Thứ Tư, 2 tháng 5, 2018

Youtube daily an May 2 2018

Inditex is the largest textile company in the world, created by Amancio Ortega and his wife

barely 30 years ago, and it hasn't stopped growing; it's secret: a product with

excellent style, quality and price. The company continues to obtain juicy profits

and growing, and its online sales have already reached 10% of its total.

On the other hand, the competition in its sector is very strong, and I fear it will only grow

in time, in particular from the internet and low cost shops.

In the stockmarkets, its share is currently in a downwards tendency, even though

the company recently announced an increase of 10% of its dividend yield.

Instead of being frightened by this fall, as a value investor, when I see a

high quality company like this: large, relatively solid, a multinational present

all over the world, I definitely analyze if I should buy it. As we know, the rule

for investing is buying cheap and selling expensive, but the question is, is it

cheap enough? At the moment of recording this video, as we see

in this chart, the price is around the 25€ mark after months falling.

At first sight, it seems like a good price, moreso if we consider we are at levels not seen

since 2015. That being said, there are a few pieces of data I don't like.

The first one, PER 21. PER is the price-earnings ratio, the share price divided

by the profits per share value. As such, the lower the value of the PER, the more undervalued

a company is in the stockmarkets. On the other hand, a PER 21 means the share

is already overvalued. To better understand this, the average of the IBEX 35, the spanish index where it is listed, has an average

PER of 13. The second piece of data I don't like is its dividend.

At the current price, it is barely above 3%. If the share price recovers

and rises hard, of course the dividend will matter little, considering I can sell the share earning two digits

percent. But what if it continues falling? the stockmarkets

are unpredictable, and if for whatever reason the share continued its bearish tendency,

nobody knows how low the price could sink, and for how long it would remain there. In this case,

we can look forward to a long period of time with our money immobilized yielding only 3%, or

selling the shares at a loss. On the other hand, in the case of a company with a

higher dividend and which I trust has the soundness to sustain it above 5%, I can keep it in my porfolio

for as long as I have to without selling, waiting for it to recover, as I am being paid

a very good rent. This is why I don't want Inditex among the

core companies in my porfolio even at these prices.

Analyzing the charts with no other considerations, I see a first buying zone

around 24 €, and it would have to sink even lower to reach the second zone,

around 20 €, a support it hasn't reached in years.

I'm a very patient and demanding investor, so the share would have to sink even

lower for me to consider Inditex as a possible investment; yes, the company is

excellent, but I find it overvalued, and this in a sector with high competition. If

the share sunk to far lower prices, I would buy Inditex to diversify, but at these prices there

are far tastier fish in the sea. If you liked the video, we invite you to subscribe

and give us a like, as it helps us reach more people.

What do you think, do you consider Inditex already at good prices, or will you wait?

No matter what you decide, brothers, best of luck in your investments!

For more infomation >> INDITEX, AN OPPORTUNITY? - Duration: 4:44.

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Asian American Life: May 2018: Asian American Women Who Make A Difference - Duration: 27:15.

♪ [Theme Music] ♪

>> Welcome to Asian

American Life.

I am Ernabel Demillo.

In honor of Asian-Pacific

American Heritage month,

we are celebrity the lives of

remarkable women who helped

change America.

You probably have not heard of

most of them, but some got their

start right here, helping the

Chinatown community.

A woman ahead of her time,

Rayner Ramirez on the life and

work of women's rights leader,

Mabel Lee.

Breaking silence, my special

report on sexual harassment.

Kyung Yoon shares the power

of women's giving circles and

Minnie Roh meets with

award-winning activist, Ai-Jen

Poo. This and more on Asian

American Life.

>> I am Rayner Ramirez.

In the early 1900s, a scholar

from Chinatown became an

unlikely activist for

women's right to vote.

And she may finally be getting

the recognition she deserves.

This post office in New York's

Chinatown may be getting a new

name to honor one of its

treasured residence, Dr. Mabel

Lee who founded the first

Chinese Baptist Church in 1925.

>> Our founder has been in the

news.

There is a movement to dedicate

a post office in honor of her.

>> Mabel Lee first made

headlines as a suffragist

over a century ago.

The New York Tribune called her

a symbol of a new era.

A recent graduate of Barnard

College, she rode on horseback,

leading a March for women's

rights to vote even though she

would never be allowed to cast

the ballot as a Chinese

immigrant.

>> Mabel Lee was involved not

just in the beginning of the

suffragist movement, but also

she was subject to the Chinese

exclusion act, which meant that

not only were Chinese excluded

from emigrating to the United

States unless they had certain

kinds of credentials, but they

were also not permitted to

become naturalized citizens, and

therefore unable to vote.

>> Mabel Lee's father was a

progressive American Baptist.

>> Part of the denomination was

preaching a gospel called

social gospel.

Not just a Bible and spiritual

salvation, but how the Christian

churches could be involved in

social changes.

>> Mabel Lee was fighting for

women's rights because she

thought that women's rights were

an important contribution for

the transformation of China.

>> Contributing to the

transformation of modern China

was Mabel's ultimate goal when

she completed her doctorate

degree in political econimics

from Columbia University.

>> She was extremely unique as a

woman getting her PhD from

Columbia University, and a

Chinese woman at that.

The label of the first Chinese

woman to earn a PhD from

Columbia shows you it was not

something that was traditional

or happened very often and it

was even unusual for men from

China to get a PhD from

Columbia at the time.

>> But Lee's dreams of

returning to China were dashed

when her father suddenly passed

away.

>> She came back to New York to

take care of her mother and take

the reins of the organization

her father had begun to build.

>> Lee secured this

building and establish the first

Chinese Baptist Church in honor

of her father.

>> Dr. Mabel Lee felt it was

important to continue her

father's vision through local

community donations, as well as

religious organizations to help

raise funds to create the

Memorial Hall we are sitting in,

today.

>> Though Lee could not be

ordained as a pastor because of

her gender, she ran the church.

It became one of Chinatown's

early community centers.

>> As part of the first Chinese

Baptist Church's mission, they

offered outreach programs to

teach young immigrants English

lessons which would help them

assimilate to life in America.

I am one of the beneficiaries of

this great mission because when

my father came here to learn

English, he went to Polytech to

earn his degree in electrical

engineering and as a result,

landed a job as one of the first

Chinese electrical engineers at

AT&T in the 1950's.

>> Robert Gee's father, Stephen,

would become a deacon of the

church carrying on Mabel Lee's

mission of giving back to the

community.

>> Through her 60 plus years of

service to the community, I

would say thousands of Chinese

immigrants she has touched in

terms of helping them, from

language or business or whatever

the need was, Dr. Mabel Lee was

there to help.

>> Gee who met Lee when he

was just a toddler, followed in

his father's footsteps and

became a deacon of the church.

