Thursday, June 21, 2018

Youtube daily report Jun 21 2018

[ ♪ Intro ]

Conventional wisdom says we're supposed to get 8 hours of sleep a night.

Fewer of us actually do, with the CDC reporting that a third of American adults snooze for

less than 7.

Now, the current consensus from sleep researchers is that we need to sleep for long enough,

continuously enough, and deeply enough to receive the proper benefits of sleep.

And that's a long list of benefits… like top cognitive performance, proper storage

of memories, or avoiding health problems like high blood pressure and obesity.

We need sleep.

But some people try to break their sleep into chunks instead of getting a single — or

monophasic — stretch of Zs.

Despite the trends, there's not much scientific evidence to suggest polyphasic sleep is better

than monophasic.

And some polyphasic sleep patterns are distinctly worse.

We don't fully understand how sleep works.

The leading model for why and when you sleep is called the two-process model.

It states that there are two, well, processes going on in your brain that dictate how sleepy

you are at any given time.

One, called process C, is a product of your circadian rhythm, or the attunement of your

brain to the cycle of day and night.

Your biological clock is run out of your brain's anterior hypothalamus.

It ticks along in response to light, and makes you sleepier at night.

The other, called process S, is homeostatic, which is to say it reflects the need for your

body to maintain a steady state in all things.

We don't know what exactly regulates process S, but it may have to do with the buildup

and clearing out of chemicals like adenosine in your brain.

The longer you're awake, the more sleepy process S makes you.

And the longer you're asleep, the more likely it is to wake you up.

While scientists are still revising the two-process model, those basic parts do seem to explain

why we sleep for a long time at night.

Process S and process C can change as you get older, and they operate independently

from one another.

So it's possible to separate your sleeping patterns from the pattern of sunrise and sunset.

And scientists use this fact to study sleep by placing subjects on an altered schedule.

In one oft-cited 1992 study published in the Journal of Sleep Research, 7 participants

were placed on a schedule with 10 hours of light and 14 hours of darkness.

Over the course of several weeks, they eventually took to sleeping in two blocks during the

dark period, with a few hours awake in between.

This, combined with historical knowledge, is sometimes used to suggest that humans naturally

adopted a biphasic sleeping pattern in the days before we had electric lights to keep us up.

The idea of breaking up sleep into a polyphasic pattern, though, has been taken to some extremes.

The scientist Buckminster Fuller somewhat infamously subscribed to the Dymaxion sleep

schedule, which involves 4 30-minute naps evenly spaced throughout a 24-hour period.

Some swear by similarly draconian napping schedules, like the Uberman, totaling only

a couple hours of sleep per day.

While others recommend longer "core" rests at night.

Napping in the afternoon, or taking a siesta, is technically a polyphasic sleep schedule,

and it's followed in many parts of the world.

Breaking up your rests could work by affecting process S, basically resetting the make-you-sleepier

ticker more often.

However, polyphasic sleep isn't well studied.

When it is, it's in the context of shift work, like of people providing essential services

in hospitals and fire stations.

A 2014 study in the journal Chronobiology International argued that 12-hour shifts probably

aren't great for productivity.

After 12 hours of work, people may suffer from decreased alertness — especially at

night when their circadian rhythm is making them naturally sleepy.

Instead, the researchers proposed shorter schedules, like 6 hours on and 6 hours off,

or 4 hours on and 8 hours off.

In the experiments they ran, 29 participants were put on a 28-hour schedule with at least

9 hours of time in bed.

Half were on a conventional light-dark schedule and half were broken up, with periods of 4.6

hours of rest and 9.3 hours awake.

The two groups didn't differ in their performance on a test that measured their alertness and

reaction times — even though participants on the split schedule sometimes reported feeling less alert.

And this led the authors to suggest that shorter work shifts with shorter rest periods could

help shift workers.

However, it's important to note the participants still got in a solid one third of their "day" as rest.

Less than that and you enter the realm of sleep deprivation, which comes with a list

of symptoms like anxiety, irritability, poor reaction times, and longer-term health risks

like high blood pressure and diabetes.

Some early sleep research failed to show any ill effects when participants slept for only

4 or 5 hours a day.

But now, researchers think those experiments were poorly controlled.

And more recent studies show drop-offs in cognitive function when less than 7 hours

are spent in bed.

Even worse, you may not know how exhausted you are.

