Thứ Ba, 3 tháng 1, 2017

Youtube daily Jan 3 2017

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The Cumberland valley is home to six towns lying between Hagerstown, Maryland and Harrisburg,

Pennsylvania— Greencastle, Chambersburg, Shippensburg, Newville, Carlisle, and Mecanicsburg.

What's exceptional about these small Pennsylvania towns is that they're each almost exactly

10 miles from each other.

The distances deviate by no more than a mile from this rule.

This isn't a coincidence and this isn't planned.

Drawing equal sized radii around each town shows you their spheres of influence.

Assuming each town has the exact same shops and services, rational people will just go

to whichever town is closest to buy or sell goods.

Towns ten miles apart mean that nobody has to travel more than five miles to reach a

town.

Each one of these towns was founded before the formation of the United States, so that

means that, of course, nobody had cars and pretty much everybody walked everywhere.

10 miles, or 5 miles each way, is about the distance a person can comfortably walk in

a day with enough time to buy or sell goods at a central market.

Back in this era before cars, a 5 mile radius was essentially the largest possible commuter

zone to small agricultural towns and therefore having towns ten miles apart was the most

efficient possible use of rural land.

When you get a chance, take a look at map of a rural area that existed before cars.

You'll see that the distance between medium-sized towns is almost always somewhere between about

10 to 15 miles.

Because the Cumberland valley is a valley, towns really could only develop in a line,

but in most cases towns develop in all directions.

This is what the ten mile rule looks like going out in all directions.

Each of these points is a town and the hexagon around it is the area from which people will

go to the town.

In the real world, each of these towns probably has a small grocery store, a pharmacy, a bank,

and maybe a restaurant.

Since everybody uses these services, there doesn't have to be many people in a towns

sphere of influence in order to sustain these shops.

But where do you put something more specialized, like a mechanic.

People only need to go the mechanic every once in a while so you need more people to

sustain one mechanics shop than one grocery store.

Well, some of these small towns develop into larger towns with more people that can support

more specialized shops and services.

Putting these larger towns with more specialized shops closer together would be unsustainable

since there wouldn't be enough people going to those shops but putting them farther apart

would be inefficient since there's land that people would not go to a city from.

This happens once or twice more until you have cities.

These cities have the largest spheres of influence and the most specialized shops.

You of course still have grocery stores and pharmacies in cities, but you also have things

like luxury car dealerships, brain surgery centers, and airports.

The city's sphere of influence is enormous because people will travel hundreds of miles

to buy an expensive car or get brain surgery or fly from an airport.

Think about it within a city.

How far would you walk to buy a latte.

Probably only a few blocks and that's why you see Starbucks or other coffee shops on

almost every block.

Since almost everyone buys coffee, you only need a few blocks of people to sustain one

coffee shop.

But how far would you walk to buy a MacBook?

Probably quite far since its a infrequent and substantial purchase.

That's why Apple stores are rather rare even in cities.

You need an enormous amount of people to sustain one Apple store and we can actually figure

out roughly how many.

In Connecticut, the Trumbull Apple Store is about 20 miles away from the New Haven store

to the north-east and the Stamford store to the south-west.

In the 10 mile radius around the Trumbull Apple Store there are about half a million

inhabitants which tells us that you need about half a million people to sustain one Apple

store.

We can compare that to the Starbucks' of lower Manhattan which are spread out at an

average distance of about 600 feet.

Drawing a 300 foot radius around one Starbucks in lower Manhattan covers around 6,000 people

which means that one Starbucks needs 6,000 people to sustain it.

Of course both Connecticut and New York are places with higher than average incomes which

means less people are needed to sustain one Starbucks or Apple Store.

The numbers would be very different in, say, rural Kansas, but since each store generally

only builds in areas with higher-than-average incomes this gives a good sense of how many

people Apple and Starbucks looks for in an area before opening up a store.

So, our model shows where cities should be, but its not like this in reality.

This is the most efficient spread of cities if you're assuming that the cities are on

a perfectly flat plane with no geographic features, no social influences, no variability

of income, equal distribution of resources—essentially assuming the world is one homogeneous place…

which its not.

In reality, of course, our world has an enormous effect on where and why cities develop.

