Thứ Hai, 31 tháng 12, 2018

Youtube daily here Dec 31 2018

Hey guys, what's going on? My name is James Mason. So with this video I have a important announcement

me and Johnny red

we are doing a

random drawing

But to enter this drawing there are four things that you need to do

What we will be given away is to two hundred and fifty dollar gift cards, so

One card, you know for two people

so

everything that you need to do in this video will be down here in the description and

again four things

so here is our

Website transparent traders

If you don't know yet, we actually have a chat room in here. That's free

It's right here as soon as you open it up. So just just go up here to WWE

Transparent traders. Um, I just

Remember that Hemi part? That's the only thing that's different

so, you know we have other things up here you can look at but

We need talking about that for this video. This is about you entering to make some money

or in hopes that you make some money, so

What were you looking at here?

We are given away to $250 gift cards when we hit six million views

Now to look at the view counter go down here at the bottom

We're almost there. I say

See today is December 30th. I say

There's a good chance we'll hit it by January the second so somewhere running there

We should be hitting six billion or I like to think at least

But so here's the the view counter, you know, 5.2 million dollars

Non dollars, I wish sorry

5.2 million views

right now

and

Again once it's it's six million views

For everybody who does these four things you'll be entered in this random drawing

For a chance to win a two hundred and fifty dollar Visa gift card, so

What you need to do is

Let's see, we'll start up your with my page go to here to find my page and

subscribe to it

so once you subscribe, you can hit the little bell for notifications if you want to continue to

get notified on my videos if you don't hit the bell some reason YouTube doesn't

you know promote videos at times not sure why so

subscribe to my page

then

Come over here to this is Johnny red my partner

To his page and

Subscribe to his to his as well and make sure it's little Bell if that's what you want and

then

For this video

You know like to make a comment just so we know and we'll be able to we already know who our subscribers are already, um

Due to some things we got set up that can pull information

We already know who has already subscribed to our pages

So for the ones who have already subscribed, if you watch this video, you obviously don't have to worry about that

You're already a couple steps ahead of the game

So, you know subscribe to my youtube channel - Johnny's YouTube channel

Like in make a comment and share the video

And that's it. That's all you have to do

And if you want to just keep up with this view counter, you know, just come down here

For our website and just see where it's at, but when you get six million, we'll make an announcement and

For everybody who met that criteria

we're gonna you know, upload all that data and

and -

There's this website that does random

drawings for things like this, so

we're gonna upload all that data into that and

Select two people to get a $250 gift card or Visa gift card, so

That's it that's all you have to do Oh

Besides, you know following our YouTube channels. There's nothing you have to sign up for or anything like that

so hey, I wish you guys the best of luck in this drawling and

You know if we don't talk for the ones I talked to if we don't talk before the new year

I wish you a safe and happy new year and

See you in 2019

Let's make some money. See you then

For more infomation >> Stock Traders Here Is Your Chance To Win A $250 Visa Gift Card From Us - Duration: 5:33.

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Here's why next year you'll see more floppy-eared dogs in airports - Duration: 0:31.

For more infomation >> Here's why next year you'll see more floppy-eared dogs in airports - Duration: 0:31.

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You Need To Build An Email List-Here Is Why - Duration: 5:31.

For more infomation >> You Need To Build An Email List-Here Is Why - Duration: 5:31.

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太妍Taeyeon-Here I Am (繁中歌詞) - Duration: 3:19.

For more infomation >> 太妍Taeyeon-Here I Am (繁中歌詞) - Duration: 3:19.

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YONI Studios´ Youtube Rewind 2018: Everyone is Here - Duration: 1:53.

For more infomation >> YONI Studios´ Youtube Rewind 2018: Everyone is Here - Duration: 1:53.

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Tiny Shows Off Romantic Christmas Gift From T.I.: See Her Lavish 'Mrs. Harris' Chain Here - News Tod - Duration: 2:42.

Tiny was on T.I.'s 'nice' list this year, because the rapper gifted her flashy bling for Christmas! See the present that proves the married couple is stronger than ever.

