Thứ Sáu, 26 tháng 1, 2018

News on Youtube Jan 26 2018

Hey it's Bey, and today I'm going to be reviewing the Vaultskin Chelsea wallet.

This is a great all around minimalist wallet that can hold up to 10 cards.

It's definitely one of my favorite minimalist wallets and I'll put a link in the description

if you're interested in purchasing this wallet.

The presentation when you receive this wallet is amazing.

The box comes wrapped in some plastic and on the back of the box,

you have some information about this wallet.

When you open the box, you will first see the wallet wrapped in some tissue paper.

Inside the wallet, you get a thank you card and on the back of the thank you card,

you have more information on the Chelsea wallet.

That's pretty much it.

When you first pick up the wallet, you immediately feel how good the quality of the leather is.

It's super soft and it will develop a unique worn out look overtime which is really nice.

Make sure to also take a sniff of the wallet once you receive it.

Anyways, you can hold up to 10 cards in this wallet but it will be a tight fit the first

time you fit them in.

However, over time, the wallet will stretch to fit your cards.

On the front, you have your first card slot that can hold up to two cards.

I like to put my debit card in this slot for easy access.

Also on the front, you have the Vaultskin logo that's embossed and a little pull tab

for the main compartment.

On the back, you have another card slot and it can fit up to 3 cards.

I like put my cash inside this slot though.

You can fold the bills only once but it will peek out a little, or you can fold the bills

twice to conceal them.

Personally, I like folding the bills twice.

The main compartment is pretty cool because to access your cards,

you have to pull the pull tab on the front.

This main compartment can hold up to 5 cards.

I really like how the pull tab automatically retracts.

On some other wallets, you would need to push the cards back in for the pull tab to retract.

After you pull the pull tab, you can pull the cards out slightly, fan them out, and

then pick the one you want to use.

After that, just put your card back and push the cards down into the slot.

Overall, the Vaultskin Chelsea wallet is an amazing minimalist wallet for the price.

It's made out of very high quality leather that makes it feel much more expensive than

it actually costs.

The wallet is stitched very nicely and there are no loose ends.

You can hold a good amount of cards and cash and it stays thin which is great.

I definitely recommend this wallet for every day carry and it even features RFID protection

that blocks scanners from reading your cards.

Again, I'll put a link in the description if you're interested.

That was my video review of the Vaultskin Chelsea Minimalist Wallet.

If you found this video helpful, please leave a like, comment, and subscribe.

Don't forget to hit the bell so you get a notification every time I upload.

Thanks for watching, and I'll see you guys in the next video.

Peace! Love you <3

For more infomation >> Vaultskin Chelsea Minimalist Wallet Review - One of The Best Slim Wallets Out There! - Duration: 2:39.

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Airrifle BSA Buccaneer SE - Review and Shooting Test - Duration: 6:51.

Hi! Nice to see you guys. Today I have another great air rifle for you!

The BSA Buccaneer SE. The air rifle is 99 centimeters long,

the barrel itself has 47 centimeters and at the end a 1/2 inch UNF thread,

on which a BSA Compenssaot is screwed on. Instead of this expansion joint you can also use

Use another one or mount a silencer.

The system can be filled with compressed air up to a maximum pressure of 232 bar.

I'll show you later how this works technically. And here's the 10-shot magazine,

that can be taken out sideways. I'll show you how to load it later.

I would have suggested that we go into the close-up now.

We'll take a close look at the air rifle.

Here you can see the compensator that makes it happen,

that the air turbulence behind the pellet that leaves the barrel is reduced.

There's the manometer right here.

I'll show you the opening for the compressed air connection.

Insert the hose filler neck into the hole,

and then you can refill the air rifle with the bottle or pump.

Then you can see the matte barrel, the beech wood shaft with the

beautifully worked fish skin in front. The double adjustable trigger,

manual backup, which means that you do not need to use this

with every shot, but you can either turn it on or off.

Then you can see the fish skin on the handle. The cheek piece,

This is suitable for both left- and right-handed users.

The ventilated, rubberized butt plate, and then the BSA logo down here.

Up here is the repeating lever, I just pulled it out,

that I could remove the magazine. The name BSA Buccaneer,

Made in Birmingham, England. Then here's the magazine.

I'm going to put the magazine back in the camera.

You see something gleaming white in the opening in here. It's such a small supernatant,

that prevents the diabolo from slipping completely through.

I'm gonna go get a pellet.

I would like to show you how easy it is to load the BSA Buccaneer magazine. Drop in and turn again.

It's super easy. I like the system very much.

The magazine has a slight spring pressure which tries to jump back after turning.

But only to the last full compartment. Then it stops automatically and does not jump further back.

The magazine can then be pushed back into the air rifle filled.

And then push the repeating lever back forward to shoot.

And up here on top of where I've already fixed the scope,

is the 11 mm prism rail. Now let's take a look at the fire test,

we want to see what the air rifle can do with 11.5 meters.

Have fun! We now come to the BSA Buccaneer SE shooting test. I shoot 4.53 millimeters with JSB Exact.

The distance is 11.5 meters. I shoot with the rifle scope Bullseye 6-24x44.

I'm shooting hung up on the Caldwell The Rock Rest.

Let's see what kind of result we bring together. Have fun!

All right, let's get the score! You see, I've upgraded a little bit!

What does Andi do with the donated money? He doesn't drown it but invests it ;-)

I bought a digital caliper gauge.

Here you can see the scattering circle of 8 1/2 to 9 millimeters.

Don't worry, I'm still not broke! I still have my famous penny piece.

But we want to keep up with the times, so the whole thing is now digital.

Here you can see the result. I bet if I shoot some more cards,

we'll probably come down to 7 millimeters. But we don't want to be petty now.

The air rifle is precise. We've proven that much.

I'd like to show you how it works now.

I just uploaded the magazine.

I shoot, repeat, shoot, repeat. It's a really cool feeling how it works.

Just like with a hunting repeater, you can quickly repeat through it.

You can really shoot a salvo here, it's extremely fun!

We are at the end of the video! Let's come to my conclusion:

What do you get for your money?

You get an absolutely compact system with under one meter and the possibility,

a compensator or silencer. The system has 3500 grams, it's 10 bullets.

You've seen it happen again, how easy it is.

The air rifle is precise, what else do you want? A very small flaw might be the print.

This is only double adjustable.

It's just not a match deduction. But, folks, we have to leave the church in the village:

For the money, this is really a great package.

We have a really great plinking weapon here!

It's a pity that I don't have any money, if someone would like to give me a present ;-)

Thanks again for watching!

Have a look at some other videos of me.

Then my work really paid off. Should you have suggestions for improvement,

then always give it to me. As long as I wish you "good shot"!

See you around! Servus says AirGhandi!

For more infomation >> Airrifle BSA Buccaneer SE - Review and Shooting Test - Duration: 6:51.

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NEW PROGRAM // CHEST FST-7 - NGÀY NGỰC // REVIEW MÌ MYPROTEIN - Duration: 17:49.

For more infomation >> NEW PROGRAM // CHEST FST-7 - NGÀY NGỰC // REVIEW MÌ MYPROTEIN - Duration: 17:49.

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Chicago 2017 - Year in Review - Duration: 8:41.

Its official, we have successfully closed out the books for 2017. So there is only one

thing to do and thats to look back on the good, the bad and just plain weird things

that happened in Chicago for 2017.

The political end of 2016 rolled over into January with fresh protests and marches all

over Chicago. People gathered at O'hare for protest of immigration bans and a large

number turn out for the women march downtown. While all this was happening, Chicago weather

was throwing us a curve ball. With January only had trace amounts of snow fall and we

also went 8 days without sunshine. Not your typical Chicago winter. Thanks, Obama.

February continued January's trend of no snow as we closed out winter with only 18

inches of snowfall. A January and February in Chicago with no snow has never happened.

Ever.

154 West Superior or affectionally known as the UP building, became famous when it

sold to a developer. The 1888 Italianate building, had a similar story to Pixars famous

film UP as the owner refused to sell during a construction boom, so the building was sandwiched

between two massive developments. The up house will be around a for a while as the current

owners say they plan to restore it.

At the Oscars we were introduced to Gary from Chicago as part of a Jimmy Kimmel sketch.

"Gary, Gary Alacole from Chicago"

However the media became more interested in Gary's

sketchy past than the sketch. February saw the biggest Chicago throwdown online, when

Reddit user BigBen2010 offered up $300 to get his hands on some Portillos Lemon Cake.

The cake which had not been sold by Portillos for 10 years, was discontinued because the

frosting would make the layers to slide over time and compromised the structure of the

cake. Yep. Good news for BigBen2010, the Portillos marketing team was on point and reached out

to make his dream come true.

