Thứ Ba, 22 tháng 5, 2018

Youtube daily May 22 2018

A federal appeals court has ruled that generic drug makers can absolutely jack up the prices

of their drugs, even if it's clear that it is clearly, clearly price gouging consumers.

According to this appellate court, that's just fine.

This is most BS federal judiciary ruling.

It's just it's beyond understanding.

They try to justify everything in this order on the Commerce Clause.

They say here you got in Maryland, just doing exactly what Maryland should be doing, a state

should have the right to say, "You know what?

The feds, you blew it.

We're not going to blow it here in our state, though.

If the company price gouges, we're going to go after them."

Now, why can't they do that with gasoline?

A state can make a decision, "Hey, we know what price gouging is on gasoline, that hasn't

been overruled by an appellate court.

But we can't do with pharmaceutical industry."

Because, you know the answer.

What's the answer?

The answer is money.

The big, big money.

People don't even understand how powerful this pharmaceutical lobby is in DC.

They're one of the biggest spenders in Washington, both in lobbying and in campaign donations.

And so, in Maryland.

Obviously-

Baltimore right over the bridge.

Right.

And all they wanted to be able to do was sue generic drug manufacturers when they price

gouge.

This wasn't a law to rein in price gouging.

It was just if you price gouge, I can take you to court, the AG can take you to court.

And this judge, and we had just talked about how important judges are, nobody wants to

care about it.

This is what happens.

He said, "No, no, no, you can't do it because the other states may set the prices and then

it's crossing lines."

You follow the history on this judge, and we haven't done it here, I wish we had.

You follow the history on these judges that made this decision.

I promise you they're from silk stocking corporate defense firms that were appointed probably

by the democrats, maybe the republicans thinking that, "Oh, once they're on the bench, they're

going to grow a heart."

Why does a person become a corporate defense lawyer to begin with?

Why do they do that?

How is it a person says, "You know, I had a really good day today.

I won in court and I prevented 1,000 widows from recovering money from a product that

killed their husband."

That's a great day for a corporate defense firm and a corporate defense lawyer.

So, here you've got these types, these same types, making these decisions.

Look, I got to tell you something.

The Commerce Clause use of this is absurd.

The argument that the Commerce Clause interferes with the ability of a state to make a decision

like this, it's balanced against, we've said it before, health, safety and welfare.

Typically, they're called police powers.

And a state has the right to say, "In our state, I don't know about your state, but

in our state the problems are so bad, they're so unique to Maryland.

They're so unique in what we're seeing every day that we believe our police powers in order

to protect the health safety and welfare of our citizens, we want to pass this."

And this federal, this is way overreaching.

Way overreaching by the Federal Court here.

Yeah.

So, this judge gets to go home, the defense lawyer gets to go home and say, "Hey, guess

what, honey?

Today I made it harder for a poor family to afford an EpiPen for their child who could

die if they don't have it.

But you know these corporations give a lot of money to the people who appointed me, they're

a lot of money to the people who paid me."

That's what this is.

This all comes back to the money.

If you looked at just the law on this, there's no question that they should be able to sue

when a company price gouges consumers, but it goes back to all of that money and politics

today.

US Circuit Judge James Wynn, he dissented, thank goodness.

He dissented in saying, "What are you talking about?"

He made the same analysis that I just made.

A state has police powers to say what's unique about our state, whatever reason they're coming

to our state and they're gouging our consumers.

I don't know what they're doing your state, but they're doing that to us.

The state has right to take action.

Yes, Stephanie Thacker was the majority.

Stephanie Thacker-

Stephanie Thacker, who I know, by the way, who used to be a corporate defense lawyer.

I've actually tried cases against Stephanie Thacker, face to face.

It's no surprise here.

This is exactly what you would expect.

I didn't even catch that until you just said it.

Stephanie Thacker, I know this woman.

She comes from a corporate defense background, and this is no surprise here.

But don't you love the Association for Accessible Medicines was the name of the lobbyist group.

The Association for Accessible Medicines.

I mean, is that dark humor or what?

EPA tried to bury a study that showed that millions of Americans are drinking poisoned

tap water because they feared that the study would "bring bad PR" for the White House.

That was the reason they deep-sixed to study.

Bad PR for the White House and make it difficult for the military to have to respond.

Take it away.

What's so fun about this is that this story came to light because we actually still have

a few journalists in this country doing their job.

