Thứ Sáu, 5 tháng 10, 2018

News on Youtube Oct 5 2018

Are there any sort of secret spots or angles that you can use when your'e trying to get

a good photo of a pretty standard or very well photographed monuments like the Lincoln

Memorial or the Washington Monument?

What are some tips for sort of spicing up your photos and making them a little more

interesting?

You know, instead of just taking a straight up photo from the spot that everyone takes

a photo, you can look for different ways to take that same photo.

Like instead of photographing the Capitol, for example, just a straight up shot, you

can photograph it with, you know, get down low and photograph the reflection of the Capitol

in the reflecting pool.

Same thing with the Lincoln Memorial, get close to the water, get the reflection and

the Lincoln Memorial at the same time.

Sometimes if you look for different places where you can get photos that might be great

as well, like the National Gallery of Art East Gallery, if you go up there and go to

the second level where the blue rooster is you can get a great shot of the Capitol, same

thing with the Newseum, and those will be a little bit more of a unique perspective.

Yeah, so that raises an interesting point which is, you don't have to take all of your

photos from the ground.

You can go up high.

Up high or down low.

We don't have any skyscrapers in Washington, DC but we have a lot of buildings with rooftops

and you just mentioned two of them, the National Gallery of Art East Building and the Newseum

are both great examples of rooftops.

Are there any other rooftops that you like to go up to for photos?

Well this isn't necessary a rooftop but the Kennedy Center has sort of a higher level

where you can get a great view of the Potomac River and the buildings behind it.

You can also go to the bridges like the Key Bridge, like walk across the bridge and take

a photo of the city from up there, things like that.

And of course if you have friends with rooftops or hotels you're staying at that have a rooftop

that you can go to that's always great as well.

I believe the W Hotel in DC also has a rooftop that's open to the public.

They have a bar up there, it's a little bit expensive but you can get great views up there

as well.

Yeah a lot of hotels do have rooftops so if you're staying at a hotel downtown and you

want to get some great photos you might want to ask before you book or before you arrive,

is there a rooftop?

Can I go up there?

Is it open to the public?

And that's a great way to get some different perspectives on the city.

For more infomation >> How to Spice Up Your Washington DC photos - Duration: 2:47.

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Stephen Colbert addresses CBS exec scandal - Duration: 2:06.

For more infomation >> Stephen Colbert addresses CBS exec scandal - Duration: 2:06.

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Connie Chung: I, too, was sexually assaulted - Duration: 4:13.

For more infomation >> Connie Chung: I, too, was sexually assaulted - Duration: 4:13.

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Gorgeous Beautiful Backyard studio shed for sale in Covington, Washington - Duration: 1:39.

Gorgeous Beautiful Backyard studio shed for sale in Covington, Washington

For more infomation >> Gorgeous Beautiful Backyard studio shed for sale in Covington, Washington - Duration: 1:39.

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Miles se manifiestan en Washington contra Kavanaugh | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 1:20.

For more infomation >> Miles se manifiestan en Washington contra Kavanaugh | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 1:20.

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Cientos protestan contra el juez Kavanaugh en Washington | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 2:13.

For more infomation >> Cientos protestan contra el juez Kavanaugh en Washington | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 2:13.

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Cornyn calls Kavanaugh nomination fight 'our Atticus Finch moment' - Duration: 2:34.

For more infomation >> Cornyn calls Kavanaugh nomination fight 'our Atticus Finch moment' - Duration: 2:34.

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Anti-Kavanaugh protesters descend on Washington - Duration: 1:32.

For more infomation >> Anti-Kavanaugh protesters descend on Washington - Duration: 1:32.

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Marchan en Washington DC contra el juez Kavanaugh | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 0:47.

For more infomation >> Marchan en Washington DC contra el juez Kavanaugh | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 0:47.

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Washington Co., TN deputies investigating two attempted child abductions - Duration: 2:04.

