Sunday, April 23, 2017

Youtube daily report Apr 23 2017

Hi. Привіт. (Ukrainian)

I am Oleg. I'm from Rivne, Ukraine.

I am Local Guide level 5, moderator Ukraine and Kyiv local guides communities.

I love Google maps and always use them when traveling.

I travel a lot around the my country.

Ukraine is a beatiful country with many interesting places that attract everyone.

Local guides help people to explore Ukraine

I like helping local businesses add information to Google maps

.- My photos have almost more than 20 million views.

I love sharing my expierence, I add photos, edit places, host Meet-Ups.

and get pleasure knowing that other users will be able to find information.

The most important reason to my attend this year's Local Guides Summit is that I want to present Ukraine and its active people.

Thank you! Привіт з України!

For more infomation >> Google Local Guides Summit 2017 - Application Video #lgsummit17 - Duration: 1:04.

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How to make a super beacon in Minecraft PE (command blocks) - Duration: 3:18.

For more infomation >> How to make a super beacon in Minecraft PE (command blocks) - Duration: 3:18.

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Why are farmers in India protesting with mice and human skulls? - Duration: 0:41.

Why are farmers in India protesting with mice and human skulls? https://youtu.be/ZMasW9uJgiM

Chinnagodangy Palanisamy says he will be forced to eat mice if the farm crisis doesn't end

The protesters said these skulls belonged to farmers who took their lives

Many protesters slashed their hands

More than 100 farmers from Tamil Nadu have protested in Delhi for some 40 days

Last week, Chinnagodangy Palanisamy, 65, held a live mouse between his teeth to draw the government's attention to the plight of farmers in his native state of Tamil Nadu.

"I and my fellow farmers were trying to convey the message that we will be forced to eat mice if things don't improve," he told me, sitting in a makeshift tent near Delhi's Jantar Mantar observatory, one of the areas of the Indian capital where protests are permitted.

The fire brigade rescued this protester who tried to take his own life

The tatty tent and the street outside have been home to Mr Palanisamy and his 100-odd fellow farmers for some 40 days now. They hail from drought-affected districts of the southern state of Tamil Nadu, one of India's most developed states. It appears to be a drought that India forgot, so Mr Palanisamy and his spirited co-protesters mounted a unique, eye-catching protest to put pressure on the government to act.

They are demanding ample drought relief funds, pensions for elderly farmers, a waiver of crop and farm loans, better prices for their crops and the interlinking of rivers to irrigate their lands. Wearing traditional sarong-like garments and turbans, these farmers have brandished human skulls that they claim belong to dead farmers.

They have held live mice in their mouths, shaved half their heads, worn women's traditional saris, slashed their hands and oozed "protest blood", rolled bare-bodied on boiling hot macadam, and conducted mock funerals.

The protesters have also eaten food off the road, and stripped near the prime minister's office in the heart of the city after they were reportedly refused a meeting. Fire-fighters rescued a protestor who tied a noose around his neck and tried to hang himself from a tree at the venue. Many of them have been taken to the hospital and treated for acute dehydration. Some complain that the famously inward-looking Delhi media have painted their protest as an exotic freak show, often missing the pain and desperation driving it.

One commentator wrote that the protest had taken on a "farcical proportion where the performance seems to have become the point of it, and the protest itself is lost".

In Tamil Nadu, where more than 40% of the people make a living from farming, lack of water due to poor rainfall, low crop prices, and dwindling access to formal credit has created what is possibly the state's worst agrarian crisis in decades. The jury is out on whether this protest will fetch results. India, after all, has seen many abortive uprisings. But this Delhi protest shines the spotlight on how drought, debt and dysfunctional policies continue to blight India's farmers: agriculture growth has shrunk to a worrying 1.2%, and tens of thousands of farmers are struggling with debt and little income.

There was a time not so long ago, recounts Mr Palanisamy, when his 4.5-acre farm in Tiruchirappalli would yield abundant rice, sugarcane, pulses and cotton. There was also a bountiful crop of fruit from his mango and coconut trees. Crippled by a debilitating drought brought on by years of poor rainfall, Mr Palanisamy's farm is now largely barren.

Two of his sons, who helped their father farm, have been forced to take up small jobs to keep the home fires burning. There's no money to pay his five workers. Loans worth 6,00,000 rupees ($9,287; £7,247) have piled up, and he's already pawned a lot of family gold as collateral.

This is the worst farm crisis I have seen in my lifetime," says Mr Palanisamy, a second generation farmer, whose lean and sinewy frame belies his age. "I have never lived through such a crisis." Many haven't. Fifty-eight debt-stricken farmers have taken their lives in drought-affected districts in Tamil Nadu since October, according to officials. A local farmers association insists the number of farm-related suicides and death of farmers is more than 250.

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For more infomation >> Why are farmers in India protesting with mice and human skulls? - Duration: 0:41.

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My girlfriend and I reveal our secrets 🙊 | Riley J. Dennis - Duration: 9:11.

Hey everybody! So I'm back in London with this one. And I thought I could just spend

a couple weeks hanging out with my girlfriend, and she was like, "No, we need to make a video,

blah blah blah YouTube." Okay, we don't have to film this video! I can leave!

I'm just teasing you, baby. Nooo!

Hahaha!

We're gonna tell each other things that we haven't told each other before.

Crazy!

And I couldn't think of any, so I had to like text my friends

and be like, "Can you remember stories of things that I've done that Fiona might not

know about?" So, I think I have some now.

We'll see. We'll see what this video's like.

You wanna go first?

Sure. Number one, we'll start you off light. In my home in Melbourne -- we had a One Direction shrine.

A shrine?

Yes. Like a full on --

Like a Hey Arnold like made out of chewed gum kind of thing?

We didn't have to use chewed gum cause we had an apartment cause we're adults.

Are you?

It was like part of like -- it was a huge shelf and it just had this like area.

Did you have like candles? Did you have like a One Direction seance?

Of course we had candles in there. We had candles in there. We had like all of our One

Direction merchandise. And we also had a calendar ritual where every month to change over the

-- we had a One Direction calendar obviously -- and to change over the month, we would

turn off all of the lights and we would light a candle and play whichever song had summed

up that last month, or maybe it was like whatever vibe we wanted to put into the next month

from One Direction -- play that song, and then go forward and just change the calendar.

That's so creepy!

We also had like a huge proper like big ass poster on the fridge, so whenever maintenance

came in they were like...

Cause, and also when Zayn left One Direction, we put a little cloth over the shrine.

Oh my god!

Just for like a few days.

Fly your flag at half mast?

Yeah.

What else you got?

You have to do one now!

Oh, we're like switching?

Yeah!

One time, I broke a person's jaw. Like, broke it.

I've broken like so many people's bones in water polo. It was like a thing -- I had to

make someone bleed every game.

That's fucked up, man. Mine was unintentional. I didn't want to do it.

Oh no, I had like a rule that I would make someone bleed every game in water polo. I

broke a girl's finger without getting caught. *Laughter* That wasn't even my turn! That was

just Riley's one.

I guess I'll tell the story, even thought it clearly doesn't matter because I'm dating

a violent water polo-er. I was just playing soccer, and I was like running because I was

a forward, and I had gotten like a through ball and the goalie was like coming out, and

the defender like pushed me right at the last second, and I like fell backwards, and my

elbow hit the goalie in the mouth, and it like -- his bottom teeth, it like knocked

them back into his mouth.

Oh wow.