This was the result of a FOIA request that we even know what happened.

The EPA conducted a study and it found that water near industrial plants, water near military

basis where they handle any kind of hazardous materials, the water is literally poisoned,

is the word they used.

It is poison.

But, they didn't want this study to come out because they said, and here's the quote "The

public media and congressional reaction to these numbers is going to be huge.

The impact to EPA and Department of Defense is going to be extremely painful.

We cannot seem to get ATSDR to realize the potential public relations nightmare this

is going to be."

Not public health nightmare.

The public relations nightmare.

Now, as you know, I tried the case in C8.

This was the Ohio case that I tried at the Ohio River Valley.

C8 was one of the issues here.

C8 is a product that the military uses.

They use it as a foam for firefighting and various things as that.

Well, they're dumping it in people's waterways.

They did that up in the Ohio River Valley, and what did we find?

The jury's came back every time in those cases and said it causes cancer, cause kidney cancer,

cause testicular cancers.

But in addition to that, the jury's didn't even get into the point that causes birth

defects, gastrointestinal problems, neurological problems.

That's what happens when people drink this stuff called C0.

So, Pruitt, who is a real thug, a dunce thug at that, he says, "Well, we're going to delay

releasing this study because it's so bad it's going to scare the bejesus out of everybody,

and we can't have that."

Well, we've already got a point here where we have more than 2,000 different water systems

in the United States that had higher levels of Lead, than what was found in Flint, Michigan.

So, yeah, you know what?

The public is going to freak out when you tell them, hey, look, you and I right now

are basically surrounded by three different military bases, one of which is where they

developed Agent Orange."

So, I have no doubt the water in our city has been consistently voted one of the worst

in the country.

And we have more cancer clusters here than most places in America by the way.

Exactly.

But yeah, people need to know that, they need to freak out, because they know how deadly

it is and they're just saying, "Well, we don't want the bad PR."

Pruitt is here.

I'm sorry, but he's here for a while.

It's going to get worse as we go.

For more infomation >> Judge Says It's Perfectly Fine For Big Pharma To Screw Consumers - Duration: 7:37.

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Judge Judy On School Shootings: 'Children Should Not Be Able To Have Guns' | Megyn Kelly TODAY - Duration: 6:40.

For more infomation >> Judge Judy On School Shootings: 'Children Should Not Be Able To Have Guns' | Megyn Kelly TODAY - Duration: 6:40.

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Wire Wrapped Agate Necklace | Michaels - Duration: 1:15.

Make it easy

Travel tool kit by Bead Landing, G-S Hypo Cement, Bead Reamer Tool, Permanent Marker

3 jump rings & lobster claw clasp, jewelry wire, Agate chunk beads, gold chain

Determine desired length of chain for your necklace and cut.

Thread the bead reamer tool through the last link in the chain. This opens the link a little so you can attach the jump ring. Repeat on the other end.

Add a lobster clasp with a small jump ring

Add a small jump ring to the other end.

Measure and mark, with a Sharpie marker, 1/4 inch from the end of your round nose pliers

Keep one half of the wire vertical and wrap the other half of the wire around the first about two times

Insert one end of the wire through the hole of a agate chunk bead.

Let dry

Add a jump ring to the loop at the top of the bead and add chain. Close jump ring.

Subscribe to our channel and share your projects using the #MakeitwithMichaels

For more infomation >> Wire Wrapped Agate Necklace | Michaels - Duration: 1:15.

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Nate Robinson on AFFL experience: Matt Barnes can really play football - Duration: 1:42.

For more infomation >> Nate Robinson on AFFL experience: Matt Barnes can really play football - Duration: 1:42.

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"Water for Life, Not Profit" Rally - Duration: 1:51.

There's not a single person who doesn't use water,

so that's why I'm here and I think it's really important.

I think more people should be invested in this cause.

We are fighting Nestlé all over the planet because

this is not a unique story. What is happening

in Ontario right now is happening all over the planet.

Nestlé comes into communities and thinks it can

bulldoze over community's rights, Indigenous rights

and bottle water for profit.

And this beautiful collection of people here today is saying:

No, that doesn't have to be how it is...

We can make a change.

For more infomation >> "Water for Life, Not Profit" Rally - Duration: 1:51.

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Maniac Pumpkin Carvers | NYC, NY - Duration: 2:13.