Some studies, including one from the journal Sleep in 2003, have found a disconnect between

self-reported sleepiness and objective sleepiness as measured by electrical activity in the

brain, with EEG.

Sleep-deprived people tended to think they were way better off than their scores on cognitive

tests actually indicated.

And while it might be okay to break up your sleep a little, researchers have also studied

sleep fragmentation — when you wake up too many times during your rest period.

For instance, many researchers think that uninterrupted sleep is necessary to store

memories properly.

A study published in 2012 in the journal PLoS One found that subjects whose sleep was interrupted

during a monophasic rest pattern had an impaired ability to form memories.

So while we don't understand everything yet, it's clear that we need sleep to be

our best selves.

And our brains definitely need more than two hours.

You can try to reprogram it if you want to, but it's at your own risk.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow!

If you want to learn more about some groundbreaking discoveries biologists have made about sleep,

check out our list show all about it!

And if you just want to keep getting smarter with us, you can go to youtube.com/scishow

and subscribe.

[ ♪ Outro ]

For more infomation >> What Do Scientists Really Know About Polyphasic Sleep? - Duration: 5:16.

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

TINI STOESSEL en MÉXICO Conferencia de prensa COMPLETA presenta "PRINCESA" // #EnPOPados - Duration: 18:33.

For more infomation >> TINI STOESSEL en MÉXICO Conferencia de prensa COMPLETA presenta "PRINCESA" // #EnPOPados - Duration: 18:33.

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

Greenpeace assume falsa bomba que interrompeu debate sobre agrotóxicos - Duration: 5:25.

 O Greenpeace assumiu a autoria do protesto que interrompeu a reunião da última quarta-feira (20/6) da comissão sobre regulação e controle do uso de agrotóxicos no país

De acordo com a organização ambientalista, a mala suspeita de guardar uma bomba era, na verdade, um alarme de moto

 Por volta das 10h30, no início da reunião, o equipamento sonoro entrou em funcionamento

Os deputados da comissão iriam discutir o Projeto de Lei 6.299/2002, chamado pelo Greenpeace de "PL do Veneno"

  Mais sobre o assunto Mala com bomba falsa suspende reunião sobre projeto dos agrotóxicos Discussão sobre "PL do Veneno" termina sem consenso e votação é adiada Bela Gil vai à Câmara para pressionar contra votação do "PL do Veneno" "O alarme estava inserido em uma pasta e não representava risco algum para a segurança dos presentes

Qualquer outra interpretação é uma tentativa mal intencionada de desviar a atenção da real ameaça em questão: a liberação de mais veneno na comida dos brasileiros", diz o Greenpeace, em nota

 Entre as mudanças discutidas na comissão está a adoção de uma nova nomenclatura para os agrotóxicos

O texto original do projeto prevê que o termo "produto fitossanitário" comece a ser usado para denominar os produtos químicos usados na agricultura

Agora, com mudanças negociadas pelos parlamentares, ao invés de "produto fitossanitário", os agrotóxicos serão chamados de "pesticidas"

 Com o início da ordem do dia no plenário da Câmara, a discussão sobre o "PL do Veneno" do  foi adiada para a semana que vem

 Leia a íntegra da nota:  "Na manhã desta quarta-feira, o Greenpeace disparou um alarme de moto momentos antes do início da sessão da Comissão Especial que analisa do PL do Veneno, na Câmara dos Deputados

O protesto teve como objetivo chamar a atenção para os riscos da aprovação do projeto, que libera ainda mais agrotóxicos no Brasil

 Após o disparo do alarme, o equipamento foi retirado do local e a sessão seguiu por cerca de uma hora até ser suspensa devido ao início da ordem do dia no Plenário da casa

O alarme estava inserido em uma pasta e não representava risco algum para a segurança dos presentes

Qualquer outra interpretação é uma tentativa mal intencionada de desviar a atenção da real ameaça em questão: a liberação de mais veneno na comida dos brasileiros

 A não-violência é um princípio fundamental do Greenpeace, que realiza, em todo o mundo, atividades pacíficas para defender o meio ambiente

 A luta contra o absurdo Pacote do Veneno é fundamental para impedir que ainda mais veneno seja colocado em nosso prato

Diversos órgãos já declararam que as consequências do Pacote do Veneno seriam catastróficas para a saúde e o meio ambiente: Ministério Público Federal, Fiocruz (Fundação Oswaldo Cruz), Instituto Nacional do Câncer, Ministério Público do Trabalho, Anvisa, Ibama, Abrasco, Ministério da Saúde e Conselho Nacional dos Direitos Humanos, entre outros

 Seguiremos mobilizados para impedir que deputados aprovem esta lei absurda que vai contra o interesse do povo brasileiro

"  

For more infomation >> Greenpeace assume falsa bomba que interrompeu debate sobre agrotóxicos - Duration: 5:25.

