Thursday, January 26, 2017

Youtube daily report w Jan 27 2017

Mata&Pawn reveal their lives in KT Teamhouse

For more infomation >> Mata & Pawn reveal their lives in KT Rolster Teamhouse [Weekly LCK Behind] - Duration: 4:15.

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Policías en R. Dominicana agredieron a motoristas | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:39.

For more infomation >> Policías en R. Dominicana agredieron a motoristas | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:39.

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Columbus Neighborhoods: Men of Courage - Duration: 5:38.

>> I USED TO WANT TO SAVE THE

WORLD WHEN I WAS YOUNG, THAT'S

HOW YOU FEEL, BUT NOW I REALIZE

I CAN ONLY SAVE ONE AT A TIME.

SO IF YOU GIVE ME ONE, AND I CAN

GET IN THERE AND BUILD THAT

RELATIONSHIP WITH THEM I AM

GOING TO DO EVERYTHING I CAN.

>> EVERY SINGLE ONE OF YOU HAVE

GIFTS AND TALENTS.

>> SOMETIMES I WONDER WHO'S

TEACHING WHO?

CAUSE I LEARN A LOT FROM THESE

KIDS!

>> EXACTLY!

>> YOU ALWAYS HAVE TO HAVE A WHY

TO BE SUCCESSFUL.

>> AND WHY IS YOUR WHAT?

>> SO YOU DON'T DO ANY MISCHIEF.

>> YOUR PURPOSE.

>> BASICALLY WE TRY TO IMPART

WISDOM AND GUIDANCE AND SPEND

TIME WITH THEM AS MUCH AS WE

CAN.

JUST LIKE ANY FATHER, UNCLE, BIG

BROTHER WOULD DO.

>> WE HAVE A GROUP MENTORING

PROGRAM IN THE SCHOOLS WHERE WE

MENTOR.

WE HAVE CLASSROOMS, WE MENTOR

12-15 KIDS AT A TIME.

BUT OUR ONE ON ONES, THEY COME

FROM BASICALLY JUVENILE SYSTEM.

>> THEY HAVE INFORMATION, SO

WHEN THEY DO THEIR INTERVIEW,

WHAT THEY'RE LOOKING FOR IS ARE

YOU THE PERSON, THAT YOU WROTE

DOWN ON YOUR APPLICATION?

THE OTHER THING THEY ARE LOOKING

FOR IS, THE WORK CULTURE THEY'RE

TRYING TO PUT YOU IN, OR WANT TO

PUT YOU IN, DO YOU FIT THAT WORK

CULTURE?

>> I KEEP COMING BACK BECAUSE I

HAVE NO MEN IN MY LIFE THAT

TELLS ME ABOUT HOW TO BE A MAN

AND FOR HIM TO COME AND TALK TO

US ABOUT THAT, I AM GOING TO

TAKE THE CHANCE TO LISTEN AND

LEARN.

FROM WHAT HE'S BEEN THROUGH HE

CAN TEACH ME NOT TO GO THROUGH

THE SAME THING HE'S BEEN

THROUGH.

>> WHEN PEOPLE LOOK ON THE

OUTSIDE, THEY THINK THERE'S A

BLUEPRINT, YOU KNOW?

AND THERE'S REALLY -- THE ONLY

BLUEPRINT TO IT IS LOVE.

THAT'S THE ONLY BLUEPRINT AND

EVERY KID IS DIFFERENT.

BECAUSE ALL OF THEM DON'T HAVE A

PROBLEMS WITH DRUGS, ALL OF THEM

AINT OUT GANG BANGING, YOU KNOW?

SOME OF THEM JUST, THEY WANT TO

GET SOMEWHERE, BUT THEY DON'T

KNOW HOW TO GET THERE.

>> SOME OF THESE KIDS HAVE NO

ONE IN THEIR LIFE THAT CAN TELL

THEM WHAT TO DO OR WHAT NOT TO

DO.

WHEN THEY HAVE SOMEONE WHO THEY

CAN ACTUALLY TRUST, THEY START

LISTENING.

THE MORE THEY COME AND THE MORE

THE COMMITTED THE PERSON IS TO

THEM, THEY START LISTENING AND

THEY START DOING BETTER, AND

BETTER AND BETTER.

MY GOAL IS TO STAY IN SCHOOL, I

WANT TO BE SUCCESSFUL AND AS I

GET OLDER I WANT MY KIDS TO HAVE

SOMEONE TO LOOK UP TO THAT WAS

SUCCESSFUL IN LIFE TOO.

>> AND I TELL THEM, ALL YOU GOT

TO DO IS VERY SIMPLE --

SMILE AND BE HONEST AND YOU'RE

IN THERE.

WHEN I SAY SMILE I MEAN BE

PLEASANT.

BE HAPPY THAT YOU HAVE AN

OPPORTUNITY, BECAUSE THAT'S WHAT

IT IS, IT'S AN OPPORTUNITY.

I AINT SAYING YOU HAVE TO GO IN

THERE, YOU'VE GOTTA CHEESE AND

EVERYTHING LIKE THAT.

BUT YOU KNOW?

THEY LOOK AT YOU LIKE THIS

PLEASANT YOUNG MAN.

WHEN I LOOK AT THESE YOUNG KIDS,

I REALLY SEE MYSELF IN SOME OF

THEM.

BEING THAT MY FATHER WALKED OUT

ON ME, LIVED WITH MY MOTHER TIL

I WAS ABOUT 13.

SHE DIED OF A DRUG OVERDOSE.

WHICH AT THAT POINT I STARTED

GETTING IN A LITTLE BIT OF

TROUBLE, I WAS ON THE FENCE, SO

WHEN I LOOK AT THESE KIDS THEY

MAY BE THE SAME WAY.

THERE MIGHT NOT BE ANYBODY IN

THEIR LIFE TO TELL THAT THEY

LOVE THEM OR THERE MAY NOT BE

ANYONE TO TELL THEM THAT THEY

ACCEPT THEM.

IT'S PART OF MY PASSION TO DO

IT.

BECAUSE I DON'T WANT TO SEE

OTHER KIDS GO THROUGH IT, OR IF

I CAN HELP A YOUNG KID NOT TO GO

THROUGH SOMETHING LIKE THAT OR

THE REPERCUSSIONS OF SOMETHING

LIKE THAT OR EVEN IF I CAN EASE

A SEASON IN THEIR LIFE FROM

THAT --

THEN THAT'S WHAT MOTIVATES ME.

>> IT WAS A SMALL THING THAT I

MISSED OUT ON.

IT WAS A SMALL THING THAT I

DIDN'T DO THAT PREVENTED ME FROM

GETTING AN "A."

IT'S THE SMALL THINGS THAT STOP

YOU FROM BEING -- THE DIFFERENCE

BETWEEN BEING GOOD AND

EXCELLENT.

YOU UNDERSTAND WHAT I AM SAYING?

THAT'S WHAT WE'RE TALKING ABOUT.

THESE ARE THE SMALL THINGS.

I HAVE KIDS NOW THAT I MENTOR,

THEY WERE IN 4th, 5th, 6th GRADE

AND NOW THEY'RE GROWN, AND WHEN

YOU'RE OUT SHOPPING IN THE

GROCERY STORE AND THEY WALK UP

TO YOU AND SAY HEY, MR.

LEWIS, I

STILL REMEMBER WHAT YOU TOLD ME

AND I AM DOING THIS, AND I

GRADUATED FROM COLLEGE, YOU

KNOW?

YOU KNOW, DOING BETTER THAN ME,

WHICH THAT'S WHAT YOU WANT.

THE REAL SPIRIT OF A MENTOR OR

FATHER THAT YOU WANT THEM TO DO

BETTER THAN YOU.

THAT'S THE GRATIFICATION THAT I

GET FROM IT.

>> WE BELIEVE IN YOU.

THAT'S OUR WHY.

EVERYBODY UP HERE, THE REASON

THEY'RE UP HERE, YOU'RE OUR WHY.

OUR PURPOSE IS TO HELP YOU

ACHIEVE YOUR PURPOSE.

THERE ARE MANY, MANY MEN OUT

THERE LIKE US, EVERYONE'S ALWAYS

TELLING ME THAT YOUNG MEN DON'T

HAVE POSITIVE ROLE MODELS, IT'S

NOT TRUE.

YOU'VE GOT TO WANT POSITIVE ROLE

MODELS.

For more infomation >> Columbus Neighborhoods: Men of Courage - Duration: 5:38.

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【Speedpaint】SMILE [Songs by Sour Apple Studios and Aquaspirit77] - Duration: 5:10.

For more infomation >> 【Speedpaint】SMILE [Songs by Sour Apple Studios and Aquaspirit77] - Duration: 5:10.

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Mercedes-Benz T2 first generation 1967-1986 #mercedest2 - Duration: 10:06.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz T2 first generation 1967-1986 #mercedest2 - Duration: 10:06.

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Parking Pilot - Mercedes Benz Parking Pilot - A Girls First Time Using Autopark - Duration: 3:41.

I'm at Mercedes-Benz of Chicago today.

And I ran into this really cool self-driving demo.

That Mercedes Benz is hosting.

For their new self parking feature.

Called parking pilot.

And I was so impressed with this feature.

And I thought it was so cool.

I decided to do a video to show you how it works.

And I couldn't think of anyone else.

To fill in for a real-world driver.

Then Tamarya right here.

Who is fantastic and parallel parking.

Exactly.

Okay are you ready Tamarya.

Ready.

That's so awesome.

I need to get one of these.

I would just do that spot right there.

To our amazement.

Parking pilot also performs perpendicular parking.

Uncut video clip.

We're in there.

So there you go.

That's how.

Mercedes parking pilot works.

In a real-world scenario.

So if you're not so good at parking.

Parallel parking.

Or perpendicular parking.

Or you're like me.

I knew get really anxious pulling into parking spaces.

And you don't want to hit other people's cars.

The self parking feature is the solution for you.

So I hope this video help you understand.

The new Mercedes parking pilot self-driving feature a little bit better.

Make sure you follow the links below.

Find out more about this self-driving parking pilot technology from Mercedes-Benz.

Or to set up a test drive.

At your local Fletcher Jones dealer.

Thanks for watching adios

For more infomation >> Parking Pilot - Mercedes Benz Parking Pilot - A Girls First Time Using Autopark - Duration: 3:41.

