Thứ Sáu, 27 tháng 4, 2018

Youtube daily here Apr 27 2018

For more infomation >> If Mosquitoes Always Go Straight For You, Here's What You Should Know - Duration: 3:34.

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Here & Now Thursday April 26, 2018 - Duration: 1:02:32.

For more infomation >> Here & Now Thursday April 26, 2018 - Duration: 1:02:32.

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ENTER YOUR ZIP CODE HERE TO FIND OUT WHAT'S REALLY IN YOUR TAP WATER - Duration: 6:55.

ENTER YOUR ZIP CODE HERE TO FIND OUT WHAT�S REALLY IN YOUR TAP WATER

BY ARJUN WALIA

Do you know what�s in your drinking water? Probably not. Toxic substances are constantly

found in contaminated drinking water around the world, and it�s not just developing

countries, but also developed countries like Canada and the United States.

According to the Chicago Tribune, an analysis uncovered toxic lead in the tap water drawn

from more than 70 percent of the homes across Chicago. Substances like aluminum, mercury,

other heavy metals, prescription drugs, and more have been found in other public drinking

water supplies.

This has been a major problem for a while, which is why The Environmental Working Group

(EWG) released a new �Tap Water Database� that allows people to enter their ZIP code

or their local utility�s name, in order to find out what�s in their tap water.

According to Live Science:

�The database contains results from testing by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

on drinking water from 2010 to 2015, which includes tests on water from nearly 50,000

water utilities in all 50 states and Washington, D.C. In addition, the EWG incorporated results

from water tests done by state agencies.�

So, what did they find? They found that, in total, approximately 270 contaminants were

identified in drinking water across the country, which also included lead and arsenic.

You can access the ZIP CODE based database HERE.

The article published by live science goes on to emphasize how the levels of contaminants

that government regulations allow for are actually higher than what current research

suggests is safe. This is a common theme, and the corporate relationship with government

might have something to do with it. It�s not just our drinking water that we see a

lack of appropriate safety regulations, it�s with many of our products, services, medications

and more.

Furthermore:

�For other contaminants, there are no specific federal standards, the EWG says. In the case

of chromium-6, which is a form of the element chromium, for example, the government looks

only at overall chromium levels, and not all types are harmful. Chromium-6 has been linked

to tumors in animal studies, and may also be linked to increased risk of stomach cancer

in workers exposed to the compound, the EWG says. Chromium � 3, on the other hand, is

�mostly harmless.�

This is why in some areas we see chlorine and other disinfectants added into the water

supply, which raises even more health concerns and doesn�t really provide an ample solution

to the problem.

Below is a great statement from the Waterkeeper Alliance:

�Every day around the world, polluters are poisoning our waterways, and people everywhere

are suffering the consequences. When a coal company discharges millions of gallons of

toxic coal ash into a river, families who depend on that waterway as a drinking-water

source are the innocent victims. When a developer demolishes a forest of mangroves, it destroys

fisheries and devastates the local economy. When hog farms dump untreated waste into a

waterway, people and marine life get sick. These are just a few examples of the battles

that Waterkeeper Alliance fights every day around the world on behalf of the common good

and to protect everyone�s right to clean water.�

When we ponder what the solutions to the problems are, at the deepest levels, the solution is

us; me, you and everyone you know. If we want to change the planet, we have to change ourselves.

Everybody seems to want change, yet nobody is willing to take a look in the mirror and

make that change. Secondly, it�s organizations like the Waterkeeper Alliance that help to

bring awareness to these issues.

Whether tracking down polluters in action on the water, in courtrooms helping to enforce

environmental laws, or advocating in town meetings or teaching in the classrooms, this

is how they do it.

The water pollution problem of all Earth�s waterways is one of the biggest issues our

world faces today. I believe Earth is a conscious being and she�s been extremely patient with

us. We don�t have to be here, we are not needed and we�ve become a threat to our

own planet when we could, with ease, have a human experience that sees everybody, including

all life on the planet, thrive.

The corporate take-over of our governments, and those who enforce �the rules� here

don�t really represent the people, or a group that looks to preserve and take care

of our planet. If that was so, it would�ve been done a long time ago.

Instead, we let our �leaders� gather every single year to talk about solutions, but that�s

all they seem to do. There is no real regard for humanity, but instead, geo-political agendas

take the forefront.

We�ve had solutions to our pollution problems for decades, yet Red Tape continues to get

in the way.

On a more positive note, the amount that the global population is speaking up and creating

initiatives to combat these problems is larger than it�s ever been. At least there are

huge efforts underway, and I do believe we are living in a time of great change. Part

of this time is to help restore and protect the planet, and that�s a priority for many.

Industry, geo-politics and globalization has lead to what we have here today. I�d like

to leave you with a quote that I�ve used many times before, so if you�ve already

seen it, I apologize.

�Political parties exist to secure responsible government and to execute the will of the

people. From these great staffs, both of the old parties have ganged aside. Instead of

instruments to promote the general welfare they have become the tools of corrupt interests

which use them in martialling [sic] to serve their selfish purposes. Behind the ostensible

government sits enthroned an invisible government owing no allegiance and acknowledging no responsibility

to the people. To destroy this invisible government, to befoul the unholy alliance between corrupt

business and corrupt politics is the first task of the statesmanship of the day.�

� Theodore Roosevelt

Oh, and obviously, don�t forget to get yourself a good water filter!

For more infomation >> ENTER YOUR ZIP CODE HERE TO FIND OUT WHAT'S REALLY IN YOUR TAP WATER - Duration: 6:55.

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Get Some Ideas to Start Your Own Banknote Collection Here! - Duration: 2:11.

Today I'm excited to share some insider information and give you professional

advice on how to create your very own banknote collection. If you're

considering starting a banknote collection but don't know where to begin

well, you've come to the right place! The incredible thing about bank notes is

that they tell you stories through their design, colors and artistic

representations. They tell stories of history and of the periods in which they

were created. Banknotes are more than just a currency

they become a collection when they are assembled in a way that reflects

centuries of history. While each banknote is unique, there are many ways to go

about beginning your collection. You can start by accruing banknotes with similar

themes. Some banknotes are inspired by nature and have incredible nature themes

such as this aquatic creatures collection. These banknotes feature fish,

sharks and sea turtles as a reflection of the country of origins aquatic

wildlife. Another wildlife theme represented in banknotes is that of

colorful birds from around the world. Beyond nature banknote collections can

be inspired by real-life events in history. For example this World War II

collection features banknotes from 1939 to 1945 from different countries that

were involved in the conflict either directly or indirectly. Some collections

are based on the material or feel of a banknote. This collection features

banknotes made of polymer material that have a unique texture security features

and increased durability.

Like each banknote every collection is unique

what will your banknote collection say about you! Thank you so much for tuning in!

Please feel free to visit our website for more information at banknoteworld.com

A list of these products will be in the description below.

For more infomation >> Get Some Ideas to Start Your Own Banknote Collection Here! - Duration: 2:11.

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Jota John - Wish You Were Here (Pink Floyd Cover) - Duration: 3:21.

For more infomation >> Jota John - Wish You Were Here (Pink Floyd Cover) - Duration: 3:21.

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Anna Jones' Simple Suppers | One-Pan Genovese-Style Pasta Recipe | Food Honestly | The Pool - Duration: 2:30.