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

Nigeria - Islandia, por el grupo D de Argentina: horario, TV y formaciones - Duration: 3:01.

  comentarios Mundial Rusia 2018 Selección de Fútbol de Islandia Selección de Fútbol de Nigeria  El grupo en el que se encuentra Argentina tiene, este viernes, un encuentro clave por el Mundial Rusia 2018

Nigeria recibe a Islandia, en lo que será un choque que los de Sampaoli seguirán desde cerca

Trasmisión y horario El partido será mañana a las 12 del mediodía, hora argentina, y lo transmitirá TyC Sports

 Se jugará en el Volgogrado Arena, que tiene una capacidad para 45.500 espectadores

Islandia Tras el gran partido que le hizo a Argentina, Islandia, dirigida por Heimir Hallgrímsson repetiría a los once

La única duda sería Johann Gudmundson, por una molestia en el gemelo. En ese caso, sería reemplazado por Gislason

 Saldría con: Halldorsson; Arnason, Magnusson, R. Sigurdsson, Saevarsson; Bjarnason, G

Sigurdsson, Gunnarsson, Hallfredsson, Gudmunson (Gislason); Finnbogason. Nigeria Gernot Rohr, de Nigeria, tiene en mente varios cambios

Aprovecharía la velocidad del delantero del Leicester, Ahmed Musa y situarlo como titular

El posible once sería Uzoho; Balogun, Idowu, Shehu, Troost-Ekong; Iwobi, Ndidi, Mikel; Iheanacho, Moses, Musa

 

For more infomation >> Nigeria - Islandia, por el grupo D de Argentina: horario, TV y formaciones - Duration: 3:01.

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

Alfa Romeo MiTo 1.4 PROGRESSION - Duration: 1:06.

For more infomation >> Alfa Romeo MiTo 1.4 PROGRESSION - Duration: 1:06.

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

Volkswagen Polo 1.2 TDI COMFORTLINE,NAVI,AIRCO,LM VELGEN,CRUISE C,ELEK RAMEN - Duration: 1:11.

For more infomation >> Volkswagen Polo 1.2 TDI COMFORTLINE,NAVI,AIRCO,LM VELGEN,CRUISE C,ELEK RAMEN - Duration: 1:11.

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

Coupe du monde 2018 : Le résumé d'Argentine – Croatie - Duration: 2:54.

For more infomation >> Coupe du monde 2018 : Le résumé d'Argentine – Croatie - Duration: 2:54.

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

What Do Scientists Really Know About Polyphasic Sleep? - Duration: 5:16.

[ ♪ Intro ]

Conventional wisdom says we're supposed to get 8 hours of sleep a night.

Fewer of us actually do, with the CDC reporting that a third of American adults snooze for

less than 7.

Now, the current consensus from sleep researchers is that we need to sleep for long enough,

continuously enough, and deeply enough to receive the proper benefits of sleep.

And that's a long list of benefits… like top cognitive performance, proper storage

of memories, or avoiding health problems like high blood pressure and obesity.

We need sleep.

But some people try to break their sleep into chunks instead of getting a single — or

monophasic — stretch of Zs.

Despite the trends, there's not much scientific evidence to suggest polyphasic sleep is better

than monophasic.

And some polyphasic sleep patterns are distinctly worse.

We don't fully understand how sleep works.

The leading model for why and when you sleep is called the two-process model.

It states that there are two, well, processes going on in your brain that dictate how sleepy

you are at any given time.

One, called process C, is a product of your circadian rhythm, or the attunement of your

brain to the cycle of day and night.

Your biological clock is run out of your brain's anterior hypothalamus.

It ticks along in response to light, and makes you sleepier at night.

The other, called process S, is homeostatic, which is to say it reflects the need for your

body to maintain a steady state in all things.

We don't know what exactly regulates process S, but it may have to do with the buildup

and clearing out of chemicals like adenosine in your brain.

The longer you're awake, the more sleepy process S makes you.

And the longer you're asleep, the more likely it is to wake you up.