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Laura Pausini estrena "Pregúntale al cielo" | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:51.

For more infomation >> Laura Pausini estrena "Pregúntale al cielo" | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:51.

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El presidente de México cancela su viaje a EEUU | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 3:27.

For more infomation >> El presidente de México cancela su viaje a EEUU | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 3:27.

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U&D- TINA DIVENTA UNA FURIA CONTRO MICHELE E UN ALTRA SIGNORA AMMIRATRICE DI GEMMA - Duration: 5:32.

For more infomation >> U&D- TINA DIVENTA UNA FURIA CONTRO MICHELE E UN ALTRA SIGNORA AMMIRATRICE DI GEMMA - Duration: 5:32.

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Artistas reaccionan a política antiinmigrante de Trump | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:58.

For more infomation >> Artistas reaccionan a política antiinmigrante de Trump | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:58.

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Juanes estrena en exclusiva video "Hermosa ingrata" | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 3:50.

For more infomation >> Juanes estrena en exclusiva video "Hermosa ingrata" | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 3:50.

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Revelan detalles de la demanda a Luis Miguel | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:32.

For more infomation >> Revelan detalles de la demanda a Luis Miguel | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:32.

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Show aéreo en Australia termina en tragedia | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:28.

For more infomation >> Show aéreo en Australia termina en tragedia | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:28.

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Ola gigante revienta vidrios de restaurante California | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:33.

For more infomation >> Ola gigante revienta vidrios de restaurante California | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:33.

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Estrenan máquinas expendedora de autos en Arizona | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:45.

For more infomation >> Estrenan máquinas expendedora de autos en Arizona | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:45.

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Oscar de la Hoya en líos por sospecha de conducir ebrio | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:31.

For more infomation >> Oscar de la Hoya en líos por sospecha de conducir ebrio | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:31.

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🌸新年迎新春桃花轉運妝🌸Chinese New Year Makeup(with subs) | January 2017 - Duration: 6:04.

Hello! Chinese New Year is gonna be tomorrow!

Wish you all a happy new year!

This is gonna be a makeup look for Chinese New Year,

and it is my first video in Cantonese.

Hope you all would like it and let's get started!

Since my skin is really dry,

I'll first put on a hydrating primer.

Then you can choose a foundation that you like.

I personally like a more dewy foundation.

I am using a foundation from MAC.

I think the finish is really pretty,

and it lasts pretty well on my skin.

In CNY, since you need to go and visit your family,

it's better to choose a foundation that lasts well on your skin.

Then, as usual, just conceal your dark circles.

You don't wanna scare people away with your dark circles in CNY.

And it's better to look fresh and recharged in CNY.

How can we miss out the color red for CNY?

I am going to apply a red cream blush before I powder my face,

Your blush will actually last longer

when you apply a cream blush first.

You can do your blush in whatever way you like,

I usually like to apply a little bit more.

Then I will first apply some powder with a smaller brush

in areas that I put on concealer.

Then use a larger powder brush to set your face

with your favorite setting powder.

Since it's a little drier in the winter time,

if you have normal to dry skin,

you don't need to put too much powder on.

Since I'm not that good in doing my brows,

I didn't film that part.

Now I'm just doing some contouring.

This step is not necessary if you don't usually contour these areas.

I just feel like it makes my face more defined and looks better.

Here comes the eye makeup!

I'll first apply a warm tone,

like an orangey brown as a base color.

I am going to put it all over my lid,

but I will put a little bit more in my crease,

and I'll also put it on my lower lash line.

We have to have some glitter

and gold for Chinese New Year!

I am using a glittery orangey gold eyeshadow

as the major color of the eye makeup look.

I am using the color for both my eyelid and lower lash line.

This eyeshadow is pretty glittery,

but I think it suits this look very well.

Then we'll use a darker orangey brown color,

to define our eyes a little more at the outer corners of the eyes.

I will use a gel eyeliner in a warm-toned brown shade

since gel liner will create a softer look,

and it's better to have a softer look while seeing your family in CNY.

I will wing my liner a little bit more today

so I will look more fresh and recharged.

I picked a red lip color for today,

so I don't want the eye makeup to be too red.

But it feels weird to miss out the color red in a CNY makeup...

So I decided to use a brown with a strong red undertone

to put it very close to the outer third of my lower lash line.

As I mentioned, gold color is essential for CNY!

So I'm using a pale gold color to highlight my inner corners.

Then I am going to use a orangey gold glitter

it is gonna show up even more than the pale gold eyeshadow.

I will put it over the pale gold shade we put earlier.

Since it takes very long for me to curl my lashes,

so I will do it off camera.

And this is the mascara I'm going to use today.

Here I'm going to use a blush in a lavender color

and put it on the highest points of my cheeks.

It will help to brighten up your complexion.

And just contouring my face here.

I'm using a pale gold highlighter to highlight the bridge of my nose.

Here comes the highlight of the look- the red lips!

The red lipstick I picked today

has a very slight hint of pink.

I applied the lipstick at the center of my lips

and blend it out with a brush.

It will look much more natural this way.

So here's the finished look~

Wish you all a happy new year!

Please give this video a thumbs up if you enjoyed it,

and SUBSCRIBE to my channel for future videos!

I'll see you all next time, bye! :)

For more infomation >> 🌸新年迎新春桃花轉運妝🌸Chinese New Year Makeup(with subs) | January 2017 - Duration: 6:04.

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Telemundo abre división de películas | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:47.

For more infomation >> Telemundo abre división de películas | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:47.

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Inmigrantes protestan contra Trump en Pensilvania | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 1:17.

For more infomation >> Inmigrantes protestan contra Trump en Pensilvania | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 1:17.

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Chofer borracho choca contra una patrulla en Luisiana | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:32.

For more infomation >> Chofer borracho choca contra una patrulla en Luisiana | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:32.

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Silence

For more infomation >> Silence

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Buy 1 Get 3 Free

For more infomation >> Buy 1 Get 3 Free

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Policías en R. Dominicana agredieron a motoristas | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:39.

For more infomation >> Policías en R. Dominicana agredieron a motoristas | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:39.

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Dads Who Play Barbie®

For more infomation >> Dads Who Play Barbie®

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Silence

For more infomation >> Silence

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Nissan Pulsar 1.2 DIG-T BUSINESS EDITION Navi | Achteruitrijcame - Duration: 1:14.

For more infomation >> Nissan Pulsar 1.2 DIG-T BUSINESS EDITION Navi | Achteruitrijcame - Duration: 1:14.

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today's Events Chaos Out of Order - Duration: 8:28.

today's Events Chaos Out of Order.

By James Corbett.

Well, we�ve all survived inauguration weekend�so far. That�s a start, right? It�s certainly

a sign of something when we take some measure of comfort in the fact that the world hasn�t

quite ended yet, but you don�t need me to tell you that.

Everyone can feel it deep down. Whether it�s the fake news squawking their propaganda louder

than ever, or protests and riots mixed with rumors of protests and riots, or wars of words

between the newly-crowned president and� well, almost everyone, things seem to be full-on

crazy and getting crazier by the minute.

Don�t you just wish for some �normality� right now? Wouldn�t it be nice to go back

to that bygone time of a couple of decades ago when the world didn�t seem so insane?

hat�s the trick. That�s exactly what you�re supposed to be feeling right now. Allow me

to explain.

You see, everyone in �conspiracy-land� is familiar with that old Masonic dictum,

ordo ab chao.

For those who stumbled onto this article from �Fake-news-establishment-land,� that�s

Latin for �order out of chaos,� and it refers to the tried-and-true method of would-be

tyrants everywhere for moving society in a given direction.

In short: Generate chaos in order to provide the type of �order� you wanted all along.

In order to pass a PATRIOT Act, you need a 9/11. So, if you were a would-be tyrant who

wanted to gain total control over the internet via an i-PATRIOT Act, what would you do?

If you answered �Stage a cyber 9/11!� then give yourself a cookie; you get the idea.

(Bonus points if you suggested appointing one of the key 9/11 cover-up artists to the

position of �cyberczar.�)

But there�s a corollary to �order out of chaos� that often gets overlooked: If

you want to transition from one order to the next (an �old world order� to a �new

world order,� if you will), then you need to create chaos. And the bigger the transition,

the more havoc needs to be generated in order to bring it about.

It would be difficult to argue that we�re not going through such a transition right

now. We are simultaneously facing:

The breakdown of the international monetary order.

The breakdown of the international security order (aka �Pax Americana�).

The breakdown of the political order (in America, Britain, Italy, Korea and elsewhere).

The breakdown of societal order (in America, Europe and elsewhere).

That�s a lot of chaos. And everyone is feeling it. There are worries about trade wars and

new trade compacts that might emerge in the coming years. There are worries about actual

wars that might take place if the bellicose warmongering from certain circles isn�t

tamped down soon.

To understand how chaotic things are, just look at a few of the radically different but

equally plausible scenarios describing how things might unfold in the Trump era:

Scenario 1: Trump pivots to the Chinese boogeyman and buddies up with Putin, driving a wedge

between the blossoming Sino-Russian friendship.

Raising tariffs, rocking the boat on Taiwan and taking back the South China Sea by force

convinces China (rocked by a plunging yuan and a stalling economy) to retreat back into

their �Middle Kingdom� shell.

Scenario 2: Trump pulls the US out of the TPP, puts up stiff tariffs on Chinese goods

and tells America�s proxies in the Asia-Pacific that if they want the US military umbrella

they had better be willing to pay for it.

China comes along offering its own free trade deal to fill the vacuum left by the retreating

Americans. Other nations in the region (like the Philippines and even Australia) turn away

from the US and embrace the new China-led Asia-Pacific order.

Scenario 3: Secretary of State Tillerson gets his way and the US labels Russia a danger

that must be dealt with. Tougher sanctions lead to more wars of words and saber rattling.

Sensing opportunity, Team Trump decides to flip the script with China, making concessions

to allow Beijing more leeway in the South China Sea. In return, Washington demands (and

receives) Chinese support for sanctions against Moscow, severing the emerging Beijing-Moscow

axis.

And those are just the Asia-Pacific scenarios. I could go on, of course. And on and on, if

need be.

Scenarios in which Iran becomes the next boogeyman for Uncle Sam, kicking off an even more serious

level of confrontation with Russia in the Middle East, contrast with scenarios in which

Trump realizes his �only Nixon could go to China� moment in Tehran, befriending

the Iranians and re-normalizing relations in a bid to recoup some of the hundreds of

billions of dollars in lost business as a result of frosty relations.

