Thứ Năm, 24 tháng 8, 2017

Youtube daily as Aug 24 2017

Right As Trump Landed In Phoenix, He Walked Up To Marines And Did The UNBELIEVABLE

President Trump loves the American armed forces.

The Commander-in-Chief has taken time out of his packed schedule in Arizona to meet

with US Marines in Yuma.

He is such an awesome President.

He always, always makes it a point to meet with our troops and show appreciation.

Here's the video below by ABC News.

President was greeted with tons of cheers ahead of the Phoenix rally.

You will not see that video on CNN.

Today, ABC News reported that Trump had a scheduled visit in the Marine Corps base beside

the Arizona- Mexico border.

This Trump's first rally in Phoenix.

that he is about to have in the West.

It's going to be a big deal.

He's gonna announce giving this country a better deal.

SHARE THIS right now if you are proud of your President and the amazing job that he has

done.

You can see it on those troop's faces.

This country is coming back stronger

than ever.

God

bless

our troops.

For more infomation >> Right As Trump Landed In Phoenix, He Walked Up To Marines And Did The UNBELIEVABLE - Duration: 13:54.

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What to do during the off season as a wedding photographer - Duration: 6:08.

hey guys! welcome to today's video. I am answering a question that I got inside

of my photo boss Facebook group which, by the way, you can join for free right now

via the link description below. the question was "what do I do during my

off season" how am I marketing my business? and

growing my business how am i attracting I do clients during my offseason and

that's the question I'm gonna answer for you guys today I thought this was a

perfect topic for today's video so I'm going to be covering some of the things

I do personally and that I recommend you also do as well during your off season

despite how it sounds my offseason is actually one of my busiest times of year

while I don't have as many weddings or gigs on my calendar I am spending a lot

more time educating myself and planning out what the rest of the year is gonna

look like taking care of things on the business end when I think of the busy

season versus my offseason I kind of picture a swimmer I'm into my lane my

head is down I'm working really hard in hustling during the on season the

offseason is my time to come to the surface to take a breather to kind of

look around and take stock and figure out what's been working what hasn't been

working and what needs a little bit more attention in my business the number one

thing I'm doing during my offseason that I highly recommend you also be doing and

your offseason is marketing you should always be marketing yourself but the

offseason is particularly a good time because you just have more of it a few

ways that I go ahead and market myself our blogging shoots that I may not have

had time to blog earlier in the year when I was having back-to-back weddings

so I go back in my archives and I make sure that I take some time to blog these

images taking special care to tag vendors and let them know so that

there's a potential reshoring going on the next thing I do is submit my work so

that I can be featured so this all falls under the marketing category the next

step that I take in the marketing of my business is to map out the next six

months following my offseason now regardless of when your offseason is

calendar maybe it's in the winter maybe it's in this summer depending on what

time zone or climate you live in it could be the opposite of mine but odds

are you will have a time that is kind of more of a lull in your booking and that

is your offseason this is the perfect time to dive in and look at the

potential promotions that you might have it coming up in the next few months you

can go ahead and take a look at your calendar and see if you're happy with

the number of bookings that you have or if you need some areas that need a

little extra attention so you have a marketing plan you've gotten your blog

updated the next thing I like to do is update my website this is something that

does not get done very often just because of how time-consuming it is

after I've gone through and blogged some of those weddings and tagged some of

those vendors I now have new images that I'd like to showcase in my portfolio

take those images and update your website the next thing you'll want to do

in your off season is take some time to network and this doesn't have to be a

big scary thing where you go into a conference center with your business

cards and it's a little bit anxious kind of situation it doesn't have to be like

that what I like to do is find some really cool people and Instagram send

them a message and see if they like to grab coffee I like to network with other

people in the wedding industry but that are not in my same field under that same

umbrella of networking this is also a great time to do some venue walkthroughs

if there's a venue that you've been wanting to work at this is a great time

to contact them go meet them have a face-to-face and walk through the space

so you've updated your website you've updated your blog you have all this new

work it's time to send some of that work to your favorite vendors so go ahead and

create some smaller galleries and gift that to your favorite vendors

potentially they will share those images it's also keeping you top of mind for if

they ever need a photographer the next thing I want you to do during your next

offseason is review your workflows how is that onboarding process for brides

and grooms how is it when somebody inquires with you are you writing the

same emails a lot or do you have that system down now if you haven't thought

about what your workflows in a while check out this series I did I think five

or so videos I also include a free pdf and lots of bonus material and it's all

available here on YouTube so if you check out that series I think it's

really to help you to tighten up those systems

make sure that you're not wasting time here and there throughout the year that

really really add up to really getting into your productivity I want to

encourage you during your offseason to be sure to take some time to get read

inspired travel read a book do something that gets you back to you and maybe dive

into some personal work even if you're playing around with film or kind of

diving into Photoshop or doing something completely different than your normal

wedding workflow I think you can just refresh you as an artist the final tip

that I have for you guys is to educate yourself educating yourself and taking

it online class or reading a book you're really staying sharp you're honing your

skills you're continuing to learn and you're making sure that you don't get

fuzzy in some areas that maybe you could use some work so one thing that I do

that I think might be interesting for you guys to try is I create a to-do list

and I keep it somewhere like inside of my planner or somewhere that I won't

lose it where I have what's called my offseason to-do list

and essentially I create a list of things that I would like to get done

when I have more time so what's cool is when the offseason rolls around and it's

February I can look at a list that I made and maybe June when I was really

busy with weddings and I wanted to work on certain projects but I couldn't now

at that time in my offseason I can look at the list and I can decide whether or

not I should do it or whether I should mix it but it's just nice to have that

list and know that I'm keeping it and gathering it throughout the year those

are my tips for growing your business during the offseason I would love to

hear what you all do if you have some similar tips or something completely

different share it in the comments down below I

would love to hear from you you guys next week bye guys

For more infomation >> What to do during the off season as a wedding photographer - Duration: 6:08.

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Former CIA Director James Woolsey: Trump hasn't said anything as foolish as George W. Bush - Duration: 2:02.

that Jim just said pushes the

envelope beyond where it ought

to be.

>> Do you think the president of

the United States has a

responsibility to act

accordingly to befitting of the

office and not to waffle.

There's one thing to say that,

well, you know, I think that

someone is weak or maybe not as

versed in it or there is a

policy difference or someone is

weak than saying someone is not

stable and you cannot trust

their decision making abilities

and they have access to the

nuclear codes and as Garrett

said four minutes later

unilaterally, it's over.

>> I don't think that trump has

said anything as fool as as

George W. Bush's looking into

Putin's eyes and seeing his

soul.

>> He hasn't spoken -- he has

only spoken glowing things about

Putin, this president, as well.

And we also remember George W.

Bush --

>> Nobody caused as much

increase in the power of Putin

as president Obama.