Hi, I'm Anna Jones, and this is the first of my series of Simple Suppers for The

Pool. My April recipe is a one-pan Genovese pasta. So, the sauce, the pasta,

everything is done in the pan. There's asparagus, new potatoes, basil, all

those fresh, lovely spring flavours.

So, first find a shallow pan with a lid,

put it on your hob, and put the pasta in. Snap the woody bottoms off your

asparagus, cut the stems of the asparagus into little 1/2 centimetre coins,

keeping the tips intact. Keep the tips to one side for later and throw the coins

into the pan with the pasta. Finely slice the cooked potatoes and add them

to the pan. Peel and finely slice your garlic, and add this to the pan along

with the green beans. Use a fine grater to grate the zest of both lemons into

the pan, and add a teaspoon of sea salt and 100mls of olive oil. Next, add

a litre of boiling water from the kettle, put the lid onto your pan, turn the heat

on to maximum and bring it to the boil. As soon as it comes to the boil, remove

the lid and simmer on a high heat for 8 minutes, turning the pasta with a pair of

tongs every 30 seconds or so. Once the pastas had eight minutes, stir

through the asparagus tips and tear over the basil. Simmer everything for a final

two minutes. Once almost all the water has evaporated, take the pan off the heat

and leave it to sit for a few minutes so that the pasta can absorb the last bit

of the water and form a lovely, creamy, lemony sauce. Twirl the pasta into four

bowls and top with a final grating of parmesan.

I hope you enjoyed this recipe. For more videos from The Pool, please just

click Subscribe.

For more infomation >> Anna Jones' Simple Suppers | One-Pan Genovese-Style Pasta Recipe | Food Honestly | The Pool - Duration: 2:30.

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Be A Moses: "Here. I. Am." - Duration: 7:04.

Hi everyone Justine Froelker here and it's Faith Wrestle Friday and we're

gonna talk about Moses I think just one more time

so once again all my devotionals were lining up and we're about Moses and I

had just a phrase that just stuck out to me I am in this place where I'm really

praying for some clarity about what God wants me doing like what's the path to

make this work the work that I'm supposed to be doing and I had to let

some things go that I'm really good at and that I love and I'm fairly pissed

about it so I've been kind of searching I literally completed a 12 day plan on

the YouVersion Bible app called 'Mad at God' cuz I was pretty pissed like I don't

want to let go of some things that he is very clearly telling me to let go of and

then I was reading another plan and it was talking about Moses and the burning

bush and I was praying on my way to church and I got this random message

from someone I don't know on social media after they had watched one of my

Insta stories talking about this struggle to let things go that I love

and that I'm good at but God is very very clearly telling me to let go of and

she really felt called to share 1 Peter 5:9 with me to which um if I

can find that I will share that too but first I want to start with the Moses

part so we're back in Exodus clearly oh I got some shit to work out with Exodus

okay Exodus chapter three that's it's where

Moses sees the burning bush right okay so in verse two, "The special messenger of

the Eternal appeared to Moses in a fiery blaze from within the bush. Moses looked

again at the bush as it blazed; but to his amazement, the bush did not burn up in

flames." So he goes and investigates and gets

curious about like any of us would and that's when God says, "Moses! Moses!" this is

what got me in one of the devotions I was reading so

we're in chapter 3 verse 4 but at the end of verse 4 God cries out to Moses,

"Moses! Moses!" like as if a burning bush says that's not being consumed by the

fire is not enough to get his attention but Moses was so freakin human just like

us that we need God to be super super direct "Moses! Moses!" and then Moses says,

"I'm right here." Moses says Here I am and he has the

courage to show up Here I am use me and it goes on like and we've talked about

that couple weeks ago like he didn't want to do what God was asking him to do

and yet he did it because he started with the courage to get curious about

that burning bush the courage and bravery to listen when God was speaking

clearly to him and the vulnerable courage to say Here I am

use me

the uncertainty of faith is man is really really really tough I don't know

where 1 Peter is oh here it is I found it

of course the uncertainty of faith is super tough I don't know what God's

doing with me I'm scared the enemy is totally lying to me about

it and old stories of shame and crap-ass

worthiness tell me to do it my way tell me to do it the way of the world and God

is very clear I want to be Moses and like literally when I was praying in the

car before that friend reached out to me I was like literally like screaming like

okay I I need to be Moses like I need a burning bush like I need something as

clear as a burning bush like show me in a way I can understand I can't tell you

how often I pray that prayer show me in a way that I can understand so I want

to go back to this friend after she watched my Insta story about me like

struggling with Moses and whatever and this like letting go whatever she said

I've been the Holy Spirit is calling me out to send you 1 Peter 5:9 I

think this is right I did not even think of this before I started recording so

1 Peter 5:9, "Resist him and be strong in your faith, knowing that your

brothers and sisters throughout the world are fellow sufferers with you. Have

you suffered for a little, the God of grace who has called you [to his

everlasting presence] through Jesus The Anointed will restore you, support you,

strengthen you, and ground you. For all power belongs to God, now and forever.

Amen. That's 1 Peter 5:9 through 11 and I

don't think that's what she sent me

5:10: "After you have suffered for a little while" because in the grand scheme

the 'waits' that he has us in in the deserts forty years? they're drops in the

bucket really and he's right there beside us through them, "After you have

suffered for a little while, the God of grace who has called you [to his

everlasting presence] through Jesus The Anointed will restore you, support you,

strengthen you, and ground you." I'm not sure there's anything more certain than

that

thanks for being here and I'll see you next week for Faith Wrestle Friday

please like and please subscribe to my channel make sure you click the bell for

notifications so you never miss a video I am honored and humbled and grateful

and I have learned so much from you guys so thanks for being here

For more infomation >> Be A Moses: "Here. I. Am." - Duration: 7:04.

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Verp is here now. - Duration: 0:16.

Hello. This is Trip's channel.

So yeah.

But I'm on his channel too now. And so yeah.

Go check out my channel, Verp the one with the blue crab. So yeah.

Hi.

For more infomation >> Verp is here now. - Duration: 0:16.

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Messing With The Quiet One? Here's 11 Major Reasons Why You Don't! - Duration: 5:23.

Messing With The Quiet One?

Here's 11 Major Reasons Why You Don't!

You will often notice those who have the loudest and most talkative voices.

In doing this, we will indirectly underestimate the calm power of the quiet one.

The problem is, that in our society today, we are most concerned about those who make

the most votes.

And this is a mistake.

By doing this, we lose great ideas and quiet insights in this situation.

You see, quiet people are people who are filled with great ideas and listen to everything

that happens around them.

Although there is nothing wrong with being an extrovert, there are some disadvantages.

Introverts or quiet people who like to stick to themselves are often misunderstood.

In this video, you will find a list of reasons why you should not mess with a quiet person.

While you may see them as easy targets to bully or persecute them not as they seem.

If you make a quiet person, you may be in a wounded world.

#1 - Tranquility does not equate with weakness - so do not mess with them

A quiet person will speak out against any error, or injustice.

They quickly show bad behavior.

Quiet people are often slow to defend themselves, but once they are pushed too far, they can

react with amazing power.

They also quickly support the more vulnerable group members.

Quiet people have high moral standards compared to others.

