Thứ Tư, 18 tháng 10, 2017

Youtube daily Oct 18 2017

Just a little further.

I had to find a way to stop them trying to kill me.

You made a serious mistake.

Not as serious as yours, I fear.

Bane.

Let's not stand on ceremony here...

...Mr. Wayne.

Peace has cost you your strength.

Victory has defeated you.

Theatricality and deception, powerful agents to the uninitiated.

But we are initiated, aren't we, Bruce?

Members of the League of Shadows.

And you betrayed us.

"Us"? You were excommunicated...

...by a gang of psychopaths.

I am the League of Shadows.

And I'm here to fulfill Ra's Al Ghul's destiny.

You fight like a younger man.

Nothing held back.

Admirable, but mistaken.

Oh, you think darkness is your ally?

But you merely adopted the dark.

I was born in it.

Molded by it.

I didn't see the light until I was already a man.

By then, it was nothing to me but blinding!

The shadows betray you because they belong to me!

I will show you where I have made my home...

...whilst preparing to bring justice.

Then I will break you.

Your precious armory.

Gratefully accepted. We will need it.

Ah, yes. I was wondering what would break first.

Your spirit...

...or your body.

For more infomation >> Batman vs Bane Sewer Fight | The Dark Knight Rises (2012) Movie Clip - Duration: 4:49.

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Animal Stories with Dan Green: the paddleboarding chicken - Duration: 0:53.

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Batman vs Bane Final Fight | The Dark Knight Rises (2012) Movie Clip - Duration: 4:42.

So you came back to die with your city.

No. I came back to stop you.

Now!

That's impossible.

Cut on over to Fifth!

Here you go. Get on the bus. Go ahead.

You, come with me. You too.

Hey, you, you, and you, come here, come here.

Everyone else get on the bus, okay?

You guys, you go knock on doors and spread the word, okay?

The bomb is gonna go off.

Get out by the South Street tunnel or over the bridge.

You do two blocks and you get back to the bus, all right?

Go, go, go!

Is he back?

Keep your eyes open. Go, go.

Cover the doors!

Where's your trigger?!

Where is it?!

You'd never give it to an ordinary citizen!

Where is it? Where's your trigger?

Where is it?! Where is it?!

Tell me where the trigger is.

Then you have my permission to die.

I broke you.

How have you come back?

You think you're the only one who could learn the strength to escape?

Where's the trigger?

But I never escaped.

But the child.

The child of Ra's Al Ghul made the climb.

But he's not the child of Ra's Al Ghul.

I am.

And though I'm not ordinary...

...I am a citizen.

For more infomation >> Batman vs Bane Final Fight | The Dark Knight Rises (2012) Movie Clip - Duration: 4:42.

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Man carving 1,483-pound pumpkin in Manchester - Duration: 0:48.

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Ryan Potter is Beast Boy - Titans TV Show - Duration: 6:44.

Holy *** is this big news!

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Glitter Fantasy Takes Central Park | Episode 13 | Cosmopolitan - Duration: 3:06.

Can you teach me how to do a high note to achieve a man?

*sings*

*attempts singing*

AH!!!

Everywhere I go, people are always trying to get a piece of

Glitter Fantasy.

They're constantly hitting on me, unicorn-calling me on the streets, and after me for my rock-solid

body.

Today, I'm here to find true love.

Not just I want your for your horn, love, but love

that lasts for centuries.

How do I find true love?

I think you have to stop looking.

Oh my god, love, I see it.

Carol!

Run fast.

Sir, would you leave your wife for me?

Sorry--

It's okay, sir!

I'll be waiting.

No, that wasn't me you saw on Grindr!

Ugh!

You guys, I'm not into being in a three-some!

Awkward!

Are the two of you married?

How do the two of you find love?

Just caring and loving for one another.

And having a giant horn!

May I lay my horn on you?

I'm not looking for love just for my horn, I'm looking for love that goes deeper.

But, I'm French, so I don't understand everything you're saying...

I understand everything that you're saying, just through your body language.

What do I do to get to the center of Paris?

