admired with all the senses.
The SANAA office 2010
Lord Palumbo said at that time:
"... for a unique
architectural language that blooms from a collaborative process that is both
unique as inspiring
for his nobles finished buildings
and the promise of
new projects
together
Kazuyo Sejima
and Rihue Nishisawa
are the recipients of the Pritzker 2010 award. "
In 2011, the prize went to Eduardo Souto de Moura
repeating the words of Lord Palumbo:
"his buildings have a
unique ability to transmit characteristics
seemingly contradictory
power and modesty
the bravado and
the subtlety
the bold public authority
and a sense of intimacy
All at the same time."
In 2012 the award was won by the doctor in urban planning
Wang Shu
the Pritzker Prize winner too
Aravena
says of him:
"The Ningbo Museum
has a power that undoubtedly deserves to be called a
masterpiece
one does not visit the building one is
hit by the building
being
beaten
for a building
rarely happens in the
architecture
because this kind of experiences belong rather to
field of music or cinema
where the Experience of a work can excite
to the point of modifying
the state of mind in a deeply positive sense
Regrettably
none of this can be transmitted by the photographs. "
Pritzker 2013
Toyo Ito
the jury justified the prize
Talking about Toyo's architecture:
"for his synthesis of the structure
space
and how to create welcoming places
for his sensitivity to the landscape
for infusing his
designs with a spiritual dimension
and for the poetics that transcends all his
works."
Nevertheless
Ito
like good japanese
is in continuous improvement
for that reason when receiving the prize proclaimed:
I will never stay at my architectural style and I will never be totally satisfied with
my job."
2014
Shigeru Ban
is a Japanese worried about
the environment and society
a unique architect in his class
as he build with paper tubes
use this technique
mainly for offer decent homes
comfortable, well planned
in response to emerging needs
how are naturals
disasters
defends this technique of building
against the detractors
claiming
the relativity that can have
the duration of a building
for example, mention the case
of a religious building that originally
it was meant to be temporary
however, the community liked it
so much and I love it so much that they asked to become permanently
and it is also the case
of concrete structures that were designed
thinking
that will last 50, 70 or more years
a natural disaster arrives
and the next day it's
already gone
In 2015 we can already perceive a trend
when choosing German
Frei Paul Otto
as prize winner
of which the jury said:
"...practiced
development and advanced ideas from sustainability
even before the word was coined."
For 2016 we find ourselves with
the Chilean Alejandro Aravena
who despite having projects of
various characters
he acquires his fame and prestige for his social work
works to meet a growing need
especially in Latin America
after listening to his emotional acceptance speech
the commitment we have with society
feels even bigger
because before be architects
we are humans
Last year
the Spanish office RCR arquitectes won
of which it was said:
"The jury has selected three architects who have worked in
collaboration
for almost three decades
Mr. Aranda, Mrs. Pigem and Mr. Vilalta
they've had an impact on the discipline far beyond their immediate area
their works go from public and private spaces
to cultural places and educational institutions
and his ability to
intensely relate the specific environment to each site is a
testimony of his process and his deep integrity."
And finally in this year on March 7 for the first time an Indian
is proclaimed winner
the architect Balkrishna Doshi
who worked with Le Corbusier in his youth
and from which we can observe an
architecture that is reflection of his
culture and a dialogue with nature
for him, the materials with which he works are extremely important
acquiring a
almost spiritual dye
he goes beyond integrate the building to the environment
as
according to his philosophy
the building emerges from the earth.
Do you want to know more about these or others architects? let me know in
comments
See you in another video
Peace.
1994
unintelligible things while I try to pronounce
-------------------------------------------
Fotograf - The Photograph by kazim öz - Duration: 1:06:03.
Mezopotamya Culture Center Cinema department
with the support of Hubert Fund of International Film Festival Rotterdam
It's taken us ten years to come through the wars and we can hold our heads up proudly
In ten years we have raised a new generation of 15 million
Under the leadership of Commander in Chief respected throughout the world
We have clothed the country in a network of iron
We are Turks and our bare chests are bronzed shield of our Republic
Turks do not rest Turks strive unceasingly to go forward
THE PHOTOGRAPH
production managers
post-production manager
casting
music
director of photography
art director
written and directed by
-The bus is leaving in 10 minutes. Don't go away
The greatest soldier is our soldier
The soldier will go but he will be back!
-Sorry! What number is this one?