#2 - Calm people can be just as persistent and loyal as a harder person

Quiet people create a bond of trust with others.

They also diligently work on their own brilliant ideas which, when expressed, will make others

silent.

#3 - Even the most reserved people have excellent social skills

In their unobtrusive ways, they develop close relationships built on trust and mutual respect.

And when they are with the company they enjoy, they can become the soul and body of the place.

#4 - The quietest person listens to many things and probably knows more than anyone else suspected.

The reason for silent people is because they listen.

They listen carefully and think deeply so you can be sure that when they finally speak,

they have something extraordinary to say.

Louder people should not assume that quiet people lack knowledge or intelligence than

they do.

#5 - The quiet people observe and capture more than others.

It's very difficult to fool a quiet person.

They listen and watch all that goes with care.

They also capture more than spoken words.

They are people who calmly focus on behavior and body language as well.

This means they can easily see unauthentic behavior and lies and fraud.

#6 - They do have social skills and know where to draw the line:

It's a common misconception that quiet people don't have social skills.

They do have good social skills and they build it slowly with others.

They enjoy deep conversations and bond with others from deep within.

They enjoy going to parties and remain within their group.

People who know them closely love them and admire them.

Introverts also know where to draw the line.

They will not tolerate any misbehavior.

If they are ill-treated, they will speak up for themselves and make sure the person gets

the right punishment.

They will not tolerate anything which is unjust.

#7 - Quiet people are not weaker just because they are not hard.

Just because someone is not obnoxious and loud, does not mean they will fall off when

you push them.

A quiet person can be strong when they need to.

You would be foolish to think otherwise.

#8 - A quiet person will not tolerate being treated badly.

Just because someone does not talk much, does not mean they will let you walk on them.

They will only take a lot before the fight.

In addition, if you treat someone bad simply because they are different, then there is

something wrong with you.

#9 - Quiet people are quiet.

Quiet people can get through life without being noticed.

They can do without you realizing they are even there.

If you really think about it, messing with a quiet person is a terrible idea.

#10 - They are more focused than extroverts:

They have a strong purpose but instead of talking about their dreams and wasting their

time, they are busy trying to achieve it.

They will start their own projects, sharing them with only a few people asked to complete

them.

Once done, the whole world knows about it.

This is a big surprise and their work is also unique.

#11 - Silence is a strength, not a weakness:

The quiet is the strongest in the group.

Since they do not reveal much about themselves, it becomes difficult to know their strengths

and weaknesses.

They are smart enough to hide their secrets and be the strongest.

Well, those are some of the major reasons why you should never mess with the quiet one.

Really cool information isn't it?

I hope you enjoy this short video, if you have something on your mind, please share

your thoughts and experiences in the comments below!

Don't forget to subscribe to our channel and watch all our other amazing videos!

Thanks for watching!

For more infomation >> Messing With The Quiet One? Here's 11 Major Reasons Why You Don't! - Duration: 5:23.

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People Who've Written Books Around Here - Duration: 28:00.

Cunningham: This program is part of

WQED's Pittsburgh History Series.

(Music)

Sebak: There are people writing books all around the Pittsburgh area.

Lori: I have friends that came from New York to visit one time,

and they're like, "We love it here. It's gritty."

Sebak: They capture stories and histories, facts and fantasies,

in poetry and prose.

And then I realized, like, the trick of poetry is --

How do you make each word count?

Sebak: So we thought we would pay tribute and go to meet

just a few poets and writers...

Some people say there's a kind of black comedy in my stories.

I agree with that. Yes.

Sebak: ...mostly folks who deal with fiction

who've spent some time in Western Pennsylvania.

Newman: You throw a beer bottle in Pittsburgh,

you'll hit a writer at this point.

Sebak: We're calling this program

"People Who've Written Books Around Here."

O'Nan: I wanted to write about Western PA in my first novel,

"Snow Angels." It's set in Butler, PA,

which I find an amazing and crazy place.

Sebak: And we apologize if we don't get

to your favorite wordsmith.

We're lucky there are so many to choose from.

It just feels like I'm writing about home

when I write about this area,

and so I like doing it.

Cunningham: This program in the NEBBY series

is made possible in part by The Buhl Foundation --

serving Southwestern Pennsylvania since 1927...

by Louis Anthony Jewelers --

proud supporter of Pittsburgh and its treasures...

by Huntington Bank -- serving communities since 1866...

by Levin Furniture -- furnishing Pittsburgh homes since 1920...

also by the Engineers Society of Western Pennsylvania...

by Henny Henninger...

by the Lincoln Pharmacy in Millvale...

by Mancini's Bread...

by Pamela's P&G Diners...

and by all 1,411 backers of our NEBBY Kickstarter...

Thanks to everybody!

Sebak: Let's start in Edgewood

where Stewart O'Nan writes at his house,

in his third-floor office full of his collections.

He was born here in Pittsburgh.

O'Nan: Grew up over on Linden Avenue,

across from the school.

One of my claim-to-fames is I used to deliver

the "Post-Gazette,"

and I delivered the "Post-Gazette" to the Dillards,

the McCulloughs, and the Philbricks,

Nathaniel Philbrick, there.

Yeah. So something in the water there in Point Breeze.

Sebak: Since then, he has studied and lived in many other cities.

O'Nan: Well, I'm one of those boomerangers.

I was away for about 30 years, left in '79,

last year the Pirates won the World Series,

and came back in 2009 when the Penguins won the Stanley Cup.

Sebak: He has written a lot of books,

nonfiction as well as fiction,

and he's still at it.

Usually I'll try to write here at the desk,

five days a week, 9:00 through 5:00.

I don't have another job.

You know, I don't have health insurance.

So I got to produce. I got to knock pages out.

Try to get one page a day, double spaced, 300 words,

could be good, could be terrible, just get it.

Get it down.

Once you get it down, then you can move it around.

It can be as bad as it's gonna be.

You're gonna write badly, like I said, every day.

And give yourself sort of the license to make it better

and better and better as it goes on.

Started to write in my early to mid-20s, about 23, 24 years old.

I mean, I'd never had any inclination to write before.

I mean, my father was an engineer,

his father was an engineer, I was an engineer.

I trained as an engineer, I was working as an engineer,

but every day I'd come back from work

and I'd write in my basement.

I'd write short stories, and I'm not exactly sure why.

I didn't have friends who were writers, or even big readers,

but I'd always been a big reader, and I grew up reading.

My mother took me to the bookmobile

when it parked on Wilkins

right by the curve near the field at Linden,

and from there I ended up going to the Main Branch

of the library down in Oakland.

Sebak: What has O'Nan been working on recently?

O'Nan: Well, I just finished a companion piece to

"Emily, Alone," which is set in Highland Park.

It's set in fact in my grandparents' house,

which is for sale right now.

And my father after church said he noticed

that there was an open house at the house he grew up in,

so he went and toured the house he grew up in.

Over on Grafton Street.

I'm very tempted to do it,

but, I mean, it's so solid in my mind now.

I've been writing about Emily and Henry now for 20 years.

So, this book is about Henry's life.

This is "Henry, Himself."

And it talks about his life from the very beginning.

The first line is,

"His mother named him Henry after her older brother,

a chaplain killed in the Great War,

as if he might take his place."

And so that sets up the expectations for Henry's life

as a man, as an American man in the 20th century.