Today, I'm talking to couples who are in love, so I can truly find that for myself!

How did you find love?

In our job.

Whenever you were at your job, did you used to walk by each other like this?

How do I go about finding someone that can do this for me?

I'm sure you don't have a tough time.

Oh, trust me honey, it's tough.

It's like the Sahara Desert over here.

I guarantee you if I drank this, it would get me wet instantly.

Really?

*singing* Looking for love, love, love... looking for love, love, love...

Are you two a couple?

You're not a couple?

Oh...

You're just cuddling in the bushes?

Carol?

Run, Carol!

Run!

Scandal in the park!

I'm just open with it, open, be honest.

So I have to always be open?

You guys, do you think this move right here will attract someone?

I just want someone to get to know me for the real me, like, my true personality!

Like, my soul.

Not just because I'm a big f*cking star!

But what about if you're a famous person, though?

But you do wear nipple pasties and a sparkly skirt?

I think you're sh*t out of luck.

Ugh!!!

You just have to be true to yourself and know what you want.

But what if I'm really famous and I can't be true to myself?

Famous or not, you've got to always be true to yourself.

It's going to be really hard.

Thanks, you guys.

Ugh!

*classical music*

Thank you, thank you, all of you.

For more infomation >> Glitter Fantasy Takes Central Park | Episode 13 | Cosmopolitan - Duration: 3:06.

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Animals With Weird Behaviors You Won't Believe - Duration: 5:29.

Animals With Weird Behaviors You Won't Believe

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Honoring The Four US Soldiers Killed In Niger | MSNBC - Duration: 3:38.

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NETFLIXXX (Netflix) - Brytiago Ft. Bad Bunny (Audio Remix) - Duration: 2:13.

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SA TV News 19 Octobor 2017 Bangladesh latest NewsToday Bangla Breaking News BD News all Bangla - Duration: 16:08.

SA TV News 19 Octobor 2017 Bangladesh latest NewsToday Bangla Breaking News BD News all Bangla

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Bangla News 19 Octobor 2017 Today Bangla Breaking News Bangladesh latest news BD News all Bangla - Duration: 12:45.

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Lil Pump - Gucci Gang (GLD & DIABLO Remix) - Duration: 5:31.

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9. Emerging Technologies: Their Evolution and Limitations Within the Fields of Cultural Preservation - Duration: 26:09.

Tim Castillo: Okay, that sounds good.

Thank you, thank you very much for the opportunity to come here today.

This is a very different audience than I'm used to presenting to.

I'm trained as an architect and been the director of this digital media lab at the University

of New Mexico for the last seven years, and so this project that we're going to talk about

is really a kind of a project that's been very dear to my heart in that I grew up in

New Mexico.

And really one of the things that we were very interested at the onset of this project

was really looking at how to document culture and people and place.

And we started very early on looking at places like Albuquerque and then ultimately in rural

context like Dixon Embudo.

My colleague when we first wrote the grant to get the funding to do this is actually

the current Dean of the School of Architecture, Geraldine Forbes.

And we were really interested in using new technologies and emergent things to really

start to tell the story of the people in this region.

And so when we started to think about this, we really didn't know what we were getting

ourselves into to tell you the truth.

We had met some people that were living in Dixon, and they really wanted to talk about

ways of documenting that culture.

It was a culture that basically was moving away from a kind of agrarian kind of context.

Dixon Embudo had been settled by the Spaniards in the early 1600s.

And so you can kind of see the Camino Real here in this image, and it really started

from that and really thinking about, well how are we going to talk about the people,

the land, the water and that evolution?

So in terms of, again, the historical legacy of the Spanish coming into this environment

and settling it was really primarily what we were interested in and really looking at

the kind of visual kind of complexity.

So here's an image of Santa Fe very early on, and we were really interested in how we

would set up a database that actually was communal; that'll allow people to think about

how this history sort of evolved, and really creating a platform that multiple people could

use.

So in terms of looking at the acequias, if you guys know what acequias are, they're basically

a form of diverting water to lands in the landscape that allow people to farm off the

land.

So here's an example of an acequia system in Northern New Mexico.

