Thứ Ba, 15 tháng 1, 2019

Youtube daily Jan 15 2019

Lawsuits are piling up right now against the Trump administration and the bosses who are

currently forcing their employees to work without pay.

Now, these are the furlough government workers who have been affected by this partial government

shutdown, who are being coerced and forced to work their current jobs without pay.

Now again, this does not cover all of the 800,000 furloughed workers.

Some of them were immediately just sent home, deemed quote, non essential, but those essential

folks, the people who the government can't function without.

Those are the ones who are told.

If you don't show up, you are fired and when you do show up, do not expect to get paid

for the time that you're working.

And according to the latest lawsuit, this is a clear violation of the 13th amendment

which abolished slavery here in the United States.

A group of federal workers is now suing the Trump administration and the people that they

work for within the federal government for forcing them to work without pay, which they

say in the lawsuit.

The argument is that this amounts to involuntary servitude to their employer because again,

their employers have issued warnings.

If you don't come in, if you call out sick, don't ever come back because you're fired.

So they are forcing these people to go into work.

They know that these people will not be paid for the work that they are performing.

And that is what spawned this particular lawsuit so far.

This one is the only lawsuit to invoke the 13th amendment argument.

And to be honest, that's going to be a very difficult one to prove.

As the Supreme Court back in 1988 actually ruled that forcing a mentally ill people in

the United States to work without pay, uh, did not violate the 13th amendment even though

the people were threatened with if you work, either you work without pay or we put you

in a mental institution because you're mentally ill, that somehow didn't violate the 13th

amendment.

So these workers have a very tall uphill battle ahead of them, um, that they likely may not

win at this case.

However, there are plenty of other law suits right now that are pretty much 100 percent

going to be successful brought by furloughed federal workers who are working without pay.

Obviously this does violate wage and hour laws here in the United States.

It's happened during every other government shutdown and pretty much every other time

the furloughed workers who worked without pay have been successful, in fact so successful

that the government actually has a fund set up that is designed to pay out these lawsuits

brought by furloughed federal workers because they know they're going to lose and they want

to have this pot of money ready to go when the lawsuits inevitably come.

But this one, however, about the 13th amendment is special.

Again, the only one to invoke invoke the 13th amendment, but also because if it's successful,

this would effectively ban any furloughed worker essential or not essential from being

able to work during a government shutdown, which means again, if this lawsuit were to

be successful, the next time the government shuts down.

There's no TSA.

None without TSA.

Would there still be air travel here in the United States?

There'd be nobody to monitor security.

Would plane still be able to fly?

Would people still be able to get a flight and go somewhere?

Unlikely given what happened before the TSA existed, so that means that if we have another

government shutdown, airports across the country might shut down.

Air travel may suddenly stop in this country.

Food inspections, safety inspections, health inspections, worth workplace inspections,

all of that would end.

The federal court system would also shut down.

No more lawsuits, no more criminal cases.

Prison workers will be forced to go home because are essential yet furloughed in many areas.

Not all of them, but many.

The entire country would grind to a halt if this lawsuit is successful the next time there's

a government shutdown, and that's why this one is so important and I hope it succeeds.

I hope it does because that may be the only way to show these republicans who are the

ones who continuously shut down the federal government.

That what you're doing has very real consequences here in the United States.

So I hope, I hope the lawyers handling this lawsuit understand what's at stake in the

long run because this may be one of those lawsuits that forever changes the face of

the United States.

For more infomation >> Federal Employees Sue Trump For Forcing Them To Work Without Pay - Duration: 5:08.

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Shieldon Leather Wallet Cover iPhone XS Max 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 - Duration: 3:36.

For more infomation >> Shieldon Leather Wallet Cover iPhone XS Max 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 - Duration: 3:36.

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The Facts about Fact Checking: Crash Course Navigating Digital Information #2 - Duration: 13:55.

Hi I'm John Green, welcome to Crash Course Navigating Digital Information.

So, the internet is a place where you can meet friends for life from halfway around

the world, you can keep in touch with your loved ones, you can learn new languages and

pick up new skills.