For more infomation >> Washington Co., TN deputies investigating two attempted child abductions - Duration: 2:04.

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Man hit, killed by car near Washington Street and Sherman Drive - Duration: 3:17.

For more infomation >> Man hit, killed by car near Washington Street and Sherman Drive - Duration: 3:17.

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Washington, DC - Duration: 20:13.

For more infomation >> Washington, DC - Duration: 20:13.

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Washington St. Crash - Duration: 0:29.

For more infomation >> Washington St. Crash - Duration: 0:29.

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Washington Co., TN deputies investigating two attempted child abductions - Duration: 2:51.

For more infomation >> Washington Co., TN deputies investigating two attempted child abductions - Duration: 2:51.

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Horrified Assault Survivors Swarm Washington to Protest Kavanaugh - Duration: 8:32.

As a final vote approaches, the sense of urgency that came in response to Kavanaugh has mingled

with one of dread at the prospect that he will end up on the court after it all.

The first time Kristi was ever arrested was a week ago, she told me.

It happened outside of Sen. Chuck Grassley's (R-IA) office. She and a group of other protesters

had gone there to demand that Brett Kavanaugh's Supreme Court nomination be withdrawn. After

they refused to move, Capitol Hill police officers placed them in plastic handcuffs

and did the moving for them. Kristi, who refuses to give her last name

lest she become targeted by Kavanaugh's supporters, was held for three hours. Before

she was taken away, she had the foresight to tell a fellow activist to call her daughter,

who'd need to pick up her brother from school since mom would be, well, indisposed.

Such acts of civil disobedience are not part of Kristi's normal routine. She's 55 years

old and can only recall ever attending two rallies in her life: one in the 1980s to support

the pro-choice movement, and the women's march last year in protest at Donald Trump's

inauguration. Kavanaugh changed her, she says. His nomination

didn't compel her to come to D.C. so much as it overwhelmed her into doing so. She is

a survivor who remains, to this day, incapable of telling her story. She would only tell

me how old she was when it happened and on condition that I didn't print even that

detail. She begs off organizers who ask if she will confront lawmakers by recounting

that horror for them. But she knew, in a single moment, that she had to come to Washington

to lobby lawmakers. "Ford did not want to come forward. She

did it because she had to. And I wasn't going to let her do it alone."

"It wasn't even a decision," she said. "I couldn't not come. I had no idea what

I was supposed to do. I came and found the activists leaders and I said to them: What

do you want me to do, I'll do it?'" By mid-afternoon Tuesday, Kristi had found

her way to the basement of the Russell Senate office building, waiting to confront senators

going through the tunnels to the Capitol building for caucus lunches. It's the location she'd

been assigned by the UltraViolet—the progressive women's group organizing the bird-dogging

of lawmakers. She was wearing New Balance shoes and a small satchel travel bag with

pins on it that say "I believe Christine," in reference to Dr. Christine Blasey Ford,

Kavanaugh's accuser. Her short-cropped hair and black-rimmed glasses belie the notion

that she's some sort of hardened liberal activist. She doesn't bother to play the

part either. As lawmakers pass through, she yells from a distance.

Why do you refuse to believe Dr. Ford?" When they're not there, she nervously looks

around the corner to see who might be coming down the hall. The anxiety oozes from her.

"I was so scared when my daughter was growing up," Kristi tells me. "People told me

it was because of my own history. But it wasn't. I was scared because of this culture. Women

are collateral damage. We are not believed. I'm here because this woman, Christine Ford,

did not want to come forward... She did not want this. She did it because she had to.

And I wasn't going to let her do it alone." There is a remarkable paradox to the Kavanaugh

confirmation battle. Women across the country have been moved to come forward with their

own stories of sexual assault. They've called into CSPAN, confronted lawmakers in elevators,

and shared moments with each other on the floors of Senate office atriums.

