- What's up, This is Tangana el Madrileno,
- And your girl Becky G and this is How It Went Down,
with our song, "Booty."
- I started the beat with Alizzz,
who is my main producer right now, in Columbia.
We were hanging there, and listening to cumbia.
We were eating bandeja paisa,
do you know what bandeja paisa is?
It's a typical amazing food from Columbia.
So, we were there, and we started,
like, thinking about the beat,
and we started speaking, like,
- the instruments, basically.
- I think I have the words now, here.
- Yeah, play it babe, it's awesome.
- Can you not hear it?
That's the original idea for Booty.
- It's interesting because by the time it got to me,
I was in Spain, for a promo trip,
and usually when I go to Spain, it's like jam packed.
And I kept telling them, every time I go to Spain,
I gotta get in the studio with him,
I gotta get in the studio with him,
And finally, this one trip,
which was one of my most recent trips to Spain,
then I was like one day! Just one day with him, please,
I begged the record label.
And they were like all right, cool, we'll make it happen.
And so I show up to the studio,
the chemistry, like creative chemistry was insane.
I just like started playing him songs
off the recent projects I've been working on, and then,
he starts playing me the set that he had been working on.
And so he just, you know, keeps playing song after song,
hit after hit, and then this one song, and he's like okay,
I'm gonna play this, but it's super rough.
And he plays this song, and the track goes off,
and I was like, this is it. This is the one.
- She just started free styling.
- Yeah, I did.
- The first thing I think was,
booty, booty, booty, booty, booty, booty, booty!
- Booty booty booty!
'cause like, how many times
have we heard songs about butts?
A lot, you know what I mean?
But it's like, you can't help it.
It's like writing about, like, love.
So I just kind of got carried away with it,
and I was just like, booty, booty, booty,
booty, booty, booty, booty!
You say you love my booty and I know you want to do me.
And, then I hit my ad lib track, which is pretty cool,
which is, always like, my favorite part
when we're creating music
- because now - Chi chi chi chi chi chi!
- I was just like making all these,
crazy like jungle sounding noises,
which are now part of the track,
so if you listen in the background,
there's the Chi chi chi chi chi chi! And then there's the
Comey boom bom bom baaay ... it's like, awesome.
I remember, I was in Miami, and I was in the car,
and he sent it to me, though WhatsApp and he's like
Yo, sis, check this out, lemme know what you think.
So I'm just like Yo! Excuse me sir,
can I connect to the system real quick,
I just want to play this song, and I play it,
and everybody in the car turns around like,
is this you? This is you?
Like this is your next song coming out?
And my favorite part is the collaboration. Right?
Like that's when the magic happens,
when one world collides with another,
in the best way possible,
and I would speak for both of us as artists,
We're inspired by so many different genres of music,
um, that, it's amazing because,
although we're from different parts of the world,
we have so much in common because of music.
For more infomation >> How C. Tangana & Becky G Created 'Booty' | Billboard | How It Went Down - Duration: 3:00.-------------------------------------------
Cultural & Heritage Virtual Tours Announcement - Duration: 1:52.
Hello i'm Monmouth County Freeholder Deputy Director Lillian Burry and I'm
standing at Laird's & Company in Colts Neck
Laird's is a production company of Applejack which started back in 1698
when Alexander Laird came from Scotland and it has been considered the most
productive company of Applejack and the oldest in the country it is really
interesting to also note that it was George Washington who called our
Applejack 'Jersey Lightning.' All of our towns in Monmouth County have great
distinction in history and culture and their stories and landmarks that make
each one of them unique. I'm incredibly proud to announce that we are bringing a
new way to discover our county. The Monmouth County cultural and heritage
byway story map is online a resource filled with interactive tours there are
eight story maps and these tours take you across the county encompassing every
imaginal point of interest from Revolutionary War sites to space
exploration from natural landscapes to happenings in downtowns and from solemn
memorials to iconic pop culture landmarks. I
invite you to discover these tours at visitmonmouth.com and find out for
yourself why Monmouth County is The Place You Want to Be.
-------------------------------------------
VO BOSS: Special Guest - Gerald Griffith - Duration: 21:17.
>> Today's voiceover talent is more than just a pretty voice.
>> Pretty voice.
>> Pretty voice.
>> Pretty voice.
>> Today's voiceover talent has to be a boss.
>> Boss.
>> A boss.
>> A boss.
>> Join us each week for business owner strategies and success with your hosts Anne Ganguzza
and Gabrielle Nistico, along with some of the strongest voices in our industry.
>> Rock your business.
>> Rock your business.
>> Rock your business.
>> Like a boss.
>> Like a boss.
>> Rock your business like a boss.
>> Rock your business like a boss.
>> A VO BOSS.
>> A VO BOSS.
>> A VO BOSS.
Anne: Welcome to the VO BOSS podcast.
I'm you host, Anne Ganguzza, along with my VO BOSS bestie, Gabby Nistico.
Hey Gabby, how are you?
Gabby: Hello, hello!
Anne: We have a special guest today.
Gabby: [in goofy fan voice] I know!
Anne: Very well known to many, many people, founder and executive producer of the huge
conference that is VO Atlanta, welcome to the show Gerald Griffith.
Thanks so much for joining us!
Gabby: Yayy!
Anne: Woo-hoo!
Gerald: Thanks for having me.
[Anne and Gerald laugh]
Gerald: That was so formal.
It was like we're opening a city hall, city council meeting, or something.
[Anne laughs]
Gabby: You'll see that as the show progresses, we become less and less formal.
So it's ok.
Gerald: It's ok.
It'll speed up at some point once your espresso kicks in.
Gabby: Exactly!
Anne: Exactly.
So Gerald, I have to say, Gabby and I go way back with you from, Gabby even further than
me because Gabby, you were at the very first VO Atlanta in 2013, correct?
Gabby: Yah.
Anne: And I met Gerald in 2014.
Gerald: Gabby, Gabby was actually my first outside of the Atlanta area presenter in July
of 2012 at the Hampton Inn here in downtown Atlanta.
Gabby: We could have never in a million years –
[Gerald laughs]
Gabby: I think projected this success and how much it's grown, and what it's become.
Anne: Oh my gosh.
Gabby: I mean, ok, last year's conference, or this year's conference, I should say,
2018, how many attendees?
Gerald: Just under 700.
Anne: Woo.
Gabby: Holy cow.
Anne: That's a big party, Gerald.
Wow.