So, yeah, it was really bad. I had like teeth marks on my elbow, and he was like sitting

there like bleeding out of his mouth, and I was like, "Oh god what did I do??" And then

afterwards, I heard that he had to get like root canals on all of those teeth, and then

he like missed the whole season and had his mouth like wired shut, and I felt so bad,

but also it was not my fault -- it was unintentional, and I was pushed.

Wow, exposed!

Okay, next. Your turn.

The way that I broke up with my high school boyfriend -- we'd been dating for just over

6 months. I had wanted to break up with him for a while cause I was just bored, but I

wanted to get to the 6 month mark. So I wanted to be able to be like, "Oh my god, I've been

in a relationship for 6 months." So, for 6 months -- cause, you know me, I'm very sentimental,

very romantic. And so for our 6 month anniversary, I took him out on this amazing date, I wrote

him this like 5 page letter about how much I love him.

To someone you were planning to break up with??? You're the worst!

And then I was like, "Okay, now I've done that." I waited a few weeks. And then Liam

and I -- Liam's my best friend from high school, shout out to Liam -- we were hanging out in

a park. I was like, "I really wanna dump James." And he was like, "Yeah, he was actually really

annoying in drama this week, so could you?" And I was like, "Yeah, fair." And so I called

him to try to break up with him, and he didn't pick up. And then we were like -- we wanted

to go get some water from the shops. So we walked on in, and then we passed him with

like all of his friends and we were like, "Great, okay." And we go over -- I'm like

hugging all his friends like, "Hey guys, like what's good?" And I was like 'Hey James? How're

you?" And then Liam had to go off with his friends while I took James to the side and

broke up with him, and Liam's sitting with all of them, and they're like, "Why, what's

happening? What's she doing?" Liam's like, "I don't know. I'm one of the bros now!" And

they're like, "You're Fi and Liam, like you know what's happening." And then I dumped

him and then he just went back. So yeah, that's how I dumped my high school boyfriend.

That's so stressful, that like stressed me out just to hear that. Alright, let's see

what else I got. Um, a Danish police officer broke my wrist.

I love how you clickbait your stories. *Laughter* Danish police officer broke my wrist! Go on, tell me.

But I haven't told you?

No, you haven't.

Oooh.

Um, I was studying abroad in Sweden, and we took like a weekend to go to Copenhagen, and

there was like this whole like festival thing going on and there was like a ton of people

out, and we were waiting in line to go into like a jail thing -- an old jail that they

were doing like tours of. And the police were out, and they had like riot gear stuff but

it wasn't cause there was like a riot, it's because they're like Danish police and they're

just like hanging out. Um, and they were like people use it. Like, they were letting kids

come out up and like hold the riot shields and batons and stuff, they're like goofing

around with it. Like totally not something that would happen in the US. And so one of

them came up to our group and he was like, "Hey, do you wanna try this stuff?" And I

was like, "Yeah I do!" And so I like grabbed the riot shield and he was like, "Okay, I'm

gonna kick it. And I was like, "Cooool!" So he like kicks the riot shield and it like

knocked me back, and I felt like a pain in my wrist, and I was like, "Oh, that wasn't

so bad. Do it again!" And he did it again, and it like almost knocked me back on my ass

-- like, I like caught myself. So I handed him back his shield and then like we went

on our way, and while we were touring the jail, I was like, "Wow, my wrist really hurts."

And like it just got worse and worse, and so when we got back to Sweden, I just like

popped into the nearest, like, hospital, and I was like, "Guys, can you check out my wrist?"

And they like -- there was nobody there -- they x-rayed it in like two seconds, got me a cast,

and I was good to go.

Once, I -- I have two broken bone stories that are similar to that. They're not secrets,

but I'm just gonna share them now. One is that when I was a child, I broke my thumb

going down the slide cause I was like climbing up and then someone went down it as I was

climbing up it, and I didn't wanna like stop playing at recess so I just didn't tell the

teacher, and then like ages later I was like -- I went to class and lunch was over, and

I went to her and I was like, "Whoops, I did this!" And another time, I was on -- we have

a thing in Australia called outward bound, it sounds fake, but basically when you're

about 14 or 15, they send you out bush for two weeks. It's a real thing! Um, and we did,

I think was when we were doing rock climbing -- I can see where we were. I think it was

rock climbing or abseiling -- I broke my wrist, and I just didn't tell the guy cause he was

really annoying -- I didn't wanna like have to talk to him. And then I just ended up snapping

my wrist back into place and it was fine -- it just hurt a bit more for the rest of the trip.

Euh, that's the so gross. When I was a teenager, like in middle school, um, I did, like, modeling.

Like was paid money to like model, and there's like professional photos of me like modeling.

Show me the photos!

No, no, nope! Nope! I'm not sure how many of them still exist. Like, I'm sure there

are a few on my computer, but like --

I'll find these online, you know I will.

They're definitely not online. They used to be on my MySpace -- they were all over my

MySpace when that was a thing.

Then they're online.

They don't exist on MySpace anymore. MySpace got rid of like old profiles. I remember having

to like download all the old photos off of it. So they probably exist somewhere on my computer --

Baby, please show me! Was it like very preppy as well?

Mhm. I was like very like preppy, sporty kinda. I had like the Justin Bieber like fwoosh hair.

See I told you you'd love this shit.

I love it.

I forgot that that had like happened until my friends were like, "Yeah, remember, you

modeled!" And I was like, "Euh, oh god, dark times."

That's so funny. My final one is -- you have to still be with me after this.

Oh god. Okay. That's not reassuring.

One sec. Maddie! So, for the last one, got my housemate Maddie here.

What's good?

And she's going to reveal to Riley my final secret.

Where am I hovering? Am I hovering in between you two? You know how everyone has one or

two special treats that they like to nibble upon? You know, not every day, but on the

occasions when you do ingest it, it brings you great joy, and you enjoy wholeheartedly, more

so than perhaps anything else that I've ever seen. Fiona here likes to concoct a delicate

mixture starting with chicken 2-minute noodles. So if you don't know what 2-minute noodles

are, they're like the instant ramen, like super noodles. So she gets the chicken packet,

she makes them as normal, chicken flavor in -- it's vegan, don't worry, stop crying -- then,

into that, we're gonna mix a little bit of ketchup and mayonnaise.

Mayonnaise? With chicken ramen?

Ketchup and mayonnaise, with the chicken flavoring. Chicken -- so you got ramen, chicken flavoring

powder, ketchup, and mayonnaise. She mixes it together, she smiles at the bowl, she takes it to her room.

Okay, I don't smile at the bowl!

Um, you definitely do. It's always like late at night when we're both like, you know what,

fine. And then like I make my 2-minute noodles, she makes her 2-minute noodles, I stop there,

she just keeps on going. Gloopy gloopy. Special sauce in your chicken ramen. Enjoy your relationship.

Why -- how did you even find that? What made you wanna be like, "Yes, these are good ingredients to put?"

They taste good!

It's just an instinct, you know. It looks repulsive, makes me feel physically sick, but I don't really need --

Have you tried it?

Obviously not. It looks worse than it sounds.

It sounds awful! Disgusting.

And that is my final secret.

Anyways, um, a little update about our London time -- we're gonna go to some English countryside

in the middle of nowhere this weekend --

Yeah! Cotswold Way!

And then next week, we're going to Malta, which I am really excited about. And before

this, I went to Lisbon, Portugal on my way here. Basically, I haven't been home this

entire month. I've been doing like one video a week in April because I've just been travelling

too much. But I'm gonna get back to two videos very soon. But yeah, that's it. We gotta go.