Another example.

And then really the kind of communal and democracy of living and working in these communities.

So this is what they call la limpia, so basically "the cleaning".

So every spring they will come in as a community and, you know, sort of take it out and clean

it up so that the water can start to flow and be able to allow that community to live

off the land.

And so we were very interested, and there's a whole communal sort of system that's evolved

over time.

There's the mayordomo who is basically the person that oversees a partition of land and

the parciantes which are actually the people that have plots of land.

And so every day or I guess every part of the week, people have certain timeframes to

irrigate the land.

So we were really interested in that and really the kind of cultural overlay.

We started to move into Dixon and really started to document it from a kind of very architectural

kind of paradigm.

We're looking at the kind of historical context in terms of the built environment, the infrastructure,

but also in terms of the plots of land because they're very important to that evolution.

And then we started to think about, "Well, how are we going to document this and think

about it from a different context?"

Previously, I had been – I was educated in New York City - and I had been aware of

this project called the Manhattan Transformations by Brian McGrath.

And it was kind of a very early on Flash-based visualization that looked at the history of

New York over time.

This was probably around, I want to say, 2000, maybe 2001.

I think maybe it might say it down there.

I was really interested in the kind of explosion of data that could be organized in the format

that would really talk about the historical evolution in a very kind of simplistic way.

Originally, we got funding to look at Albuquerque, so we were looking at four communities in

Albuquerque: Old Town, Atrisco, Martineztown, and Barelas, and really looking at a way of

bringing that together to tell the story of the history of the people.

And so we used things like GIS.

We brought it into a Flash-based format.

And I bring this up because it was the limitations of the technology of the time, and it allowed

for a kind of dynamic environment to be present on the web, so people could have access to

it, but it also created limitations.

So one of the things that I found out very early on was that GIS wasn't for everyone.

In particular, for the audience that we wanted to hit, it wasn't really, we wanted to hit

the researchers but we really wanted it to impact the community.

And so when we put this out and populated it on the web, it got very minimal kind of

usage because people really didn't understand how to interact with that application.

And so we went back to the drawing board and we started to think about coming up with a

different kind of platform.

So we went into the Google Earth kind of platform.

It was at that time in about 2009, we started to look at what potential that had.

And being a very open source application, we thought that it had great potential.

And being able to bring the layers from GIS but also using things like SketchUp, using

Street View, as ways of articulating that place, and really breaking down these layers.

You can kind of see here some of our early visualizations just talking about the context.

We're using panoramic photography as a way of articulating that space and really looking

at the history of the contemporary issues and also the historic issues that comprise

that community.

Again, water being a primary element in Dixon and then really working with the community.

So this is Esteban Arellano.

And so if you're from New Mexico and you're aware of the acequia tradition, Esteban Arellano

was one of the foremost authorities on the history and evolution of acequias basically

in our region.

And so he was a great contact and he really allowed us the opportunity to get to the community,

to talk to them, to really understand their history, you know.

One thing that we were trying to sort of also think about is deviating from the kind of

traditional one perspective of history, but really telling it from a multiplicity kind

of platform, and thinking about how, you know, being able to, in a visual narrative, bring

several voices to the surface to allow that story to be told.

So Esteban, along with our researchers, were an important part of that element.

So here's a great photo of that context.

And then really kind of thinking about this later model…

I guess, if this will work.

Let's see if this works.

Let's see, maybe if I hit this.

Woops.

It's a video….There we go.

Is it going?

Oh.

Well, all right.

That's okay.

That's what happens when you work in Macs and you transfer it over to PowerPoint.

But anyway, so we developed a model to look at the community.

We broke it up into six layers.

We were looking at culture, we were looking at the economy, we were looking at the infrastructure,

the built environment, and also the culture.

And so in there, there were also sublayers that we were very interested in looking at,

you know, how you look at the architecture, you know.

In particular, like a place, Embudo, there was a heavy presence of Catholicism and what

that had in terms of the evolution of the community, and really the infrastructure in

terms of manmade and natural infrastructure.

Those are the things that we started to look at in terms of trying to break this down into

a new model and then ultimately moving it into Google Earth.

