Thứ Tư, 28 tháng 11, 2018

News on Youtube Nov 28 2018

Narcos Mexico Accuracy: How Much of Season 4 is True? | Heavy.com

Narcos: Mexico traces the rise and (the begin of) the fall of the Guadalajara cartel, shifting the "drug war" from Colombia to Mexico and the U.S.

border.

(Be forewarned that this article contains spoilers.).

The series is certainly popular, and the acting feels authentic.

However, what is the accuracy of Narcos: Mexico? Are the characters real? Are the narratives? The answer is that, generally, yes, the series stays true to the broader sketch of the Guadalajara cartel and the characters leading and interacting with it.

However, some scenes and dialogue are fictionalized and, at times, the series veers away from known facts.

There is a disclaimer at the beginning of the series warning that, while the season is "inspired by true events," some characters, scenes, businesses and so on have been fictionalized for dramatic purposes.

Here's what you need to know:.

Ernesto Fonseca Carrillo AKA Don Neto.

Ernesto Fonseca Carrillo, known as Don Neto, is one of the series' most interesting and colorful characters.

An aging co-founder of the Guadalajara cartel, he's skeptical at first but proves to be a loyal comrade in arms to cartel chief Felix Gallardo.

Don Neto is real, and his true story closely tracks with the Netflix storyline.

In real life, Don Neto was sent to prison for decades as a result of DEA agent Kiki Camarena's death, but, in 2016, he was placed on house arrest in what Mexican News Daily described in 2016 as luxury digs.

He had already served 31 years of a 40-year sentence at that time, and, Fox News reports that, in 2017, he was granted early release by an appellate court in a ruling that the network said would apparently allow Don Neto to leave his house.

In Narcos: Mexico, Don Neto is played by actor Joaquin Cosio.

Don Neto's cartel roots run deep.

According to El Pais, he is the uncle "of the brothers Amado Carrillo Fuentes The Lord of the Skies and Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, leaders of the Juarez Cartel.".

In real life, Don Neto was already a leader in a Sinaloan organization of drug traffickers before he helped Gallardo unite various fractious groups into one unit.

According to the book, Mexico: Narco-Violence and a Failed State? By George W.

Grayson, Ernesto Fonseca Carrillo was called "The Godfather" and "pioneered large-scale poppy production and trade" in Sinaloa.

He also mentored Rafael Caro Quintero, who is described in the book as a "shrewd and youthful entrepreneur who converted Mexican marijuana from second-rate weed to the choice of connoisseurs by perfecting a seedless variety of the plant (sinsemillas.)".

According to CC News, Don Neto was was captured in 1985 – four years before Gallardo – in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.

The death of Camarena was planned at a Christmas Party in 1984 that Don Neto attended, the site reports.

"Don Neto confessed that he and Caro Quintero had made the decision to kidnap Camarena," journalist Anabel Hernández told BBC.

Miguel Angel Felix Gallardo.

According to BBC, Gallardo wasn't actually the first drug lord to bring cocaine from Colombia to the United States by way of Mexico.

That distinction belongs to "his mentor and former head of the Sinaloa band, Pedro Avilés," who was slain in the 1970s, the news site reports.

BBC reports that it's true that Gallardo – known as "El Padrino" – formed an alliance with Pablo Escobar in Colombia; "By the end of the 1980s, Félix Gallardo's alliance with Escobar handled 60% of the cocaine consumed in the United States via Mexico," the news site reports.

El Mundo reports that Gallardo was indeed a member of the Federal Judicial Police who was born in Sinaloa and later "was the escort of the children of the former governor of the state.

" He did, in fact, start trafficking marijuana (and also opium) before making his deal with Escobar.

He was captured in 1989.

Where is he today? He's 72-years-old, and he's serving a 37-year sentence in a Mexican maximum-security prison.

He's been in prison since 1989, when he was captured in his bathrobe in what is known as Operation Leyenda.

He had been sought since the death of Kiki Camarena, but he evaded authorities for five years.

By 2011, Gallardo's family told a Mexican court that his health was failing.

According to The Washington Post, the family members claimed Felix Gallardo has "cataracts, deafness, ulcers and a hernia." (You can read more about the real Kiki Camarena here.).

"For more than three years, without any justification, prison authorities have kept him segregated, isolated and without contact with other inmates, and have prevented him from participating in any physical, sports or educational activities," the drug lord's family wrote to the court, The Post reported.