Tameka "Tiny" Harris's family spoiled her on Christmas! The Xscape member revealed her holiday loot to Instagram fans on Dec. 26, and we couldn't help but notice T.I.'s contribution. The "Whatever You Like" rapper gave his wife a white gold chain that read "Mrs. Harris," a title that Tiny is now wearing proudly (T.I.'s real name is Clifford Joseph Harris Jr.). Tiny's kids were just as generous, as her daughter Zonnique Pullins gave her Chanel kicks and son Clifford "King" Harris surprised his mom with a bracelet. See Tiny's new wardrobe below!

Tiny's Christmas was just as sweet as her present stash, as she spent the night of the holiday making slime with T.I. and their 2-year-old daughter, Heiress! In an Instagram video of the slime-making session, Tiny revealed that their daughter adorably calls herself the "slime baby." Tiny has been spending a lot of time with Heiress this holiday season, as she took her mini me to visit Santa Claus! "Made sure I made time to get my Sunshine @heiressdharris a picture with Santa Claus," Tiny wrote alongside a picture of Heiress's meet and greet with the big man in the red suit. "Something I think kids should experience at least once!!"

We love seeing this family closer than ever, especially when it comes to Tiny and T.I.'s relationship! Although they've seen their fair share of drama, T.I. proved he's still proud to call Tiny "Mrs. Harris"…as his Christmas gift proves! The rapper also used the endearing term in a flirty Instagram comment right before Christmas. After his wife debuted her hair makeover to Instagram on Dec. 10, T.I. wrote, "Nice look Mrs. H. 😋."

Nothing says true love like a heavy chain bearing your boo's namesake! It warms our hearts seeing Tiny all loved up, with expensive price tags to prove it.

For more infomation >> Tiny Shows Off Romantic Christmas Gift From T.I.: See Her Lavish 'Mrs. Harris' Chain Here - News Tod - Duration: 2:42.

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WINTER VACATION are here.... - Duration: 6:38.

Hello i hope you are fine i am also fine.so as you all know that winter

vacation are here

now most people start there vacation by going somewhere

but i start my vacation by sleeping

ok so lets come to the main point

i have got three assignments from school for vacation

which i think is the worst thing

which i have to do in my vacation

so the assignments are that i have to make two charts of reader and one book review

which i think is a kind of hard thing to do.But i will complete my assignments so first lets complete it

hello,so this is the next day.Today i will go to cinema

to watch donkey king because like why not donkey king not coming slow

winter vacation are here so lets go

alright guys,i am here at fotress square mall

Now assignment are complete and movie is also complete.Now what

now after some days,25 december came

now most people celebrate this day by decorating their house or going somewhere

but we celebrate this day by starting the car,going to a shop buy a loaf of bread and some egg,come back home

make a breakfast,finish it and than again sleep

this is how we celebrate this day

which i think is not a good thing.we must celebrate this day very very nicely

LAZINESS

ok so now there is nothing special to do.shall we play playstation,lets do it

done playing playstation.Now what can we do?shall we play granny lets do it

i have done playing practice this game

i have never escape this house like this game in front of me is quite hard

ooooo,i lost.the game is actually very nice ,good by my heart

but it's quite hard.If i set the difficulty at easy it look like i am playing hard because it is soooooooooo hard

Now in every vacation i make something which is related to electricity or it is related to some art work

so this time i have made a lamp aka light man

done playing playstation,granny and also done showing you my lamp now i think its time for som outdoor games like cricket and football

but we cannot play because they don't let anyone play in the park so we decided to play in plot

on 1st jan its my relative's birthday.they will come to my home so i have to decorate this room so lets

do it.but now there is a twist in the story.Today is not 1 jan its 28 december which mean Atif aslam's

concert in packages mall so lets go with a magic

we are here

hello,so this is the next day,yesterday i came back home

concert was good but not the best because the timings was 6:30 but the main singer came around 9:30 which i think is kind of a bazar thing

2 thing is that the speaker of this concert were not good like the coke fest speaker were ligit but in this concert the speaker were not good

like sound was obviously coming out of the speaker but the speaker dosen't had tha power which i thought

otherwise the good thing was that the concert was live

now lets decorate this room so lets do it

For more infomation >> WINTER VACATION are here.... - Duration: 6:38.

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Bloom into You is the Queer Yuri Anime we Needed, and Here's Why - Duration: 48:39.