And the Portillos Lemon Cake hype continued into March as BigBen2010 got his cake and

Portillos decided to reintroduce the lemon cake for a limited amount of time in stores

later in the year. If you took the lemon cake to go you could enjoy it in Amazons new bookstore

which opened in the Southport corridor. This wouldn't be the only Amazon hype we would

see for the year. As we said goodbye to winter, we were reminded of its effects as Illinois

was tied for first place with Connecticut for having the worst roads in the USA.

Apparently, you'll find the best road in Indiana.

In April, you were either getting dragged off a United flight or dragged to the new

Park at Wrigley. Cubs fans would be able to watch the game from outside the ballpark in

another park that from the air looked a little suggestive. Though, you would have to make

it onto the plane first, which proved difficult for one passenger at O'hare, when he was

forcibly removed by airport security. It was a lesson in how not to handle a PR situation

as massive backlash on United caused a lot of heat and judging by this job posting it's

clear to say they didn't like the way it was handled either. The strange weather we

received earlier in the year seemed to have affected the animals, Coyotes were on the

prow! As a Reddit user snapped this National Geographic award-winning photograph

And in May, a deer had decided to swim in Lake Michigan. There must be something in

the water. May was a good reminder of Chicago's premier dining options as the worlds first

Nutella cafe was opened in Chicago. The cafe doesn't have a crazy dress code, unlike

Bottle Blond, a lively Italian eatery who posted this very specific dress code.

It ended up bringing them much more attention that they wanted.

Joining the deer in Lake Michigan was a dog who was saved by a Chicago police officer.

The Police were responding to a crash on Lake shore drive and it was believed that the dog

ran from one of the cars and tried to grab a drink from the lake. Trying a little too

hard, he fell in. All this was captured by ABC 7 helicopter. It was the perfect combination

for a viral video. The dog, who was called boogie by the way, amassed 1.6 million views

on Facebook alone. In June, another heroic act took place in Wicker Park as a man stopped

an assault from happening as he scaring off the attacker with a sword. A sword purchased

from medieval times no less. Mac Dolan awoke to a disturbance in his apartment and found

a random man attacking a female guest who was staying in the living room. Mac grabbed

the $100 sword which was purchased on a drunken night to Medieval times and scared the intruder

off. The intruder was quickly apprehended as he left his wallet at the scene.

In July on National Hotdog day, Heinz tried to fool Chicagoans into putting Ketchup on

their hot dog by releasing Chicago dog sauce. If you didn't know, the ingredients on a

Chicago hot dog are a Vienna beef dog, onions, green relish, pickle, tomatoes, sports peppers,

celery salt and mustard on a Poppy seed bun. Why, nobody knows why. Ketchup is not on that

list, so it has become a cardinal rule not to include it. Honestly, if there was one

person who would put ketchup on their hot dog, its probably Jojo. Jewel's new furry

red mascot. I see no need for mascots other than in sports, so it really surprised me

that a supermarket decided they needed one.

The eclipse had everyone looking up in August, but in Chicago most people were disappointed

as all they got was a cloudy view. Others went south to experience totality and had

plenty of time to reminisces in the bumper to bumper traffic back to Chicago. This month

we received a new tax, a new train station and a new holiday. August 4th became Barack

Obama day as Illinois declared it a state commemorative holiday. The Washington Wabash

station opened in the loop and the cook county sweetened beverage tax took effect. The new

tax was off to a rocky start as some chain retailers were unsure if la Croix was sweetened

or not. The saddest news came this month was that Sue, the t-rex in the field museum was

going to be relocating, but luckily, she will she will be getting her whole room.

Another tragic loss for Chicago as Huffington post writer decided to give up on the Chicago

and move out. His parting easy which was painfully hard to read was also reassuring that Chicago

wasn't going to miss him at all. The Cubs won the central division, although it was

looking pretty bad against the Dodger's by the end of the month.

And on the first day of October, they were out. Pestering rain in Chicago flooded the

river walk downtown, and Chicago became a feature in the Netflix series stranger things.

Yet, the skyline didn't match the tv shows 1980's setting with modern buildings such

as the blue cross blue shield completed in 2010 and trump international hotel and tower

completed in 2009 were visible. This wasn't the only recreation that sparked interest

this month. The Chicago local 1 ironworkers recreated the iconic "lunch atop a skyscraper"

photo from 1932. Hats off for this remarkable achievement and I'm sure they had ample

opportunity cause there was a lot of construction going on in Chicago. Notably the Apple Store

just opened. However, they didn't end up going with the apple logo on top. Which was

spotted during construction. With all this construction hype, Chicago wanted even more!

As the city announced it would submit a bid to attract Amazon to the city. Amazon, successful

made all major cities in America feel like first-time job applicants when they announced

their intention to build another Headquarters. And for the right price, they will do it in

your city. Bringing a juicy cashflow of taxes and workers with it. Citing mounting pressure,

cook county decided to repeal the sweetened beverage tax.

"Because raising the pop at that point. Will cause more people to consume water"

While cook county tax will be repealed

the Chicago still has its old soda tax which remains.

November brought the first snow to Chicago, while the city decided to sue Uber and Us

Steel and others .. like Equifax. NY mayors press secretary said Chicago pizza was better

than New York's and Elon Musk said he's going to help out with the express line train

to O'hare, not going to hold my breath on that one.

November also marked the closing of DNAinfo, a hyperlocal news outlet that provided an

essential service to Chicago and its communities. The whole situation was a mess and caught

everyone off guard, I'm not going into the specifics but this was a huge loss for Chicago.

The end of the sweetened beverage tax and the Apple was struggling with icicles on their

roof. There was good new, there were no arrests at TBOX and we managed to finish off with

a white Christmas and no Chitown rising. The New Years celebration which was sponsored

by Corona? Was just too cold and unpopular.

This year was my first full year making videos in Chicago! And in 2017 I released 54 videos.

It was a great way to learn about Chicago, meet new creators and even experimenting with

longer form content. Thank you for all your support, make sure you hit subscribe and the

bell, it will give you a notification every time I release a new video. In Chicago, there

is a story on every corner and you'll be able to learn a few of them on my channel.

So here's to a successful 2018! Cheers

For more infomation >> Chicago 2017 - Year in Review - Duration: 8:41.

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Spoiler-Free Review of Ragged Company by Richard Wagamese - Duration: 6:03.

My name is Danika, and today I wanted to talk about Ragged Company by Richard

Wagamese. One of the things I'd like to do this year is to make videos about

my five-star reads of the year, because it's pretty rare that I would give a

book five stars. Generally for me that is an incredible book: life-changing or

really memorable. Something that I absolutely love and I want to be able to

share those sort of books more. Also, I know book reviews aren't seen as popular

on booktube but they're actually some of my most viewed videos over time, because

people go back and look on YouTube for books that they've read that they've

loved. They want to see other people's opinions, and even though those videos

might not get a ton of views right away, they do have lasting value. So if

you wanted to do reviews but you feel like no one will ever watch them, I would

recommend giving it a shot. Maybe if it's a super obscure title it won't get a lot

of views, but that's not to say it's not worth doing. You get a lot more engaged

feedback on those videos. But also my most viewed video of all time is my

Series of Unfortunate Events review, so you never know what people are gonna

respond to. But mostly I wanted to make videos about these books because I want

to talk about them, and I also want to think about them a little more. If I'm

gonna rate a book five stars and say that it is amazing, then I want to be

able to think about it a little bit and really process my own thoughts and

feelings on it. So, onto the review itself: this is a spoiler-free review, so if you

haven't read it, that's okay. Ragged Company follows a group of four

chronically homeless people, two of whom are indigenous and the author is also

indigenous. As the weather gets colder, they start to go to movie theaters to

have a place to stay warm, and they end up completely falling in love with movies.

And also, they win the lottery.

That premise, of a group of homeless people

winning the lottery, makes it sound like there's gonna be a very strict

divide between before and after, and that's not exactly what happens here.

Obviously, it does change things for them, but the book is very contemplative and

character-based, it has more to do with survivance than any grand fantasy of a lot

of wealth. Survivance is a term used in indigenous studies and I only

learned about it once briefly in school. so I may be getting this completely

wrong, but as I understand it it's about indigenous survival as an ongoing

process, both culturally and individually. As an active, vital way of being. The

characters in Ragged Company have suffered. Part of the reason that they

are chronically homeless is that they have been running from the past and the

trauma that they had there. Just having to get by day to day meant they never

stood still long enough for the past to catch up with them, but winning the

lottery changes that. And when they start to be able to take their own health and

safety as granted, the other things that they have been fighting to push down

start to resurface, and they have to deal with them.

That's kind of the thing about healing,

is that once you're in a safer place, you might start to notice all of

these things bubbling up that you might not have even realized were there,

because you're finally in a place where you can actually look and deal with them.

So we slowly get to learn about all of their pasts, and how they ended up where

they are. And it's brutal to read. These people have gone through tragedies.