>> I feel that we are blessed

with the opportunities that this

church provided to my father.

As a way of giving back to the

community and this church and

the mission of Dr. Mabel Lee,

this is why I am here, helping

the community which is the

mission of what they had set

out over 92 years ago.

>> Gee's family is among

the countless lives touched by

the work of Dr. Mabel Lee, a

trailblazer who left her stamp

on Chinatown, and continues to

inspire a new generation.

>> Younger Asian American women

can learn from Mabel Lee that

determination is important.

You don't allow society to

define you.

>> The bill to rename this

post office in Mabel Lee's honor

passed in the House of

Representatives and is now in

the hands of the U.S. Senate.

For Asian American Life, I am

Rayner Ramirez.

>> Sexual assault and

harassment has been making

headline news -- and now some

Asian-American women are

leading the fight,

refusing to be silent no more.

>> So these are all of our black

velvet hangers. So instead of

traditional cleaners-

>> Rechelle Balanzat is the

woman behind Juliette, a mobile

laundry app designed for the

busy New Yorker. With a tap

here and a tap there,

your laundry is picked up,

cleaned and returned within 24

hours.

>> Everything is done in the

Upper West side where we process

the clothes, package it and do

quality checks before we

deliver it to our customers.

>> Balanzat came up with the

idea in 2013, when she found her

self trying to navigate the not

so clean male-dominated world

of venture capitalists and

investors.

>> There are varying degrees of

sexual harassment.

I have been fortunate enough to

not be on the high-end.

The sexual innuendos, examples

would be going out for a

cocktail date or dinner date

that is supposed to be an

investor meeting, those types of

things.

I would have to really

second-guess their intentions.

>> But it was pretty clear

to her, what their intentions

were.

>> They would say things like

all you have to do is go on this

date and he will write you a

check.

That is pretty forward to me.

It really made me question what

is the purpose of this date?

Are you looking at me because

you are expecting a sexual favor

or is it because you believe in

my business and this company I

am trying to build?

>> Balanzat and other

Asian American women tech

entrepreneurs say this is a too

common experience for them,

getting hit on and in the

extreme, assaulted,

while pitching to investors.

And they are not alone.

The #MeToo movement has led to

women coming forward with their

stories of sexual assault,

violence and harassment, not

just in the tech industry, but

in Hollywood, the service

industry, the media, and more.

Women and their supporters are

saying enough with boys will be

boys.

>> I think the tide has shifted.

I think in our generation, we

were more apt to accept that

sort of thing.

Hopefully now, this new

generation who are coming into

corporate America, board rooms,

classrooms, anywhere are less

tolerant of that kind of

behavior.

>> Despite all the media

attention to the movement, some

argue that not much attention is

being given to the diversity of

the women victims.

>> Our needs have to be taken

into account in any kind of

development of programming or

policies.

We cannot be overlooked.

The stereotypes that apply to

white women may not apply to us.

We tend not to have the same

level of championship within

organizations.

We tend not to have role models

who look like us.

We don't have sponsors who can

advocate for us to the extent

that they do for white women.

>> Dr. Giscombe is with

Catalyst, a New York

based nonprofit supporting

women in the workplace.

She says stereotypes make women

of color more susceptible to

sexual harassment.

>> With Asian-American women,

there is this China doll

stereotype that came about

because of the U.S. occupation

of Asian countries after wars,

that there was a sex trade that

grew up to serve American

soldiers.

>> In Hollywood for

example, Asian women are often

portrayed as hypersexual.

And one study, analyzing

pornographic websites, found

nearly half of the women being

raped and sexually assaulted

were Asian women. Meanwhile,

in real life, most AAPI

women are afraid to speak out

when they are a victim.

Karen Elizaga is an author,

executive coach and long time

president of Woman Kind,

a nonprofit supporting

Asian Americans who are

victims of domestic and sexual

violence.

What kind of cultural barriers

Asian American women

face when it comes to reporting

sexual violence and harassment?

>> I will speak in a generality

which is that as a culture, we

have the issue of shame.

There is the issue of loyalty,

also the issue of being a good

soldier.

Putting your head down and

getting the job done.

We don't want to bring shame to

our family.

We want to be loyal to our

family.

How do you step out of your

cultural norm and raise your

head and say I have been a

survivor of sexual violence?

>> Some Asian American

women have been fighting back,

notably the journalist Suki Kim,

who publically accused her

former boss, the award winning

journalist John Hockenberry,

of sexual harassment.

There's Ellen Pao who filed a

gender discrimination lawsuit

against her employer.

While she lost the suit, it did

help highlight the treatment of

women in tech.

According to a recent survey,

six in 10 women in tech say they

have experienced harassment.

>> When you are starting out,

you are so hungry for validation

or capital or support and to

have it dangled in front of you,

knowing that you need the

support but in exchange, you are

required to do some sort of

favor, even if it is as innocent

as a date.

The fact that I have to be

propositioned that way and not

because of my business model.

>> Women entrepreneurs are

still fighting an uphill battle.

According to the tech company

Crunch Base, the number of

startups with female founders is

only 17%, the same number since

2015.

Balanzat says the obstacles have

only made her tougher.

>> When you are trying to build

a company, you cannot be shy and

quiet otherwise your company is

not going to go anywhere.

I had to learn that grit and

I had to learn that strength

whem I was faced with no's,

with sexual harrassment,

with people who didn't take

me seriously, you kind

of grow and develop as a person.

>> And she is not afraid

to tell her story, because maybe

one day these stories can add up

to systemic change, the kind of

change organizations like

Catalyst and Women Kind are

demanding.

I'm Ernabel Demillo for Asian

American Life.

>> I'm Kyung Yoon.

Giving circles are relatively

new trend in America, but they

are built on traditions that

date back hundreds, maybe

thousands of years around the

world.

In New York City, a group of

Asian American women are

redefining what it means to be

philanthropist activists.

>> Where is the social Justice

piece of this?

>> I think that is what makes it

a medium.

>> Meet the women of the

Asian Women Giving Circle, New

Yorkers who care about their

community.

They pool their philanthropic

dollars to fund projects led

by Asian American women

and community groups that

promote positive and

progressive social change.

Hali Lee founded the Giving

Circle in 2005 after realizing

how much more of an impact she

and her friend could have by

giving together, rather than

going at it alone.

>> I would respond to an

appealing appeal if there was a

disaster.

I would give to my college or

the places that matter to me.

I was not focusing my giving on

women or girls in New York City

or Asian American families in

New York City.

With this idea of starting

Giving Circle, it was a

great chance to get my

girlfriends together and also

just be more strategic and

impactful with our philanthropic

dollars.

>> Starting with its first

grants in 2006, the Giving

Circle has raised and awarded

over $850,000 to support more

than 85 projects by

Asian-American women artists,

activists and changemakers.

>> She get straight A's.