How brutal was Felix Gallardo during his prime? According to The Post, "he is reputed to have punished a subordinate's alleged betrayal by killing the subordinate's children, cutting off the head of his wife, and sending the head to him in a box.

In March 1985, the DEA recovered the body of Kiki Camarena, 37.

According to El Pais, Camarena's "skull, jaw, nose and cheekbones were crushed with a tire iron.

As he lay dying, a cartel doctor was ordered to keep him alert by administering drugs.".

According to The Los Angeles Times, Camarena's murder "led to the fall of Gallardo and his close associates" and the fracturing of their cartel.

Amazingly, Gallardo was only recently re-sentenced in the death.

Gallardo was sentenced to 37 years in 2017 for the death of Camarena by a Mexican court (as well as for the murder of Alfredo Zavala, a Mexican pilot), according to The Times.

He's been in custody since 1989; however, a retrial had been ordered.

Zavala was helping Camarena in his "undercover operations," The LA Times reported.

He was originally sentenced to 40 years in prison in the Camarena death.

Key figures in the Camarena death had filed appeals of their sentences.

Gallardo was ordered to pay about $1.17 million in reparations, according to The Associated Press.

"We coordinated with the Mexican national police … and we started to do wire intercepts and we tracked him to a residence in Guadalajara — he never left Guadalajara, that was his power base," Mike Vigil, former chief of international operations for the DEA, told Business Insider, of the capture of Gallardo.

A 1989 New York Times article on Gallardo's arrest says that authorities also rounded up an entire city police force for questioning about ties to him.

It's true that Gallardo was close to a Mexican governor, Antonio Toledo Corro, according to The Times, and was photographed at a wedding with him.

According to the book U.S.

Border Security: A Reference Handbook, by Judith Ann Warner, Felix Gallardo started working as a family bodyguard for Mexican Governor Leopoldo Sanchez Celis.

Gallardo was able to use those connections to build his cartel.

Gallardo was a godfather to Celis's son, who was murdered and tortured by a rival cartel.

He was once a federal police agent and was born on a Sinaloan ranch.

He was also a supporter of the Contras, a point that some have used to allege led the U.S.

government to look the other way before the Camarena murder.

For more infomation >> Narcos Mexico Accuracy: How Much of Season 4 is True? | Heavy.com - Duration: 12:44.

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

How Much Do Affiliate Marketers Make? (Make Money!) - Duration: 6:26.

Chances are that you've about affiliate marketing and you want to know how you can use it to

make more money.

Well, you came to the right place.

What's up, go-getter?

It's Angie with Fab and Focused, and on my channel I talk about successful side hustle

advice to help you turn it into your main hustle.

Be sure to subscribe to my channel and hit that bell so that way you can get notified

when I post a new video every week.

Let's start off with what is affiliate marketing actually is.

Affiliate marketing is when a company pays you to promote their products through a commission.

Basically you promote the product, someone buys the product through you, and then you

get a percentage of the total sales for your work.

And there's a lot of affiliate programs out there, but they usually work the same way.

Now, I've made a couple thousand dollars myself with affiliate marketing, so I am so excited

to share this with you guys.

Let's talk about getting started.

Before you do anything else, you need to figure out your personal brand.

If you already have a social media presence then this is not going to be hard to figure

out.

What are most of your posts about?

And what subjects get the most people talking on your page?

Once you've figured out what kinds of things people associate with you personally, then

you want to look for products and services that match your image.

And if you don't have a social media presence, then that's fine.

Just think about things that you like, or know a lot about.

Once you've identified a few things that you feel really comfortable and confident talking

about, then you can look for brands that match your interests.

And actually I accidentally did this and I made $4,000 the first time with affiliate

marketing.

I made a video about it of course.

I'll add that link somewhere here and in the description below.

Go ahead and check it out if you want.

The good news is that most brands have some kind of affiliate program.

There's literally thousands to choose from.

And you can find the right one just by simply Googling it.

If you're into cosmetics, then just type cosmetic affiliate program.

If you're into health, the health affiliate program.

You get the idea, right?

Just a little side note, sometimes you're going to have to go through a whole application

process before you can get approved to promote that product or service.

Brands are very selective on who they want promoting their products, at least some.

All right, now I want to hear from you guys.

Comment below and tell me if you can think of a product or service that you're really

interesting in trying to promote.