It's also a place where your mother can tag you in an extremely detailed Facebook

post about the night of your birth that all your friends can see.

And it's a place where you can accidentally like your ex's new boyfriend's Instagram

selfie from three years ago.

God it would be hard to be a young person on the Internet right now.

I really admire your fortitude and resilience.

These days, a lot of us are asking whether the Internet is a net positive or a net negative

in our lives.

But I tend to think that question might be what the Buddhist Zen masters called, A question

wrongly put.

Instead, the better question might be, "How can I make the Internet a more positive force

in my life, and the lives of others?"

And part of the answer, I think, is that better information leads to better decision making,

which leads to a better world.

So for the sake of our collective souls, let's improve our information sorting.

INTRO As you may remember from our first episode,

we've teamed up with MediaWise, with support from Google to bring you this series.

Our friends at the Stanford History Education Group -- or SHEG -- have done a lot of research

on how internet users evaluate the information they find.

They've tested middle school, high school, and college students, history professors,

and fact checkers, who were by far the best at judging the reliability of information.

Professional fact checkers work with news organizations to verify facts.

Sometimes that means they look over articles before they're published to ensure their

content is accurate and up to date.

They might call up a source, for example, to double check the spelling of their name.

Once, there was a profile of me in the New Yorker, and the fact-checker asked me questions

for OVER AN HOUR.

And in the end, the piece contained no errors.

Although, it did an illustration I found a tad unflattering.

To be fair, the illustration also contained no errors.

I just don't think I like my face.

Anyway, fact checkers also work for publications whose sole purpose is to verify claims made

by public figures or on the internet, and explain why they are or are not true.

Snopes and Politifact are some of the more well-known fact-checking sites.

So, in the Stanford study, college students, history professors, and fact-checkers were

all asked to look at two websites.

One website belonged to the American Academy of Pediatrics[1], or the AAP, the main professional

organization of pediatricians.

The other site belonged to the American /College/ of Pediatricians, or the ACP.

Now of course, they sound very similar, but the ACP is actually an organization that broke

away from the AAP because the AAP supports adoption by LGBTQ couples.

The AAP is a large, well-respected professional organization.

My kids' pediatrician is a member.

The ACP, on the other hand, is a much smaller, more ideologically-motivated interest group.

But looking at the two sites, many of the professors and students thought ACP's site

was more credible.

Why?

Because they focused on the site itself.

They spent time examining and reading the website, noticing that there were footnotes,

and checking out its design elements.

One student said of ACP's website, "I can automatically see this source and trust

it just because of how official it looks...even the font and the way the logo looks makes

me think this is a mind hive that compiled this."[2]

The ACP's website may have looked official, but when compared the the AAP's website,

its information was less reliable.

AAP is the trustworthy group.

So, the professors and students focused on the websites themselves and how they /presented/

information to decide which was more credible.

That meant they didn't do a great job evaluating the source itself.

The fact-checkers on the other hand, did much better.

That's because they consistently asked themselves three questions while evaluating the sites:

1.

Who is behind this information?

2.

What is the evidence for their claims?

And 3.

What do other sources say about the organization and its claims?

These questions are a really useful framework when you want to interpret the accuracy of

information you've encountered.

Let's begin with who's behind the information:

First, we want to know who exactly is sharing it with you.

A friend on facebook?

A stranger?

A news organization?

Is it promoted post that a company paid to insert into your feed?

An anonymous social media account?

And then we should ask ourselves WHY they are sharing it.

Each of those sharers mentioned could have very different reasons for presenting information

in a particular way.

I am, for instance, incentivized by my career to say that I think teenagers should read

contemporary fiction, specifically contemporary fiction written by me, and I am more likely

to share stories of people who benefited from reading contemporary fiction.

And even your personal friends have motivations for sharing what they do online--they may

want to signal what kind of person they are (or wish to be seen as), or they may want

to win over others to their worldview, or they may be trying to get someone's attention

with a subtweet.

A journalist might be sharing information because they think it's important for their

readers to know, but, of course, that decision is based on their own personal experiences.