That is big.
Gerald: Just a few friends, you know?
Just a few friends.
Anne: Well, listen, I'm just gonna say that those [laughs] – anybody that knows me out
there knows my little group, my little VO Peeps group.
And I've hosted events at my house.
Ok?
And nothing compared to close to 700 people.
So I know, Gerald, how much work it takes to put on an event, at least in the scope
that I did.
But I cannot imagine what it takes to put on the VO Atlanta conference.
Tell us a little about how that all got started, and you know, what was your mission in the
beginning -- and wow, it's just grown so much – and what your plans are for growing
it into the future?
Gerald: [laughs] Getting started, the idea was pretty simple both with the meet-up and
with the initial aims of the conference, was to basically be a resource for the Atlanta
area.
And when I did the conference in 2013, it was to be a drivable resource for people in
the southeast United States.
And you know, having done the meet-up here which focused on local people, it was one
of those things where everything seemed to be far away, you know California, New York,
Chicago, somewhere.
So I say, "well, there's obviously people in the southeast too, so why not have something
that people can drive to?"
I literally had a map on the wall, and I used one of the online tools to measure out how,
how far somebody could get if they drove say six hours.
You know, I drew a big circle, and that was my target audience in my mind.
Seems so far away, removed at this point.
[Gabby laughs]
Anne: And now you've got global attendees.
Gerald: The circle feels like an exclusion zone.
Like fewer people come from that circle than outside of that circle, but that's, that's
how it all started.
I remember that first year, we had one person attended from Bermuda.
And I was so pumped up.
I was like, "Oh my God."
I sat there and stared at the screen a little bit.
"Bermuda?
Wow!
This is awesome."
And since then I think we've probably had well over 20 different countries represented,
and on average we do somewhere between 13,14 different countries each year that come out.
This year we had people from 40 different states, including Alaska.
[Gabby laughs]
Anne: Wow.
Gabby: I got to ask you, Gerald, every year, every conference, you have a theme.
And the theme is woven through the entire event.
It's, it's always, everything comes back to that central theme.
What kind of prompted you to do that?
Where did, where did that come from?
Is that part of the corporate background?
What, how did that transpire?
[Anne laughs]
Gerald: Me, corporate?
Gabby: Nah.
Anne: No, not at all.
[laughs]
Gerald: Yeah, well, I think it's one of those things where people need something to
kind of go back to, particularly when you bring in presenters who all have difference
experiences, and difference background, and different approaches.
You want to have something that serves as a starting point that no matter what they're
teaching, no matter what they're bringing to the conference, they can sprinkle this
one thing in there somewhere and tie it into other sessions or other happenings at the
conference.
And so having a theme of some kind is, is really an integral part so that people can
have something to rally around as, as an underlying thread throughout the event.
Gabby: And what is the 2019 theme?
Gerald: "Refresh."
Anne: Ahh very nice.
Hey Gerald, your 2019 is a little bit later this year than normal.
Gerald: Yes, it is.
[all laugh]
Anne: Any particular reason for that?
Was that just location?
Was that…
Gerald: It was the farthest I could push it and still be in March.
[Anne laughs]
Gerald: Well, what people don't realize is it's this really weird thing with the
calendar.
First of all, you're coming out of the holidays into January in the first place.
And then February is a shorter month.
So… it's like, by the time people come of their hole or whatever they went for the
holidays, their family, their vacation, their -- you know, when they finally resurface and
go "Ok, I'm gonna be apart of the, the world again," you're halfway through January.
And then you get to February, and it's like, it's a shorter month! [laughs] So you get
to January, and you literally feel like you've got four weeks to go.
And needless to say, you know, as the conference has gotten larger, there are a lot more things
to put in motion, and crank up, and get going.
And coming out of the holidays, a lot of those things slow down, because people just -- they
have their own agendas during the holidays with family and different things, and so you
really don't get their attention again until January.
And you need that extra time as much as possible to just give people a chance to breathe.
And get everything cranked up again.
Anne: I'd like to commend you too about how much you actually offer at this conference.
And I think your offerings for breakout sessions and X-sessions have maybe doubled in size.
Tell us a little bit about your, your ideas behind that.
Gerald: [laughs] The funny part about this is they're not really my ideas.
The, the conference, and I can say this without the slightest bit of embellishment, the conference
is a reflection of what people have shown an interest in, what agents have said what
they wish people know, what directors have said they wish people knew, and I take it
from there and attempt to bring the resources into the conference to speak to those things.
And I think that's one of the things that makes VO Atlanta a little different in my
role in it because I'm not an in-the-booth talent.
What I do is focus on having experts be experts, and I take care of the event planning, and
the logistics, and meals, and all that stuff like that, and what I want them to do, and
what I ask them to do, what I expect them to do is come and be the best expert in that
space that they can be, to make themselves available, and that's why people, when you're
a presenter with me, you come in on Thursday, you stay to Sunday.
You're available.
People can talk to you in the hallway, they can talk to you at lunch, at breakfast.
You know, it's, it's more of a relational environment, and so it's a very important
thing to listen to the comments, read the surveys, you know, incorporate the things
we can in there.
We do a lot of specialty sessions in addition to our main tracks, because we want to make
it something that people can really, really come and get a great experience in the industry
but also build their networks of friends and colleagues, because you learn differently
in person.
You just, you just do, and so the conference is really not about what I wanted it to be
as much as it is a reflection of conversations I have had with agents, directors.
"If you could go back and train this talent who just sent you their demo, what do you
wish they knew?
What would you teach them?
What would you tell them they needed to figure out before they got to you?"
And then I try to build a conference around that.
Gabby: Anne and I get asked all the time "should I attend a conference?
What conference should I go to?
Why should I go?"
What's the one thing you want someone who's new to know and to understand about VO Atlanta?
Gerald: It's, it's -- I use the phrase "it's your conference."
So I, I think of it more in terms of like a buffet.
I try to make sure there is great, high quality things at the buffet, but ultimately it is
up to you to decide what is good for you.
So we have our main things.
You know, we have commercial, we have, you know, I push business, marketing stuff out
there a lot, animation, gaming, and things like that.
So what I think is really good is that a person can come with an initial interest in any of
those areas but also have the luxury of jumping into another session, listening in on another
panel, talking with someone that works in that other genre, and getting a feel for what
it's really like.
I believe people coming into voiceover are willing to work hard to be successful.