Scenarios where the �wave of populism� from 2016 translates into nationalist victories

at the polls in Europe, putting the final nails in the coffin of the EU, contrast with

scenarios where the EU redoubles its efforts and uses the migrant crisis or the Italian

banking crisis (or whatever the next crisis happens to be) as an excuse to take more power.

All of these scenarios are wildly different, some even contradictory. And yet they all

seem equally plausible. In fact, they could all be wrong and something even more outrageous

could be the story of 2017.

If this ended up being the year of the first North Korean nuclear attack or the rise of

a neo-Communist insurgency in the West or an all-out cyberwar between major powers or

a fake alien invasion, who would even be surprised at this point?

We�ve lost our sense of normal. There is only chaos.

Of course, we have to understand that we have been brought to this point for a reason. In

order to get their new order, the powers-that-shouldn�t-be had to generate this current chaos.

The unprecedented levels of social, political and economic tension we are experiencing right

now are part of a game plan. To reset the chess pieces, the board has to be knocked

over first.

This presents us with a glass-half-full/glass-half-empty situation. When the game board is overturned,

the would-be tyrants waste no time in getting to work, trying to arrange things to their

liking.

But their control is not total. At times like this, when the glacial status quo has been

liquefied and everything is in flux, we have an opportunity for true change.

I can attest to the fact that over the years I have watched as more and more people have

unplugged from the matrix and started to learn the truth about false flag terrorism, the

central bank fraud, the creeping police state and other such vital issues.

Often, they have been woken from their slumbers by a major shock to the system: a 9/11, a

Lehman collapse, or some other chaos-generating incident.

And so it is that those sowing the chaos may reap the whirlwind of an ever-more-awake public,

rejecting the phony solutions that the so-called �elite� try to shove down its throat.

It�s a race between us and them, but in this window of opportunity there are more

people than ever before who are at least receptive to hearing the truth.

Still, I do find it worrying that almost all of my imagined scenarios for the coming year

involve war between major powers.

For more infomation >> today's Events Chaos Out of Order - Duration: 8:28.

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Audit suggests major issues with DOT cost estimates, budget - Duration: 2:22.

For more infomation >> Audit suggests major issues with DOT cost estimates, budget - Duration: 2:22.

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Jan Kraybill's Super Bowl Pipe Organ Program | Arts Upload - Duration: 4:26.

- It''s no secret that February 5th

will be a big day for football fans.

But for the last 17 years,

Super Bowl Sundays have also been a great opportunity

to hear the giant pipe organs

found at the Community of Christ Church complex in Independence.

Jan Kraybill didn''t exactly realize she was starting

a counter-programming tradition,

but over the years, she''s embraced and embellished

this chance to showcase a true local treasure.

[organ playing]

♪ ♪

- Pipe organs, each pipe speaks one note at one volume.

That''s all it knows how to do.

So that''s why you need so many pipes

to make so many different kinds of sounds.

So for instance, from here to here is 61 notes.

I have to have 61 pipes. That''s just for the trumpet.

Now I want to be a flute, I have to have 61 flutes.

So, when you do the math, in this organ,

it ends up being 6,334 pipes.

Some of the pipes are behind me,

but some of them are a football field-length away,

back in the back of the room.

And it happens in this organ

that the loudest pipes in the organ

are actually back there.

There''s this big set of trumpets.

[organ playing]

They make a significant noise and I love it.

♪ ♪

For 18 years,

I have been doing these Super Bowl Sunday concerts.

They didn''t start because I''m a sports fan.

They started because I''m very naive.

And I was 18 years ago.

Didn''t realize that a concert date that I had chosen

was actually the Super Bowl.

- Having it land on Super Bowl Sunday was wonderful.

It gives folks who may not be sports-minded

something else to do that day.

But also those who are sports-minded,

it shows a real wonderful blend of what we can be

and how we can be together.

- It was a very creative idea,

and certainly the audiences that come for it,

so it''s been a success and more power to her.

[organ playing]

♪ ♪

N- 2016 was an interesting year for all of us in the world,

but specifically in this country with the election.

So I started thinking about a concert

designed around the concept of conversing,

of interacting with each other.

[playing "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" theme]

♪ ♪

That scene from "Close Encounters,"

it''s coincidentally called "The Conversation."

And it''s conversing with the other, the enemy.

You know, they weren''t sure in that film

what they were about to encounter.

[transmitting music notes]

[glass shattering]

[repeating music notes]

[repeating music notes]

7,000 people came to the inaugural concert on this organ

to hear and see this organ be played

for its very first time.

[organ playing]

- The times have changed, of course.

but the organ has a unique contribution to make

to the music world in our city,

and I''m so grateful that we have these opportunities

to expose people and to bring them along

and excite them about this amazing instrument.

[organ playing]

- So I''m hoping that this concert helps people

to explore different views

and listen to some music that might be unfamiliar to them.

And maybe walk away saying this is worth pursuing,

talking with people that I might consider to be "other."

[organ playing]

♪ ♪

- Here on "Arts Upload," we like to believe that Kansas City

is America''s creative crossroads,

so it really was no surprise so when just as soon

as the streetcar was up and running,

art started popping up all around it.

Last summer, there were temporary

Art on the Route installations at various stops,

even performances by great musicians

like Beau Bledsoe.

Another of the things we like to do on "Arts Upload"

is share stories from other PBS stations

around the country like this next one,

which reminded us of artists we often met

doing "Rare Visions and Roadside Revelations."

Meet Dan Bentley, a flea market devotee

in Rochester, New York. [bell clanging]

[jazzy music]

- You four.

♪ ♪

- That''s cool, but it''s probably a reproduction.

- Yeah. - Made in China.

- Thank you very much. Have a great day.

- What are you thinking on these?

- I would like you to tell me. - I''d give you a dollar for it.

- You know what? I''ll take a dollar for it.

- My name''s Dan Bentley. I''m from Rochester, New York.

And I''m an artist that recycles vintage products

into sculptures so that we can continue to enjoy them.

Old aluminum kitchenware stuff is cool.

"Schrader''s Truly Delicious Hots and Steamers.

"Containing round steak.

Made in Minnesota."

Yeah, that''s cool.

I''m gonna use her arms. They''re bent the other--

bent up, they''re good feets.

And it''s a dollar.

Robot legs.

Pretty cool.

I spent 35 years in product design

and really gained an appreciation

of iconic design work.

And I see a lot of it going by the wayside

because it''s been replaced by more modern products.

And I just think that design is great enough

that we need to continue to enjoy it.

♪ ♪

I just kinda realized what I was doing

after a year or so of building sculptures,

and everything is turning out to be robots

because I''m kind of a robot nut.

Blending this obsession with robots

with product design, what I found myself doing

was showcasing these products.

I really enjoy collecting the products,

finding the products at flea market,

finding things that represent certain style periods.

I wind up with this collection of pieces,

and sometimes it''s--sometimes it''s two or three sets

of things I might use for feet,

but I just start puzzling pieces together.

Lots of masking tape, balancing things up

and seeing how they fit. Are the proportions right?

And once I do decide that,

that these are the pieces,

then I start figuring out how am I gonna put them together.

[grinder grinding]

So I do a mockup,

and when I''m happy with that,

then I disassemble everything,

and the I start restoring all the pieces.

You know, get everything looking absolutely brand-new.

[upbeat music]

I decided that I was not gonna build a sculpture

that didn''t centerpiece

at least iconic design element.

♪ ♪

You know, once people look past the robot,

which is what they-- their first reaction,

then they start to realize, "Oh, that''s a percolator.

My mom had one of those," and, "Isn''t that cool?"

♪ ♪

You know, or it just brings back a lot of memories for people,

and then they realize that because it''s great design,

you know, it was such well-designed products

that this, you know, time stamp of certain periods

that it really resonates with people.

♪ ♪

I''ll see a product

and know that that''s gonna be a torso

or that''s a head or those are legs.

And, you know, and I know that that has to be

pretty much unchanged in the sculpture.

♪ ♪

I can''t let it off the bench.

It''s not done for me until it makes me smile,

that I see that it has a personality.

It has a character.

Sometimes it''s whimsical, sometimes it''s more serious.

Yeah, it has to have a personality.

- Well, you know, we''ve actually managed to cover

a pretty good chunk of the 2.3 mile route

with everything from robots to runways

and some pretty good music sprinkled in as well.

So I officially pronounce this episode

of "Arts Upload" complete.

Next week, would you believe chicken footstools

from The Citygirl Farm?

Till then, I''m Randy Mason. Thanks for watching.

[playing harp]

♪ ♪

- ♪ You can''t have ♪

♪ Who you fall in love with ♪

♪ You can''t have ♪

announcer: Production funding for "Arts Upload"

has been provided in part by:

For more infomation >> Jan Kraybill's Super Bowl Pipe Organ Program | Arts Upload - Duration: 4:26.

-------------------------------------------

Monkey Forest 🐒 Ubud - Denpasar✔Backpacking Bali#01 German+English Subtitles - Duration: 7:53.

Good morning from Denpasar

in Bali

our first morning, we go and have breakfast now

we're going to go to ubud today

we have to organise everything

I show you where we live

here's the room

here you go out :)

wow it's hot

I close the door

we want to..

go out of the city already

because the beautiful places are outside

and yes...

see you later

it's boiling hot here

yes..

we organized a bus

we get picked up at 01pm

roughly a 45 minutes drive

ubud :)

roughly 6 euro per person

that's alright

we're walking down the road and go eat something

mmmmhm what do you have for lunch?