When he drew the red line and

said, Putin -- or said to Assad,

you will not use chemical

weapons against your own people,

Assad did and president Obama's

solution was to turn it over to

Russia.

>> No one has questioned the

stability of any president in

modern history as they have

questioned this president's

ability, members of his own

party.

>> They ought to have a reason

to --

>> You don't think there is a

reason.

Did you watch the speech last

night?

>> I did.

>> You don't think there is a

reason to question his

stability.

>> No, people can disagree with

parts of it.

But I think that we need to

realize that in terms of the

world as a whole, the united

States' stability is a center

piece.

We are a big family that has an

For more infomation >> Former CIA Director James Woolsey: Trump hasn't said anything as foolish as George W. Bush - Duration: 2:02.

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Matthew McConaughey on Richard Linklater as a Director - Duration: 2:24.

Hey guys, one more thing: this summer when you're being inundated with all this American bicentennial

Fourth of July brouhaha, don't forget what you're celebrating, and that's the fact

that a bunch of slave-owning, aristocratic, white males didn't want to pay their taxes.

You know, you look at a genre and say, "I've got my own teenage

film to make." I was always trying to capture a moment, or the essence of it.

I didn't have a great plot, but I had the texture of it. I had the

feel of it. Alright you little Freshman bitches! All right!

It was kind of magical recreating a period and the atmosphere of a point in time.

Nostalgia kind of suggests a warm glow, like, "Oh, what a

great time." I didn't have that feeling about this. And I think that comes

through in the movie, if you really break it down. But yet you look back on it, you know,

there's something kind of great about it, too.

There was something about the footage that we were getting that was so genuine.

I felt like I'd really never seen that kind of footage before.

Whatever it was that he managed to do,

pulling that ensemble together, it was an incredible experience to be able to

watch the dailies, and just go, "Oh my god. These kids are nailing it." And the only

reason they're nailing it is because it was well-cast, and they trust Rick.

So read it in your mind, again. Okay. You know, I really like Tony's last

column about this decade. What was that line? The uncertainties of the '60s have

been sold out for the certainty of boredom in the '70s.

Maybe the '80s will be radical, you know? I figure we'll be in our twenties...

Rick gave all the cast members albums, and goes, "This is what I think your guy or your

girl would be listening to." That, number one, is brilliant because it's not a director

telling anyone what to do. You get to go off and listen to music from the time

and the place, and the director thinks it's what you'd be listening to.

The actor gets to own whatever they come up with about what that means. We love

that stuff.

you

For more infomation >> Matthew McConaughey on Richard Linklater as a Director - Duration: 2:24.

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Breaking: 14 homes destroyed as the Ukraine War escalates. - Duration: 6:54.

Everyone are running from here for some reason

Husband ran to Mariupol

Here's no dogs only puppy

Two dogs died from cardiac rupture

Don't be scared

That's my property

Shell came from there

Wall, behing the wall was garage, there was new "Ford"...

There's no "Ford" anymore

I covered over the wall

As good as woman could did it

Propped it because joists were falling

And that's all

How many homes were hit over this week?

14 houses were burned, totally, they don't exist anymore

Home next but one from mine

There's no homes till the end of the street

2 homes there are burned

Over that street are burned, first home at this street is burned

Two more homes were burned further over the street

Two homes were burned in the draw

14 homes were burned over 9 days

Over 9 days

Because there were purposeful shelling of homes

They were firing untill it got ignited

They shooting at one point until it got ignited

When it got ignited they stop

After that they don't let to extinguish flame

There's a shelling until it burns out

Because firefighters came to us, God bless them

And they can't normally extinguish flame because of heavy shelling

Soldiers, you fight? Leave civilians

Civilians are beside the point

Why Ukrainians shoot at civil village?

I don't know why and who's shooting

I'm not a soldier

And I don't care

Why and who's shooting, who and what need

I'd say honestly, I didn't go to elections

I don't support any army

I'm against these shellings

Any conflict could be solved peacefully, without shellings... Any

It's your car?

Yes, "Ford" made in 2008

In 2014 shell hit there

There was garage made from this

Here was big good garage

And it's gone

As in movie "if there was a boy?"

So my garage, there was one but isn't anymore

Boys helped to cover the roof

I'd cover over the wall... "Cover over"... no snow coming inside and that's all

Destroyed everything...

I'd like to ask why? It bothered someone?

What's that?

That's BMP shell that ignited it all

There's Ukrainian side

And you can see where from shell came

It's clearly seen

For more infomation >> Breaking: 14 homes destroyed as the Ukraine War escalates. - Duration: 6:54.

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Liverpool as bad as Barcelona this summer amid Philippe Coutinho saga - journalist - Duration: 2:58.

Liverpool as bad as Barcelona this summer amid Philippe Coutinho saga - journalist

At least that's what journalist Tony Evans has suggested on Twitter amid the ongoing Philippe Coutinho saga. Coutinho has been lined up by Barcelona as a replacement for compatriot Neymar, who left the Nou Camp for Paris St-Germain this month.

And in a bid to force a move he's handed in a transfer request, which Fenway Sports Group (FSG) rejected as they are insistent he will not leave.

Liverpool's stance has seen them knock back three bids for Coutinho, coming in at £72m, £90m and £118m respectively.

The latest reports indicate Barcelona are poised to return with a fresh offer of around £136m for the 25-year-old - despite Liverpool's refusal to do business.

Evans, who writes for ESPN and the London Evening Standard and supports the Reds, has seemingly likened Barcelona's pursuit of Coutinho to Liverpool's interest in Naby Keita and Virgil Van Dijk. On Twitter, Evans said: Re Coutinho.

FSG will not budge on this issue. However, its another sign of naivety. Were heading to the sort of offer worth taking. But theyve backed themselves into corner with statement.

Still, dont trust recruitment dept to spend money well. So he might as well stay.

On Barca, they are a club I despise (Real [Madrid], too). But to think their activities are any less moral than LFCs is delusion.

And the football business is dog-eat-dog. Ask Southampton about us. Southampton and RB Leipzig have informed Liverpool that Van Dijk and Keita are not for sale this summer.

And Liverpool's decision to continue targeting the duo has drawn criticism given their own position on Coutinho's future.

For more infomation >> Liverpool as bad as Barcelona this summer amid Philippe Coutinho saga - journalist - Duration: 2:58.

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রাজ ভট্টাচার্যের জীবনে এখন দুই সঞ্চারী Zee bangla serial Aamar Durga Raj Bhattacharya as Doctor Anja - Duration: 2:43.

For more infomation >> রাজ ভট্টাচার্যের জীবনে এখন দুই সঞ্চারী Zee bangla serial Aamar Durga Raj Bhattacharya as Doctor Anja - Duration: 2:43.

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Lottery Machines Busy As People Buy Powerball Tickets Ahead Of Big Jackpot - Duration: 2:14.

For more infomation >> Lottery Machines Busy As People Buy Powerball Tickets Ahead Of Big Jackpot - Duration: 2:14.

