Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Youtube daily report Jul 25 2018

Realtor in Distress: Help!

LoanGuyRy: Did you hear something?

Realtor in Distress: Help!

I think I need my loan rescued LoanGuyRy: I've got to go?

Superman Theme Music Playing

Realtor in Distress: My lender is not returning my phone call!

LoanGuyRy: Man, I hate when they don't return phone calls

Realtor in Distress: We're not going to close on time!

LoanGuyRy: Not if I have anything to do with it!!

LoanGuyRy: LoanGuyRy turning into Captain-Save-A-Loan Do you realize that my company has actually

created marketing material for this specific reason!

We're here to help you close loans on time frankly, close them early!

So all entertainment aside, all jokes aside, this is somebody's livelihood and I want to

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Realtor in Distress: Thanks Captain-Save-A-Loan

For more infomation >> Superman - Duration: 1:07.

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Arquivo pessoal - família 1 - Duration: 29:53.

For more infomation >> Arquivo pessoal - família 1 - Duration: 29:53.

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Arquivo pessoal - família 2 - Duration: 15:38.

For more infomation >> Arquivo pessoal - família 2 - Duration: 15:38.

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Équipement SMS Témoignage de client : MGT Management - Duration: 3:32.

For more infomation >> Équipement SMS Témoignage de client : MGT Management - Duration: 3:32.

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Definition of Sex - Duration: 6:06.

My name is Lindsey Doe.

I'm a clinical SEXologist and doctor of human SEXuality.

[WHIP CRACKING, COUGH]

Recently my friend and I were talking about something and she said, "wait, what is your

definition of sex?"

I tried to give her an inclusive answer that wouldn't leave out anyone's experiences

and validated me as a so-called expert on the topic.

I'll tell you the definition I gave but first, some background on how I got to it.

I grew up in the 80 and 90s and among my peers, sex meant a penis in a vagina.

If the penis only touched the vagina, that was "just the tip."

If it was a finger in the vagina instead of a penis, that was fingering.

An anus instead of a vagina was anal sex, not sex sex.

And oral went by more specific terms: blowjob, eating out, or tossing the salad.

Of course people had broader definitions of sex, my friends and I didn't determine language,

but this is where my journey started.

In 1998 when I was a sophomore in high school, media repeatedly quoted the president, Bill

Clinton, saying "I did not have sexual relations with that woman."

This was a big deal for the definition of sex.

The woman, Monica Lewinsky, had recorded nine encounters with Clinton and kept an unwashed

dress of hers with Clinton's semen on it.

He had definitely had sexual relations with her.

But as a nation we debated, what constitutes sexual relations?

What is sex?

If our president was getting head, people like me who were giving head were being told

by their country's leader that it's not really sex.

No need for protection.

Or need for concern about SEXually transmitted infection.

When the court challenged President Clinton, he argued, "I thought the definition included

any activity by [me], where [I] was the actor and came in contact with those parts of the

bodies" (referring to a list that included: "genitalia, anus, groin, breast, inner thigh,

or buttocks") "with an intent to gratify or arouse the sexual desire of any person."

As in, "since I didn't touch her genitalia or intend to gratify or arouse her, since

it was my penis and my pleasure, I wasn't having sex."

Ummm?!?!?!?!?

The court disagreed.

Giving or receiving a blowjob was now sex.

However when I was in college, if you asked me how many people I'd had sex with, I'd

tell you 4.

There were the two high school boyfriends and then two guys I had seen from work.

I wouldn't have included the oral hook-up.

I wouldn't have included mutually masturbating with a friend, and definitely not those I'd kissed.

My definition was still pretty specific.

After college I was certified to do HIV counseling and testing which meant swabbing people's

gums and assessing their risk.

I learned there were men who identified as heterosexual, had wives or girlfriends, but

put their penises in other men's assholes and or mouths and or received penises in their

assholes and or mouths.

Often anonymously, without protection or communication to understand risk.

Because if you have a strict definition of sex as penis in vagina, or denial about your

homosexuality, then you're less likely to have safer sex, and more likely to pass sexually

transmitted infections.

During this time I was also in graduate school working on my thesis.

This big ol' bounded thing.

My research question was: what is sexual intercourse, specifically the first time?

How do we determine when we've had sex?

I found that the phenomenon of sex usually included: negotiation, heightened body temperature,

anticipation, genital contact, sensation of an electric charge, performance awareness,

and persistent movement.