-11. Sorry, I seem to have taken your seat.
-No! No! You stay here. It is not important. -But it is your place!
-You're already there.No need to move. -Thanks.
-Maybe we can change later -Sure
-There's some space up here -Thank you
-Would you like a cigarette? -No, thanks. I don't smoke
-Sorry, I should have asked you before -Don't worry, mate.
-I've just started, too.
-It's all right, if I smoke, isn't it? -Sure, carry on
-Are you thinking of her?
-I mean the girl who was seeing you off.
-Yes
-Just wondering, don't take it wrong why did you only shake her hand?
-We probably won't see each other for a long time. To make it easier
-Yeah, I see, you're right.
-What do you mean?
-If you go over the top, they only get ideas.
-The next day you look up and they're gone
-Why, has it happened to you?
-Nothing's worth it in this world
-They don't care. It's better to be tough.
-Actually, I think love is a selfish business.
-Maybe you are right, but there are unselfish loves, too
-Come on, that only happens in the movies.
-Sure, it's usually just in movies.
-Do you work? -I'am a student.
-Where? -I am studying law.
-There may be justice in law, but there is no justice in love.
-Justice...
-There's no justice anywhere. It's just an abstract concept right now.
-Where are you going?
-To Diyarbakır, to see a relative. What about you?
-To Tunceli, I'm going to see relatives, too. Actually I'm going via Elazığ.
-Oh, Tunceli!
-Have you been there before? -No, this is the first time.
-Me, too.
-I wonder what it's like around there.
-So do I.
-It's suffocating, this darkness, I wonder where we are now.
-Well, there is snow, so must be in the mountains.
-Mountains!
-Why do you keep looking into dark?
-No reason.
-Just looking at the lights in the distance.
-Have one? -No, thanks, I don't smoke.
-Come on, have one! -Leave it, it's better not to smoke.
-Go on let's have a cigarette -Ok, then, just the one.
-It is best way to go.
-Thanks, I'll light it myself
-You're right, we might as well die of cigarettes...
-You smoke too much
-Must be because I'm excited.
-Yeah, excitement
... The excitement of going for the first time.
Dear passengers of Özbatmanlılar Turizm welcome to the Özkar Service Station
You have a half hour break in which to drink tea and take advantage of the facilities
The soldier will go but he will be back BUT AS A CORPSE
The Turkish Military forces are making sustained progress in operation 'Çelik'
in their campaign against the separatist terrorist organisation, the PKK, in Northern Iraq
Approximately 2400 terrorists have been captured during the operation, which covers a massive area
The armed forces have lost 26 brave members during the operation so far.
The terrorists are defenseless in the face of the determination and resolution of Turkish Army
''Our lads have climbed up here and are defending this whole area...''
''...We've lost blood but we've taken blood, too. The terrorists have nowhere left to run...''
''...We're calling them: Where are you? We are here!
Despite the use of warning shots, tear-gas and water cannon...
...police were unable to disperse rioters in Gazi last night
...Street fights have continued in the area throughout the night, resulting in deaths and injuries
The Gazi quarter has been transformed into a battlefield
-He's been shot in the head.
-There were people from our village. 15 of us came but there's no one left...
They've probably all been shot.
We want justice. That's all we're asking for. Justice! Only justice!
-Identity control, get your ID's out!
-Wake up everybody!
-Your identity card, lady! Are you sleeping?
-Have we arrived dad?
-Where are you going? -To do my military service
-Don't you know that it's forbidden for soldiers to travel by bus?
Get off, we will send you by convoy in the morning
-Don't you ever watch television? You know nothing about what is going on
-No need to rush. Get off at the front!
-Are you together? -Yes.
-Give me your identity card.
-Hilal 95! Hilal 95!
-Hilal 95 here.
-Ali Türkoğlu, 73, Istanbul Faruk Öztürk, 75, Istanbul
-Received, OK
-Negative
-OK, over and out.
Passangers for Elazığ and Tunceli We have arrived
Dad! Have we arrived?
-So you're getting of here, aren't you? -Yeah, I am getting off.
-Have we arrived dad?
-Let's just shake hands! Have a good journey
-You, too.
-It's funny. We still don't know each others names.
-Yours is Faruk, mine is Ali.
-Did you remember..? Take care!
-Bugger off kids!
''HAPPY IS HE WHO SAYS I AM A TURK !''
-Only the men get off the bus! Identity card and logging control!