Uh, thank you so much for watching! I love you all, and I'll see you next time.

Do do doo doo. Do do doo doo doo doo doo.

Alright, let's go let's go let's go!

We legit really need to pack now. Bye!

For more infomation >> My girlfriend and I reveal our secrets 🙊 | Riley J. Dennis - Duration: 9:11.

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Scary YouTube Videos That Should Not Exist - Duration: 8:14.

Scary YouTube Videos That Should Not Exist

Each day, A lot of disturbing clips and images are captured around the world. Some of them

might never be fully explainable, while other's are theorized to have been staged in a poor

manor. Today, we want to take a look at 3 creepy videos on YouTube that should not exist.

In this video we are seeing the maid of Nurul Baker, who was checking her surveillance camera

one day, when she suddenly noticed her maid acting pretty strange. It appears, that she

had been possessed and was not able to control her own body anymore. What makes it even more

disturbing, is that the maid is also wearing a white nightgown besides pointing at things

in the room, that are not there. Nurul later reported, that her mum and kid's were not

home during the creepy events.

What do you think ? The creepy footage was recorded in Baker's apartment in Singapore.

After showing the video, her whole town apparently was freaking out.

The next clip was recorded late night in an old morgue in Brazil. Two guards are investigation

a strange banging sound, that seems to stem from the end of the hallway. After taking

a second look, a red door, underneath the flickering lights seem to be responsible for

the nightly disturbance. What is very disturbing, is that the banging

stopped as soon as the two men were further approaching the door. Could it have been a

disturbed spirit which just wanted to release it's anger ? Different sources claim that

this clip is real, while others say that is has been staged. Either way.. the video surely

is very haunting.

This next video shows artist Olivier de Sagazan. His creepy live performances are truly something

unique. While entering the stage a a normal person.. that transforms into a nightmarish

creature.

terrifying..no doubt about that.

Thank you guys for watching today's episode. Please leave a like and a subscription. If

you want to tell me your own creepy stories, please send me an email. Stay frosty!

For more infomation >> Scary YouTube Videos That Should Not Exist - Duration: 8:14.

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Previa A Todo Ritmo | Enganchado Bolichero ATR 2017 - Duration: 20:17.

For more infomation >> Previa A Todo Ritmo | Enganchado Bolichero ATR 2017 - Duration: 20:17.

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BEST GIRLS, BOYFRIEND, AND MORE! 【Q&A】 - Duration: 19:44.

Hey guys. It's me! This is my Q&A, I'm finally recording- I've been so excited all day to record this. and now I finally get the chance to do it!

So, uhm, quick things before I get started: Thank you so much for the support on Happy Party Train. I did not know it would be getting 3.5 thousand views in 3 days. That's... that's insane.

Like and it's gotten so much support... I, I just, I can't. I don't know how to put it in words. I'm REALLY horrible with words.

Thank you so much. Like that, that means so much to me.

Secondly, you can find my instagram, twitter, and snapchat all in the description or I'll likeput it in the video right now.

So let's get started on this Q&A. I haven't looked at any of these questions yet.

I've tried to make a Q&A before, but the problem was I kept accidentally looking at the questions

and I couldn't like commit to answering them honestly and like on the spot.

So I have the questions on my phone, and I'm just gonna be answering them!

[laughter] okay. So the first two questions I think are sent by the same person.

and it just says, "can you teach me how to sing ~Nya"

I wish, but I'm not a teacher, I'm a singer. I wish I could put like my input

But like it's not much that I can do. Sorry..

"How are you today!" I'm good! It's been a good day.

It's, uh, I went to school, went to theatre club, and... just had a good day in general.

"Where do you see yourself 10 years from now."

I hopefully want to be still doing YouTube...? Maybe 26 is a little old for YouTube, but like

Uh... I want to be working in some kind of voice acting industry,

Uh, but mostly doing audio engineering.

"What is your favorite flavor of ice cream? Do you have a dog? What's your opinion on Sweet Tea vs Non Sweet Tea?"

My favorite flavor of ice cream... [inhale/exhale] I'm one of those people- I can't decide on anything?

It would probably be between vanilla or chocolate, like, I can't, you can't tell me to like decide between the two of them because I can't.

I don't have a dog anymore, I used to, her name was Mochi, she was really really cute, but we had to... we couldn't keep her, basically

because she um... she bit. And yeah, which was sad but now I have 3 lovely cats, so.

and my opinion on sweet tea vs non sweet tea? I don't really drink tea. I kinda just drink water. Sorry, I can't really put my input on that.

"Do you like the animu? Coke or pepsi? Or RC Cola?

I mean, I have a channel that's dedicated to making songs from animes.

Um... I guess. I mean probably.

I despise Pepsi, Coke all the way. If you like Pepsi, I'm sorry, but you're disgusting.

I've never heard of RC Cola, so... uh, yeah. it's gonna- I'm gonna stick to coke.

"Yohane best groll ok ok."

Yohane's one of my best girls, yes, um, It's gotta be a tie between Kanan and Hanamaru as well.

So I can't, I can't decide between the 3 of them.

"What did you feel when you realized that you have 1.5K subs? did you expect this many people to come to your channel and hit the subscribe button? From a scale of 1-10, how intense was the emotion you felt when you saw that 1.5K people have subscribed to you?"

What did I feel? I was just like... 'Cus I don't check the amount of subscribers I have, I just kinda like- it's just something I see

It's not like "one more new subscriber today!!" It's not something like that, I just, go with the flow, and... like you know, I just kinda... "Oh, it happened!"

I remember me getting just a thousand subs- that was like a huge moment. I borderline cried.

And 1.5, I was kinda like "Oh my god, I already have 500 more subscribers?!" like, it just like, happened SO quick,

and I was just, I wasn't expecting it at all.

Between having a thousand subscribers and 1.5K, I was on a little bit of a hiatus from YouTube, and not doing anything,

so I wasn't really checking YouTube as much. So this just kinda came out of nowhere.

I was pretty shocked. Um... I've never expected this many people to like ever subscribe to me ever.

I... kinda just like made my YouTube channel out of the blue.

I, um... I made my YouTube channel because I used to do singing videos on instagram. They're not on my instagram anymore.

I still have like, some videos of it, I can like play a video right now.

and my friends were like, "here, you should make a YouTube channel!" and like, it just happened. I kinda just did it for my friends, I didn't even know it would get to this much, honestly.

"what's your favorite parts of being part of this community? also why are u like this -not faith"

Um... Thanks for the question, Faith.

My favorite part of being part of this community, is that it's super small. So that everyone kinda knows each other or has heard of each other.

like, everyone's super nice to each other, so there's no drama, it's just kinda like... Yes. We're stuck in idol hell. [laughing]

Why am I like this? I don't know. [chuckle]

"Did you take voice lessons?"

I still take voice lessons now, I've been doing it with this teacher for about a year now.

But I had taken voice lessons- on like various different times- hey, I got a notification!

"What was your favorite song to cover so far, and why did you enjoy covering it so much?"

My favorite song to cover so far... Off the top of my head: Moon Pride.

I just like- really enjoyed writing the lyrics for that song, it's all about like Girl Power so I'm just like, yeah! It was like really fun.

and yeah, I just like Sailor Moon. You can see the poster right up there. I enjoy the show, I haven't finished it. But I enjoy it. [guilty laughter]

"What sparked your interest in signing" Why is Umi your best girl when Nozomi is obviously superior? How'd you get into Love Live? What's your favorite UR?"