Like I said, it was an emergent platform in that time and it had a very robust kind of

capacity.

We started to build this into a model where you can turn off and turn off layers and being

able to understand, you know, the kind of physical context, but also being able to bring

it into a different kind of environment where we would control it in a kind of Flash-based

environment, so you could actually turn on and turn off layers.

And so originally, when we set up the platform, we had something that would be community-based

that'll allow inhabitants of the community to upload data into our repository, and then

something that was maybe more of a kind of academic sort of component that we would control

and try to merge it together into telling this historical evolution.

So then we started to look at, you know, the different sort of visuals that we could acquire

in all the archives around the state.

So here, you can start to see the breakdown of the different aerials and maps that we

were able to find over time.

This is just it being populated geospatially in Google Earth.

This is one of the earlier maps that start to breakdown the kind of partitions of land.

Some of the aerials over time.

It was really interesting in kind of looking at these.

What we noticed in just looking at the aerials, that the land actually got wider.

We were kind of curious about that, so we actually were talking to Esteban and one of

the reasons is that the tractor around the 1940s actually came into play and it actually

increased the size of plots of land.

That was a really interesting kind of observation that came out of looking at the aerials.

Ultimately, the Virtual Embudo Project became the Virtual New Mexico Project.

We got funding to move into another context and we started to look at going to Santa Rosa.

I worked with Chris Wilson, the Historic Preservation Director at the time at UNM, and he was very

interested in taking this model and using it at a Historical Preservation class.

I had the great opportunity to work with a couple of other professors, Enrique Lamadrid

and Miguel Gandert.

And it created a new environment.

And that's actually when I first met Adriane, so I'm going to let Adriane talk a little

bit about when she stepped into this project and some of the things that we did in terms

of moving from maybe a static, kind of, mapping, kind of, tool into something that was much

more visually a motion narrative.

Adriane Zacmanidis:

So moving into Santa Rosa, we brought this out of the Google Earth platform and into

an ethnographic research model.

Previous, we were really coming at it from an architectural pedagogy and now we're starting

to bring in the ethnography as well, and starting to break down the systems in, sort of, a more

specific way.

And so this was a week-long Historic Preservation intensive class.

It lasted the summer though and what I mean by that is that the students were on the ground

for the week, and then they had two months after that to complete the project.

What we did at this time was, working with Enrique Lamadrid who is an ethnographer, and

Miguel Gandert, who is a photographer, we started to take the ethnography into a video

narrative platform, which we thought would become more accessible to the communities

that we were trying to reach with this information because as Tim said, from the very beginning

of this project, this wasn't just for the ivory tower research.

This was really for the communities that we were working in as well, so that they could

look at their morphology of place, look at their history of time, and understand maybe

ways to move their communities forward.

And so the students were really allowed to create their own research and interpretation

of the story of place in Santa Rosa.

What came out of it were some extraordinary videos ranging from narratives that were basic

oral histories to short almost what you would call an informational video about the history

of the place and economic development.

One of our students came from the MainStreet Program here in New Mexico and.. are we going

to…

Adriane Zacmanidis:

Anyway, she did a great video around economic development for Santa Rosa.

Some other people focused on the water issues in Santa Rosa.

This allowed us to bring our model, as I say, out of that strict architectural pedagogy

and those layers of just building 3D representations of the morphology of place over time into

bringing narrative community member's voice, community member's memories into the place.

This brings us into knowing your audience.

And so I've worked for many years with museums in interpretation and in exhibit design, so

when I came on, we really started to look at who the audience was for this research.

As I say, from the get-go, Tim and Dean Forbes didn't want this to be just for the ivory

tower, really wanted to bring it out into the community.

We started looking at ways in which we could disperse this information out into the communities.

And what we realized was that we needed to use a website.

Google Earth became a problem because people had to download Google Earth and then understand

how to work Google Earth.

Once we were able to put these short Google Earth videos into a website or into a video

narrative, then it became much more accessible.

We were also interested in starting to use this information for K through 12 education

in the state, and that's something that we're still working towards.