An advocate for a particular cause might be sharing information to persuade others to

join that cause.

Once you've established who is sharing information with you and thought about why they might

be doing so, you get to the heart of the matter.

The claim itself.

Take a moment to identify what, if any, claims are actually being made.

It could be a factual claim or an opinion statement.

Reading is a useful skill is a factual claim.

Reading The Fault in Our Stars will make your life better, clear your skin, and improve

your wardrobe is an opinion statement.

And a true one.

Next you'll search for two things: whether they've backed up that claim with evidence

and whether that evidence is from a reliable source.

Evidence could come in the form of a link to the article or study they're referencing.

It could be a video or photo illustrating what they've described.

It could even be the name of someone who made the claim in the first place.

The next step is to look at the source of this evidence.

Is it a reputable source, like a trusted news organization or an expert in the field?

Or is it from some random blog you've never heard of?

Does it back up its claims with other sources or explain how its information was gathered?

If you've never heard of the source of this information, you can use a search engine to

discover what others say about it.

The sheer /existence/ of evidence is not enough to verify a claim.

The /absence/ of evidence, on the other hand, is reason to be skeptical of its veracity

until you can verify it.

And that brings us to the final and really vital step: what do others say about this

claim?

Whenever you're checking on the truth, you can and should check multiple sources to see

what other information is out there.

Check a search engine or a website known to be an authority on the topic to see what others

have published about it.

If a trustworthy source backs it up, great.

If you can't find evidence for that claim or you find evidence to the contrary, then

you can be fairly certain it's not true.

So these three questions -- who's behind it, what's the evidence, and what do others

say -- really kind of put information through the ringer.

Let's try it out in the Thought Bubble.

Here's a tweet from Steve S. @steelseller002: Each American uses 25 plastic straws daily.

We should use metal ones!!!

All right.

Let's begin by asking who's behind this information and what motivated them to post

it.

His profile says his name is Steve S. His handle is @steelseller002.

So you search "Steve S., steel seller."

It turns out, @steelseller002 /sells steel/.

Perhaps he loves the environment and wants to help reduce waste.

He also might just want to sell more steel.

So now, you look at the evidence of this information.

He didn't give us any.

Even if he had provided a source, that wouldn't guarantee this is trustworthy -- claims should

be backed up by evidence, and not all evidence is created equal.

But the absence of it is suspicious.

Finally, you want to look into what /other/ sources have to say about this claim.

As we've established, some are more credible than others, but all sources have their limits.

So it's important to seek multiple trustworthy sources when fact-checking.

You do a simple internet search: "Number of straws used by Americans per day."

The New York Times cites two research firms that say America as a whole uses between 170

and 390 million straws per day.[3] That's a little over one per person per day at most.

But search results from Time Magazine, the Washington Post,

and The Seattle Times cite another statistic: 500 million per day.

Some publications, though, say that statistic was compiled by a 9-year-old who polled straw

manufacturers.

Regardless, that estimate is still fewer than two straws per American per day.

So we have no consensus.

But from our research it seems somewhere between 170 and 500 million straws per day is more

accurate.

Far fewer than Steve's claim.

Steve.

Thank you, Thought Bubble.

I just...we were just talking about the name Steve, and whether anybody is named Steve,

and I asked Zulaiha if she knew anybody named Steve, and she said, "I don't anyone young

named Steve.

Just one guy in his late 20s."

Oh God.

Oh God, Father Time is coming for me.

What were we talking about, Stan?

Right, checking with multiple sources made us pretty skeptical of Steve's claim.

Typical for an old guy in his late 20s.

Now, that doesn't mean plastic straws should be widely distributed, or that they don't

have negative impacts,or that you can trust @plasticseller002 on Twitter--but regardless

of how you feel about straws, we need to have these discussions with real data and real

cost-benefit analyses.

Better information makes for better decisions.

You're going to hear me say that a few times.

Now I know that this seems like an absurd amount of work to check the veracity of one

tweet out GAJILLIONZ of tweets.

But there is no simple, magical way to have an information feed that is always reliable.

And so when you encounter information that comes from sources you don't already trust,

you have to be suspicious of it.