While scientists are still revising the two-process model, those basic parts do seem to explain

why we sleep for a long time at night.

Process S and process C can change as you get older, and they operate independently

from one another.

So it's possible to separate your sleeping patterns from the pattern of sunrise and sunset.

And scientists use this fact to study sleep by placing subjects on an altered schedule.

In one oft-cited 1992 study published in the Journal of Sleep Research, 7 participants

were placed on a schedule with 10 hours of light and 14 hours of darkness.

Over the course of several weeks, they eventually took to sleeping in two blocks during the

dark period, with a few hours awake in between.

This, combined with historical knowledge, is sometimes used to suggest that humans naturally

adopted a biphasic sleeping pattern in the days before we had electric lights to keep us up.

The idea of breaking up sleep into a polyphasic pattern, though, has been taken to some extremes.

The scientist Buckminster Fuller somewhat infamously subscribed to the Dymaxion sleep

schedule, which involves 4 30-minute naps evenly spaced throughout a 24-hour period.

Some swear by similarly draconian napping schedules, like the Uberman, totaling only

a couple hours of sleep per day.

While others recommend longer "core" rests at night.

Napping in the afternoon, or taking a siesta, is technically a polyphasic sleep schedule,

and it's followed in many parts of the world.

Breaking up your rests could work by affecting process S, basically resetting the make-you-sleepier

ticker more often.

However, polyphasic sleep isn't well studied.

When it is, it's in the context of shift work, like of people providing essential services

in hospitals and fire stations.

A 2014 study in the journal Chronobiology International argued that 12-hour shifts probably

aren't great for productivity.

After 12 hours of work, people may suffer from decreased alertness — especially at

night when their circadian rhythm is making them naturally sleepy.

Instead, the researchers proposed shorter schedules, like 6 hours on and 6 hours off,

or 4 hours on and 8 hours off.

In the experiments they ran, 29 participants were put on a 28-hour schedule with at least

9 hours of time in bed.

Half were on a conventional light-dark schedule and half were broken up, with periods of 4.6

hours of rest and 9.3 hours awake.

The two groups didn't differ in their performance on a test that measured their alertness and

reaction times — even though participants on the split schedule sometimes reported feeling less alert.

And this led the authors to suggest that shorter work shifts with shorter rest periods could

help shift workers.

However, it's important to note the participants still got in a solid one third of their "day" as rest.

Less than that and you enter the realm of sleep deprivation, which comes with a list

of symptoms like anxiety, irritability, poor reaction times, and longer-term health risks

like high blood pressure and diabetes.

Some early sleep research failed to show any ill effects when participants slept for only

4 or 5 hours a day.

But now, researchers think those experiments were poorly controlled.

And more recent studies show drop-offs in cognitive function when less than 7 hours

are spent in bed.

Even worse, you may not know how exhausted you are.

Some studies, including one from the journal Sleep in 2003, have found a disconnect between

self-reported sleepiness and objective sleepiness as measured by electrical activity in the

brain, with EEG.

Sleep-deprived people tended to think they were way better off than their scores on cognitive

tests actually indicated.

And while it might be okay to break up your sleep a little, researchers have also studied

sleep fragmentation — when you wake up too many times during your rest period.

For instance, many researchers think that uninterrupted sleep is necessary to store

memories properly.

A study published in 2012 in the journal PLoS One found that subjects whose sleep was interrupted

during a monophasic rest pattern had an impaired ability to form memories.

So while we don't understand everything yet, it's clear that we need sleep to be

our best selves.

And our brains definitely need more than two hours.

You can try to reprogram it if you want to, but it's at your own risk.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow!

If you want to learn more about some groundbreaking discoveries biologists have made about sleep,

check out our list show all about it!

And if you just want to keep getting smarter with us, you can go to youtube.com/scishow

and subscribe.

[ ♪ Outro ]

For more infomation >> What Do Scientists Really Know About Polyphasic Sleep? - Duration: 5:16.

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

48 Fundraising Ideas in Under 8 Minutes - Duration: 7:45.

This is 48 fundraising ideas to get your brain going on a whole bunch of different topics.

Good luck! We're gonna go through this quickly.

This is 48 fundraising ideas to get your mind thinking on how to raise money for your organization.

Don't worry, there's also a link to a bunch of extra resources you can find

that go along with this video but we're gonna go pretty quick so maybe put it in slow motion?