To start out, let's cut this down to one city on a flat, featureless plane for simplicity.

What affects the location of cities more than anything is water.

If we put an ocean on one side of our isotropic plane, our city will almost certainly locate

near it.

Oceans have always been and still are what connects the world.

There's no other means of transport that can move such enormous amounts of cargo for

so little.

Any city needs to be economically efficient to grow and it will cost more to bring goods

to a city that's 1000 miles inland than one right by the ocean.

Just look at Europe.

6 of the 10 largest European cities are within 100 miles of the coast.

But oceans aren't the only bodies of water to affect cities.

Rivers are just as or perhaps even more influential.

Milan, the 19th largest European city, is the largest to not be either directly on the

ocean or on a river, and even then its only 15 miles from a river and 75 miles from the

ocean.

Until the last century or so, cities could not survive without direct water access.

If you need more proof, 14 of the 15 largest cities in the world are within a few dozen

miles of the ocean.

Perhaps the most obvious attractor for cities is resources, so going back to our isotropic

plane, putting natural resources anywhere on this map will draw cities near it.

Cities that existed before the last century or so generally sprung up right near the resources,

much like Pittsburgh, since they acted as manufacturing and transportation hubs for

those resources, but more recently new resource dependent cities don't need to be as close

to the resources themselves.

New transportation technologies can bring the resources from their source.

Just look at Dubai.

Of course the UAE has enormous oil deposits, but they're much closer to Abu Dhabi and

the South-West than Dubai.

In 1900, Dubai had 10,000 residents, less than half that of Carlisle, Pennsylvania—one

of the farming towns we talked about at the beginning.

That only grew to 40,000 by 1960, but today its known worldwide and has more than 2.5

million residents.

It was able to grow at this enormous rate—even faster than Abu Dhabi—since it cemented

itself as the economic and administrative hub for the oil industries of the region.

Another geographic feature that we can add to the plane is mountains.

Now, mountains don't always have a uniform affect on cities.

Mexico City, Bogota, and Addis Ababa are all enormous cities at elevations above 7,000

feet.

Mountains do make transport and trade difficult, but they also provide protection.

Many ancient cities grew in these locations since they were easy to protect, which left

more time to focus on growing the city, but mountains can also hinder development.

For quite a while, the United States could not develop west of the Appalachian mountains.

They just served as an enormous barrier.

In 1800, the average center of population for the entire United States was here even

though the US had sovereignty over this entire area.

Of course technology eventually conquered this barrier and moved the mean population

center all the way out to Missouri today, but if the Appalachian mountains didn't

exist American history and geography would be completely different.

We would have seen urban development much earlier in the mid-west.

But mountains can have another effect.

You see, coal, silver, gold, and other mineral deposits are all often located in mountainous

regions, and, just like Dubai, cities can develop in less hospitable and easy places

due to resources.

The economic advantage of exploiting the resources overpowers the economic disadvantage of being

in an inhospitable location.

Denver, Colorado grew 650% between 1870 and 1880 with the opening of a railroad branch

connecting with the transcontinental railroad.

It served as an access point to transportation to the gold miners in the rockies.

So mountains can either push cities away or bring them nearer—it really just depends

on the circumstance.

Let's exchange our isotropic plane for a world map.

Where should cities be on here?

Well, our world's cities are not necessarily all in the most geographically efficient locations.

While there is a certain level of natural selection that grows the efficiently placed

cities and shrinks the inefficiently placed cities, humans are not always able to put

cities in the most efficient locations.

Let's put up the 224 cities in the world with a population over 2 million.

You can immediately see some patterns.

Putting up the equator, you can see a clear divide.

Only 32 of these cities lie in the southern hemisphere.

One might think this is because there is so much more land in the northern hemisphere,

but that's not entirely true.

You see, the southern hemisphere still has 32% of the world's land, but only has 14%

of the world's large cities.

There's clearly a higher density of cities in the northern hemisphere.

You can pretty much trace this all back to Europe and Asia.

The first large civilizations and empires were on these two continents even though the

human race likely originated in Africa.

There's hundreds of different theories on why civilizations succeeded in some places

and failed in others, but one of the more plausible and interesting theories is that

Europe and Asia succeeded because they're wide instead of tall.