Just came upon a truly remarkable scene: a group of women literally sitting on the concrete

floor in a circle in the Hart Senate office building recounting their stories of being

abused and raped. "I have literally told no one else this story before I talked to

you all," one says

And yet, for these same women, the fight over Kavanaugh is a frightening case study of the

perils of stepping forward in the first place. Dr. Ford, to them, is at once a hero and a

cautionary tale. And how the Senate ultimately chooses to vote in the coming days will be

seen not just as a referendum on Kavanaugh but on the notion that women will ever truly

be believed in the first place; that their own stories actually matter.

So they've mobilized. They've given money. Act Blue, the online

portal for campaign donations reported its biggest day ever for giving on Sunday, Sept.

30th, and its second biggest day on Friday, September 28th. They've volunteered. Run

for Something, the progressive organization that encourages first time candidates, so

massive uptick in interest as the confirmation battle heated up.

In the last 24 hours, we've had 20 TIMES the usual average number of people sign up to

volunteer -- all for state & local candidates. The GOP has no idea what they've done.

We've seen a bump in people signing up to volunteer with @runforsomething. Take a look

at what they're saying, then join. "I haven't done anything political ever. I

am just a working mom that is fed up with the current state of our government and the

individuals running it. I might even consider running for something."

"Mad as hell and not gonna take it anymore." "I am an active duty service member... / want

to do something, anything political.. I want to develop efficient systems capable

of making the world I live in run smoother and allow people to work in better harmony."

"I am a life-long tech executive and a little too old to run, but want to help recruit next

gen candidates."

They've overrun local offices. And they've come to D.C. to lobby. Melissa Byrne, action

adviser for UltraViolet, said that at least 60 people had volunteered to birddog senators

so far. On the day that the Senate Judiciary Committee voted on Kavanaugh's nomination,

they had someone shadowing every member on the panel. They've come so regularly that

the security guards now know them. They've come because lawmakers no longer hold town

halls, where constituents usually can plead their case. "We bring the town hall to them,"

is how Byrne puts it. Kristi said she's been roaming through Senate

offices for 12 days now. She's fortunate since she can go home at night. Others were

staying at local churches because they had nowhere else to go. Naina Khanna, 41 and a

survivor too, flew in from Oakland on Sunday and pledged to stay "as long as I am needed."

"I think a confirmation of Judge Kavanaugh for survivors would indicate for us that at

the highest levels of justice in this land, our stories don't matter, the truth doesn't

matter, and what happened to us doesn't matter," said Khanna, executive director

of the Positive Women's Network, a national membership group of women living with HIV.

Some of the demonstrators are savvy politically. But much of what they're doing is slapdash

and improvised. "For the women protesting on her behalf,

Ford is at once a hero and a cautionary tale." No one, for example, seems to have a full

grasp on the members of the United States Senate. At one point, a crew chased a middle-aged

man to the elevator, to demand he oppose Kavanaugh. His fleshy white face, neatly parted hair,

and circular pin on his lapel gave off a senatorial vibe. But, alas. "I appreciate what you're

doing," he said at one point. "But you've got the wrong guy. I'm not a senator."

Byrne compared the process to fishing. The vast majority of the time, nothing happens.

And then, suddenly, you reel one in. It's what happened with Sen. Jeff Flake (R-AZ),

when two survivors caught him in the elevator and demanded that he listen to their stories.

On Tuesday, the closest they came is with Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) who recognized the

crew from an earlier interaction and angrily pointed his finger at Byrne before scampering

off towards the Capitol. At the end of the day, it didn't appear

that many people, let alone senators, were reconsidering where they will come down on

the nominee. All of which has created a near-paralyzing sense of urgency for those who have gathered.

They've revealed the most horrifying moments of their lives for lawmakers and the public,

and it all might be for naught. "It would mean that they don't have the

ears to hear the truth from survivors, from a credible survivor who had absolutely nothing

to gain by coming here and putting herself on the line like this," Kristi explains.

"I will be devastated and ashamed. I will be working very hard to not let their shame

add to what I already deal with."

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