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Kim Heechul And Shin Dong Yup Confirmed As MCs For New Couple Matching Variety Show - Duration: 0:59.

Kim Heechul And Shin Dong Yup Confirmed As MCs For New Couple Matching Variety Show

JTBC is launching a new couple matching program!. Perfect on Paper is a variety show that will attempt to match couples based on characteristics such as personal disposition, lifestyle, and values.

This contrasts from most other Korean matchmaking programs which focus on qualifications such as occupation, education, wealth, and physical appearance. Scientific and systematic analysis by experts will be used to match people that appear perfect together on paper.. Soompi. Display. News. English.

300x250. Mobile. English. 300x250. ATF. Super Juniors and have been confirmed as MCs for the program. Perfect on Paper has launched a and is currently taking applicants for the show. The first episode is scheduled to air in October.

For more infomation >> Kim Heechul And Shin Dong Yup Confirmed As MCs For New Couple Matching Variety Show - Duration: 0:59.

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Can You See The Stars As Well As Your Camera? - Duration: 5:33.

This episode was brought to you by Skillshare Despite what I say on this channel, human

vision is quite amazing - we may not have the sharpest vision, or the best colour vision,

or the best night vision of the animal kingdom, but we do have a remarkable balance of all

three - a jack of all trades if you will.

However, because we are mostly diurnal animals, our night vision is certainly the weakest.

So, I was wondering, when compared to the average camera, how does our eyesight deal

with low light conditions?

[Intro by Caro Waro & Cristina de Manuel]

Our eyes can cope with over a million-fold

change in brightness from broad daylight to a pitch black night, and coping with and adapting

to changing levels of light variation is one of the eye's most important jobs.

There are several ways our eyes let us see better in the dark.

Firstly, our pupil can widen, allowing more light to pass through.

However, our pupils are only able to dilate from 1 millimeter up to 8 millimetres, which

isn't really enough to let in the amount of light required to transition from a brightly

lit scene to a starry night.

Most of the magic that enables us to see at night happens in the retina.

This process is known as dark adaptation.

Firstly, there is a switchover from cones to rods.

Cones are photosensitive cells which respond best in high light levels and they send colour

information to the brain, whereas the rods are also sensitive at a much wider range of

light levels - especially lower ones, and this is actually why our vision is generally in black

and white in low light conditions.

To complete dark adaptation, the rods in the retina must fully regenerate.

When a photoreceptor is stimulated by light, a compound called rhodopsin is photobleached

in response.

In cones, it takes around 10 minutes for the pigment to regenerate, and in rods, up to

30 minutes - which is why it generally takes around half an hour to fully adjust to a dark

room.

The horizontal cells which connect photoreceptors downstream together also send information

back to the photoreceptors so they can adjust their sensitivity accordingly, and this means

that small changes in light levels that would be normally imperceptible in broad daylight

are detected and fully perceptible under low light conditions.

Now, that's about it when it comes to dark adaptation in humans because we don't have

the other fancy adaptations that other nocturnal animals have for low light environments, such

as tapetums or spatial or temporal summation.

So, how do cameras operate?

Well, there are a few things that work quite similarly to our own vision.

We can open the aperture of a camera to let more light in onto the sensor, and we can

also raise the ISO, which increases the sensitivity of the sensor.

Both of these would be the equivalent of dilating our pupils and undergoing dark adaptation.

However, even when increasing ISO as far as possible and opening the aperture as wide

as it will go, the resulting picture of a night sky will probably be a lot blacker that

what you can see in real life.

But fortunately, there are a few other things you can do with your camera to make it perform a little

bit better in low light, the main one being to decrease the shutter speed.

This allows an image to expose on the sensor for longer.

So for example, these pictures here took between 8 and 15 seconds to take - and believe it

or not, they were taken at midnight!

And, to be honest, I have to say that getting an updated image every 10 seconds is *anything*

but practical in real life but they can capture a great level of detail and can also be used

for artistic purposes, such as to denote the passing of time, or for creative purposes.

However, as well as taking longer to photograph, the other downside of low light photography

is that it tends to have a lot more noise.

Cranking up the ISO increases sensor noise, and exposing images on the sensor for longer

than a couple of seconds creates thermal noise as the sensor heats up.

There are, however, a few ways around this.

It is generally possible to reduce the appearance of ISO noise in post-production, and you can

reduce the degree of thermal noise in-camera using a setting called the long exposure noise

reduction or LENR setting.

If you activate this setting after taking a photo, the camera will take a second picture

with the shutter closed for the same amount of time, meaning you will have a dark picture

with a thermal noise imaged on it, which can be subtracted from the original photo taken.

Whilst it does double the amount of time it takes to take a photo, it does render a much

cleaner image.

So, as to who performs better in low light, our eyes or a run of the mill camera, it depends

on what you want.

If what you want is to navigate quickly and detect objects and do everything fast, human

vision wins out.

But, if you're after detail and colour information, then camera is probably the way to go.

And, fun fact before I head off, the sky pictures you saw in today's episode as you might

have been able to guess I took myself, I'm quite proud of them, they were from the Perseid

Meteor shower in mid-August.

I took them following Ian Norman's course on skillshare, who is an astrophotographer

I really, really admire and compared to theclueless Inés from a year ago, I'm really pleased

with how they turned out.

Skillshare is an online learning community with over 16000 classes, and if you know me,

you know that with every video I make I always try to challenge myself to try out a new photography

or editing technique, and honestly, over the past couple of months I've been trying out

a few new things from skillshare, from subtle animation things, to improving my timelapses

to this long exposure photography - I'm trying hyperlapses next!

So if you're like me and you like learning new things and pushing yourself creatively,

the first 500 people to click the link in the description will get a 2 month free trial

on skillshare.

After that, membership starts at 10 dollars per month, but, if you discover during your

trial that it's not for you, you can cancel, there is no risk or obligation to continue

with it! and as always thank you so much for watching

me and I'll see you in the next one!

Bye!

[Art & Animation: Caro Waro & Cristina de Manuel]

[Music: Thastor & CryoSleepKitten] [Hosting, Script, Editing: Inés Dawson]

[Translated into {language} by {your name}]

For more infomation >> Can You See The Stars As Well As Your Camera? - Duration: 5:33.

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Gluconeogenesis as a Stress Response: Regulation by Cortisol | MWM 2.31 - Duration: 34:50.

Does losing all your money stress you

out? If so you probably feel like your

liver does when it's engaging in

gluconeogenesis because it's flooded in

cortisol. If that sounds like something you

can relate to this video is for you.

A ketogenic diet has neurological benefits.

Why do we have to eat such an enormous

amount of food?

Complex science.

Clear explanations.

Class is starting now.

Hi. I'm Dr. Chris Masterjohn of

chrismasterjohnphd.com. And you're

watching Masterclass with Masterjohn.