I will admit to full-on sobbing while I was reading at least once, but because

these are things that mostly happened in the past there's a little bit of

narrative distance, which made it more readable than if they were happening in

real time. But overall, this book has more to do with hope and friendship than it

has to do with despair. Before winning the lottery,

Amelia, Timber, Dick, and Digger had started to change their habits to be

able to come together. Digger, especially, was someone who was a loner

by nature and really pushed back against the idea of being part of a group and

relying on people again. But Amelia leads them to each other, and they start to let

each other in. And facing this new situation

mostly brings them closer together. Having to deal with this huge change of

lifestyle all at once. I keep thinking of Ragged Company as "homegoing," and it's

funny because when I read Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi, I didn't really think about

the title, I obviously didn't get the title because it wasn't until I read

this book that it popped into my head and I started really thinking about it.

I feel like this book made me understand that book better, even though they don't

have a ton in common. In Ragged Company, they seem to be

circling back, and by sitting with the trauma that they've been running from

for so long, they start to be able to move through it. Not over it, but through it.

There's a line in the book where one of the characters says "You have to go

home. You have to go home, so you can finish

your story." And that seems to be true for all of the characters: they have to go

back so that they can move forward. The movement in this narrative isn't linear,

it's spiraling. Despite the pain and the tragedy in this book—and it does get

really dark—it reminded me of The Color Purple by Alice Walker in the way that

it deals with tragedy and these really horrific things, while still having this

message of hope. It acknowledges that the world can deliver these horrific blows,

while still saying that it's worth living in it. It's also about the

abundant potential of human connection. It's not just the group of the four of

them that get closer. They start to gather more people into their lives that

they wouldn't have met otherwise, and start to realize that reaching out to

people that are really different from you can be hugely rewarding. Obviously I love this book.

It made me think, it made me cry. It felt like such a nourishing book.

Whenever I encounter a book like this, I realize how shallow the interaction I

have with most other books. And that's fine! Not every book has to be

life-changing, but it's really gratifying when you read a book that feels so deep

and meaningful, and that you really feel like you're fully engaged in. And I'm

really grateful to have had that experience with this book. Let me know if

you've read this one or if you're thinking of reading it, and if you have

read it, definitely tell me what you thought about it! I would love to discuss

this with other people. And thank you for watching!

For more infomation >> Spoiler-Free Review of Ragged Company by Richard Wagamese - Duration: 6:03.

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Too Faced White Peach Palette Review, Swatches, Demo of all Eyeshadows | Cruelty Free @phyrra - Duration: 13:36.

Hey friends, welcome back and for those of you who don't know me, I'm Courtney.

Today I'm going to be sharing my demo, swatches, and review of the Too Faced White Peach palette.

This palette contains a mix of matte, shimmer, and glitter shades and it's supposed to be

a cool toned version of the Just Peachy Mattes.

I'm going to go ahead and show you swatches first.

Peach Cream is a matte soft cream.

Peach Suede is a matte dusty rose.

Peaches and Dreams is a golden peach pearl.

Crème de la Peach is a soft coral with gold sparkle.

Peach Sorbet is a matte creamy peach.

Glistening Peach is a rose gold with sparkle.

Peach Smoothie is a matte rose taupe.

Sweet Fig is a matte smokey mauve.

Peach Ice is a white shimmer with gold sparkle.

Fuzzy is a matte creamy gray.

On the Grill is a matte charcoal gray.

And Peach Passion is a deep orchid with blue and purple sparkle.

I'm going to go ahead and insert the demo.

I'll be using every single color in this palette and several different looks.

I went ahead and put on my eyeshadow primer.

I used Too Face Shadow Insurance on my lids.

I use the ColoreScience Total Eye under my eyes.

I set it with my Milani Prep Set Go Setting Powder and I'm just going to dig into this

palette and see what happens.

I'm going to try and use every single shade.

I'm using Peach Cream and just kind of applying that as a wash on

my brow bone/crease because I have hooded eyes.

Very powdery formula.

Definitely smells like peaches.

I'm going for Sweet Fig next and applying this as a transition shade.

I like that this is a cool tone.

It's a really nice cool tone on me.

Sweet Fig and Peach Cream, apply and blend out very nicely.

I'm spraying my brush with all nighter spray because I want to use Peach Passion and it

looks like it's going to be glittery and messy otherwise.

Oh my God, it's a purple.

It has pigmentation from Too Faced.

This is amazing.

Alright, I'm grabbing a different brush just so that I can try it with a dry brush too,

just to see how well it works or doesn't work.

It's okay with a dry brush.

I still think it looks better with a wet brush.

Alright, I'm going to take On the Grill, which seems to be their deepest shade and I'm going

to put a little bit of definition at the outer part of my eye.

It's also very powdery and I'm grabbing a Sigma E25 to blend this out.

I guess really I don't need to do both eyes since I'm just testing this out but I wanted

to test at least out ... I wanted to test the blue-ish purple color out just to see

how it worked.

I'm going to go back with a little bit more of that Sweet Fig.

I'm finding if I kind of just press like ... Press like this my brush onto the pan, it kicks

up less powder and I do prefer that.

Alright, I'm going to add a little bit of a highlight with Peach Ice.

Oh my God, Peach Ice is like super just glittery, barely seems to adhere to my brush but it'll

work as a little highlight at the end corner.

Alright, so I would say that this isn't bad.

The colors blended out pretty well.

The purple performed way better than I expected because I have been ragging on Too Faced purples

for a long time.

I think their last good purple like was probably Black Orchid, Night Orchid, something like

that.

It was some sort of orchid color.

Alright, so here's look one.

I've got several more colors to use in the palette so I'm going to go on to the next

look.

This is Peach Suede and I'm just trying to apply it as crease color.

It's also got that sort of powdery formula but it seems to blend out okay.

Has fairly good pigmentation.

I'm bringing this color down onto my lid, the mobile part of my lid.

I'm going to blend out the edges with Peach Cream.

Yeah, we've already used this color but ... Oh yeah, it blends out nicely.

Alright, I'm going to try Crème de la Peach on my lid.

It's like a pastel matte orange and it has gold glitter but I don't feel like the gold

glitter really translates to the lid at all.

It definitely looks lighter on my eye than it appears in the pan.

I'm going to go in with Peaches and Dreams along my lower lid.

Oh, this color is so much nicer than the color I just put on.

This ones really buttery.

This is Peaches and Dreams.

It's much better than Crème de la Peach.

I'm basically layering some of that Peaches and Dreams on top of Crème de la Peach.

I think I'm going to try a little bit of Peach Sorbet at the lower lid.

It's a good transition color, although I feel like this is a really weird pastel look thing.

I'm going to put a little bit more of that Peach Suede on the outer lid and then I'm

going to grab some of that darker color, On the Grill and just shade.

I did have a super amount of fall out just now from Peach Suede because I didn't tap

off my brush but before I was being pretty careful and didn't see a lot of fall out.

Yeah, I don't like this look at all but this is what I came up with.

So we've got three colors left.

I'm taking Peach Smoothie, which is the pink shade.

Ooh, it's very, very light and very pastel.

I'm going to use it basically in the smokey dome shape.

I'd say this color blends out pretty easily.

Needs a little bit of Peaches and Cream to soften the transition of the edges.

I'm going to use Glistening Peach on the lid.

This color basically looks like NARS Orgasm in an eyeshadow.

It doesn't apply very well with a dry brush so I'm going to try wet.

It just doesn't want to seem to come out of the pan, like it's like it's flaking.

It looks much better when used wet, much like the purple-y blue color.

I just don't think it looks great.

Alright, I'm going to use Fuzzy for my lower lid.

Fuzzy is just fine, like it's a great color but I'm really not impressed with Peach Smoothie

or Glistening Peach.

I am going to go ahead and do one last look with this palette so that I have something

on my eyes whenever I'm recording my review.

This time around, I'm going to be doing the Colorescience primer with three in one eye

treatment primer because it's tinted.

I am setting as usual with my Milani Prep Set Go Setting Powder.

I'm using Sweet Fig as my transition color and lid color.

Using Peach Cream to blend out the edges.

Using Sweet Fig under the lid, or the lower lid rather.

This would probably be a good like every day minimal eyeshadow type look but I'm going

to add some On the Grill to add some definition.

I need a little bit of sparkle so I'm going to put Peach Passion on my lid.

Okay, now that you've seen the swatches and the demo of the colors, I'm going to go ahead

and talk a little bit about the palette.

The palette is $45.00.

You get 12 eyeshadows.

They are 0.04 ounces each, so they're a little bit smaller than average.

Typical eyeshadow size is 0.05 ounces, so it's just a little bit smaller for each shade.

I personally found most of the mattes in this palette to be very powdery.

I found it best to basically lay my brush ... Like kind of pat it on the shadow and

then go from there to apply the color.