Wonder Girls! Wonder girls. I was trying to think of the name. They had this song called "Tell Me", it was like super popular at the time, and like that was my favorite song.

And like, they were like a pretty big inspiration. at that time, when I was like, that age.

Umi's not my best girl... She's actually like very low for me. But not because I dislike her at all,

I just like other girls so much more. Nozomi used to be my best girl for a very very long time, but now it's Kotori, with Eli as an extremely close 2nd.

Like every time I say Kotori is my best girl, I feel bad for Eli because I love her.

How'd you get into Love Live? Um, I think I saw people talking about it on Tumblr. And I'm like "I wanna jump on this!" 'cus like, why not, you know?

You know, cute girls singing.

My favorite UR... I don't know, I can throw in like a montage of my favorite URs of all time right here:

"What other anime do you like? What's your favorite song?"

Evangelion, Kill la Kill, and that's it. [laughter]

I mean, I don't really like anything else. Um, yeah. See the End of Evangelion poster right here.

I can't decide a favorite song! Um... I like way too many songs at once. But I feel like Snow Halation is like... nothing beats that one.

"What's your favorite place to eat out?"

Probably like... BJ's?

"Hey Seilin! I got some questions! #1, how did you become a part of the Love Live! Community? #2, you made it quite obvious who your favorites are, but what makes Umi your best Muse girl? #3, who is your favorite Seiyuu? Thanks."

I feel bad that Umi isn't my best girl! I just, I just have her in my thumbnails because at the time I sounded a lot like her when I started singing Love Live! covers?

Ow! I hurt my finger.

But now I sound more like a mix of like Maki and Umi, but mostly Maki, but yeah.

How did I become part of the Love Live! community. Um, I just kind of... I auditioned on this website called CastingCallClub which you should all check out!

Because if you want to be a voice actor... or if you're an aspiring voice actor, it's like a thing to go on.

And um... there's like fanmade projects, some are professional, honestly I haven't gone on it in a long time just because I'm busy, not because I don't like it, because it's a great website, you should definitely use it.

Um... But there's a lot of Love Live! related stuff on there, like, you know, english choruses, there's just a bunch of stuff.

And... a big part of the Love Live! cover community is on there, so your chances of like- excuse me- your chances of collaborating with them are very high.

Because like, because if you go on there and audition for their stuff, they'll see you.. and yeah.

Who's your favorite seiyuu... Um...

I really like Kussun, and Nanchan, and... uh.... Ucchi... and Emitsun. and Mimorin... And... Pile... and Soramaru. I love everyone of them. And Shikaco... and Rippi.

"Do you like the Dragon Main anime?"

I'm assuming this person meant to say Dragon Maid,

I watched a couple episodes, I haven't finished it yet, but it's pretty interesting.

I've heard like some bad things about it, which like made me kinda stay away from it, but I might finish watching it someday.

"Who it the brunette girl in the Q&A vid?"

That's Kotori Minami, she's a Love Live! character, and I love her. [giggle]

"Do you play LLSIF? If yes, for how long are and what rank are you?"

I do play LLSIF, I've played it, I think for a year...? Less than a year? 6 months, 8 months? I don't know. I'm Rank 88

"Do you play otome games? If so, what is your favorite?"

I don't really play otome games, the only otome game I've ever played was like parts of Clannad, which I didn't even finish, and Seduce Me the Otome

which is free on Steam, and it's the funniest game, you've ever played in your life. PLEASE. Please play it.

I watch lots of Let's Plays of otome games. I have a Mac, so a lot of the games I can't even, like, get. So yeah.

Oh, Hunie Pop! If that counts. I've put like at least 50 hours into Hunie Pop. It's really bad.

"What Aqours song is your favorite?"

Right now, it's Guilty Eyes Fever, yeah. I love guilty eyes fever, so much.

"I have only one question that I can possibly think to ask, Can I has a shout out? It was a joke, my real question is do you ever prepare your singing voice, and if so how? I'm talking like mi mi mi mi style preparing. Thank you for reading, have fun with your Q&A, -Charter Hold"

Yes, I do prepare. Not like Mi mi mi mi mi, I don't know. I do a lot of different kinds. Like it takes me a good 10 minutes to warmup.

"Will you marry me and by my Nico Nico waifu?"

Why not? [laughter]

"How can I be good like you" Aw, thank you!

"Is Faith x Kim real?" sure. [chuckle]

"Will you ever be holding your own cover group"

Uh, I want to, but I feel like I'd never be able to just because I have really bad leadership skills, and I'm just like not organized in general.

I would love to, it's just I'm a huge procrastinator, like it's not my thing that I can do.

It's something that other people can pull off much better than me.

"Do you like Nico?" Uh, yeah, I like Nico!

"Are pandas or penguins better?" Um... probably Pandas, sorry. [giggle] "Love you" I love you too! "Will you be my Maki in a NicoMaki ship?"

Uh, yes. Absolutely. [giggle]

"Who are your best girls in order?"

I don't remember, but I wrote it down somewhere, so here it is.

"What's your fave muse/aqours/vocaloid song?"

Ah, my favorite vocaloid song? ODDS&ENDS. ODDS&ENDS will always be my favorite. like, it's a great song.

"Why are you so amazing, you're my favorite cover artist." Aw, thank you!!

"I'm the one who has danced to your covers on Instagram, I love you so much, keep making great music" I know who you are!! I know!! I love you...! {follow her !! @spamhinata}

"What was the first anime that you watched?"

Tokyo Mew Mew, I grew up in Korea, and I watched the Korean dub of it. And that was my first anime.

It's like a magical girl anime, and they turn into like specific animal things, it's hard to explain the plot, even though it's super simple, I'm just really bad at explaining things.

"If you could be any character from any anime who would it be?"

Um, any character that's like intensely rich.

"What mic do you use?" I'll put it right here:

"Can I be your friend?" Of course!

Just like, hit me up. Talk to me on Social Media, I'm super responsive.

"When was the first time you truly fell in love and who was it with? Are you in a relationship? If not, will you go on a date with me? How many pets do you have? What is your favorite kind of flower and candy?"

The first time I fell in love, is the relationship I'm in right now. I'm dating someone, his name is Dawson... and he listens to heavy metal and has really long hair. That's us.

Um. Yeah. I love him a lot.

My favorite kind of flower? Is there any blue flowers? I love blue, and I think blue is a good color on flowers. Whatever blue flower exists, is my favorite flower.

Candy? Um... Probably like, Jolly Ranchers. Jolly Ranchers are great.

"How are you so beautiful?" [at a loss for words] "are you planning on-" Thank you.. "Are you planning on doing any metal vocal covers?"

"What is your ideal night out alone with your lover?"

So I know who sent this, this is Dawson who sent this.

Not planning on doing any metal vocal covers... But yeah. My ideal night out alone with my lover which is to be, I don't know. Literally anywhere.

Spending time with you. That's my ideal night.

I love you, Dawson.

"Isn't it better to have morezomi than Nozomi? Like. Wth man." I agree.

"What's your favorite song to sing (not just hell live)? What are your aspirations in life? Do you want to have a singing career?"

I can't decide a favorite song- any question that says favorite song, I can't answer it.

Do I want to have a singing career? I mean, I want to be doing YouTube. If that counts as a singing career more than it does a YouTube career, I don't know.

I want to be doing YouTube, but not necessarily going out and becoming a singer.

"Nico Nico?"

Yes. [laughter]

"How old are you?" I'm sixteen.

[laughing] This just says "Bees?"

Um... Sure. Yes.

"Can you give me your friend ID?"