Starting off with athletic ideas: golf for good tournaments.

So get the companies involved, have people come out to the course.

Next up running for a cause. I love this!

5ks, marathons, there's easy ways of organizing this: start small

so you can build a base together...same thing for bike for a cause, you know.

5 mile loop, map it out, get people year over year involved, you're challenging them.

Lawn sport Olympics! This is just a funny way of getting a bunch of people

maybe sponsor teams to take part winner-take-all championship and like a

cornhole game or bocce what-have-you. Relays and challenges are fantastic.

Look, you do walk-a-thons, dance-a-thons, pledge per mile if you're walking around

a track and definitely again engaging that community, building a list of people

that you can then go back out to again the next year so you're really hopefully

getting local champions involved. Any sort of challenges that you're doing you

can always add a little extra so let's say if one team wins you can "embarrass

the boss" or principal with like a dunk tank, or tape them to the wall, or you can

have donate to vote for the type of "punishment" -- colorfully -- that you're giving

the person, or boss, or leader. You can do any sort of cause marketing with

these campaigns with a company pulling in the campaign aligning with their

cause and passion. You can partner with a local restaurant and do sort of pay for

water donation or a percent tip on top of tip for a local cause they care about:

works particularly well, I'd say, with local causes aligned with that.

Okay, next topic, drives. These are things where we're raising in a

cluster, in a group. Workplace giving is a big one, where you're in the workplace

you can work with charities.org to do this in order to get part of

people's donations out of their paychecks to be given to you and agree

to a drive. You can do a penny drive -- classic -- toss in a penny, collect a lot of

them then you have a lot of money. Box tops for good! General Mills actually

donates based on the number of box tops raised so this is particularly good for

public-leaning schools who are doing this. You can do a shoe drive! And use funds2orgs.com

in order to turn those shoes into dollars -- same thing with e-waste!

Ink cartridges and old cell phones. There's ways of also finding sites where

once you've collected a bunch you can then go about turning that into a donation to your organization.

Next, events! And this is a giant one. This is classically what we think of

you know, what we jokingly call the classic rubber chicken, right? You're giving out

speakers and awards and performances and getting people in there and sponsoring it, sure.

Other fun things to think about are like

poker or casino night events. So these are pieces where you can come in, obviously

not for winner-take-all money but you can have other awards. You can have a young

professionals bar event or a Sunday Funday where it's an excuse to get

dressed up and drink mimosas. Wine taste test fundraising, so a "guess the wine"

challenge and you can do any sort of things: okay the challenge and seeing who

can tell their Pinots from Pinotages. Be the bartender events --

sell the chance to be a bartender! You wouldn't believe how people would love

to be behind the bar. Shout out to Sue Bilotta and the team Fox group that does that --

Tips for Parkinson's is amazing, if you haven't ever heard of them go and

check them out. Trivia events -- a bar or event space, charge per team, create a fun

reward system, get your local bar involved, boom. Food tasting event -- so sell

tickets include voting challenges to spice it up, like a taste of the Lower East

Side type of thing, and local vendors kind of come in and it's a win-win

ideally for both the cause and the local companies. A dog show or cat show... come on

get everybody's cute cats and puppies together, march them down the avenue,

and see who's gonna support it. Art show by famous both internal or external artists

demonstrate art on the walls so, obviously, profits go for the cause.

Grow for good! So obviously mustaches we can grow in Movember but there's other

things you can grow -- your hair out, or your nails out -- this is a weird one, but

there's something there potentially. Auctions: so you can do a "guess the

amount" of a seasonal relevant thing in a jug. So, put a bunch of candy corn in, or

put a bunch of jelly beans in, see how many people get closest, take money

for each one of those guesses, and boom, there you go. Silent auction, classic.

So you can do any sort of silent auction event

in conjunction with an event so people writing in there. 50/50 raffle: you buy a chance

to win the overall money, and half of it goes to the cause. So if I gave you a dollar

fifty cents to the cause, fifty cents to the inevitable winner. You buy tickets and then

you have these little chances to win and then you can put those in different

events. That works for a lower tier prize packages, if no single person can

necessarily afford to bid, you know, a thousand dollars, but they can buy a hundred

dollars of tickets, they can put those tickets in those things. Live auction,

catered dinners, or a bachelor/bachelorette: dates, cars, all those things

can be auctioned. You can also do online auctions with high value celebrity experiences.

Charity.ebay.com or Charitybuzz are fantastic at managing all of those pieces,

we love those guys. A duck or a floaty thing race, so, pick a small body

of water, label all the ducks -- so I have duck number 101 --

dump it in with a thousand ducks, see which duck wins in the end, and obviously money

goes to charity. Karaoke night: book the venue, and then charge for songs or

spotlight moments, obviously for drinks, and partner in with that -- people love

their karaoke. Polar Bear Plunge into a cold body of water! Sell tickets.

Sell sponsorship. Write on people, bring towels, sponsor teams -- have fun with it!

Turn your Polar Bear Plunge into a cause. Cupcake or chili wars. Have judges.

Make the public judge, or charge tickets for votes for the best cupcake and

see who wins. Have a dog or car wash -- maybe not at the same time.

Online. All right more ideas when you go online. You can actually have supporters use tools

like goodsearch.org, and they send a portion of proceeds to your organization:

these are very very small margins. Same thing with the affiliate

advertising and the Amazon Smile program. Register your organization with Amazon

and then when people shop, you get a very small percent of their action to your cause.

Online sponsored real estate: a page, like, so that "million dollar website",

you can have people pay for messages on your site,

sort of a donor wall. You can have a sponsored brick or wall, and real estate

in your physical location, sell that online, saying, "Hey, we're making our new office,

sponsor a brick or stamp on our site." Grocery or gift wrapping at a

local store for open donations, right? You're sitting there, "Hey, would you mind if I

gift wrap your eggs for a cause?" Probably works better with presents.

You can do the Combined Federal Campaign for large nonprofits to get into federal

donation systems: check out charities.org for that. You can do peer-to-peer fundraising.

So you can source a recipe book with a theme, and sell the sponsorship, and sell,

then, the book. So all the people that also did it as well. You can do odd sort of

challenges with a fundraiser, peer-to-peer. If X dollars is raised,

someone will volunteer to do something odd and post it. You can do a birthday,

a wedding, or a shower gift for good. There's tons of sites that allow people to ask,

instead of gifts, send donations to a certain organization. We can do a

haunted house or a trick-or-treat give, so the Unicef style of giving people boxes to

run around and fundraise on your behalf during those events -- that correspond

obviously with the holiday, cuz Halloween in December doesn't make much sense.

You can sell a thing! So, branded food model. Certainly the Girl Scout model works

very well, getting those cookies out there and sold. Coffee, bake sale, coffee

and bake sale on high traffic days around, for example, the election is very

very common. You can sell branded materials: so obviously you can put your

logo on just about anything. I mean, heck, you could do pet rocks for the environment.

Why not? Be creative! You can do a cause- or a town-opoly: customize a Monopoly set,

or any sort of game, and then compare that with a game night fundraiser.

All right, whoo! 48 ideas. Hope something rang a bell.

Again, check out our resources on our site, where you can find some more links.

Hopefully that was helpful!

For more infomation >> 48 Fundraising Ideas in Under 8 Minutes - Duration: 7:45.

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

Mondial 2018 : Lionel Messi se confie sur son rôle de père - Duration: 3:33.

 En ratant notamment un penalty contre l'Islande, Lionel Messi est passé à côté de son match samedi 16 juin

Les Argentins n'ont pu faire mieux qu'un match nul face à de valeureux Islandais

Tout le pays attend que Leo Messi fasse des exploits ce jeudi face à la Croatie de Luka Modric

Les Croates peuvent quasiment assurer leur qualification en cas de victoire ce soir

 Leo Messi a découvert, depuis la naissance de son fils Thiago en 2012, la vie de père

Une vie différente mais qui convient à la "Pulga". Avec sa chérie Antonella Roccuzzo, il prend du temps pour élever son dernier enfant, un troisième garçon, Ciro, né le 10 mars dernier

Il avait célébré la bonne nouvelle d'un post Instagram."J'ESSAYE D'AVOIR UNE VIE NORMALE" Il poste d'ailleurs régulièrement des photos de sa petite famille sur les différents réseaux

Son métier de footballeur et son statut de superstar internationale pourraient l'empêcher de s'occuper des siens

Il a donc fait de l'éducation de ses enfants une priorité et passe un maximum de temps avec eux et sa femme

Antonella Roccuzzo partage la vie du génie argentin depuis 2009 et file un amour parfait avec lui en Catalogne

 Il avait pu expliquer la vision de son rôle de père et des responsabilités qui lui incombent, en 2015 pour "Yahoo" : "J'essaye d'avoir une vie normale, surtout avec mon fils

J'apprécie d'être père (…) Dans mon approche du football rien n'a changé mais dans ma vie de tous les jours j'ai davantage de responsabilités comme tous les pères qui élèvent leurs enfants (…) Je déteste toujours perdre un match, mais quand je rentre chez moi j'ai la consolation de passer du temps avec mes fils"

 Par Léo Tourbe

For more infomation >> Mondial 2018 : Lionel Messi se confie sur son rôle de père - Duration: 3:33.