Whenever I tried to sweep it across the color too much, it would kick up way more powder

than I was expecting.

The glittery shades were very, very densely packed, almost like a completely different

formula and for some of them it was hard to get any good color payoff.

Some of these colors I don't agree with the description that Too Faced gave them at all,

like On the Grill is definitely a charcoal gray in my opinion.

Fuzzy, they call it a matte creamy gray.

I would actually consider it more like a taupe because it really ... I feel it has a lot

of brown to it.

It's definitely cool toned but definitely has brown tones.

I love Sweet Fig but I love that sort of mauve color on me.

I think it's a great transition shade or a great crease shade, or if you just want like

a one and done eyeshadow, that's the sort of color I would wear.

I found Peach Smoothie to be very pastel like, like a pastel pink and I didn't think it had

the best pigmentation though it blended out okay and I could build it up without a problem.

Peach Sorbet had really nice pigmentation.

I did not like Crème de la Peach.

It looks like it has glitter in it, like a gold glitter in it, but when you put that

on the lid it doesn't really translate to that on the lid, it looks just more like a

pastel orange and I didn't really feel like it had the best color payoff.

It was a very disappointing shade.

Peaches and Dreams was a much better color.

That color applied very easily and was very buttery.

It was probably one of the best colors in the palette.

It's a shimmer formula.

Glistening Peach was disappointed.

Now Glistening Peach reminds me of NARS Orgasm, like a peachy pink with a gold shift and gold

glitter, but it was just very difficult to get out and I felt like basically I was kind

of almost digging at the color so I didn't think it was very good.

Peach Cream was great as a base shade or to blend out the edges of other colors and Peach

Suede was great too.

I'm going to be honest with you.

I bought this palette hoping that it would be as good as the original Just Peachy Mattes

and in my opinion, it's not.

I do really like about four of the colors in the palette.

I really like Sweet Fig, Peach Passion, On the Grill, and Fuzzy.

Those four colors worked very well for me.

Peach Ice, which is supposed to be like a white with gold sparkle, it's just like a

white shimmer on my.

I didn't see any gold.

I forgot to mention that.

I did like Peach Suede, Peach Cream, Peach Sorbet, and Peach Fuzzy, so ... Hold on.

That's one, two, three, four, five, six, seven.

I liked seven of the colors in the palette but I don't like the remaining colors at all

and I'm going to return it.

I know that sounds horrible but I'm just not that impressed with it.

I really, really didn't like the Crème de la Peach and I was disappointed by Glistening

Peach because I feel like a lot of other brands have a similar color to that that performs

really beautifully so I'm kind of confused as to why this is so bad.

I will say that I'm impressed that Peach Passion turned out to be so good because normally

Too Faced purples are terrible and this one actually worked really well for me.

Another thing, Too Faced says that this features an ombré layout for easy transitions and

I just don't see it.

I mean, when I look at the palette I don't see ... Maybe I'm blind, I just don't see

it but I don't feel like this is an ombré.

I don't feel like this is an ombré.

I don't feel like this is an ombré.

Even if I go down, I don't feel like it's an ombré, so I feel like maybe that copy

was like copied from the Just Peachy Mattes palette and carried over but I don't see it.

I really don't.

Yeah, anyway, I guess that's my opinion on the palette.

I found it disappointing.

I don't recommend it and I'm going to return it.

What are your thoughts?

Please be sure to let me know in the comments below.

If you liked this video and found it entertaining or helpful, please give it a thumbs up and

share and if you haven't already, click on that little subscribe button down below and

I'll see you in my next video.

For more infomation >> Too Faced White Peach Palette Review, Swatches, Demo of all Eyeshadows | Cruelty Free @phyrra - Duration: 13:36.

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The Office: TV Review - Duration: 1:06.

Just how cheeky is the humor in The Office?

"That's what she said!" [laughter]

Well, let's just say the jokes are on the mature side.

This workplace mockumentary series follows a team of employees at a Pennsylvania paper

company where work is not priority No. 1.

"Save Bandit!"

[Cat meows]

[Crashing]

Alright, so The Office's comedy

pushes the envelope a bit,

but generally stops short of being crude.

Expect frequent jokes about sex

and some sexual innuendo,

but nothing too racy.

"A little extra dose of naughty!"

One character has an ongoing problem

with alcohol, which is played for laughs.

And another has a history of drug use.

"Just pretend like we're talking until the cops leave."

As for language, there's some mild cursing,

plus a few racist and sexist remarks.

"Someone complained that

the men's room is whites only."

That said, mixed in with the humor

are messages about teamwork and friendship.

Common Sense says The Office is OK for teens 14 and up.

For more age-appropriate media picks, visit us at commonsense.org.

For more infomation >> The Office: TV Review - Duration: 1:06.

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Persolaise Sixty Second Scents perfume review - Trudon Bruma (Antoine Lie 2017) - Duration: 1:00.

For more infomation >> Persolaise Sixty Second Scents perfume review - Trudon Bruma (Antoine Lie 2017) - Duration: 1:00.

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KODAK ICO REVIEW - Duration: 5:11.

hello everyone it's icoguru and today we

will talk about Kodak ICO and Kodak one

platform here is an official website but

it looks like unofficial Kodakcoin

com and here is a counter four days and

14 hours until the ICO and still they

don't have even light paper they have

only button to sign up and you when you

sign up there is nothing sent to your inbox

after it there is a block with no details about

technology just few words about

nothing paragraph here paragraph

there nothing important about the Kodak platform and the

product again few paragraphs and nothing

important very strange for such company

like Kodak with such name and brand here

is a partnership with wenn digital wenn

digital is a paparazzi photographers and

Kodak is famous brand in photography here is an

official website of Kodak company and

here is an announcement about this

technology called a kodakone and

cryptocurrency called kodakcoin

websites this one and this everything

what you can find about this ICO on

the internet no documents nothing just

wait until the launch an ICO bring your

money and still wait marketwatch has an

article about them and here have written

that Kodak coin will be in category of

other security and the main thing that

they will ensure that all investors will

be accredited so they will act under the

SEC rules and if you are not accredited

investor you will not be allowed to

invest

in Kodak ICO as well let's have a

look at wenn digital here is a Twitter

of wenn digital only four tweets and 179

readers again nothing official nothing

important just few words about Kodak and

this ICO this guy

Jan Denecke is mentioned as a

CEO of wenn digital but here is a

webpage of wenn and there is nothing else

on the internet about wenn digital only

this maybe it's not an official but

here is a management board and this guy

gender naked not mentioned where as you

can see it's again very very strange so

here we have made an article about Kodak ICO

and we think that it's not a good idea

to invest in it because Kodak still has

not clarified anything about technology

has not prepared white paper light paper

or even one pager, nothing they just

announced that they will have an ICO

---- and it looks like bring your money

and calm down that's it so far on our

opinion Kodak's purpose is to have jump

in stocks prices because from their

comeback in 2013 their stock prices

are very low and after announce of ICO

they had X 13 you know they made a

lot of money on this and now they don't

care about an ICO and of

course another reason to not invest in

this ICO is the lack of information and

unclear roadmap because without

information about ICO you cannot

recognize what is it you cannot

recognize what is the product and you

cannot do your investment because first

of all you should do your own research

and then invest. do not invest only

in the name

think twice because money is yours and

no one will give it to you back if you

will invest it just in idea because a

call that has ICO so read this article

we will put the link in the description

and there you will find all of our

suggestions about this ICO so don't

forget to put thumbs up and subscribe to

our channel and be aware of scammers and

do not invest just in the names do your

own research

thank you bye

[Music]

For more infomation >> KODAK ICO REVIEW - Duration: 5:11.

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🐦 Sunmi Heroina Review 📣 [ESP]📎[ENG SUB] - Duration: 3:06.

Today we are going to talk about the new Sunmi MV Heroin

The MV begins with her bequeathing in a car like a poster where there is nothing

It's like he grabs an attack and throws his juice

and he starts dancing right just there

Now let's focus on the letter

This song was written by Sunmi The lyrics of the song do not know if it goes so well

with the video

It is not so consistent with the video

Try talking about her self, which is now her own heroin

Heroin is a drug

This is your brain

And this is heroin

This is what happens to your brain

when you turning in heroin

It does not refer to drugs, but to the superhero COW: Now the cow understands it!

and it motivates people to be able to follow their same example

and be his own superhereo

Bad vibrations?

It is the first part of Gashina that is, this song goes and Gashina follows

In fact we can see that in the car in the what is she at the beginning of the MV

is the same one that is parked in front of bar in Gashina

In the beginning of the heroine MV she is taking a juice

and in the beginning of Gashina she is taking as if it were a Milk Shake or a Ice Cream Soda

and we can also notice that in the beginning of this video

just like in the beginning of Gashina

when Sunmi is alone, she is attacked

and she starts dancing like crazy

What can be seen from the MV

that all the colors have as a detail they always appear at the right time

and always (she) highlights much of the rest

always has a vibrant color what it does

she stands out more

and by the end of MV it reappears in

the place of the beginning only this time it's raining

and his poster falls

I personally did not like the clothes

although it should be noted that they have colors very cute and very vibrant

and Sunmi's legs are scary

because they are very thin and long

like two sticks

Do not forget to visit our page

Facebook lavacaesunpeluche

What are you laughing at?