The problem is most of them take their initial advice from some random video they saw on
YouTube, and it's not advice for them, it's just advice.
And so they don't really have a relationship with anyone who understands who they are.
So when they come to the conference, they get a chance to have conversations with people.
They get a chance to sit in on a panel and listen to actual casting directors and actual
agents talk about what they're looking for, and then they can jump into different sessions.
You, you, you can try audiobook, you can try narration, you can try animation, you can
try gaming.
You can take a workshop.
You can do business and marketing, all in one weekend.
And, but it is your conference.
And I mean, to that point I remember early years, there would be the occasional where
someone would say, "hey, I'm thinking about coming to the conference.
What am I gonna get out of it and why should I spend my money?
You know, what's in it for me?"
I reversed it a bit, and I asked them "what do you want to get out of the conference?"
So if you can tell me what you're looking for in the conference, I can do my part to
make sure it's available to you.
It's your job to get something out of it when you've made the decision to come.
Because both of you have been to the event before, and it's one of those things where
if someone came to you at the end of it and said, "I didn't hit anything out of that,"
your first thought should be, "where were you?
Like were you actually -- did you go to anything?"
Because I realized I can't control whether you…
introduce yourself to people.
I can't control whether you go to the panels or the breakouts or you take a workshop.
I can't control whether you even come out of your room.
And so by extension I can't take control over your conference experience.
It's your conference, it's what you make out of it.
Some people come there, they've been in the industry 20, 30 years, and for them the
conference is more of a social endeavor where they see their friends.
They meet people they've worked with 15 years, but they've never had a beer with
them.
So they come for that.
Some people come because it's their first opportunity to ever take a voiceover class
of some kind.
Anne: I think it's a great concept.
And one of the things I love about VO Atlanta is your whole concept and graciousness about
giving back to the community.
In 2013 when I came to you with an idea about my career education scholarship, you were
all for it, in terms of donating VIP registrations to the conference, and I cannot tell you how
thankful I have been over the years because every year -- it wasn't just 2013, it's
every year since, you have supported the scholarship and given back and even added more.
Not only can people get a great education, but there's also this wonderful segment
for people who may not be able to afford the conference in, in terms of you helping to
give back to the community.
Thank you, Gerald, for that.
Gabby: She's getting teary.
Gerald: Thank you for that, Anne.
Anne: I know, I'm getting the clinch.
Gabby: She is.
She is, I can hear it.
[all laugh]
Anne: I do.
I get, I get all caught up.
Gerald: Well, well, Anne I never let you say that without giving the true context of it.
And that's a lot of people may approach you with any number of ideas.
But when it's someone who approaches you, and they're willing to take the reins, you
know, and really, really contribute to the success of something and put in the work to
make it happen, those, those are the people that make it so easy, continually give and
contribute to something because you know that it's not one of those things where you say,
"Ok, I'll help out," and then someone just dumps stuff on your plate and say "here's
what I need from you."
You've done that.
I think it's your giving spirit that takes the little contribution I make to that process
and bring it to life.
And it wouldn't happen otherwise because I don't have the bandwidth to take the auditions
and find yet another panel of people to, to work on something, and it's your work that
really makes the scholarship program come together and work every year, so thanks to
you.
Anne: Thank you for that, but it's not possible without your contributions.
And so, yeah.
Gerald: Of course.
Gabby: Oh stop it, both of you.
Stop it now.
"I love you more."
"I love you more."
"No, I love you more."
"No, I love you more."
[Anne and Gerald laugh]
Gerald: No, you did it more!
No.
Anne: Speaking of which, speaking of which, Gerald, for 2019 there will be another scholarship
program.
We just spoke about it the other day.
Gabby: I don't think anybody who's been to the conference hasn't noticed this.
Like your entire family in some way, shape, or form is apart of VO Atlanta.
They are the beating heart of, circulatory system even throughout everything.
Your sister, [laughs] I love her so much.
And it's really great that, yeah, we have this massive event, lots and lots of people,
but there's still at its core a family.
Gerald: Yeah, family are people that you hire when nobody else'll work with you.
[all laugh]
Anne: No, but I actually, I feel like your family, like I know them.
You know?
Gabby: Yeah.
Anne: And I, I hope they, I hope they're OK with that.
[laughs]
Gabby: We've been watching your kids grow up.
Anne: Right?
Gerald: Yeah, and, and that's the funny thing.
It's like with, for instance with Grant, you know, I always think about it, my younger
son who is now 11, the first year of the conference, he was five years old.
Gabby: Yeah.
Anne: Wow.
Gerald: And it is interesting because there are a lot of people who have been there a
number of years, and they, they have watched them grow up, and then they see them on Facebook,
and, and you know, their milestones, different things they are involved with and I share
there.
They've gotten used to it now when they go to conference and people comment on what's
happening in their life.
They just kind of roll with it, but in the beginning it freaked them out a little bit.
[women laugh]
Gabby: Aww.
And of course there's your wife who, who is just a saint.
Anne: Oh yeah.
Gabby: And you know, it's, it's not easy, it's not easy when your husband is that
occupied for that large a period of time.
Anne: Oh my goodness, yes.
Gabby: Yeah, so.
Anne: I know what it takes for me to put on a small event.
And to put on an event the scope of what you put on, Gerald, is, it is a year-long process.
And for any of you guys that don't realize that, you need to realize that.
It is, it is no small thing to put together a big party for about 700 people and take
care of everything for days.
And Gerald, I can't even imagine the scheduling.
I know just the scheduling alone has got to be a nightmare.
Gerald: I would say that's the biggest challenge.
All of the other stuff is a little more manageable, but when, when it comes to the schedule, we
have, I'll say, well over 100 line items on our schedule --
Anne: Wow.
Gerald: -- that represent well over 200 hours of schedule activity.
Gabby: In a weekend.
[laughs]
Anne: Yeah.
Gerald: It is.
And so we've even, we've made some changes going into '19.
We're moving the keynote to Thursday evening so that we can give a dedicated space to itself,
and get everything kind of kicked off later that evening.
And we'll have the mixer, instead of having an opening reception earlier, we'll have
that after the keynote, and then we'll get ready to kick off early Friday morning for
those people who get up, the hard-core ones and do the fitness stuff at 6:30 in the morning.
Anne: Wow.
Gerald: You know?
You, you ladies will be there surely, correct?
[Anne laughs]
Gabby: Oh yeah.
Oh absolutely.
Anne: Oh yeah, we'll be there.