She is a fan of art.

She's perfect

the way that God made her.

>> The best way to move people's

hearts is through words, images,

song, dance, theater,

documentary films, spoken word

poetry, so we decided to focus

our philanthropic might on art

for progressive social change.

>> The group is proud of

being an early funder of

programs like this one by

Amita Swadhin, an anti-violence

activist and survivor.

>> When I remember Poleen, I

remember the difference between

victim and survivor.

>> Amita did a program called

Secret Survivors, around child

sexual abuse in families,

including some Asian American

families.

We gave her a small grant and it

enabled her to workshop her very

moving personal theatrical

piece.

It was like different actors

embodying the stories of people

who had survived childhood

sexual assault.

After we gave her that grant,

she got $50,000 for the

foundation.

>> Here, the group

is discussing a grant

application to fund a girls

leadership and advocacy project

in New Yorks Chinatown.

It teaches papermaking, made

from recycled paper used each

Lunar New Year.

>> The paper is the medium for

the kids to learn about Asian

American women activists in

New York City in Chinatown.

>> It is an awareness thing for

the younger generation.

Literally after one of these

festivals, the confetti along

the sidewalks is about that

deep.

All of that paper goes to waste.

To me, the recycle part, I found

it cool.

>> We are working with such a

small group of young

women who have never had the

chance to work with their hands

or even learn how to make paper.

This is the first grant that we

ever applied to.

The project started in 2016.

It was a labor of love until

2017.

Having the Asian Women Giving

Circle support us in this was

exciting and also established a

really strong foundation for us

to continue to think about how

we might be able to create

programs that provide long-term

change for our communities.

We are really thrilled and

excited.

>> The Giving Circle's

grantmaking and fundraising

activities are led by a

committee of about 25 women who

come from diverse professional

backgrounds, but who share

a passion for amplifying

the voices of Asian-American

women and having some fun

in the process.

>> We have gotten to know each

other personally.

We have shared personal time

together.

>> We love to eat, so we often

go out to dinner.

>> Who is the one that picks the

restaurant the most?

>> We are 13 years in.

We have gone through marriages

and divorces.

We just had our first grandbaby

in the group. One of us is

having her first baby.

You experience life together.

So over those years those

connections become real.

It is not just a board or a

fleeting thing.

We love each other and care for

each other.

I am really grateful for this

sisterhood.

>> The Asian Women Giving

Circle is looking to hit or

surpass $1 million in cumulative

grants this year.

Beyond the dollars, it is clear

the impact is on the donors

themselves who are changing the

face of philanthropy.

I am Kyung Yoon for Asian

American Life.

>> I am Minnie Roh, Ai-Jen

Poo is best known for her

work transforming the

landscape of labor standards

and working conditions

for domestic workers. The 2014

MacArthur Genius award

recipient has dedicated her

career to giving a voice to the

voiceless, nannies,

housekeepers, human trafficking

survivors.

Continuing her social justice

work, she has set her sights on

revamping the home health care

system.

Together with the Asian-American

community, she is making some

groundbreaking strides.

It is an inevitable fact of life

that everyone grows older.

While we hope to live our lives

independently until the end,

what if you or your loved ones

is one of those millions that

needs extra help?

>> We are about to have the

largest older population we ever

had in the history of this

country.

We are not prepared.

>> Ai-Jen Poo is legendary

in the advocacy world and her

work has won over fans like

Meryl Streep who even took her

as her date to the

2018 Golden Globes.

For the past seven years, Poo

has led a national campaign

called Caring Across Generations

which examines the needs of both

the care recipient, elders and

disabled, and the caregiving

workforce.

As outlined in her book, The Age

of Dignity, this is a field that

can be characterized as a crisis

waiting to happen, or exciting

new frontier.

>> People are living longer than

ever because of advances in

health care and the baby boomer

generation is starting to age at

a rate of a person every eight

seconds turning 65.

A lot of people talk about the

age wave as kind of a crisis.

They talk about a silver

tsunami like it's a natural

disaster.

I really do see it as an

opportunity for us to care for

each other in this country in a

whole new way.

>> An AARP study shows that

73% of all Asian

American Pacific Islanders

believe caring for a parent is

expected of them versus 49% of

other populations.

AAPI's are twice as likely to

care for an elderly relative at

home compared to other

ethnicities.

Personally, Poo's father cared

for his own father at home until

he was no longer able to do so

and had to place him in a

nursing home.

>> He stayed in a nursing home

in a room that he shared with

six other people and it was

miserable.

He did not eat, he could not

sleep, and he passed away after

three months.

>> This experience further

fueled her desire to find a

solution for the millions of

Americans who could face a

similar fate, whether for

themselves or providing care for

aging parents or loved ones.

>> There is a huge increase in

the need for care.

A lot of families are just being

crushed by the pressures of

affording care, managing care,

understanding what care options

are.

>> About 44 million

Americans or one in five adults

provide care for a family

member.

Many of them are also what is

known as the sandwich

generation, taking care of

parents and children of their

own, which further as to

financial stress.

>> We are just unprepared

for the fact that

people are going to live an

average of 20 years longer than

when our safety net was put in

place.

We need a new policy framework

and a new culture that helps us

adapt and embrace the fact that

we have longer to live which

also means longer to work,

longer to love, longer to teach

and contribute, longer to

connect.

>> The U.S. Census shows

the average wage in America is

$59,000 a year.

The average cost nationwide of a

semiprivate room in a nursing

home is roughly $89,000 a year.

On the other side of the coin,

Poo says the average annual

wage of a home health care

provider is as low as $13,000.

The numbers just don't add up.

>> The workforce we are counting

on to take care of our families

can't earn enough of a living

to take care of theirs doing

this work.

We often lose our best

caregivers to professions like

food service and it is a serious

issue because there is such a

need out there.

>> People who need care

cannot afford it.

People who provide care cannot

make a living doing so.

This is what Poo and Caring

Across Generations has set out

to fix.

She was instrumental in passing

legislation in Hawaii called the

caregivers program which went

into effect January 2018.

This groundbreaking bill allows

caregivers to apply for

a benefit of $70 a day to

hire respite care for the loved

ones they are caring for at

home.

Poo believes the vast number of

AAPI legislators in Hawaii

was the key to pushing the

bill through.

>> There really is a tradition

of caring for elders.

It's really

embedded community just

like it is in Asian communities

across the country and I see

Hawaii as groundbreaking

leadership on this issue as a

signal that this could be

something the Asian-American

community in general can lead

on.

>> She is currently working

on a campaign for universal

homecare which would allow

everyone in the state of Maine

to afford to pay a living wage

for their caregivers.

>> Because families and the

workforce are so interdependent,

when we resource families, we

can resource the workers.

When we resource the workers,

the families benefit.