But it's also about Pittsburgh and how Pittsburgh has changed.

Henry is born in 1923,

so we get to sort of look back at how Pittsburgh has changed,

and his father was an engineer

who helped wire a lot of the skyscrapers downtown,

including the Gulf Building.

And so there's all this lore about how the city was built,

and how it's changed.

Sebak: So you look forward to this new "Henry, Himself"

book with a Pittsburgh setting.

And you wonder, "What will Stewart O'Nan do next?"

O'Nan: One thing, I've never been sort of put into a pigeonhole

where I have to write a certain kind of book,

which -- I've been very, very lucky that way.

I'm allowed to do my goofy weirdo thing,

whatever it happens to be.

I'm just gonna do it myself,

and I think coming from Pittsburgh

and growing up at the time

I did helps with that, the DIY ethic, right?

George Romero says, "We can do it right here." Right?

You don't need New York to tell you that it's okay

or L.A. to tell you that it's okay.

You know, or the ghost of Melville or Camus

to tell you that it's okay.

Just do it.

You know, do it as best as you can.

It doesn't have to be perfect and, you know,

keyed in or toned up or calibrated to the nth degree.

John Wideman, great Pittsburgh writer, says a book is a gift.

Now no one tells the writer that they have to write it.

No one tells the reader that they have to read it.

And yet somehow we make that leap

and come together on that page and it means something.

It means something important to us.

And for fiction, that's kind of magical, right?

'Cause you don't know who your audience is.

You're just sort of putting it out there

and hoping that someone will find it.

And it will mean something to them and might move them.

And I, you know, having been moved many times as a reader,

especially when I was young, I mean that's --

that's it, right? That's what I want.

I want a book that moves me, moves me deeply.

Sebak: Our own search for deeply moving books

led us to the Falk Laboratory School

in Oakland, where we met Cameron Barnett.

He's a new Pittsburgh poet.

Barnett: I've been a Pittsburgher since I was six.

I always say that I'm California-born

but Pittsburgh-bred.

Sebak: He now teaches middle-school language arts

and social studies here.

And when I'm doing, like, writing of my own,

if I have a quiet moment in my room, I'll work there.

Sebak: When he's not at school, he lives in Garfield

just off Penn Avenue.

Barnett: I write often times here in my apartment.

I'll write in bed when a thought comes to me,

you know, last moment.

I often go down the street to the Commonplace

and, you know, grab a coffee and give myself a prompt and say,

"You have one hour to come up with something."

Give myself a bit of a challenge

and whatever I come up with in that hour,

you know, that's the poem or at least the beginning of a poem.

Sebak: In 2017, Barnett's first book of poems titled

"The Drowning Boy's Guide To Water"

was published by Pittsburgh's own

Autumn House Press.

The book was soon nominated for a prestigious

NAACP Image Award for Poetry.

"The Drowning Boy's Guide To Water"...

"Remember the strength of chlorine,

the indoor pool, swim class clinging to the kickboard

then jumping from the ledge

into the arms of the smiling white lady,

only mostly sure she would catch you.

Mom calling, 'Cameron!

Cameron!'

to get you to look, then said, 'Kick, kick!'

Remember, there's nothing a mother won't do

for one still shot of your head above the water.

It's important to always practice good form --

kick your legs."

The spirit of the book really comes from late high school

and early college when I was thinking about the experience

of growing up as a young black male in spaces

that I didn't always see a lot of faces like mine in.

And as I kept going, the theme of water

became more and more apparent.

My writing advisors Terrance Hayes

and Yona Harvey, Lynn Emanuel, they were pointing out like,

"Water's coming up all the time in your poems.

What's up with this?"

And I was like, "I didn't really realize that,

but now that you've pointed it out,

I'm going to run with it."

When I was in grad school, Yona Harvey sat me down,

and we had a conversation with a group of writers,

but I was sort of in a shy place with my writing to begin with,

and I kind of admitted

that I didn't really know how to write about race

because I didn't have a "typical black experience"

growing up, whatever that means.

And so I felt I didn't have the license

to really write about black issues or black things.

And she looked at me, and she told me, "Well, you are black.

All of your experiences and stories

are black experiences and stories,

like, they don't have fit any sort of mold or anything.

You can just do it."

And as simple as it sounds,

it was like this really great switch,

this light bulb that went off in me.

"Iron Angel"...

"Freedom Corner.

My knees kiss concrete.

Dirt is the first sign of forgetting.

The leaves that accompany it -- deciduous flair,

red crinkles and orange flakes,

a finely ground autumn snow

blown into cracks in the wall

beneath the iron body.

Every inch of the ground feels like braille.

I find my grandfather's name embossed in the granite,

Centre and Crawford.

This is the biggest circle in the city

that has been forgotten..."

You know, this is a family history

that I wasn't fully aware of

or really thinking about too much when I was younger.

But one thing I've told students before, too,

is that one of the reasons I like to write stories

and poems about myself

is that I am the master of that.

And there's a strength in being able to own your own story,

but no one else gets to own that for you.

You get to own that for you, and that's a special power.

Sebak: That special power of telling your own story led us

next to the borough of Trafford, PA,

to this house where two writers live --

Dave Newman, who grew up in Irwin,

and Lori Jakiela, who grew up in this house.

They both write poetry and prose.

They're married with two kids.

Lori teaches at Pitt Greensburg and Dave does medical research.

They've both published books that incorporate their lives

and jobs into the stories they tell.

They've been at it for a while.

Jakiela: As far back as I can remember.

I was an only child, and it was kind of one

of the things that I did.

Newman: I mean, I think wrote 25 books before I published a book.

So I was one of those guys that just didn't know

what I was doing, didn't...

just kind of kicked along, you know?

I don't think I saw a lot of Western Pennsylvania in books

when I was growing up,

I didn't see a lot of people who had a lot of jobs

or, you know, were sort of struggling to get by,

or, you know, that didn't see a lot of mills in books.

Like, I love the idea of books set in Western Pennsylvania,

and recognizing locations and you can have a book

where someone goes into Tessaro's and eats a burger

when they're down and out.

Or he goes to Dee's Bar or somewhere like that.

My first memoir is "Miss New York Has Everything."

And then my second one

was "The Bridge to Take When Things Get Serious."

Newman: I have one called "Please Don't Shoot Anyone Tonight."

It was my first book.

Jakiela: My third one was "Belief is Its Own Kind of Truth, Maybe."

My fourth one is "Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker,"

and then I have a collection of poems

called "Spot the Terrorist!"

A collection of poems called "The Slaughterhouse Poems,"

a novel called "Raymond Carver Will Not Raise Our Children,"

a collection of poems called "The Poem Factory,"

and a novel called "Two Small Birds."

That's all of them, I think. [ Laughs ]

I finished a novel that's not very good,

so I'm gonna go back and go back to an earlier novel

that was not very good and try to work on that.

I have a collection of poetry that's coming out next year --

"How Do You Like It Now, Gentlemen?"

I just finished a big book

called "East Pittsburgh Down Low"

that I just started sending out.

It's all set in Turtle Creek and Wilmerding and Trafford

and around here.

My last book I wanted to call "A Collection of Essays"

because that's what it is, but the publisher said,

"Nobody likes essays so call it a memoir again."

But yeah, people generally sort of lump

in when you're writing about your own life

and telling true stories about it as memoir, yeah.

They're meant to appear based on my life

even if they're not based on my life -- if that makes sense.

I mean, they're meant to be someone sitting next to you

and talking to you that you can get to know.

It's really important to me.

I mean, my dad was a millworker, and things it's important to me

to remember where I came from.

I love Pittsburgh.

I love Western Pennsylvania. I love all of it.

I love all the little towns around here.

Love the Electric Valley.

Love all the old Westinghouse towns.

If you get something wrong about this area,

like if you say something that's not true,

or is misrepresenting it, people will call you out really hard.

I like the unhip side of Pittsburgh.

I'm like not into the $5 piece of organic toast,

but I do like the dive bars and the burgers.

Most of the work is done here and sometimes coffee shops.

I can work in public spaces pretty well.

I like it.

The noise, you know.

Hi. Can I get you guys something to drink?

Right now I usually write at 4:00 in the morning.

I get up and I write before I go to work.

And I try to bang out at least an hour or so every day.

Jakiela: Usually at the table here for me or in bed.

And his work ethic is very good

so it helps me because I'm lazier.

Newman: And then on Saturday, Lori and I will sit down,

and we'll have a couple drinks

and we'll touch up what we wrote,

read it at the table and go over it together

and have a little editor-session back and forth.

You have poems? Mm-hmm.

You want to read one?

You far enough along?

Yeah, I am. All right.

Read me some.

"'So what's your earliest memory?'

my father-in-law Charlie asks the waitress,

the bartender, and me.

I love Charlie, a holy New Yorker

who spent his life away from New York.

Who sang Frank Sinatra while he washed pots and pans

and worked on houses and worked in factories and worked doubles

so his kids could have lives he did not.

Charlie is earnest and kind,

and his stories don't ever go where I think they should.

'What's your earliest memory?'

Charlie asks, hoping to tell his."

That sound like your dad? Mm-hmm.

That's good. It does. It sounds awesome.

You know, we read for each other, you know.

And there's...

and people are always asking, "Is there competition?"

I'm like, "Absolutely no. There's not."

And I don't know how to explain that to people,

but it's not like that.

"Outside the wedding tent, in the parking lot

by the gift shop at Bushy Run Battlefield

in their new-ish Ford Escape,

Brianna, who everyone calls 'Bree,' takes a deep breath

filled with frustration and says,

'You have got to be kidding me.'

She pauses and stares hard at her husband.

She says, 'You have got to be kidding me.

We stopped at the ATM, you took out $100,

we stopped at the ATM specifically

so you could take out $100.'"

Jakiela: I went to New York to be a writer,

and I didn't write at all really,

I mean notes, little scribbles, things like that,

but if I hadn't gotten together with my husband,

if I hadn't moved back home,

I wouldn't have written anything.

I had no books.

And, you know, I wrote everything since

I've been back here,

with his support.

Newman: The idea of doing work is appealing to me,

and the people that work, and I always liked the idea of writers

who worked a lot and did their work.

You know, that was just always appealing to me.

And then also, I mean, I think people just write to say,

you know, "I was here once," you know?

"And you're here, and isn't that awesome?"

Sebak: Of course, there have been awesome writers

who have lived here once, some just for a while.

Take Willa Cather, a great American writer

usually associated with Nebraska

and the Great Plains where she grew up,

but she moved here in the late 19th century,

and in June of 2017,

her Pittsburgh connections attracted scholars

and devoted readers from around the world

for the 16th Willa Cather International Seminar,

organized this time by two local academics,

Tim Bintrim and James Jaap, with help from Tracy Tucker

from the Willa Cather Foundation in Nebraska.

This day, folks are visiting sites on the North Side

that Cather would have known.

It's all part of the seminar.

Bintrim: It's always in a different place where she lived.

This is the first time it's been in Pittsburgh.

And we're taking a week, six to seven days,

to celebrate her time in the city,

her 10 years living in Pittsburgh

between 1896 and 1906.

We can expect to go on walking tours

and to visit places that were integral

to different works that she wrote.

Tucker: I think she always wanted something,

you know, newer and bigger and more exciting,

so this doesn't seem like a surprising place

to find Cather after she's done with college.

Jaap: From I think she was 22 till she was 32,

and then she continued to visit until about 1916,

so for another decade, she made Pittsburgh really

one of her -- one of her "bases," I would say.

Tucker: This was a big step -- to be away

from the rest of the family

and develop her own friends and her own networks of people.

Jaap: This house where we are was owned by George Gerwig,

a friend of hers.

Bintrim: And George was her friend at the University of Nebraska.

They were great friends.

He taught her theater reviewing.

Jaap: He recommended her for a position as an editor

and writer at a new magazine based in Pittsburgh

called The Home Monthly.

This was in 1896.

Tucker: This would have been one of the first places that she,

you know, she was meeting lots of actors

and she was writing reviews,

and I do think she liked Pittsburgh a lot,

of course, that doesn't mean she didn't go on

to New York afterwards or want to go on to New York.

But I do think this was an important step for her.

Jaap: So the first five years she was a journalist,

and then she shifted to teaching school.

So for the next five years, she taught at Central High

and then over here at Allegheny.

Bintrim: It's all documented, starting with "Chrysalis,"

the 1980 work which we all go back to.

And there's been a lot published recently.

Peter Oresick's collection is a good place to start.

It puts the six most important Pittsburgh stories

together for the first time in a handy format.

And it's just wonderful.

For about five years, her last five years here in Pittsburgh,

she stayed in the home of her friend Isabelle McClung

over in Squirrel Hill on Murray Hill Avenue.

Bintrim: We got permission from the owners, the current owners,

to go into the back garden

and to gaze up at the rightmost dormer window

which is where Willa Cather did

so much of the writing that we know,

including the great prairie novel, "O Pioneers!"

which was put together out of two stories that she wrote here

and then spliced together in that tiny upstairs sewing room

with a single window which is always what she favored.

There's something about the storytelling

and the beauty of her writing that appeals to people.

Just the beautiful language, first and foremost.

She tells a great story and she tells it beautifully.

And that's really all that matters to most readers.

Sebak: Many such readers today may also want to check out

the beautifully told stories of Osama Alomar

whom you may encounter on the North Side,

often on Sampsonia Way.

I walk a lot. Yes.

Sebak: He fled his homeland of Syria for political reasons,

and he's been selected as a writer-in-residence

for two years here in Pittsburgh

through the unusual City of Asylum program.

Alomar: I first came to the States on October 2008.

I lived in Chicago for eight years.

And I drove a cab there.

Sebak: Osama first came to Pittsburgh years ago to give a reading.

He stayed in this same house.

I remember that night I wrote three very short stories.

Sebak: He has written and published several books

of these "very short stories,"

including the 2017 collection called "The Teeth of the Comb."

The stories are almost like poems.

Alomar: "Never Been Touched."

"A book sitting on the shelf with torn covers and pages

filled with comments and notes in the margins

said to his colleague who stood beside him,

'I envy so much your freshness

and your eternal youth.'

But his colleague answered him dejectedly,

'I've never been touched!'"

I write about objects and animals because I feel

there is inspiration everywhere,

not only among humans.

There's inspiration in dogs, cats, chairs,

walls, any kind of objects.

Sebak: Osama says he usually writes in the afternoons,

here in the house.

Alomar: Writing every day.

I'm writing every day on my notebook.

But I don't go to my computer every day.

Now I'm working on a novel about the Syrian war,

about the Syrian disaster.

And it lasted until now for over seven years.

I cannot describe this disaster in very few words

or very few sentences.

Syria is hell now,

and I think it takes years and years.

Sebak: Osama still writes in Arabic,

but, obviously, his English is good.

Alomar: You know, language is a very big ocean,

so every day I discover new thing.

Sebak: And he seems to be productive in Pittsburgh.

Alomar: I'm still discovering the city.

It's not that big.

It's not like Chicago.

I'm good here.

Maybe that's why I'm writing every day.

Sebak: And it's just a short walk

to the place called Alphabet City

where City of Asylum now has a great bookstore.

-Hi. -Hi. How are you?

Good. How are you?

Alomar: Yeah, I always go there.

Check out the books, the events,

there's lots of beautiful events there,

jazz music, readings, all kinds of events.

Sebak: One night in February of 2018,

we went to that bookstore for an event

featuring the Pittsburgh writer Tom Sweterlitsch,

who brought along his wife and daughter.

Tonight is the book launch for my new novel

called "The Gone World."

They've invited me to give a reading and maybe a Q&A

and sign some copies of my book.

[ Applause ]

So --

So today "The Gone World" comes out.

Those of you who know me,

this book has been with me for a long time.

I started writing it back in 2014

shortly after my first novel was published.

And it's actually been finished for quite some time

but publishing sometimes just takes a very long time

to work its way through a publishing house,

so finally it feels good to have this out into the world.

I don't know what I call my genre.

It's sort of a mix of all sorts of things,

so this is my second book, and both have been similar

in that they've had a strong component

of like a thriller/mystery novel

but they're clearly science-fiction.

This new book, "The Gone World," is much more horror

also than my first one.

And this one is a time-travel novel

so it touches the future and the past.

"'Hello?' 'Special Agent Shannon Moss?'

She didn't recognize the man's voice,

though she recognized the drawl on the vowels.

He'd grown up around here,

West Virginia, or Pennsylvania --

rural.

'This is Moss,' she said.

'A family's been killed.'

A quaver in his voice.

'Washington County dispatch logged the 911

a little after midnight.

There's a missing girl.'

2:00 a.m., but the news was like an ice bath.

She was fully awake now.

'Who am I speaking with?'

'Special Agent Philip Nestor,' he said.

'FBI.'

She turned on her bedside lamp.

Cream-colored wallpaper patterned with vines

and cornflower-blue roses

covered her bedroom walls.

She traced the lines with her eyes, thinking.

'Why my involvement?' she asked."

My first book was incredibly Pittsburgh,

it was nothing but Pittsburgh essentially.

This one is the area.

There are scenes in Pittsburgh,

but there's a lot of scenes in Canonsburg, West Virginia,

so it's still what I would consider

local to Pittsburgh writing,

but yeah, not so much the city itself this time.

"Moss' memories of Courtney were the sweetest

essence of childhood summers --

endless days spent poolside, roller coasters at Kennywood,

splitting cigarettes down by Chartiers Creek.

Courtney had died their sophomore year,

murdered in a parking lot for the few dollars

she'd had in her purse."

So the time-travel mechanism in "The Gone World"

is that generally speaking you can go to the future,

but you're not going to the future,

you're going to a future,

one of an infinite possible versions of future.

I often say I didn't invent how to time travel,

but I had to do enough research to make it feel like I had.

Sebak: Tom says he's been writing every day

since his early teens in Ohio.

Sweterlitsch: But yeah, I would write horror short stories.

That was the first thing that I did with any regularity.

And I did that through high school until college

when I started writing poetry.

I came to Carnegie Mellon and majored in creative writing.

I had a couple of other majors, too, but writing

what I write now is sort of this --

like I view it as a little bit of a combination

between the kinds of interests I had when I was studying poetry

and, you know, the horror and science-fiction stuff

I liked as a kid.

So, I do not write at home.

I live in Greenfield.

It's a minuscule two-bedroom house.

And I don't have room to write there.

And I go to different places.

I go to shopping-mall food courts --

that's a favorite of mine --

Century III Mall, Ross Park Mall --

those are great places just to set up shop

and nobody bothers you or thinks it's weird

that you're just sitting there for a long time.

Once everything's done and it is in print and published,

I don't look at it ever again.

I pick out a couple passages for readings, and that's it.

I think I would go -- I think I would go mildly crazy

if I went back into a printed book

'cause I would just start finding all sorts

of things to change and re-write

so I just don't. [ Laughs ]

"...but arrivals were different from departures,

no exhilaration at seeing home after

so long an absence --

rather, seeing this future-earth was like staring into a mirror

and discovering someone else's face."

Thank you.

[ Applause ]

Sebak: You know, we're lucky to have all these writers --

and more -- in our midst.

The stories and poems, the characters and predicaments,

the memoirs and novels that they create

all add to the beauty and mystery and goofiness

of living in and around Pittsburgh.

We're happy to see places we know mentioned

and preserved on printed pages.

And no question -- we always want to read more and more.

(Music)

Last question -- If someone says to you,

"As a Pittsburgher, what book should I know?"

O'Nan: You should know "Damballah"

by John Edgar Wideman.

It's a story collection about Homewood.

Gorgeous. Gorgeous.

He's working all different types of form.

He's working the yarn, the fable, the slice of life.

Beautiful language. Just gorgeous.

"Damballah."

John Edgar Wideman.

Yeah, that's the one that I would point you to.

You know, the real, real Pittsburgh of it.

For more infomation >> People Who've Written Books Around Here - Duration: 28:00.

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ENTER YOUR ZIP CODE HERE TO FIND OUT WHAT'S REALLY IN YOUR TAP WATER - Duration: 7:07.

ENTER YOUR ZIP CODE HERE TO FIND OUT WHAT�S REALLY IN YOUR TAP WATER

BY ARJUN WALIA

Do you know what�s in your drinking water? Probably not. Toxic substances are constantly

found in contaminated drinking water around the world, and it�s not just developing

countries, but also developed countries like Canada and the United States.

According to the Chicago Tribune, an analysis uncovered toxic lead in the tap water drawn

from more than 70 percent of the homes across Chicago. Substances like aluminum, mercury,

other heavy metals, prescription drugs, and more have been found in other public drinking

water supplies.

This has been a major problem for a while, which is why The Environmental Working Group

(EWG) released a new �Tap Water Database� that allows people to enter their ZIP code

or their local utility�s name, in order to find out what�s in their tap water.

According to Live Science:

�The database contains results from testing by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

on drinking water from 2010 to 2015, which includes tests on water from nearly 50,000

water utilities in all 50 states and Washington, D.C. In addition, the EWG incorporated results

from water tests done by state agencies.�

So, what did they find? They found that, in total, approximately 270 contaminants were

identified in drinking water across the country, which also included lead and arsenic.

You can access the ZIP CODE based database HERE.

The article published by live science goes on to emphasize how the levels of contaminants

that government regulations allow for are actually higher than what current research

suggests is safe. This is a common theme, and the corporate relationship with government

might have something to do with it. It�s not just our drinking water that we see a

lack of appropriate safety regulations, it�s with many of our products, services, medications

and more.