And even when it comes from sources you do already trust, you have to be a little suspicious

of it.

Interrogating the information we come across online is just so important.

You cannot believe everything you read -- but that doesn't mean you should distrust everything

you read, either.

This is actually its own problem.

We've become so skeptical of widely believed information, that we'll believe any evidence

that counters that information, regardless of whether it is accurate.

There's a very fine line between being skeptical -- or, not easily convinced -- and being cynical,

or generally distrustful of everyone else's motives.

A healthy dose of skepticism improves our critical thinking and judgement.

But cynicism clouds our judgement with negativity and suspicion.

It's really difficult for any of us, on a minute-by-minute basis, to carefully vet

the contents of every tweet or reddit post we see while scrolling and swiping.

But if we can carefully interrogate some sources, we can find some that we regularly trust,

which makes it easier to navigate the Internet over time.

Whenever your inner skeptic speaks up, your fact-checking can begin by checking in with

your trusted sources.

But of course, the problem with this is that your inner skeptic may speak up mostly when

you see information that seems like it must be wrong to you because it does not align

with your pre-existing worldview.

Here's an example from my own life: I don't want to alienate anyone here, so I'll use

like, hypothetical examples.

Let's say there's some horrible football club named United Manchester FC.

Watching one of their games recently, I shared a tweet about how United Manchester FC are

awarded more penalty kicks than any other team, and how it is blatantly unfair.

And everyone agreed with me, because almost everyone in my feed also reviles United Manchester

FC.

It was only much later that I learned that the football team I support has actually been

awarded more penalties over the past 25 years than United Manchester.

The disinformation did not trip up my inner skeptic, because it seemed like the kind of

thing that would be true.

So we shouldn't /just/ wait for our inner skeptic to tap us on the shoulder about information

we disagree with.

We need to make a habit of quickly checking out whatever we find interesting or shareable

or that makes us emotional.

Because that is the kind of stuff that changes our decisions, and also changes us.

And so we have to train those internal falsehood alarms to respond not just to potential misinformation

we disagree with.

That's why fact-checkers are so good at this -- they have to check everything.

But this work is like any other kind of training: the more you utilize your information analyzing

muscles, the stronger they'll get.

So, we'll continue to work out next time, but, you know, not, like, with movement.

Just...up here.

I'll see you then.

For this series, Crash Course has teamed up with MediaWise, a project out of the Poynter

Institute that was created with support from Google.

The Poynter Institute is a non-profit journalism school.

The goal of MediaWise is to teach students how to assess the accuracy of information

they encounter online.

The MediaWise curriculum was developed by the Stanford History Education Group based

on civic online reasoning research that they began in 2015.

If you're interested in learning more about MediaWise and fact-checking, you can visit

@mediawisetips on Instagram.

________________ [1] https://sheg.stanford.edu/civic-online-reasoning/website-reliability

[2] https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3048994 [3]https://medium.com/@MediaWiseTips/do-americans-really-use-500-million-straws-a-day-%E3%83%84-7e711416b10c

For more infomation >> The Facts about Fact Checking: Crash Course Navigating Digital Information #2 - Duration: 13:55.

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Victorious from the Fantastic Four | Marvel Quickdraw - Duration: 1:55.

[ANDY MACDONALD] Hi, I'm Andy MacDonald

and today I'm drawing Victorious from The Fantastic Four

I didn't even know where to get

comic books as a kid like really

The Incredible Hulk cartoon show

was my like first introduction to comics but not in comic form

I didn't have cable but my friends had cable

and I think The Thing show

It was just Ben Grimm, like a teenager

He'd turn his ring and he would turn into The Thing and that was his deal

I've seen him somewhere else and that was The Fantastic Four

The thing about Fantastic Four is family

They're actually together cohesively so rarely

It's more about trying to stick together than it is

like enjoying the fact that everyone is together

Comics is this world of wonder and magic

And like how in the world would you ever get into that?

I don't know if it's blue collar thinking or what?