With that in mind, let's talk about making money.

Once you're all signed up and approved the company is going to send you an affiliate

link.

And this affiliate link is basically your golden ticket because any purchases made with

that link is going to make you money.

Now with that said, commissions do vary from program to program.

So it could literally be 1% to 75% or more that you could be making off commission for

a particular product you're promoting.

Now, where you post that link is entirely up to you.

But I wanted to give you a few options.

The first are Facebook posts.

They are a great way for you to experiment with the wording to see what works and what

doesn't work.

Another one is Instagram.

It's great, but the thing is that you can't really link it to the caption or the comment,

you have to put it in the bio section.

So when people actually click on it, it'll take them to that product or service.

Another one is through your YouTube channel.

You can and you should include it your description of your video.

And if you like writing and have a blog that you can actually post it there as well.

As far as the affiliate link itself, the one that the company usually gives you is pretty

long and it looks pretty spammy, so what I like to do is use a tool called Bitly to shorten

it up.

What you basically do is you copy the long link and then you paste it on there, and what

it'll do, it'll generate a shorter one.

That's the one that I use to post on my Instagram bio section or my Facebook post.

I encourage you guys to do the same.

I'll add that link for you below, if you want to go check that out.

All right, now let's get into the pros and cons of affiliate marketing.

Like any other job, affiliate marketing does have its share of pros and cons that you should

consider.

The first pro is that it's passive income, which means that as long as your link is active

and up then you're going to make money.

And if you get really good at it, then you can make this your main source of income.

Another pro is that there's really no startup costs, which means that you don't really need

to have a website, a business, to start doing affiliate marketing.

The third pro, and it's probably my favorite, is that you don't need to create a product

or store it anywhere in your house or anything like that.

The fourth is that you can use social media, and that's free to use.

So literally there's no excuses to not do this.

And last but not least is that you get to talk about products and services that you

like, which is always fun.

With that said, the biggest con is that if you don't have an online presence, or it's

very low, it is going to take you some time to generate some money.

Now there is a way of promoting products and services, but just keep in mind that nobody

wants someone who is constantly and aggressively just telling them to buy, buy, buy.

So instead, start off by explaining the benefits, the features, your experience with the product,

things like that so it comes off more of like a conversation.

Just don't ever come across really sales-y.

Because if you do, people are not going to buy it.

Now, I did want to mention a few disclaimers.

The first is that you're obligated by the FTC to tell people that you're going to be

making commission off that product or service that you're promoting.

The thing is that you don't you deceiving people.

If you have a blog, you can just put a little disclaimer on there.

If you have a YouTube channel or you're making a video on that product and you can state

it at the end.

And also put it in the description below.

What I've found is that when you're honest and upfront and transparent with people, then

they're going to want to buy even more, whatever it is that you're promoting.

But anyway, I encourage you to go to the FTC site and review all of that before you start

promoting.

I'll add that link for you below, just to make it a little easier.

Now, the second thing that I do want to warn you is that reputation is everything.

With that said, always be selective of the products or services that you promote.

If you promote a very cheap and bad product just to get money, then you're eventually

going to ruin your reputation, and then no one is going to want to buy from you.

And that's a wrap.

If you have any questions, feel free to leave a comment below and I will be more than happy

to help you.

Now if you want to know more about affiliate marketing, then I invite you to join my exclusive

group called CLUB Fan and Focused where you're going to meet like-minded people who are starting

their business or side hustle.

You're going to get encouragement from me and your Fab fam.

The link to join is in the description below.

If you liked this video, please let me know by liking it below, subscribing, and also

sharing it with your friends.

Until next time.

Okay, let's get it.

So, oh.

Couldn't we just let it stick in there?

This damn hair!

And then you get a commission of the total ... okay, so.

Here it goes again.

This little piece of hair.

Damn it.

Well, you came to the right place.

We're going to be talking about blah, blah, blah.

For more infomation >> How Much Do Affiliate Marketers Make? (Make Money!) - Duration: 6:26.

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

[VOEZ] How much difference between 30FPS and 60FPS? - Duration: 2:58.

This time, I made a comparison video between 30FPS and 60FPS,

as a celebration(?) of the new camera I bought.

Please compare how different those are!

For more infomation >> [VOEZ] How much difference between 30FPS and 60FPS? - Duration: 2:58.