We are now in our 31st, I think, but who

can count, lesson on the system

of energy metabolism.

And today we're talking about how

gluconeogenesis is regulated by cortisol.

As you can see on the screen

gluconeogenesis is kind of like saving

all your money so that you can pay your

kids' college tuition and they get a

degree in English. Gluconeogenesis

consumes 6 ATP to get glucose so that

cells will do the reverse reaction,

glycolysis, to generate only 2ATP.

You spend 6 and the return on your

investment is 2. Gluconeogenesis is

a very expensive investment with a

negative ROI. As we talked about in the

previous lesson the day-to-day

regulation of gluconeogenesis is

primarily by the insulin-to-glucagon

ratio and the energy status of the liver cells.

Insulin inhibits gluconeogenesis

because it's the signal that you have

plenty of glucose. Glucagon stimulates

gluconeogenesis because it's

the signal that you don't have enough

glucose. High energy status stimulates

gluconeogenesis because gluconeogenesis

is expensive and the liver can only

afford to engage in it when it has

enough energy reserves that it can meet

its own needs, its needs for biosynthesis,

and enough left over to make glucose.

For the same exact reason low energy status

inhibits gluconeogenesis.

But if gluconeogenesis is something that

can be extremely essential because all

of the physiologically essential roles of

glucose and yet is extremely expensive,

that sounds like something stressful; and

in fact stress hormones also regulate

gluconeogenesis. Glucocorticoids, as their

name implies, are powerful regulators of

blood glucose. Glucocorticoids are

steroid hormones and -oid, kind of like

humanoid for example from a

science-fiction film, means resembling,

like, or taking the form of. And a steroid

is something that resembles cholesterol

because all the steroids are made from

cholesterol. A corticoid is a steroid

that's produced by the adrenal cortex,

which is the outside layer of the

adrenal glands. It's a glucocorticoid

because its primary purpose is to

increase blood glucose. In humans the

predominant and most powerful

glucocorticoid is cortisol. Cortisol has

a number of actions on blood glucose

concentrations that are all geared

towards increasing the availability of

glucose to the brain. For example

cortisol acts on the liver to increase

gluconeogenesis and to increase glycogen

storage. So remember that the liver is storing

glycogen for the purpose of increasing

blood glucose at a future time.

So the liver is both, under the influence

of cortisol, increasing the production of

glucose for output into the blood and

taking the excess of what is newly

produced to store it as glycogen so that

after these effects wane the liver is

still very well primed to further

increase blood glucose with its extra glycogen.

In the muscle, cortisol

decreases glucose uptake, decreases

glucose utilization, and increases

protein degradation. That means that the

muscle will conserve its use of glucose

for the blood so that the increased

blood glucose can reach the brain.

Meanwhile the increased protein

degradation in the muscle frees amino

acids from those proteins to go to the

liver and to become substrates for

gluconeogenesis. At adipose tissue, cortisol

decreases glucose uptake and utilization

and increases lipolysis; that releases

free fatty acids. Those free fatty acids

can now be used by other tissues such as

the muscle in place of glucose so that

the glucose can increase in the blood

and become available to the brain.

That even includes the liver because, if free

fatty acids go to the liver and amino

acids go to the liver, the free fatty

acids can focus on providing the liver

with the extra energy it needs to make

glucose, meanwhile the amino

acids become the building blocks for

that glucose. It also acts acutely on the

pancreas to decrease insulin and to

increase glucagon, although chronic

exposure of the pancreas to cortisol can

actually, in the future, increase insulin output.

Altogether this serves,

whether by hormonal reasons, or because

of the release of substrates from muscle

and adipose tissue for gluconeogenesis,

or by conserving glucose utilization in

all the tissues except

liver and allowing the liver to ramp up

its glycogen storage and its glucose

output; all of these converge on

increasing blood glucose and making it

more available to the brain. Because the

brain is primarily sucking out glucose

using glucose transporters that are

simply extracting whatever happens to be

floating in the blood in proportion to

the concentration that's floating in the

blood, so the only way to drive extra

glucose into the brain is to increase

blood sugar levels. In order to

understand how cortisol operates we

should review gene expression from

biology, something we actually haven't

covered here yet. I should note now that

insulin and glucagon and many of the

other things that we've been talking

about do regulate gene expression and we

haven't talked about that yet. We'll talk

more about that in the long-term

adaptations to diet once we are able to

tie everything together in this course.

The reason it's important to talk about

with respect to cortisol is that unlike

glucagon and insulin, which have acute

effects on phosphorylation cascades and

such immediate pathways, cortisol has all

of its known effects through mechanisms

that require protein synthesis. So if we

want to take the information in DNA and

turn it into a protein this in general

is what has to happen. In the nucleus is

where the DNA is, we have a process

called transcription that makes an RNA

template from that information in the

DNA. The RNA leaves the nucleus and in a

process called translation it feeds into

a ribosome, which is made of a different

type of RNA that plays structural roles

to make the ribosome, and it feeds into

the ribosome, the ribosome takes that

information and makes a protein with it.

The ribosomes are in the membrane of the

endoplasmic reticulum, the RNA is on the

outside, the protein comes out on the

inside, if it needs modification that

happens in the endoplasmic reticulum,

maybe it goes onto another organelle

called the Golgi apparatus, but in any

case the protein can be made and simply

exported from the ER -- the endoplasmic

reticulum, not the emergency room -- once

it's gone through the process of translation.

Some people may point out to help

remember these things that transcription

means to simply copy something,

translation means to go from one

language to another; so an analogy that

people often use to remember this is

that DNA and RNA are both made of

nucleic acids. So they're like different

variants of the same nucleic acid

language, whereas protein is something

fundamentally different. So you're taking

whatever information is in the DNA

and the RNA and you're translating it in

to this fundamentally different

language of protein.

Genes need to respond to signals in the

environment. So every gene can be roughly

broken down into its coding region, shown

on the right, and it's promoter region,

shown on the left. The coding region is

what contains the information needed to

assemble the proper amino acid sequence

to make the protein.The promoter region

consists of structures called response

elements, abbreviated here RE, and

these response elements respond to

signals in the environment. This is

actually a continuous strand of DNA and

as far as the gene is concerned there's

no difference between one region and the

other. We humans look at what happens and

we say, "hey everything from here on is

coding for amino acids, everything before

here contains sequences that respond to

the environment." But actually this is

just one nucleic acid after another, one

nucleic acid after another perfectly

continuous down this line.

One of the many response elements that

are in the promoter regions of genes is the

glucocorticoid response element

abbreviated here as GRE. If the GRE is in

the promoter region of a specific gene

then that gene is a glucocorticoid-

responsive gene

because the GRE in its promoter region

allows that gene to respond to

glucocorticoids. Unlike insulin, which

binds to a cell surface receptor and

carries out a cascade of reactions that

occur inside the cell,

all the while insulin remains outside

the cell binding to the receptor, unlike

that situation, cortisol has to enter the

cell and even get into the nucleus.