All of that to say, knowing your audience, starting with user experience very early on,

and understanding what our limitations are and what the public's limitations are with

connecting with that research and connecting with systems thought and systems based materials

was very important to us.

Tim Castillo: In terms of applying this model elsewhere, we subsequently have gotten funding

to move to Silver City, so we're really interested in different types of economic engines across

the state.

So he agrarian community, Santa Rosa was a kind of ranching community, and then moving

down south to a place like Silver City, that's a mining community.

So what you see here on the right, or my right, is the town and actually the open pit mine.

They're actually to scale, so you can actually see the vastness of that mine.

And really, what we're interested in is also creating visualizations that start to talk

about the kind of growth over time.

As the mine grows, the town also starts to show that growth.

We're interested in that kind of collaboration.

This is a video you're not going to be able to see, unfortunately.

But we started to, we had a graduate student that was working with us, and we were able

to start to create these animated system maps, and so coming back to the idea of visualization,

and really allowing a community to understand the many layers.

I mean I think they become self-evident if you're in that community, but sometimes it's

informative to understand the complexity that comprises each community.

So we went back, using this methodology to be able to articulate the different kinds

of areas that we were focusing on, so really again looking at a visualization and its capacity

to tell stories.

One of things that we found is that we're trying to stimulate people not necessarily

in a way that maybe is intriguing.

So one of the things that we really started to move into, is into the idea of cinema,

and really that YouTube format is a very productive format as a threshold into research.

It's almost the ... If you look at the metrics, YouTube has the highest metrics in terms of

social media.

And so we thought, we've got to move into that domain so that becomes our threshold,

our doorstep into the rest of the research.

So it becomes a way of a calling card.

So we started to create these animations as a way of really calling into play the different

work.

As we moved on in moving into different tools, coming back into that kind of iterative process

that we learned in architectural pedagogy, we're very interested in looking at new tools.

We know over time ... We had been looking at the New York Times model of visualization.

If you're aware of what's going on in terms of that model, it's been a very productive

model.

It's very consumer base, but can be very saturated with high content.

The Story Maps model that came out a couple years ago is a great model that basically

works in the GIS format.

And so we had one of our research students, a landscape architect, start to look at Las

Vegas, New Mexico.

That's our new community that we've been really researching and really coming back to the

kind of architectural built environment context and looking at the before, or the then and

now kind of photographs and be able to allow that user interface to be interactive and

hopefully user friendly enough so that people can actually be able to access it.

So Adriane, I don't know if you wanted to elaborate on that a little bit more.

Adriane Zacmanidis:

One of the things that I want to just reiterate on and push home is that this is really, truly

an interdisciplinary project at the University of New Mexico, as well as working with the

communities closely on the ground.

And so for Las Vegas specifically, we worked with the Historic Preservation group there

that is quite active and quite strong.

They were helping us, every step of the way, gather materials for this because they understood

the implications of getting this information out there, and again visually stating that

morphology of place and the necessity of preservation in their community.

And we were also always, because we're a research institute, we're also always pushing the boundaries.

We're able to make mistakes.

Like Julie was talking about earlier, we're not consultants coming in.

We're able to go back to our lab at the university, work with this type of technology, push the

boundaries, and make some mistakes.

And so with Esri, not that we were making mistakes with this necessarily, but we were

pushing the boundaries of this, just seeing how we could fit our research into this and

could it hold it, would it hold it, and how would it translate to the community?

And so with that said, then we moved into looking at more, or then we move into looking

at more emergent tools and how those emergent tools can work for us in this type of research.

I'll let Tim expand on that.

Tim Castillo: We got a grant this summer and really a lot of this funding, it comes directly

from the Center for Regional Studies which is a granting agency at the University of

New Mexico.

We had this great idea of moving into ... Everybody's talking about VR right now.

And so we at the lab, we purchased six Oculus Rifts.

We really wanted to test the potential of what this 360 degree VR world would look like.

We went back to the communities that we had been working in and we basically documented

multiple sites in 360.