The very shape of the continents may have changed the course of human history.

You see, when a continent is wide, you have a ton of land with roughly the same climate.

Climate tends to change when you go north and south rather than east and west as a nature

of how the earth rotates around the sun.

Much of the success of early civilizations had to do with the domestication of plants

and animals and the corresponding technology.

When expanding horizontally, the climate is similar enough that an empire can use the

same successful plants and animals, while expanding vertically requires the domestication

of new plants and animals.

If a civilization started in central-america, for example, there would be very little land

on the continent with a similar climate and their expansion would be severely limited.

In Europe and Asia, on the other hand, theres thousands upon thousands and miles of similar

climate that can be reached just by traveling east or west.

There's evidence to back this up.

Just look at the maps of the four largest early empires—the Qing Dynasty, the Abbasid

Caliphate, the Umayyad Caliphate, and the Mongol empire.

They were all in Eurasia and they all expanded horizontally.

When some of the more modern empires expanded, they had the technology to do so overseas.

The three major modern empires were the British, Spanish, and French empires—each of which

came from relatively similar climates.

A major reason why America was able to succeed is because all the agriculture from Europe

worked there.

Climatically, Europe and America are nearly identical.

The majority of developed colonized countries are in the northern hemisphere just because

they were closest to Europe, but formerly British countries like South Africa, Australia,

and New Zealand are all highly developed and in the Southern Hemisphere.

Their success over more northern countries in the southern hemisphere can also be partially

attributed to their greater climate similarity to Europe.

Let's ask one more question.

If our world only had one city, where would it logically be?

Well if you take the location of every person in the world and average it out, you come

to south-central Asia.

That means that this general region is the optimum place to live on the planet, but where

more specifically should our world city go.

Well, this region is already in the Northern Hemisphere and in Eurasia, so we've already

covered those two criteria.

We want a place within a hundred of so miles of the ocean, on a navigable river, near mountains

with rich mineral deposits—the single best place for a city on earth just might be…

Dhaka, Bangladesh.

Every geographic model and theory says that there is no better place on earth to put a

city than here.

There's evidence to back this up: Dhaka is between the 4th and 18th largest metropolitan

area on earth depending on how you define metropolitan area, and Bangladesh is the sixth

densest country on earth—there are 161 million people living in an area about the size of

England.

History has affected geography enough that the largest and most advanced civilizations

are not all in South-Central Asia, but if we started all over again, did humanity a

second time, every geographic model says that this region could be the origin and central

point of human civilization.

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For more infomation >> Why Cities Are Where They Are - Duration: 15:44.

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Download Your YouTube Videos - How to Download Your Own YouTube Video [Urdu / Hindi] - Duration: 2:39.

For more infomation >> Download Your YouTube Videos - How to Download Your Own YouTube Video [Urdu / Hindi] - Duration: 2:39.

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2015-2017 F-150 Gibson Dual Sport Aluminized Cat-Back Exhaust System (5.0L) Sound Clip & Install - Duration: 6:20.

Hey, everybody, I'm Justin with americanmuscle.com, and this is my detailed review and install

of the Gibson Dual Sport Aluminized Steel Cat-Back, available for your 2015 and newer

five-liter powered Super Crew F-150.

In this review I'm gonna talk about what kind of sound you can expect when bolting up the

Gibson Dual Sport to your F-150, we're gonna break down the construction and the materials,

and then finally, I'll quickly walk you through the install itself.

And, if you have a Super Crew F-150 with a five-and-a-half foot bed, this is gonna be

a very easy bolt-on job, so one out of three wrenches on the difficulty meter, with some

more detail coming up later on.

So, the Dual Sport from Gibson that we have in this video is going to be one of the company's

most popular offerings for the truck aftermarket.

Gonna be for the truck owners out there looking to give their five-liter heater a little bit

more presence while on the road while keeping that price point beneath $500 bucks.

And with that said, I think this system will appeal to those truck owners who prefer that

old-school muscle-car tone, that deep low thumping tone, as opposed to some of the louder,

more higher-pitched systems as you guys heard with our sound clips.

And, speaking of those sound clips, let's dive head-first into the sound you can expect

when using the Gibson Dual Sport and I just said, this is gonna be for the owners out

there who don't want the loudest system on the block.