But like you can't make a living as an artist

Like you're crazy boy get a job at the factory or something like that

It wasn't until like a few years after I graduated college

That I was like oh, I'll give it a shot

Doing a lot of comic conventions

and meeting as many people as I could

To like advance in a career and not just be a fan

When I got the design for Victorious I let it roll around for a little while

Like she looks a little angry but really powerful too

So I did a few sketches to kind of reflect that

I don't have a normal, set way of beginning

The page will maybe, hopefully, evolve as I'm going along

I think the costume is fun, the helmet is cool

But I also like drawing hair and she's kind of got both so

I get to do that

You know you go about your day sometimes

I just slap myself awake and realize holy cow!

I'm working on you know this Fantastic Four character

This is great right?!

For more infomation >> Victorious from the Fantastic Four | Marvel Quickdraw - Duration: 1:55.

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JoJo's Bizarre Adventure OP 8 - "Fighting Gold" (Cover en Español) - Duration: 4:16.

For more infomation >> JoJo's Bizarre Adventure OP 8 - "Fighting Gold" (Cover en Español) - Duration: 4:16.

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Cierre del gobierno entra en su día 25 | Noticias Telemundo - Duration: 2:10.

For more infomation >> Cierre del gobierno entra en su día 25 | Noticias Telemundo - Duration: 2:10.

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¿Sabrina Sabrok no está pagando el "child support"? | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 2:28.

For more infomation >> ¿Sabrina Sabrok no está pagando el "child support"? | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 2:28.

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Revelan red de túneles de El Chapo | Noticias Telemundo - Duration: 1:53.

For more infomation >> Revelan red de túneles de El Chapo | Noticias Telemundo - Duration: 1:53.

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Episode 1, "Round Eight" Preview | Little Dog: Season 2 - Duration: 2:09.

(<i>'Sunshowers' by Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band plays)</i>

(hearing Sylvia's voice) You destroy everything you touch!

F***!

Come on.

Mmm.

(mumbling incomprehensibly)

Mmm!

(incomprehensible)

I wasn't gonna eat you.

I wasn't gonna f****n' eat you, man.

(laughs)

(stomach groans loudly)

(trippy music plays)

For more infomation >> Episode 1, "Round Eight" Preview | Little Dog: Season 2 - Duration: 2:09.

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Alerta de queda de ÓVNI? Putin chama o exército após montanha siberiana entrar em 'colapso' - Duration: 6:34.

For more infomation >> Alerta de queda de ÓVNI? Putin chama o exército após montanha siberiana entrar em 'colapso' - Duration: 6:34.

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👉¿Porque no debo escuchar música protestante?❌😲 - P LUIS TORO - Duration: 7:46.

For more infomation >> 👉¿Porque no debo escuchar música protestante?❌😲 - P LUIS TORO - Duration: 7:46.

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I go solo [WYA] - Duration: 2:08.

What's your family history?

My mom had it.

And how old was she when she was diagnosed?

32.

That's very young.

Yep.

How i feel?

My mom was dying of breast cancer when I was in kindergarten

The only thing I really remember about her in hospital and her mechanical bed

The smells in there still scare the crap out of me

It never stops

I wish I couldn't feel anything

I just...

I need everyone to know how scary this is.

I wish I couldn't feel a damn thing

You feel the way you're supposed to feel.

I feel nothing.

You may not want to feel it...

Stop crying...

But it's there.

I don't know...

I'm just-

I'm just sad.

I don't know what I'm doing...

I...

I- I carry around all these mistakes!

I don't know how to be... happy

Am I... selfish

or...

am I... scared?

You know?

It's not the end of the world to feel...

things.

I guess not.

I'm both happy...

and sad.

And I'm still trying to figure out how that could be.

[magical kisses stock]

For more infomation >> I go solo [WYA] - Duration: 2:08.

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Bournemouth manager delivers Callum Wilson transfer blow to Chelsea - Duration: 2:50.