But beyond that the experience was really personal.

One participant asked if I wanted to know about her first sexual intercourse experience

ever or just the first time she was with a guy.

Another person wasn't able to really penetrate his partner or ejaculate, they touched naked

bodies together and that was sex to him.

Someone I named Bella, recounted everything that was said during her first time, where

it happened, how she felt, and in doing so realized that what she thought had been sex,

was probably rape.

My 200 page thesis has some answers but certainly not everyone's story or definition of sex.

I can tell you my own story didn't fit in and so I added it to the preface, a full description that reads:

"Reflecting on very lucid memories of anal sex is what brought this study to seek what

defines a phenomenon.

In casual conversation with others, [first sexual intercourse] was repeatedly referred

to as vaginal-penile penetration. When the

researcher's own experience [mine] blurred this definition of first sexual intercourse experiences..."

I had to question sexology as a whole.

My professor, Dr. Merle Farrier, explained that a definition has a genus and a species.

A general category and then something that makes it specific -- different than everything

else in that category.

For example the definition of a thesis is a long essay or dissertation (the genus) involving

personal research, written by a candidate for a college degree (the species).

In that conversation with my friend about my definition of sex I answered to me sex

is: a consensual activity designed to arouse a physiological response.

It has a genus and species.

It doesn't use the word sex in the definition.

It's inclusive, but too much so.

A pelvic exam could be sex in this case.

So could open heart surgery.

Dictionaries aren't much better, though.

The Merriam-Webster definition says sex is sexually motivated phenomena or behavior.

Showering can be a sexually motivated behavior for me.

So can trimming pubic hair.

Driving to my partner's house... do all those constitute sex?

Then there's this definition: "anything connected with sexual gratification or reproduction

or the urge for these..."

That includes oral and anal and sexting and watching porn and masturbating.

It could include all the kinks, fantasizing about someone, and in vitro fertilization.

I don't think there is one all encompassing definition.

I think that words and their meanings are influenced by the people using them and the context.

Going back to my friend's question, "wait, what is your definition of sex?"

The answer is the question.

What is my definition in that moment, in that conversation.

I don't have to have a tidy short "this is the meaning of sex."

The gift is the opportunity to talk more about behaviors and experiences rather than coming

up with a succinct qualifier for all the sex out there.

This is more inclusive.

It includes more bodies, types of desire.

It makes it easier for people to express themselves sexually when they aren't held to a rigid idea

that to have sex means you have to get hard or wet and someone's on top and there's thrusting.

If sex can look the way each of us decides and there's consent among all parties,

that's sex.

Let your definition of sex be a dialogue about sex and stay curious.

[MAIA:] "Since it was my penis and my pleasure, I wasn't having sex."

[LINDSEY LAUGHS]

For more infomation >> Definition of Sex - Duration: 6:06.

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Cette épice détruit les cellules cancéreuses, d'après une nouvelle étude |MDSO - Duration: 7:14.

For more infomation >> Cette épice détruit les cellules cancéreuses, d'après une nouvelle étude |MDSO - Duration: 7:14.

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Toyota HiAce 2.5 D4-D 89PK EXPORT!! - Duration: 1:05.

For more infomation >> Toyota HiAce 2.5 D4-D 89PK EXPORT!! - Duration: 1:05.

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Sacrificio d'amore 2, anticipazioni puntata 25 luglio - Duration: 3:15.

For more infomation >> Sacrificio d'amore 2, anticipazioni puntata 25 luglio - Duration: 3:15.

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Sound By Numbers: The Rise of Digital Sound - Duration: 14:12.

Have you ever noticed that a loudspeaker is the opposite of an eardrum?

Eh, probably not.

But it's true!

See our ears work by concentrating changes in air pressure onto a small diaphragm that

will move back and forth with the pressure changes.

This vibration causes stimulation in the heary bits of the ear which your brain can, assuming

you have normal hearing ability, turn into what we perceive as sound.

A loudspeaker does the opposite--its diaphragms (the driver cones) vibrate to create pressure

changes in the air.

This vibration gets transferred to our eardrums so we can hear it.

We're sticking to simple stuff today because the rabbit hole is just too deep.

All you need to know is that things vibrate, which causes air pressure to fluctuate, which

causes our eardrums to also vibrate, which stimulates the brain so that we can perceive

that vibration as sound.