What's really great about this is, is that is gives you ... It's much like that Street

View in Google Earth where you can get that context, but now what we're doing is actually

layering metadata onto these 360 degree images.

Right here is Albuquerque Plaza in Old Town.

So if you wanted to find information on the church, you would click on that image and

then it would take you into another 360 inside the church and then you can actually get data

about when it was built, its historical evolution.

It's really an interesting tool for talking about place.

It's one that we're, like I said, like Adriane was talking ... We have the liberty to test

these things and really try to understand its potential.

I think right now, we're in the process of really trying to understand this.

One of the difficulties about this technology is that, well, not everybody has an Oculus

Rift.

Well, with the VR technology, you can actually put it on the web and be able to have accessibility.

That actually has great promise.

The other thing is that, you know, you can create these Google Cardboards and use your

Smartphones as a way of getting that immersive quality.

Those are the things that we're very interested its potential and really layering it back

into our existing VNMP model.

In terms of limitations - this is a video that you're not going to see …It's basically

... It kind of goes, yeah ...This is really a trailer and again, coming back to the idea

of YouTube, it's a really poetic thing.

We purchased some drones a couple years ago, and so we've been able to go in and drone

these environments, and we've put this really fantastic, beautiful composition about all

the communities that we're in.

It's really, again, like I said, it's that threshold.

It's really that door, that threshold into our research to stimulate the students.

Like Adriane was saying, we love ... My dream is for this to be the way that kids in the

state of New Mexico learn about the history of New Mexico, so being able to populate this

in their tablets, into their computers, and, you know, having this interactive platform,

is really kind of a goal that we're trying to strive for.

In terms of limitations, again, it's funding.

Funding is everything.

Being able to carry something like this forward takes a tremendous amount of resources.

We don't get to all the layers that we want to in the communities because we run out of

time, we run out of money, but at the same time, we're also running up against limitations

about technology.

Like in transitions into Google Earth, we've seen over the last six years that Google Earth

has actually become more imploded and more closed down.

The things we could do eight years ago, you can't do anymore.

You've got to roll with the technology, but again, like the Esri model, that's a new opportunity

that we're expanding on.

And so we're constantly being malleable and really trying to roll with the times, but

at the end of the day, we have this catalog of information that is robust and we think

that it has great potential.

So just in terms of conclusion, I think that we're very excited about what we're doing

here at the University of New Mexico but in terms of our region, documenting the people

and place, but also taking this into a more global kind of context.

And so one of the things that we're very excited about is working with Julie this next year

to actually look at this model in the parks across the region and really starting to think

about how that evolves over time.

Adriane, do you have a couple more ...

Adriane Zacmanidis:

[inaudible 00:26:01].

Tim Castillo: Yeah and specifically Bandelier, this next year will be where we'll be spending

a majority of our time.

So thank you very much.

For more infomation >> 9. Emerging Technologies: Their Evolution and Limitations Within the Fields of Cultural Preservation - Duration: 26:09.

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After Getting BAD News Overnight, NFL Commish Just Emerged From 3Hr Meeting With SHOCK Announcement - Duration: 5:31.

Major business players in the NFL held an emergency meeting yesterday, presumably to

pow wow over how they are going to fix their desperate situation and save their season.

It's reached a point of no return and now the league commissioner, Roger Goodell, who

allowed these players to protest for weeks on end and demanded everyone be patient has

to face the music of his bad decision.

Now, he's emerged with a sudden shocking announcement about the NFL that's been destroyed

under his "leadership."

There's no denying that boycotts are alive and well when with each new game there's

more empty seats than the week before.

Ratings are the lowest they've been in decades, big sponsors are dropping players as the hits

keep on coming.

While the outrage is obvious, the only ones who refuse to see it are those directly affected

by it – football players who insist on kneeling and league officials who continue to allow

it.

When word got out that NFL officials were going to be holding an emergency meeting over

the protests that have plagued their sport, the country thought they would emerge with

a "white flag" on the issue and announce a hail mary in hopes of saving themselves

from further failure.

Instead, they perpetuated the disappointment and sealed their unfortunate fate for the

rest of the season and perhaps even the future of the sport.