 AFC Bournemouth loan manager Carl Fletcher has said he does not think Callum Wilson will leave the club to join Chelsea

 Wilson, 26, joined Bournemouth from Coventry City in 2014 and has been a central figure in the club's rises to the Premier League

 During that time he has come back from two serious knee injuries and managed to make his full England debut in November last year

 Yet to break into double figures during a Premier League season Wilson currently sits on nine goals in 16 games

That form has seen him linked with a view to Stamford Bridge in a bid to rectify Chelsea's striking troubles

 Although a price of £75 million has been mentioned, AFC Bournemouth's loan manager Carl Fletcher has poured cold water on the deal, believing that Wilson is vital to not only the club's present but also their future

 "Callum has done fantastically well to come back from injuries," he told TalkSport

"He scores goals in the Premier League, made his England debut, fantastic.  "Credit to all of his hard work he's done

I think like I said before the team, the club, are trying to improve and you can't improve if you sell your best players

 "So obviously you want your best players to stay with you. I think it's fantastic that the players we've got are attracting interest from other clubs — which is great

 "For us he's an integral part to the squad and to the team and what Ed [Eddie Howe] is trying to do

You can never say never in football, but for me he's a massive part of that Bournemouth team

"  Keep up to date with the latest news, features and exclusives from football.london via the free football

london app for iPhone and Android. Available to download from the App Store and Google Play

For more infomation >> Bournemouth manager delivers Callum Wilson transfer blow to Chelsea - Duration: 2:50.

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DIGITAL PORTRAIT PAINTING TIPS | improve your portrait painting skills - Duration: 5:00.

Hey! What's up!

I'd like to talk to you about ways to improve your portrait painting skills.

In this video I will give you 5 tips or exercises to improve your portrait painting skills.

Let's get started!

Number 1

My first tip to improve your portrait painting skills is to do studies of facial features.

If you struggle painting lips for example, make a series of lip studies.

Even quick and rough studies can help a lot.

These quick studies of facial features usually don't take up too much time

so the chance of getting frustrated is smaller.

Number 2!

My next tip is to make quick sketches and set yourself a time limit.

Improving your skills is all about practicing, a LOT.

Making quick sketches and limiting the time to 10 minutes for example

enables you to get a lot of practice in a short amount of time

Also, don't worry about the end result too much

but think about the exercise itself and you are working on improving your skills with every sketch you make.

Number 3

Of course it is a lot of fun to make colorful portrait work

but working in color is a lot harder than working in black and white.

Values are extremely important when you want to make realistic portrait paintings.

You can use all the right hues of color, but when the value is off

the portrait won't look very realistic.

So working in gray scale is a great practice

When you make value paintings, you can focus more on shapes, edges, details in the facial features, etcetera

Once you are more confident painting portraits, you can switch to full color paintings

or you can use coloring techniques to color your black and white portrait paintings.

Number 4

My next tip is to learn construction, study the Loomis technique for example.

Learning construction like this, helps you to decide where the facial features should be placed in your portrait painting.

The head can be divided into three equal parts for example

giving you markers for the hairline, the eyebrows and the underside of the nose.

Learning techniques like this is a great way to practice measuring in your portraits

and doing exercises with these techniques will improve your portrait paintings.

Number 5

My final tip is to draw over your reference photos.

This is a way to study construction by drawing over a photo and thinking about the basic shapes of the face.

There are different ways to use this technique.

ou can make a rough lay over on your reference photo and copy these lines.

You can then use this 'line art' to build up your painting, giving yourself a head start.

You could also make an even more abstract lay over of your reference, using mostly angular shapes.

This makes the shapes very simple and easy to duplicate.

This time, don't just copy the line art, but draw it yourself.

It is a wonderful exercise to improve your hand eye coordination.

Next, you can use this abstract line work to build up your portrait painting.

But perhaps you are not too confident about your drawing skills yet

What you can do is make a more detailed line drawing on top of your reference.

People might say this is cheating, but I think it's still a great practice

since it will help you understand the structure of the face.

In time you will become more confident and continuously make your steps more challenging.

So just go ahead and make the line work as detailed as you feel is needed for your skill level and use that line drawing as a base for your painting.

And remember, you're not a cheat as long as you don't claim you drew it by hand. Just enjoy the practice!

These were my 5 tips to improve your portrait painting skills.