When you finish a piece and look at it, how does that feel to the two of you?

Love.

[violin music]

I'm Chris Soria. I'm Mark Evan, and we're Maniac Pumpkin Carvers from Brooklyn, New York.

We grew up together. We've been friends

since we 12 years old, and we've been making art for a really long time but

we've also been into Halloween for a really long time, since we were kids.

Those two interests kind of eventually combined into a passion for pumpkin carving.

We really are very wide-ranging and diversified in terms of the

content of what we carve. We do everything from branding, to characters

to works of art. We've done six now for the Museum of Modern Art.

The medium and the

ephemeral nature of the pumpkin, and the medium that we're working with as

well as the subject matter that we often explore, relate directly to our

experiences as artists. Whether it's Salvador Dali's persistence of memory

and like the themes that Salvador Dali was exploring in that painting or even just

The Scream, and how they relate to the ephemeral nature of painting with light

because at some point you are kind of using techniques and applications that

release light from the painting. We both do a lot of murals and there are

a lot of similarities with pumpkin carving in the way you have to approach

the medium. It's such an important part of the process to just be in the

moment and pumpkin carving as well as painting, they almost become like a

meditation. A lot of challenges for artists is being so precious with their

work, and when a pumpkin is quickly decomposing, when a wall that you just

finished gets tagged over, you know you have to be willing to let go sometimes.

For more infomation >> Maniac Pumpkin Carvers | NYC, NY - Duration: 2:13.

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Detroit: Become Human - Kamski [PS4, deutsche Untertitel] - Duration: 4:58.

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How to draw TOGEPI Pokemon - Duration: 3:10.

How to draw TOGEPI Pokemon

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DESCRIPTION OF THE HOUSE [12] I HO CHI MINH CITY I Nhadepkiendong - Duration: 5:01.

DESCRIPTION OF THE HOUSE [12] I HO CHI MINH CITY I Nhadepkiendong

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Meadows Smokes Rosenstein: Your DOJ 'Can't Be Trusted to Investigate Themselves' - Duration: 3:01.

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VO BOSS - Special Guest: Eliza Jane Schneider - Duration: 21:12.

VO: Today's voiceover talent is more than just a pretty voice.

Today's voiceover talent has to be a boss, a VO BOSS.

Set yourself up with business owner strategies and success with your host, Anne Ganguzza,

along with some of the strongest voices in our industry.

Rock your business like a boss, a VO BOSS.

Anne: Before we get started on today's episode, we want to share some bossolutions.

We have a fantastic new product for you guys called the BOSS Blast.

Now the BOSS Blast allows us to send a marketing campaign specifically to a target market audience.

Gabby: It's amazing, and Anne and I have both done it.

We've tested it on ourselves of course.

This thing is amazing.

Custom list.

We have up to 90,000 available opted in contacts that are basically willing and ready to receive

emails from you.

Anne: So it's not like you have to worry about being thought of as spam, because these people

have already opted into this list.

This is a great way for you guys to get more clients.

Gabby: Just go to voboss.com, go to the shop tab, and click on BOSS Blast so you can get

your boss on.

Anne: Welcome, everybody, to the VO BOSS podcast.

I'm your host, Anne Ganguzza, along with my lovely cohost, BFF bosstie, bestie, Gabby

Nistico.

Hey, Gabby.

Gabby: Hi.

[both laugh]

Anne: You know, I am really excited about our very, very special guest today.

She is known as the woman of 1000 voices, and here is my favorite word of the day.

She is a dialectologist.

[laughs] Celebrity coach and researcher.

Gabby: I'm in love.

Anne: She has recorded over 7000 authentic dialects.

She is a playwright, a performer, and a virtuoso fiddle player, which I think is amazing.

So welcome to our VO BOSS podcast Eliza Jane Schneider.

Thank you so much for joining us today.

Gabby: Yay!

Anne: Yay!

Eliza: Oh, it is my pleasure, my pleasure.

I'm coming to you from the KPFK radio studios in Los Angeles today.

Gabby: Nice.

Eliza: And I actually just ran into another violinist in the hallway, Shankar, L. Shankar,

who was like my idol when I was 12 years old.

Gabby: Wow.

Eliza: He was Peter Gabriel's violinist, and it was the first time my little Suzuki self

had ever seen an electric violin being played.

Gabby: Oh wow.

