HOW TO add Money To Steam Wallet | FREE STEAM CARD CODES | Steam Money
HOW TO add Money To Steam Wallet | FREE STEAM CARD CODES | Steam Money
HOW TO add Money To Steam Wallet | FREE STEAM CARD CODES | Steam Money
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Shakespeare Uncovered | "Much Ado About Nothing" with Helen Hunt | Preview | PBS - Duration: 0:31.
On Shakespeare Uncovered...
I do love nothing in the world so well as you
Helen Hunt revisits one of Shakespeare's most popular plays.
The opening just says we are in we are all in
And the original romantic comedy
It could be a small and intelligent and as witty as you want
But until you open yourself to emotion and to risk then none of it makes sense
Much Ado about Nothing with Helen Hunt
I love it!
On Shakespeare Uncovered
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How Our Brains Reward Us When We See Someone Fail - Duration: 4:39.
Haha, you suck.
Schadenfreude is enjoyment derived from another person's misfortune.
We've all watched fail compilations, shared vines, and cheered on Christy Teigen when she's out here roasting people.
We enjoy seeing someone get dragged, roasted, or cooked for a mistake and that
enjoyment is felt in our reward centers in our brain.
The striatum, the anterior cingulate cortex, and the amygdala, all contain dopaminergic
neurons that activate when experiencing schadenfreude.
It's a complicated emotional response, which feels good, but how much should it govern our decision-making?
Theme song time.
Seriously dude, you gotta get that theme song going.
You deserve everything that's coming to you, stupid.
Don't lie, I know you've gotten a chuckle when someone's taken an L on the internet or in real life.
I know I giggle when I see someone speed past me on the highway and get a ticket.
Or if someone gets a four-piece and some fries in a fast-food fight, you know what I'm saying? You know what I'm saying.
Is it cool to laugh another person's misfortune?
No, but do we do it?
Hell yeah,
because we're human.
Schadenfreude manifests more strongly when we perceive people deserve their misfortunes
or when misfortunes happen to people who are widely disliked.
Makes sense.
If a Nazi or racist gets cooked on Twitter we laugh because we think they're super wack and deserve to get flamed.
Right? Right.
It can also manifest in less desirable social conditions like envy.
Researchers found that when a subject felt that a person was superior and more important,
stronger envy and stronger anterior cingulate cortex activation was also seen.
Also, stronger schadenfreude and striatum activation were induced when misfortunes happened to an envied target.
So, schadenfreude pops up in our brains
whenever someone we perceive as higher status than us or people we don't like gets knocked down a peg or 20.
But schadenfreude could possibly also be a way of social learning from another person's mistakes.
A UCLA study put electrodes in the heads of 10 subjects playing a computer card game and found that observing and predicting errors
in the card game activated the rostral anterior cingulate cortex, part of the cerebrum,
that encodes learning, decision-making, and rewards. Make sense so far.
Made the wrong decision, we get a little bit of dopamine and hopefully you learn from the mistake that you're viewing.
Researchers came to that same conclusion and believed that neurons from that specific area
we're learning and calculating next moves. But wait, there's more. That's a reference.
This may sound a lot like one of my favorite topics, mirror neurons, but they're not the same.
Mirror neurons are neurons that respond equally when we perform an action and when we see someone perform that same action.
When we see someone make a mistake you're not thinking "man, let me go mess that up for myself."
You're learning from that mistake and making better life choices. Today's episode is brought to you by live choices...
When subjects in that card study found that they won, those areas activated much more than when they were let down by their
papapapa pokerface.
Reference.
Could be schadenfreude activated neurons, but remember, correlation does not equal causation.
So as always, more research is needed.
When we see a public figure take an L, it quickly turns into a dragging
competition on who can pull that person down the furthest. This manifests all the way at the top with politics.
America's famous for their two-party system and humans already have a tendency to have trouble identifying with out-group members,
preferring members of our own perceived tribes. And when people from outside of our tribes take serious Ls, ding dong, schadenfreude here.
A 2012 study found that participants felt more positive when misfortunes befell a high-status competitive target
as compared to other social targets with a less competitive streak.