Nasi Goreng

ah delicious, love it here :)

so

hello

we arrived at our accomodation

we walked a lot of steps up and down :)

with our luggage

we walked until here

we changed clothes puh

so

but it's very nice here and really cheap

roughly

8 dollars a night alltogether

yes

that's really ok

we came with two other germans

they've booked here already

because of that we just went with them

we were lucky and joined them, we actually didn't organize anything :)

This is how you do it

we do it always spontanious :D

here's the room

Ramona show them

The scooters :)

so, we're walking here and here are monkeys everywhere

I think they are used to humans

yeah so do I

cheers :)

we're on the way to the monkey forest

Today again with Joans and Marc

PEACE :)

So, that was it for today

if you

liked the video

then always remember to like it please

we have to be careful now that we don' get knocked down :D

remember to like it like always :)

hit the subscribe button

follow us

and we want to..

thank all our subscribers

thank you for following us

it's always great

we're happy about each comment

all the comments you write

thank you

and

like i said..

actually I never said that :D

we would be peased

to inspire many people for travelling

yes

because it's wonderful

and we really have a lot of fun

now it became an open end

at the beginning we actually planned only one year

so, thank you all

keep going

hit the subscribe button

if you still want to see us...

walking through the rainseason :D

see you next time :)

and here we have, ah hello :)

how are you?

good

say hello to the camera

For more infomation >> Monkey Forest 🐒 Ubud - Denpasar✔Backpacking Bali#01 German+English Subtitles - Duration: 7:53.

-------------------------------------------

(ENG) 연예인을 꿈꾸는 분들께 If you wanna be a Kpop Idol - Duration: 11:39.

Hey guys its JESSICA HERE!! :)

First, I would like to introduce myself to the ones who first came to my video.

Im Jessica, hahha, I'm a student, and I have an experience of being a trainee for about 3 years in Korea.

You guy might have noticed already looking at the title,

I made this video for the ones who wish to be a kpop,

so hope you guys watch till the end and find it helpful :D

Its been approximately half a year that I stopped being a trainee

And I decided to quit by myself.

You usually start being a trainee when you are mid or late 10s in Korea.

I also started being a trainee when I was 13.

One of the reason why I stopped it, is because of loneliness.

I wasn't a person who feels lonely during that time (Now I am. lol)

Since I use to live outside Korea, so my family and friends were in abroad.

And I was an outlier who wanted to be a kpop star..

At first, I didn't really care about the fact that Im not seeing my family and friends,

But since I wasn't with them.. every time I felt lost, I was so lonely :(

If theres ONE thing I can conclude,

People gets mentally apart if their physically apart. (except family)

Although you know anyone in Korea, you'll not get to meet them often.

So you gradually get apart…

I used to lose feelings to the ones I liked too.

And since I almost got into a stage to debut, I had to delete ALL my social media.

You know that you barely talk to the ones who aren't so close with you right

You only maintain the relationship through social media.

But since the moment I deleted all my social media, I totally lose the relationship between them.

I think this s a HUGE part, because come on, were teenagers..

You know how you feel when you are lonely.

Next, I had MUCH of a burden when it comes to skills.

First of all, in the field of kpop companies, they don't really praise you much.

I mean they would, but not as much as you'd think.

But we all love being praised..

They would expect a lot from you but where I am is still remote from that point.

I think that gave me a huge burden..

Yes, I do wanna do better but skill is not something that would improve in single night.

And DIET.

It think this is like the title of majority of the celebrities. these days,

And I heard this exceeding info from the company.

That your weight in kg, should be 120 minus your height in cm.

During the time I was a trainee, my height was 160cm. if 120 was subtracted, its 40kg.

So that means my weight should be 40kg.

I was quite young during that time so the company never gave me a burden,

But when they started talking about debut,

I grew taller, which was 167cm, and I was like 50kg.

So although Im not a greedy person when it comes to eating,I felt hungry

I totally thought that not eating is a torture.

And I felt like, Im just a trainee now. how could I handle this later on?

NEXT one was future's uncertainty, and anguish over waiting.

Being in that field? is just loads of uncertainty.

They might suddenly say that your gonna debut next month!

No one can predict really..

And thats actually the thing there. Where ever you go? its like that.

Its gets even worse after your debut.

Lets say you finally had your debut.

There are tons of pops out there if you know..

You should be the shining gem among them which is pretty challenging.

So I thought that I couldn't do this without even knowing whats gonna happen.

This phenomenon is followed by contracts.

There are 2 kinds of contract in the entertainments.

First is the trainee contract, and the official contract.

The trainee contract is relatively shorter than the official one.

But the minimum term for the official one is 7 years.

You know that 7 years isn't short for a teenager. A year is even long for us.

I asked myself if I can survive for 7 years without knowing whats gonna happen,

unhealthy diet, and carrying burden.

Last, this is one of the biggest reason why I stopped.

I had a poor stamina and body.

But I had to dance everyday so then I got injured, so bad.

I couldn't dance although I had to.

So yeah, these are basically the reasons why I stopped.

And I told you that its been half a year right.

My life after that, is just normal.

Its not that Im satisfied, neither regretful.

Ill tell you the things I earned and lost.

First, obviously, Skills.

I wasn't a good singer and dancer before I got in.

Its not that Im gonna use all the skills somewhere else generally.

But I think it worth it for my own satisfaction. lol

Next thing I learned was socializing.

It is something thats pretty much related to economics.

Its a business, and Im generally an employee in a sense.

People who has so same aim gather together and work hard in their chosen role.

Having a good relationship between all of them is literally considered as socializing.

I met so many kinds of people there. Like, too many.

And I realized, how hard it is to communicate with them without hurting their feelings.

Experiencing those might give me a negative or positive effect,

but I want to believe that its positive.

Time to talk about the things I lost.

Some of you might know this already, but for those who doesn't,

I didn't go to school for a year.

I went back and forth to the Phils to go to school in the 2nd year of being a trainee,

But then I stopped again in the third. lol

Doing that gave me a big challenge in academics.

So I want to tell you to never ever give up your school life.

Although you had your debut,

there will come a time when you success or fail.

If you failed, you can't stay in that field anymore for a long time since you'll age.

By that time, the range of 2nd jobs you can do will surely lessen since you didn't go to school properly.

Thankfully I didn't give up in my academics,

so I didn't face a plight, such as going in to a younger grade or something.

So you should always be anxious about the plight thats gonna happen.

Since theres no guarantee that you'll be successful.

Not saying that you should be outstanding or something..

But just a passing grades are fine when ur a trainee.

No pressure!!

If you would ask me if I regret quitting,

I would say no.

I think that I lose more things than the things I earned

but there still is things that I earned so..

I guess most of the people watching this video is pretty much interested in kpop.

First, having a dream itself is a very happy thing I guess.

Always know that TOO MUCH anxiousness will give you sickness.

Have you ever heard about this statement that theres no parent who will defeat their children.

I believe in that statement.

So if any of your family member isn't allowing you, you can always change their mind.

With your strong will of course.

Never mind all the ********* around you, just believe in your self :D

If you feel lost, (like me) just try to think about positive things.

If going through a struggle now, there will always come a time that you'll feel better.

Don't lose your moment of happiness because of anxiety

Dont procrastinate the choice that you have to make because of the concerns.

Or else you'll end up wasting time.

Just wanna wish u guys all the LUCK!!!!!

Thanks for watching till the end guys!!

If your interested to these topics pls check it out!!

Subscribe this channel for more videos,

Like this video if you enjoyed.

BYEEEEEEEEE <3

For more infomation >> (ENG) 연예인을 꿈꾸는 분들께 If you wanna be a Kpop Idol - Duration: 11:39.

-------------------------------------------

Calvin Arsenia | Arts Upload - Duration: 7:21.

Hey, just because we''re one host down this week on "Arts Upload,"

doesn''t mean that I can''t get a little help, right?

Call it coincidence, but here''s producer Ashley Holcroft.

Hey, Ashley. - Hey there, Randy.

Question for you. What does Prohibition Hall,

The Brick, and Leawood Baptist Church all have in common?

- [chuckles] It''s cold, I don''t know.

- [chuckles] They''re all places that Calvin Arsenia

has played just this last month.

- Ah, Calvin. I actually saw him for the first time

at the Kauffman Center''s fifth anniversary with his harp.

He was awesome. - Amazing.

And thanks to our partnership with "KC Studio" magazine,

I got a chance to hang out with him

and learn that he not only plays the harp,

but the piano, the uke, the banjo, and so much more.

Take a look.

[instrumental music]

♪ ♪

The summer of 2016 saw a unique birthday celebration

for a unique landmark.

And in fitting fashion, the party was just as unorthodox.

Arts of all kinds were put on display

for the huge crowds that filtered in throughout the day.

From dance to opera to culinary to an array of music.

Ranging from familiar KC faces

to someone who has been quietly shaking up the scene

with a very new take.

[soft music]

♪ ♪

♪ There''s nothing that your heart would do ♪

♪ ♪

♪ Your daddy and your mommy stand ♪

- At 26, multi-instrumentalist Calvin Arsenia

isn''t merely looking to sound good;

that would be too simple.

No, he''s looking to change the atmosphere

by creating moments of transcendence.

- I have a very high expectation for music

and live music, in particular.

To influence and transform a space and an audience

and the way that they feel that room in that time,

to create these moments where people leave inspired

and refreshed and, you know,

there''s a little bit of pressure.

I love playing with tension in music.

But that pressure turns into release, you know.

It''s like a massage where there''s, you know,

you''re kneading the knots through distant chords

and then all of a sudden, you go into this very serene

and, you know, major chords.

And because of that, it''s really hard for me

to go into a room and have already determined

what songs I want to play or how I''m going to play them

because I really want to meet an audience where they are

and invite them into my space,

and then we go somewhere together.

N- Calvin began his relationship with the harp in 2010.

After a captivating introduction

via Florence + the Machine...

- ♪ Happiness hit her ♪

- Bjoöörk...

[Bjoöörk singing]

- And Joanna Newsom... - ♪ The days grew shorter ♪

♪ I was sure if she came ''round ♪

♪ I''d hold my ground, I''d endure ♪

- And I''ve always been a little bit more ambitious

than I ought to be, and so I went on a hunt

around Kansas City to look for a harpist

that would play with me.

What I found was a whole bunch of people

who were very classically trained

and were beautiful people, but to play, you know,

original compositions, to do the rehearsal time,

to move the harp, like, it was gonna be

quite a task to ask of anybody.

So I found a harp studio that let me rent a harp,

and I couldn''t afford to rent the harp and to take lessons,

so I just took the harp, and I learned from YouTube

for about a year, and it was horrible.

- Fortunately...

- It''s really hard to make actually, like,

bad sounds on the harp.

And so I would take it, you know, everywhere.

- But everywhere doesn''t include international travel.

Calvin joined a mission trip

to Edinburgh, Scotland in 2014,

and man and harp would have to part.

But that didn''t last for long.

- I made it about one or two weeks before I was, like,

craving a harp, and I was like,

"I have to play. I have to--have to play."