Eliza: It was awesome.

It took over the whole arena, this incredible swath of sound, so I just ran into him in

the hallway.

He gave me his number, oh my God.

Aaah!

Anne: You know, I have seen you come onto the scene with a force in the last year or

so, which has just been incredible, and I, I have just been kind of fangirling you for

a while now.

So tell our listeners a little bit about yourself and how you got started in this industry.

Eliza: Yeah, it's one of those things.

They say, an overnight sensation takes 10 years, and I think these days it's more like

20.

[laughs] You know, like --

Gabby: True.

Eliza: These people who are purported to have "made it."

It took a really, really, really, really, really long time, but I have loved every second

of it.

You know, my favorite thing is the researching.

I have just -- I went to Singapore last summer to present my voice matching looping method

that I use to basically teach almost everything that I teach,

Dialects, accents, character voices.

And Singapore was the final country in the world, the final English speaking country

for me to go personally and record people in.

Because I was on a mission when I was 20 to go and record all of the dialects of spoken

English in the world.

And I started with America.

I went across America in an ambulance, just because it had AC outlets, and I found it

under cargo vans in the L.A. -- I kind of think she found me.

Gabby: [laughs]

Eliza: And I could plug in my recording gear, and I could plug in my wok and cook Thai food

in Mississippi, which I envisioned they might not have, and I was correct about that.

Gabby: [laughs]

Eliza: And yeah, and I could hang my houseplants on the IV hooks, which was homey.

Gabby: [laughs]

Eliza: And I was a bit of an escape artist journey -- a gypsy of old.

I think it has something to do with being raised on a Chippewa reservation, and the

Ojibwe tribe is a very much a nomadic people, and I was sort of raised by these elders in

my daycare, Ojibwe woman while my mom was being an attorney.

My mom was an attorney trying to protect the Ojibwe tribe from the federal government.

[laughs]

Anne: oohhh.

Gabby: Wow.

Eliza: That worked.

Anne: That's a story.

Eliza: But no, yeah, so, so last summer I went to Singapore.

It was the last English-speaking country in the world where I still had yet to record

dialects, and so now I have over 7000 interviews that my 35 to 40 some odd minions, who are

students of mine, who are all on some kind of a program with me, they are also helping

me upload all this research to the dialect database.

So it is really fun for them too because it kind of saves them the gas money, you know.

They get to go on these take –

Gabby: Wow.

Anne: To say the least.

Eliza: Journeys around the world.

Gabby: How, how –

Eliza: [laughs]

Gabby: How did that start?

You have got to like take us back.

Like how in the world did this become your life?

Eliza: Well, I mean, my dad was a drama teacher and a math teacher.

So the sort of art and science of things is always somewhat integrated.

I was a Suzuki violin kid from like age seven, and that's an ear training method, and it's

about immersion.

So I've merged dialects, accents, language, music, and it is all sounds to me.

And it's just a huge part of my identity.

It's how I, It's how I interact with the world, and so um it's just kind of who I am.

It's not really a choice.

[all laugh]

Eliza: But I, but I did know that when I went to -- I went to Northwestern University's

national high school institute for, you know, all the egotistical, "I'm the best actress

in the world" kids who got the lead in their high school play, you know.

And I realized that I was just one of many.

And they had a dialect elective, umm, and I realized there wasn't any material available

back then -- it was the early 1990's -- for actors that wasn't -- well, there was David

Allen Stern imitating people.

It was him doing all the accents, and it was on cassette.

This is pre-Internet, so I just made it my business to go and get, gather source material

from people who had never set foot outside of their hometowns.

And I've just had a fascination with sound from a very early age.

Anne: So I imagine, I imagine that that's absolutely where you start, obviously with

the dialects, is teaching in that vein of listening, I'm assuming, to, to these different

dialects and trying to, to form a foundation there?

Eliza: Yeah, so it starts with immersion, and then I have this looping method that's

a sort of proprietary kind of thing that I've developed.

And it's the thing that all the voice teachers at the VASTA conference last summer in Singapore,

the international voice teachers were all excited about it.

And it was really fun for me because here's this dialect coach or teacher from, you know,

Australia, and I'm teaching her a Nigerian dialect.

And it literally took me minutes to teach her what she would take six months to teach

her students in an academic program.