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

Textile Designer Salary | How Much Do Textile Design Jobs Earn? - Duration: 11:12.

hey what's up fools I learned the senior textile designer am

portrait illustrator behind the brand Lauren Lesley Studio. I've been a designer

for over 10 years and I've designed textiles sold by anthropologie, target and

Wayfair online. In this video I'm going to give you an honest look at how much

money textile designers actually make and the five factors that influence your

salary as a creative so make sure to watch the whole video because I have a

little surprise for you at the end. like it leave a comment and of course

subscribe to my channel. alright let's get started. okay so design salaries are

based on five main factors number one is your years of experience so entry level

designers start out at around 45 K this was updated by payscale.com

as of october 1st 2018 so just keep that in mind so according to this chart that

payscale.com shows it looks like most entry-level designers start out at

around 45 K and they tend to kind of peak at around 65 K so I kind of

disagree with this statistic unless they're talking about what you would

earn before you become a senior designer but when it says you know that you're

experienced and you have about ten to twenty years of experience you can

definitely make more than sixty-five K at that level but you are generally

promoted to be a senior designer after around ten years of experience so they

may be you know not including that okay so factor number two is going to be your

talent and your portfolio now you your talent definitely can influence the

amount of money that you make but I would say it is in conjunction with your

years of experience so anytime that you have that much practice year after year

after year you are going to become more talented just whatever you practice

that like that you're gonna just naturally get better at but I would say

that your level of talent will definitely impact the salary that you

can earn so what you should do is learn what your salary range could be so from

here to here you know based on your years of experience and location and

things like that and then try to aim to get towards the high end of that range

based on your talent and how strong your portfolio is if you have a kick-ass

portfolio and you have let's say three years of experience you know you're not

past that five years of experience yet but you may be able to earn fifty five

cave instead of forty five K and that's like a huge difference especially at

that level so you want to be realistic but also optimistic evaluate how strong

your portfolio is and see how confident you feel in your ability to fulfill the

job and impact the company overall if you feel confident in your ability then

the employer will also feel confident in you and will be more likely to give you

a higher salary so factor number three is going to be location unfortunately

sometimes that kind of seems like it sucks but I do want to say that you want

to weigh the cost of living in your area versus your salary

so you know let's say that you're living in New York where it says New York has

an eight percent higher than the national average for your salary so that

sounds really great right but the cost of living in New York is pretty extreme

so if you're living in let's say Atlanta and there's a 9% decrease against the

national average but if you're able to find a much cheaper apartment or just

overall cost of living is much cheaper then you still may be coming out ahead

even if you have a lesser salary so pay scale con gives you a customized salary

report based on your location and years of experience which is pretty cool

so you can just type in your location and your years and get your salary

report the creative group also provides customized salary report and it's based

on even more it's based on the national averages the job title and your location

and it's adjusted for 2019 they come out with it every year so even if you're

watching this video and it's been a couple of years they will still have a

new report for your for the upcoming year so you should still go check check

out the creative group and I would recommend looking at both pay scale calm

and the creative group and just see if both of your customized reports kind of

puts you in the same salary ballpark that's a really good way to get you know

a pretty confident idea on what salary you could make and creative group also

gives adjusted salaries against the national average for all major cities in

the u.s. so you can go down and see I just recently moved to Birmingham so it

says that Birmingham is five percent less than the national average which

kind of sucks but cost of living is pretty cheap here so at the end of the

day I might still be coming out ahead versus someone who maybe is living in

New York okay so step four is gonna be the company growth you have to think

about what company is interviewing you are they having a positive year do they

have growth year after year are they a strong company is it someone who can you

know kind of afford to pay you at the higher end of your range and factor

number five is going to be market rates now just because the company can afford

to pay you more it doesn't necessarily mean that they should you definitely

want to get to know the market rates in your area because competition with other

designers is very real and you want to kind of weigh okay how competitive is it

in my field as a rug designer honestly like the competition isn't horrible

because not that many people know how to design rugs and now I have seven years

of experience under my belt whereas if I was a graphic designer

you know maybe there would be higher competition because more people are

needed as graphic designers it seems like the competition would be higher in

that field but it is a factor you want to make sure that you know what

the competition is and what the market rates are because you don't want someone

else to get the job just because you priced yourself too high now that still

doesn't mean that you shouldn't get the salary that you deserve you shouldn't

lowball yourself at all but you know if someone is around you're saying talent

range and the competition is pretty high you know maybe you want to stay a little

