Thứ Ba, 26 tháng 6, 2018

News on Youtube Jun 27 2018

Apple's iOS 12 public beta is now available for you to download to try out.

To download the beta, you'll want to head over to the Apple Beta Software Program website

at [beta.apple.com] and you'll either want to sign in or sign up to the program.

Once you've logged into your account, you're going to want to go to the iOS tab.

Scroll down and download the profile to your device.

Allow any pop-ups that might pop-up and install it to your device.

Now what you can do is restart the device.

When you go to the settings app, and go to Software Update you will see the iOS 12 Public

Beta download, which you can then install onto your device.

Once your device has restarted, you'll get all the latest and greatest in features for

the cutting edge build.

You will still want to consider that this software is still beta, so you'll probably

want to avoid installing it on your main device but if you have a spare one lying around – go

for it!

Just make sure you back up all your data, as things can go wrong in betas.

The final version of iOS 12 should be available later this year alongside the next iPhone.

That's been it for this video, thanks for watching and I will see you in the next one.

For more infomation >> How to Download the iOS 12 Public Beta - Duration: 1:25.

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Public Art Enhancing Cities: The London Mastaba by Christo and Jeanne-Claude - Duration: 1:36.

the Serpentine really is a fitting place to celebrate two of the greatest public

artists of our times. The London Mastaba will bring all the

benefits that come with great public art, it will add new energy to the city, it

will help people see the familiar in a new light and provoke conversation and

debate, and that's exactly how great art should be: it's supposed to expand our

minds to get us thinking and to get us realizing how lucky we are and what the

possibilities are for the future.

This is something very dear to me and Jeanne-Claude

This is part of our value, our works of art deal with real things. This

perfect example with the Serpentine lake, you can see how it changes and I'm

so exhilarated to have weather with so different conditions. The sun and the

light, everything plays with all this form and the people around.

All that is the work of art.

The benefits that public art is bringing to cities aren't always

recognized but Bloomberg Philanthropies is working to change that by helping

more cities invest in public art and we expect to spend more time here with the

Serpentine and do more great things.

For more infomation >> Public Art Enhancing Cities: The London Mastaba by Christo and Jeanne-Claude - Duration: 1:36.

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[KPOP IN PUBLIC CHALLENGE] BLACKPINK (블랙핑크) - '뚜두뚜두 (DDU-DU DDU-DU)' | DANCE COVER - Duration: 2:57.

For more infomation >> [KPOP IN PUBLIC CHALLENGE] BLACKPINK (블랙핑크) - '뚜두뚜두 (DDU-DU DDU-DU)' | DANCE COVER - Duration: 2:57.

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[KPOP IN PUBLIC] BLACKPINK - 뚜두뚜두 (DDU-DU DDU-DU) Dance Cover - Duration: 3:33.

omg???!!!!

We don't know the reason for this,. only know that they are two homeless. After this, each one got out and nothing more happened!

I waited they leave to back to record

For more infomation >> [KPOP IN PUBLIC] BLACKPINK - 뚜두뚜두 (DDU-DU DDU-DU) Dance Cover - Duration: 3:33.

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Chris Hayes Explains Why It's Important to Yell at Public Officials - Duration: 6:07.

-What happens now moving forward in terms of, I mean,

first and foremost, these separated families?

Do you have any optimism that those 2,000 children

are gonna be reunited with their parents?

-I hold out optimism, if only because I think that

the public pressure has had some effect.

Perversely, as you mentioned at the top of the show,

there's now this, kind of, choice that's being offered,

which is, like, you can get your kid back

if you agree to be deported

and you renounce all your -- your claims to asylum.

So, I think a lot of people are gonna be deport--

reunited that way.

But it's going to take sustained public pressure.

I mean, what's very clear is, we broke a story a year ago

when they first started thinking about this policy.

And they thought about it

and they crafted internal procedures about it.

And someone leaked us documents, 'cause there was this --

-This is the separation policy. -Child separation policy.

People were so freaked out about it

and they cogitated about it for a year, and they implemented it.

They had no plan to reunite these families.

They had no plan, because they didn't care.

I mean, that's what, I think,

is so shocking about this whole thing.

-How did it go from -- I mean, so, 2017 you break this story.

Obviously, it takes, you know,

up to near a year to come through.

Were there people in the administration

who knew it would play like this?

-I think so. And I think the reason it didn't happen was,

precisely, because the experts who --

you know, there are people who work in

the Department of Homeland Security

and in the asylum office and things like this

who understand that you can't do this.

And I think they warned against it successfully.

I think the President in a fit of pique, recently,

has been ramped up about how, you know, stressed out he is

about the border. -Yeah.

-And the "invasion" and the "infestation"

that's coming over it,

and I think he managed to prevail on his advisers

against a lot of the better judgment of the civil servants

in those agencies to start doing this.

-So, then he signs an executive order, you know,

which ostensibly says,

"We're gonna get these families back together."

He says, you know, on television, he just couldn't --

it was too awful to have families be separated.

What do you think happened there for him

to ultimately reverse himself?

Although we are hearing whispers now

that he's saying he wishes he hadn't done that.

-I think the President sits in the White House

and watches cable news all day.

-Yeah. Good for you.

[ Laughter ]

-Good for us, maybe.

Bad for the country probably. -Yeah, yeah.

Probably not a -- probably not a ton of MSNBC.

-Yeah. [ Laughter ]

Although, yes.

Although he -- more than I think he would ever admit.

-Right, right. Yeah. -You know what I mean?

Like, there's times where it's very clear --

he does a lot of hate-watching.

-Yeah.

-Which, again, if you're hate-watching, cool.

-Yeah. [ Laughter ]

You know, whatever -- I don't judge.

-They all have to watch the commercials.

-Yeah, yeah. -Yeah.

-We make no discernment.

No, I mean, basically, I think he's sitting there

and he's watching himself take a beating on this

in public opinion and feels like he has to walk it back.

And I thought it was a significant moment

in the history of this administration

because we've seen him penned in before by the courts, you know,

when they came in against the travel ban or DACA.

We've seen him penned in by Congress when John McCain

gave the thumbs-down for ACA.

This was really the first time that I felt like civil society,

you know, in -- in a broad sense, basically, kind of,

stood up and said, "No, you can't do this."

-You mentioned civil society.

I will segue to civility.

That seems to be the conversation today.

It's a tricky thing to talk about, because I think we all,

you know, we all would expect to be treated civilly.

Like, we all want that.

How do you feel about right now Republicans saying

that there is now a lack of civility?

-I mean, look, I under-- I want to, like, acknowledge

what you're saying, which is I get people's impulse.

And I don't think it's a bad impulse to have of, like,

"Yeah, don't yell at people." Or, be, you know -- I get that.

That's a human and understandable part of

people's impulses around this stuff.

And, generally, I think that's a good guiding post for people.

I will say this that, look, Sarah Huckabee Sanders,

for example, is one of the most powerful people in the world.

And in a very real and tangible sense the defining feature of

a free society is that you can tell

one of the most powerful people in the world in your government,

"Get out of my restaurant."

-Right.

-Like, that's genuinely, like, a thing that makes a free society.

[ Applause ]

And, now, people could say, like, that --

I don't think they should do that or that's rude.

And I totally get people on either side of that.

But in a real deep sense, like,

hectoring, yelling at public officials?

I mean, I covered all the Tea Party town halls of 2009.

That was a festival of yelling at public officials.

And in the same way,

that's actually an important right to preserve.

So I think sometimes that this conversation about civility

can paper over a lot of what is actually just --

what politics looks like.

-And, you know, I feel, like, lost in this, obviously,

Sarah Huckabee Sanders, in her tweet, framed her --

she focused on her own politeness in politely leaving.

It does seem as though she was also politely asked to leave.

-Yes.

-Now, again, you know, at the end of the day,

I think if you're asked to leave a restaurant

you don't look back and go, "They were so nice about it."

[ Laughter ]

-They did -- They did comp them the cheese plate.

-Yes. That's no small thing.

-Yeah. -Yeah.

But, you know, and it did strike me as interesting that the woman

who owned the restaurant, she went and asked her staff.

She made it very clear that she had, you know,

she had an ethnic staff, she had a staff that were, you know --

gay people on her staff that made it difficult.