Furthermore:

�For other contaminants, there are no specific federal standards, the EWG says. In the case

of chromium-6, which is a form of the element chromium, for example, the government looks

only at overall chromium levels, and not all types are harmful. Chromium-6 has been linked

to tumors in animal studies, and may also be linked to increased risk of stomach cancer

in workers exposed to the compound, the EWG says. Chromium � 3, on the other hand, is

�mostly harmless.�

This is why in some areas we see chlorine and other disinfectants added into the water

supply, which raises even more health concerns and doesn�t really provide an ample solution

to the problem.

Below is a great statement from the Waterkeeper Alliance:

�Every day around the world, polluters are poisoning our waterways, and people everywhere

are suffering the consequences. When a coal company discharges millions of gallons of

toxic coal ash into a river, families who depend on that waterway as a drinking-water

source are the innocent victims. When a developer demolishes a forest of mangroves, it destroys

fisheries and devastates the local economy. When hog farms dump untreated waste into a

waterway, people and marine life get sick. These are just a few examples of the battles

that Waterkeeper Alliance fights every day around the world on behalf of the common good

and to protect everyone�s right to clean water.�

When we ponder what the solutions to the problems are, at the deepest levels, the solution is

us; me, you and everyone you know. If we want to change the planet, we have to change ourselves.

Everybody seems to want change, yet nobody is willing to take a look in the mirror and

make that change. Secondly, it�s organizations like the Waterkeeper Alliance that help to

bring awareness to these issues.

Whether tracking down polluters in action on the water, in courtrooms helping to enforce

environmental laws, or advocating in town meetings or teaching in the classrooms, this

is how they do it.

The water pollution problem of all Earth�s waterways is one of the biggest issues our

world faces today. I believe Earth is a conscious being and she�s been extremely patient with

us. We don�t have to be here, we are not needed and we�ve become a threat to our

own planet when we could, with ease, have a human experience that sees everybody, including

all life on the planet, thrive.

The corporate take-over of our governments, and those who enforce �the rules� here

don�t really represent the people, or a group that looks to preserve and take care

of our planet. If that was so, it would�ve been done a long time ago.

Instead, we let our �leaders� gather every single year to talk about solutions, but that�s

all they seem to do. There is no real regard for humanity, but instead, geo-political agendas

take the forefront.

We�ve had solutions to our pollution problems for decades, yet Red Tape continues to get

in the way.

On a more positive note, the amount that the global population is speaking up and creating

initiatives to combat these problems is larger than it�s ever been. At least there are

huge efforts underway, and I do believe we are living in a time of great change. Part

of this time is to help restore and protect the planet, and that�s a priority for many.

Industry, geo-politics and globalization has lead to what we have here today. I�d like

to leave you with a quote that I�ve used many times before, so if you�ve already

seen it, I apologize.

�Political parties exist to secure responsible government and to execute the will of the

people. From these great staffs, both of the old parties have ganged aside. Instead of

instruments to promote the general welfare they have become the tools of corrupt interests

which use them in martialling [sic] to serve their selfish purposes. Behind the ostensible

government sits enthroned an invisible government owing no allegiance and acknowledging no responsibility

to the people. To destroy this invisible government, to befoul the unholy alliance between corrupt

business and corrupt politics is the first task of the statesmanship of the day.�

� Theodore Roosevelt

Oh, and obviously, don�t forget to get yourself a good water filter!

For more infomation >> ENTER YOUR ZIP CODE HERE TO FIND OUT WHAT'S REALLY IN YOUR TAP WATER - Duration: 7:07.

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11th Annual Chancellor's Leadership Forum on Diversity and Inclusion - Duration: 1:30:23.

For more infomation >> 11th Annual Chancellor's Leadership Forum on Diversity and Inclusion - Duration: 1:30:23.

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Here's Why I Still Drive My Old 1994 Toyota Celica - Duration: 4:15.

rev up your engines, a lot of people have asked me, Scotty how come you still

drive your old 94 Toyota Celica, well today I'm going to explain why, first I'm a

mechanic, we spend all week fixing other people's cars, the last thing we want to

do in our spare time is work on our own cars, that's why I've got a Toyota Celica

because the Celica is pretty sporty looking, but really it's just basically a

Toyota Corolla in disguise, it's got the same exact engine and the

same exact transmission down in here, and I've personally seen Corollas that had a

million miles on them, so you know the thing is going to last, and another reason

is I'm cheap, I bought this thing for three hundred and fifty dollars quite a

long time ago, it's got two hundred thirty nine thousand miles on it now, and

the AC still blows cold as can be when you push the button, and it's still got the

original AC compressor, yes one time I did have to add a little refrigerant

but hey, it's what twenty four years old, so tiny leak like that's no big deal I

filled it up and it's still blowing cold, that was like six years ago, and it's still

got the original engine, the original transmission, the original power steering

pump, these things were made to last, and even the wheels still good, but that's a

trick watch this, these are just autozone wheel covers, behind it are steel wheels

I love steel wheels for one main reason, they can take damage if they're steel, if

you hit a pothole or something, you get a little bend in a steel, you can get a

hammer and you can mash it right back out again, if you up fancy alloy wheels

like this Lexus, you can see there's damage here, if you hit a big bump and this wheel

brakes, these things cost hundreds and hundreds of dollars a piece, but even if

you hit a curb, with these cheapy autozone hubcaps, hey you can buy another

set for practically nothing, and from far away they look perfectly fine, there's

nothing wrong with a little facade every now and then, and another advantage of a

car like this is, hey it was the mass-produced car, they made millions of

the Corollas, and the Celica being basically the Corolla parts, you can get

parts easily and cheaply just about anywhere, even though the car is 24 years

old now, and being a hatchback comes in handy,

once you take all the covers off, and put the seats down, you can then carry a

whole bunch of stuff, I put all kinds of lumber and giant screen TVs in this baby

as far as I'm concerned, it maybe the perfectly designed car of all time and

since I live in Texas, it may be 24 years old but no rust, now if you moved

down here with the car that started to rust, like my sister-in-law did, then all

bets are off, because once rust starts, the humidity of Houston will just eat

the car up, she had a Pinto she brought it down from Buffalo, and after a few

years one day she opened the driver's door and it fell off, so then she drove

it a while climbing into the passenger door, so since it doesn't rust, what is the

point of getting rid of this car, it runs good, gets good gas mileage, has

freezing cold air conditioning, and hardly ever breaks down, now granted the

front seats did wear out, but look at these beautiful covers that I put on

these covers have been on for like five years

they look really well and they weren't that cheap, I mean they were like 65

bucks apiece, but hey it still looks pretty good for an old car, and I put

these covers on myself, just realize if you ever try it it's not going to look too

good for the first few days, because they come in a package all scrunched up, but

once you stretch them on, and they sit in the Sun for a few days, they look

pretty good, and yes I did get rid of the crappy Toyota stereo that came with them

and put in this JVC, because it really sounds a lot better, that was 75 bucks well spent

what the heck, and I did put in a pair of CV axles, but what the heck they were $49

a piece for a brand new aftermarket ones, and they're still working fine six years

later, so now you know why I'm still driving this 94 Celica, even though it

has hand crank windows, so if you never want to miss another one

of my new car repair videos, remember to ring that Bell!