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

BIENVENUE SUR MA CHAINE - Duration: 1:00.

For more infomation >> BIENVENUE SUR MA CHAINE - Duration: 1:00.

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

🐶 Biduzidos | Meu latido será sua herança (Ep.11) - Duration: 1:42.

For more infomation >> 🐶 Biduzidos | Meu latido será sua herança (Ep.11) - Duration: 1:42.

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

Trending With Special K - Duration: 3:32.

For more infomation >> Trending With Special K - Duration: 3:32.

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

Artists Express Interest in Working With BTS | Billboard News - Duration: 1:27.

ARMY, I don't want to make you jealous, but you're not the only ones

who love BTS. Now hear me out on this...This isn't a bad thing,

because artists from around the world of music are also taking notice of your boys,

and not just paying attention, but wanting to collaborate!

So let's check out five musicians who have expressed interest in working with BTS.

You know, I feel personally responsible for a few of these we're going to talk about

because I was the one bringing up the topic.

There was that time out in Brooklyn with Tinashe.

" Would you ever collaborate with a BTS, would you be open to that?"

"Sure, why not."

"That'd be intertesting"

And that other time, hanging out with Maluma inside the Billboard offices.

"Would you ever collaborate with a band like BTS?"

"I would love it. I would love it, yeah."

Artists aren't just showing their love during interviews though,

they also take to social media.

Zedd used Twitter to get in touch.

Kehlani tweeted for BTS to holla at her after the guys

name-dropped her on Billboard's Facebook livestream

and DNCE responded to a fan's question about whether they'd collab

with the guys on Twitter by saying,

"We'd collab with them any day."

To check out the full list of all eight artists who want to work with BTS,

you can head over to Billboard.com right now, but before you go and do that,

I want to know personally: Who is your No. 1 pick for a BTS collaboration?

Let me know the answer to that down in the comments

and until next time, for Billboard News - I'm Kevan Kenney.

For more infomation >> Artists Express Interest in Working With BTS | Billboard News - Duration: 1:27.

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La llegada del 5G supone una reantenización de los televisores en España - Duration: 2:29.

 Van pasando los días y el "apagón" de la TDT está cada vez más cerca. Eso implica que la Secretaría de Estado para la Sociedad de la Información y la Agenda Digital indique cuáles son los pasos que se seguirán para reorganizar los canales

La llegada del 5G ocasiona que se necesite despejar la banda de 700 MHz, como ya se hizo con la llegada del 4G y la banda de 800 MHz

  Tal y como informa El Confidencial, la Comisión Nacional de los Mercados y la Competencia (CNMC) ha realizado un informe valorando a qué situaciones podría enfrentarse durante el proceso

Para ello ha baremado la tecnología necesaria que se utilizará para el cambio, cuál será el impacto en la red y en los hogares

 El escenario más recomendado es el llamado "4+5", que implica una "renovación de la mayor parte del parque de televisores y la actualización de la red"

La CNMC apunta que es la opción más costosa de los cinco escenarios posibles, pero que también es el único que garantiza la total competitividad de la TDT y el paso completo a la nueva generación tecnológica

Todo por el consumidor El paso al nuevo estadio tecnológico proporcionará una completa adaptación al HD e incluso algunos canales gozarán de la calidad Ultra HD, bien conocido como 4K

Ese es el objetivo final aunque al principio de la transición no se consiga. Dicho informe publicado por la CNMC pretende "prever con la debida anticipación todos los procesos de provisión de información a los ciudadanos" para que tengan un gasto mínimo durante el cambio

 

For more infomation >> La llegada del 5G supone una reantenización de los televisores en España - Duration: 2:29.

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V některých zemích Evropy rapidně vzrůstá nenávist vůči Romům. Řeč je především o Itálii, kde nový p - Duration: 4:21.