I'm pretty sure I have all the spaces used up, I'm sorry.

"How do you record the voice and put it into the song?"

You have to have some kind of software. There's a lot of softwares out there- audacity's free, I don't use that one. I use Logic Pro X.

You just have to combine all the tracks together, and tune it, do all these effects and all that.

"I am love u ur amazing? I wish I was ur Nico."

Aww, thank you!!

"How has Love Live impacted your life?"

I think about Love Live! constantly, like it's an unhealthy amount. I've also spent a lot of money on it, I've got all these figurines. And... that was expensive.

"How long have you been singing?"

I've been singing... on and off but like since I was like six.

"Will you ever do a face reveal?" Never.

"Do you plan on making more casting calls for more future collabs?" Yes, of course.

I'm definitely going to continue to use CCC, I'm working on one right now, and it's for a Love Live! cover. You should check it out, it's in the description.

"If you were to have anime character as your yandere stalker, who would it be and why?"

There's not a lot of yandere characters, so can I just choose any character and have them be a yandere stalker?

I would love for Nico to stalk me, just saying.

"Do you like muse or Aqours songs more?" I'm gonna have to go with Muse.

I love some Aqours songs, but Muse is just better in my opinion.

"ChikaRiko or Chikayou?" Uh... ChikaRiko I guess.

"Do you wanna build a snowman?" Sure, it's April though. I don't think theres gonna be snow anywhere?

'cus I live in a very hot part of California. And there's never gonna be any snow here.

"Will you marry me?" Yes.

"Do you learn songs with scores and stuff or listening by ear or both?"

Um, I can't read music. I just listen by ear.

"Favorite snack?" Hot Cheetos. The one with the lime in them. That's the best one. You can't top that one.

"On a scale of Sentimental StepS to Soldier game, how good are you at LLSIF?"

I'm like a solid Bokura wa ima no naka de.

just like kind of in the middle.

"Night or day?" Uh, day. Just because you can do more stuff. You can't do anything in the night. Everything is closed at that time.

"Do you play any instruments?" I play piano. And I haven't played in 2 years, but I can still play.

"If you could only sing covers from one kind of group, what would it be? By group I mean vocaloid or anime covers."

I'd probably just stick to anime covers in general, just because I'm more into anime than I am into vocaloid.

"Are almonds the only clue to solving hidden mysteries?" Probably?? I don't understand the question.

"Is Hestia Bestia?" I've never seen that show.

Do I like Celery? No. I hate celery.

"Which non-Japanese artists/bands do you like?"

I like a lot of different people, I like Rihanna, Marina and the Diamonds a little bit. I like Ariana Grande, yeah.

And I think that's it. Yeah.

That was all the questions! Thank you, thank you so much for asking them.

This was very fun, I'm glad I finally got to look at all these questions. If you're still here, and watching the video, thank you for sticking around.

Bye!! [giggle]

For more infomation >> BEST GIRLS, BOYFRIEND, AND MORE! 【Q&A】 - Duration: 19:44.

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NextDrive Plug | Jak to funguje? - Duration: 1:50.

For more infomation >> NextDrive Plug | Jak to funguje? - Duration: 1:50.

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Colin Wright interview / rozhovor o minimalismu a cestování - Duration: 37:25.

Here we have him, one of the best known minimalists, full-time traveller, author, entrepreneur,

amazing person, Colin Wright. Let's ask him some questions about his unconventional

life.

Hey Colin. The first question is: "What's your schedule like on a common day and is

it different from that of other people."

Yeah, probably, I, honestly, I don't really have a typical schedule, it changes a little

bit everyday based on where I am at and so as a result I've got like little habits

things I'll try to do everyday. But it really adjusts, sometimes completely, sometimes I

don't do any of these things, each and every day based on where I am at, what I am up to,

who's around, what I'm trying to accomplish. I try to workout a bit every day, I try to

eat pretty well, I try to, I take a lot of walks, I try to write every day. Usually I

have anywhere between fifty and couple hundred emails to answer so I take the time to do

that and and whatever else is interesting to me at the time. I try to read a whole lots

both on the internet and books, I read like a crazy person, so I take a lot time to do

that. So in that way the fact that I have such immense flexibility, I think it's the

main differentiating factor between my day and most people's day. A lot of my friends,

they'll go to work during the day or have set hours of some kind. I don't have any

set hours and so as a result I'm always working and not working. If you have an entrepreneur

in your life you know what I'm talking about. Where on one hand it seems like "oh, no

work hours, it's got to be vacation," but on the other hand what it really means

is that they're kind of working all the time and that's where I'm at to, where've

got, I'm very fortunate to do for a living things that I love, so I am doing that stuff

all the time anyway it just also happens to be attached to the work that I do full time

to make my living. So lot of my day revolves around that revolves around traveling to different

places and doing that same non-standard day to day schedule.

And do you have something like habitual intro you live by every time you move to a new country.

No, kind of like I said on the last question. I don't have any particular schedule. I

usually fall into some habits depending on where I'm living in a giving country. So in

Prague, which is the last place overseas that I was living, I had a very different working,

writing, walking, eating routine than most places. It was very very easy to go to nice

restaurants, which were just right next to my apartment essentially. So my habits usually

involved like a long walk in the morning followed by lunch, then going home and writing for

four or five hours and going up finding something to eat and little coffee sit downs mixed in.

Whereas when I was living in Kolkata in India, there's not the same coffee culture or restaurant

culture and walking can be kind of trial in certain circumstances because I was outside

the center of town. So my habits as a result were very very different. So it changes pretty

dramatically each and every place but, I sort of achieve the same objectives each time to

allow me to do the things that I enjoy, take care of the things that everybody has to take

care of like eating and then also working on the things that I care about.

I suppose every time you move to a new country you try to find friends there. Do you have

any verified way on how to make new friendships simply.

Yeah, I mean, two main things. One is to not be afraid of looking like an idiot, which

is difficult to get passed in lot of cases because we tend to as humans be just like

terrified, abjectly terrified of looking foolish. Some people are more afraid of looking foolish

than dying or being put in situation that's incredibly dangerous. Typically if you willing

to talk to people you're halfway there and then the other half is just the other thing

that I would recommend is be a nice person, don't be a jerk, don't be an opportunist,

don't be the type of person that looks at other people as resources or as a means to

an end or somebody that will get you something. Yeah be nice, be a decent person, be friendly,

be helpful, give before you try to get, that type of thing. If you're willing to do that

if you're willing to be able to reach out the people and be the type of person they

want to have around you'll never have any trouble making friends and establishing relationships.

So just focus on that if you don't have that already, go open talk to some strangers

and be nice and see what you can do for them and, you know, be good to your existing relationships

too and you've got everything you need.

How do you prepare before you move to another country?

Very little, actually. I try not to prepare. I like arriving in a place and not knowing

much at all. I really like being surprised. So I actually, my routine for this is that

I'll start cruising the internet to for cheap tickets to see how I can get there at lowest

cost possible and then I kind of know of what that point how far in advance I'm preparing.

Sometimes it's just week, sometimes its couple of weeks I usually adjust based on

prices and then within that timeframe I start to do just the most the tiniest bit of research.

Usually it's only reading the Wikipedia article of a given place just enough so that

I know kind of which city in a country I want to go to. Because my readers determine which

country I'll be moving to I decide on the city so I read the Wikipedia entry. I can

usually get a pretty good idea of which city I want to live in based on that information

along with dominant language spoken, what religion people tend to be, if any, and bit

about a history. Enough so that I can go and not offend people right away pretty much and

then I like to learn rest on the ground. So my research really is kept to minimum because

to me learning from people actually in the country is both part of the adventure and

the best part or the best way to get information that is not biased based on what your government

or media or whoever is trying to tell you about that place.