In chapter 1 of the Bloom into You manga, as protagonist Yuu turns down the boy who

asked her out at the end of middle school, careful paneling keeps older student Touko

out of frame, aside from a somewhat solemn shot of her glancing at Yuu.

Instead of showcasing the upperclassman, attention is paid to Yuu's body language as she tenses

up while rejecting him before calming down after he accepts it, shown on the next page

so as to provide a sense of catharsis upon flipping.

This leads into an uneasy page composition wherein we as viewers are only able to see

Touko's grasping arm, while Yuu expresses concern at the face which is hidden from us.

Suddenly, this face is made visible as she asks the pivotal question, implying her own

interest.

Yuu, attempting to avoid her comprehension of Touko's question, grows increasingly

uncomfortable, and once again her facial expression is hidden.

This continues until she brings Yuu to her face, forcibly confessing and denying her

the chance to avoid engaging with the situation.

This expert sequence is something that could only be done in a manga, one made by an expert

of the craft at that.

It was one of many that I thought the anime would fail to live up to.

However, the voice acting of the anime's version fully communicates Yuu's tension,

relief, and then plunging back into anxiety.

The excellent cut of Yuu pulling her arm back only for Touko to yank it forwards works together

with the ripple that the motion creates, the aforementioned voice acting, and the stellar

music to not only communicate the manga's core in this scene, but to elevate it.

In effect, it transfers the original's beautiful charm while adding its own understanding of

these characters.

This scene's conclusion, of Yuu seeing their clasped hands in Touko's eye, is not present

in the manga, and demonstrates this expertly.

It's rare to see an anime so clearly understand its source.

It's far rarer for that to lead to one of the most important queer works in the entire

medium.

But this start may have been a bit abrupt.

Allow me take a step back before we begin in earnest, as the backstory here really is

quite important.

As I argued in my video on Fall of 2018 a week or so ago, yuri anime is in a great place.

Anime fandom has always been an important space for queer fans, one where gender-deviant

expression is normalized far beyond where it is in broader society.

The presence of queer works, yuri being a big part of that, has been a boon to young

gays for well over 2 decades now.

I'm confident in saying that I would not have discovered my identity were anime not

around, and that's something that can be said by tens if not hundreds of thousands

around this planet.

Yet in all this time, we have not been blessed with what we need.

For all the wonderful queer works that exist as manga, few manage to make their way into

anime.

This isn't to deny the existence of important, excellent works; Oniisama e, Aoi Hana, Yuri

Kuma Arashi, Doukyuusei, Wandering Son, Flip Flappers, all of these are worthwhile watches.

And of course, we can't ignore the key role played by decades of trash.

Godawful, intensely problematic works had and have their own roles to play in allowing

people to peek at potential identities in a safer and easier to justify way.

However, for those who've made it beyond that hill of self-discovery, these works are

often disappointing, and it can scarcely be denied that young, burgeoning queers deserve

some wonderful works as well.

Enter Bloom into You.

It's fairly well known at this point that I am anime youtube's chief expert on the

yuri genre.

As the one sitting on that not-so-respected throne, I consider it my sworn duty to educate

the world as to what we get every season.

Without a doubt, there's always gay content.

However, quite infrequently do we get romantic works as such.

This year has had plenty of excellent yuri anime, from Comic Girls to Revue Starlight,

but for as inarguable as the queerness is in these works, it is not the focus of any

of them.

Aside from the admittedly excellent Kase-san OVA and Liz and the Blue Bird, the only straightforward

queer female romantic comedy or drama prior to Fall was Citrus.

I'm sure Citrus has had a positive impact on the lives of many, as I said, trash can

be important, but it is trash, though I won't relitigate my complaints given that there's

already a 30 minute video where I do so.

It's very fortunate, then, that we got an adaptation of what is, without a doubt, one

of the most beloved yuri manga ever penned.

Written and drawn by the fantastic Nakatani Nio, the manga which is referred to in Japan

as Yagate Kimi ni Naru or Eventually, I Will Become You has risen up the charts, placing

on the Weekly Manga "Oricon" lists, something no series in the genre had accomplished beforehand.

This sterling feat is no shock given the series' background.

Nakatani Nio did not, of course, get her start on Bloom into You, though it is her first

serialized manga.

Like many in the industry, she started out her "career" as a Touhou doujinshi artist,

though even with her early, 2010-era works, skill is self-evident.