bit you know I I wouldn't be unrealistic with the salary that you want to earn in

other words so the median salary for a textile designer according to the

creative group is fifty two thousand three hundred eighty three dollars per

year but it can go all the way up to eighty one thousand eighty six dollars

per you so this data gives you a great starting point for where you believe you

fall in the range based on experience talent location and market rates and I

would say that those stats sound right to me it kind of gives you the

percentage on what the median is so you know ten percent of textile designers

are earning this at the lower end it cetera and I would say eighty one

thousand dollars a year is probably going to be more of a senior textile

designers salary um just to give you that data point but so that would say

that's more like you know ten years experience overall but yeah that all

sounds right to me based on being from someone inside the industry the creative

group also provides a yearly salary guide for creatives which is awesome so

the 2019 salary guide is available to download and unfortunately they don't

have specific info for textile designers but I find that I can get a good idea by

studying the salary trends of graphic designers and illustrators so I would

say when I those stats it feels very comparable to textile

designers so the 2019 salary range for graphic designers is 42 K on the low end

and 83k on the high end and for me like I said this is very consistent with what

textile designers earn so you can take a look at the salary guide it has

everything from what a creative director earns to an art director or project

you know production artists etc and like I said I mostly pay attention to the

graphic designers and illustrators because they seem to be mostly in line

with what textile designers earn as well so for a little transparency. here's a

photo of me in my very first big-girl job I was an entry-level graphic

designer. I worked here for four years and starting out I made $35,000 a year.

Now, keep in mind this was in 2008 in South Carolina so the good news is

that the market rates have steadily increased since then. I did feel kind of

poor I have to admit but the good news is that my own salary also increased

with experience - and I don't feel quite as poor as I did back then. so ten years

later I'm happy to say I'm making well above the average salary for textile

designers. so if you had any questions please leave a comment down below for me

and I'll be sure to answer those if you have any ideas for other videos you

would like to see please leave that in the comments below as well or if you

just like this video leave me like a heart emoji or something cute that would

really make my day! also please subscribe to my channel and click the little bell

above and that way you'll be notified every time I come out with a new video

and don't worry I don't come out with a new video every day so it's not gonna

like harass you or bug you it'll probably be like once a week at the very

most more likely like once a month if you'd like to check out my website go to

lauren leslie calm and be sure to look down in the description I have a free

surprise for you guys it's a PDF download chock full of information so be

sure to get your free copy and if you'd like to join our Facebook group go

to Facebook.com/DesignTribeLaurenLesley I'm also posting

lots of information here and it's a great way for us to just kind of get

community with each other and thank you so much for watching I'll see you in the

next video!

For more infomation >> Textile Designer Salary | How Much Do Textile Design Jobs Earn? - Duration: 11:12.

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

How Much Is My Case Worth: Personal Injury lawyer Alabama, do I have a PI case, Insurance claims PI - Duration: 2:10.

Hello mark, Pete row with the Petro law firm, you know, I am always asked

By a client or a potential client or someone that I meet out on the street and talk about their case

How much is my case worth well before I answer that let me tell you every case is different. So

call me today at

The number listed below so we can talk about your case. But let me answer your voice. Okay, get the question

What is the value of your case? Let me tell you if you ever meet a lawyer. Who tells you

From an initial phone call that they can tell you what the value of your case is

You need to run because that lawyer is not being truthful with you because there is no way that a lawyer can tell you

What the value of your case is?

Without having a lot of facts without having reviewed all of your medical records and Bills

When you were through with your medical treatment

Knowing what's their lost wages in there?

Knowing whether or not your injury is going to be long-lasting or for something that you will immediately recover from

Whether or not you will have loss of earning capacity

Going forward because you can no longer return to work or because you can't return to what you were doing before so

There are a lot of factors that go into

Evaluating the case and a lawyer that is telling you the truth will tell you that they cannot

Give you a fair evaluation of your case

until you were through with your

medical treatment so

Pick up the phone today and call me and we will discuss your case

I cannot tell you what the value of your case is, but I can tell you the things that you need to look at

What you need to be aware of?

For at the end of the road and you're through through medical treatment

And we can take a look at give a fair evaluation every day

So pick up the phone today and give me a call Mark Petro Petro law firm

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét