Thursday, January 26, 2017

Youtube daily report Jan 27 2017

Hm, the three NHL teams that play on an island?...

On an island?

I actually have no idea.

I really don't know.

Do you know?

Well, the Islanders.

Besides the Islanders.

Besides them, obviously, but I don't know the other two.

Obviously the Islanders, we're in Brooklyn.

The Islanders and the Canadiens.

Oh, the Island of Montreal!

Oh, yeah.

I always forget it's an island.

You have to go on a bridge to get there.

Yeah, there we go.

Think, think...

I don't know any!

You do.

Yeah, I don't know.

I'm actually going to know this one, because I studied geography, so one obviously, is

Montreal, in Quebec, is an island.

Obviously Brooklyn, and the New York Rangers.

Play on an island, let's see...

That's a tough one, definitely.

I have no idea.

C'mon you should know this.

Do you know any of them?

There are the New York Rangers who play on Manhattan Island, there are the Montreal Canadiens

who play on the Island of Montreal, and the New York Islanders.

Oh yeah!

I forgot Montreal is an island in the middle of like, the St. Lawrence, right?

So there you go, now we're going to be on TV.

Well Montreal is one of them.

Montreal is an island.

The Rangers, Manhattan is an island.

I've got to go with the Islanders, because Brooklyn is technically Long Island.

Thank you.

Ok, is that it?

The Islanders...

Is that an island?

Yeah?

That's good, if it was confirmed by a geographer.

On an island?

The Islanders.

The Rangers.

The Canadiens?

No, they don't play on an -- do they?

I didn't know Montreal was an island.

So, look at that.

Easy trivia.

The Canadiens have got to come up with harder questions than that!

For more infomation >> Vox Pop: Do Islanders fans know that Montreal is an island? - Duration: 2:01.

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Rings - In Theatres February 3

For more infomation >> Rings - In Theatres February 3

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Silence

For more infomation >> Silence

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Veteran and his service dog denied access to Currituck County buiding - Duration: 2:38.

AND HER FAMILY WHO IS HOMELESS

TONIGHT.

TOM: A FRIEND OF A DISABLED

VETERAN CONTACTED 10 ON YOUR

SIDE AFTER HE SAID THE WOUNDED

WARRIOR HAS A SERVICE DOG AND

WAS NIGHT ACCESS TO A CURRITUCK

COUNTY BUILDING BECAUSE OF THE

DOG.

COUNTY LEADERS ARE APOLOGIZING

FOR THIS MISTAKE.

ANDY HAS THE STORY.

ANDY: THEY ARE APOLOGIZING

BECAUSE FEDERAL LAW IS A

BUSINESS, THE CURRITUCK COUNTY

COMMITTEE CENTER, CANNOT REFUSE

ADMITTANCE OR TREAT A PERSON IS

FAVORABLY THAN OTHER PATRONS,

BUT ON TUESDAY IT APPEARS

THAT

IS EXACTLY WHAT HAPPENED.

AFGHANISTAN, SEPTEMBER 20,

2012,

A TRUMP -- 67 OPERATIONS

LATER, A SERVICE DOG, AND

TUESDAY NIGHT BOTH WERE DENIED

ACCESS TO THE CURRITUCK COUNTY

COMMUNITY CENTER TO WATCH HIS

SON PLAY BASKETBALL.

I WAS STOPPED AFTER TWO FEET

THROUGH THE DOOR, TELLING ME I

COULD NOT BRING HIM IN THERE

BECAUSE THEY JUST PUT NEW FLOORS

DOWN.

ANDY: HE CALLED THE DIRECTOR OF

PART-TIME -- PARKS AND

RECREATION.

IT IS MY MISTAKE.

IT WAS AN HONOR THE STATE.

ANDY: WE ASKED WHY

DENY THE

SERVICE. ACCESS ANYWAY?

WE HAD JUST FINISHED OUR

FLOOR.

ANDY: HE GAVE HIS LEFT LEG IN

WAR, AND HAS A FEDERALLY

PROTECTED SERVICE DOG THAT CAN'T

COMPANY HIM BY LAW ANYWHERE.

THEY ARE WORRIED ABOUT THE

FLOOR, AND HE GAVE HIS LEFT

LEG

TO THE SERVICE OF HIS COUNTRY.

I DID NOT KNOW HE HAD LOST

HIS LEG.

LOOKING BACK I WISH WE WOULD

HAVE TOLD HIM TO SIT WITH HIS

FAMILY.

ANDY: WEEKS WANTED US TO KNOW HE

DID NOT UNDERSTAND FEDERAL LAW.

YOU SHOULD HAVE ALLOWED

UNFETTERED ACCESS TO THE DOG.

YES, AND THAT IS WHERE WE

SHOULD HAVE HAD THE OBLIGATION.

I AM HERE TO GET THE WORD OUT

AND MAKE PEOPLE ARE EDUCATED ON

THE RIGHT THING.

ANDY: THE LAW STATES A SERVICE

ANIMAL CAN ONLY BE REMOVED FROM

A PLACE IF THE DOG IS OUT OF

CONTROL OR POSES A THREAT.

EITHER THE CASE HERE.

A MEMBER OF THE BOARD OF

COMMISSIONERS REACHED OUT TO

HIM, BUT THAT DID NOT GO SO

WELL.

BOTH SIDES ARE NOT

For more infomation >> Veteran and his service dog denied access to Currituck County buiding - Duration: 2:38.

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Let's talk songwriting with RKVC & Kat McDowell - Duration: 7:03.

KAT: Awesome!

Party time!

ALL: Excellent!

Eclectic musical reference to the White Album.

(meow!)

I'm doing another Let'sTalk Music series today

with RK ...

VC.

YAY!

We do a song on their channel

I taught them one of their songs in Japanese!

WHAT?!

So make sure you go check out their video

afterwards

My voice just cracked...

(laughter)

These guys are amazing songwriters and producers

and good friends of mine.

They look very good

in black and red.

And so I felt like it was appropriate to ask them some questions about songwriting.

VC: YES!

I asked you guys on Instagram and Facebook

and Twitter

to ask me some questions.

So... Question:

Jonathan Menchin asks

RK: I wouldn't be surprised if we were putting in a forty-hour work week

to work on a song or two.

VC: Definitely

RK: But, as far as most successful, the song we just did on our channel, "The Cat,"

has been the most successful song off this current album we did

and we recorded that on a phone

in like an hour

(laughter)

then cleaning up in the studio, like another hour.

KAT: Really?

RK: So...

KAT: So that recording is from your phone?

RK: Yeah.

VC: Yes.

KAT: The phone mic?

RK: It's from the microphone on the headphones

of the iPhone

KAT: Wow! VC: (laughter)

KAT: You didn't want to re-record it?

RK: Well, we did....

VC: We just had this attitude to it

We didn't even try to recreate...

because we just loved it too much.

RK: We went down to listen to it

and if you hear the song, it's kind of like a sonic middle finger.

So we kind of heard that in the tape...

and when we went to re-do it at the time, because it's such a new song

we couldn't really recapture that.

VC: There's something about that take, that first take,

that was magical in a sense of vibe and attitude

RK: If it wasn't broke, we didn't fix it.

KAT: I had a friend, I don't know if this is public information...

So there was a band called <garbled non-public information>

that signed to Capitol Records

a few years ago

and they had a song that was a great demo.

It was a great song.

And they said, "We'll give you fifty grand

to go re-record that."

So they went into the nicest studio.

They got a top producer and re-recorded it and everything

And then they stayed with the demo.

(laughter)

and released it.

RK: I think that's a good way to sum up the answer.

KAT: So for me, I'd say it takes three hours to record.

Then 37 hours to try and re-record it better.

and then you stay with the original.

Is that right?

RK: Pretty much. VC: That sounds about right.

KAT: Next question:

Thomas Norris asks:

KAT: That's not a music question. Do you guys miss New Zealand?

VC: A lot. So much.

RK: I miss Lorde.

(laughter) KAT: Me too.

RK: Is chocolate a special thing about New Zealand?

KAT: It's just dairy in general.

The cheese, the ice cream,

the milk,

the cream

Everything. Like, dairy ... so good.

Sorry for you lactose intolerant people out there.

COW: Moo!

Again. Jonathan. Such good questions!

VC: I don't think I ever thought of that.

KAT: Uh . . . 246?

RK: Unless we're doing an EDM song

and then it's four.

(laughter)

Scott Helm, this is a very common question:

What about you guys?

VC: I personally like to create everything from scratch

All at the same time

So I don't want to create the track and then create lyrics.

I want them to both happen simultaneously.

I want it to start with a vibe

and then from there continue with a concept

then as it starts to shape itself

then you can hear, like, what key it should be in

or maybe we'll start at this chord

maybe it needs to be more minor

and then, oh, it's on a ninth

RK: I feel like almost every songwriter does everything.

Sometimes lyrics first

Sometimes music first

Sometimes both

Sometimes you work with a lyricist who knows nothing about music in a technical sense

And you want to write a song around lyrics

At the core of it

if it just came down to being creative

and if I want to create something or speak something

it kinda happens

at about the same time

I feel like for us, at least.

(cell phone chimes)

(laughter)

VC: Maybe it's a call for a question!

KAT: Hello

PHONE: Thank you for choosing...

(laughter)

... to receive a complimentary ...

RK: Oh! A complimentary what?

KAT: I missed it!

I have a question...

Lee Austin asks:

KAT: Do you need to play music to do it?

If you have GarageBand (software)

like if you have a music program

you don't really need to play an instrument to write a song

You can add loops and you can add beats

and you can do all sorts of stuff to write music

If you're creative, and you have something to say, and you have a sense of melody

Like, Mariah Carey, I don't believe she plays an instrument

but she wrote a lot of the main parts of some of her biggest songs

KAT: Michael Jackson doesn't (didn't) play an instrument

RK: Yeah, and he can sing every part.

KAT: And he still wrote a lot of those songs.

RK: I heard stories about him being with the producers

and he would sing all the parts to the producers,

like different instrument parts.

So even though he wasn't playing (an instrument) he had something to say.

VC: Just an enormous vision for each of the songs.

And to be able like, "In that bit the trumpet should do this:

🎼🎡 duh da da 🎢 da-da-da 🎡🎢"

and not even play trumpet.

Now that's pretty amazing.

KAT: Thanks for answering so many great questions!

RK: Yeah it was fun!

KAT: Yeah, it was fun.

I'm hoping we can chat about music again soon.

This is great. If you like the Let's Talk Music Series

please feel free to ask any questions below

and maybe I'll be able to answer them in the next Let's Talk Music video.

Go check out the video we did together on their channel

and make sure that you guys subscribe to them

and to me

The KickStarter campaign is happening

If you want to hear any of my music (pointing BELOW) go check that out

BYE!!

And a big shout-out to all my Patreon supporters for helping me to make these videos.

For more infomation >> Let's talk songwriting with RKVC & Kat McDowell - Duration: 7:03.

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Introduction to Genetics and Shared Genes - Duration: 9:23.

Hi, I'm Michael Corayer and this is Psych Exam Review.

In this video I'm going to provide a brief introduction to some of the ideas of genetics and the first idea is the idea that information can

be passed from the parent to the offspring. This is what we mean when we say that something is heritable.

We mean that it can be passed from the parent to the offspring through biological means.

So how is this information passed from the parent to the offspring? Well, it's passed through genes. So what are genes?

Well, a gene is just a way of talking about this information, it's a unit.

So a gene, we can say is a unit of hereditary information.

So all this information is being passed from parent to the offspring and each individual piece of information is what we call a gene.

Now all of that information together

all of the genes is referred to as the genome.

OK so when we talk about the genomes of different species we're talking about all the genes that get passed from the parent to the

offspring. And when we compare species, we see that actually lot of these are similar. If we look at humans and chimps

we see that their genomes are very similar. In fact they're about 96%

the same.

So chimps and humans share about 96%

of the same genes.

Now this might be surprising to you

but if you think about what genes do it's not so surprising.

So you might ask, well what exactly do genes do?

What genes do is they provide instructions. They tell that organism

how to build that organism.

So a chimp's genes tell it how to build a chimp and a human's genes tell it how to build a human. So if you think of genes as instructions

you realize that actually chimps and humans need very similar instructions

because they have to build a lot of the same types of things.

We need to build blood vessels and hearts and skin, hair, and teeth and eyes and chimps need to build all of these things too.

So they're going to need a lot of the same instructions that we need and this is why our genomes are going to be so similar.

We're building most of the same types of things. They're not identical but they're very similar.

Now you might ask, so this information gets passed from parents to offspring, but how do I get it from mom or from dad?

Well, when we talk about our genetic information, we talk about our DNA.

So our DNA is essentially the set of all these instructions

and it's inside almost all of the cells in our body.

The DNA is organized into chromosomes.

and humans have 23

pairs of chromosomes.

Each of these pair, the way that it works is that you get half of the pair from your mom and the other half from your dad.

This means that overall, amongst all these 23 pairs, half of your genetic information comes from your

mom and the other half comes from your da. That means you're going to share 50%

of your genes.

So the way that it works is that a sperm cell will contain half of the sets of chromosomes, a half for each pair, and an egg cell will

also contain half, then they get put together and that becomes you.

This allows

you to be different from your siblings because they also get half the information but it's a different half. The pair they get

,they got this half from mom but you got that half of that pair from dad so it's not the same information. This means that

the same parents can create different offspring.

But on average they're also going to share about 50% of their genes.

So how does that work? Well, this is an average.

So if we're talking about a particular gene

you can either get the mom version of the gene or the dad version of the gene

and your sibling, the same is true, they can either get the mom version or the dad version. So sometimes you both get the mom version,

sometimes you both get the dad version. Sometimes you get the dad version, they get the mom version. Sometimes you get the mom

version they get the dad version. So on average, for those four possible scenarios two of them are the same; you both get mom's

version or you both get dad's version. So that is why we say you're going to have 50% shared genes with your sibling. It's not exactly 50%

it could end up being slightly more or slightly less, but that's an average.

Now, you might be confused at this point because you say

"Mike you just said that we share 96% of our genes with chimps and now you're telling me that I only share 50% of my genes with my

brother". Well we're talking about different things here. When we talk about genomes, we talk about shared genes across species, we're

talking about the overall genome, the overall set of instructions. In that case if we talk about humans, humans have 99.9% shared genes.

You have pretty much the same genes as everyone else on Earth, any other human who has ever lived. You have pretty much the same

genes, nearly identical. But when we talk about genes in families, now we're talking about the specific types of individual genes. We're saying

you have the mom version of this version and your sibling has exactly that same version.

Somebody else also has that gene but it might be slightly different.

Or your sibling could have that same gene, but it's the dad version.

But the overall blueprint is the same.

So when we talk about shared genes in families we're talking about specific individual genes, when we talk about

shared genes across species, we're talking about the overall structure of the genetic information.

OK so there is an exception with siblings. This is that some siblings share more than 50% of their genes. These are identical twins

or if we want to sound more scientific

we can call them monozygotic twins.

This is just Greek for one zygote.

So a zygote is a fertilized egg. It's an egg and a sperm cell that have come together

and what happens in monozygotic twins is that we have this single fertilized egg here, so one sperm cell, one egg, and then

what happens is it splits and becomes two people. So this one egg splits into two

and now you get two people but they have exactly the same information. They each got that same sperm cell, same egg cell.

So this means they're going to have 100% shared genes.

If we went through and looked

when it comes to which version of the gene, do they have the mom version or the dad version for every gene it's going to be

the same.

The other type of twins that we have are dizygotic twins.

This is two zygotes. So what happens in dizygotic twins is that we have

two separate eggs and two separate sperm cells that come in and fertilize each of those eggs

so what happens is we end up with two people. But these two sperm cells have different genetic information

these two eggs have different genetic information. So what happens is we end up just like any other siblings 50%

shared genes.

So fraternal twins or dizygotic twins are sharing the same amount of genes as any other siblings, about 50% on average.

In the next video I'll talk about how we do studies of twins to try to determine

how much we inherit certain traits or certain behaviors from our parents.

And we'll see why it is that researchers are so interested in studying twins.

Well hopefully this gave you a good understanding of some of the basic ideas of genetics, some of the terminology, so you know

what genes are, genomes, DNA, chromosomes and we'll go into more detail

on many of these topics in future videos. I hope you found this helpful, if so please like the video

and subscribe to the channel for more.

Thanks for watching!

For more infomation >> Introduction to Genetics and Shared Genes - Duration: 9:23.

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If I Was In Undertale! Part 1 - Duration: 2:13.

(Annoying Sleeping Sounds)

Woah!