 Italský vicepremiér, ministr vnitra a člen silně protiimigrační strany Liga severu Matteo Salvini si vybral další cíl

Po uprchlících obrátil svou pozornost na Romy a začátkem týdne šokoval výrokem, že je chce začít sčítat, evidovat a případně vyhošťovat

„Ty italské si bohužel budeme muset nechat doma," korunoval svoje slova.  Jeho výroky vyvolaly ostrou vlnu kritiky a chladným nenechaly dokonce ani Salviniho koaličního partnera, dalšího protiimigračního politika Luigiho di Maia, který sčítání Romů označil za protiústavní

Bouří se i řada dalších státníků, někteří Salviniho počínání přirovnávají ke krutovládě fašistického diktátora Benita Mussoliniho

 Jenže ani to novopečeného ministra vnitra nijak nevyvádí z míry a v úterý podle listu The Guardian potvrdil, že na svém úmyslu trvá

Prý je pro něj důležitá v první řadě bezpečnost Italů. Silně protiimigrační politik Salvini zaměřil svou pozornost na italské Romy

 Od řady obyvatel má ostatně Salvini podporu, vždyť země Apeninského poloostrova k Romům zaujímá suverénně nejvíce negativní postoj, menšina vadí více než 80 % obyvatel

S výroky o bourání romských osad buldozerem tak zřejmě sympatizuje většina Italů

Na Ukrajině zničili další osadu Zemí, která Itálii v nenávisti k Romům zdatně sekunduje, je nepochybně Ukrajina

Už nedávno jsme vás informovali o brutálním zásahu extrémně pravicového uskupení C14, jehož členové vypálili romský tábor v Kyjevě a jeho obyvatele hnali s kamením či slzným plynem v ruce

 Ke stejnému rasově motivovanému útoku došlo před dvěma týdny znovu a opět ve stejném městě

Na svědomí ho tentokrát mají neonacisté z Azovské národní družiny. Ti nejprve na Facebooku stanovili ultimátum, do kdy mají Romové opustit tábor v městském parku, jeho obyvatelé ale podmínku nesplnili, a tak se útočníci na místo vydali na vlastní pěst

 Národní družina vyhnala Romy z osady a tu pak srovnala se zemí. Na videu, které nejprve dokonce přenášeli online na Facebook, vyhrožují místním dívkám

Po akci se členové družiny na místo vrátili vyzbrojeni sekerami a kladivy a tábor srovnali se zemí

Na místo pak dorazili policisté, ti ale celé situaci jen přihlíželi a s neonacisty se bavili

 

For more infomation >> V některých zemích Evropy rapidně vzrůstá nenávist vůči Romům. Řeč je především o Itálii, kde nový p - Duration: 4:21.

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✅ Tomáš Savka bude poprvé otcem. Nešlo to přirozenou cestou, přiznává zpěvák - Duration: 1:59.

 Zpěvák Tomáš Savka se ve společnosti moc neobjevuje. Žije svůj poklidný život, vystupuje po České republice, nejčastěji pak v Ostravě, a snaží se být co nejvíce se svou rodinou

 S manželkou Zuzanou totiž vychovává tři děti, které má drobná blondýnka z předchozího vztahu, a nyní se mu rodina rozroste o dalšího člena

Během akce ve Špuntíku totiž odhalil, že je jeho žena těhotná. „My jsme si to nechávali pro sebe. Zaprvé jsme pověrčiví, zadruhé jsem nechtěl, aby to dítě bylo atrakcí dříve, než se narodí," ujasnil zpěvák, který se již v létě stane otcem

 „Máme dva měsíce do porodu a bude to holka," prozradil dále s tím, že je z pohlaví miminka nadšený. „Moje žena má tři syny, tak jsem rád, že se to doma trochu vyrovná," zasmál se

 Pár se na příchod potomka těší. Početí ale tak vtipné nebylo. Vzhledem k tomu, že je partnerka Savky o něco starší, nešlo jim to přirozenou cestou

„Do určité míry jsme to nechali osudu a do jisté míry jsme si nechali pomoc. Více bych to ale nechtěl rozebírat," řekl Savka, který se na vymodlené miminko velmi těší

 K porodu však nepůjde. Myslí si, že je to čistě ženská záležitost, a pokud na jeho přítomnosti nebude manželka trvat, počká na chodbě

„Zatím jsem rozhodnutý, že k porodu nepůjdu," uzavřel.

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