''HAPPY IS HE WHO SAYS I AM A TURK !''
-You've got a long journey ahead of you -Yes, a long journey
-Welcome. -Thanks!
-How are you? Are you all right? -All right. And you?
-Come on, this way.
-March march march.
-Stay in line, in line I said.
-March march stay in line, just stay in line.
-Shut up you, Get in line!
-Stay in line, you!
-March march just march!
-This kid looks strong, but let's have a look
-Take off your pants!
-OK. OK!
-Where are you from soldier? -I am from Çorum
-What is your job? -I used to work in a coffeehouse.
-Get in!
-Idiot, you idiot!
How many times have you missed? How often do I have to tell you?
...You're supposed to aim for the center...
...If you carry on shooting like this, all you'II do is make him deaf.
-Go on, fire again!
-Bloody hell, you must have starting trembling as soon as you came out of the womb
-Arsehole!
-You're not supposed to scratch the bastard, you're supposed to kill him!.. Kill him!
-Hurry up. Pass it here. We are late!
-Tie it tight! Make sure it doesn't fall
-Peace be with you! -And also with you!
How are you? Are you OK?
Thanks. Welcome. How are you?
Thanks, God be with you!
-Did you have to wait long? -Yes, We had to wait about an hour.
-It's disgusting. How can you have 18 different ID checks between two cities!
-Has everybody got their ID cards on them?
-Change this cassette, Change it!
Change the cassette, put in a Turkish one.
-Let's get these young men to get out their ID cards!
-Where are you going?
-We're going to see my parents with my wife
-How long are you staying? -We haven't decided yet.
-No longer than three days, all right?
-OK: you can go. Go on!
-At ease! Attention! At ease! Attention!
-Turn left!
-March on the spot
-Jog, march!
Sister in law is sleeping on the balcony!
Sister in law is sleeping on the balcony!
Yaylalar yaylalar!
She throws off the quilt!
Yaylalar yaylalar!
Under her red knickers...
Her cunt is like a juicy watermelon
-Come on, lads!
-Stay in line!
-You've got a long journey ahead -That's right, a long journey.
-Welcome Thanks
-Was your journey fine? -All right. But there were a lot of checks
-Welcome comrade -Thanks.
-How is it going in Amed?
-The enemy is pushing us but we're doing our best
-How is it going here? -Here's OK, everything's fine.
-Is this your daughter?
-What's her name? -Ronahi
-Ronahi!
-Mom, where do they live? -They live a long way away.
-Comrade Helin! I think here is OK. We've only got an hour till dawn, anyway.
...Let the comrades have a rest -OK, comrade.
Comrades, We can have a rest here
-It's been a long day's track -Oh, yes!
Comrades, who wants to drink water?
-Have we got a long journey ahead? -No, not too long.
Come on, man, hurry up Our boots are getting dirty!
-What did you do that German stuff? -It's not German, you bastard, it's American.
-Fuck off. What would you know?
-The girl was a beauty. Don't push me you bastard!
-Shit! This prick's camera doesn't work it just makes noises...
-It's got diarrhea! -Hang on, it's working now!
-Stop wriggling around like a woman!
-Hey, Faruk take your camera!
-Come on, tie this one up. -I can't tie this one up, it's too heavy.
-Hey man, give us the rope,we'll pull it -Is the rope strong enough?
-Tie it up from his feet, not from his neck.
-Come on men, let's leave this hellhole before night falls.
-Can I have an inland stamp, please? -Here you are
-How much is that? -Fifty thousand.
-Here you are.
-Hurry up a bit, or we'll have to freeze at the check point. -All right.
Fırat can't catch me. Fırat can't catch me!
Fırat can't catch me. Fırat can't catch me!
-Mr. Postman, mom is not at home -Where is your mom?
-She's gone to the market -To the market? What's your mama's name?
-Feride
-This is for your mom, OK? -OK
-No reading it now, OK? -OK
Turkish Fortitude Road
Sevda is it. Sevda is it!
Sevda can't catch us!
-Why don't you come and play?
-What are these?
Come on, man, hurry up Our boots are getting dirty.
It's not German, you bastard it is American
Shit! This prick's camera doesn't work, it just makes noises.
Hey Faruk, take your camera!
-Savaş Savaş! Come on son, come and help me to carry these bags!
-Savaş Savaş! (*war)
translated by Güliz Sağlam and Shreen Fancy
-------------------------------------------
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