The glucocorticoid receptor is normally

present in the cytosol and it's bound to

a chaperone protein called Hsp90,

which stands for heat shock protein 90.

This is part of a class of proteins that

are known to respond to heat stress, but

this particularly well characterized

binding is primarily a way to allow the

glucocorticoid receptor to respond to

cortisol. In the absence of cortisol the

glucocorticoid receptor stays bound to

Hsp90 and it stays in the cytosol. And a

gene with a glucocorticoid response

element in its promoter region inside

the nucleus will not be expressed.

By contrast, if the cortisol enters the cell

and it binds to the glucocorticoid receptor,

that causes the dissociation of the

cortisol receptor complex from Hsp90.

That allows cortisol in the

glucocorticoid receptor to enter into

the cell and to bind to the promoter

region of genes that are responsive to

glucocorticoids. That will allow the

information in the DNA to be turned into RNA. Now it should be noted I've

simplified this here by showing the DNA

getting expressed upon binding to the

receptor, but it's not true that the

response elements always bind to

something in order to express the gene.

Sometimes the gene is expressed in

the absence of something binding to it,

and when that binding occurs it

actually suppresses it.

What we'll say here in general is that the

presence of a GRE in the promoter region

of specific genes makes those genes

glucocorticoid-responsive genes.

The binding of cortisol to the

glucocorticoid receptor releases the

receptor from Hsp90, allows it to go into

the nucleus, bind to the GRE within the

promoter region of glucocorticoid-responsive

genes and thereby regulate

the transcription of those genes.

The profile of proteins that are produced

under the influence of cortisol have two

major impacts on gluconeogenesis.

The first is that some of these proteins

antagonize insulin's phosphorylation

cascade. That means in the presence of

insulin more cortisol will stop the

activity of that insulin. So it induces a

state of relative insulin resistance.

Since insulin suppresses

gluconeogenesis the insulin resistance caused by

cortisol promotes gluconeogenesis.

Meanwhile cortisol also directly

regulates gluconeogenic enzymes.

Among those increased are PEPCK,

fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase, which catalyzes one of

the final steps in gluconeogenesis, the

conversion of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate

to fructose 6-phosphate. It stimulates

fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase, which

catalyzes the degradation of fructose

2,6-bisphosphate, the regulatory molecule

that stimulates glycolysis and inhibits

gluconeogenesis. It stimulates

glucose 6-phosphatase and the glucose

6-phosphate transporter that allows

glucose 6-phosphate to get in the

endoplasmic reticulum where it has

access to glucose 6-phosphatase, which

catalyzes the conversion of glucose

6-phosphate to free glucose. That's the

truly final step in gluconeogenesis in

the liver and its role is to allow that

glucose to become free and enable it to

leave the liver and go into the blood.

So from the beginning through the end

cortisol is increasing the expression of

the gluconeogenic enzymes. And in doing that

it increases the total capacity for

gluconeogenesis and it amplifies any

other pro-gluconeogenic signaling.

In other words, if insulin and glucagon

interact to suppress or stimulate

gluconeogenic enzymes that are already

produced, and cortisol increases the

amount of those enzymes, then whatever

insulin or glucagon does to gluconeogenisis

is amplified by the fact

that your total capacity for

gluconeogenesis is increased. For example

if you increase the total capacity for

gluconeogenesis two-fold and if you have

a low insulin-to-glucagon ratio, you could

potentially get double the impact than

you could without cortisol increasing

the expression of those genes. In sum

cortisol is a molecule that represents

the stress response, the need for more

glucose, unlike insulin and glucagon,

which are primarily responding to the

normal level of blood glucose. If you

have high cortisol in a fight-or-flight

response it may be because you need

higher blood glucose than normal in

order to meet the demands of that stress

response. That would be a

glucose-demanding stress.

However, hypoglycemia is

also a stress in itself.

Hypoglycemia could be caused, for example,

on the one hand, by poor blood sugar

regulation. In some cases if you eat a

carbohydrate load that you can't handle

because your regulation of that load is

messed up and that provokes you into

hypoglycemia, then that hypoglycemia

could provoke a cortisol response.

It shouldn't, because when the regulation

is happening naturally insulin and glucagon

are fully capable of doing what they

need to do to regulate blood sugar.

But if you go into hypoglycemic stress, that

means there's something wrong with that

first layer of regulation and you need

to tap into the second layer of the

stress response. But it could also simply

be glucose deprivation. At least in

theory if there's some level of glucose

deprivation that goes beyond the ability

of insulin dropping and glucagon rising

to normalize your blood sugar then that

itself could potentially lead to the

hypoglycemic stress that elicits the

cortisol response. The end result is that

cortisol is there as a backup mechanism

to acutely promote and also amplify all

the other signaling, to stimulate

gluconeogenesis out of necessity.

Because remember this is an energetically

expensive process that only makes sense

to do when you have to. So let's look at

a handful of studies about whether

carbohydrate restriction could provoke a

cortisol response. I want to emphasize

that I'm just going to show you three

studies and this is not an exhaustive

review of the literature. But the

literature in general is inadequate and

to my knowledge we're not skipping over

anything that would offer any kind of

definitive conclusions about any of this,

certainly no conclusions that are

contrary to the ones that I'm going to

make in this presentation.

Here's data from rheumatoid arthritis

patients who were given a

weight-appropriate ketogenic

diet, meaning not designed for any kind

of fat loss, and they didn't report the

exact percentage calories or exact

nutrients in the diet, but we can

approximate that it was about 80%

calories as fat. They were given this for

seven days and then they were re-fed for

two weeks on a lacto-ovo-vegetarian diet.

The authors said that the purpose of the

lacto-ovo-vegetarian diet was to act as

a kind-of-sort-of placebo in the sense

that the patients were told that both of

these were experimental diets and that

allowed them to essentially trick the

patients into thinking that either of

them had potential to treat their disease.

And what you see here is that after

seven days on a ketogenic diet there's a

statistically significant increase in

blood cortisol. It was about a relative

increase of 15% or 14%. After they were

re-fed on two weeks of the lacto-ovo-

vegetarian diet it went back down to

baseline. This was not randomized, it was a

before-and-after study, but it supports

the idea that carbohydrate restriction

at least across seven days is going to

increase cortisol levels because insulin

and glucagon modulation isn't enough to

maintain blood glucose at what they need to be.

Here's data from nine children with

epilepsy who were put on the traditional

four-to-one ketogenic diet, which refers

to the amount of fat versus non-fat mass

in that diet, and this provides

approximately 90% of calories as fat.

Again they didn't report those details in

the paper, but these diets typically

provide about that much. This was for

the purpose of seizure control; this is

the well-established method of seizure

control in children with epilepsy that

doesn't respond to drugs. They were on

the diet for three to four weeks and you

can see there was again a statistically

significant increase in cortisol levels.