I went there expecting like two old white guys with long beards like drooling in a corner

talking about something that happened in the great vowel shift like 200 years ago.

Gabby: [laughs]

Eliza: I had a few prejudices about academia, you could say.

Anne: [laughs]

Eliza: Because when I first started this research, I was at UCLA studying world arts and cultures,

and they told me, oh, America doesn't really have a culture.

We study Third World countries here like China and Africa.

And I was just sitting there thinking, OK, Africa's not a country.

[gabby and anne laugh]

Eliza: I've just had some issues with academia from early on, so this is, this last summer

like 20 years later, I'm like, OK.

I'm just gonna present what I've learned and come up with here and see what you guys

think.

And it really was, it was like, it was embraced, and the people who were there were, you know,

Tibetan throat singing professors, umm you know there was Singlish.

There's like four different kinds of Singlish because they've got those four different mother

tongues.

They've got Tamil, which is a South Indian language, and Malay, and anyways –

[all laugh]

Eliza: It was sort of a phonemic, phonetic stream to be out there listening to all that

stuff.

There is so many things you learn about the stuff if you are obsessed like I am, like

you know the fact that the tones of the Chinese -- of Mandarin are what's behind what I always

used to perceive as that kind of mosquito quality to the Chinese opera.

You know, the [imitating singing] [laughs] It's so, it used to sound to me like Gizmo

from gremlins.

[does impression] You know?

But really, it's just a slowed down, exaggerated sort of puppetry version of their speech,

and the tones in their speech.

I just love the intersection with music and tonal languages.

The one I'm coaching tonight is Ibibio, which is a 7000-year-old language.

Anne: Wow.

Gabby: Oh my gosh.

Eliza: And there's -- it's a play called "Her Portmanteau" and umm Mfoniso, the

playwright, is just freaking amazing, and they go in and out of the Ibibio language.

And [in accent] you know, that Nigerian sound, the Ibibio sound, sometimes it comes like

a waterfall, and it just [out of accent] keeps going.

Right?

It's so musical and it's so dynamic, and it's so much fun.

So this, this kind of thing has always fascinated me, but I realized when I first left on my

first research trip that I couldn't go out into the world and become the expert on everybody

else before I knew anything about my own country's sounds, as begrudging I was about hanging

out in America for too long back then and I was -- I have since fallen in love with

the people in this country um just by virtue of doing the research and being invited into

so many homes, and you know, seeing myself in the, in the eyes of people whom I was raised

to fear and loathe.

You know, like Republicans and stuff.

I like them now.

[Anne and Gabby laugh]

Anne: I love how you said, how you set out in the world to become the expert.

And that is such a, I think, a, a great foundation to a great business.

I love that you're so in love and passionate about what you do.

And I guess I question would be, so, at what point -- the research, you know, you've probably

– I can't say it's ever been finalized, but you did ever -- you did a lot of research.

So now what do you do to make that a part of your business, right?

So how did you --?

Eliza: OK, so I've got this website.

It's dialectdatabase.com, and it's totally incomplete.

Gabby: [laughs]

Eliza: And so you know, if you go there and you see any problems with it, email me

and help me fix them.

But um but basically I have 7000, a little more than that, interviews that I'm putting

out as a reference for actors, and so that is a tool that we use, so umm it's, it's something

that I hope will be like the go-to site for people.

And it is, for a lot of my, my umm director friends now.

I'm often hired to coach a director before they have to go in and direct a session with

actors from, you know, or the actors have to sound like they are from various places

in South Africa or, you know, Sri Lanka, or maybe they'll

have a back to back.

You know, so I'll have to coach.

I'll have to coach a director on what to listen for in their sessions.

So this, this research, this behemoth 25 years of research, like I don't even know of a doctorate

program that requires 25 years of research.

I think –

[Anne and Gabby laugh]

Eliza: But I'm putting this stuff up so that we can access it quickly because I think one

of the big rifts between what they call the practitioners like us, the voice actors who

are also, maybe we have a business, maybe we are teaching, but -- and academia, where

actors go to get trained to do this stuff, is the luxury of time.

We just don't have it.

You know, so when we are, when we're, when a casting director or a director has to figure

out what you can do, they don't have time to listen to 500 demos, and they don't have

time to listen to your entire demo necessarily.

So that's part of what I'm doing in my character -- my advanced character acting class right

now, which is also an online class, which I actually -- I only teach this like once

every 10 years.