>> The title of Poo's book,

The Age of Dignity,

refers not to just those who are

aging, but ensuring those who

are caring for them can also

live with dignity.

>> We are talking about two

populations that are quite

vulnerable.

The workers are quite vulnerable

and the elders are quite

vulnerable.

What we have to really value and

protect both.

>> Whether it is home

health care or the labor and

traffic world, Poo's mission is

to give everyone a voice so they

can play an active role in

changing their future.

I'm Minnie Roh for Asian

American Life.

Ernabel: That's our show for

now.

If you want more information on

our special edition, be sure to

follow us on Facebook at

Asian American Life.

I am Ernabel Demillo.

We will see you next time.

♪ [Theme Music] ♪

For more infomation >> Asian American Life: May 2018: Asian American Women Who Make A Difference - Duration: 27:15.

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An Bord der Beluga II in Schottland | Greenpeace 360° - Duration: 3:28.

For more infomation >> An Bord der Beluga II in Schottland | Greenpeace 360° - Duration: 3:28.

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Immediate Smaller element in an N-ary Tree | GeeksforGeeks - Duration: 4:01.

For more infomation >> Immediate Smaller element in an N-ary Tree | GeeksforGeeks - Duration: 4:01.

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Ever Wondered Why You Continue To Suffer As An Empath? - Duration: 2:33.

Ever Wondered Why You Continue To Suffer As An Empath?

Being empaths is absolutely a great gift.

Not all people are blessed with this kind of ability.

However, it is worth noting that there are some problematic issues that come with this

super power.

One of the most common ailments is exhaustion.

There are some reasons why you are exhausted.

One of them is because of aura leak.

Empaths indeed sometime suffer from leaky aura sometimes.

It is inevitable especially if the empaths have been attacked by people with negative

energy.

Additionally, this also happens when they are in a condition of near-exhaustion after

spending a lot of time with random people.

Though it is the most common cause of leaky aura, there are some other reasons why it

happens.

Things like excessive stress, emotional pain, bad people, lifestyle choice, food, and toxic

environments all contribute to leaky aura.

  Leaky aura is indeed the main cause why bad

people are attracted to you.

You can imagine this leaky aura as invitation for narcissists to help you.

Toxic people are usually empaths who can read the condition of people around them.

They find weak prey, and they can smell it from people with leaky aura.

It is true that people with leaky aura need help because they are basically exhausted,

weak, desperate, emotionally unstable, and tired.

That is why you should consider fixing it soon.

As empaths, it is important to take a look at yourself.

Sometimes, empaths always take care of others without considering themselves.

Meanwhile, they are actually in constant degradation of health because of exhaustion.

There are actually some ways to repair your broken aura, so that it will make yourself

feel better.

One of them is living in solitude for a while.

This helps to both recharge and recover your energy.

Additionally, you also can try fixing it with healthy foods.

All in all, that's the "Ever Wondered Why You Continue To Suffer As An Empath?".

So, Really cool information isn't it!

Please share your thoughts and experiences in the comments below!

Don't forget to subscribe to our channel and watch all our other amazing videos!

Thanks for watching!

For more infomation >> Ever Wondered Why You Continue To Suffer As An Empath? - Duration: 2:33.

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An important message from Mark Rylance & Claire van Kampen - Duration: 2:31.

(Mark) The A.R.T. is a very important home for us, wouldn't you say?

A.R.T. was the first theater to give me– give us a job in America.

And I think we came in 1991, with Hamlet.

(Claire) I was in that production.

(Mark) You were.

(Claire) Playing the violin.

(Mark) It was wonderful. Still some of my closest friends are from that production.

(Claire) We found a tremendous welcome for our work at A.R.T. and I'm sure everyone else has.

When they've come to do something new, the A.R.T., it's like a little oasis, really,

that you walk in and you have everything there, that you need to make new work,

which is really rare.

(Mark) We wanted to refine it, make it more powerful and simple,

and there the A.R.T. just was the place that we thought where they have regularly taken chances.

There's an adventurous spirit in the audience.

That kind of audience, you can't buy it.

It only comes with dedicated, artistic direction.

(Claire) We really reshaped it

(Mark) Yeah.

(Claire) at A.R.T.

(Mark) And then it led to the play coming to Brooklyn,

which was a different audience at St. Ann's and that was fun.

And then to London, which was a whole different audience.

Both Dianes were so positive with us.

They're a very, very extraordinary pair aren't they?

(Claire) Visionary. To survive ten years in a post being artistic director of a theater as a female

you have to have an enormous sense of vision and dedication.

I certainly think the two Dianes have blazed a trail.

They have both led with heart and mind and that has been seen by the community that they serve.

(Mark) It's nice for us when the people who are willing to put some money into it

come and join that family and be part of it.

(Claire) Yeah, we welcome that, for us to be able to say thank you.

(Mark) To develop this very successful theater

with a great marriage of classical and new thinking,

this is a theater with a wonderful track record.

(Claire) Once Shakespeare's plays were subversive, but they were written to reflect the world in which he lived.

They were there to raise topics and debate and discussion.

And A.R.T. is the perfect place for that.

This is the theater that can give rise to change, and change the way we think.

(Mark) Yeah.

[instrumental chamber music]

For more infomation >> An important message from Mark Rylance & Claire van Kampen - Duration: 2:31.

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Dove | Real Beauty Productions Season 2 | An Hour With Her - Duration: 4:20.

Hi!

Hi!

Hi!

Caralyn, I'm Chelsea. Hi, I'm Caralyn.

I'm so excited to meet you!

Nice to meet you too!

Hi!

Hi!

So I'm here because I'm also an actress

and I hear that we may have a few things in common.

One of the things that I loved, loved, loved, loved,

loved doing when I was a kid

was I loved being on stage.

As I hear you love it too. Yeah.

I love it so much.

But, um I actually also

went through a lot of bullying when I was younger.

I remember walking down the hallway

and this one kid shoulder butted me into lockers.

And I remember I had like, just cut my hair

and I had gone to school feeling like, really pretty

um, and he pushed me into these lockers

and he's like, "baldheaded."

It still burns just because like, that's so cruel.

I was bullied in so many different ways

and developed like such a terrible depression

and...anxiety.

Yeah. You take a breath there.

Yeah ok. Yeah.

My school had a production

and I didn't audition for it

because, everyone else that was going for the role

was slim

and, I'm not skinny.

I thought...

I can't go for the role.

Because I'm on the swim team for my school

we have to wear suits.

And I took a picture with one of my friends.

And I got cyberbullied

because of the way I looked.

I was called a "slut."

I even got comments saying "go kill yourself."

It's hard.

All I want to do is fit in

and be like what society says

you should be. Mhmm.

For me like, just some of the different aspects

of just like, being African American

became...

things that I just didn't feel good about.

Like I used to even wear makeup

that was like way too light for my skin.