It's a deep tone, it's a thumping tone, but at the same time, it sounds really good.

In fact, it just embodies what a big V8 truck should sound like.

So, breaking out my "wake the neighbor's scale," I'm going strong two out of five here, guys.

Again, definitely not the loudest when it comes to overall volume, but the idle certainly

sounds a lot stronger, you're certainly picking up some volume when you're hammering on that

loud pedal, and you're getting a little bit more interior noise, but nothing crazy.

So with the sound covered, let's move into the quality and construction here with the

Gibson Dual Sport and for a sub-$500 system the overall build quality is really solid.

Now, the materials themselves could be a little better.

You are looking at aluminized steel here, after all.

It's definitely not stainless steel, so, therefore, don't look for the same longevity or corrosion

protection that you might get with those full stainless systems.

And, as such, Gibson does not offer the lifetime warranty here with the Dual Sport in aluminized

steel.

Talking about the design with the Dual Sport from Gibson guys, you're gonna find a three-inch

lead pipe coming into the Superflow SFT muffler, that kicks down to a two-and-a-half inch mandrel-bent

tubing before exiting out the dual four-inch tips, brightly polished embossed with that

Gibson logo.

Now, these guys, the tips themselves are actually constructed from 304-grade stainless steel

which is nice because ultimately, this is what you're gonna see the most, and these

guys are gonna look good for years to come.

Let's go back to that Superflow SFT muffler here real quick because I actually like what

Gibson does with this thing.

They don't use any internal packing which can sometimes burn out or blow out.

Those are two terms you might hear in the exhaust world.

And what those do or what that does, is basically change the tone of the system over time.

Not the case here with the Gibson and their Superflow muffler.

This thing's gonna sound the same from the day you bolt it up to your truck, to the day

you take it off or until the day you sell your truck.

And as promised, let's get into that install here, briefly.

Like I talked about earlier, one out of three wrenches for any Supercrew, five-and-a-half

foot bed owner out there guys.

This not gonna be a tough job as long as you have some basic socket sets or basic tools.

About an hour or two in the shop or garage is really all you need before you're making

some noise here with the Gibson.

Going back to that socket set, Gibson recommends you really only need that half-inch socket

wrench along with a nine-sixteenths inch socket wrench, and I personally like to use a little

WD-40 lubricating oil, something like that on those stubborn rubber exhaust hangers.

Now, you'll want to first remove that factory exhaust system by unbolting the clamps in

front of the factory muffler and get that guy out of the way.

Just fair warning, this thing is a little big, it's a little bulky, so if you have a

buddy around the shop, now'd be a great time to grab him.

Once that factory system is out of the way, get to work installing the new Gibson starting

from front to back with that three-inch lead pipe, hang the muffler, and then your two

tailpipes, and you're pretty much good to go.

But just save your final tighten up to the very end.

Once everything is in place, just make sure the system isn't rubbing against any brake

lines, suspension fluids, things like that and you should be good to go.

In my opinion, the Gibson Dual Sport that we have in this video checks all the right

boxes when it comes to sound for a big V8 truck.

Now, pair that with a quality construction, the sub-$500 price tag, and overall, you got

a great system for any 5-liter equipped F-150 out there.

So that is my review of the Gibson Dual Sport which you can grab right here at americanmuscle.com.

For more infomation >> 2015-2017 F-150 Gibson Dual Sport Aluminized Cat-Back Exhaust System (5.0L) Sound Clip & Install - Duration: 6:20.

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Video: Rain, freezing rain on Tuesday 01/06/16 - Duration: 2:14.

5:15.

PHAPPY TUESDAY MORNING.

PA FREEZING RAIN ADVISORY.

PTHEY START AT DIFFERENT TIMES

PBUT MOST GO UNTIL TOMORROW

PMORNING AT 7:00.

PYOU GUYS FOR THE EAST WILL HAVE

PTHAT FREEZING RAIN LASTING

PLONGER THIS AFTERNOON AND

PBEGINNING LATER.

PKEEP THAT IN MIND FOR LATER IN

PTHE DAY FOR VERMONTERS.