Yeah, yeah.
Gabby: Oh, I was just going to ask, how people can sign up for the conference?
Gerald: They can go to voatlanta.me to learn more about it and sign up for things.
We expect to get to that point of saying "registration's closed," like "we just cannot sign up
anyone else."
It'll be, it'll be kind of a bittersweet thing, you know?
It'll be kind of good because you feel like "well, we got a lot of people," but you
know, it just is what it is.
And, and to that point, you've both kind of referenced the number of people or the
size.
I really strive to make it feel like a community thing.
And that's, that's a really important element that, even though there are a lot of people
there, that we maintain a comfort level so that you feel like it was a family reunion,
or a gathering with old friends, versus this massive, nondescript, just glob of people.
And so that's why we incorporate fun things like, you know, our Friday night chill stuff
where it's nothing about voiceover.
It's stuff like fingerprinting or cigar bar with bourbon or something.
I mean, it's just, it's not voiceover stuff.
It's people stuff.
And I think, you know, we think that's important.
I think that's important that people have a chance to engage just on a personal level.
That's why we don't put titles on name badges because I really don't care that you're
a casting director first.
I care that you're a person first.
And that's who I should go up and introduce myself to and say, "hey, how are you doing?"
And then if I want to see all the details, I can go read that in the, in the mobile app
or the program guide or something.
Anne: Gerald, thank you so much for spending time with us today and talking about VO Atlanta.
I cannot wait until March of 2019.
Gerald: Absolutely.
We, we gonna do your live thing again, your live podcast from there on location, on site?
Gabby: Yes.
Anne: Woo-hoo, yeah!
Gerald: We're gonna step it up, so you guys can be ready.
I expect the VO BOSSes to be ready to go.
Gabby: We won't let you down.
[Gerald laughs]
Anne: I'd like to give a huge shout-out to our sponsor, ipDTL.
Yes, you too can record like a boss and find out more at ipdtl.com.
Gabby: And of course, guys, for all things BOSS, please go to the website, voboss.com,
and thank you so much!
We'll see you next week.
Anne: Bye-bye!
Announcer: Join us next week for another edition of VO BOSS with your hosts Anne Ganguzza and
Gabby Nistico.
All rights reserved, Anne Ganguzza Voice Talent in association with Three Moon Media.
Redistribution with permission.
Coast-to-coast connectivity via ipDTL.
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Treino Rápido Para PERNAS e ABDÔMEN 🍑 Musa Fitness Girls Workout - Duration: 1:48.
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Rome 390 Boss 2019 Product Video at Blue Tomato - Duration: 3:54.
Hi my name is Chris, and i'm from Rome Snowboards
I'd like you to meet the 390 Boss from Rome.
Many of you probably know the 390 Boss because it's been around forever in our line at Rome
a medium stiff binding which you can use for any application
with the 390 Boss you will have a lot of fun.
It is always a question of the company's philosophy to make pure plastic bindings or pure aluminium bindings
we try to get the best out of both worlds
namely we have an aluminium heel cup which stretches from under the base
which ensures a direct power transmission from the heel to the toe edge
but we also have a plastic base which preserves the natural flex.
Very important for us at rome is customization
which means you can take the binding out of the box, assemble it and you will have fun with it
but if you are still a little busy with the binding, certainly you can get a lot out of our bindings.
A few examples
the highback rotation is a concern for us and possible with all rome bindings
Because only if the binding was mounted with zero degrees on the board
would the highback fit parallel to the heel edge
But if I mount it an angle, the highback doesn't close parallel to the heel edge anymore
Now I have the possibility to rotate the highback from 0 - 24 degrees. If I would rotate the highback now,
the highback would be parallel to the heel edge again
and this ensures a much more direct force transfer to the heel edge.
The straps of all our bindings are adjustable without tools.
What you can see here is our anklestrap, that's our autostrap.
I'll show you how to adjust it.
You just have to adjust the length of the strap to your boot first
and then tighten this autostrap here. You'll see if I open the binding
the strap jumps out, stays open and you can always comfortably get into the binding
without having to grab into the base to get the strap out of the base.
We use a really very comfortable Toestrap
which adapts perfectly to every boot
and I can really bang myself perfectly into the binding with this Toestrap
which gives me additional grip and a direct power transmission to the board.
You can see the tool-less template angle adjustment in the back here,
easy to open and easy to move on the block and you have either more template
or you can take the template out completely.
We also use our Vrod Base here
What is so special about the Vrod Base is that it gives me a smaller contact area on the board
This allows a more natural board flex
and it tilts easily directly from the heel to the toe side edge
but still has the side to side flex
The 390 Boss is available in two sizes: small/medium and large/XLarge
Small/medium I would recommend up zo a boot size of US 9
Anything beyond that please order the Large/XLarge
The 390 Boss is a medium stiff binding with which you can really do nothing wrong
no matter on which board you will have your fun
Very important for you to know, lifetime warranty on all spare parts for Rome bindings!
That means no matter if you need a new Highback, a new Anklestrap,
a new Toestrap, a new toothband or whatever you need,
you get it for free from Rome your whole life!
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Tourist Sauce (Scotland Golf): Episode 5, Crail - Duration: 17:45.
We're out at the Himalayas.
The ladies medal going on.
The excitement is palpable.
Just watching some of that stuff, I'm very happy that Randy and I made an excuse to go
see more of the town of St. Andrews.
The worst part was that I played really, really well the previous day at the Old Course, and,
like, one of the best rounds I've had this year, so I had really high hopes going into
it, and of course struggled and got our dicks knocked in.
Well we were happy to see more of the town of St. Andrews.
One thing that's really cool is just the fact that St. Andrews is as accessible as it is.
One of our first questions, we had a chance to sit down with some people from the Links
Trust and, one of our first questions was just "how does this place stay public?"
It's a St. Andrews thing but I think it's also inherently a Scottish thing.
That's our freedom to roam, and the way that links courses were born, were just rough patches
of ground next to towns on the coastal areas of Scotland.
What happens here in St. Andrews you'll see if you go elsewhere in Scotland in terms of
the courses that are on the coast are an intrinsic part of the places they're at and they're
part of the community, they're part of the residents, you know, experience, you know,
if you live in North Berwick, you want to play that golf course, if you live in St.
Andrews, you want to play that golf course.
And I think it's just part of our DNA and our relationship with golf that, we just wanna
make it accessible and affordable and give all people an opportunity to come out and
play.
The Old course is the coolest thing about St. Andrews, the town of St. Andrews is the
next coolest thing.
Listen, the kid loves seeing college towns.
As does Randy.
So sleeping in and just seeing the town of St. Andrews was, about as much of a thrill
as you can possibly have.
SIIIIICK.
So St. Andrews is a town that we're really fortunate that you have a huge university
that's just grown and grown over the years.
So it's kinda seasonal, in the summer with all of the golfers, and then the winter all
of the students are here.
And that's that knock on effect that, for a town of its size, because we've got a really
small resident population, it's got a great offering in terms of restaurants, pubs, things
to do and see, and you've got all of the history away from the golf course as well with the
cathedral, it's a real, picturesque, beautiful place.
How long did y'all sleep in till?
I think Soly and I were up at 6:15.
Oh gosh, yeah we slept in until like 8, 8:30.
Had a coffee.
Honestly, I don't wanna rub it in, but it was a delightful.... delightful day.
So one of the coolest things that you can see from the Old Course is the Himalayas putting
green.
The Him-All-ee-yuhs, as the locals like to call it.
And it's this putting green that Old Tom Morris built for the Ladies Putting Club back in
the 1840's-1850's I think.
And it turned out, it was all of these wives of the R&A members who basically were like,
hey we can, yunno, we like to putt, we don't really like to play golf.
We like to do stuff too.
So, like, they're like, cool!
Why don't you guys have this putting green and you guys go have matches out there.
So they have all of these different competitions out there and all these different medals,
trophies, everything that they play for, comps, and as someone who struggles to hit driver
on the planet consistently, the idea of like a one-on-one putting match is.... mind blowing.
That's as appealing as it gets to me.
No joke, Randy and I probably sat here for two hours, watching the ladies putting club.
It's incredible.
It's awesome.
They have absolutely closed off the waiting list to get into this club.
I think someone has to die before they let a new member in.
They've got an edge to them and they're all really chippy.
It looks like the most fun you could possibly have.
The most fun I've ever seen in my entire life.
Just these like, completely like no stakes, but also kind of all the stakes, like you
could tell it means a ton to all of these ladies.
You can see in the pictures here, this putting green is bananas.
It's so hard to lag it close, and they're soooo good from like 40 feet, put 'em to any
hole, and the cups change every day, so it's not like you learn every putt or whatever,
they change every day.
They're so good at knocking it to stone dead, every time, and then, they all have the yips
within like, they can't make a putt within like 2.5-3 feet.
I'm only laughing because I can't hit the hole from like four feet either.
They're going to extra holes!
They're going to extra holes!
I'm gutted.
The visor lady was putting on a really good charge.
Hitting really aggressive putts.
And it just caught up with her a bit at the last there.
She kinda left herself a tough downhiller.
But she made it pretty far in the bracket.
Now she goes to enjoy a bit of time on the yellow course.
It looked like there was quite a crowd there as well.
For sure.
Well I mean yeah.
Well actually, a lot of those people are public that got turned away.
Our man Kevin sets the course, he just took the job recently in the last couple of months.
I felt bad for him, he's gotta turn away all of these people who are just, they're chipper
and they're rolling up with their putters and "I'm sorry the course is closed just now",
and he's gotta explain that basically this piece of land is owned by the ladies putting
club and then they basically let the public use it at no cost, and then whenever they
feel like closing it down for competitions, they're well within their right to do so,
and uh, that's what happens three days a week.
"Did any of the ladies wanna come on camera?"
They did not wanna come on camera.
It is a very proper club and I think there's a hierarchy of things.
Basically the club secretary is allowed to speak for the club and I don't believe anyone
else is.
And I suppose when you're not accepting new members you kinda, don't wanna ruffle any
feathers, get yourself kicked out.
And one thing that was weird, and I don't get why they do this.
Is that the ladies have numbered flags, so they know what hole is which, and then Kevin
goes and he has to switch out all of the numbered flags for unnumbered flags so the public has
no clue what's going on.
It's a beautiful disaster.
I can't get enough.
I think we should start a putting club when we get back to Jacksonville.
Ladies only, and me and Randy.
Let's go.
So tell me what I missed, tell me about Crail.
Well Poosh joined us.
We got out to Crail, it was kind of a gloomy, gray morning.
Tell me about this secretary, because I saw a lot of this dude in all of the footage.
Yeah, he was a menace.
He knew basically anything about everything.
Or everything about anything.
Scotland was glaciated and when the glaciers melted and receded.
The land virtually sprung up a little bit.
So what you're looking at on Balcomie is a sand beach which is higher than the sea level.
It's the longest continuously inhabited piece of ground in Scotland.
They found Mesolithic artifacts from 6,000 to 9,000 years BC.
He was on another level.
He seems like the kinda guy you'd wanna have at like every cocktail party.
Yeah.
Because it was such a narrow strip of land and it was common ground, there was a great
deal of tension between the golfers, and the other people that use the ground.
A farmer paid a young boy to drive cattle a gallup up and down the golf course to ruin
it for the golfers.
He was like the Scottish middle aged version of Panther Mike.
That's the highest honor.
Shoutout Panther Mike.
Not only did he give us a history of this course, he gave us a history of their other
course, designed by Gil Hanse, it was his first solo design.
He gave us a history of golf in Scotland.
The glaciation.
The geological history.
The place was mad glaciated.
Eastern Scotland, the whole thing was, yunno Viking history, the whole thing was more than
I had bargained for.
I don't think I even had a cup of coffee.
You probably didn't need one.
No, no.
So Crail wasn't the first club to invent hole cups, but we were the first club to officially
record the use of them.
It's in our minutes from 1874.
Alan Robertson was the world's first golf professional.
He was the first guy to ever make a living from playing golf.
The 12th is a very difficult green to putt, well that's because there's a Viking defensive
structure runs through the middle of that green.
Actually of this was after we played, this was after we thoroughly got punched in the
face.
It's not a very long or, yunno, to the eye it's not a very challenging course.
And then, I thought it was ten times harder than most of the other courses we played on
this trip.
Well while you guys were getting a history lesson, we were doing a little bit of exploring
of our own.
Randy and I are huge into seeing college campuses.
This is probably, I think, our 5th or 6th of 2018 and the big guy just, what a thrill
to see him... this was the best... what a thrill to see him roaming around academia,
he loves it.
It's like some Harry Potter shit.
I'm big on seeing campuses.
I love seeing college campuses.
And this campus feels like like it couldn't be anymore college.
The most college.
What do you think?
It's magnificent turf.
Look at this quad!
This is a proper quad.
You could huck D's out here for hours.
You might need to pump some photos of Randy in college here.
Yeah so Randy played college basketball for a couple of years at Washington and Lee.
So he was a point guard, he's 6'8" and he was a point guard.
And then his coach got fired after his sophomore year, or after his freshman year, and the
new guy wanted him to bang down low.
It's not his style.
And Randy said, I'm just gonna quit.
It's gonna be a no for me.
And transfer to Miami.
Yeah this was a sign about someone that got burned at the stake at this spot.
It was pretty heavy stuff.
You better be careful expressing some of your views around here.
That's heavy.
I think Randy took more photographs and videos of cemeteries than he did on golf courses.
Yeah he, like, shoutout to Randy, but he's not always quick on the trigger with filming
on the course, but he shot like 15 cemeteries while we were in Scotland.
Very morbid.
He loves shooting video of cemeteries.
And this of course, he's a huge fan of the royal family, so this was quite a thrill as
well for him.
Crusin' weather.
You don't see a lot of people getting a convertible on their Scottish vacation, so shoutout to
BMW for making that happen.
And giraffe Randy, poking his head out.
But enough about that, let's get into the actual golf course.
So Crail, pretty compact property.
We really just didn't pack our game.
So "Boathouse" is the first hole.
You hit down, it's like this drivable par-4.
And along the right is this boathouse.
And there's lifeboats in there.
Soly drove it to the right side, he had to play over the boathouse.
And then a theme too, Poosh covers the ball so well with his sternum.
Poosh has some old school Ted Ray vibes.
So you go out, the first four holes, first five holes are along the coast.
And then you start coming back in, but they're all right on top of each other.
You guys really struggled here.
That's heavy contact out of the bunker.
That was OB.
Way OB.
There's barbed wire, there's like cows grazing over there.
It's so on top of each other that you're hitting into other groups.
Hitting chili peppers down the other fairway.
We saw the Australians that you played with.
We were playing up their fairway, they were playing up our fairway.
Nathan and Brendan and the boys.
I thought I flagged that one.
Didn't.
Another theme is on a trip like this, obviously we're trying to make everything as authentic
as possible but we played so bad that.
Alright no one wants to see us miss this - like, that was a shank.
Nobody wants to see us miss this many putts, so we started... like alright, we gotta, I
think this was like the fourth take of that and I still couldn't even get it remotely
close there.
So we started, like, we obviously need to start making some putts here.
usually we're pretty authentic on the scores and stuff, but we just needed some video of
putts going in the hole.
And it looked like you guys had a massive struggle trying to make that happen.
That's a bad....
God that's a bad effort.
Obviously we weren't playing Tilt, Musselburgh, and Crail we did not play Tilt.
And Cullen we didn't play Tilt either, later in the season.
Were you guys playing the friendly Herman Cain.
I don't even think we were playing anything.
I think by the 8th hole, it was like, yo I need some action guys.
There's groups everywhere, and its quaint and, super old school, and it's kinda rustic
golf in a sense.
God It looks like you're just hitting into everybody all the time.
Yeah I mean that's the tee box for the next hole, short right where all of the bad players
miss, that's where the wipey scrape lands, yunno.
Here's Poosh talking a little bit more about that.
There's no tee shot at Crail where you stand on the tee and you don't think you could possibly
kill somebody with your tee ball.
Really deep in the process, trying to find the secret in the dirt.
We were deep in our own process to be totally candid with you.
We hit up a local farmer's market, picked up some fresh strawberries.
God it was delightful.
Crack on!
That was something about Scotland, the produce was.... the produce was off the charts, the
produce was off the charts and the fish is really good too.
Listen, you wanna talk about the food?
People bitch about the food, but the food was good.
That was kinda the best surprise of the trip.
I mean obviously they've got meat and potatoes, but they've got plenty of good fish, a ton
of good veggies.
We eventually started kinda golfing our ball.
The par-3's for whatever reason I had like 5-iron into all of the par-3's.
I played exceptionally well on those.
You don't see a lot of balls stopping and spinning in Scotland, that's a little concerning.
Soly was hitting stingers all day, shoutout Pete Dye.
Was this an original Pete Dye?
This was like the 1850's version of Pete Dye. Lang wang here, par-5, my only birdie of the
day.
I've watched this putt like 25 times, and I'm pretty sure, like, it goes in, right?
Like, it's definitely in, definitely in, definitely in....
Oh that's brutal.
Did you fix that?
I went back and fixed that after I holed out, I felt terrible.
That's disgusting.
It was so firm.
That's true it probably didn't matter.
So Poosh, for a big big man, extremely flexible, extremely live.
I think he's kind of a Yogi.
So you go down this path, and go back to the last four holes of the course and you think
it's kinda gonna run out of gas, but actually those last four holes are just as good, those
are behind the clubhouse.
the clubhouse sits up, great view over those four holes and the rest of the course on the
other side.
There's this Robert Louis Stephenson lighthouse that, it was the original lighthouse upon
which all other lighthouses henceforth were modeled after.
The big guy loves infrastructure.
I do.
Guilty.
Obviously we wanna remain objective about courses, but to a certain extent that's just
impossible, it was gloomy and gray when we started playing, right when we were leaving
the light came out, we threw the drone up, and it just started popping.
It was night and day versus what we had teed off in.
I wish we had another crack at Crail because we could really go back, and I think a lot
of the features that we didn't even see because they just looked flat in flat light, popped.
So that really set the tone for the afternoon, the most spiritual experience of my life.
We'll see that next week.
Excuse me, trying to get to Elie.
How's it look?
Magnificent.
How do you feel?
Not right now guys.
The integrity of golf is preserved.
Alright we're checking out this Indian food.
Good stuff on the way in.
You know it's good, if he's been here.
Monty, Boris Johnson.
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Proof Toyota Makes Mistakes Too, Automatic Belt Tensioner - Duration: 3:42.
Rev up your engines, today I'm going to show you how you can replace
a part that goes out often in modern cars, the automatic belt tensioner, now older cars
like this 94 celica, they didn't have automatic tensioners, there were nuts and bolts that
were on the alternator in different parts and you'd have to loosen them to tighten the
belt and then tighten them down to make sure the belts were tight, but on all the later
model cars, there's one serpentine belt, it goes around everything and it has an automatic
tensioner that tensions it, with the one belt system it's almost impossible
for a human to adjust it correctly if it's a manual adjustment, you're either going to
get it too loose or too tight, these automatically do it some have springs,
this has a little shock assembly with a spring inside that pushes it up to make sure it has
the perfect tension, and like everything else, eventually they
wear out, in this case, it actually broke, because the factory one was a cheap pot metal
and the adjusting bolt that you put the wrench on to make it get loose so you can put the
belt on and then let go when it tightens up, it just snapped right off, there was a design
flaw in these toyotas, as you can see right here, that part is snapped right off, that's
suppose to be where the bolt is and it snapped off because it was cheap pot metal so we have
to replace it now, and although it's kind of hidden in there,
there's only one, two bolts that hold the whole thing in so I'm going to show you how
you can change it yourself, now in this case it's easier to access through
the bottom, so we'll take the tire out of the way, then we can access the bottom bolt
on that little shock part of it and take that off,
so we take that nut off, then you put a wrench here on the other end from the top, from the
top of the engine, and then loosen it up here from the bottom
because there's not any working room from the top but there's plenty of working room
on the bottom, then you wiggle it until it comes out,
here's the old broken one right here, you can see this part it broken off,
it was just cheaply made, you can see that nub has broken right off and this one is much
more solid piece, then you slide the new tensioner back in,
then you put the wrench on the bottom where it reaches to the top bolt and get that nice
and tight, and then put the bottom bolt on too, get that
nice and tight, and now of course you have to put the fan
belt back on, well I'm a mechanic so I've got data systems that can print out a picture
of it so I know where the belt goes, but if you're not a mechanic you got a phone,
before you take it apart and remember this before, take a picture of the belt then you'll
have a picture to see where it goes, because it goes over a bunch of pulleys and it only
goes one way, and the way you get it on is this, I get a nice long bar with a 19mm socket
on it, and the socket, it goes right over the adjuster nut so you can push it down and
get slack to get the belt on, and you pull down on the pry bar, and then
snap the belt on and voila it's now fixed, the old one with the broken piece on has been
replaced with a new one, the belt doesn't squeal and the alternator charges, just don't
forget to put the wheel back on, so the next time your automatic belt tensioner breaks
down, why not replace it yourself, even if it is raining outside, we all got umbrellas
somewhere, so if you never want to miss another one of
my new car repair videos, remember to ring that bell!
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CVTM Update (November 27, 2018) - Duration: 2:31.
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How to make Mixer Truck - Self Loading Concrete Mixer Truck - Duration: 12:04.
How to make Self Loading Concrete Mixer Truck from Cardboard
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Fiat Punto Evo 1.3 M-Jet Dynamic 5drs AIRCO/LMV - Duration: 1:06.
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Débrifing IronMan Malaysie 2018 - Duration: 15:12.
thank you to watch this video
I will now explain to you how I finish the Malaysia's IronMan 2018
first of all I arrived there two days before the event
it was long trip
I spend 7 hours driving
2 hours by boat and 1 hour on the bus
then it was time for registration
after that drop off the bike at Transition 1
drop off all bags on the right places and on right moment
after that it was the D Day
so I arrived arround 4am or 5am at the starting line
I had to come early to finish to prepar thz bike
past all food on the bike
and the race will start arround 7am
I didnt have high stress because I did it last year
but it's still a big challeng
so, the last week before the race I was nervous
I had some scared about ...
how my body will react?
what will happen during the race?
what kind of technical or physiological problem I can have?
one thousand things can happen during the race...
but this time I was lucky
on the swim part
I start with the group who can complet 3.8km on 1h30 to 1h45
it was less stress than last time
no jelly fish this year !
at beginingg of the race no waves
during 1h it was ok
but very fast a storm came
super heavy rain
we couldn't see the finish line
we couldnt see line and signal on the sea
we couldn't see kanoe kayak from race staff...
it was almost a hurricain ;)
we coudn't see otjer athlete too
it was very stressfull situation
at this time we were swimming with waves
waves were 30 to 40 centimiteres
it's look like nothing when I explain it
but swim inside it's so hard
I get water on the mouth and nose
this sitution was very difficult to manage
the last 30 minutes it was about fight to save my life
it was not easy at all, because I didnt swim in the sea at all
for long time
because here in thailand it was the mousson
so too much waves
it's too dangerous to swim.on the sea
and also during last 6 weeks
I was traveling for judo championships
to be honnest I swim only 1 time
during last 6 weeeks
I did scuba diving but it doesn't count
so now I am on transition 1
last time I spend 10 minutes
but this time I was arround 5 minutes
because i know I didn't need much thing
only the minimum
others things were past on the bike
so I just wear a tee-shirt and my bike's shoes
and I was ready
and to be honnest after 1h36 of swim I was ok
I was just a bit stress with waves...
so now I started bike
during the two first hours
it was heavy rain
the famous tropical mousson !!
it was very dangerous
because from the begining we were on hills
super dangerous, slippy
also because we were crossing each other
also because race's staff didn't stop cars
athlete were racing to the top
and then turn... and on the way back
we were crossing each other from super close
very dangerous
raining, car, race super speed...
after 2 hours...
the rain finally stop
after that it was very sunny
we all get super burn
it was super intense
and the other problem...
race staff didnt bring sun protector on each stop station
food and help stations were every 20 or 30 km
so all athlete were on trouble!!
so after that...
I have to tell the truth...
the last 50 km were so so hard
less than last year
because I had good training this year
I was in shape
I also have very smart way to train
but we should remember than last month and half I was travelling
so it was not the best final preparetion
I use to do a bit of bike in Mexico..
and Ecuador...
but the bikes were not good at all
I'm shame to call that bike becquse it was really shit
you can have a look on my videos...
so the end of bike part...
it's just a nightmare....
I coudn't belive I was doing all this bike...
but we did already too many hours racing...
we can't stop any more
for the bike I spend 7h30...
I was thinking to do less time
but I was very very tired
sometimes just arround 20km/h
I was without power... coudn't push and spin more...
this year I coudn't eat gel...
and bar...
nothing process...
because last year it made me stomac pain...
and this year I didn't do the same mistak
so I eat tuna sandwich
with just slid of bread and tuna box
it was past to the bike
it was perfect and tasty
with this I had some bananas
I had also some bread with raw honey!
we also enjoy isotonics drinks
water
and we also have opportunity to shower us with buckets
every 20 to 30km it was very fresh moment
it help a lot
so now I am at Transition 2
but I have to spend time therelast year just 10 min
but this year 17 minutes
because I was very tired
my legs were so painfull
coudn't flex them
now the run
I start the race of 42.2km
a marathon
the begining is so hard
we have legs so painful
cannot flex
pain on the knees and ligaments
after fews minutes it's ok.
the body start to bein running mode
so during 2h
2h30....
I was good... nice feeling
it was great to go forward "fast"
I spend 2h30 for 20km
this time is ok for me at this moment
normally if i only run 20km I can do it in 1h45
but at this moment of the race....
I was super tired
with swim and bike fatigue
so after 20km it was so hard
we were racing on sand sometimes...
and small rock were on our legs
and when every 4km we had some bucket to shower us, the little rock were going ...
between feet and shoes....
very very painful
bucket were to refesh us
it was end of afternoon
arround 35 degree C...
but with rock between socks and shoes
it was a nightmare to run
at this time with weat feet...
and dry shoes and socks
i already get burn and pain...
but with rock ... it was so painful
at this time we cannot stop...
to take off the shoes and check the feet....
if you stop you cannot start running again
and so also I cannot lose too much time
because I know for end of race I will walk
so I was running and walking
during hours
with small rock inside my shoes
so my feet get super hurt
I was feeling to walk on cloves... or cristal..
so after 25km I was on very hard situation
then it was night time
at this moment after hours racing...
we know than we cannot give up...
we did already too much
we cannot give up
on our mind we are in kind of trans
like people walking in fire
we forget all the pain
to be focus only on the final goal
to cross the finish line
and become IronMan
so I was really feeling to walk on nail
so thlast 10km I was on evil
so I start to get some hallucination
my shoes were blue
but I was thinking than they became red
for the blood of my burning feet
I was feeling my feet was floting on blood
and on same time...
an other athlet came to talk to me
he asked me if i was ok?
because for the pain on my feet I was probably running on strange way
and he also ask me than my shoes were with strange color
so I said yes than i was feeling bloody...
and he said yes..
like he saw my shoes red like I was seeing it...
but I told him I cannot stop
if I stop I cannot finish but qi wqs feeling walking on nail.
so I start to go faster to finish as soon as possible
at this time...
I was walking
at 6km/h
it's very fast for me
for the last 5km
we know we cannot stop...
but we have so much pain
every step...
burimning legs
pain every where
knees cannot flex
after finish line
it's like nirvana
we cant belive we did it
we cant belive we get our dream done
so after I have to sit down
but the music was so high volum
it made my hear very stressfull
so I start to be sick, needed to vomiting
I was looking arround me where I can vomiting
but it was crawded area
people were resting
eating...
so I just get on floor super sick...
almost dead
during 15min
to 20 min
i coudn't speak and move
we had acces to food, pizza pasta potato...
but I coudnt move to grap it
but during race I always keep eating
many people stop eating
but its mistak
I wqs eating breadzel and coca during marathon
it help me a lot
it was give me some energy
so after finish line
after 30 minutes
I eat a small plat of pasta
and I push myself to the exit of the hotel
I ask for a taxi
it was only 1km but I was finish
it was first time I take a taxi for 1km
but I needed to get home
and go to rest my ironman body
to be honnest the race day
I didnt want to hear about triathlon, sport, judo...
nothing... just be on bed resting
dont do sport any more
I was suffer so much
it's a very deep pain
15h55 of suffer
people ask me if i was suffer from the begining
to be honnest after 1h of swim on waves... yes!!
with stress every feeling is bigger
the next day I had a small thininking about doing again
and the seconde and 3rd days after
I already think.... yes I have to do it again
I was made to race this kind of craziness
i will do this race again
I feel alive...
when I fight death
when I live this kind of moment
I feel I am myself
I feel so good to race ironman
I made to race that where I can feel I go over my capacities
next year I will be on starting line
I need your help to support me
like my videos
share my videos
subscribes to my channel
many challeng will come
this tile it was just the bronze medal
in world judo championships
and the finisher medal for ironman
but I will fight for the world titile
and on ironman I will fight to get a better time
I need your support !
we have many new adventures to live together
and some surprise coming soon
I cant tell you more about that
please guys keep training
share your experiences
let comments on the videos
if I can share my tips I will do it
and get a bigger community
and be over the moon
we should get the moon as a goal
at least we will be on stars
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Секретная бейблейд - миссия Саши и Богданы. Супер-конкурс с призами от Rozetka Kids! - Duration: 6:47.
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Volkswagen Passat Variant 1.4 TSI GTE Highline EX BTW | LEDER/ALCANTARA | OPEN DAK | CAMERA | TREKHA - Duration: 1:10.
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Ricou (L'amour est dans le pré 2018) relativise son échec sentimental avec Rosanna - Duration: 2:50.
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Amazing Luxurious Tiny Home with Much Lager Inside For Sale Under $50K - Duration: 1:56.
Amazing Luxurious Tiny Home with Much Lager Inside For Sale Under $50K
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[ENG SUB] After tuned VFC / Premium / Stark Arms GLOCK V1 still worst for play? - Duration: 3:32.
SAME SYSTEM ( MARUI GLOCK 18C SYSTEM)
Left(cybergun M&P9C) Middle(VFC / Premium / Stark Arms GLOCK19 Ver.1) Right(Tokyo Marui Glock18C)
4~~8~~12~~16~~19
20 rounds
FAST SHOOT
20 rounds again
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Les Zones jeunesse et l'intégration des jeunes - Duration: 1:33.
-TeenZone was like my second family.
I went there because I didn't want to go home after school
because of the personal stuff going on there.
-I was just, like,
on the streets with my friends, doing stupidness.
And then, one day, one of my friends brought me there
and it was just, like: I had another home to go to
when I didn't want to actually go home.
-For me, the TeenZone,
it really changed
how I saw myself,
because it made me have more confidence in myself.
It made me have different perspectives.
Anyone could feel safe.
Whether you're part of the LGBTQ community;
whether you're a person of colour;
whether you're, like, anyone.
You're all accepted.
-It changes you.
You walk into TeenZone and it changes everything.
You're comfortable there, you can be yourself.
If you've got problems, they're there to help.
They have activities, you meet a lot of people.
School can be tough, work can be tough.
It's tough everywhere.
But at TeenZone, they don't judge you.
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