In this case the increase was almost

4 times larger than it was in the

previous study. Let's come back to why

there might have been differences in the

cortisol response to the ketogenic diets

after we look at a third study.

This data is from a radically different population.

These people are not only not sick but

they're competitive off-road cyclists.

Eight of them underwent a randomized

crossover study involving four weeks of

a ketogenic or a mixed diet. That means

that everyone got both diets, but some

got the ketogenic diet first others got

the mixed diet first. After they were on

each diet for four weeks continuing on

that diet they cycled on an ergometer

with progressively increasing intensity

until they reached maximal effort.

In other words, as you see rest, 45 minutes,

90 minutes, max effort, what they're doing

is they measure the data that's shown on

the screen before they start the trial,

then they cycle for 45 minutes. Through

that 45 minutes they're progressively

increasing the intensity, they keep going

for 90 minutes, at 90 minutes they've not

only gone twice as long, but they're also

going at a much higher intensity, and

eventually they get to max effort, which

is when they reach, what it sounds like,

the absolute maximum that they're able

to tolerate. And these diets were, on the

ketogenic diet, 70% fat by calories and

on the mixed diet 30% fat.

If you look at what happened

to cortisol... I should note among the

things that I don't like about the

reporting of the data in this study, they

did not look at statistical significance

between each of the groups at each of

the time points; instead they looked at

the significance overall to say that

through this data there are differences.

That's not statistically rigorous, but it

is what it is. So the cortisol was either

not different or slightly higher on the

mixed diet than the ketogenic diet at rest.

That flips around when they start

exercising. You can see that during

exercise the cortisol levels are lower,

but on the ketogenic diet they have higher

cortisol levels than the mixed diet.

That's also true as you get to 90

minutes. Then as you get to maximum

effort that difference pretty much

disappears. So it seems like at rest

these extremely healthy competitive

athletes, who, by the way, as we covered in

lesson 17 and 18 are doing exercise that

should be largely fat adaptable. These

athletes seem to be meeting their needs

for carbohydrate

on the ketogenic diet at rest,

which suggests at least from the

cortisol response that they are meeting

those needs to maintain their blood

glucose at normal because of the natural

regulation you'd expect of insulin and glucagon.

They didn't measure glucagon in the study,

but you can see that at rest

insulin levels are 19 on the mixed diet

and 10 on the ketogenic diet.

So insulin basically drops in half to

maintain the same level of blood glucose.

That could be partly mediated by

glycogen release or partly mediated by

gluconeogenesis, probably a little bit

of both. When they start exercising the

muscles need more glucose. And you can

see that the blood glucose starts to

rise in each of these cases, insulin

levels drop in both of them to the point

where the mixed diet has hardly any more

insulin than the ketogenic diet does.

The changes in insulin and the glucagon

that we don't see don't seem to be

enough to sustain the increased need of

the muscles for glucose during the

exercise because upon exercising is when

we see this ratio flip around and the

cyclists on the

ketogenic diet having higher cortisol

than they did on the mixed diet.

This continues at 90 minutes. The glucose

in the blood drops back down to about basal

levels, perhaps because the output of

glucose isn't quite keeping up with the

uptake of glucose to keep it any higher

than basal levels as it was at 45

minutes. But presumably you have a lot

more glucose utilization in the muscle, a

lot more glucose output, but they're

balanced and so the blood sugar is

staying pretty even. Insulin is maybe a

little bit lower, about the same in both

groups, about the same as it was at 45

minutes. Cortisol is a little higher in

each group and it's again higher on the

ketogenic diet. At maximum effort

that difference seems

to even out, cortisol is the highest as

it was across the entire thing,

perhaps because at that point needs for

blood glucose are maximal and no one on

any diet can't exert maximal effort with

no spike in cortisol. And you can see

that the spike in cortisol is driving

blood glucose up to 120 and that is

maintained partly by these relatively

high levels of cortisol compared to the

earlier time points at 45 and 90 minutes.

At maximal effort that seems to be the

place where the high demand for glucose,

because of the exercise, is becoming the

dominant factor in cortisol beyond

anything about the insulin-to-glucagon

ratios and the glycogen levels in the

ketogenic diet versus the mixed diet.

So if you look at this study it seems like

in healthy people who are very well

trained you may not see a spike in

cortisol on a ketogenic diet except in

the cases where the exercise drives up

the need for glucose. Now we have to be

really careful with interpreting these

studies. So, for example, let's look at the

carbohydrate and fat contents of the

diet. The first study we looked at

derived 80% of calories as fat and it

showed a moderate increase in cortisol.

The second study that we looked at

derived 90% of the calories as fat and

it showed a much larger, almost four

times larger, spike in cortisol. The last

study that we looked at showed that

cortisol didn't spike except when

exercise was increasing the demand for

glucose, but it derived only 70% of its

calories as fat, the least out of any of

these studies. On the other hand the

first study involved rheumatoid

arthritis patients. These people are sick

with an inflammatory disorder. The second

study involved children with epilepsy

that was resistant to drugs. These

children have severely disturbed

physiology that puts them into such an

energetic crisis that without this

treatment they have seizures. The third

study involved healthy competitive

off-road cyclists. These people don't

just not have diseases; they engage in

physical performance that puts them in

top shape, especially with respect to

energy metabolism. So are these studies

coming to conflicting results because of

the health of the people involved?

Do significant health problems raise the

need for blood sugar or the need for

cortisol in some way that precipitates,

or allows, enables the ketogenic diet to

provoke that increase in cortisol? Or is

this all about the degree of

carbohydrate restriction? Do the

ketogenic dieters with epilepsy

have the strongest increase in cortisol

because their situation demands the most

intense ketogenic diet out of any of

these and the greatest degree of

carbohydrate restriction? Do the patients

with rheumatoid arthritis have a less

pronounced cortisol spike because their

glucose restriction was less pronounced?

Do the off-road cyclists have the least

evident spike in cortisol out of

anything that only becomes clear during

exercise because they're healthy or

because they had the most moderate

ketogenic diet that was the least

intense in its glucose restriction out

of all three? These are questions that we

can't answer because we just don't have

a lot of data on the cortisol response to glucose

restriction. It makes sense to me that if

the glucose restriction gets intense

enough it's likely to induce an obligate

increase in cortisol if the insulin and

glucagon modulations just aren't enough

to handle the degree of restriction that

you're imposing on your system. I can't

support that because there's too many

studies with different methodologies

that don't clearly control those

variables. I also believe that if you're

less healthy and you have other taxes on

your energy supply or other things going

on in your body that are contributing to

inflammation or obesity or other

derangements of normal physiology; other

things that are totally normal but are

stressors like pregnancy, like work

stress, like family stress, anything that

goes into your stress bucket; then maybe

the addition of all the things into your

stress bucket makes glucose restriction

going on top of it, if that's the thing

that makes it overflow, then maybe that's

what would also put you into the

cortisol response. In any case we can see

from these studies that glucose

restriction in and of itself does not

always regardless of context increase

cortisol. However, there may be a degree

of glucose restriction, particularly as

you get down to 10 to 20% of

calories, where you cross a threshold

that does require an obligate increase

in cortisol. And it's at least true that

in the context of other stressors on the

system many people will experience a

rise in cortisol, indicating a stress

response, in response to carbohydrate

restriction. Cortisol is called

a glucocorticoid because it is a powerful

regulator of gluconeogenesis.