PFOR NORTHERN NEW YORK WE HAVE

PTHAT FREEZING RAIN ADVISORY IN

PPLACE UNTIL 2:00 THIS AFTERNOON

PFOR SPECIAL TO THEM FOR PARTS OF

PTHE SEAWAY VALLEY.

PEVERYONE WILL HAVE A CHANCE FOR

PPATCHY FREEZING RAIN WHICH IS

PWHY ADVISORS ARE IN PLACE.

PSCATTERED SNOW SHOWERS WOULD NOT

PBE SURPRISED IF SLEET OR

PFREEZING RAIN IS MIXING IN

PESPECIALLY ALONG THE ST.

PLAWRENCE RIVER VALLEY WHERE YOU

PGUYS HAVE FREEZING RAIN FALLING.

PPLEASE BE CAREFUL AND CAUTIOUS

PAS YOU DRIVE TO WORK ALTHOUGH IT

PWILL NOT BE WIDESPREAD.

PIT WILL BE SLIPPERY IN LOCALIZED

PLOCATIONS SO KEEP AN EYE OUT FOR

PTHAT.

P34 IN BURLINGTON, 36 AND

PPLATTSBURGH.

PIT'S MUCH COOLER IN SARANAC LAKE

PAT 29.

PMID-20'S FOR MONTPELIER,

PLEBANON, SPRINGFIELD.

PUPPER 30'S BENNINGTON.

PTEMPERATURES IN THE CHAMPLAIN

PVALLEY DON'T WARM UP MUCH.

PMAYBE A FEW DEGREES BY THE

PAFTERNOON HOURS AND WE DID BACK

PDOWN TO THE MID-30'S.

PMORE THOSE RAIN SHOWERS ARE

PMOVING IN AND BY THAT 6:00 HOUR

PTHOSE WILL BECOME MORE

WIDESPREAD.

PFREEZING RAIN IS THE ISS FOR

PTHE SEAWAY VALLEY.

PYOU FIND THAT CONTINUING TO

PACCUMULATE IN THE GREEN

PMOUNTAINS AND NORTHEAST KINGDOM

PBY THIS AFTERNOON AND TONIGHT

PWHICH IS WHY ADVISORS ARE FOR

PLATER IN THE DAY.

THAT FREEZING RAIN ALONG AND

PEAST OF THE GREEN MOUNTAINS.

PHERE ARE SOME PERIOD'S OF

PWIDESPREAD AND HEAVY RAINSTORM

PTO TAPER OFF TOMORROW MORNING.

PIT WILL TURN TO MORE OF THAT

PSNOW.

PBY WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON LINGERING

PSNOW SHOWERS AND WE HAVE A

CHANCE FOR LIGHT AND SCATTERED

PSNOW SHOWERS.

For more infomation >> Video: Rain, freezing rain on Tuesday 01/06/16 - Duration: 2:14.

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Tuesday: Foggy morning; partly cloudy afternoon - Duration: 3:57.

IT'S A FREE TRIAL.

CHARLE LET'S NOT GO THAT FAR.

LET'S TALK ABOUT THE FOG.

DAMON: IT'S WITH US ACROSS

SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA.

WE ARE UNDER A DENSE FOG

ADVISORY UNTIL 8:00.

THE DENSE FOG ADVISORY IS UNTIL

AND :00 THIS MORNING WE'RE

DEALING WITH SOME MEASURE OF

FOG.

VISIBILITY IN HAMMOND HAS FALLEN

DOWN TO TWO MILES FROM FOUR

MILES JUST 10 MINUTES AGO.

ON THE GULF COAST, THE

VISIBILITY HAS FALLEN IN BILOXI

TO ONE MILE.

ON THE SOUTH SHORE, OVER AT THE

LAKEFRONT AND IN GALLIANO, ONE

MILE VISIBILITY.

IT IS SIX MILES AT THE AIRPORT.

BE VERY CAREFUL AS YOU HEAD OUT

THE DOOR THIS MORNING.

LEAVE LOTS OF SPACE IN FRONT OF

YOU AND YOU SURE LOW BEAMS.

THE FRONTAL BOUNDARY THAT

BROUGHT US THE RAIN IS TO THE

EAST OF US.

THERE LOTS AND SHOWERS -- OF

SHOWERS AND STORMS.