While many of these were considered yuri by her fans, and likely would be classified as

such by most of the viewers of this video, she herself didn't think of them that way.

As she says in an interview, "I was hesitant to call my work yuri because I never intended

to narrate a love story."

In spite of this, it's clear that the groundwork for Bloom into You was laid at this point.

The way she portrays relationships has hardly shifted; she's deeply invested in the messy,

complicated aspect of our feelings.

This, in itself, is important.

Much of the reason trashy works continue to be beloved among some sides of queer fandom

is the fact that they often, in being problematic, deal with complicated situations, though perhaps

not in an ideal manner.

Real human feelings are hardly straightforward, something only made more true when you exist

within a society that views you as "different" at best and sinful at worst.

Queer is, after all, a term that means weird, and to most of us, our feelings on gender,

romance, and sex count as such.

Nakatani's intense focus on these was, as a result, bound to be relatable to a great

many.

Of course, complex emotions have one other benefit; they simply make for a good story.

It's far from guaranteed of course, and a well-learned writer is necessary to bring

the potential in a complex story like Bloom to the forefront, but were the actual story

not enough for you, the way Nakatani makes use of Koyomi, the resident writer character,

should more than establish that this woman understands the craft, a topic we'll return

to with time.

After submitting another messy love-story of sorts to Dengeki Daioh for a contest, one

which she happened to win, Nakatani got the chance to debut as a part of the professional

mangaka world.

Fortunately for her, this came at the perfect time.

Dengeki Daioh is a seinen magazine, one published primarily for adult men, and traditionally,

non-fetishistic yuri has not had much luck in those publications.

However, the genre has been fast expanding, and Bloom's appearance in Dengeki Daioh

marked a major turn of the tides, showcasing that yuri manga could now appear anywhere.

Nakatani's new editor asked her to be the one to introduce a yuri work to this magazine,

a timely request given that at the time she wanted to make a work where, unlike her doujinshi,

"No matter how you look at it, it's yuri."

And so, Bloom into You began its warpath, acting as one of the vanguards for the genre

which has, over the last 3-to-4 years, virtually expanded by a scale of magnitude.

The announcement of it getting an anime this year was long-awaited, and served as solace

to fans afraid that the wonderful world of lilies was being stained by the adaptation

of works such as Netsuzou Trap and Citrus.

However, there was some nervousness about the project, and for good reason.

The manga is simply fantastic, and unlike many works, this quality is heavily derived

from its usage of the medium it's in.

This series was conceptualized as a manga through-and-through, elevated by the fact

that Nakatani's understanding of how comics function is on a level far above that of most

other mangaka.

Any given chapter is full of expertly-composed pages.

Her use of moment-to-moment transitions, a decision that allows a creator to showcase

the precise movements and expressions of characters so as to communicate in full their feelings,

would take cinematography and animation rarely seen outside the works of KyoAni.

Yet, with the assistance of Nakatani's relatively involved participation in the production,

it's turned into a satisfying work that somehow does manage to convey everything the

original did and more.

It's hard to say which is a superior work, yet in spite of being a fairly direct adaptation,

neither is invalidated by the other.

Even Nakatani herself says, "I think it's rare for an anime to reflect the original

author's intention to this extent.

I would tell them in detail, "This scene was drawn with this intention," "This

character is like this," so that there shouldn't be a difference in interpretation between

the original work and the anime."

As she adds, "The anime staff was also very careful with it."

I, and I believe the yuri community at large, could not be more pleased with this work.

But simply talking about Nakatani does not do it justice.

It's now time to return to where we started, looking at what it is that makes this work

so special and what it is that makes it so important.

As with all true masterpieces, Bloom into You is greater than the sum of its parts,

and talking about any individual aspects as if those are what truly make the show amazing

would do a disservice to how it all comes together.

However, it's nigh-impossible to structure a piece of this size without doing so to some

extent, so please forgive me as I break this into multiple sections.

Part 1: How The Anime Adapts the Manga The excerpt I began this video with, while

a particularly important one, is an excellent demonstration of the skill that director Makoto

Katou has brought to this series.

Of course, directors are far from the only staff involved in anime production, and many

people have played important roles in bringing this series to life and allowing it to dance

on the small screen, but as the leader of the project and storyboarder of the first

three episodes, it's inarguable that he set the tone for the series.