They discovered this by measuring participants facial muscles and found activity consistent with smiling.
Politicians are running for the highest position of power in the country. If they crash, it's normally at high speed
and research suggests that we enjoy it.
That same study suggests that schadenfreude
decreases when a target group member is of a low status or is cooperative and learns from their mistakes
So it's no fun to punch down, only up. Good note for comedians.
Political affiliation has become a sort of tribe identifier in recent years.
In the last few elections, it always felt like a win for one party was a loss for the opposing party, when we live in one whole ass country.
When President Bush won in 2000, it was perceived as the Democrats losing.
When Obama won in 2008, a loss for the GOP.
A 2009 paper looked directly at schadenfreude and political affiliations in four studies, and across all four studies
participants political party affiliation and the intensity of in-group identification within those parties
strongly predicted whether their emotional reactions to news articles describing misfortunes happening to others produce schadenfreude.
Basically, stronger political allegiances correlated with more laughs at the opposing political party's misfortunes.
Schadenfreude has also been linked with anti-empathy, or the opposite of empathy.
Some people really deserve it like bullies, criminals, racists, sexists, people with way too much power.
Sometimes that's all the same person. And they will get what's coming to them.
But remember, research found that schadenfreude punches up, not down. If a more perfect union is the goal here, schadenfreude ain't it.
Okay, enough of this enjoying other people's failures.
I mean, what if there was a way to use neuroscience of the brain to do some good? To like...
Positively influence people. Oh, wait right here in this video. You're nerds. Watch it.
And while you're watching it, make sure you go down a little bell down there and hit subscribe.
We love you.
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What We Learned At During Pride Month At Humber - Duration: 3:10.
I started working closely with the LGBTQ+ community at Humber,
in June 2018 when I started working in the Student Success and Engagement department
Up till working with them at that point, I didn't know what I didn't know.
I'm an international student, and the place that I came from, we don't have this kind of stuff.
You know, before pride month and attending pride month, I was just excited to get some cool cool photos out of it.
But it's so much more than that.
When I went to the parade, it felt like it was more than a party.
It was like a moment for them to show their visibility, and empowerment.
I think it's great they have a space to show their voice.
Pride isn't just about about love, it's not just about colours
I had no idea the depth of conversations that were happeing with things like identifiers.
Even just the day in trials and tribulations of any member of that community.
Because just to go to the parade, does not seem to be, like, enough.
We as content creators, obviously have needs.
And I don't think we would have come anywhere close to having any kind of success if it wasn't for the help and support of the folks from the LGBTQ+ resource centre.
You know we had the entire "All My Intersectional Relations" event. You know, the partnership with the LGBTQ+ resource centre and the Aboriginal Resource Centre
I didn't realize the contention between the two communities.
I realized I'm not doing much.
I liked working with the "Identity Is Not Black and White". Because I was already interested in the theme.
It's so rewarding to see students, stop by our hidden office and look at the posters and nod and they acknowledge it.
I think it's nice as any story teller or content creator or any artists, it's so nice to have your work noticed.
Those pieces of content taught us alot. People are not just, you know, their race, they're not their sex, they're not their religion. People are people.
I would like to thank the LGBTQ+ centre to help us with the project support, with the research, and for the great tie-dye shirts.
So I've been workin with Humber for the past three years and I can honestly say that working with you folks at the LGBTQ+ community centre has been the most rewarding.
You folks have been so patient the with the media team, and have educated us beyond what I can comprehend sometimes.
I wanna thank you for your patience with me, and all the things that I didn't know I didn't know.
WE ARE HUMBER! WE ARE PROUD! MAKE SOME NOISE!