And so I rented another one and I took it to every,

kind of, jam session or open mic that I could.

And I remember, sometimes I would be playing

if there was open mics,

and my hands would just tremble and tremor.

And my voice-- I was just so nervous, and...

[chuckles] because with the guitar and the piano,

like, I''ve been confident on those for a long time

before I was actually playing and the expectation,

you know, for me to be able to deliver what I wanted

to do on an instrument, like,

I had that expectation of myself,

and I had made that expectation for my audience.

And so, yeah, I would just shake.

And then, you know, three years later, here I am.

And it''s what I do for a living,

and it''s kinda cool.

♪ If I said the devil made me do it ♪

♪ That''d be the easy way out ♪

♪ But it was God himself that dug me out ♪

♪ Dug the ditch of doubt ♪

♪ The choices I made got me here ♪

A lot of times, I''m able to be the first harpist

that people have seen, and I feel really--

it''s really cool to me.

It''s also kinda scary because I don''t play conventionally,

so it''s cool because I get-- I love to take the harp

in places that it''s never been before.

But sometimes I do get booked and asked to play,

like, banjo or guitars something,

and sometimes I get confused.

And I show up at a venue, like, with a harp and nothing else,

and they''re like, "Wait,

we thought you were gonna play guitar."

I''m like, "But I brought a harp."

[laughing]

- Besides having several albums under his belt

and a packed performance schedule,

Calvin also makes time

for a handful of exceptional students.

- Yeah, I''m getting ready to go in

to teach one of my students. His name is Reno.

And he plays piano.

And Reno plays by ear really, really well.

Loves to improvise, but I just try to give him

some more vocabulary in what he''s doing.

And some different kinds of ways to approach melody and chords

and as well as technique.

I think my job is to help people fall in love

with the process of learning

and learning how to be self-sufficient.

And kind of unveiling these different kinds

of concepts and nuances

rather than trying to teach them how to memorize a piece.

It''s more important to me that they''re able to express

their own ideas and to be able to hear and communicate

and understand the ideas that other people make

so that they can communicate their own stories.

And I''m really excited to see

where my students go in the years to come.

- It''s a journey that holds much promise

for both student and teacher.

As Calvin continues to push the bounds,

taking the harp where it''s never gone before.

- ♪ I had some good over you ♪

- And taking us along for the ride.

- ♪ Before I knew it I was needed ♪

I love getting to do what I love for a living.

And then expose people to the idea

that anything''s possible

if you''re willing to get messy with it

and you might embarrass yourself,

but you just gotta pick yourself up

and keep going for it.

You write--you are the only one who gets to write

the story that you want to tell.

[playing harp]

♪ ♪

- It''s no secret that February 5th

will be a big day for football fans.

But for the last 17 years,

Super Bowl Sundays have also been a great opportunity

to hear the giant pipe organs

found at the Community of Christ Church complex in Independence.

Jan Kraybill didn''t exactly realize she was starting

a counter-programming tradition,

but over the years, she''s embraced and embellished

this chance to showcase a true local treasure.

[organ playing]

♪ ♪

- Pipe organs, each pipe speaks one note at one volume.

That''s all it knows how to do.

So that''s why you need so many pipes

to make so many different kinds of sounds.

So for instance, from here to here is 61 notes.

I have to have 61 pipes. That''s just for the trumpet.

Now I want to be a flute, I have to have 61 flutes.

So, when you do the math, in this organ,

it ends up being 6,334 pipes.

Some of the pipes are behind me,

but some of them are a football field-length away,

back in the back of the room.

And it happens in this organ

that the loudest pipes in the organ

are actually back there.

There''s this big set of trumpets.

[organ playing]

They make a significant noise and I love it.

♪ ♪

For 18 years,

I have been doing these Super Bowl Sunday concerts.

They didn''t start because I''m a sports fan.

They started because I''m very naive.

And I was 18 years ago.

Didn''t realize that a concert date that I had chosen

was actually the Super Bowl.

- Having it land on Super Bowl Sunday was wonderful.

It gives folks who may not be sports-minded

something else to do that day.

But also those who are sports-minded,

it shows a real wonderful blend of what we can be

and how we can be together.

- It was a very creative idea,

and certainly the audiences that come for it,

so it''s been a success and more power to her.

[organ playing]

♪ ♪

N- 2016 was an interesting year for all of us in the world,

but specifically in this country with the election.

So I started thinking about a concert

designed around the concept of conversing,

of interacting with each other.

[playing "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" theme]

♪ ♪

That scene from "Close Encounters,"

it''s coincidentally called "The Conversation."

And it''s conversing with the other, the enemy.

You know, they weren''t sure in that film

what they were about to encounter.

[transmitting music notes]

[glass shattering]

[repeating music notes]

[repeating music notes]

7,000 people came to the inaugural concert on this organ

to hear and see this organ be played

for its very first time.

[organ playing]

- The times have changed, of course.

but the organ has a unique contribution to make

to the music world in our city,

and I''m so grateful that we have these opportunities

to expose people and to bring them along

and excite them about this amazing instrument.

[organ playing]

- So I''m hoping that this concert helps people

to explore different views

and listen to some music that might be unfamiliar to them.

And maybe walk away saying this is worth pursuing,

talking with people that I might consider to be "other."

[organ playing]

♪ ♪

- Here on "Arts Upload," we like to believe that Kansas City

is America''s creative crossroads,

so it really was no surprise so when just as soon

as the streetcar was up and running,

art started popping up all around it.

Last summer, there were temporary

Art on the Route installations at various stops,

even performances by great musicians

like Beau Bledsoe.

Another of the things we like to do on "Arts Upload"

is share stories from other PBS stations

around the country like this next one,

which reminded us of artists we often met

doing "Rare Visions and Roadside Revelations."

Meet Dan Bentley, a flea market devotee

in Rochester, New York. [bell clanging]

[jazzy music]

- You four.

♪ ♪

- That''s cool, but it''s probably a reproduction.

- Yeah. - Made in China.

- Thank you very much. Have a great day.

- What are you thinking on these?

- I would like you to tell me. - I''d give you a dollar for it.

- You know what? I''ll take a dollar for it.

- My name''s Dan Bentley. I''m from Rochester, New York.

And I''m an artist that recycles vintage products

into sculptures so that we can continue to enjoy them.

Old aluminum kitchenware stuff is cool.

"Schrader''s Truly Delicious Hots and Steamers.

"Containing round steak.

Made in Minnesota."

Yeah, that''s cool.

I''m gonna use her arms. They''re bent the other--

bent up, they''re good feets.

And it''s a dollar.

Robot legs.

Pretty cool.

I spent 35 years in product design

and really gained an appreciation

of iconic design work.

And I see a lot of it going by the wayside

because it''s been replaced by more modern products.

And I just think that design is great enough

that we need to continue to enjoy it.

♪ ♪

I just kinda realized what I was doing

after a year or so of building sculptures,

and everything is turning out to be robots

because I''m kind of a robot nut.

Blending this obsession with robots

with product design, what I found myself doing

was showcasing these products.

I really enjoy collecting the products,

finding the products at flea market,

finding things that represent certain style periods.

I wind up with this collection of pieces,

and sometimes it''s--sometimes it''s two or three sets

of things I might use for feet,

but I just start puzzling pieces together.

Lots of masking tape, balancing things up

and seeing how they fit. Are the proportions right?

And once I do decide that,

that these are the pieces,

then I start figuring out how am I gonna put them together.

[grinder grinding]

So I do a mockup,

and when I''m happy with that,

then I disassemble everything,

and the I start restoring all the pieces.

You know, get everything looking absolutely brand-new.

[upbeat music]

I decided that I was not gonna build a sculpture

that didn''t centerpiece

at least iconic design element.

♪ ♪

You know, once people look past the robot,

which is what they-- their first reaction,

then they start to realize, "Oh, that''s a percolator.

My mom had one of those," and, "Isn''t that cool?"

♪ ♪

You know, or it just brings back a lot of memories for people,

and then they realize that because it''s great design,

you know, it was such well-designed products

that this, you know, time stamp of certain periods

that it really resonates with people.

♪ ♪

I''ll see a product

and know that that''s gonna be a torso

or that''s a head or those are legs.

And, you know, and I know that that has to be

pretty much unchanged in the sculpture.

♪ ♪

I can''t let it off the bench.

It''s not done for me until it makes me smile,

that I see that it has a personality.

It has a character.

Sometimes it''s whimsical, sometimes it''s more serious.

Yeah, it has to have a personality.

- Well, you know, we''ve actually managed to cover

a pretty good chunk of the 2.3 mile route

with everything from robots to runways

and some pretty good music sprinkled in as well.

So I officially pronounce this episode

of "Arts Upload" complete.

Next week, would you believe chicken footstools

from The Citygirl Farm?

Till then, I''m Randy Mason. Thanks for watching.

[playing harp]

♪ ♪

- ♪ You can''t have ♪

♪ Who you fall in love with ♪

♪ You can''t have ♪

announcer: Production funding for "Arts Upload"

has been provided in part by:

For more infomation >> Calvin Arsenia | Arts Upload - Duration: 7:21.

-------------------------------------------

Arts Upload | Season 4, Episode 9 - Duration: 26:53.

female announcer: Production funding for "Arts Upload"

has been provided in part by:

- Hi, I''m Randy Mason.

Co-hostless this week while Maris plays the role of new mom

to baby Kieran. Congratulations to them.

But "Arts Upload" is heading down the tracks nonetheless

with stories about a fashion designer from far, far away,

plus a man who makes music on among other things, a harp,

and a woman who plays it on a giant pipe organ.

All that and more ahead on your "Upload."

[DJ Shadow''s "Midnight in a Perfect World" playing]

-♪ Ahh, ooh ♪

♪ ♪

♪ I don''t love you ♪

- Everyone who works in the fashion industry around here

knows there''s more hard work than glamour in it.

Probably no one''s come from farther away to be a part of it

than Nataliya Meyer.

Her family immigrated from Ukraine nearly 20 years ago.

Producer and videographer John McGrath

looks in on this busy, productive designing woman.

- My name is Nataliya Meyer, and I''m addicted to fashion.

[upbeat music]

Zora''s wearing my shoes.

It has to be sexy.

♪ ♪

- Working with Nataliya is always a blast.

- This is the dress. We''ll have a slip under that''s black.

Isn''t this just beautiful?

Um, silks and lace.