Where Am I? (Do I Care)

AHHHH!!! A FLOWER WITH A FACE!!!

Uhhh...

You Ok?

Hi!

That Ain't Good

My Name Is Flowey (What A NICE Name)

Flowey The Flower (Thanks Captain Obvious)

And You Are

In The Underground (I Should Be Dead)

That's My Reaction To

People Call This Place Undertale (Kay)

Which Is A Very Dangerous Place For You (How Do You Know?)

Still Freaking Out?

Yeah I Know, Pretty Scary

Are You Okay? (What Do You Think!)

...

STOP IT WITH THAT FACE!!! (No YOU'RE SCARY!!)

10/10 REAL Scream

HEY YOU BACK BACK HERE! (With That Voice, Why Would He?)

Oh FORGET IT!!!

Wait Aren't You Meant To Go In The Ground?

Is He Gone (Look With Your EYES)

Yes He Is M'lad (WHO THE HECK ARE YOU?!?!)

Go Away

Ok M'lad

Ok Where Do I Go Now? (Depends)

Oh Hello There Child, (How Much Kids Did You Kidnap?)

Do You Want Some Butterscotch

Cinnamon Pie? (No)

*Stab*

Wow, What A Bad Sound Effect,

CHANGE IT PLS!!!

Ok... Pervert

You Didn't Change It You!

Bleh

(Humming)

You've Encounter Someone!

It's Already Dead...

No!

NOOOOO- ded

WWWHHHHYYYYY!!!

GAME OVER...

NERD!!!

I Hate You (I Love Him For Telling The Truth)

Ok Let's Just Stare At Each Other

What Am I Doing With My Life (Staring At Ghosts)

Hmm...

Oh Hey There Little Spider,

What Do You Want? (Money)

Oh Hey There, Would You Like To Donate

To Us Spiders? (Spider Don't Really Need Money...)

You Can Also Win Prizes!!!

HAUH (What?)

*Hit*

Umm...

Is This How I Get Home? (No)

And Why Is The Door So Big?

Probably Because Of How Fat Torial Was (OOOHHH!)

Wait,

How Do I Know Her Name? (And How Did You Kill Her?)

(Stick Braking)

What Was That (Me)

Heya (SANS!!!!)

AHHHHH!!!

Oh Hey A New Outro!

For more infomation >> If I Was In Undertale! Part 1 - Duration: 2:13.

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barbara d' urso ricorda i suoi amici dell' hotel - Duration: 0:39.

For more infomation >> barbara d' urso ricorda i suoi amici dell' hotel - Duration: 0:39.

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Vox Pop: Do Islanders fans know that Montreal is an island? - Duration: 2:01.

Hm, the three NHL teams that play on an island?...

On an island?

I actually have no idea.

I really don't know.

Do you know?

Well, the Islanders.

Besides the Islanders.

Besides them, obviously, but I don't know the other two.

Obviously the Islanders, we're in Brooklyn.

The Islanders and the Canadiens.

Oh, the Island of Montreal!

Oh, yeah.

I always forget it's an island.

You have to go on a bridge to get there.

Yeah, there we go.

Think, think...

I don't know any!

You do.

Yeah, I don't know.

I'm actually going to know this one, because I studied geography, so one obviously, is

Montreal, in Quebec, is an island.

Obviously Brooklyn, and the New York Rangers.

Play on an island, let's see...

That's a tough one, definitely.

I have no idea.

C'mon you should know this.

Do you know any of them?

There are the New York Rangers who play on Manhattan Island, there are the Montreal Canadiens

who play on the Island of Montreal, and the New York Islanders.

Oh yeah!

I forgot Montreal is an island in the middle of like, the St. Lawrence, right?

So there you go, now we're going to be on TV.

Well Montreal is one of them.

Montreal is an island.

The Rangers, Manhattan is an island.

I've got to go with the Islanders, because Brooklyn is technically Long Island.

Thank you.

Ok, is that it?

The Islanders...

Is that an island?

Yeah?

That's good, if it was confirmed by a geographer.

On an island?

The Islanders.

The Rangers.

The Canadiens?

No, they don't play on an -- do they?

I didn't know Montreal was an island.

So, look at that.

Easy trivia.

The Canadiens have got to come up with harder questions than that!

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