If you liked these tips, don't forget to give a thumbs up, I'd really appreciate it.

And if you have any questions, feel free to ask me in the comment section.

I'm here to help you.

Have a wonderful day! See you next time, for the next digital art tutorial.

For more infomation >> DIGITAL PORTRAIT PAINTING TIPS | improve your portrait painting skills - Duration: 5:00.

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Gods Woord 'Gods werk en de praktijk van de mens' Deel twee - Duration: 37:57.

For more infomation >> Gods Woord 'Gods werk en de praktijk van de mens' Deel twee - Duration: 37:57.

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Faça Esse Chá de Canela para Descer Menstruação. E Veja o Resultado. - Duration: 3:13.

For more infomation >> Faça Esse Chá de Canela para Descer Menstruação. E Veja o Resultado. - Duration: 3:13.

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Auto-Generate Youtube Subtitles In 191 Languages - Duration: 8:54.

Hey everyone and welcome back to another Tuesday tip where in this video I'm going to be showing you how to automatically generate

subtitles for your YouTube videos for up to

191

different languages and to all of my BMX core audience out there I apologize that this isn't

BMX related but I do this with all of my tip Tuesday and news videos that I can and I've had several

Different people ask me how to do this when. I've talked about it so I figured rather than typing out this extremely long

explanation of how to do it I would just make a quick video so I hope that you guys aren't too mad at me for

not making a BMX related tip Tuesday video so I hope that you guys can either skip this one or find something useful to learn

out of it for maybe your own YouTube videos here on YouTube so

like I said we're going to be automatically generating subtitles for our YouTube videos there are several

Conditions for this so you might not be able to do it with every single video before we get too far ahead of ourselves

let's jump into YouTube which I already have up on my screen here

You're going to want to select a video that you want to automatically generate?

subtitles for and you're going to want to be in the old

creator studio because I don't believe there's a way to do this in the new studio beta as

of right now in recording this video so once you're into the creator studio and the video that you want to auto

Subtitle you go into the edit settings and all of the different things that you can do here we've got info and settings enhancements audio

and screen cards

subtitles

CC so I know that the Creator Academy or creator

insiders whatever YouTube channel just recently uploaded a video talking about

Subtitles but they didn't tell us how to make them so what you're going to do is select the subtitle

CC tab within the old creator studio

it's going to bring up this screen right here and what you're going to have to look for to make sure that you can do

this is the published and in

Automatic to be in this list if there is nothing here you're not going to be able to

automatically generate and translate subtitles

within this video so once you've found a video that you want to generate

subtitles for and it has English

Automatic under this published list you're going to want to go up to this blue button up here and click add new subtitles or

CC

automatically English pops up here you're going to click on

English and then the next screen is going to show up and you're gonna have three options upload a file

Transcribe and auto-sync or create new subtitles or cc what you're going to do here is click create new subtitles or

CC and

when the screen pops up you'll see then because we've already got automatic subtitles

generated that it puts them into the video for you whereas normally in this screen you'd be typing out the

subtitles and pushing enter for it to automatically populate these boxes in the areas that it's

Generated for you within the video we don't have to worry about any of that here or we're going to do is find you the

actions drop-down we're going to click Auto generate just to be redundant it says Auto generation

completed and then we're going to click published or publish and I don't normally read through these because they're usually

pretty close but you can go through and make sure everything is correct and that it translated everything properly for you

into subtitles I usually don't worry about it and just move ahead with the process

So now that we have that part done the rest of it is extremely easy

All we have to do is click add new subtitles or cc again

We're going to search for the language that we want and I will start with the language that I always start with and do?