I wanted to play with texture. I wanted things to be different.

This is a body suit, and it''s pretty well hidden.

When normal people just watch TV or do their own thing,

I just always do work.

How can we help you?

[soft music]

♪ ♪

So normally the horizontal wrinkle

happens when it''s pretty fitted.

Does it come up a little bit onto the hair when I do it?

- Yeah, like that. - I would like to use

all of this, but not finish it.

I would do a blind stitch and two inches left.

We have been in this location for about three years.

Oh, my kid''s here. How are you doing?

- Good. - Muah.

We have people from all over the world here,

so my husband is American and he''s from Colorado.

- And they''re talking in Russian, of course.

- I''m from Ukraine.

You have danced before in it. I don''t know.

Marina''s from Georgia Republic.

- Our brains just still continue to think Russian.

- Mike is from Iraq.

- What did you do in Iraq before you came here?

- I served with American army for a couple of years.

I really love America.

- I work for Brooks Brothers as a tailor

and for St. John as sales.

I also worked at random master tailors--

for random master tailors throughout the city.

We have kind of a smaller market for everything.

We have some people that will get fabulous clothes,

and we get some people who are looking for evening or fur.

That whatever I can sew with my sewing machine,

I''ll attempt to put together.

It could be a furniture project, outside furniture project.

As long as there''s a pattern to be made,

I can do it.

All right, thank you so much. I''ll see you.

- Thank you. - Thank you, dear.

Have a great day. Appreciate your business.

- Have a good day.

- Bend your fingers on your right hand just a little bit.

There it is. Very nice.

[camera shutter clicking]

- ♪ I need la, la, la, la, la ♪

- Chin down to the left just a little bit.

Oh, I love it so much. Like, oh, there it is.

There it is. See the difference?

- Having a photo shoot will help me

just talk to my consumer.

- Great, one, two, three, go.

- Brad is so talented and so knowledgeable.

- First I look at texture, and then I look at shape.

- I can just send the girl and not even go with him.

And he will just know what to do,

how to place her in the best light

and how to read my story

and how to introduce my story to the viewer.

- Okay, you ready? Go for it.

- I just want to share with people what I do

and let them feel a little bit of how I feel.

It''s like a visual conversation.

It''s not when-- it''s like making art.

You can describe art,

but you can''t really see that until you see it,

so these things are amazing for me.

- Beautiful. Right there.

- Hey, ladies, would you like to know the order?

You''re probably after Shelby.

You''re right after Sheree.

Zora? Can I have you?

- Nataliya, so any time you''re ever gonna wear a dress

or work for her, you just consider yourself blessed.

- You''re gonna be showing basically a whole season.

- Just this season, yeah, yeah. - Okay.

- We love her fashions

and she''s always been giving in the community.

- This is my mama, and this is my papa.

- Hey.

- And this is my sister, but she doesn''t like me to hug her.

But I love--oh, hi.

- Hi. Hello. [laughter]

- Even I come, you know, with my broken language

and nobody knows what to expect from me.

It''s kind of hard to start, you know?

- I was scary. I was afraid I wasn''t gonna make it.

- She actually stared making her own dresses

when she was 14,

so at age of 14, she was like almost--

almost everything was made by her own hand.

- Nataliya just was very interested

in getting her parents here,

and they''ve wanted to several times;

it just hasn''t worked out with work schedules

and other events being, you know, in different places,

so this just--perfect storm. Worked out great,

so they get to come see her and everything.

[upbeat music]

♪ ♪

- What did you guys think?

- Oh, we like it. It''s really nice. Amazing.

- Dad, what did you think? - I like it very much.

- It was awesome as usually. Like, it''s amazing.

- I''m very happy to have such daughter.

- She wants to help people. She wants to do what she can.

And all those things add up to somebody that I want to be with.

When you look at these other people

that are around and in her life,

they see that constantly.

They see the 16 hours a day, 17 hours a day that she works,

and I think that it does inspire people.

It inspires me. It let''s me know that

there''s so much more I could be doing that I''m not.

- She inspires me, you know, not only to be a better model,

but just a better person in general.

And I just love the relationship

that I have with her and working with her.

Being on set with her is always just such a great experience.

- I''ve been here in the United States

for about 13 years now,

so I''m definitely--the way I''m building in my life,

I''m very lucky to be here

where I see my son will be able to have a future

and, you know, accomplish things and have dreams

and be able to accomplish

hopes and dreams and just succeed.

- All right, let''s hear it for Nataliya Meyer.

Stand up, people.

- ♪ Shake, shake, shake, shake ♪

- Like most of her peers here,

Nataliya''s been taking care of business,

getting things ready for the big reveal,

also known as Kansas City Fashion Week in April.

Hey, just because we''re one host down this week on "Arts Upload,"

doesn''t mean that I can''t get a little help, right?

Call it coincidence, but here''s producer Ashley Holcroft.

Hey, Ashley. - Hey there, Randy.

Question for you. What does Prohibition Hall,

The Brick, and Leawood Baptist Church all have in common?

- [chuckles] It''s cold, I don''t know.

- [chuckles] They''re all places that Calvin Arsenia

has played just this last month.

- Ah, Calvin. I actually saw him for the first time

at the Kauffman Center''s fifth anniversary with his harp.

He was awesome. - Amazing.

And thanks to our partnership with "KC Studio" magazine,

I got a chance to hang out with him

and learn that he not only plays the harp,

but the piano, the uke, the banjo, and so much more.

Take a look.

[instrumental music]

♪ ♪

The summer of 2016 saw a unique birthday celebration

for a unique landmark.

And in fitting fashion, the party was just as unorthodox.

Arts of all kinds were put on display

for the huge crowds that filtered in throughout the day.

From dance to opera to culinary to an array of music.

Ranging from familiar KC faces

to someone who has been quietly shaking up the scene

with a very new take.

[soft music]

♪ ♪

♪ There''s nothing that your heart would do ♪

♪ ♪

♪ Your daddy and your mommy stand ♪

- At 26, multi-instrumentalist Calvin Arsenia

isn''t merely looking to sound good;

that would be too simple.

No, he''s looking to change the atmosphere

by creating moments of transcendence.

- I have a very high expectation for music

and live music, in particular.

To influence and transform a space and an audience

and the way that they feel that room in that time,

to create these moments where people leave inspired

and refreshed and, you know,

there''s a little bit of pressure.

I love playing with tension in music.

But that pressure turns into release, you know.

It''s like a massage where there''s, you know,

you''re kneading the knots through distant chords

and then all of a sudden, you go into this very serene

and, you know, major chords.

And because of that, it''s really hard for me

to go into a room and have already determined

what songs I want to play or how I''m going to play them

because I really want to meet an audience where they are

and invite them into my space,

and then we go somewhere together.

N- Calvin began his relationship with the harp in 2010.

After a captivating introduction

via Florence + the Machine...

- ♪ Happiness hit her ♪

- Bjoöörk...

[Bjoöörk singing]

- And Joanna Newsom... - ♪ The days grew shorter ♪

♪ I was sure if she came ''round ♪

♪ I''d hold my ground, I''d endure ♪

- And I''ve always been a little bit more ambitious

than I ought to be, and so I went on a hunt

around Kansas City to look for a harpist

that would play with me.

What I found was a whole bunch of people

who were very classically trained

and were beautiful people, but to play, you know,

original compositions, to do the rehearsal time,

to move the harp, like, it was gonna be

quite a task to ask of anybody.

So I found a harp studio that let me rent a harp,

and I couldn''t afford to rent the harp and to take lessons,

so I just took the harp, and I learned from YouTube

for about a year, and it was horrible.

- Fortunately...

- It''s really hard to make actually, like,

bad sounds on the harp.

And so I would take it, you know, everywhere.

- But everywhere doesn''t include international travel.

Calvin joined a mission trip

to Edinburgh, Scotland in 2014,

and man and harp would have to part.

But that didn''t last for long.

- I made it about one or two weeks before I was, like,

craving a harp, and I was like,

"I have to play. I have to--have to play."

And so I rented another one and I took it to every,

kind of, jam session or open mic that I could.

And I remember, sometimes I would be playing

if there was open mics,

and my hands would just tremble and tremor.

And my voice-- I was just so nervous, and...

[chuckles] because with the guitar and the piano,

like, I''ve been confident on those for a long time

before I was actually playing and the expectation,

you know, for me to be able to deliver what I wanted

to do on an instrument, like,

I had that expectation of myself,

and I had made that expectation for my audience.

And so, yeah, I would just shake.

And then, you know, three years later, here I am.

And it''s what I do for a living,

and it''s kinda cool.

♪ If I said the devil made me do it ♪

♪ That''d be the easy way out ♪

♪ But it was God himself that dug me out ♪

♪ Dug the ditch of doubt ♪

♪ The choices I made got me here ♪

A lot of times, I''m able to be the first harpist

that people have seen, and I feel really--

it''s really cool to me.

It''s also kinda scary because I don''t play conventionally,

so it''s cool because I get-- I love to take the harp

in places that it''s never been before.

But sometimes I do get booked and asked to play,

like, banjo or guitars something,

and sometimes I get confused.

And I show up at a venue, like, with a harp and nothing else,

and they''re like, "Wait,

we thought you were gonna play guitar."

I''m like, "But I brought a harp."

[laughing]

- Besides having several albums under his belt

and a packed performance schedule,

Calvin also makes time

for a handful of exceptional students.

- Yeah, I''m getting ready to go in

to teach one of my students. His name is Reno.

And he plays piano.

And Reno plays by ear really, really well.

Loves to improvise, but I just try to give him

some more vocabulary in what he''s doing.

And some different kinds of ways to approach melody and chords

and as well as technique.

I think my job is to help people fall in love

with the process of learning

and learning how to be self-sufficient.

And kind of unveiling these different kinds

of concepts and nuances

rather than trying to teach them how to memorize a piece.

It''s more important to me that they''re able to express

their own ideas and to be able to hear and communicate

and understand the ideas that other people make

so that they can communicate their own stories.

And I''m really excited to see

where my students go in the years to come.

- It''s a journey that holds much promise

for both student and teacher.

As Calvin continues to push the bounds,

taking the harp where it''s never gone before.

- ♪ I had some good over you ♪

- And taking us along for the ride.

- ♪ Before I knew it I was needed ♪

I love getting to do what I love for a living.

