- No, no, no, no, no. - What?
It's the same cop! Block them, block them, block them.
Oh, my God.
Cool, Mom!
-------------------------------------------
Video: Councilman seeks better tracking of juvenile offenders - Duration: 2:09.
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Learning Colors with Fruits Coloring Book Learn names of fruits finger family song nursery rhyme 😀 - Duration: 4:05.
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Volunteers clean up Greenwood Cemetery - Duration: 1:02.
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First soldier from Nelson County remembered - Duration: 1:57.
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Video: Ashes of Baltimore veteran to be interred at Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens - Duration: 2:08.
For more infomation >> Video: Ashes of Baltimore veteran to be interred at Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens - Duration: 2:08. -------------------------------------------
Presunto abusador de menores tuvo una caída mortal | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:29.
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Record lows; Cold weekend ahead - Duration: 2:41.
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5 Investigates: Controversial moves by retiring MSP superintendent - Duration: 2:06.
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Famosos Al Rojo Vivo: Resumen de farándula de hoy | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 8:14.
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Jerry Tracey's weekend forecast - Duration: 2:19.
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What is Exited: the podcast? - Duration: 1:49.
"Well, because how old are you?"
"21"
"And what happens when you're 21?"
"I'm going to graduate and get me a job!"
In everyone's life, there's a moment when they leave the world of adolescence and transition
into the adult world -- the real world.
"Then at 21, you're done."
"That is really what becomes scary."
It can be a confusing time for everyone, but for young people with disabilities and their
families, it can feel like arriving at a cliff, as they leave behind the cocoon of school
and sometimes struggle to find a place where they belong.
"Is creating something separate, equal?"
"We view this as a tremendous opportunity, actually."
I want to introduce you to eight young people...
"My first art class was a writing seminar..."
"Soccer...baseball, football, wrestling, track and field...and then basketball..."
"I love a band that used to be famous called IM5..."
And their families...
"You're trying to prepare them for when you're not going to be around, to make sure that
they're still going to be OK."
"The parents that don't speak up, does that mean their kids aren't getting what they need?"
"Isn't it your job to help them?"
*applause*
...as they navigate this transition and try to find their place in the world.
"I am not ready..."
"But I want to be part of the normal society again..."
"I felt like I belonged there..."
I'm Karen Shakerdge, I'm a reporter with WXXI News.
"OK, great, so we're recording over here."
Coming November 13, 'Exited', a podcast about growing up and trying to find a place where
you belong, when you've been told your whole life ... you're different.
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts or listen online at ExitedPodcast.org.
"Well, we'll get to that. That's a whole other issue, oh my gosh!"
-------------------------------------------
8-inch water main breaks on Beacon Hill - Duration: 1:43.
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Harrisburg police identify victims of double homicide - Duration: 1:05.
For more infomation >> Harrisburg police identify victims of double homicide - Duration: 1:05. -------------------------------------------
EP067: Comic Book Origins - Justice League of America - Duration: 6:09.
[Main theme]
Hello everyone!
And welcome to a new episode of MajestiComic.
If you are a fan of comic books, you'll surely know that a brand new Justice League
movie is about to premiere on November 17, 2017.
So, to prepare you for that, we are going to give you some background on the original
Justice League - the one first formed in DC Comic books in March of 1960.
The Justice League was invented by a man who has had a hand in over four thousand of the
world's most popular comic book stories, Gardner Fox.
During the Golden Age of Comics in the 1940s and 1950s, Fox came up with a precursor to
the Justice League of America, known as the Justice Society of America.
The JSA was the first group of superheroes ever to appear in comics, and it featured
popular characters at the time, such as the Flash, Sandman, Hawkman, and Green Lantern.
Each character was introduced individually in their own story, and then they were all
brought together to fight one evil villain in the dramatic conclusion of the story.
Around twenty years later, Fox and DC decided to try to recapture some of the magic they
had made with the JSA by taking that concept and making it even bigger and better.
This time, Fox included seven of the most popular comic book characters of all time:
Batman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, The Flash, the Green Lantern, and the Martian Manhunter.
This team debuted in DC's The Brave and the Bold, issue number 28 in 1960, and proved
to be such a big hit that they got their own line of comics just a few months later.
In fact, this new team, called the Justice League of America this time, was so important
and so influential that it served as the foundation for the worldwide comic book empire that is
DC Comics.
As with many other DC comics, the JLA has had several different origin stories.
In a flashback featured in issue number nine of the Justice League of America comic line
released in 1962, the JLA's story began when Batman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, The Flash,
the Green Lantern, and the Martian Manhunter all united to battle an army of alien invaders
called the Appelaxians.
Although the individual heroes each did a pretty good job of taking out a lot of the
aliens on their own, they found that they were stronger together, and this was the basis
of their forming a league of superheroes.
The league created a headquarters in a cave near Happy Harbor, Rhode Island, and this
served as their base of operations.
Although they were arguably the most popular of DC's characters at the time, Batman and
Superman rarely joined the team for their adventures.
Surprisingly, though, an average teenaged boy from the Rhode Island area managed to
become, not just a mascot for the team, but an honorary member of the Justice League.
Lucas Carr, otherwise known as "Snapper" because of his unique habit of snapping his
fingers when he is happy, helped the Justice League for one of their first and most important
missions.
When Starro the Conquerer, a starfish-shaped alien bent on taking over the universe, comes
to Happy Harbor and begins to enslave the residents with his mind control powers, the
Justice League must spring into action.
In spite of the fact that he is just a normal human teenager with some snappy sixties beatnik
lingo, Snapper is immune to Starro's powers because of the lyme he was using while gardening
nearby.
This makes him a valuable tool and ally for the Justice League, which is then able to
defeat the monstrous starfish and officially welcome Snapper onto the team.
Snapper stays a member of the team for some time, perhaps standing in for the reader in
the league's incredible adventures.
Eventually, though, he resigns from the team, after the Joker leads him astray and convinces
him to reveal the location of the JLA's Secret Sanctuary.
As for the super members of the superhero team, the roster stayed more or less the same
throughout the rest of the Silver Age, with the exception of Wonder Woman, who lost her
powers for a time in the 1960s and left the team.
Other members were eventually added or swapped out, like the Green Arrow, the Atom, and Hawkman,
and when the seventies rolled around, even more members joined the team, such as Black
Canary.
As time moved on, the origin story of the team changed numerous times, sometimes seeing
Black Canary as a founding member of the team, and sometimes seeing superhumans that no one
really knows very well, like one named Triumph, listed as the founder.
Basically, almost all of DC's most important and bestselling characters did at least a
short stint as a part of the Justice League, and they continue to do so to this day.
Long before the Crisis on Infinite Earths events, the first real, huge crossover event
in DC comic books, dozens of DC characters could cross over into the stories of the other
characters via the Justice League line.
This gave readers a chance to see all of their favorite heroes all in one comic book, interacting
with each other and fighting crime together.
This was a unique thing at the time, and definitely gave DC a leg up over their competitors.
The publisher was already extremely successful with its individual characters like Superman
and Wonder Woman, but their ability to bring those characters together brought something
new and different to the table, and catapulted the company to even more success, leading
to decades and decades of comic book lines, television shows and cartoons, and now a feature
film.
How do you think that film will compare to the original origin story of the Justice League
in the comic books?
Feel free to discuss it with us in the comments, or over on our forum at www.majesticomic.com!
Don't forget to subscribe to our channel too, and to follow us on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google+.
Thanks for watching!
Until next time.
Bye!
[Credits theme]
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