And it makes sense that the stress

response is a powerful regulator of

gluconeogenesis because

gluconeogenesis

is an energetically expensive investment

with a negative ROI that it only makes

sense to engage in if there's a real

need for it.

The audio of this lesson was generously

enhanced and post-processed by

Bob Davodian of Taurean Mixing, giving

you strong sound and dependable quality.

You can find more of his work at

taureanonlinemixing com.

If you want to keep watching these

lessons you can find them on my YouTube at

youtube.com/chrismasterjohn.

Or on my Facebook page at

facebook.com/chrismasterjohn.

Or you can sign up for MWM Pro to get

early access to content, enhanced

keyword searching, self-pacing tools,

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a rich array of hyperlinked further

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other and me.

If you really want to own

these lessons, study them, and get the

most out of them, you can sign up for MWM Pro at

chrismasterjohnphd.com/pro.

All right, I hope you enjoyed this lesson.

Signing off, this is Chris Masterjohn

of chrismasterjohnphd.com. You've been

watching Masterclass with Masterjohn.

And I will see you in the next lesson.

For more infomation >> Gluconeogenesis as a Stress Response: Regulation by Cortisol | MWM 2.31 - Duration: 34:50.

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#Chelsea launch new Drinkwater raid as they try and tempt Leicester with £32m bid as deadline looms - Duration: 2:54.

Chelsea launch new Drinkwater raid as they try and tempt Leicester with £32m bid as deadline looms

CHELSEA are preparing a new £32million offer to land Danny Drinkwater. Leicester have so far held out against selling their England midfielder, 27, as they seek £40m.

Danny Drinkwater is waiting for a club to meet Leicesters valuation.

Leicester star Danny Drinkwater wants a move to a bigger club. Drinkwater has no buy-out clause which means the Foxes can play hardball.

But with time ticking on the transfer window, which shuts next Thursday, Blues boss Antonio Conte wants to get a deal done.

Chelsea's latest offer falls short of the initial asking price but is seen as a compromise offer to test City's resolve.

Leicester will crack eventually if the money gets to the right level as they will ultimately not stand in Drinkwater's way to play for one of the big clubs if the deal is right.

Chelsea are also on alert with Arsenal's Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain set to snub a new £100,000-a-week offer and seek a move away. Conte is also still tracking Inter midfielder Antonio Candreva but sees Drinkwater as his first choice.

Chelseas pursuit is not helped by the lack of a buy-back clause.

Danny Drinkwater would add depth to Chelseas squad and increase their quota of home-grown players.

Chelsea will step up their efforts over the weekend as the Italian boss tries to buy in new faces for his midfield. He is willing to spend the £50m he got for selling Nemanja Matic to Manchester United to get his wish.

Leicester are playing hardball over one of their star players.

For more infomation >> #Chelsea launch new Drinkwater raid as they try and tempt Leicester with £32m bid as deadline looms - Duration: 2:54.

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Arsenal star Santi Cazorla closing in on return from injury nightmare as video shows him working - Duration: 2:59.

Arsenal star Santi Cazorla closing in on return from injury nightmare as video shows him working out in sunshine

SANTI CAZORLA appears to be closing in on a return to action after posting a video of himself working out. The Arsenal playmaker has been out of action with an ankle injury picked up last October.

Santi Cazorla is upping his recovery from injury.   Arsenal fan favourite Santi Cazorla steps up recovery from injury nightmare.

And the Gunners appeared to miss Cazorla desperately for the remainder of the campaign as they finished outside the top four for the first time under Arsene Wenger.

However, supporters have been given a huge boost after the Spaniard uploaded a video to social media in which he can be seen doing squats. The caption read: "One step more, one step closer! #Lookingforwardtoseeyouall!".

Cazorla has a year left on his Arsenal contract and will be desperate for a taste of first-team action again. The Gunners appear to be missing an extra spark in midfield and Cazorla could be just the man to turn things around.

Arsenal have endured a mixed start to the season, narrowly beating Leicester on opening day before suffering a shock defeat at Stoke.

The ace posted a video of himself doing squats.

Cazorla has been out injured since October with an ankle problem. And Cazorla could yet play a big role for the Gunners this season as he looks to return as quickly as possible.

He said last month: "I do not know how far I am [from returning] but I am convinced that I am going to play football again and at my best level.

"I am working on it and hopefully, it can be as soon as possible. I am convinced that I will come back. Those who want to retire me will get to see me again.

Keep up to date with all the latest news, gossip, rumours and done deals in SunSports live transfer blog.

For more infomation >> Arsenal star Santi Cazorla closing in on return from injury nightmare as video shows him working - Duration: 2:59.

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Lottery Players Hold Breath As $700M Powerball Jackpot Drawing Nears - Duration: 2:03.

For more infomation >> Lottery Players Hold Breath As $700M Powerball Jackpot Drawing Nears - Duration: 2:03.

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Just As He Arrived In Phoenix, Trump Looked Out In Crowd And Saw A MIRACLE - Duration: 13:54.

Just As He Arrived In Phoenix, Trump Looked Out In Crowd And Saw A MIRACLE

This is an absolutely touching moment.

A group of Bikers for Trump gathered in front of the President to pray for the safety of

everyone that came to the event.

They then prayed for the protesters to stay peaceful and for attendees and their families

to stay safe.

Amen.

Watch the amazing video below.

Trump needed the protection today, too.

The Leftist organization John Brown Gun Club showed up to the rally with AR-15s and bullet

proof vests.

They said they were there to protect protestors from "white supremacists."

The Bikers for Trump traveled to Phoenix to defend Trump supporters from violent leftists

and the Antifa gangs that have attacked previous Trump rallies.

The Bikers made the following announcement on Facebook before the event.

The Rally attendees showed up hours early to go see the blockbuster rally in Pheonix,

Arizona.

Check this amazing video below via Josh Caplan.

President Trump is going to make this country great again.

You can feel it in the air.

Let's say a prayer to keep our President safe.

God.

Please bless and protect President Trump and all that around him.

We need him to heal the country and make jobs for the working class of America.

With us behind him, he can't fail.

Amen.

Share this prayer with every Trump supporter

you know.

For more infomation >> Just As He Arrived In Phoenix, Trump Looked Out In Crowd And Saw A MIRACLE - Duration: 13:54.