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You won't believe how much Meghan Markle's outfit in Chichester today cost - Duration: 6:39.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have arrived in Chichester. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have begun their official visit to Sussex today
Richard Palmer tweeted: "Harry and Meghan have arrived in Chichester on their first official joint visit to Sussex
"They are going on a walkabout." Twitter fan account Meghans Mirror wrote: "Meghan and Harry have arrived! Meghan looks to be wearing a cream colored coat today
" The Duke and Duchess of Sussex arrived at Edes House, West Street, Chichester, as part of their first joint official visit to Sussex
Meghan wore her hair up and a green leather skirt. Meghan smiled as she met with children from Westbourne School #Chichester who gave her their A-Z of Sussex, according to Daily Mail royal reporter Rebecca English
Meghan's smart coat revealed a few inches of her green leather skirt. The Duchess wore nude shoes, a favourite style of hers, and clutched a green bag to match her leather skirt
Meghan carried the Gabriela Hearst Nina bag, which costs £4,785.73. Meghan Markle wore a Hugo Boss green leather pencil skirt
The Lambskin-leather pencil skirt with panelled structure from the brand costs £457
50. She appeared to be wearing the "Straight Fit Silk Shirt" a rare high street piece in the Duchess's high end wardrobe
It costs £69. Meghan looked to be wearing the Emporia Armani single-breasted coat in double cashmere in a cream hue
The piece costs £1,650. Meghan wore the Ginette NY mini gold wolf chain necklace which costs £304
31. Her whole outfit cost to £7,197.54.Who is Meghan Markle? Quick profile Meghan Markle was born Rachel Meghan Markle, on August 4, 1981 to parents Doria Ragland and father Thomas Markle
Her father was previously married to Roslyn Loveless and Meghan has two elder half sibling - sister Samantha Markle and brother Thomas Markle Junior
Actress Meghan's first television appearance in the USA was in an episode of the medical drama General Hospital in 2002
She later moved on to roles in CSI, Without a Trace and Castle along with bit parts in Hollywood films including Get Him to the Greek, Remember Me and Horrible Bosses
Meghan was also a "briefcase girl" on Deal or No Deal - but her most famous role was as Rachel Zane in legal drama Suits, which launched in 2011
She was written out in the finale of the seventh series when her character got married, which aired in April 2018 - just before she got married herself
Charity and humanitarian work Meghan Markle's career in television has gone hand-in-hand with her support for causes close to her heart
She wrote about the stigma around menstrual health in an article for Time magazine and was a Global Ambassador for World Vision Canada - with whom she travelled to Rwanda for the charity's Clean Water Campaign
And her commitment to gender equality has seen her work with the United Nations - receiving a standing ovation in 2015 for her speech to mark International Women's Day
Relationships In September 2011, she wed film producer Trevor Engelson, who she began dating in 2004
But the pair divorced two years later in August 2013, citing irreconcilable difference
She was in a relationship with celebrity chef Cory Vitiello for almost two years, before they broke it off in 2016 but the two remain good friends
And in June 2016, she met Prince Harry on a blind date set up by a mutual friend
Their relationship began in October that year and just over one year later, on November 27, 2017, the pair announced their engagement
They married on May 19, 2018 at St George's Chapel in Windsor Castle.Meghan's heritage Some have claimed Meghan Markle is the first mixed-race member of the Royal Family
Historians are still arguing about Queen Charlotte, the wife of King George III. But Meghan will be the first royal to openly embrace a mixed-race heritage
She has written about the difficulties of being a biracial actress in Hollywood as she claims she is not black enough for some roles and not white enough for others
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Luggage and facilities on European trains - How to travel by train in Europe - Duration: 1:27.
Each train company offers different onboard facilities,
and what you get can also depend on your ticket type.
Luckily with Trainline, you can compare different ticket options for your journey in an instant!
All European trains have onboard toilets and luggage compartments (some with strict size restrictions).
And if you're bringing a bike with you, there may be special storage areas, but you'll need a reservation.
Some trains, usually the more modern ones,
will have air conditioning, WiFi, and power outlets to make your journey more comfortable
– but sometimes these are just perks for First Class passengers.
If you're travelling for a while, it's worth checking if there are food options on your train to avoid hunger pangs.
Some services will have onboard cafés or food carts selling light snacks, sandwiches and drinks,
while premium services may offer full meals, either at your seat or in a dining carriage.
If your train doesn't have food facilities,
you're better off grabbing some food at the station and bringing it with you.
Bear in mind that there's no smoking allowed on board.
For specific details about your train's facilities, head over to our Trainline Tips page.
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