And I used to have these bright green contacts.

Then I would wear a lot of long super straight hair extensions.

And it was just one of those things where it's like

I looked in the mirror and didn't even recognize myself.

One of the major things for me that has helped me

has been the Dove Self-Esteem Project

when I was 16.

Through it, I really got to

start to appreciate me.

It was about defining my own

beauty.

And that's my measure of self-esteem now.

How do I feel about myself?

When it's not based off of

anybody else's standards.

It's so important to define

what beauty is for you.

It's not really a physical feature you can have.

Yeah.

For me beauty is just being happy.

Exactly!

Acting is my happy place.

It's scary but it's fun!

Yeah! Makes you feel alive.

Yes!

Like, I get to portray different people...

characters that I've always wanted to try.

'Cause sometimes I can be shy but if

this person's very outgoing

then I'm gonna take the chance and be that person

who's outgoing. Yes.

And I take a little piece of them

and it's like a new part of me.

In the future,

I see myself acting

and whatever character I'm portraying,

it's inspiring young girls.

It's helping them

with whatever they're going through.

That's all I wanna do is make people laugh.

Make people happy.

For more infomation >> Dove | Real Beauty Productions Season 2 | An Hour With Her - Duration: 4:20.

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How To Be An Effective Leader | Martin Solis | Career Mode | EP12 - Duration: 7:23.

Hi everybody this is Martin Solis and welcome to episode 12 of career mode the

straight talking, no-nonsense show that looks to answer all your career

questions today my friends we're going to be talking about poor management so

don't go away

alright guys so today's question

okay you know what

I'm gonna be honest this absolutely vexes me it does this is this is quite

easily within my top 5 of absolute vexers because like what did you think

was gonna happen here you know you you bowl around with this whole kind of

results first niceties later approach and and and what people are gonna be

like you know what what a fucking legend that guy is in fact you know what I'm

calling it hero that's what he is to me he's a fucking hero never gonna

happen ever in a million years you know and and this is an example for for all

managers who are approaching things in a similar way and it's not just this

particular behaviour right it's any behaviour of this nature right I used to

have a boss long long time ago and you know what day today he was alright wasn't

brilliant wasn't wasn't inspirational but what used to really get on

everybody's nerves is you'd go to him you'd say look I've got this problem can

you help me out sure no no worries you do this you do that and you're golden

and you'd be like you know what thanks mate I really appreciate it and he'd be

like just just wait there one minute just as an FYI I'm not your mate

I'm your boss and you'd be like do you know what whatever and and and this is what

I'm talking about right it's it's it's that kind of behaviour that just pisses

people off it just it just does because it's completely unnecessary and you know

you can't Bowl around doing those sorts of things and then expect people to want

to work for you to want to get those results

you just can't end of story in terms of moving forward I'm going to let you into

a little secret right when you're when you're managing people you actually have

to give a shit about them right sounds silly I know right crazy yeah who thinks

of this stuff but look it's kind of fundamental because listen as as you are

now finding out without them you ain't shit they are the foundation to your

success and what you need to understand is that when you took over that role you

you didn't just become responsible for the results you became responsible for

the people and so if you really do want to move things forward you need to start

investing time in them you need to start putting their needs above your own you

need to start communicating better and more probably right rather than just

talking to them when you want something and if that was me I would be taking

that feedback very seriously right I wouldn't just shrug it off and...

no they don't know what they're talking about they're not a manager you know I wouldn't be

taking that approach because it's it's just circles isn't it you're just the

same same thing you just go round in the same old circle so I would be taking

that in and in fact I'd go the extra mile and I would even go and speak to

them about it and I'd try and understand you know where that feedback is is is

coming from and what they feel I could do to improve

things and look you're not going to change things overnight right perceptions are

incredibly difficult to to shift once they're once they're set and look you

know what it could be that you do go through all of this what we've

discussed you know investing time putting their needs above yours

communicating etc and you just think you know what this is too much work

and you know if you reach that stage then that's absolutely fine right you

know it doesn't make you a failure it just means that you have established

that actually that's not what you want to do right or that's not where your

strengths lie and there's absolutely nothing wrong with that because it could

be that you are you know better or would be better in a results-driven

environment right where you don't have to manage people you just have to get those

numbers in or bang them out whichever one right so that could be the case and

if you establish that through this process then you know brilliant that's

good for you because then what that means is is that you can start focusing

on what you know or where your strengths lie rather than focusing on on this of

trying to be a manager trying to be a leader when it really doesn't when it

really doesn't suit you but listen in terms of next steps it really is about

investing time in your people now right understanding them what drives them what

motivates them what do they want to see from you as their manager and potential

leader look at the feedback as well and once you've kind of gathered all of that

information the next big thing for you is to start taking action and look I

can't guarantee the results obviously but I think if you are doing things

right next kind of 2 to 3 months you'll begin to see an improvement within the

team and talking long-term if you continue to go down that that path you

won't have to worry about the results because they will naturally follow as a

result of your team being much more motivated and much more happy all right

guys listen that is it for today's show I hope you enjoyed it hope that I

managed to answer the question as always if you want me to elaborate on any of

the points that were discussed in today's show then let me know hit me up

in the comments and I'll get back to you equally if you have a question that you want

to bring onto the show again comments is the place to be hit me up

and we will get it on other than that though guys listen thank

you for watching and I will see you again next time

For more infomation >> How To Be An Effective Leader | Martin Solis | Career Mode | EP12 - Duration: 7:23.

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Keziah Daum, an 18-year-old high school student in Woods Cross - Duration: 0:45.

a teenager is called racist for wearing a traditional Chinese dress to prom

Utah high school student keziah DOM tweeting her pictures and receiving

hundreds of angry comments many people saying they were offended by this pose

you'll see it right there with her hands folded together but she's standing up to

her critics tweeting in part now you see her tweet I'm simply showing my

appreciation to their culture I'm not deleting my post because I've done

nothing but show my love for the culture

For more infomation >> Keziah Daum, an 18-year-old high school student in Woods Cross - Duration: 0:45.

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How To Install a Toner Cartridge in an HP Color LaserJet Managed MFP E87640, E87650, E87660 - Duration: 1:50.

Install a new toner cartridge or replace a toner cartridge that is low or depleted in

an HP Color LaserJet Managed E87640, E87650, or E87660.

Open the front door to access the toner cartridges.

If replacing a low or depleted toner cartridge,

pull the handle to unlatch the cartridge and remove it from the printer.

Remove the new toner cartridge and the installation and recycling instructions from the box.

Keep the cartridge in the plastic bag to prevent toner dusting.

Hold the cartridge vertically with the blue cross handle facing down.

Keeping the cartridge vertical, shake it vigorously up and down five times.

You must shake the toner cartridge vertically to make sure

the toner distributes evenly throughout the cartridge.

Remove the toner cartridge from the bag and set the bag aside.

Remove the desiccant packet and tape.

Take note of the direction indicated by the arrows on the blue cross handle.

Hold the cartridge at a 45-degree angle, and turn the blue cross handle two full rotations

in the direction indicated by the arrows on the handle.

If there is resistance inside the cartridge, continue to turn until the handle turns smoothly.

Pull the cross handle as you turn it to release it from the cartridge, and then remove it from the cartridge.

Slide the toner cartridge into the printer until it locks in place.

Repeat this process for each toner cartridge, and then close the front door.

For more infomation >> How To Install a Toner Cartridge in an HP Color LaserJet Managed MFP E87640, E87650, E87660 - Duration: 1:50.

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One-Dimensional Material Packs a Powerful Punch for Next Generation Electronics - Duration: 2:28.

Engineers at the University of California, Riverside, have demonstrated prototype devices

made of an exotic material that can conduct a current density 50 times greater than conventional

copper interconnect technology.

Current density is the amount of electrical current per cross-sectional area at a given

point.

As transistors in integrated circuits become smaller and smaller, they need higher and

higher current densities to perform at the desired level.

Most conventional electrical conductors, such as copper, tend to break due to overheating

or other factors at high current densities, presenting a barrier to creating increasingly

small components.

The electronics industry needs alternatives to silicon and copper that can sustain extremely

high current densities at sizes of just a few nanometers.

The advent of graphene resulted in a massive, worldwide effort directed at investigation

of other two-dimensional, or 2D, layered materials that would meet the need for nanoscale electronic

components that can sustain a high current density.

While 2D materials consist of a single layer of atoms, 1D materials consist of individual

chains of atoms weakly bound to one another, but their potential for electronics has not

been as widely studied.

One can think of 2D materials as thin slices of bread while 1D materials are like spaghetti.

Compared to 1D materials, 2D materials seem huge.

The researchers discovered that zirconium tritelluride, or ZrTe3, nanoribbons have an

exceptionally high current density that far exceeds that of any conventional metals like

copper.

The new strategy undertaken by the UC Riverside team pushes research from two-dimensional

to one-dimensional materials­­— an important advance for the future generation of electronics.

Electronic devices depend on special wiring to carry information between different parts

of a circuit or system.

As developers miniaturize devices, their internal parts also must become smaller, and the interconnects

that carry information between parts must become smallest of all.

Depending on how they are configured, the ZrTe3 nanoribbons could be made into either

nanometer-scale local interconnects or device channels for components of the tiniest devices.

For more infomation >> One-Dimensional Material Packs a Powerful Punch for Next Generation Electronics - Duration: 2:28.

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BREAKING GOWDY HAS IT ALL AND IS ABOUT TO DROP AN ATOM BOMB ON OBAMA AND HOLDER - Duration: 18:37.

BREAKING: GOWDY HAS IT ALL AND IS ABOUT TO DROP AN ATOM BOMB ON OBAMA AND HOLDER

The U.S. Department of Justice under President Donald Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions

have agreed to provide congressional investigators confidential records on the failed Obama-era

gun trafficking operation.

This operation was conducted by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives.

It was known as "Fast and Furious Operation."

"Today, the Department of Justice entered into a conditional settlement agreement with

the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform and will begin to produce additional

documents related to Operation Fast and Furious.

The conditional settlement agreement, filed in federal court in Washington D.C., would

end six years of litigation arising out of the previous administration's refusal to

produce documents requested by the Committee," the Department of Justice stated.

According to our source, Daily Vine, in announcing the settlement, Attorney General Jeff Sessions

said: "The Department of Justice under my watch is committed to transparency and the

rule of law.

This settlement agreement is an important step to make sure that the public finally

receives all the facts related to Operation Fast and Furious."

Rep, Trey Gowdy also made a statement on former President Barack Obama's invoking executive

privilege, regarding the Fast and Furious Operation.

"The assertion of executive privilege is legally compromised and calculated solely

to delay Congress from exercising its constitutional responsibility to provide oversight," Gowdy

stated.

He added: "The President claims he knew nothing about Fast and Furious prior to Agent

Brian Terry's murder and no one at the Department of Justice has suggested the President was

part of the drafting of a demonstrably false letter dated February 4, 2011, to a committee

of congress."

"So, my question to the President is: What are you asserting privilege over?

Did you know about Fast and Furious before Brian Terry's murder?

Did you approve the operation?

Did you participate in the drafting of a false letter to congress?

Unless the answer to all of those questions is yes, there is no matter over which the

President can assert privilege.

It is merely the latest ploy to delay the investigation.

The original Fast and Furious Operation somehow allowed about 2.000 firearms to find their

way into the hands of Mexican cartel members.

Scroll down to the comments and tell us what

you think.

For more infomation >> BREAKING GOWDY HAS IT ALL AND IS ABOUT TO DROP AN ATOM BOMB ON OBAMA AND HOLDER - Duration: 18:37.

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Turkey Survival war GalliPoli, And an untold story of a Pakistani - Duration: 9:56.

Abdur Rehman was born in Peshawar, Pakistan in the 1880s/90s.

He belonged to a prominent family from Peshawar and was the son of Ghulam Samdani.

While he was studying at Aligarh University, a mission was put together by Dr. Mukhtar

Ahmed Ansari to go to Turkey in support of the ailing Ottoman Caliphate.

As military support of the Caliphate was not allowed by the British government, a medical

team comprising 24 doctors and male nurses was assembled.

Abdur Rehman left his studies and volunteered for this mission as a stretcher bearer / nurse.

As he was uncertain of his father's approval, he sold all his belongings to raise funds

for his journey.

After the defeat of Germany and Turkey at the end of World War I, the Allied Powers

occupied Istanbul.

Mustafa Kemal Pasha established a provisional government in Angora (Ankara) to oppose the

Allies and the Caliphate.

Abdur Rehman joined these forces in their struggle for the restoration of Turkish sovereignty.

In 1921, he was sent by Atatürk as Turkey's ambassador to Afghanistan.[citation needed]

For more infomation >> Turkey Survival war GalliPoli, And an untold story of a Pakistani - Duration: 9:56.

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Oxford English Dictionary Developing An Affinity For New York City Lingo And Slang - Duration: 1:49.

For more infomation >> Oxford English Dictionary Developing An Affinity For New York City Lingo And Slang - Duration: 1:49.

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The Life Of An ABA Therapist & Family Man│Motivation│The Grind - Duration: 6:37.

I'm fragile I feel pain I heard I opened my eyes I

create the conquer I hold the power I'm a thinker I create victory I do not

give up I feel no fear I fear no man I'm an

athlete a warrior and artists what's going on run at your

boy Jay Torres Register Behavior Technician that Brett DiNovi &

Associates it's Monday April 9th 2018 and let me tell you something I watched

Brett's video this morning on motivation and the dude knows what he's talking

about because when I woke up I felt sluggish I wasn't ready

didn't have any motivation to get my day started I didn't even know how I was

gonna make it through the day until I watched the video and then my mind

started racing a million miles a second like it always does then I thought hmm

let me make a video on the things that I do to help get me motivated keep me

motivated build behavior momentum keep my eyes on the prize and keep me hungry

for achieving my goals for my family and I and this is what I came up with I hope

you guys enjoy

they like to talk about the bride Julie or de bras like I know what the brothers

like I started from the bottom

I mean I've been doing this a long time I mean over half my life oh but it's

awesome for me to be able to put out music that people will actually hear

especially when you put this much time into something that you love something

you have a passion for I just as motivation

when I first started never knew if they will listen but when I write I produce

passion that's Mel Gibson if music is a disease I promise I'm in fact that I

draw more different levels of Dreams into my playground what's going on world

boy JT ready to get this day started Tuesday April 10th I look at this land

every morning it was purchased for us my wife and I and this is where our dream

home is gonna be built one day at a time progress motivation I'm hungry my owners

kicked off the right way coffee made clothes iron lunch packed kissed the

family goodbye watch breads video again I'm ready to go let's go

motivation ready to ride in my life

here we go just let the school district getting ready to go to my next client's

house more traffic but let's go baby let's go motivated

just finished up my first of two home sessions for the day you have to be the

quickest the strong is you don't have to be the most intelligent to get to where

I am that's what you guys do you just got a grind know your grind

you gotta outrun so many of you heard me say is your father listen to me my owner

company your mama might be a millionaire you might come from privileged your

daddy might hook you up with a car you might know people he might better get

you a job but you will not outwork me and what you saw Bishop OJT finally just

got home from a long day of Irvington school district first home case second

home case traffic grind and still brundin days not done yet about the

Golden Sun I'm about to prep for tomorrow

get some behavior momentum going that way it lowers my response effort in the

morning so I can get up get motivated keep it going and going and going

you get the point let's go

you better grow up and get to the point as a man that if you ever get beat you

better get beat by somebody that's just that's just purely more talented than

you are I ever get paid by somebody because you beat yourselves you have to

take advantage of an opportunity of a lifetime and the lifetime of the

opportunity a real man in the dark nobody's watching you put me in work

a real man in the dark when nobody's watching you put me in work chat about

this is it be phenomenal will be forgotten 1 2 3 1 2 3

For more infomation >> The Life Of An ABA Therapist & Family Man│Motivation│The Grind - Duration: 6:37.

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Trey Gowdy Wants An Investigation And You Won't Believe Who Is On The Hot Seat - Duration: 13:55.

Trey Gowdy Wants An Investigation And You Won't Believe Who Is On The Hot Seat

Trey Gowdy has a well-earned reputation as one of the most dogged investigators in Congress.

He played key roles in exposing Hillary Clinton's illegal private server and the fake news Russia

collusion story.

Now Gowdy is calling for a new investigation and you won't believe who is on the hot

seat.

Dr. Ronny Jackson – a Navy admiral – withdrew his candidacy to run the VA after Montana

Democrat Jon Tester smeared him with fake news allegations about being a drunk who terrorized

colleagues and wrecked a vehicle while at work.

The Secret Service and Trump administration found no evidence to support either charge.

They were lies and fake news, but the media published them without verifying them because

it was a way to try and hurt Trump.

But instead of investigating the scheme to smear a decorated Admiral, Trey Gowdy believes

the accusations against Jackson should be looked in to.

Politico reports:

"House Oversight Chairman Trey Gowdy on Sunday said some of the allegations against

President Donald Trump's ill-fated pick for secretary of Veterans Affairs should be

investigated.

Appearing on CBS' "Face the Nation," the South Carolina Republican said, "I think

some of those allegations do warrant being investigated," referring to a series of

allegations levied against the White House physician and now-withdrawn VA secretary nominee,

Rear Adm. Ronny Jackson.

Gowdy specified that Congress was not the appropriate body to investigate all allegations

of misconduct by Jackson, referencing in particular claims the Navy doctor overprescribed sleeping

pills while serving in the White House.

"I don't think you want members of Congress deciding whether or not the prescribing of

Ambien is within the course of a professional medical practice," Gowdy said.

"In fact, I can't think of anybody less well-qualified to decide whether Ambien should

be prescribed than a bunch of lawyers."

Jackson withdrew his nomination to serve as Trump's VA secretary last week after allegations

surfaced that, among other things, he created a toxic work environment and maintained poor

prescription records.

Allegations of Jackson's creating a hostile work environment would be the jurisdiction

of "some combination of the Veterans' Affairs Committee and House Oversight,"

Gowdy said."

This is a repeat of the Russia probe.

In both instances, innocent men – Trump and Dr. Jackson – are being investigated

based on fake news and unsubstantiated rumors started by Democrats.

The real scandal is the coordinated effort to sabotage them, but in neither case is that

being investigated.

Do you agree?

Let us know your thoughts

in the comment section.

For more infomation >> Trey Gowdy Wants An Investigation And You Won't Believe Who Is On The Hot Seat - Duration: 13:55.

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How an AI Chatbot Helped Me Feel Happier for the Last 60 Days (Woebot Review) - Duration: 4:27.

- I think everyone gets down from time to time.

Slow, depressed, that sort of thing.

And a lot of the time, the cause is our own thoughts.

The way that we talk to ourselves

and judge ourselves inside our own heads.

One of the fixes in the world of psychology

is this thing called cognitive therapy.

This is a process where

usually with the help of a therapist

your thoughts are broken apart

in order to identify negative feelings

you have about yourself

or ways that you are limiting yourself.

As an example,

one of the thoughts might be,

I always screw these up.

And in cognitive therapy

the change would be changing the word always to sometimes.

That's literally all it takes in your brain.

If the next time you're going to think

I always screw this up.

If you instead think I sometimes screw these things up.

All of a sudden a world of possibilities

opens up in your brain and you are able to get better.

That brings up to the topic of this video

which is Woebot.

Woebot is a chat plug-in for Facebook

that you add - It's an AI bot

and it will lead you through cognitive therapy.

I've been using it for the last few months

and it has kept me happier.

The main thing that it does is,

everyday it will ask you how you are feeling

and make you judge from a set of emojis, so

super smiley, kinda smiley, kinda pissed off, super angry.

You pick how you are feeling

and it tracks it in a chart that shows you

how you are feeling on a day to day basis.

Then, every once and a while,

it will talk you through cognitive therapy.

So it will teach you things like

that changing always to sometimes thing

we talked about a second ago

and there are other take-aways that frame your mindset

and walk you through how to talk to yourself

in a more healthy way.

It's a free AI therapist.

I know what you're thinking.

Why have a robot do this?

It seems like the most inhuman thing ever.

But I kinda like it.

You don't have to go to a therapist.

You don't have to pay for anything.

It's literally just interfacing with a robot,

telling him how your day's going

and telling him the triggers that got you that way.

So for instance,

it will ask you you are feeling

and then it will say

What are you currently doing right now?

Even though the robot keeps track of all this stuff

I found that just reporting on when I'm feeling happy

and when I'm feeling sad

has led to me seeking out

a lot more of these behaviors where I'm feeling happy.

Insights for me are,

whenever I'm working on a project

or hanging out with somebody,

I'm happy.

And usually when I get sad or lose motivation,

it's when I haven't seen another person in a few days

which is easy to do when you are working at home.

Or, I haven't worked on anything in a while.

Maybe I'm distracted by reading articles on reddit

or tweeting too much.

Things like that.

And it's good to measure this sort of stuff

because you can figure out where your own triggers are.

For instance, if you hate your job,

you might be unhappy at work.

I know whenever I've felt unhappy at work

I've actually just been unhappy before I get there

and after I leave.

I'm usually pretty good at getting in a flow state

once the work actually starts.

So, let me show you one of these lessons.

Woebot will keep pinging.

He has asked me about "should statements"

for a few days here.

Which is another cool thing.

If you don't want to talk about the

cognitive therapy lesson at the moment

and you just want to report on how you are feeling

it's pretty easy to do that.

And so here the robot is talking about "should statements"

He says, the thing about "should statements"

is it feels like you are being forced to do something.

These responses are canned.

So every time he says something,

Facebook will give you three or four responses

you can choose, or you can write your own.

I just usually hit the buttons.

Then he's saying you can totally transform should statements

for example - I really must get an A+ on my English exam

could be transformed into:

I want to do well on my English exam because

the studying will help me learn more English

so that I can converse more fluently with

all these nice humans.

I also love that he's conversing from the

point of view of a robot.

At another point he referenced how he was hanging out

with another robot and they were drinking oil together.

I love that.

It helps me feel like I am living in the future.

Even if the robots, obviously, don't have

physical bodies, right.

They're AI. Own it.

And it terms of results, I feel happier.

I feel more productive over the last couple weeks

using the Woebot.

Just having somebody ask how you are feeling every day

even if it is an AI, has been helpful to me.

You might find it helpful too.

It's a free chat plugin.

You can grab it down in the description below.

If you found this valuable,

I'd love if you would share this video with a friend or two.

We're trying to hit 100,000 subs this year.

And every share counts.

Also, if you run a digital agency and want more

deal flow. Want more enterprise clients,

check out experiment27.com

Thanks.

For more infomation >> How an AI Chatbot Helped Me Feel Happier for the Last 60 Days (Woebot Review) - Duration: 4:27.

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"Natürlich habe auch ich Lehrgeld gezahlt" - 15 FRAGEN an Ulrich W. Hanke | LYNX fragt nach Teil 1 - Duration: 4:29.

For more infomation >> "Natürlich habe auch ich Lehrgeld gezahlt" - 15 FRAGEN an Ulrich W. Hanke | LYNX fragt nach Teil 1 - Duration: 4:29.

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Dự Đoán xổ số An Giang hôm nay XSAG 03/05 - Bạch thủ lô xổ số AG 03-05-2018 - Duration: 3:41.

For more infomation >> Dự Đoán xổ số An Giang hôm nay XSAG 03/05 - Bạch thủ lô xổ số AG 03-05-2018 - Duration: 3:41.

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Selling and Marketing Your Brand to an Audience | Berklee Online | Creativity & Entrepreneurship - Duration: 4:25.

The best shows we've ever experienced, the best performers we've ever

seen-- think of Freddie Mercury, live at Wembley during LIve Aid, or a year

later, Queen, live in Wembley, 1985, which

is widely considered one of the best rock shows of all time--

what do they do?

They're able to bring that audience into their reality.

They're able to sell an audience, if you will, onto their particular vision.

The audience and the performer becomes one.

That's what great sales is.

All too often, someone thinks of selling as the used car salesman.

You've got some piece of junk that you know isn't any good,

and if you smooth talk somebody well enough, they'll buy it anyhow.

To a really good entrepreneur who's building products from day one

with customers in mind, selling begins on day one.

Having a dialogue with customers and co-creating,

enrolling them in your vision, and getting them

involved in what you're doing, building it for and with them,

and getting them to crave it-- or having it have an element of covetability

such that it sells itself, to some extent,

that could be built into the engineering process of the product itself.

So it's not just, well, I sit in my backroom and build it.

And then I hire someone with a suit to go out and try to sell it.

But rather really getting close to people

and understanding what they want, and also understanding

some of the modern tools of inbound marketing and social networking

presences to get people connected to you early on,

to get them to really feel they want to be part of what you're doing,

is a much more effective way of selling.

Join the herd-- it came out naturally.

I' trying to build a brotherhood here, like a community.

Like, yeah, join us.

Yeah, come on, let's party together.

And let's dance together to our music and wear face paint, if you want,

as well.

We invite them to all of that, for them to feel like they're part of something.

You can be guilty-- and I've seen some designers fail--

when they're designing for themselves, and they're not really

designing for the brand.

And for me, Nike was the ultimate challenge.

Because when I went to Nike, I wasn't an 18-year-old football crazy kid, and 12

years later when I left, I still wasn't a football crazy kid,

but I felt that I knew him better than anybody else.

For many people, the creative process is relatively easy.

But then, for some reason when they go out there

and they have to convince somebody to buy into this new reality,

they feel that this is something foreign.

They feel almost uncomfortable with that.

But think that, unless whatever you're doing connects with an audience,

unless you're able to create that joint reality between you

and whatever audience you have, you will simply just not be successful.

A company exists, and a career exist, only when

there is a willful participant on the other end to buy into that new reality.

Especially a place like Berklee College of Music,

where we've got some of the best young musicians

around the planet who are steeped at this point in their career

with continuing to hone the jewel of their performance.

And very often, I find that those musicians--

I remember when I was that age, also-- don't really

have a connection to how to get their performance before people.

But the older you get, you're going to have to pull that in.

Because music that you hold to yourself, it's kind of selfish.

If you are a great performer, if you do have

something incredible to say, and only five people

hear it, well what about me?

What about my grandchildren?

What about all the rest of us in the human condition that

could have been enriched by this idea?

So for me, to be a musician is to be responsible to this notion of trying

to get your message, or your musicality, or you're thought process out

to as many people as possible.

So re-channel that passion that you may have for the creative process of what

you're doing, and take that and apply it into the selling

process of what you're doing.

Don't see it as an individual or separate step.

That force that propels you to create something new

should be a force that continues at actually

taking that new thing that you've just created

and helping it find its rightful audience.

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