ANOTHER FRONT IS HEADED IN THIS

DIRECTION.

IT WILL BE PASSING THROUGH OUR

AREA.

IT'S NOT GOING TO BRING AS MUCH

IN TERMS OF GREAT FALL I THINK

WE WILL NOTICE THAT

SIGNIFICANTLY.

SOME OF THAT CLOUD COVER YOU CAN

SEE IN THIS PICTURE, NOT SO MUCH

THE FOG OF THE POSSIBILITY

EXISTS WE COULD SEE A LIGHT

SHOWER OR TWO IN PARTS OF SOUTH

LOUISIANA THIS MORNING.

THE VAST MAJORITY OF US WILL

STAY VERY DRY.

YOU WILL NOTICE HOW BE CLEAR OUT

NICELY INTO THE AFTERNOON HOURS.

SOME OF THAT FOG AND CLOUD COVER

ROLLS BACK IN TONIGHT AND IN THE

MORNING.

WE MAKE -- MAY WAKE UP TO FOG IN

THE MORNING.

VISIBILITY WON'T BE AS IMPACTED

AS IT IS THIS MORNING.

WEDNESDAY IS GOING TO BE A

CLOUDY DAY.

IT PUSHES THROUGH, LEAVING US

WITH A NICE THURSDAY MORNING

INTO THE AFTERNOON.

HE LOOKS LIKE HE CLOUD COVER IS

GOING TO RETURN.

RAIN CHANCES WILL STAY AT ZERO

OR 10%.

HERE COMES THAT CHANCE OF RAIN

FALL DEVELOPING.

THIS IS EARLY ON FRIDAY.

NOTICE UP HERE SOME WINTRY MIX

THROUGH PARTS OF TENNESSEE.

I GOT A NOTE ON FACEBOOK ABOUT

THE WINTER PRECIPITATION.

I DON'T THINK WE ARE GOING TO

SEE THAT DO HERE.

THE POSSIBILITY IS IF YOU ARE IN

CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI YOU MIGHT

SEE A LITTLE BIT OF THAT.

WE WILL CHECK BACK WITH THAT

AGAIN TOMORROW.

IF YOU'RE DOING SOME FISHING

THIS MORNING, THE TIDE IS NOT

TOO BAD.

ONE FOOT IS THE RANGE OF TIDE.

HERE IS A LOOK AT THE

TEMPERATURE AT THE AIRPORT RIGHT

NOW.

IT IS 60 DEGREES.

WE'VE GOT THE FOG WE ARE

EXPERIENCING THIS MORNING.

THE WIND IS BLOWING AT FIVE

MILES PER HOUR.

OR TEMPERATURES THIS AFTERNOON

LOW-TO-MID 70'S FOR THE MOST

PART.

THERE WILL BE SOME SIMILAR

NUMBERS ON THE NORTH SHORE.

EXPECT THOSE MILD CONDITIONS.

THIS IS A LOOK AT YOUR SEVEN-DAY

FORECAST.

TEMPERATURES ARE ON THE WAY

DOWN.

IT'S MUCH COOLER ON FRIDAY

AFTERNOON.

NOTICE THOSE MORNING LOWS,

ESPECIALLY THURSDAY AND FRIDAY

AND INTO THE WEEKEND.

28 DEGREES IS A POSSIBILITY ON

SUNDAY MORNING ON THE NORTH

SHORE.

For more infomation >> Tuesday: Foggy morning; partly cloudy afternoon - Duration: 3:57.

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#AbrahamHicks Best § Where you are vibrationally is everything § Daily #LawofAttraction Video Quotes - Duration: 13:51.

For more infomation >> #AbrahamHicks Best § Where you are vibrationally is everything § Daily #LawofAttraction Video Quotes - Duration: 13:51.

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Life hacks that will change your life || Simple Life Hacks & DIY Ideas 2017 - Duration: 5:01.

Life hacks that will change your life, Simple Life Hacks & DIY Ideas 2017,

For more infomation >> Life hacks that will change your life || Simple Life Hacks & DIY Ideas 2017 - Duration: 5:01.

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Bad Baby bloody tooth Tooth Fairy Prank Shasha And Shiloh Onyx Kids Creator Funny - Duration: 9:23.

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