And then expose people to the idea

that anything''s possible

if you''re willing to get messy with it

and you might embarrass yourself,

but you just gotta pick yourself up

and keep going for it.

You write--you are the only one who gets to write

the story that you want to tell.

[playing harp]

♪ ♪

- It''s no secret that February 5th

will be a big day for football fans.

But for the last 17 years,

Super Bowl Sundays have also been a great opportunity

to hear the giant pipe organs

found at the Community of Christ Church complex in Independence.

Jan Kraybill didn''t exactly realize she was starting

a counter-programming tradition,

but over the years, she''s embraced and embellished

this chance to showcase a true local treasure.

[organ playing]

♪ ♪

- Pipe organs, each pipe speaks one note at one volume.

That''s all it knows how to do.

So that''s why you need so many pipes

to make so many different kinds of sounds.

So for instance, from here to here is 61 notes.

I have to have 61 pipes. That''s just for the trumpet.

Now I want to be a flute, I have to have 61 flutes.

So, when you do the math, in this organ,

it ends up being 6,334 pipes.

Some of the pipes are behind me,

but some of them are a football field-length away,

back in the back of the room.

And it happens in this organ

that the loudest pipes in the organ

are actually back there.

There''s this big set of trumpets.

[organ playing]

They make a significant noise and I love it.

♪ ♪

For 18 years,

I have been doing these Super Bowl Sunday concerts.

They didn''t start because I''m a sports fan.

They started because I''m very naive.

And I was 18 years ago.

Didn''t realize that a concert date that I had chosen

was actually the Super Bowl.

- Having it land on Super Bowl Sunday was wonderful.

It gives folks who may not be sports-minded

something else to do that day.

But also those who are sports-minded,

it shows a real wonderful blend of what we can be

and how we can be together.

- It was a very creative idea,

and certainly the audiences that come for it,

so it''s been a success and more power to her.

[organ playing]

♪ ♪

N- 2016 was an interesting year for all of us in the world,

but specifically in this country with the election.

So I started thinking about a concert

designed around the concept of conversing,

of interacting with each other.

[playing "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" theme]

♪ ♪

That scene from "Close Encounters,"

it''s coincidentally called "The Conversation."

And it''s conversing with the other, the enemy.

You know, they weren''t sure in that film

what they were about to encounter.

[transmitting music notes]

[glass shattering]

[repeating music notes]

[repeating music notes]

7,000 people came to the inaugural concert on this organ

to hear and see this organ be played

for its very first time.

[organ playing]

- The times have changed, of course.

but the organ has a unique contribution to make

to the music world in our city,

and I''m so grateful that we have these opportunities

to expose people and to bring them along

and excite them about this amazing instrument.

[organ playing]

- So I''m hoping that this concert helps people

to explore different views

and listen to some music that might be unfamiliar to them.

And maybe walk away saying this is worth pursuing,

talking with people that I might consider to be "other."

[organ playing]

♪ ♪

- Here on "Arts Upload," we like to believe that Kansas City

is America''s creative crossroads,

so it really was no surprise so when just as soon

as the streetcar was up and running,

art started popping up all around it.

Last summer, there were temporary

Art on the Route installations at various stops,

even performances by great musicians

like Beau Bledsoe.

Another of the things we like to do on "Arts Upload"

is share stories from other PBS stations

around the country like this next one,

which reminded us of artists we often met

doing "Rare Visions and Roadside Revelations."

Meet Dan Bentley, a flea market devotee

in Rochester, New York. [bell clanging]

[jazzy music]

- You four.

♪ ♪

- That''s cool, but it''s probably a reproduction.

- Yeah. - Made in China.

- Thank you very much. Have a great day.

- What are you thinking on these?

- I would like you to tell me. - I''d give you a dollar for it.

- You know what? I''ll take a dollar for it.

- My name''s Dan Bentley. I''m from Rochester, New York.

And I''m an artist that recycles vintage products

into sculptures so that we can continue to enjoy them.

Old aluminum kitchenware stuff is cool.

"Schrader''s Truly Delicious Hots and Steamers.

"Containing round steak.

Made in Minnesota."

Yeah, that''s cool.

I''m gonna use her arms. They''re bent the other--

bent up, they''re good feets.

And it''s a dollar.

Robot legs.

Pretty cool.

I spent 35 years in product design

and really gained an appreciation

of iconic design work.

And I see a lot of it going by the wayside

because it''s been replaced by more modern products.

And I just think that design is great enough

that we need to continue to enjoy it.

♪ ♪

I just kinda realized what I was doing

after a year or so of building sculptures,

and everything is turning out to be robots

because I''m kind of a robot nut.

Blending this obsession with robots

with product design, what I found myself doing

was showcasing these products.

I really enjoy collecting the products,

finding the products at flea market,

finding things that represent certain style periods.

I wind up with this collection of pieces,

and sometimes it''s--sometimes it''s two or three sets

of things I might use for feet,

but I just start puzzling pieces together.

Lots of masking tape, balancing things up

and seeing how they fit. Are the proportions right?

And once I do decide that,

that these are the pieces,

then I start figuring out how am I gonna put them together.

[grinder grinding]

So I do a mockup,

and when I''m happy with that,

then I disassemble everything,

and the I start restoring all the pieces.

You know, get everything looking absolutely brand-new.

[upbeat music]

I decided that I was not gonna build a sculpture

that didn''t centerpiece

at least iconic design element.

♪ ♪

You know, once people look past the robot,

which is what they-- their first reaction,

then they start to realize, "Oh, that''s a percolator.

My mom had one of those," and, "Isn''t that cool?"

♪ ♪

You know, or it just brings back a lot of memories for people,

and then they realize that because it''s great design,

you know, it was such well-designed products

that this, you know, time stamp of certain periods

that it really resonates with people.

♪ ♪

I''ll see a product

and know that that''s gonna be a torso

or that''s a head or those are legs.

And, you know, and I know that that has to be

pretty much unchanged in the sculpture.

♪ ♪

I can''t let it off the bench.

It''s not done for me until it makes me smile,

that I see that it has a personality.

It has a character.

Sometimes it''s whimsical, sometimes it''s more serious.

Yeah, it has to have a personality.

- Well, you know, we''ve actually managed to cover

a pretty good chunk of the 2.3 mile route

with everything from robots to runways

and some pretty good music sprinkled in as well.

So I officially pronounce this episode

of "Arts Upload" complete.

Next week, would you believe chicken footstools

from The Citygirl Farm?

Till then, I''m Randy Mason. Thanks for watching.

[playing harp]

♪ ♪

- ♪ You can''t have ♪

♪ Who you fall in love with ♪

♪ You can''t have ♪

announcer: Production funding for "Arts Upload"

has been provided in part by:

For more infomation >> Arts Upload | Season 4, Episode 9 - Duration: 26:53.

-------------------------------------------

Police: Woman Abused As Child Had Friend Beat Kids For Her - Duration: 1:57.

THIS BREAKING NEWS STORIES AND

BRING UPDATES LATER IN OUR

NEWSCASTS.

A MOTHER AND FRIEND ARE NOW

FACING CHARGES.

THE MOTHER CONVINCED HER FRIEND

TO SPANK HER CHILDREN FOR HER

SO SHE WOULD NOT HAVE TO DO IT

FOR HERSELF.

Reporter: A MOTHER AND HER

FRIENDS ARE BOTH FACING CHARGES

AFTER THE CHILDREN WERE BEATEN

TO THE POINT THEY HAD BRUISES.

HARDENING SAID THAT SHE CALLED

HER, THEY WERE BEING

DISRESPECTFUL TO HER AND NOT

LISTENING TO HER.

THE CHILDREN WERE BOTH

INTERVIEWED AT CHILDREN'S

HOSPITAL THIS WEEK.

AND THE YOUNG BOY TOLL THE

INVESTIGATORS HE WAS -- TOLD

THE INVESTIGATORS THAT HE WAS

TOLD TO STRIP DOWN TO HIS

UNDERWEAR BEFORE HARDENING BEAT

HIM ON SEVERAL OAKS AND SHE

USED HER OPEN HAND, STICK AND

BELT AND FLY SWAT INTERPRET AND

THE BOY SAID THAT HIS MOTHER

WAS PRESENT DURING THE BEATING

AND DID NOT SAY OR DO ANYTHING

TO STOP DEFENDANT FROM BEATING

HIM.

AND THE YOUNG GIRL SAID THAT

THIS WAS THE FIRST TIME SHE WAS

BEATEN.

SHE WAS HIT ON THE ARM WITH A

WOODEN SPOON AND THEN THE BACK.

SHE SAID THAT HER MOTHER

STARTED LAUGHING AND THEN

STARTED CRYING.

SHE ALSO SAID THAT HER BROTHER

GOT HIT A HUNDRED MORE TIMES

THAN HER.

NEITHER CHILD SAW THE OTHER GET

BEATEN.

BUT THEY HER EACH OTHER CRYING.

AND SHE SAID THAT SHE WAS WAS

ABUSED AS A CHILD AND DOES NOT

LIKE TO HIT HER CHILDREN.

AND ADDED, I DON'T KNOW WHY I

DIDN'T CALL 911.

HARDENING CONFESSED TO CAUSED

THE BRUISES ON THE CHILDREN

TELLING THE POLICE, I GUESS I'M

HEAVY HAND.

BOTH KENNEDY SPACE CENTERS AND

HARDENING -- KERNS AND

For more infomation >> Police: Woman Abused As Child Had Friend Beat Kids For Her - Duration: 1:57.

-------------------------------------------

Cannatonic CBD Cannabis Offspring MK Ultra G13 Haze Smoke Sesh Strain Reviews #420 News #Weedtuber - Duration: 21:05.

Hey Stoners Welcome to The Johno Show Live I'm your host Jonathan.

It's Thursday January 26th 2017 and that means it's strain review day.

Today we're gonna review some Cannatonic.

Cannatonic is a unique hybrid strain bred by Spanish seed bank Resin Seeds specifically

for its low THC content, which rarely gets above 6% and high CBD content, which can get

as high as 17%.

The strain is a cross between a female MK Ultra and a G13 Haze male.

It produces a relatively short-lived, mellow high that is uplifting and relaxing due to

the high CBD levels.

This is considered to be one of the premier medical strains and is often used to treat

pain, muscle spasms, anxiety, migraines, and a wide variety of other physiological and

psychological symptoms.