And now, tell us which countries You have visited yet.

Oh gosh. The list is getting fairly substantial. It's been 35 or 40 countries and I don't

think I can list them all. A lot of that places that I've lived I started with let's see

with an Argentina, New Zealand, Thailand, Iceland, India, Romania, feel like I'm missing

a couple countries here, Czech Republic. There's been a whole lot and in between I tend to

do road trips, overland trips, so you do by train or by bus or whatever. If you like the

rest of the continent. When I was living in Argentina I travelled all of South America.

In between I'll often come back and travel North America so the United States and Canada

in particular to just see more of my home country, my home continent as well, cause

there's so much here to see, and I've done all, I've done 48 of up to 50 states

here and in a lot of ways each of them is kind of like different micro-country. So they've

been very much worth my time to visit as well.

You mentioned Czech Republic. Because I live there, show me this country through your eyes

please.

To me, Czech Republic, which was my last home country away from the United States, was,

it was really wonderful. Like there is something very interesting to me about Central Europe,

or Eastern Europe depending on, you know, what you call it. Those kind of former Soviet

satellite states are really remarkable, because they have such a recent history in terms of

upheaval and rebirth. And so there is like these really rich deep histories and then

like couple cutting of points where those histories were shattered or broken or rebuilt

in some different way. And so as a result you get this strange combination of architectural

types and food and arts and attitudes about the world and about people. Which I really

find inspiring, like it's really cool, full of amazing people, like most places where

I've been but I'm still shocked sometimes about how friendly people are even when culturally

maybe there's a coldness compared to what I'm accustomed to, coming from the US. Really

really great. And in terms of cost of living to quality of life, the ratio was very friendly,

especially if you're spending in US dollars, it was great. You can get really really good

meal for about half of what you would get in the city that size in the United States.

So for me in terms of lifestyle it was great. It wasn't particularly challenging in any

way that there weren't a lot of cultural mores or folkways that were strange to me

in the way that like living in India. So many things there was so unfamiliar it took me

a while to get a grasp on it. In Czech Republic people are pretty metropolitan, people love

travel or they know people from all over the world so it wasn't isolated in the same

way that lot of other places that I've been where. So just a very very pleasant, very

beautiful, very culturally rich place.

Nice. Could You share some exciting or funny moments from your journeys with us.

Oh gosh, yeah this is kind of like listing countries where, I can go on and on at length

and often do, but let see. You know, there's been a couple times when I've been in very

uncomfortable situations. One of these times was very early on in my travels I decided

to take a bus from Argentina to Peru. And the Argentine bus companies are really wonderful.

They're like super high quality very very cheap and what you get for the money is amazing.

And I checked it out and to take a bus trip from Buenos Aires, Argentina to Lima, Peru

was like three days so as about 72 hours. And the cost of ticket was nothing and I've

been on these buses before and they were really lovely so I was kind of thinking "Ok, not

a bad way to spend three days on these very high-end buses with great food, very comfortable

seats, Wi-Fi and outlets." I can sit and I can write and it just seem like really great

way to spend my time. So I got a ticket and it turns out that this is the one time I ended

up with a company, a bus company, that was not Argentine and it was, I think it was Peruvian

country, a Peruvian company. So the bus standards where significantly less. Rather than nice

great big leather seats and Wi-Fi and even like games of bingo and stuff that they put

on while you're traveling. I was essentially sitting in a bus full of chickens and goats.

A lot of the windows didn't open or some didn't close. Full of these big fat flies

that were buzzing around you the entire time. The bathroom was broken, the driver was drunk,

there was a spare driver kept underneath sleeping on our luggage, that was also drunk. And we

were driving just weaving our way up these massive mountains with the roads were tiny.

I felt for sure several times we're going fall off especially when they're driving

on these roads in the middle of the night and especially because these drivers were

drunk. But we made it. We survived. It was just one of the most trying three days of

my entire life. It was so bad. It was funny. It was hilarious the entire time. Every time

something would escalate and get worse I would just laugh my ass off. And that's really

all you can do at some points, is just to look at the bad things and say "My god,

this is so uncomfortable now, but it's going to be a great story later." Like that's

how you travel, that's the attitude you have to have I think because travel above

all else is typically uncomfortable and imperfect. And if you can embraced that then you're

really going to enjoy it, but if you can't you're going to be in trouble.

Back to the beginning. How did you get into the minimalist lifestyle. Have you ever heard

about it before or did you just start to live it because it had worked for you?

It's a strange, little bit of both. So, wait to this truck to pass…enough that's

coming through the speaker. For me it was little bit of both. For about six years ago,

when I started my blog I hadn't heard of it and I just decided basically to reduce

my number of possessions down to what I could fit into carry-on luggage. Because it seemed

practical, it seemed to make sense and it didn't make sense to put a bunch of like

computer equipment and clothing away in storage because when I got back the clothing might

not fit or be radically out of style or and the computers will be definitely be too old

to be useful. So I sold all the stuff, gave away the stuff I couldn't sell and yeah

just had very very few things. I didn't realize how few things until later. Then I

started writing about this and how this was very liberating feeling and how it would have

freed me up to focus on these other things that I really cared about. And yeah I mean

people started telling me "Wow that's so cool you are a minimalist," and I said

"Yeaah, yeah, ok I'm a minimalist," and I started to call myself minimalist and

as I progressed since started writing about it more and then I'm like "Ok, yes, this

really is a philosophy, this philosophy of focusing on the important stuff and removing

the unimportant stuff from your life so that you have more of your time, energy and resources

to spend on the important stuff. At the time, at the beginning it was just a practical thing,

then I haven't really thought it trough. And it took me about year probably to really

fully flash out my personal brand of minimalism and my philosophy about it. And there's

lot of, you know, deviations from it, different people consider the title to main different

things or whatever. I don't think there is a right or wrong way to do it, but for

me it was it was kind of a stumbled upon practical thing that then turned into a core philosophy.

Did you eliminate your things in like one day or was it a longer process?

It was a long process. For me it was not a one day get rid of everything, for me it was

about four months worth of trying to get rid of all the shit I had. And I had a lot of

stuff just this great big walk in closet full of clothing and like eight computers and all

this furniture and all this …. that you accumulate when you are making a lot of money

and feel like you need to spend it to be happy. And that's the point of where I was at when

I was living in Los Angeles as that I was trying to spend money in order to make myself

happy rather than making myself happy and allowing that to determine what I spend money

on. So it took a while. We had a completely separate rooms set up actually in my townhouse

just that I called garage sale room. Full of stuff that I needed to get rid of and we

would have people over which just say "Hey dude, do you want anything in the garage sale

room cause it's just taking us forever get rid of it" and down to the last day that

I was in LA, right before I left town, I still had stuff I hadn't got rid off. So I just

I took it into the Goodwill and gave it to them, donated it, got a tax deduction, which

is I guess the best you can hope for in some points and left the country. So it's a process.

In most cases you not gonna be able to do it in one day I think. And less you already

have a you know kind of small number of possessions already.

Have You ever though about how long you will live this way?