This channel started as a series exploring the history of artificial sound, and it's

been over TWO YEARS since I last touched on it at all.

Finally we're finishing this up with the introduction of

DIGITAL SOUND (emphasis added with obnoxious reverb).

Since it's been forever, let's go over a brief history of sound recording technologies.

The first device which could reproduce a sound recording was the phonograph.

Thomas Edison's invention consisted of an artificial eardrum, which would vibrate along

with changes in sound pressure, and with the aid of a collecting horn, the vibration is

transferred into this stylus, creating an up-and-down motion.

This carves a groove into a wax cylinder, and the vibrating stylus creates an imprint

of the sound wave.

The depth of that groove becomes a literal analog of the original sound vibrations.

Then, when the stylus is run over the now bumpy groove, the bumps cause the diaphragm

to vibrate in the same way as it did when it first made the bumps, and the result is

that you hear the same sound as before.

Or at least, a barely passable imitation of that sound.

(sad sounding violin music)

Commercially produced discs and cylinders were molded from master

recordings, and wouldn't wear down like the original wax cylinders.

They were played back using devices like this.

This device is called a reproducer, and for decades all phonographs were based on

simple acoustic devices like this.

For nearly a century, this is how artificial sound recording technologies worked.

Something (like this horn) would collect sound waves, and recreate them onto a physical analog.

Then, that physical analog could recreate the original sound waves when played back.

While it all started with simple acoustic devices like this phonograph, eventually improvements

were made.

The development of the electronic microphone was perhaps the most important.

Now, sound waves cause a receiving diaphragm to move a coil of wire around a magnet, and

a voltage is produced in the wire as the diaphragm moves.

This time, sound waves are recreated as a voltage coming from the microphone, and by

amplifying this voltage and sending it into a new record cutting device which moves its

cutting stylus as a function of the voltage it receives, a more accurate carving of the

sound wave could be made into a disc or cylinder.

This greatly improved the fidelity of the recorded sound, even on acoustic reproduction

devices like this.

With the proliferation of radio--which I feel I must explain is a sound transmission technology,

not sound recording.

Just so we don't get confused too much here--

the loudspeaker became a big deal.

Loudspeakers are the opposite of microphones--instead of producing a voltage as a reaction to a

sound pressure wave moving its diaphragm, a loudspeaker will move its diaphragm and

create a pressure wave as a reaction to incoming voltage.

With loudspeakers all the rage, record players could now use a phonograph cartridge, which

acts like a microphone for records.

The movement of the stylus as the groove vibrates it generates a voltage which can be amplified

to drive a loudspeaker.

This gets very meta very quickly.

An artificial ear turns sounds into voltage, and a cutting stylus turns this voltage into

a groove on a record.

Then, a playback stylus playing the record generates a voltage as the stylus vibrates.

This voltage is then amplified to drive a loudspeaker, which causes pressure changes

in the air around the loudspeaker, which your ears concentrate down to your eardrums, and

now your real eardrums are vibrating in roughly the same way that the original artificial

eardrum moved in the microphone in the first place.

Yeah.

In essence, the record becomes a way to recreate the original pattern of voltage created by

the microphone, so that the sound can be heard again in a different place

at a different time.

Let's cut out the middle bit because that's what's most confusing.

A microphone like this creates an electrical signal of fluctuating intensity based on how

its diaphragm moves.

I can just amplify that signal and send it straight into a loudspeaker, which will reproduce

the sound in real time.

Radio accomplishes this wirelessly, but the sound isn't recorded.

To capture the sound coming from the microphone to be played back later, it has to be converted

into an analog of the signal.

And that's why it's called analog recording technology.

No matter if it's a record, a cassette tape, an open reel tape, or even a wax cylinder,

the sound information is recorded "doorectly"...

Doorectly.

Doorectly?

The sound information is recorded directly onto something, which can then be used to

recreate a copy of the original sound information.

That something is an analog of the original sound waves.

Improvements in sound technology were for many years simply incremental.

Wax cylinders became shellac discs.

Shellac became vinyl.

Magnetic recording wire allowed for a reusable, electronic recording medium.

This was improved into magnetic tape, allowing for a high fidelity, versatile recording medium

enabling multi-track recording and editing.

And to improve on the noise of magnetic tape, different particle formulations were developed,

and noise reduction technologies matured.

But we were still just taking some signal from a microphone, then slapping it basically

as is onto some sort of physical medium.