Moving on to the choreography, you can see that It is quite complicated

Sunmi always has a lot of choreography difficult

They are like very armed and very perfectionists With many details and that are quite complicated

and this choreography even though in the MV see a little you do not get to see full

never get to connect all the steps but you can see it's quite complicated

The final conclusion is that if I recommend this song

Although the MV is a bit strange and if you're not fan of Sunmi

you probably can not understand it So I recommend the song

Although the MV depends a lot on how much you like it she (Sunmi) and her music

I am Lola and this is Señora Vaca

Do not forget to subscribe

Give him little hand up and share this video with all your friends

see you next Bye!

For more infomation >> 🐦 Sunmi Heroina Review 📣 [ESP]📎[ENG SUB] - Duration: 3:06.

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[MK23 SOCOM - Tokyo Marui] Review | Airsoft FR - EN subs - Duration: 12:15.

Hi everyone and welcome to this presentation of the MK23 SOCOM from Tokyo Marui

This one is delivered in a beautiful hard case provided with an engraved marking announcing the content

Inside, you will find a plastic bag of Japanese written documentation and a couple of paper targets

But we will find mainly what interests us, the user manual, also Japanese written only but widely illustrated

The last separate sheet is the documentation dedicated to the LAM block

We also find in a specific housing in the case, a bag of bbs

Stalled in another housing, it is the sound moderator of the bb gun that we can find

Of course, we will find again, the MK23 SOCOM bb gun with its LAM block and its safety cap

Another Japanese written paper (safety notice?) and a cleaning rod, hidden deep inside

Note that the lower protection is made of rigid polystyrene and that the upper pprotection is made of very thick foam, so the content is perfectly protected

This MK23 SCOCOM is composed mainly of ABS

The only metalic parts are the bolt catch lever, the outer barrel and the hammer

Regarding the markings, they are numerous, almost realistic and engraved

And a serial number is present under the front grip

A textured coating is present on the entire pistol grip for a better grip

2 sets of embossed streaks are present to help with the handling of the upper slide

In terms of safety mechanisms, the first one is provided by the bolt catch lever that can be pushed up to block firing or down to allow it

A dedicated and ambidextrous safety lever is also present at the back of the bb gun, it will have the same function but with color coding

These 2 mechanisms are complementary

This bb gun has a fixed slide (NBB) but we can shoot double or single action

Regarding the grip, it is just correct to my taste and it is better to have big hands

The aiming sights are a bit simplistic but do the job

The magazine ejector lever is ambidextrous and is located at the junction of the trigger guard and pistol grip

The magazine ejects and re-inserts perfectly

The magazine with a capacity of 28 bbs, is mainly made of metal and it is this one which represents the majority of the weight of the bb gun

The gas filling is done under the heel

This magazine also has some markings

For bbs loading, one can lower the spring guide to insert them from the bottom, it is the most practical I find for the reloading by hand or with a bb loader

To remove the upper slide, begin by removing the magazine

Move teh slide back to the notch

Then remove the bolt carch lever

We can then remove the slide from the body

Here I show you the hop-up adjustment wheel, move it slowly because I noticed that it adjusts very quickly

To assemble back the slide, we follow the opposite process

The outer barrel ends with n 16mm clockwise screw pitch

We can easily adapt the standard provided sound moderator

If we open this one, inside we will find several foam rings, there is no gun extension as on other models

The moderator also has its painted marking

Out of curiosity, I tested the sound emitted with and without sound moderator

There is no real difference in terms of decibels because it is the mechanic parts that make most of the noises

With this Marui model, a LAM block is also provided

Similarly, some markings are engraved on this one

The LAM block lighting works with 3 LR03 batteries

To make it work, it will be necessary at first to use the lower wheel to put it under tension then, use the pad to activate the constant or temporary mode

When activated, the light and a small red diode are lighting up

This light is really made especially for decoration purpose because its power is only a few Lumens

To install it, simply slide it on the rail of the bb gun and fix it with the tightening wheel on the side that will tighten a screw in the trigger gard

Once in hand, I find that the ignition pad is a little far away from the fingers and using second hand is more convenient

In game, this MK23 is really very enjoyable to play, its reputation of precision and having a good range is not unworthy

And I really enjoyed playing only with this one

The only small problem I encountered is when adjusting the hop-up because it is very sensitive as already said

And in game, I happened to turn on the flashlight often inadvertently because the pad is sensitive, not terrible for stealht

In conclusion, even if this MK23 Socom Marui is a bb gun that begins to be old, it is still an excellent one for game

Its ABS finish is not excellent visually but its shooting characteristics are excellent

I find that the LAM black and the sound moderator have only an esthetic value regarding their performances but it is true that the visual rendering is really very pleasant

The only major defect of the bb gun is the specific o'ring of the magazines which very quickly tend to deteriorate, causing gas leaks, very difficult to repair

But know that magazines from other brands (STTI, ASG, ...) are also compatible if necessary

Thank you for watching this video, do not forget to like and share it if you enjoyed it

A big thank you to Fidel for lending me his bb gun

Do not hesitate to comment on this video if you also have this bb gun or if you want to discuss about this one

Also remember to subscribe to the channel and my various social media

This will certainly allow you to avoid missing any future content, to follow my news and show your support

See you soon in an upcoming video

For more infomation >> [MK23 SOCOM - Tokyo Marui] Review | Airsoft FR - EN subs - Duration: 12:15.

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Teleprompter Review - Parrot Teleprompter - Duration: 5:40.

In this video, video #3, in my video series on teleprompters, I'm going

to show you my current favorite teleprompter, the teeny-tiny Parrot

Teleprompter. Hi, my name is Sue Ferreira, creator of Wisdom To Wealth Mastery ,where

I show you how to take all the wisdom you have up here in your head, brain dump

it, organize it and then take your wisdom to the world, using video, because

you know, that video is your most powerful tool you have to be seen and

heard. Quite frankly, if I can do this in my 70s, in a couple of years from

scratch, you can do this too, so subscribe to my channel and then,

click the bell icon alongside, to receive a message every time a new video of mine

is posted. Back to this lovely Parrot Teleprompter. It's so small, it's light,

it's packable, it's portable, it's resilient and as I said, it's so cute! When I first

looked at it, I wondered if I would be able to read the script as easily as I

can on this larger teleprompter behind, because the script is on a smartphone,

but to my delight, it's as simple to read the script, on this little teleprompter,

as it is on my larger one. Let's now look at how this teleprompter works. At

the moment, it works primarily with a DSLR camera or a Mirrorless camera, as I

have here - my Lumix GH3 - but you know, I'm pretty sure it could adapt quite

easily to work with my Logitech webcam, which I'm using right now. With a little

fiddling and creativity, I reckon you could also adapt it to work with two

iPhones, one running the app and one behind here, as the recording camera. Now,

the Parrot Teleprompter has very few moving parts. It comes with two

protective parts on it. It has this little cover at the front and I'm just

going to flip off the cover now and hey presto,

there is the mirror, the beamsplitter mirror, which I talked about with this

teleprompter in my previous video. The the front cover here this piece is

really to protect the mirror, which is a good idea! Then the back here is

the place, where the camera goes and it comes with a very

resilient cover, which you can slide off and then it leaves you with a large hole.

Okay, so you've got the mirror here and you've got this large hole at the back,

where the camera fits, but it doesn't fit exactly right. Why doesn't it fit exactly?

Because every camera has a different size lens diameter and the neat thing

about the Parrot Teleprompter is it comes with a whole range of different

adapters, so you can adapt any size lens to this teleprompter. My Lumix has a 52

millimeter lens on it right now, so I pick up the 52 millimeter adapter, out of

all those different adapters and gently I screw it on to the front of the lens.

Very simple! What these adapters do is adapts any size lens to this gap at

the back here for the teleprompter. Now all I do - I took the cover out and

in the same way, I slide in my camera - TaDa!

Now the camera is fixed to the teleprompter. It's so light, it doesn't

need a counterbalance, like my one at the back here does and I am ready to go.