Yeah, often, actually. I check in with myself probably every three or four months just to

make sure I'm still doing the right thing. Right thing in this case being not absolute

but for me, for what I want right now. And so far the answers always been yes, but I

even I kind of test myself and I look at real estate, I look at apartments, I look at you

know computers and gadgets and things, the clothing that I could be buying if I didn't

have to worry about just fitting everything into one bag. And it doesn't tempt me, it

doesn't tempt me away, non any significant way, away from what I'm doing and even tho

there are aspects of that life I miss - having more substantial wardrobe and you know having

the freedom to get certain furniture and have a space that I can have consistently. That's

appealing in some way, but it wouldn't be worth the trade off. Not to give up the freedom

that I have. So I do consider to continue to test myself tho, so there, maybe one day

that I'll be like "Ok, yeah, now it's worth it. Now it's time to stop this and

go to something else," but not so far. As of now this is still the ultimate lifestyle

for what I want to get out of life.

Do you remember any situations when you were telling yourself I want to stay and live here

for the rest of my life or on the other side I want to move back home, now.

Yeah, you know, honestly in every single place that I've lived at some point I've said

"I could live here. Do I want to live here? Should I live here?" And I've kind of

consider that and really allowed myself to go completely down that mental path. And every

time so far, like I said with the possessions, every time so far it hasn't been worth the

trade off and no matter how amazing that place has been, and I've been fortunate to live

in some amazing places, it has not been worth what I would be giving up. Which is that freedom

of movement and that freedom of essentially being able to call the world my home. And

as a result then I don't really have a home to feel sick for. If I did have a space somewhere

an apartment or something that I kept and I had my desk and my furniture and my clothing

and such that I left there then I might get homesick for something because I would then

be comparing every place that I go to that place. As it is I don't have place like

that and so I have no means comparison. And so I attend to double down more and focus

more on wherever I happened to be and making that my home. Rather than trying to compare

to some far of place. So to me that works much better for what I want that works much

better and that allows me then not to get homesick because I'm always home. I just have

a lot of them.

What inspired you or made you live this way.

Aah, couple things. I've always wanted to travel. And that was the dream that I've had

for quite while actually because of what it represented to me. I'm somebody that needs

to know things, I love learning and trying new things and having new experiences and

seeing new perspectives like flashing out the mental map of all the knowledge that there

is to have on the world. And as a result I've always been a big reader and a talker. Asking

people questions, but seeking out knowledge and information wherever I can find it. And

it became apparent to me, I think at high school, that books, you can get a lot from

books and you can get a lot from the internet and things like that, but there's some things

that even know you could describe them to someone else or give the data to somebody

else. Some things are best experienced or only experienced through being there, through

being on the ground, going and doing and feeling and you get this perspective that you can't

really attain through somebody else's eyes. So I knew I wanted to do it I kept putting

it off because I was running businesses and stuff since I was 19 so I always had other

more important things to worry about. And it was when I was 24, it took that long for

me to find my saying "You know, enough is enough. I need to go travel now while I'm

young, so that if I make some big stupid mistakes I can still bounce back from it. Not that

you can't when you're older, you know I can be 60 still going out and having fun

and making amazing mistakes, but it's easier I think when you are younger to do it and

more socially acceptable on a lot of ways. It's just, it's kind of a bias towards

being able to do silly foolish things and have it be considered ok. It looks weirder

if you're older. So I wanted to do it when it was probably more expected and people would

forgive me rather than shaking their heads and you know writing me off.

Let's travel in time a little bit. What did you want to be when you were young? And

how has it changed as you've grown up? What changed your mind?

I've wanted to be all kinds of things. When I was a kid I wanted to be a comic book artist

like an illustrator for comic books, very very into comic books. And then kind of a

fine artist as well like a painter and illustrator of all different sorts. Journalist when I

was in high school and college in particular ,which I really appreciate journalism and

writing. And there was a point when I was really into math and I kind of wanted to be

a chaos theorist or somebody in high theory side of math, very very different now. And

I don't know today what I do is a combination kind of a amalgamation of all of these things

were I really wanted to do creative work, I love writing, I love visual work, I love

art and design, I like communicating and telling stories and sharing information and that's

kind of what I get to do today. So even tho I'm not doing it the way I would have maybe

predicted as a kid I'm certainly doing these things. I'm just doing it as kind of this

working in profession that's very hard to describe. I'm an author, that's how I make

the majority of my money, but I do a bunch of other things as well either for fun or

for profit. And as a result I don't feel like I'm missing out on any of these things.

So kind of waving back through time at my childhood self and I'm hoping you would be

proud because I'm getting to do those things even if maybe you know I'm not making comic

books. But maybe I will, I don't know. I have the option that's the nice thing.

Could you share with us some lessons from your life? And do you live by any motto?

So my motto is actually kind of one of these lessons. It's you have exactly one life

and no more than that in which you do everything you'll ever do and as a result you should

probably take that into consideration with every decision that you make. For me this

is what kind of jolted me back to reality and made me realize that putting of traveling

was not something I can just doing definitely. And if I put it off in my twenties, if I put

it off whenever. You know, I first thought about it as like a real reality, something

that I needed to get on and start doing soon, than I'd just put it off forever and I wouldn't

have second chance it's not like I can go back and try my twenties over again. So yeah

that's something that I taken to account with every single thing I do and it was a

lesson that was kind of put together, cabled together from different things that I'd read

and different things that I'd seen and just kind of thinking about it and realizing "Holy

hell, I'm acting as if I have my entire life to sacrifice and then to live later. As if

I'm going to do the work I don't want to do up in till I'm 50 and then retire, or 60

now I think, and then retire and then live," but that is, if I'm lucky, anything after

that retirement age is like the latter half of my life. And chances are statistically

it's only couple decades still in most places of the world and you're not in top health

and you're not enough young to make these stupid decisions socially in socially acceptable

way. So to me it just completely do not make sense to sacrifice any of this time that I

had. And even if I failed even if I pushed in direction of something that I really really

wanted and was passionate about and failed that still would be time better spend than

being very comfortable doing something that I don't enjoy and I don't believe in.

So that's probably the biggest most core essential argument that I've learned and the

motto that I live by. I would also say that the minimalist philosophy, the idea of "oh

there's a cat behind me," the minimalist idea of focusing on the things that really

matter and then issuing getting rid of the stuff that doesn't matter that's incredibly

valuable. And it's amazing how much time and energy and money and other resources you

actually have when you're not spending them on stupid stuff or on things that you told

you suppose to want but which don't actually make you happy. And just that lesson alone

actually freed up so much time that like I'm able to do everything that I want to do and

still have so much free time. It's absolutely ridiculous and I get to be crazy productive

at doing the stuff because I love it I throw myself into it. But at the same time I've

got plenty of extra to play with and try other things and new things and to contribute my

time to other people if I want to. And to just waste time. Doing nothing at all. Just

relaxing, getting plenty of sleep, eating well, exercising. Focusing on that, focusing

on how you apply these resources is very very good investment and kind of allows you then

to figure out lot of other important things, that may not align with what I think. What's

important to you won't necessary be important to me and vice-versa, but if you free up that

time then you're able to find what is important to you and become the best possible version

of you possible.

Is there anything you could say this lifestyle gave you.

Yeah, everything. It gave me my time, it gave me my resources, it gave me a perspective

in which, what's important and what I believe in and what I like doing and what I'm passionate

about or actually important. And not just "oh maybe someday dreamy sort of life,"

but like actually core to everything that I do. Being able to say for example that I

won't work with assholes. I do not do business with people I think are jerks. And being able

to say that is a result of this lifestyle of being free enough to be able to make decisions

that I believe in ethically and morally and philosophically rather than struggling and

having to make decisions like on a survival basis. Having to make decisions and saying

well I have to do business with these people otherwise I won't survive. The fact that

I can survive on so little allows me to make those decisions and the fact that I know exactly

what to spend what I have on allows me to make those decisions so that's been a huge

thing that I've gotten from this lifestyle.