China or Chinese and

We're going to click on the first one here this is the same for any language that you want to choose in this list you're

going to click create new subtitles or cc again the screen is going to pop up and it's going to have our English

subtitles here we're just going to click Auto translate you'll see that it'll automatically populate and

translate the subtitles that we have in English

to Chinese

for us and I can't tell you how much time this saves because honestly

I've never taken the time to

translate by hand I can only imagine that it would take days to do this if we did it manually

So now that we've got all of this done and

we're ready to publish our new Chinese subtitles we just click publish and

basically we just repeat the process for any

subtitle language that you want to add into your video and this is a perfect opportunity to use

analytics and subtitles together to reach entirely new audiences or reach audiences that you're already reaching

but on a whole new level because rather than having to

understand what you're saying in English or whatever language you're speaking

they will have subtitles that they can read that makes it that much easier for them to understand and enjoy your content

so with that being said go into your analytics go into your

demographics and find out which countries are watching your videos the most and then figure out what

language those countries speak then add

subtitles for every single one of these countries in their languages into your videos

So that that many more people can enjoy them and another tip for using analytics and subtitles together that will literally

boost your view counts over

night as they did for me is to go into your real-time video views and look at your top performing videos

over the 48 hour period and

make sure that you put subtitles on all of those videos for all of the languages and countries that you found in the

demographic settings this way all of your videos that YouTube is

already serving to people will get served to that many more people because now they're in different languages and

more people can enjoy them and understand them as I said this literally

boosted my view counts over night when I did it with all of my top performing videos and

it's something that anyone can do on any video that YouTube

automatically provides subtitles for and like I said if you don't have this English automatic

Here, you're not going to be able to auto translate an auto subtitle your videos you'll have to do it manually but typically

YouTube does a pretty good job of doing this for you especially if you have

video language set to your language of origin

Which is very easy to do and if you don't have it set all you have to do is select it the same way you

do to add subtitles and then click this box for default for new

uploads and this is something that you're not gonna have to worry about going away because the Creator studio

classic is not going to be going anywhere even when the studio beta becomes the studio norm

So with that being said

thank you guys for watching I hope that you guys learn something and I hope that this helps you get more views on YouTube and

helps your videos reach and help as many people as possible

If you're watching this and you're here from the BMX audience on my channel thanks for sticking through to the end and I promise

tomorrow's video is going to be an awesome one for you guys if you guys did enjoy the video or learn something and you're new

here hit the subscribe button down below

Even if you're not

into BMX because I promise that the videos that I do with all of my friends are super fun and you never know you could

find something that you enjoyed that you really didn't know about through this youtube

subtitle video so with that being said I put out Tuesday tip videos every Tuesday

BMX news videos on fridays and other types of riding videos and streams throughout the week I want to thank you guys all

Again for being here and watching and like I said before we'll see you in tomorrow's video which is an awesome one

thanks again goodbye

For more infomation >> Auto-Generate Youtube Subtitles In 191 Languages - Duration: 8:54.

-------------------------------------------

Google My Business and Maps Ranking Tips - Duration: 2:01.

- This is your Marketing Minute from Forward Push.

I'm Marc Apple and I just finished setting up a new client's

Google My Business profile.

Have you done this for your business?

If not, we're gonna talk about how to do that

at then end of this video.

But first I wanted to share this question

that this customer asked me.

They said, "Why are we taking so much time

"to make sure that this profile is complete?"

And I thought to myself, you know what?

I've heard this question before, but phrased differently.

It's always in the phrase of,

"How do I get my business to show in the Maps section

"or when someone does a search,

"all those businesses that appear at the top?"

And one of the key things you can do

is have a complete profile.

There's a couple other things that factor in

on what businesses show

when people do a search like that.

It's the proximity to your business' location.

Which means that you wanna have a physical address

listed in your Google My Business profile.

So, one is proximity,

second is the physical address,

and third is

proper Google My Business category association.

So you wanna make sure that your top service

is your primary category association.

And the fourth thing you can do

is make sure that your subcategories

relate to your primary category.

So, for instance for Forward Push,

we're a marketing agency,

subcategory would be website development.

So, if you do not have a Google My Business profile,

here's what I can do for you.

Let me know in a comment below,

send me an email,

or give me a call.

We are a Google My Business partner,

so we can go ahead and do a fast track

to get your profile set up.

There's no charge for it, we just wanna make sure

that your business is listed properly on the Internet.

So now you know a little bit more about Google My Business,

your profile,

and how to have it ranked when people do a search.

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