It's running now this year.

Anne: Wow.

Gabby: Wow.

Eliza: And I, I bring in my director friends who, who actually, literally say to me in

the booth, "you know, I'd love to meet new people.

I'm tired of working with the same five people all the time."

You know, over at Disney character voices or whatever.

I'm like, "are you serious," because I have very strong memories of being that newbie

who's like, "I just want to meet somebody!

When am I gonna get a general?

How can I show these people what I have got?"

You know?

And so I, I take a lot of pleasure in introducing the very talented group of students that I

now have two these directors and people who can give them work.

Gabby: This whole thing, it's just so fascinating to me on so many levels.

And I wish we had more time to pick your brain on numerous topics.

But I want to get your take really quickly on neutrality in voiceover, neutrality of

speech.

Do you even -- is it a thing?

Does it even exist, or –

Eliza: Oh God, it's a huge thing because it doesn't exist.

It's a construct, right?

Gabby: [laughs]

Eliza: No matter where you are, there's a sort of constructed upgrading of your speech

or neutralizing of your speech.

And I mean, personally, I, I think it's, you know, taking the soul out of things.

It is sort of like the opposite of what an actor wants to do and make things sound authentic.

Everybody comes from somewhere.

My own idiolect is comprised of certain sounds from upstate New York.

I say water instead of warter.

I say wah, give me a glass of water.

I'm exaggerating a little bit.

But then I also, I have some Minnesota sounds.

Sometimes I say "oht and aboht" and I don't realize I'm doing it.

Gabby: Well, I love that you're talking about that, you know, honoring where we are from

and just that.

I have always felt for so many years, voiceover was just stripped down, and now I think finally

we're at a place where different dialects, different regional quirks, accents are being

accepted, and I think it's great.

Anne: And embraced.

Eliza: Embraced.

For sure.

Yeah.

And um you were asking me how I started to use this research to base my business.

I have -- my class is dialectmasterclass.com.

And so what I've managed to do is take -- I put up these modules that are these kind of

evergreen, you know, lifetime access modules that you can just go when you have that audition.

You can go in, and you can go as deeply as you wish.

You know, if you only have five minutes, you can get those sound substitutions really quickly

and just listen to a native speaker in this class.

Or if you have the time to spend eight weeks in the class getting feedback from me and

practicing what we call springboards.

So I have my students memorize.

You know, voice actors are reticent to do such things, but once they do, they're grateful.

I have been memorize springboards in different dialects, so if they have to do a tidewater,

non-rhotic southern accent, they've got in their head, well, [in dialect] is that an

ambulance you're driving?

[laughs] I think that's just wonderful.

Who happens to be one of my interviews, and then they can change it and make it, you know,

younger or whatever.

[out of dialect] but it's in their head.

You know, they grab it, and a springboard off of it into the improvisation and into

their lines.

Gabby: There is a laundry list of voice actors that are clamoring to work with you.

And uhh you know, you're their dream coach, basically.

And when I saw the video you did recently for St. Patrick's Day, I was just enamored.

I was like, I love this woman.

I don't know her.

I absolutely love her, I adore her, I love everything about this.

[laughs]

Eliza: Ohh thank you.

That's so sweet.

Anne: And I think too it's a, it's a testament too to you know, all those years of research

that you did, and now -- and I've seen a bunch of videos that you have created, and I think

it's fantastic to get yourself out there um online so people know about you.

And I actually, I know you're so busy now, I wanted to um ask, on behalf of the listeners,

because I know they're gonna want to know, do you also do private coaching?

Eliza: A lot more rarely these days, but yeah.

Um, so now that I've completed the English-speaking world, I'm all about the Asian sounds and

various weird esoteric -- I'm going to Iceland and sort of regions

-- rural regions of France this summer to record more dialects and -- but yeah.

I do, I do private coaching on occasion.

It's, it's more expensive than I think is fair, but -- [laughs] what can I do?

I don't have a lot of time.

Anne: Exactly.

I think the best thing too if people want to, you know, learn from you is to probably

go to your -- that master class that you have.

Eliza: Yeah.

Anne: And how can people access you in that class?

Eliza: Oh it's just, go to dialectmasterclass.com.

If you click on the free training in the top left corner, you'll get a sense of what the

flow of my classes are like.

And you know, you'll see whether it's right for you, and if you decide to come on in,

you can, you can purchase the modules only.

And it's really affordable right now.

It hasn't gone up.

I keep threatening to raise the price, but I never do.

Anne: [laughs]

Eliza: Because I'm -- as Jerry quickly here at KPFK described, I'm a broken hippie.

So I got that -- we got that going for us, people.

Um and then the other, the other one, the umm, the more advanced classes where I give

you feedback every week, and you, you know, submit your samples and, and -- those are,

those are the people I've been sort of grooming to go into the advanced character

acting.

So I have an advanced character acting class and a working Pro character acting class that

meets on Tuesdays.

And I, I meet with these people during the week.

And you know, we become friends, and very often, you know, these are people that end

up on, in the dialect database going into my research with me, and umm you know, finding

the good stuff and gold-mining.

So it's, it's a great group of people.

It's just an incredible group of very smart people with great ears and a lot of talent.

And that's my class.

Anne: Well, it sounds fantastic.

Eliza, thank you so much for taking the time to join us today.

Eliza: Oh, my pleasure.

Thank you.

Anne: And I, I think -- I want another podcast.

[laughs]

Gabby: Totally.

Eliza: Oh yeah.

Gabby: My gosh.

Eliza: Well, there is so much more to talk about, and I do tend to kind of go on tangents.

Anne: How can people get in touch with you again?

Master class?

Eliza: Oh, dialectmasterclass.com.

Click the free training in the upper left-hand corner, and then you can also just email assistant@dialectmasterclass.com

with any questions that you have, or, you know, if you want to get involved in the character

acting class.

There's a new set of those coming up.

Umm, we're going to be running them quarterly, and so we're flipping back and forth between

animation, inviting my animation director friends in, and the video games and interactive

directors are coming in to listen to my people.

Anne: I'd like to give a big shout out to our sponsor, ipDTL, for our quality connection

and recording.

And you too can record like a boss and find out more at ipdtl.com.

Gabby: And for all things BOSS, check out voboss.com.

We will see you guys next week.

Have a great one.

Anne: Have a great one.

Bye-bye.

Eliza: Bye, guys.

Gabby: Pleasure meeting you.

VO: Join us next week for another edition of VO BOSS with your hosts Anne Ganguzza and

Gabby Nistico.

All rights reserved, Anne Ganguzza Voice Talent in association with Three Moon Media.

Redistribution with permission.

Coast-to-coast connectivity via ipDTL.

Gabby: Really quick, do you have time to tell us the story about dialectologist?

Eliza: So, when I did the South Park voices, I had used my looping method.

That's when I developed the looping method was because I had one week to nail eight female

voices.

[each said in character's voice] Wendy, Shelley, Principal Victoria, Stan's mom, Kenny's

mom, [normal voice] Mrs. Crabtree I won't do because she screams from her throat,

and your occasional -- oh, the mayor.

But yeah, so I, I had to do these all really quickly, develop the looping method, and um,

and then I got a pre-nodule on my vocal cords because I was being very technical, which

I teach my students to come at it the opposite way, you know, to go from the emotions first,

and then go into all this technicality, and tweaking the tone, and pitch, and lilt, and

timbre, and all these other aspects of the music of the dialect or the character voice.

And so I developed a pre-nodule, which I had to be silent for six weeks.

Gabby: Wow.

Eliza: So I'm silent, and I refuse to be in Los Angeles when I can't talk, so I was running

around on one of my research trips, and I was in London at a university college interviewing

John Wells, who is -- who wrote the three-volume survey of the British regional dialects.

Gabby: [laughs]

Eliza: But he said to me -- I wrote down on this piece of paper because I was writing

everything on a pad of paper because I couldn't speak.

And I wrote down, "I'm a dialectician," and, and he just looks right at me, and just imagine

the spit coming out of this guy's mouth.

Anne: [laughs]

Eliza: So it's [in dialect] "you're not a dialectician!

You don't study dialectics!

You're a dialectologist!"

Anne: [laughs] Oh my goodness, dialectologist.

For more infomation >> VO BOSS - Special Guest: Eliza Jane Schneider - Duration: 21:12.

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Ultimaker: How to work with project files in Ultimaker Cura - Duration: 3:08.

In this video we are going to demonstrate how to work with project files in Ultimaker Cura

Project files are used to save all your work in an Ultimaker Cura session

including models, machine settings, materials, and printing profiles

Project files will work across Windows, Mac, and Linux platforms for maximum compatibility

We can arrange scale and rotate models on the build plate without having to worry about losing any information

because everything will be saved in the project file

These models need to be tough, so we will use CPE as the build material loaded into extruder 1

To support any overhangs and ensure the dimensional accuracy of the models

we will use PVA as a support material in extruder 2

As PVA is already loaded into extruder 2 here, no further actions need to be taken

To change specific print settings of the model, switch to custom mode

and choose a printing profile to base your printing strategy on

First let's increase the wall thickness and the top and bottom thickness to 2mm

This will create a strong outer shell for each model

Next, let's increase the fill density to give the models a more rigid internal structure

Finally, let's enable support, and assign extruder 2 as the extruder to print the support structure

The star icon next to the profile name indicates that we have altered the base profile

Click the printing profile to open a drop down menu and create a profile from the current settings

Let's give this profile a name so we can use it again later

Navigate to "File" > Save Project"

A summary dialog of your machine, material, and print settings will appear for you to review

If you don't want to see a summary dialog every time you save a project, you can disable it

Click "Save"

A save dialog will appear

Choose a file name and location to save your project file

Ultimaker Cura project files use a .3MF file extension

Now we will clear the build plate and load the project file

Navigate to "File" > "Open files" and choose your project file

A dialog will appear asking if you want to open the entire project, or just the models included in the project file

Let's open the entire project file

The summary will appear again

Since we already added the Ultimaker 3 to Ultimaker Cura earlier, you are asked if you want to use that machine

and change its configuration to match the project configuration, or create a new machine entry

Every time there is a profile or setting in the project

with the same name available in Ultimaker Cura

we have a choice to create a new entry or not

Click "Open" to load the project

As you can see, the same machine, materials, models, and profiles have been loaded

You can resume your work on this project and make the necessary changes, or start printing

You now know everything about working with project files in Ultimaker Cura

Thank you for choosing Ultimaker

For more infomation >> Ultimaker: How to work with project files in Ultimaker Cura - Duration: 3:08.

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Ultimaker: How to use the layer view in Ultimaker Cura - Duration: 2:57.

In this video we're going to explore the layer view in Ultimaker Cura

The layer view is a powerful tool to check specific details of your printing strategy

Using the layer view efficiently will ensure the best results for your print

We have loaded a part of a shock breaker into the 3D viewer

and we'll prepare to print with an Ultimaker 3 so we can print with dual-extrusion

We will use blue PLA as a build material, loaded into extruder 1

Since the model has a lot of overhangs, we will use PVA as a support material

This is loaded into extruder 2

We will use recommended mode to prepare the model

Let's select a layer height of 200 micron and an infill density of 40%

We will enable support material and assign extruder 2 to print it

Now that all of the settings are in place, wait for Ultimaker Cura to slice the model

When slicing is finished, we will be able to preview the printing strategy

Click the drop-down list in the top-right corner of the 3D viewer and select "Layer view"

The layer view will show the slice results in the 3D viewer

It will also show a new control interface with the following options:

The color scheme selector, which can be used to visualize different properties of your print

A checklist, which can be used to show and hide different elements of the printing strategy

A play button, to simulate the current layer of the printing strategy

and a layer slider, to navigate through each layer of the print and inspect specific layers

The current selection shows the material color that the model is going to be printed with

To visualize different properties of the model, select "line type"

To get a better view of the layers, we can hide certain elements

We've used extruder 2 for support material

If we uncheck extruder 2, support material for this print will be hidden

If we uncheck "Show Travels", we can hide all movements of the printhead where material is not extruded

The colored squares next to each element correspond to the colors in the 3D viewer

This makes it easier to determine the printing strategy of each individual element of the model

You can inspect a layer range or individual layers with the layer slider

To use it, grab the top handle and drag it up or down

You can input a layer number in the input field to jump to a specific layer instantly

The same can be done with the bottom handle

When a layer range is visible, you can drag that layer range up and down by dragging the layer slider between the handles

We can simulate the nozzle's movements by clicking the play button above the layer slider

Simulation will start and can be controlled by dragging the progress bar

or pausing it and using the arrow keys

or Shift + the arrow keys to step through the simulation

That's it. You now know how to use the layer view efficiently

Thank you for choosing Ultimaker

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