Could you share with us some of your most life-changing moments and is there anything

you could send as a message to young people based on those experiences?

Yeah, not one specific moment, but I will tell you that every place I've gone in the

world people have been wonderful. And not just like "oh yeah, people are so friendly"

and not like "oh what tourism industry, they're trying to sell you something so

they're friendly." I don't live in a touristy part of town, I live with locals,

I go to the grocery store, I eat what they eat, I listen to music that they listen to,

I hang out where they hang out. People are generally good. Everywhere you're on the

world. 99.99999 percent of people are awesome. And they will go out of their way to make

sure that you have a good time and to make sure that you are safe and to make sure that

you have nothing but good memories of their home and their culture. There is very incredibly

small percentage of people who are jerks out there. And they'll be the memorable ones,

so if you encounter one you'll remember them, but they're not a good representation

of that culture or that country. So remember that don't be afraid of other people and

other cultures. I mean be careful, don't put your wallet in your back pockets so that

people can pick it. Don't get drunk and go wander around town cause then you're

being a jerk but you're also making yourself an easy target for the people who are pickpockets

and such. But in general be less afraid. Be less concerned because we're all people

and everybody is just, we are all people who happened to be born in different places, have

to be happened to have grown up under different cultures and lifestyles and religions and

whatever, but at core we are all people and treat each other as such. Like if somebody

comes to your town you're not gonna let them get victimized and it's the same overseas.

These people are not aliens, they're not any different than you, so go interact, you

know, learn what they have to share and share what you have with them as well and be amazed.

That's something that I would give advice to anybody at any age, but young people in

particular because there's still a lot of time to grow and learn and earlier you learn….go

start encountering these other ideas and perspectives the more value you'll get from them.

Has your way of thinking changed along with your lifestyle transformation and how?

Yeah, It's opened up broadly. I no longer think that anything is impossible. I'm pretty

damn sure actually that everything is possible. I have massive amount of faith in humanity.

The things that I've seen and encountered and experienced has reaffirmed this believe

that I have that humanity's good and we're capable of anything and that's. You know,

there's very small group of people who are, who ruined that in a lot of ways. You know,

typically people in power or, you know, politicians and stuff like that. There's lot of people

who get into positions of power who are not the best people in the world. But typically

people around the world are wonderful and typically the solutions to all of our problems

I think are out there. Especially if you work together. So that's I kind of felt that

way before but it's been very much confirmed by traveling and just seen what's out there

and different ideas and having my mind blown many times by the perspectives of other people

had to offer.

It is known that you have about fifty things, could you tell us briefly what's in your

backpack and pockets now?

Yeah, it's funny, I had fifty things probably three or four years ago and that's still

like one of the more popular posts I think at my blog, but I don't actually know how

many things I have anymore. I tend not to count because I feel that it gives false impression

that to be a minimalist you have to own very few things and that's not the case. You

can own a lot of things as long as the things that you own bring you joy and they're things

that you're passionate about. That's exactly what you should own. That's what possessions

are for and there's nothing wrong with consumption, just compulsory consumption, feeling like

you have to own something, there's something wrong with that. But buying things that bring

you joy that's wonderful. and for me I travel so I own very few things because owning more

would prevent me from pursuing the thing that makes me happiest, which is travel. So not

everybody should own fifty things. Not everybody should own a hundred things. Not everybody

should own two hundred things. Like the level of, the lower number of possessions will not

make you happier. It will only make you happier if that aligns with what you trying to do

with your life. So let's know that first. That being said what I do I own I have two

bags actually, kind of a more of a split duffle bag where I carry some clothing. And then

like a laptop bag where I carry my laptop and some charging cables and some notebooks

and some pants and what a spare battery, hard drive, little point and shoot camera. And

in my pockets I've got like wallet that has a notebook and little pen attached to it and

a smartphone. That mean, that's kind of it, there's not a lot of gadgetry going

on. I find usually the simpler you travel the better of you are and the most prepared

you are for the things you actually need and use. I don't use a lot of tricky travel

gear or anything. Every once in while I'll come across something that seems really cool

and maybe I'll use it for a bit but in a lot of cases, I just, a lot of this stuff is available.

So if I need something I can buy it wherever I end up. And it's much better to safe my

money and then just buy stuff as I needed rather than, you know, filling up my bag that

I have to carry with a bunch of excess stuff.

I've read on your blog that you worked as a designer and now you are publishing and

writing books. For whom are your books and what can we find in them?

My books are for everybody, I like to think. I've written a bunch of books now, like

thirty books or something like that. And most of the newer ones are fiction, but I've written

in the past about travel, about business, about like relationships and networking. I

have written about a curation online. I've written about philosophy a couple books on

philosophy - Act Accordingly and Considerations. And then I've written a whole lot of short

story collections of various types of fiction. A couple science-fiction series as well and

couple kind of just generic fiction, literally fiction I guess you'd call it, types of

books. So I'm just I'm writing all the time and I really I write about whatever is interesting

to me at the time. And if I come up with an idea like "Oh i wish that book existed,"

then I'll just all write it. With a non-fiction I write about things that I feel. I have some

expertise in. Something that I either do for living or have education in or just have the

opportunity to explore quite a bit and write on quite a bit. And then I'll write a book

about it eventually once I feel I've reached the point where I have something valuable

to say. Something that I would feel comfortable charging people for. And even up until that

point I'll just write about it for free online, on my blog and in my newsletter and such.

Yeah and then the fiction's kind of the same way where I have these ideas or come

up with these concepts, hear about new technology or come up with an interesting plot point

and then I'll write about it. And I'll flash out the story try to make it as entertaining

and interesting as possible. Try to fit in couple mind bending type of things so that

people actually walk away feeling that they learned something in addition to having been

entertained. And then I publish. And thankfully I work with some wonderful people and have

a wonderful infrastructure now through which to publish so this part of process has become

much easier.

And final questions - how did you meet The Minimalists.

Oh, so Josh and Ryan have been friends of mine for a long time. They contacted me a

long time ago, many years ago. And they were reading my blog and we're starting to minimize

their lifestyles and we're doing that. I killed a job with it and I ended up meeting

with Josh and we stayed in touch after that point. And they ended up starting a blog and

really kicking butt with it and introducing a whole new point of view within a minimalism

space. And yeah we kept in touch and helped support each other long away. And then eventually

decided with Asymmetrical press to go on business together because we've had very similar

ideas about business, about publishing, about not doing business with assholes and about,

just kind of what were we thought things are going. The type of business that we'd like

to do and we're had very complementary skill sets. So very very happy to be working with

those guys because Josh and Ryan and everybody else who's involved with Asymmetrical actually,

they're just amazing people and they do amazing work and it's very very humbling

to surround yourself with people like that.

Thank You very very much Colin, I'm glad you made some time for us. Your life stories

are amazing and I'm sure people will find them inspiring. Enjoy your travels and once

again thanks. And is there anything You'd like to say to close this interview?

So again my name is Colin Wright, you know, thank's for the interview questions and

happy to record the answers. Hopefully there's some value in there. If you want to see more

of my work you can go to exilelifestyle.com or colin.io where my books are. And then I'm

on twitter and Instagram and a lot of other places under the handle colinismyname, so

feel free to reach out to me on any of those and say "Howdy". Thank you so much.

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