The strain supposedly produces a calm relaxed sensation and a gentle warm tingling sensation.

Cannatonic improves mood without anxiety and without plastering you to the couch.

With the high CBD and low THC this strain is recommended for use during the daytime.

The strain is supposed to help calm muscle spasms, which is what I'm really looking

for it to do.

I'm hoping it doesn't give me that brain fuzzy feeling and instead just relaxes my

muscles.

What would be even better is if it helped me focus.

If you have insomnia though you'll want something heavier.

Let's Smell It!! slight earthy odor

mild, sweet, citrusy flavor mild herbal, woody aroma with a touch of citrus.

Let's Take a Look Under the Microscope!!

Brownish tint Now let's smoke it!!

Now onto ANNOUNCEMENTS HIGHNY's next event will be on February

22nd.

The event takes place at at Impact Hub 394 Broadway 5th Floor from 7-9pm.

Dinner, Drinks (21+), & Giveaways.

Tickets are $25: http://www.highny.com/22217/ But if you use the code "Johno" at checkout

you'll save $5.

The speaker will be Jeanne Sullivan the Co-Founder of StarVest Partners, a NY City-based venture

capital firm created in 1998 and raised $400 million investing in technology.

NYC CANNABIS FILM FESTIVAL Are you a filmmaker that has a movie dealing

in one way or another with cannabis culture?

The NYC Cannabis Film Festival is in it's third year and they're currently open for

Feature and Short Film submissions.

This year the festival will be held in Manhattan and is going to be even bigger than last year.

Do you want your cannabis movie to be seen in one of the biggest cities in

the world?

Submit your Feature or Short Film today via Film Freeway!

And I've got that link in the description below.

https://filmfreeway.com/festival/NewYorkCityCannabisFilmFestival

If you have an announcement or a question please send them to me

via social media.

Thank you for listening.

Please let me know if you liked this episode by sharing it with your friends on social

media and

giving it

a thumbs up.

If

this is your first time here please consider subscribing.

The Johno Show produces a Daily Show

Monday through Thursday.

Monday we report on Cannabis industry news.

Tuesday is Q&A.

Wednesday are interviews and opinion pieces and Thursday I light up and give you a strain

review.

Thank you for letting me be a small part of

your lives.

Please subscribe and consider supporting The Johno Show

on our

Patreon page.

Thank you Bye!

For more infomation >> Cannatonic CBD Cannabis Offspring MK Ultra G13 Haze Smoke Sesh Strain Reviews #420 News #Weedtuber - Duration: 21:05.

-------------------------------------------

Survival: Night (Hard) - Duration: 28:11.

Hey Everyone, Brandon Here, Welcome back to Plants vs. Zombies.

In this video, I will be showing you how to complete Survival: Night (Hard).

So.

To start off a game of Survival: Night, you start off by planting sunflowers along the

back.

And puff-shrooms along here.

Now you may think just using sunflowers won't be much, but it'll add up quickly once you

add more and the puff-shrooms are nice to begin with since they don't cost any sun.

Use grave busters to get rid of all these graves.

Next thing, in this column, plant fume-shrooms and gloom-shrooms.

To slow down the zombies.

Plant pumpkins around them to protect them.

Next thing, plant magnet-shrooms behind where your gloom-shrooms will be.

In order to stop those zombies with metal items.

Try as hard as you can to get rid of all the graves before the second flag in a round.

Turn the sunflowers in the back into twin sunflowers.

I apologize that mess-up as I was going to pick new plants.

This round shouldn't be too difficult.

Plant pumpkins around the magnet-shrooms to protect them more.

Next, replace the sunflower here, and here with umbrella leafs.

Next, in this empty column, add in melon-pults followed by winter melons.

Blovers are useful to get rid of those annoying Balloon Zombies.

Next, replace the sunflowers here, here, and here with gloom-shrooms to stop the Imps hurled

by Gargantuars and Digger Zombies if there's any.

Ha, so much for that grave buster.

Okay, you can begin by turning the melon-pults into winter melons.

Continue building those gloom-shrooms in the back.

Okay, now you got all your gloom-shrooms.

Put pumpkins along these back plants here to protect them more.

Plant the

pumpkins around these plants also.

Next, turn the puff-shrooms in this column into repeaters followed by gatling peas.

Okay, this round should be pretty easy.

Next, replace the puff-shrooms in this column here with torchwood.

I"ll do twice as much damage to the zombies.

Plant pumpkins around the gatling peas and repeaters to protect them.

Gee, that was a lot of balloon zombies, good thing one blover will take care of them.

Oh, that was close, could've wasted that lawn mover on a balloon zombie.

Wow, glad the jack-in-the-box zombie exploded back here and not near the gloom-shrooms.

Wow, this might be the easiest Survival: Night (Hard) game that I've ever played.

Because other times that I played, there would always be Digger Zombies, and Gargantuars.

On this whole game, they have not appeared at all, that's why I have these back gloom-shrooms here.

I almost forgot that there was still one more melon-pult that I needed to change into a winter-melon.

Plant pumpkins around the torchwood as well.

Plant pumpkins around the sunflowers in the back as well.

So basically what you're doing is planting pumpkins around all the plants in the whole

game.

You may think you don't think you need to do that, but it's a good idea especally with

those Imps and Digger Zombies, better to protect them as best as you can.

Okay, here is your complete setup.

This is all it takes to complete Survival: Night (Hard).

I used this setup when I completed it the first time.

Okay, that was all it took.

This is Brandon saying, Thanks for Watching. See you in the next one.

For more infomation >> Survival: Night (Hard) - Duration: 28:11.

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TRUMP MEXICO - Trump floats 20% tax on Mexican imports to pay for wall - TRUMP NEWS - Duration: 6:47.

Trump floats 20% tax on Mexican imports to pay for wall, but considering other options

The White House on Thursday said President Donald Trump is considering a 20% tax on imports

from Mexico to pay for a southern border wall, but that the President is still weighing other

options.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer told reporters on Air Force One Thursday that Trump

was backing the proposal and had just discussed it with congressional Republicans in a private

meeting.

Hours later, amid an uproar from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, Spicer said that

he was simply putting forward one idea Trump is considering to show how the administration

could fund the multibillion-dollar construction of a wall on the US's southern border.

Spicer repeatedly said the White House was aiming to be "illustrative" rather than "prescriptive"

as he walked back the more definitive comments he made earlier Thursday.

White House chief of staff Reince Priebus also told reporters the White House is considering

a "buffet of options" as it considers how to pay for the border wall.

Peña Nieto Meeting canceled The discussion over an import tax to pay for

the project comes after Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto canceled a planned meeting

with Trump after the US president signed an executive order Wednesday kicking off the

process of building the border wall and vowed once again to force Mexico to pay for it -- something

Mexico has adamantly rejected.

Spicer also said Thursday evening that revenue from a tax on Mexican imports or other revenue

streams that didn't involve a direct payment from the Mexican government would fulfill

Trump's campaign pledge to compel Mexico to pay for the border wall.

The White House press secretary rebuffed questions from reporters about the impact of a 20% tax

on imports from Mexico on American consumers, insisting such criticism was "short-sighted."

Businesses that manufacture US consumer goods in Mexico would inevitably pass on an import

tax to American consumers, who could see the price of many goods soar.

Spicer first said Thursday that Trump was on board with a plan by congressional Republicans

to tax imports from Mexico as part of broader comprehensive tax reform legislation to help

pay for the border wall.

"By doing it that we can do $10 billion a year and easily pay for the wall just through

that mechanism alone.

That's really going to provide the funding," Spicer had said, referring to a 20% tax.

According to the Office of the US Trade Representative, Mexico's exports to the US in 2015 was valued

at $316.4 billion.

The trade deficit is estimated to be $50 billion.

That alternative route appears to be lodged in raising a massive import tax on goods exported

from Mexico to the US -- a tax that could cause the price of US consumer goods produced

in Mexico to skyrocket.

Despite the controversial nature of the proposal, which is likely to be met by stiff opposition

from business leaders in the US, Spicer said the proposal is one "we've been in close contact

with both houses (of Congress) in moving forward and creating a plan."

"It clearly provides the funding and does so in a way that the American taxpayer is

wholly respected," Spicer said Thursday.

Spicer dodged reporters' questions about the impact of the border tax on American consumers,

instead stressing the tax's benefits for American workers.

"I'm not going to get into it," he added when pressed about businesses that manufacture

goods in Mexico passing along the tax to American consumers.

Hill Republicans react Several Republicans expressed concern about

Trump's growing feud with Mexico, worried that the new President is starting a trade

war with one of the country's most significant trading partners -- and could drive up the

debt in the process.

GOP officials are particularly worried about effectively closing off the border with one

of the country's largest trading partners, while alienating Hispanic voters in the process.

"Many unanswered questions about proposed "border adjustment" tax," tweeted Sen. John

Cornyn, R-Texas, said.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-South Carolina tweeted: "Border security yes, tariffs no.

Mexico is 3rd largest trading partner.

Any tariff we can levy they can levy.

Huge barrier to econ growth.

Simply put, any policy proposal which drives up costs of Corona, tequila, or margaritas

is a big-time bad idea.

Mucho Sad."

Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona also expressed concerns about NAFTA.

"While renegotiations could help to strengthen and modernize NAFTA to benefit American businesses

and consumers, any effort to restrict or impose new barriers on our ability to trade with

Mexico and Canada could jeopardize the future of this trade agreement and have serious consequences

for Arizona and the country," McCain said in a statement.

House Freedom Caucus Chairman Mark Meadows, asked about Trump's proposed tax on Mexican

imports to pay for the border wall, didn't embrace the idea.

"Generally speaking I'm not in support of tariffs and taxes.

At the same time I don't want to hamstring the administration," Meadows said.

"Obviously we are going to look at a number of ideas to make sure that our border is secure

-- at the same time throwing out an idea and necessarily settling on that are two different

things."

Meadows added: "As a matter of general principle I'm not for tariffs."

"There's always the potential for retaliation which normally doesn't support good economic

growth of either country," Meadows said.

Ohio Republican Rep Jim Jordan, a leading House conservative, asked about offsetting

the cost of the border wall, said before he decided if he could vote for the proposal

from the Trump administration, said it was important to consider the impact on the deficit.

Also, Republicans are expressing deep concern about Trump's threats to pull out of NAFTA,

urging him to mend the relationship with Mexico.

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