And that medium was never perfect.

Poorly made tape would cause signal dropouts.

Discs would be plagued by dust and scratches, and would slowly wear down with each play.

Because the analog medium contained the sound in its physical properties, it was inherently

prone to wear, damage, and distortion.

Which of course would wear down, damage, or distort the sound recording itself.

If only there were some way to encode the sound, perhaps a way to store sound logically

rather than analogously.

Maybe if the signal weren't the sound itself, but instead were a set of instructions on

how to recreate it, we could get lossless, near-perfect sound reproduction.

And thus, digital sound was born.

The heart of uncompressed digital sound is pulse-code modulation, or PCM.

PCM's roots can be traced back to the telegraph days, but its invention as we know it today

for sound came from British Engineer Alec Reeves.

I feel I must compliment Mr. Reeves on his given name, it's excellent.

Very good.

He first devised this digital method of transmitting and receiving voice communication in 1937,

though it required extremely complex circuitry for the time.

However, PCM transmission was used during World War 2 as a way to encrypt extremely

important voice conversations, such as those between Winston Churchill

and Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

This encryption system was called SIGSALY,

"SIGSALLY"?

"SIGSALIE"?

Or Project X, X System, Ciphony 1, or Green Hornet.

Anyway, Project Green Sally X System Hornet 1 was much more complicated than simple Pulse

Code Modulation, but PCM was a large part of its encryption.

So how does PCM work?

It's actually simpler than it might seem at first.

It's rather like a system for repeatedly asking what the instantaneous amplitude of

a signal is many thousands of times per second, then simply writing that down.

Let's look at a simple sine wave.

If this were to be encoded on a vinyl record, the groove of the record would start out straight

in the center, then move to the left as the signal intensity reached peak, then it would

start to move to the right, keep moving, keep moving, and then it would pull back to the

center.

When it's played back, the movement of the stylus as the walls of the groove wiggle it

back and forth will recreate this signal.

And audio tape does the same thing, except the intensity isn't recorded as a physical

movement, but as a degree of magnetization on the tape.

But with PCM, we aren't even trying to recreate the wave.

Instead, we want to quantify it and play connect-the-dots.

Let's say I want to take 20 samples of this waveform.

OK, I'll divide it up into 20 chunks.

Now I just need to define the detail I can have within each sample.

Let's put this on a scale of 0 to 15.

That's 4 bits of resolution.

Now, at each sampling point, we can take the closest value.

This sine wave can now be represented as the following string of numbers.

To get the sine wave back, we simply plot those numbers on a graph.

Then, connect the dots.

Tada! A sine…

wave?

Well, a sloppy sine wave.

But that's only because we weren't very specific.

We only took 20 samples, and each one could only be one of 16 values.

But now we know the two most crucial parts of digital sound--the sample rate and the

bit depth.

Perhaps the most common sample rate and bit depth of digital sound is 44.1 kilohertz,

16 bits.

This means that every second, 44,100 samples are taken, and each sample can be one of 65,536

values, or 2 to the power of 16.

And that's how devices like this, a Tascam DR-05, record sound.

It's looking at the voltage coming from the microphone, and taking precise measurements.

Every 44.1 thousandth of a second, it takes a voltage reading, and, well, writes it down.

It's furiously quantifying and logging the voltage it measures with 16 bits of accuracy,

and the result is a string of numbers that logically represent the shape of the sound

waves that exerted pressure on the microphone's diagram.

Pretty neat, huh?

And it can actually write down two numbers at a time, since this has two microphones

and records in stereo.

Inside this recorder is what's called an analog-to-digital converter, or ADC.

The "ADC" is the actual device responsible for creating the stream of samples.

It takes the analog signal coming from the microphones themselves and converts it into

a stream of discrete numbers.

If you open the files it makes in audacity, you see what looks like a waveform of the sound.

It is a waveform, but a waveform that's been plotted precisely on a graph.

Zoom way, way, way in on the waveform,

and eventually you can see the individual samples themselves.

And that's all digital sound is--

it's a huge list of numbers strung together in order.

To get these numbers back into sound we can hear, we need to use the opposite of an analog-to-digital

converter, or "ADC".

So, we'll use a DAC, or Digital-to-analog converter.

I like it when names make sense.

A DAC will read the string of numbers, and generate an analog voltage based upon their

values.

The DAC will smooth out the choppiness of the samples a bit to make the resulting sound

a little more natural, and now you've got an analog signal to send into an amplifier

and drive a loudspeaker.

The result is a near-perfect reproduction of the originally recorded sound.

Here's a very crude analogy to explain the difference between analog and digital sound.

A vinyl record's walls generate an analog signal by moving the stylus left and right...

as well as up and down.

It's diagonally moved for stereo, but just imagine for a moment that it's just left

and right.

A record directly creates the analog signal via the motion of the stylus.

But a digital sound source is instead sort of like a virtual stylus riding in a virtual groove.

The sound samples are snapshots in time of where the stylus was.

A DAC will then create an analog signal by running a virtual stylus through this virtual

groove and placing it at exactly the correct location--and thus generating the appropriate

voltage level--as defined by the samples.

By using a giant list of numbers to recreate sound, instead of the physical properties

of a plastic disc, the sound can be reproduced flawlessly and accurately with no reliance

on the record player's cartridge properties, the integrity of its stylus, it's motor,

the quality of the vinyl etc.

The biggest boon of digital sound was that it eliminated all of the little nuances that

might change how a recording sounds.

Digital sound is in a sense, absolute.

But getting digital sound into the hands of the average consumer took a long while.

DACs and "ADCs" were expensive components, and the amount of raw data generated by sound

recording was immense for the standards of the time.

Although 650 megabytes, the data equivalent of the first compact discs, is a paltry sum

of data in the 21st century, it was unimaginably huge in the early 1970's, when the first

commercial digital sound recording took place.

For context, the Commodore 64, released the same year as the compact disc, has 64 kilobytes

of ram, and that was considered huge for the time.

A compact disc held roughly ten thousands times as much data.

64 kilobtyes of CD quality audio lasts this long;

(clip)

That's not super helpful.

When we continue, we'll look at the methods that were used to store data from digital

recordings, and we'll discuss the rise of the compact disc as a robust, consumer-friendly

format for digital sound reproduction and distribution.

Thanks for watching, I hope you enjoyed the video!

If this is your first time coming across the channel and you liked what you saw, please

consider subscribing to Technology Connections.

Don't forget you can also follow me on Twitter @TechConnectify, and you might enjoy the second

channel, Technology Connection 2, where I talk about stuff and don't prepare for anything.

Also, thanks to Lord Telaneo on Twitter, there is also a Technology Connections Subreddit.

I really don't know reddit at all, but you will also find me there as TechConnectify.

As always, thank you to everyone who supports this channel on Patreon, especially the wonderful

folks that have been scrolling up your screen.

It is with the support of people like you that I'm able to make these videos.

Thank you.

If you'd like to you join these awesome people and support the channel too, why not

take a look at my Patreon page.

Thank you for your consideration, and I'll see you next time!

For more infomation >> Sound By Numbers: The Rise of Digital Sound - Duration: 14:12.

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Everything We Know So Far About Demi Lovato's Overdose - Duration: 4:44.

Demi Lovato was hospitalized at approximately 11 a.m. on Tuesday, July 24th, 2018, with

sources telling TMZ that they suspect the singer suffered from, quote, "what appears

to be an overdose."

However, insiders close to Lovato insisted to The Blast that whatever she suffered from,

it was not due to use.

She was reportedly unconscious when paramedics arrived.

Law enforcement sources told TMZ that Lovato was treated at her home with Narcan, which

is used for overdoses of opioids such as heroin or Oxycontin, the latter of which she'd previously

admitted to abusing.

The overdose reportedly occurred in her house.

Insiders also told TMZ that Lovato had partied with friends the night before and seemed to

be in good spirits.

The good news is that a few hours after she was hospitalized, Lovato's rep confirmed,

"Demi is awake and with her family who want to express thanks to everyone for the love,

prayers and support."

While we wait for more updates on her condition, here's everything we know about Demi Lovato's

troubles.

Musical confession

In her heartbreaking ballad "Sober," released in June 2018, Lovato revealed that she had

relapsed.

She didn't comment further on her slip from sobriety, except to say in the days leading

up to the song's release that she would soon reveal her, quote, "uncomfortable and shocking

truth."

Sources told Entertainment Tonight at the time of the "Sober" music video release that

Lovato had began drinking again, with insiders confirming to People magazine that her relapse

began with alcohol abuse, and that those closest to her saw her alleged overdose coming as

soon as she relapsed.

The insider claimed that over the last few months, Lovato felt that she was keeping her

initial alcohol abuse "under control," but unfortunately, that control didn't last long.

The insider added,

"Start using again and it's a slippery slope right back to rock bottom.

The minute she started using again, the clock was ticking down to this exact moment."

Risky friendship

A red flag for many fans was when Lovato was spotted holding hands with rapper G-Eazy during

a late-night outing to a Los Angeles nightclub earlier in July 2018.

Spies told Radar Online that Lovato and G-Eazy arrived at the club at 1:00 a.m. and left

together at about 2:30 a.m.

This news was concerning to many, as according to Radar Online, G-Eazy was arrested in May

2018 in Sweden after being busted with two bags of cocaine and a rolled up $100 bill

following a brawl in a nightclub.

Despite the hand-holding, G-Eazy later told Entertainment Tonight that Lovato was, quote,

"just a friend."

Six years

In March 2018, Lovato marked six years of sobriety onstage in a moving speech, saying,

in part,

"Yesterday, six years ago, I was drinking vodka out of a Sprite bottle at nine in the

morning, throwing up in the car and I just remember thinking, 'This is no longer cute.

This is no longer fun.

And I'm just like my dad,' so I made changes in my life."

Lovato also celebrated the milestone on Twitter, writing, "Just officially turned 6 years sober.

So grateful for another year of joy, health and happiness.

It IS possible."

"One of the reasons I've stayed sober is because I want people to know that it is possible

for you to get help and to recover."

Unfortunately, in June 2018, Page Six revealed that Lovato had unfollowed her sober coach,

Mike Bayer, who was also her partner at CAST Centers, a mental health clinic she had co-owned.

A source close to Lovato told Radar Online,

"[Demi has] gone off the rails.

[…] She's completely dropped her family members, friends and everyone in the sober

community, including all of the people at CAST.

And now she is cutting off her staff who have worked with her forever."

Suspicious fans

As early as April 2018, some fans were concerned that Lovato wasn't living a sober lifestyle

anymore because her friends got a little messy on social media.

In an Instagram pic from a night out with friends, Lovato is seen holding a plastic

cup containing a gold beverage.

But when another friend posted the pic, Lovato's cup appeared to be edited out, and followers

were quick to notice.

A miffed Lovato reportedly responded to one fan, "I don't have to defend anything, but

it was Red Bull."

In June 2018, before her relapse reveal, Lovato canceled two scheduled performances in London,

citing vocal cord issues and claiming that she was sick.

While this caused some speculation among her fans, it's unconfirmed if the cancellations

were related to her relapse.

Planning to tell all

Lovato has been open about her struggles with substance abuse, self-harm, bulimia, and mental

illness, and Radar Online reports that she was planning to tell all about her relapse

following the release of "Sober."

Lovato had intended to sit down with NBC Today host Hoda Kotb to detail her plans to get

back on track.

An insider added,

"Demi is ready to share what led to the relapse and what she is doing now to stay sober.

She has always been very open and honest with her fans about her struggles, so it's only

natural that she would do this."

"So many people feel connected to her in a way that I haven't seen before."

For more infomation >> Everything We Know So Far About Demi Lovato's Overdose - Duration: 4:44.

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Ces 2 symptômes peuvent être des signes de cancers ! - Duration: 8:24.

For more infomation >> Ces 2 symptômes peuvent être des signes de cancers ! - Duration: 8:24.

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People Told Me To Feed This To Induce Breeding Activity - Duration: 5:13.

Oh Man, this is gonna be an epic slow motion feed.

Oh man, this is going to be epic!

Greetings everybody this is Paul The inventoryking, would love if you guys can punch the subscribe

button, click on that notification bell, I'd be honored for you guys to become subscribers

and join me on my channel and my fish keeping adventures.

So on one of my last videos I talked about how we are going to be feeding these guys

heavily to try and induce breeding, to try to get them to start breeding.

Well, I got a lot of comments that said go ahead and feed them frozen krill.

In this, uh, in this cup here, so that, with tank water of course.

So as you can see, we're going to go here and then we're just going to break some of

this apart in the bag.

Oh Man, this is gonna be an epic slow motion feed.

Oh man, this is going to be epic!

Nice!

So we need to let that defrost now, need to let it defrost.

So what I'm about to do, do you all think that it's going to work?

In those comments down below, let me know what you guys think.

Would love to see what your guys comments are.

I love when you guys comment.

I love to respond to you guys, I appreciate everything that you guys comment on, like,

share, subscribe, all that good stuff.

So are we ready to do this?

Let's do it.

Alright.

We are ready to do this epic feeding.

This is the first time I'm feeding this to them as you can see it as ready to go.

All right, so check them out.

There's quite a few of them eating it.

There's a few that seemed like they were like, what in the world is that?

There's a few down here as you can see.

So I'm hoping that they are going to head that way and notice them pretty soon.

But yeah, they are chowing down and loving it I'm assuming.

There we go.

There we go.

A little bit of male action there.

These predators have such big mouths.

It's an awesome thing to see.

You could see that dude just chewing on that Krill.

HAHAHA, That's awesome.

This lady's chewing on some.

That one looks to be.

This is awesome.

So I'm probably gonna end up feeding some of this a couple times a week just to see

what happens.

This dude right here is awesome.

Look at this beast chewing on that Krill, Loving it!

Pretty sweet huh?

It is so awesome to feed our fish.

Whatever fish you have, one of the funnest parts of the hobby.

So again, thank you so much for watching.

If you could punch that subscribe button and Click on the notification bell, I'd be honored

for you guys to join me on my channel and my fish keeping adventurous.

If you can like the video, share the video, that would be awesome.

You guys are great.

Thank you so much and stay tanked.

For more infomation >> People Told Me To Feed This To Induce Breeding Activity - Duration: 5:13.

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Como Funciona O Processo de Desenvolvimento de Carreira - Duration: 3:33.

For more infomation >> Como Funciona O Processo de Desenvolvimento de Carreira - Duration: 3:33.

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Gigi D'Alessio e la Tatangelo di nuovo insieme - Duration: 3:48.

For more infomation >> Gigi D'Alessio e la Tatangelo di nuovo insieme - Duration: 3:48.

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Équipement SMS Témoignage de client : MGT Management - Duration: 3:32.

For more infomation >> Équipement SMS Témoignage de client : MGT Management - Duration: 3:32.

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Coming soon ** new construction approx. 3500 sq.f, monroe nj, russell hayek weichert realtors - Duration: 4:01.

hey guys this new construction custom home brings us into Monroe we figure

about four or five weeks left

new construction approximately 3,500 square feet sets on two and a half acres

open floor plans lake views from every room eat-in kitchen will have stainless

steel appliances granite countertops

family room fireplace first floor office two car side entry garage has a full

basement with high ceilings well let's just take a walk through

well let's take it upstairs

of course any questions just shoot me a text

or give me a call

ten rooms five bedrooms three full baths

alright guys I guess that wraps things up here have any questions need

more info just shoot me a text or give me a call so I'll figure about good five

six weeks talk to you later next time have a good one

For more infomation >> Coming soon ** new construction approx. 3500 sq.f, monroe nj, russell hayek weichert realtors - Duration: 4:01.

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Η συγκλονιστική φωτογραφία που αποκαλύπτει την κόλαση που έζησαν οι κάτοικοι στο Μάτι | Top News | f - Duration: 1:09.

Τον γύρο του διαδικτύου κάνει τις τελευταίες ώρες μια φωτογραφία, η οποία αποκαλύπτει την κόλαση που έζησαν οι κάτοικοι στο Μάτι, στην προσπάθειά τους να γλιτώσουν από τις φλόγες που τους κυνήγησαν μέχρι τη θάλασσα

  Ο ουρανός έχει γίνει κατακόκκινος από τους καπνούς και τη φωτιά, η ατμόσφαιρα είναι θολή και αποπνικτική, δύο ανθρώπινες φιγούρες διακρίνονται μέσα στην θάλασσα που καίει από το τεράστιο θερμικό φορτίο

  Στο εν λόγω στιγμιότυπο βλέπουμε τον ουρανό να είναι κατακόκκινος από τη φωτιά, γαμάτος καπνούς, η ατμόσφαιρα δείχνει αποπνικτική και μέσα στη θάλασσα δύο ανθρώπινες φιγούρες με τα χέρια τους ψηλά, κρατώντας τα λίγα πράγματα που μπόρεσαν να πάρουν μαζί τους

Κανείς δεν γνωρίζει την τύχη τους.  Πηγή φωτογραφίας: forecastweather.gr

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