For more infomation >> Here's Why I Still Drive My Old 1994 Toyota Celica - Duration: 4:15.

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'The Two Of You Have Defined A Relationship Here Where You Thrive On Drama,' Dr. Phil Tells Couple - Duration: 2:43.

For more infomation >> 'The Two Of You Have Defined A Relationship Here Where You Thrive On Drama,' Dr. Phil Tells Couple - Duration: 2:43.

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NBA Daily Show: Apr. 26 - The Starters - Duration: 23:04.

For more infomation >> NBA Daily Show: Apr. 26 - The Starters - Duration: 23:04.

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Gutfeld on Kanye's latest tweets - Duration: 6:55.

For more infomation >> Gutfeld on Kanye's latest tweets - Duration: 6:55.

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The First Lady Melania Trump Celebrates 48th Birthday - Here Look Back Her Life - Duration: 3:01.

Melania Trump, the First Lady of the United States, is today celebrating her 48th birthday.

Here we look back at her life in pictures and Melania Trumps' best bits.

The current FLOTUS was born in Novo Mesto, Slovenia on April 26, 1970.

Born Melania Knavs, she began her modelling career at the age of sixteen and attended

the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia where she studied architecture.

However, she left her studies after a year to pursue a successful career in modelling.

Melania has worked as a fashion model for agencies in Milan and Paris and she later

moved to New York City in 1996.

In 2000, she appeared nude on the cover of British GQ, an achievement she is immensely

proud of and is listed on her official biography on the White House website.

The website states: "As a model, Melania has appeared in high profile ad campaigns

and worked with some of the top photographer in the fashion industry.

"She has graced the covers of Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, British GQ, Ocean Drive, Avenue, In

Style and New York Magazine."

Melania also once appeared scantily clad aboard Donald Trump's gold-encrusted Boeing 727.

GQ editor Dylan Jones said Trump requested the photographs be delivered to his office.

"We framed the cover and a selection of prints and sent them as soon as we could,"

he said.

She met the current US President Donald Trump, who was a real estate mogul at the time, at

a party in New York and they began a relationship.

Melania married Donald Trump in January 2005 and a year later the couple had their first

son, Barron William Trump.

When she married Mr Trump she became a step-mother to his children Donald Jr, Eric, Ivanka and

Tiffany Trump.

In 2006, she officially became a citizen of the United States of America.

She is only the second First Lady outside of the United States.

The first was Louisa Adams, wife to John Quincy Adams, the nation's sixth president.

Recently the First Lady welcomed French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte to the

White House and hosted her first state dinner with France.

Melania paid homage to France when meeting the French president and his wife by wearing

a Chanel Haute Couture gown, hand-painted with silver and embroidered with crystal and

sequins.

President Trump thanked his wife for her efforts on the dinner during a toast on Tuesday night.

He said: "To America's absolutely incredible First Lady, thank you for making this an evening

we will always cherish and remember.

Thank you, Melania."

For more infomation >> The First Lady Melania Trump Celebrates 48th Birthday - Here Look Back Her Life - Duration: 3:01.

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Today's Melania Trump's 48th Birthday, Here Are 7 Other First Ladies at 48 - Duration: 6:00.

For more infomation >> Today's Melania Trump's 48th Birthday, Here Are 7 Other First Ladies at 48 - Duration: 6:00.

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Today's Melania Trump's 48th Birthday, Here Are 7 Other First Ladies at 48 - Duration: 5:32.

Today's Melania Trump's 48th Birthday, Here Are 7 Other First Ladies at 48

During a call-in interview with "Fox and Friends" this morning President Donald Trump

cheerfully addressed the fact that today is his wife Melania's 48th birthday.

The President said he got her a card and flowers, stopping short of telling the world what their

plans were for this evening's birthday celebration.

With a sense of humor, Trump was listed as "Donald from D.C."But let's take the

time to see what other former first ladies were up to for their 48th birthday.

Michelle Obama also spent her 48th birthday in the White House.

Michelle spent her time as the first lady visited homeless shelters and soup kitchens

and spent an ample amount of time promoting poverty awareness, education, nutrition, physical

activity, and telling other people to eat healthily.Laura Bush spent her 48th birthday

in the Texas governor's mansion.

To which she claimed that that politics doesn't drive her.

Throughout her years in the governor's mansion, the former teacher didn't hold a single

formal event but instead worked tirelessly for women's and children's causes including

health, education, and literacy while at the same time raising funds for public libraries.Here

is more information on first lady Melania Trump via Biography:

"First Lady Melania Trump is the wife of Donald Trump, the 45th president of the United

States.

Who Is Melania Trump?

Born on April 26, 1970, First Lady Melania Trump is a former model and the third wife

of U.S. President, real estate billionaire and former reality TV star Donald Trump.

Early Life Melania Trump (born Melanija Knavs, Germanized

to Melania Knauss) was born on April 26, 1970, in Novo Mesto, Slovenia (then part of communist

Yugoslavia).

Her father was a car dealer and her mother was a designer for children's clothing.

She grew up in a modest home with her younger sister and later discovered she had an older

half brother, whom her father had from a previous relationship.

Modeling Career Trump began modeling at age 16, and two years

later she signed on with an agency in Milan.

She enrolled at the University of Ljubljana, but dropped out after one year to pursue her

modeling career.

In her early days of modeling, Trump worked in Milan and Paris, before moving to New York

in 1996.

There she gained steady work, working with well-known photographers like Patrick Demarchelier

and Helmut Newton, and landing covers on magazines such as Harper's Bazaar (Bulgaria), Vanity

Fair (Italy), GQ (for which she posed nude in January 2000) and the Sports Illustrated

Swimsuit Issue.

In March 2001, she was granted a green card for permanent residency in the U.S. through

the EB-1 program.

Her acceptance later came under scrutiny, as the so-called "Einstein visa" is often

allocated to top academics, business leaders, Oscar-winning actors and others who demonstrate

"extraordinary ability," though others suggested she easily qualified for EB-1 approval.

Marriage to Donald Trump Melania met her future husband Donald Trump

at a New York fashion party in 1998.

Although she first refused to date him, the couple eventually began establishing a relationship

and were engaged in 2004.

The following year they married in a lavish Palm Beach, Florida, ceremony, with celebrity

attendees including Shaquille O'Neal, Barbara Walters, Kelly Ripa, Matt Lauer, Katie Couric,

former President Bill Clinton and then New York Senator Hillary Clinton.

In 2006, Trump gave birth to Barron William Trump.

Their son is husband Donald's fifth child.

That same year she also became a U.S. citizen.

In November, Melania Trump delivered a rare speech on the campaign trail outlining how

fighting cyberbullying would be a priority for her if she were to become first lady.

"We need to teach our youth American values: Kindness, honesty, respect, compassion, charity,

understanding, cooperation," said Trump.

News outlets were quick to point out the irony that her husband was known for his use of

the social media platform Twitter to insult opponents.

Other Projects In 2010, Melania Trump launched a jewelry

line, as well as a skincare line.

She has appeared in an Aflac commercial, co-hosted on The View, and appeared on her husband's

NBC reality show, Celebrity Apprentice.

Multilingual Trump is said to be fluent in the Slovenian,

English, French, Serbian and German languages, with other outlets reporting that she speaks

Italian, as well."

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