And she actually asked them their opinion, which --

-I thought it was, look, again, I feel like the basic --

my basic principles here are --

nonviolent action in dissent or in protest,

sort of across viewpoints,

is part of what American political life is about.

And, you know, that's -- [ Applause ]

That's like -- and I think --

And I think people feeling moral urgency about a 12-month-old

who is sitting in some facility a thousand miles away

from her mother, who's been torn away from her,

I think feeling some sense that, like, this is a crisis.

This is a moral crisis that requires me

to take some extra action, again,

within the sort of confines of, you know, what's protected

under law and our democratic, sort of, principles.

I think that that makes a lot of sense.

-It's always so great to have you here.

Thank you so much for making the time for us.

-Thank you, man. [ Cheers and applause ]

Chris Hayes, everybody.

For more infomation >> Chris Hayes Explains Why It's Important to Yell at Public Officials - Duration: 6:07.

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Вышла публичная бета iOS 12! Стоит ли обновляться? Как установить? Нюансы - Duration: 2:00.

For more infomation >> Вышла публичная бета iOS 12! Стоит ли обновляться? Как установить? Нюансы - Duration: 2:00.

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IT'S ALL OVER – ROBERT MUELLER SCANDAL GOES PUBLIC - Duration: 12:39.

IT'S ALL OVER – ROBERT MUELLER SCANDAL GOES PUBLIC

Yesterday, we reported that White House Special Counsel Robert Mueller has said that he wants

to question President Donald Trump as soon as possible.

While many initially assumed that this was bad for Trump, there could be a silver lining

for the president after all.

Fox News reported that experts say that reports of Mueller wanting to speak with Trump indicate

that he is nearing the end of his investigation into the president's alleged collusion with

Russia during last year's election.

Prosecutors pretty much never interview their highest-ranking potential target until they

have acquired most of the evidence since they want as much ammunition as possible when they

finally speak with him.

This would mean that it's unlikely that Mueller's investigation will continue for

the next year or two, casting a dark shadow over the White House for that entire time

period.

It was revealed yesterday that Mueller told Trump's lawyers last month that he will

probably seek to interview the president, which set off discussions among Trump's

attorneys about the perils of such a move.

The Washington Post reported that "the president's attorneys are reluctant to let him sit for

open-ended, face-to-face questioning without clear parameters, according to two people

familiar with the discussions.

Since the December meeting, they have discussed whether the president could provide written

answers to some of the questions from Mueller's investigators, as President Ronald Reagan

did during the Iran-contra investigation.

They have also discussed the obligation of Mueller's team to demonstrate that it could

not obtain the information it seeks without interviewing the president."

An unnamed source told the New York Times that Mueller "appeared most interested in

asking questions about the former national security adviser, Michael T. Flynn, and the

firing of the F.B.I. director, James B. Comey — not the broader question of possible collusion

with Russia.

Those topics signal an interest in whether Mr. Trump tried to obstruct justice."

Trump himself has always made it clear that he wants Mueller's investigation to end

as quickly as possible, as he is confident that no evidence of him colluding with Russia

will be found, since he knows it never actually happened.

"We have been very open," Trump told reporters at Camp David.

"We could have done it two ways.

We could have been very closed, and it would have taken years.

But you know, sort of like when you've done nothing wrong, let's be open and get it

over with."

What do you think about this?

Let us know

your

thoughts

in

the comments section.

For more infomation >> IT'S ALL OVER – ROBERT MUELLER SCANDAL GOES PUBLIC - Duration: 12:39.

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Last Day For NYC Public School Students - Duration: 0:20.

For more infomation >> Last Day For NYC Public School Students - Duration: 0:20.

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Supreme Court To Rule On Whether Public Employee Unions Can Require Members To Pay Dues - Duration: 3:06.

For more infomation >> Supreme Court To Rule On Whether Public Employee Unions Can Require Members To Pay Dues - Duration: 3:06.

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Public shaming of Trump officials sparks debate over protest and civility - Duration: 13:38.

JUDY WOODRUFF: But first: President Trump's policies, and his comments and tweets have

sparked a new wave of protests and roiling anger.

However, as William Brangham reports, it's also caused some to wonder if the protests

are going too far.

REP.