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Soy Luna 2 | Matteo gets introduced as Luna's boyfriend to her parents (ep. 52) (Eng. subs) - Duration: 2:48.

Do you need anything?

I want to ask you if you can bring me tea to my room.

Yes, as you want.

Sorry to ask but are you okay?

Yes, I'm okay. I'm a little tired so I want to drink the tea and go to sleep fast.

Miss Ámbar, I think they're looking for you.

No, nobody's looking for me. I present you Matteo, Luna's boyfriend.

Your boyfriend?

Monica, did you know about this? Why am I always the last one to find out about these things?

I also didn't know anything.

What are you doing here?

I missed you and I wanted to see you.

Why didn't you say you were coming?

I wanted it to be a surprise.

Mission accomplished.

For everything, since when are you two a couple?

Not so long ago.

Yes, it's very recent.

Don't worry.

I imagine. If I remember right, you were Ámbar's boyfriend before, no?

That is their business.

The only thing I'm trying to do is getting to know my daughter's boyfriend better.

Why don't you join us for dinner? Do you want to stay for dinner?

I would love to but they're waiting for me at home.

I'm sorry.

It's okay. Another time. You're welcome whenever you want.

You have to ask first to see if we can.

It's getting late. If you want, I'll accompany you to the door.

Why don't we go and let them say goodbye?

But to where?

I'm really sorry. My dad was super intense.

Don't worry. I understand. But I came to give you a surprise.

I didn't see it.

You saw it but I brought you flowers.

Why so many surprises?

Because I love you, and a lot.

Isn't that enough?

Yes but maybe you felt bad about what you said about Simón.

No but there is another reason.

I brought you flowers to hide from your dad but I didn't have the time.

Do you like them?

I can't smell them because I have a cold.

Okay, I'll leave them here.

Will you accompany me to the door?

Okay, let's go.

For more infomation >> Soy Luna 2 | Matteo gets introduced as Luna's boyfriend to her parents (ep. 52) (Eng. subs) - Duration: 2:48.

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Police investigating Farmington Hills' woman's death as a murder - Duration: 2:38.

For more infomation >> Police investigating Farmington Hills' woman's death as a murder - Duration: 2:38.

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Harvey regains strength as tropical storm - Duration: 1:10.

For more infomation >> Harvey regains strength as tropical storm - Duration: 1:10.

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HOW TO MAKE SILLY FACES AS AN ADULT - Duration: 4:43.

hello darlings Kellie here good to see you today we are going to explore our

silly sides stay tuned hey there so welcome to my channel where anything can

happen I promise anything so I want the first of all say

you should subscribe early before you you know get into this one because you

probably gonna think I need a padded room after we're done and you're probably not

going to want to subscribe or maybe you will maybe we'll be in that padded room banging our

heads together alright so today I wanted to explore our silly sides because

when we get grown folk be like you're being childish you should grow up why

have you been adulting for a while have you had to pay bills have you had

responsibilities don't nobody like that shit so who the hell wants to grow up they run

around here telling you not to be childish because they got sticks in their

bufts no we pulling sticks out our asses today okay so let me tell you guys as my

children grew up we had a rule in our house and everybody had to follow it I

did not make rules in my home that I did not follow along with my kids right so

the rule was no matter what if someone walked in and it didn't matter where

either and they said oh you got to do it then you had to do it and that meant if

my youngest came in and said mommy you got to do it then mama had to do it if

mama came in and said to whoever you got to do it then we had to do it right so

as a direct result we don't get embarrassed real easily because we have

done thriller in Walmart we have planked in the mall we have done all kinds of

nonsense but let me tell you by far one of the most fun and the best things ever

is making faces at strangers I want you try this like for real so sometimes

you'll see people out and about and like at the mall I love people watching at

the mall you can get yourself a little bench and you can be entertained all day

long right so we would sit and or see someone maybe at the airport

and they would be staring at you so I made faces and when you make faces at

old people it really wigs them out because they get their glasses they're like

let me clean these is my visions mess up they like what just happened I know I

didn't see what I thought I saw cuz she grown she's an adult did she just make

faces at me but the best participants ever like seriously like it'll be a

straight-up competition and you will learn some things are with little kids because it

cracks them up and it gives them the ability to be silly too

so you're sitting there having faceoff wars and I literally mean like faceoff

wars like come on y'all I want you guys to I'm going to put a link I'm going to

give you guys don't want to give you all my email address I don't know if you all can

upload you pictures on YouTube but oh I know what come to my facebook page I'll

put the link below and comment with a picture of your silliest face and just

absolutely just love it so if you're you know having fun with kids let me show

you so my good ones yeah copy that one I'm all about making faces you all as

you watch my videos you know that every now and again you're getting so I was

believing laughing I do not take myself or anybody else too seriously guys you

have got to find some joy because stress will kill and stress will put wrinkles on

your beautiful little face and the only lines I want on my face baby are smile

lines so I hope that this brought you a little bit of joy

there's a face for ya and no I don't have no shame I ain't shy and I don't get

embarrassed easily so you can see what the hell you want to but these faces are fun

see how much i'm laughig, I hope you're laughing too- so comment like and subscribe come over to my facebook page and

and add your goofball face and share some joy come come on now share some joy I'll see

you guys in the next video ciao

For more infomation >> HOW TO MAKE SILLY FACES AS AN ADULT - Duration: 4:43.

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EastEnders danger ahead for Michelle Fowler as stalker Tom returns tonight - Duration: 2:07.

EastEnders danger ahead for Michelle Fowler as stalker Tom returns tonight

EastEnders new mystery man Tom Bailey makes a reappearance tonight (August 24) as he visits Albert Square to see Michelle Fowler.

Tom (Daniel Casey) has been appearing in the show on and off since June, when he had a supposedly random meeting with Michelle on the Tube.

The pair ended up having a couple of dates, but it all seemed to fizzle out when Tom left Michelle disappointed by starting to ignore her calls and texts. Charming.

Unbeknownst to Michelle, this was probably good news for her since we know that Tom appears to be a creepy stalker – but just when we were all breathing a sigh of relief, he suddenly pops up again.

In tonights EastEnders episode, Michelle is surprised when Tom seeks her out on the Square and makes a big apology for ignoring her.

Tom has his reasons for why he cooled things off for a while, but he now appears ready to commit to a proper relationship and begs Michelle to give him another chance.

Well see Tom again in tomorrows episode too, as he and Michelle end up sharing a very public kiss during Ladies Night at the Queen Vic. But surely Michelle is making a terrible mistake by trusting him again?.

Fans have been suspicious of Tom ever since they saw him lurking creepily outside Michelles home, hinting that hed become obsessed with her. Some viewers even questioned whether their first meeting had been as random as he made out.

We also saw hints of a darker side to Tom when he ranted aggressively at a total stranger. Is EastEnders lining him up as the shows next big villain?.

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