What do we do next? Well, we pick up our smart phone and we

already have loaded the text up onto this smart phone and that's something

I'll show you later. To make it easier to demonstrate this, I have just put my

Lumix GH3 onto a tripod, which you would do anyway, and if I roll it around

you will see now, that if I pull down here on the bottom, I can slot in my

smart phone, which for me happens to be an iPhone. It will take any size

phone and the cool thing about the app, which I will show you later is that with

different sized phones, these days, there's always a risk if you stretch the

text from one side to the other with a larger phone, your text will be scrolling

outside of the screen, but the app allows you to bring the text in, within the

limits of this mirror, so then all you have to do is load up the app, click the

Go button and you are off to the races. with your teleprompter. I've turned on

the app and you can see here, the text it's mirrored here and then on the

mirror itself, you can see that it's the correct way around. For controlling

it, well, you can actually control it with your finger, stopping and starting it

with your finger, but it also comes with a nice remote. I can just click on

and off, I can click, I can speed it up, I can slow it down and I can stop it. You

can change the speed at which the text scrolls, you can change the size, you can

stop and start it. What more could you want? You know for me, for the price and

portability, I don't reckon you can beat the Parrot Teleprompter and the link to

it is below in the description box. If you like this video, please hit the "Like"

button and leave a comment or question below in the comment section.

Download my guide. "5 Easy Ways To Share Your Expertise" and again, the link

is below in the description. Share this video with your friends, who are

doing video. As well, be sure to subscribe to my channel, like I mentioned earlier,

so you can check out all my videos about teleprompters and other pieces of video

equipment, and receive a notification when my videos are posted. Thanks for

watching and I'll see you in the next video.

For more infomation >> Teleprompter Review - Parrot Teleprompter - Duration: 5:40.

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SMSL Sanskrit 6th - Review. The Audio DAC that gives to Standard a Name? - Duration: 4:46.

Hey every one welcome to my review of SMSL Sanskrit 6th.

The 6th Anniversary edition.

I believe every time we think about upgrading our current sound setup we wonder how much

do we need to spend to really hear the difference.

And with the DACs it's usually the most common question .

SMSL Sanskrit is on the market for quite a while and this 6th generation is definitely

not their newest product but I decided to test it to find out how it stands to other

newer DACs I already have tried.

To give you my opinion where this DAC stands and maybe help you make your purchase decision.

This DAC shares the same clean metal design with brushed aluminium housing as most product

from SMSL and gives you that kind of industrial rough feel and simplicity which I personally like.

During the review I paired this dac with SAP8 headphone amplifier and with SMSL SA-98E amplifier

as I had them available for other reviews and there is without a doubt an intention

to make them work together due their design similarities.

This DAC features the usual combo of digital inputs as USB, coaxial and optical input.

And maximum output through USB is 32bit 192Khz.

The other ports as coaxil and optical delivers 24 bit 192khz.

There is one analogue output and no analogue input.

The signal to noise ratio is 115db and the dynamic range is 110db.

No native DSD playback.

The DAC is powered by 9V 1.3 A power adapter made by SMSL which always makes their own

power adapters for their products.

I tested this DAC on windows 10 and with my android mobile and I had no compatibility issues.

It was recognized immediately. There was no need to install the drivers.

Everything worked just fine.

On the front panel you can find lined up power LED and input LEDs and also ON/OFF button which

works on a long press and on a short press it works as an input switch.

So how does this DAC sound and compares to other newer DACs with newer chipsets?

Well maybe this DAC doesn't feature the newest chipset on the market now but I have learned

it is not always just about the chip but about the overall harmony with other components,

about the engineering behind which gives it the magic or it doesn't.

This DAC also doesn't provide native DSD playback as the others so... but what you are getting here is

very pleasing sound reproduction with enough of detail and transparency.

The sound signature is more on the cold side and sometimes feel almost clinical.

But it doesn't lack dynamics.

I would not suggest to pair this DAC with some highs sensitive headphones or speakers.

But on the other side due its sound signature it gives a very clean feel and clarity.

And it sounds quite balanced.

So my opinion is. If you are looking for a solid DAC in a hundred Dollars price range

which gives you a clean, detailed decent quality output this is a standard you should be looking

for.

If you are looking for

an improvement

of your on board sound card

or upgrading from

for example SMSL M3 or some other similar products from Topping or other brands you will definitely

hear a pleasing difference in a transparency and clarity.

Thank you for watching.

For more infomation >> SMSL Sanskrit 6th - Review. The Audio DAC that gives to Standard a Name? - Duration: 4:46.

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Tacoma | Chilled-Out Game Reviews - Duration: 2:57.

For more infomation >> Tacoma | Chilled-Out Game Reviews - Duration: 2:57.

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Review - Lego City: Police Car (30352) - Duration: 3:16.

Hey everyone!

JAYSTEPHER with Police Car by Lego City.

Set number 30352.

Contains 50 pieces.

Recommended building ages are 5 through 12.

Looks like we get to make an awesome Police Car.

Nice colorful polybag.

Let's see the contents.

Well I see a head rolling around! [Laughs]

Looks like we have a nice selection of bricks

and a small folded instruction manual.

Let's take a closer look at the Police Car.

This is certainly one fast set to assemble.

Off to the left, we have our minifigure.

His torso is printed on both front and back.

He does feature a single-sided head

and a ball cap.

On the right, we have his Police Car.

Nice front bumper and grill.

The slope is printed with "POLICE"

as well as a badge.

Inside consist of just a steering wheel.

I've never seen 1 by 3 wall elements before

Here's the rear with a reflector

and a set of handcuffs.

Let's set our figure inside.

He hoes reach the steering wheel.

We're all buckled up.

We're ready to go for a test run.

Well [Laughs],

this comes off fairly easily.

He don't want to drive too fast.

His lights will come off the top! [Laughs]

It does roll smooth on a flat surface.

We don't want to go too fast.

You don't want to loose your lights.

It's not a bad set.

It will be perfect for any Lego collector

or as a source for spare parts.

This concludes the review for Police Car by Lego City.

Set number 30352.

Thank you for watching!

For more infomation >> Review - Lego City: Police Car (30352) - Duration: 3:16.

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Review The Jesuit Order as a Synagogue of Jews – Part One - Duration: 24:10.

Review The Jesuit Order as a Synagogue of Jews � Part One

The Jesuit Order as a Synagogue of Jews: Jesuits of Jewish Ancestry and Purity-of-Blood Laws

in the Early Society of Jesus Robert Aleksander Maryks

Brill, 2010.

Free Download

�Those from the circumcision subverted the entire house of the Society.

As sons of this world who are shrewd in dealing with their own, and avid of new things, they

easily excite disorders and destroy the unity of souls and their bond with the government.�

Lorenzo Maggio, Jesuit Curia in Rome, 1586.

One of the more interesting aspects of Jewish group behavior is the presence of subversive

strategies employing crypsis, often facilitated by a combination of deception and self-deception.

To date, the most forthright and convincing theoretical framework for understanding cryptic

forms of Judaism is found in Kevin MacDonald�s groundbreaking Separation and Its Discontents:

Toward and Evolutionary Theory of Anti-Semitism.

A substantial portion of the fourth chapter of the text (1998/2004: 121�132) is devoted

to �Reactive Racism in the Period of the Iberian Inquisitions.� Here MacDonald puts

forth the view (147) that the blood purity struggles of the Spanish Inquisition during

the 15th and 16th centuries should be seen as �an authoritarian, collectivist, and

exclusionary movement that resulted from resource and reproductive competition with Jews, and

particularly crypto-Jews posing as Christians.� The historical context lies predominantly

in the forced conversion of Jews in Spain in 1391, after which these �New Christians�

or conversos assumed (or indeed retained) a dominance in the areas of law, finance,

diplomacy, public administration, and a wide range of economic activities.

MacDonald argues (148) that despite superficial religious conversions, the New Christians

�must be considered a historical Jewish group� that acted in such a way as to continue

the advance of its ethnic interests.

An integral aspect of this was that Wealthy New Christians purchased and endowed ecclesiastical

benefices for their children, with the result that many prelates were of Jewish descent.

Indirectly, and almost certainly unintentionally, MacDonald�s arguments find much in the way

of corroboration in The Jesuit Order as a Synagogue of Jews (2010) by Boston College�s

Robert Aleksander Maryks.

Examining the same geographical area during the same period, Maryks presents an account

of the early years of the Society of Jesus, during which a fierce struggle took place

for the soul, fate, and control of the Order; a struggle involving a highly influential

crypto-Jewish bloc and a competing network of European Christians.

In this unpolished but interesting book, Maryks illuminates this struggle with reference to

previously undiscovered material, in the process shedding light on some of the most important

recurring themes of reactive anti-Semitism: Jewish ethnocentrism, nepotism, the tendency

to monopoly, and the strategic use of alliances with European elites.

Perhaps most fascinating of all, Maryks makes significant reference to Jewish responses

to European efforts to stifle their influence, some of which are remarkable in the close

manner in which they parallel modern examples of Jewish apologetic propaganda.

As such, The Jesuit Order as a Synagogue of Jews is highly recommended for anyone seeking

to understand, via an easily-digested historical case study, the dynamics of the ethnic conflict

between Jews and Europeans.

Maryks divides his text into four well-paced chapters.

The first provides readers with �The Historical Context of Purity-of-Blood Discrimination

(1391�1547),� a detailed standalone introduction to the nature of the �New Christian� problem

in Iberia but which should be read in conjunction with MacDonald�s work on the same theme.

The second chapter concerns �Early Jesuit Pro-Converso Policy (1540�72),� which

demonstrates the intensive manner in which crypto-Jews infiltrated key positions in the

Society of Jesus, adapting its ideological positions in accordance with their interests,

and eventually establishing a monopoly on top positions that extended to the Vatican.

The third chapter, �Discrimination Against Jesuits of Jewish Lineage (1573�93),�

concerns the establishment of a movement acting against the crypto-Jewish strategy, with an

analysis of the key figures and their rationale.

The fourth chapter, �Jesuit Opposition to the Purity-of-Blood Discrimination (1576�1608),�

examines the efforts of crypto-Jewish Jesuits to fight back against the European counter-strategy,

often involving the employment of tactics and stances that are now familiar to us as

the hallmarks of a Jewish intellectual movement.

This sequence parallels the processes that led to the Inquisition�New Christians establishing

themselves in top positions in Spanish politics, business, and culture, provoking a reaction

by the Old Christians aimed at regaining power, followed by Jewish counter efforts against

the Inquisition and the against the Spanish government generally, the latter typically

played out on the international scene.

One of the key strengths of this fascinating book is that Maryks can rely on relatively

recent genealogical discoveries to prove beyond doubt that many of the individuals once merely

�accused� of being crypto-Jews were undeniably of Jewish lineage.

Maryks can thus cut through a clouded period in which ancestry was vital and yet fogged

with accusations, denials, and counter-accusations, with tremendous clarity.

In the author�s words (xxix), �racial tensions played a pivotal role in early Jesuit

history.�

Opening his book, Maryks recalls delivering a paper on converso influence in the Jesuits,

and afterwards receiving an email from a man with origins in the Iberian peninsula.

The email concerned the remarkably long survival of crypto-Jewish behaviors in the sender�s

family:

From Friday evening through Saturday evening, his grandfather would hide the image of baby

Jesus from a large framed picture of St. Anthony that he kept in his home.

It was, in fact, a wind-up music box.

On Fridays he would wind up the mechanism and push a button, so that Jesus would disappear

out of St. Anthony�s arms, hidden in the upper frame of the picture.

On Saturdays he would push the button, so that Jesus would come back out from hiding

into St. Anthony�s arms.

As eldest son in his family, my correspondent was told this story by his father, who also

asked him to eat only kosher food.

(xv)

The survival of such eccentric, and in this case apparently trivial, forms of crypto-Judaism

into what one assumes to be the early twentieth century, might appear to be little more than

a socio-historical curio.

In actual fact, however, it is a small but memorable vestige of what was once a very

powerful means of continuing the Jewish group evolutionary strategy in the Iberian peninsula

after 1391 � an overwhelmingly hostile environment.

In a political, religious, and social context devoid of the synagogue and many of the most

visible aspects of Judaism, small reminders of group difference, even otherwise trivial

ones like hiding images of Jesus or adhering to discreet dietary rules, became vital methods

for retaining group cohesion.

For some time, these methods were largely successful in facilitating the continuance

of Jewish life �under the noses� of the Christian host society.

During this successful period, conversos were able to expand nepotistic monopolies of influence

in a wide range of civic and even (Christian) religious spheres.

When it failed, however, the consequences could be catastrophic.

Maryks points out (xxii) that from its founding in 1540 to 1593, the Society of Jesus had

no discriminatory legislation against individuals of Jewish heritage, and that during this period

converso Jesuits �held the highest administrative offices, and defined the Society�s institutional

development and spirituality.� However, significant resistance to this crypto-Jewish

monopoly had developed by the latter date, and from 1593 to 1608 a power struggle resulted

in the defeat of the crypto-Jewish element and the introduction of laws prohibiting the

admittance of members of �impure blood.� From 1608 until 1946 this involved a review

of the ancestry of any potential member of the Society of Jesus, up to the fifth generation.

The Jewish Origins of the Jesuits

On 15 August 1534, Ignatius of Loyola (born ��igo L�pez de Loyola), a Spaniard from

the Basque city of Loyola, and six others, all students at the University of Paris, met

in Montmartre outside Paris, in a crypt beneath the church of Saint Denis, to pronounce the

religious vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience.

Ignatius� six companions were: Francis Xavier from Navarre (modern Spain), Alfonso Salmeron,

Diego La�nez, Nicol�s Bobadilla from Castile (modern Spain), Pierre Favre from Savoy, and

Sim�o Rodrigues from Portugal.

At this point they called themselves the Compa��a de Jes�s, and also Amigos en El Se�or

or �Friends in the Lord.� The Spanish �company� would be translated into Latin

as societas, deriving from socius, a partner or comrade.

This soon evolved into the �Society of Jesus� (SJ) by which they would later be more widely

known.

In 1537, the seven travelled to Italy to seek papal approval for their order.

Pope Paul III gave them a commendation, and permitted them to be ordained priests.

The official founding of the Society of Jesus occurred in 1540.

The presence and influence of conversos in the Society of Jesus was strong from the beginning.

Of the seven founding members, Maryks provides categorical evidence that four were of Jewish

ancestry � Salmeron, La�nez, Bobadilla, and Rodrigues.

In addition, Loyola himself has long been noted for his strong philo-Semitism, and one

recent PhD thesis[1] has even advanced a convincing argument that Loyola�s maternal grandparents,

(his grandfather, Dr. Mart�n Garc�a de Licona, was a merchant and financial advisor

at court), were full-blooded conversos � thus rendering the �Basque nobleman� halachically

Jewish.

Jewish scholar of the Inquisition, Henry Kamen, who had earlier argued that the Inquisition

was �a weapon of social welfare� used mainly to obliterate the conversos as a distinct

class capable of offering social and economic competition to �Old Christians,� once

voiced his own personal view that Loyola was �a deep and sincere spiritual Semite.�[2]

Straightforward assessments of the reasons for Loyola�s philo-Semitism are, as Maryks

admirably elucidates, complicated by the ubiquitous presence of converso propaganda.

More specifically, Loyola�s reputation as an ardent admirer of the Jews rests predominantly

on a series of anecdotes and remarks attributed to him � and many of these derive from biographies

penned shortly after his death by converso Jesuits aiming to promote and defend their

interests.

For example, the only source for the argument that Loyola had an overwhelming desire to

be of Jewish origin so that he could �become a relative of Christ and his Mother� is

the first official biography of Loyola � penned by the converso Pedro de Ribadeneyra.

Ribadeneyra is described by Maryks as �a closet-converso� who distorted many now-established

facts about Loyola�s life, including a concealment of the fact that �the Inquisition in Alcal�

had accused Loyola of being a crypto-Jew.� (43) An important aspect of Ribadeneyra�s

biography was thus the promotion of the idea that being Jewish was desirable and admirable

� Loyola�s philo-Semitism (real or imagined) was intended to be emulated.

Meanwhile the sinister aspects of crypto-Judaism, and their suppression by the Inquisition,

were excised from the story altogether.

Whether Loyola was in fact a crypto-Jew, or whether he indeed was a European but possessed

a strong desire to be a Jew, remains unconfirmed at time of this writing.

However, it is certain that Loyola surrounded himself with many converso colleagues and

that he opposed any discrimination against converso candidates within the Society of

Jesus.

Maryks argues that, issues of crypsis and philo-Semitism aside, Loyola was probably

�motivated by the financial support that he had sought from their [converso] network

in Spain.�(xx) In this reading then, Loyola was fully aware of the elite position of the

conversos within Spanish society and was prepared to accept their money to establish his organization

in exchange for adopting a non-racial stance in its governance.

The question of course remains as to why the crypto-Jewish elite in Spain would back, both

financially and in terms of manpower, a Christian religious order.

The important thing to keep in mind is that religion and politics in Early Modern Europe

were intimately entwined, and that, through spiritual confraternities and their relationships

with local elites, even poverty-espousing religious orders like the Franciscans could

exert a strong form of socio-political influence.

This was often made even more sharply evident when religious orders engaged in missionary

work in foreign lands, often taking pioneering roles in colonial regimes, and even assisting

with their economic enterprises.

William Caferro notes that in Renaissance Italy �the Florentine political elite was

closely tied to the church.

Government officials often held high church office and benefice, which aided their local

political power.�[3] Involvement in religious orders was thus a necessary aspect and extension

of political, social, and cultural influence.

Unsurprisingly then, it can be demonstrated that crypto-Jews straddled the interconnected

networks of royal administration, the civic bureaucracy, and the Church.

Citing just some examples, Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh note in their history of

the Inquisition:

In 1390 the rabbi of Burgos converted to Catholicism.

He ended his life as Bishop of Burgos, Papal legate and tutor to a prince of the blood.

[Burgos�s son would later become an important pro-converso activist and will be discussed

below].

He was not alone.

In some of the major cities, the administration was dominated by prominent converso families.

At the very time the Spanish Inquisition was formed, King Ferdinand�s treasurer was converso

in his background.

In Arag�n, the five highest administrative posts in the kingdom were occupied by conversos.

In Castile, there were at least four converso bishops.

Three of Queen Isabella�s secretaries were conversos, as was the official court chronicler.[4]

For the crypto-Jewish elite of early modern Spain, the founding of an influential religious

order headed by a philo-Semite (if not a fellow crypto-Jew), staffed predominantly by a converso

leadership, and constitutionally tolerant of converso applicants, would undoubtedly

have been an attractive prospect.

That a bargain of some form existed between Loyola and his crypto-Jewish sponsors is suggested,

as noted above, by the nature of the early Jesuit constitution and by early correspondence

concerning the admission of candidates of Jewish ancestry.

The founding of the Jesuit order had coincided with the rise of a more general Spanish anti-converso

atmosphere that reached its peak in 1547, �when the most authoritative expression

of the purity-of- blood legislation, El Estatuto de limpieza [de sangre], was issued by the

Inquisitor General of Spain and Archbishop of Toledo, Sil�ceo (xx).� Pope Paul IV

and Sil�ceo�s former pupil, King Philip II, ratified the archbishop�s statutes in

1555 and 1556, respectively, but Ignatius of Loyola and his converso successor, Diego

La�nez (1512�65) vigorously opposed the Inquisitor�s attempts to preclude conversos

from joining the Jesuits.

In fact, in a letter addressed to the Jesuit Francisco de Villanueva (1509�57), Loyola

wrote that �in no way would the Jesuit Constitutions accept the policy of the archbishop (xxi).�

Seeking to quell rising tensions over the issue, in February 1554 Loyola sent his plenipotentiary

emissary, Jer�nimo Nadal (1507�80), to visit the Inquisitor.

Nadal insisted that the Jesuit Constitutions did not discriminate between candidates of

the Society on the basis of lineage, and even personally admitted a number of converso candidates

during his visit to Iberia.

In a heated debate with the Inquisitor over the admission of one of them, Nadal replied:

�We [Jesuits] take pleasure in admitting those of Jewish ancestry.� In what would

become a striking pattern, most of the pro-converso arguments were made by crypto-Jews claiming

to be native Spaniards.

Maryks notes that his historical investigations suggest that Nadal was �most probably a

descendant of Majorcan Jews (77).�

Jewish attempts to alter Christian thinking about Jews, from within Christianity, were

already well-established by the date of Nadal�s intercession with the Inquisitor.

An excellent example is the classic work of Alonso de Santa Mar�a de Cartagena (1384�1456)

� Defensorium unitatis christianae [In Defense of Christian Unity] (1449�50).

Alonso de Cartagena had been baptized (at the age of five or six) by his father Shlomo

ha-Levi, later renamed Pablo de Santa Mar�a (c. 1351�1435), who� as chief rabbi of

Burgos�converted to Christianity just before the anti-Jewish riots of 1391 and later was

elected bishop of Cartagena (1402) and Burgos (1415).

The fact that the wife of this Bishop of Burgos remained an unconverted Jewess does not appear

to have impeded the latter�s career in the Church is interesting to say the least.

Meanwhile his son, Cartagena, like many other conversos, studied civil and ecclesiastical

law at Salamanca and went on to a highly influential career straddling royal, civic, and religious

spheres.

He served as apostolic nuncio and canon in Burgos.

King Juan II appointed Cartagena as his official envoy to the Council of Basel (1434�9),

where he contributed to the formulation of a decree on �the regenerative character

of baptism without regard for lineage (4).� Like other examples of pro-converso propaganda,

however, Cartagena�s arguments always went beyond mere appeals for �tolerance.� According

to Cartagena, �the faith appears to be more splendid in the Israelite flesh,� Jews naturally

possess a �civic nobility,� and it was the duty of rough and uncouth native Spaniards

to unite with the �tenderness of the Israelite meekness.� (14, 17)

Conversos thus emerge in the works of the earliest crypto-Jewish activists as more special

than ordinary Christians, as naturally deserving of an elite status, and, far from being the

worthy objects of hostility, were in fact uniquely blameless, �tender,� and �meek.�

One is struck by the regular use of similar arguments in our contemporary environment,

a similarity that only increases when one considers Cartagena�s attribution of anti-Jewish

hostility solely to �the malice of the envious.� (20)

Against this backdrop of crypto-Jewish apologetics, Maryks demonstrates, whether he intends to

or not, that the early Jesuits were largely a vehicle for converso power and influence

(both political and ideological).

Loyola continued to be �surrounded� by conversos throughout his leadership (55).

Enrique Enr�ques, the son of Portuguese Jews, even authored the first Jesuit manual

of moral theology, Theologiae moralis summa, in 1591.

(65) Maryks describes Loyola as having an unlimited �trust� in candidates of Jewish

heritage, citing his decision to �admit in 1551 Giovanni Battista Eliano (Romano),

the grandson of the famous grammarian and poet Rabbi Elijah Levita (1468�1549) �. He

entered the Society at the age of twenty-one, just three months after his baptism (66).�

In explaining Loyola�s lax requirements for converso applicants, and resultant acquiescence

in flooding the Society with crypto-Jews, it is strange that Maryks should abandon his

own prior suggestion that the founding of the Jesuits may have rested on a quid pro

quo with the converso elite in favor of a less convincing theory based on a putative

and ill-explained �trust� that Loyola possessed for Jews.

Unfortunately this is a common theme throughout Jewish historiography, where the facts and

conclusions presented in the same text are often on entirely different trajectories.

In a similar vein, Maryks�s skeletal explanation that crypto-Jews flooded the Jesuits simply

because Loyola had �numerous contacts with the converso spiritual and merchant network�

before he founded the Society of Jesus, seems woefully inadequate and lacking in context.

Despite the best laid plans of Loyola and his colleagues, and just 32 years after its

founding, the Society of Jesus would undergo a revolt from below against a rapidly expanding

crypto-Jewish elite.

The features of this revolt represent a fascinating case study in the reactive nature of anti-Semitism.

Maryks narrative of how two competing ethnic groups struggled for the future of the Jesuit

Order, outlined in his second and third chapters, is certainly the greatest strength of the

text.

It is to this European counter-strategy that we now turn our attention.

Go to Part 2.

For more infomation >> Review The Jesuit Order as a Synagogue of Jews – Part One - Duration: 24:10.

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[REVIEW SÁCH KINH DOANH] - Công Thức Tuyệt Mật Của CoCa CoLa - Frederick Allen - Hoàng Ngọc Sơn - Duration: 22:20.

For more infomation >> [REVIEW SÁCH KINH DOANH] - Công Thức Tuyệt Mật Của CoCa CoLa - Frederick Allen - Hoàng Ngọc Sơn - Duration: 22:20.

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

Migos - Culture 2 | Album Review - Duration: 5:25.

What up youtube.

Topaz Yates back with another album review.

This time to Migos Culture 2 and I am giving this one the yellow light because there are

instances of solid music but for the most part it is background music.

I put most of the blame of that on the fact it is a 24 track album.

No musician in the world has 24 versitile tracks to put on an album espicially not the

migos who are limited due to lack of lyricism.

You can overtly see their formula which is to seek out quality productionfocus on their

flow and it works for them.

Yet without lyricism they fall into human natures subconscious predictability.

Its a lot like playing madden

and we have a ton of plays to choose from.

Yet when the pressure is on we all go back to

the handful

of plays that are our

bread

and butter.

For more infomation >> Migos - Culture 2 | Album Review - Duration: 5:25.

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నిజమైన రివ్యు చూడండి ? | Bhaagamathie movie review | Public talk | response | first day collections - Duration: 2:57.

Copy rights

For more infomation >> నిజమైన రివ్యు చూడండి ? | Bhaagamathie movie review | Public talk | response | first day collections - Duration: 2:57.

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

MAZE RUNNER: THE DEATH CURE - 30 Second Movie Review - Duration: 0:44.

Maze Runner: The Death Cure is a solid, yet flawed farewell to the franchise that,

despite providing some solid action sequences and inspired production design, remains painfully

inconsequential due to its predictable, cliched writing, constant reliance on deus ex machina

and an unnecessarily long runtime.

And though the satisfying sense of camaraderie between the main cast and its relatively complex

villain allow it to rise above the dregs of its genre and achieve some genuinely moving

moments, the film's consistent lack of narrative innovation whilst providing an end to this

maze leave it standing as a serviceable conclusion, that's far from a-maze-ing.

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