MAXINE WATERS (D), California: And if you see anybody from that Cabinet in a restaurant,

in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd.

(CHEERING AND APPLAUSE)

REP.

MAXINE WATERS: And you push back on them.

And you tell them they're not welcome anymore anywhere.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Congresswoman Maxine Waters has become the latest leading voice in the

resistance to President Trump, most recently protesting the administration's controversial

zero tolerance immigration policies.

The president, a self-described counterpuncher, pushed back on Twitter, calling Waters "an

extraordinarily low I.Q. person," adding, "She has just called for harm to supporters

of the make America great again movement.

Be careful what you wish for."

Those supporters were in full force at a rally in South Carolina last night.

DONALD TRUMP, President of the United States: They're only good at one thing.

What's that term?

Resist.

It's the party of Maxine Waters.

Do you believe her?

(BOOING)

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: On MSNBC, Waters clarified that her calls for protest are not calls for

violence.

REP.

MAXINE WATERS: I didn't call for harm for anybody.

The president lied again.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: This back and forth is just the latest in an escalating debate over political

discourse and just how far is too far.

Democratic activists have aligned with Waters' strategy, openly confronting some administration

officials who implement or defend the president's immigration policies.

Last week, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen was shouted out of a Mexican restaurant.

Protesters also rallied outside Nielsen's home and the home of Trump adviser Stephen

Miller.

Over the weekend, White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders was asked to leave a Virginia

restaurant by the owner, who said her staff felt angry over the impact of the president's

policies.

SARAH HUCKABEE SANDERS, White House Press Secretary: We're allowed to disagree, but

we should be able to do so freely and without fear of harm.

And this goes for all people, regardless of politics.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Some Democrats in Congress, including House Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate

Leader Chuck Schumer, have urged more civility and a different kind of action.

SEN.

CHUCK SCHUMER (D-NY), Minority Leader: If you disagree with a politician, organize your

fellow citizens to action and vote them out of office.

But no one should call for the harassment of political opponents.

That's not right.

That's not American.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: But Waters and others point out that President Trump has his own history

of inflammatory statements, some of which they say encourage violence.

DONALD TRUMP: I would like to punch him in the face, I will tell you that.

All right, yes, get him out.

Try not to hurt him.

If you do, I will defend you in court.

Don't worry about it.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: The president's musings are so frequent, The New York Times has tracked

472 people, places and things Donald Trump has insulted on Twitter.

So, is there a point where these public protests go too far?

Or are these moves the appropriate response to policies that have crossed their own boundaries?

To explore these questions, I'm joined by Quentin James.

He's the founder of the Collective PAC, which is working to increase African-American representation

in elected offices.

Chris Buskirk is a radio host in Phoenix and editor of the conservative blog American Greatness.

And former Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell is a longtime and prominent voice in the Democratic

Party.

Gentlemen, thank you all for being here.

Quentin James, I would like to start with you first.

Sarah Sanders gets asked to leave a restaurant.

Protests are occurring outside Kirstjen Nielsen's home.

These protesters seem very angry about what they are protesting.

What do you make of all of this?

QUENTIN JAMES, Founder, Collective PAC: I think it's great.

It's great for our country.

It's great for Democrats.

Listen, the administration is, you know, in the midst of working on critical issues that

are affecting people's real lives.

We are removing children from their parents at the borders.

We are, you know, talking about taxes that are benefiting the rich.

And, you know, we're talking about NFL players and their inability to protest, and, even

today, the Muslim ban.

These are real issues that get to the core of American values.

And so I think it's a great show of where the country stands, where America really is

on these issues, and, you know, we want to see more of it.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Chris Buskirk, I know you're a supporter of the president.

What do you make of these very public protests against members of the administration?

CHRIS BUSKIRK, AmericanGreatness.org: Well, I will tell you, more than more than a supporter

of the president, which I am, and happy -- and happy to say so, I am a supporter of civil

discourse.

And that is what I see being degraded daily by the advocacy of unrest, and in some cases

of violence by the left.

We look at -- we look at the Sarah Sanders incident at the restaurant in Virginia the

other day.

This wasn't just the owner politely asking her to leave, saying, I don't want to serve

you here, which I think would be bad enough.

This was the owner chasing her family across the street to where they were trying to eat

another meal.

And, look, if Democrats think this is good politics, then I say we will see you in November,

because it just isn't.

And it degrades what we're trying to accomplish as a country, fellow citizens, that wants

to govern themselves according to -- according to our reason, and not according to our passions.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Ed Rendell, what do you think this?

Does this degrade the public discourse or is this meaningful, vigorous democracy at

work?

ED RENDELL (D), Former Pennsylvania Governor: Well, I think you have to draw a line.

If people protest outside a governmental office, outside the Senate chamber, the House chamber,

or at a town meeting where a public official is called it as part of his or her business,

that's absolutely appropriate and fair.

And the left should do it and the right should do it, because that's our God-given right

as Americans.

But to interfere with someone's private life when they're going out with their family somewhere,

that is uncivil discourse.

And it resounds to the detriment of the people who are doing it.

And I agree with Chris.

If we keep doing this -- and we're not alone in doing it.

The right has certainly done it -- if we keep doing this, it's going to fire up the Republican

base in ways that nothing positive can.

And it's going to make winning the election much more difficult.

But I want to say one thing.

The person who could solve this and who bears the greatest responsibility for creating these

-- this type of viciousness is the president himself, because he has been the most vicious,

the most insulting, the most degrading of all the commentators, whether they be from

the left or the right.

And the president doesn't understand that I think the number one job of the president

of the United States is to set a moral tone for the country.

And the president should say, stop it.

People who support me, stop it.

People who are against me, stop it.

We have got to get together and move this country a forward.

And we're not going to do it by shouting hateful things at each other.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Quentin James, pick up on what Ed Rendell is saying there.

He is arguing that, if you want to protest, protest outside a government building.

Don't confront someone at a restaurant.

Don't go to their home.

QUENTIN JAMES: Listen, I completely respect Governor Rendell, but I disagree.

And here's why.

We saw during the civil rights movement when we -- African-Americans were told, don't march,

you know, don't protest.

And we saw Congressman John Lewis, at the time a member of SNCC, getting beat in the

head bloody with a billy club by the police, who were, you know, supposed to be there to

protect and serve.

But if we fast-forward today, I think we're hearing some of the similar things.

It is totally lawful.

Folks are not breaking the law by raising their voices and showing up, whether they're

at movie theaters or restaurants or even to someone's home.

These individuals are public officials, or they work for public officials.

And, therefore, they are -- the public is expressing their feelings and showing, again,

the true American values of freedom of speech, the true American values of accountability

and justice.

We are literally, again, talking about banning Muslims in this country today with the Supreme

Court's ruling.

We are talking about ripping children from their families and from their mother's and

father's arms.

This isn't a conversation about civility.

This is about life and death for many people.

And so this is, in my opinion, justified.

And, again, if Democrats want to win in November, we need to see more of this.

We're talking about not the Trump voters we need to be persuading, but a lot of Democrats

who didn't hear enough from us or see enough us from in 2016.

Those are the folks we want to see turn out in November.

And, again, I think we need to see more of this work.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Chris Buskirk, I know you disagree with this type of action.

And -- but let's put the shoe on the other political foot.

Let's imagine the circumstances were changed, and there was someone in the White House who

you vehemently disagreed with, someone who thought whose policies were chipping away

at the very foundation of this country.

And for many on the left who are protesting, ripping children from their parents at the

border fits that bill.

Let's say someone was doing those actions that you really disagreed with.

What would do you?

What would you urge your supporters to do?

CHRIS BUSKIRK: I would urge my supporters -- and we -- this is the exact same thing

we try to do today -- which is try and win the argument.

Try and win the political debate.

Convince people why you're right, and take that to the ballot box.

That is the system that we have, and it's the only sustainable system if we want to

live in a society that values freedom or justice.

The idea that by -- the idea that by breaking that boundary between the public and the private

in some way advances the public good, I think it is self-evidently false.

And I don't see Quentin putting his home address out on Twitter right now asking -- inviting

people who disagree with him to come by his house, nor should he.

Nor should he.

And that is a boundary that I think we should all respect.

QUENTIN JAMES: But it's not about disagreement.

It's not about disagreement.

These people are literally making policy that impacts people's lives.

I'm not a public official.

So you're right.

I'm not going to put my address on Twitter for folks to come to my house and show me,

you know, what they believe.

This isn't about disagreements on ideology.

This is about, again, banning people from coming to this country because of their religious

background.

This is about banning children and removing children from their parents who are seeking

asylum and coming here lawfully.

Right?

This is not about a civil discourse.

And let's also not forget, this is the same party, the same individuals who were hanging

up Obama effigies right by nooses in 2010.

These are folks who showed up at congressional town halls in 2010 with semiautomatic rifles.

Right?

These are folks who are wearing make America great hats, going into our schools and our

churches and killing people.

Right?

So this isn't about the left is turning to violence.

No, this is about our God-given right...

(CROSSTALK)

CHRIS BUSKIRK: I remember June 14, 2017, when a left-wing activist showed up at a baseball

diamond and started shooting at a bunch of Republican congressmen.

That's what I remember.

(CROSSTALK)

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Gentlemen, can I just interrupt for a second there?

Ed Rendell, I would like to you pick up on this issue, because this is something that

the president indicated in his criticism of Maxine Waters.

He said she was calling for violence.

She says absolutely not.

Do you believe that -- as some do, that this is a slippery slope that could lead to violence?

ED RENDELL: Look, Quentin is wrong and Chris is wrong in part.

And I say that in deference to civil discourse.

But they're wrong in part, because, Chris, part of the Constitution gives us the right

to protest, not just vote.

And I agree with you, we should vote.

But we also have the right to protest.

But that protest should be done in a decent way outside of government buildings, at town

meetings, where it's part of the public dynamic.

It shouldn't be visited on people when they're doing private things, like shopping in a supermarket

or eating in a restaurant.

And, Quentin, if you think this helps us win the election, you're crazy.

I have had a lot of independents, people who were tending to want to vote Democrat for

Congress saying, I'm not voting for Democrats or Republicans.

Both sides suck.

And this type of action backfires on us, because it doesn't do anything to help us, and it

fires up the Republican base, and they're going to come out in droves, whereas, a month

ago, they were dispirited and they weren't going to come out.

We were going to have a 10 percent lead in turnout.

But the bottom line is, if this country is ever going to solve its problems, we have

to do it together.

We have to do it together.

We're never going to have 61 votes in the Senate, the House and the presidency again.

You're not going to be able to get things done unless we try to work together.

And the more that we have this hateful stuff, the more difficult it becomes for us to do

anything.

If we don't start doing things together, we're going down the tubes.

(CROSSTALK)

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Gentlemen, I'm sorry.

We have to end it there.

Ed Rendell, Quentin James, Chris Buskirk, thank you all very much.

CHRIS BUSKIRK: Thanks.

QUENTIN JAMES: Thank you.

ED RENDELL: Thanks.

For more infomation >> Public shaming of Trump officials sparks debate over protest and civility - Duration: 13:38.

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Public Safety Director Weighs-In On Antwon Rose Protests - Duration: 2:48.

For more infomation >> Public Safety Director Weighs-In On Antwon Rose Protests - Duration: 2:48.

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Margot Robbie and Husband Tom Ackerley Go on Rare Public Outing Together - News Today - Duration: 2:54.

 Margot Robbie may be preparing for her latest role in Quentin Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, but she always has time for her husband

 The couple, who wed in December 2016, was spotted enjoying some time together in Los Angeles with their dog, Boo Radley, on Sunday

Robbie, 27, was low-key in a black dress, sun hat and sunglasses while Ackerley, 28, was dressed in a white T-shirt and patterned board shorts

 Robbie and Ackerley, who met in 2013, were introduced on the set of Suite Francaise, where Ackerley was working as an assistant director

 The pair, who co-produced the Oscar-winning film I, Tonya together, rarely makes public appearances

Margot and Ackerley last attended a red carpet event in May for the L.A. premiere of Terminal along with costars Mike Myers and Simon Pegg as well as director Vaughn Stein

 But next, Robbie has her eyes on the role of Sharon Tate.  In May, the actress confirmed she is set to star opposite Brad Pitt, Leonardo DiCaprio, Dakota Fanning, Burt Reynolds, Timothy Olyphant and Emile Hirsch

 "Tarantino is one of my bucket-list directors. As long as I can remember, I've been a huge Tarantino fan," Robbie told IndieWire in May

 "Beyond anything, I've just always wanted to see him work. And I want to see how he runs a set, and how he directs people, and what the vibe is onset, and what's in the script, and then what happens on the day

I'm just fascinated by all of it, fascinated. So it's going to be a crazy experience to witness it firsthand

It's something I've always dreamed of doing," she said.  Set in 1969 L.A., the production will feature DiCaprio as Rick Dalton, the former star of a western TV series, and Pitt as his longtime stunt double Cliff Booth

They're both struggling to survive in a Hollywood they no longer recognize. Although, one person they do recognize is Rick's next-door neighbor: Sharon Tate

 Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is expected to hit theaters Aug. 9, 2019, which marks the 50th anniversary of Tate's death

Tags Margot Robbie Movie Celebrities Movie News News

For more infomation >> Margot Robbie and Husband Tom Ackerley Go on Rare Public Outing Together - News Today - Duration: 2:54.

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Public Safety Director: Unpredictability Of Antwon Rose Protest Locations Presents Challenges - Duration: 3:35.

For more infomation >> Public Safety Director: Unpredictability Of Antwon Rose Protest Locations Presents Challenges - Duration: 3:35.

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What you need to know about using public Wi-Fi - Duration: 3:08.

When Internet is available everywhere

like your local cafe airport or hotel wireless it gives us great flexibility

of work from anywhere we want and we don't even think twice about connecting

to these networks but is it a good idea to connect to these networks and is it secure

there are a number of ways in which bad actors can scam or steal

information from you when connected to these networks not only do you need to

trust the people who are maintaining and who had set up the network originally

you need to trust all of the users who are currently on that Wi-Fi network

its frighteningly easy for an attacker to set up a fake wireless network with

the name of the cafe you're at or the hotel you're staying in and so this

could look like a genuine wireless network but quite often the scammer will

be setting this network up to scam you to steal information from you to

redirect you to a fake banking website there are just a number of ways in which

your information can be stolen or you can be scammed be most cautious of wireless

networks which don't have any password security at all this means that your

information is being transmitted over the wireless without any encryption

whatsoever it's tempting to use the completely free wireless which doesn't

have a password to get into it because you can just click the network and

you're instantly on the internet however this means that your information has

been transmitted without any encryption whatsoever so at the bare minimum you

should be trying to connect to a network that it leads to asks you for a password

a general recommendation is not to use public Wi-Fi at all due to these

insecurities if you absolutely have to just use it to look up basic information

so avoid logging into web services trying to do financial information on

the connection or anything else that may be personal or exploited in some sort of

way so if you can't use public Wi-Fi what are the solutions well the best

solution is to use a personal hotspot like from your mobile phone

a USB dongle that uses 4G or a little pocket Wi-Fi device this will give you

the best protection against attackers because it's an encrypted connection and

it is only you using that connection by using a 4G connection this is giving you

strong encryption between you and the network so it's much harder for

eavesdroppers to attack or compromise their connection you may have also heard

of VPNs virtual private networks these encrypt your data between you and your

destination however they do come with their own pros and cons that are a

little bit too much to go into in this video we will be covering it in a future

video though in conclusion is best to avoid using public Wi-Fi networks

especially those that don't require you to use a password your best solution is

to use a 4G service like a 4G wireless hotspot or USB dongle and there is also

the option of a VPN service if this sounds interesting to you get in touch

with us and we'll discuss your needs

For more infomation >> What you need to know about using public Wi-Fi - Duration: 3:08.

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Lisa Armstrong vows revenge on Ant McPartlin for 'public humiliation' - Daily News - Duration: 3:34.

</form> Lisa Armstrong was so gutted by Ant McPartlin's romance with their former PA that she's sworn revenge on him, worried friends have claimed

 The Strictly Come Dancing head of makeup only found out estranged husband Ant was seeing ex-close friend Anne-Marie Corbett the weekend before last, when the story hit the papers

 Since then, she's been left reeling as concerned pals beg her to "be the bigger person"

 According to Closer magazine, Lisa's thoughts are now turning to revenge for Ant "publicly humiliating" her with her mate

Read More Ant McPartlin and Anne-Marie Corbett  "Lisa feels she has stood by Ant following all his issues over the years

She's been a shoulder to cry on during many lows and, despite their split earlier this year, vowed to support him," said a source

 "But after having to hear about him and Anne-Marie through the media and for Ant to not even bother contacting her to see if she's OK, she's now livid

 "She feels publicly humiliated by him. After everything she's been through, she's determined to make him pay

She'd have been happy for an amicable divorce settlement before, but friends wouldn't be surprised if things turned nasty

"  According to the pal, Lisa's told her support circle that she's been to hell and back with Ant, who by his own admission made her put up with his mood swings and depression as he battled a drink and drug addiction

 "Lisa often saw Ant pictured with Anne-Marie but never assumed anything other than a friendship," the pal added

 "It's hit her hard. Friends are pleading with her to be the bigger person but, right now, they feel she's so angry she wants to make Ant pay

"  Since finding out about the betrayal, Lisa was holed up at home being comforted by her mum and dad - and Labrador Hurley, who she still shares with Ant

 But she's now jetted over to Los Angeles for some much-needed rest and relaxation and was spotted smoking outside a designer shop at the weekend

 She's still wearing her wedding rings, even though Ant's legal team are trying to force her to hand them over to be valued as part of the divorce proceedings, but a friend of Lisa told the Mirror that she had no intention of giving them up - fearing she'd never see them again

 It's thought Lisa, 41, is looking for a £50million settlement to be able to start a new life Stateside, and Ant's team has said he'd be happy to give her whatever she wants to move on

For more infomation >> Lisa Armstrong vows revenge on Ant McPartlin for 'public humiliation' - Daily News - Duration: 3:34.

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St. Landry School Board hosts public hearing on budget - Duration: 0:32.

For more infomation >> St. Landry School Board hosts public hearing on budget - Duration: 0:32.

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PG&E Asking For Public Input On Proposed Rate Increases - Duration: 0:29.

For more infomation >> PG&E Asking For Public Input On Proposed Rate Increases - Duration: 0:29.

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✅ Charlotte Casiraghi serait enceinte d'une fille selon Public (photo) - Duration: 1:49.

 De la prétendue grossesse de Charlotte Casiraghi, il en sera question dans les colonnes de Public, dans son édition du 4 mari

 L'hebdomadaire l'affirme enceinte d'une fille.    « Une petite soeur pour Raphaël », le fils qu'elle a eu de sa relation avec l'humoriste Gad Elmaleh, annonce le magazine people en sa Une de demain

 La rumeur de cette grossesse avait été ébruitée en avril dernier par Public, qui affirmait que la jolie brune l'avait annoncée à ses proches

 Charlotte Casiraghi aurait appris être enceinte en décembre dernier.  «Ils ont appris l'heureuse nouvelle durant les vacances de Noël, confiait une source

Entre eux, c'est vrai, tout est allé très vite. Leur coup de foudre remonte tout juste à un an

Ce n'est pourtant pas évident de se fondre dans le monde de Charlotte, mais son fiancé très amoureux a tout fait pour intégrer les codes de la principauté »

 Et dans la foulée, les deux amoureux l'aurait annoncée fin janvier à leurs mères respectives, Caroline de Monaco et Carole Bouquet

For more infomation >> ✅ Charlotte Casiraghi serait enceinte d'une fille selon Public (photo) - Duration: 1:49.

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Domino Park is already a huge hit with the public - Duration: 1:25.

 We can't not mention just-opened Domino Park at Two Trees' mixed-use Domino Sugar complex on the Williamsburg waterfront

 My New York Post colleague Tim Donnelly has already told you how scenic and atmospheric the five-acre park is, crammed with restored remnants of the industrial past

I can add that no new park has been so instantly embraced by the public — not even the High Line, whose chief designer, James Corner Field Operations, also designed Domino

 Incorporating lessons of the High Line and the Battery Park City Esplanade, Domino Park over the past few weekends drew the most enthusiastic multiracial gathering I've ever seen at a new Big Apple park — especially walk-through fountains where kids happily splashed as if they'd never seen water before

Kudos to all involved.

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