Despite the NFL and NFLPA calling it a "productive meeting," it was only productive in making

matters worse for their industry when it didn't seem like that could be possible.

After coming out of the three-hour pow wow, the statement on what they discussed and conclusions

they had come to was to continue to do . nothing about kneeling while "promoting a positive

social change and address inequality in our communities," the statement said.

That was the final nail in the NFL coffin since now the fallout from that had come to

fruition and a lot of people could soon be out of work.

A statement released jointly by the NFL and NFLPA after the meeting where 11 owners and

13 players were in attendance, said:

"Today owners and players had a productive meeting focused on how we can work together

to promote positive social change and address inequality in our communities.

NFL executives and owners joined NFLPA executives and player leaders to review and discuss plans

to utilize our platform to promote equality and effectuate positive change.

We agreed that these are common issues and pledged to meet again to continue this work

together."

"As we said last week, everyone who is part of our NFL community has a tremendous respect

for our country, our flag, our anthem and our military.

In the best American tradition, we are coming together to find common ground and commit

to the hard work required for positive change."

The meeting was supposed to be about the anthem, as the first and most important order of business,

as well as other league matters.

Just like NFL officials have done all season so far, they ignored that protesting part

and went on to innocuous stuff that won't matter in the long run based on the damning

news the NFL just got today.

Just when the NFL ratings seemed to have reached an all-time low, they dropped to a level that

they won't be able to recover from now and it has everything to do with players and officials

ignoring their fed-up fans.

The overnight ratings plummet was the final straw and is going to cost more that just

commercial revenue and stock values.

The Daily Mail reports:

The Tennessee Titans won their Week 6 game against the Indianapolis Colts on Monday,

but the real losers may be ESPN and the NFL, which suffered through the lowest-rated 'Monday

Night Football' game of the season.

MNF, which is broadcast by ESPN, had been losing viewers throughout the season, but

Monday's 6.1 rating in metered markets was its lowest of the 2017 season, according toDeadline.com.

(In other words: 6.1 percent of households in metered markets watched the game on Monday).

According to Deadline.com, Monday's game registered a 3.7 rating among adults 18-49

and drew in a total viewership of over 10.3 million.

Monday's Titans-Colts game came in 3 percent below ESPN's Week 6 broadcast from a year

ago, which drew only 8.4 million viewers in the 18-49 demographic.

The ultimate culprit might be the NFL's ongoing protests in which many players have

refused to stand during the national anthem as a way of raising awareness about police

brutality and injustice against minorities in America.

The demonstrations began in the 2016 season when then-San Francisco 49ers quarterback

Colin Kaepernick first sat and then knelt for the anthem during the preseason.

And even though Kaepernick remains a free agent this year, the protests have become

much more frequent.

The bitter end result of their poor decision and rock-bottom ratings is that the NFL has

now lost their long-held title of "America's Favorite Sport."

Whether the industry cares about that fact or not, even if they pretend they don't,

it's going to be a long road to recover from, if they can.

They will start to care when it affects their paychecks and it's only a matter of time

before it does.

It's too late now to make a change, the fans have found better things to do with their

time and money.

Their actions spoke volumes when they had the chance to stop the protests and do the

right thing, and didn't.

The true tragedy is that the NFL has allowed entitled, misguided players destroy a favorite

past time that was brought people together.

what do you think about this?

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top stories today.

For more infomation >> After Getting BAD News Overnight, NFL Commish Just Emerged From 3Hr Meeting With SHOCK Announcement - Duration: 5:31.

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Justin Quiles - Ropa Interior (Audio Remix) - Duration: 2:53.

For more infomation >> Justin Quiles - Ropa Interior (Audio Remix) - Duration: 2:53.

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For more infomation >> সরাসরি আজকের রাতের সর্বশেষ বাংলা খবর ইন্ডিপেন্ডেন্ট সংবাদ !Independent TV News 19 October 2017 - Duration: 13:06.

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►আপনার ফোনের জন্য যে অ্যাপটি সবসময় দরকার।জানতে হলে দেখুন। Android app review - Duration: 2:45.

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