Katou brought a number of new elements to the work, ones which assist its transference

to an audio-visual medium.

Take the use of water.

It's far from original as a way to represent both coldness and a feeling of suffocation

but it feels so natural as a metaphor for Yuu's feelings that it's almost surprising

Nakatani didn't come up with it herself.

Take the first shot of the entire series.

As Yuu narrates about her interest in fictional romance, dazzled by it, with the image of

hand-holding stuck in her eyes — an element which, as you may remember, will return as

Touko confesses to her, showcasing the opening of possibilities — she herself is unable

to grasp love even as she reaches her hand out.

The light of the water's surface reaches down to her, but she continually sinks, incapable

of making her way up-top, where everyone else is.

At this point of the story, where Yuu intellectually understands love due to media but is unable

to truly grasp it, this imagery is perfect.

This water motif continues through the work, especially in Katou's trio of episodes.

It returns later in the episode, as Yuu's friends talk of love, ready to experience

it, something that alienates her from everyone else.

It returns in the next episode, as Yuu is truly confronted with the fact that Touko

is not like her and in her has found a love that Yuu herself is utterly incapable of finding,

as well as when she spends time in her room that night, even showing the light of the

surface move away from her as she stares, unable to reach it.

Perhaps most strikingly, it returns in episode 3, in a different form.

After receiving the planetarium from Touko, her room is once again drenched in blues.

She is still sad about her inability to love, and in this instance, the metaphorical blue

curtains really do indicate her emotional state.

However, coming to appreciate Touko, she is now floating, not drowning, as she lays on

her bed.

On its own, this would be a simple, though effective, addition to the work.

What makes it such a productive case study in showcasing how the work is adapted, however,

is the way its integrated into the broader text.

One of the pivotal moments of the series occurs in episode 6, what is the end of the manga's

volume 2, as Yuu has come to the point where she sees it as possible for her to fall in

love with Touko.

Upon confessing that she values the side of the upperclassman that she doesn't show

to others, she's promptly told this: (I'd rather die than hear that).

This is something that causes Yuu to stumble, to consider that maybe, she can't fall in

love with her.

In fact, she literally stumbles here, almost falling into the water.

But she is no longer beneath the surface.

She's able to jump forward, on shaky steps, yes, but above the waves, and confront Touko.

She doesn't do so with a confession — she can not yet accept herself as in love with

the girl — instead lying and saying she never will fall in love in spite of her desire

to do so.

Yet, it's clear that she has moved forward.

She can now avoid falling back into the water, because as nervous as she may be, she no longer

believes with all her heart that she can't fall in love.

While the meaning of this scene above the river remains unchanged from the manga — though

as in most cases, it's elevated by the audio component that I'll get to in a bit — a

whole new depth is added to the work due to Katou's careful understanding of the characters

and application of a new element.

As I've always said, an adaptation will most often succeed by copying the original's

core while changing the tangible details where necessary, and that's something that Bloom

into You has, without a doubt, managed to accomplish.

It's funny in retrospect that the other sterling yuri adaptation of the year, Kase-san,

also increased its manga's use of water motifs.

Great yuri minds think alike, I suppose.

There are just so many scenes which perfectly capture the manga's appeal in a totally

different way.

In episode 2, when Touko kisses Yuu as the train passes by, the sense of intimate eternity

that the vehicle's obstruction provides is demonstrated by having everything but Touko,

Yuu, and the train itself fade into white as time truly does freeze for these two kissing

people.

The series takes many viewpoints, but no matter who it's highlighting, we live in their

world, almost to a solipsistic extent.

In the same episode, as Touko tells Yuu that she doesn't want to date her, the muted

colors of the cafe give way to dazzling light.

This does not merely reflect Yuu's feelings of confusion and confused affection, it projects

them, expanding them in scale.

Take, on another hand, the intimate scenes.

These are numerous, and the anime's camerawork and animation always serve to emphasize them.

For as much as Nakatani focuses on moment-to-moment transitions, you can only convey a prolonged

passage of time so much in an inherently still medium.

Anime are gifted the chance to extended these moments far beyond the time that your mind

will register them as you read the page.

In episode 3, as Yuu strokes Touko's hair, the animation serves to emphasize the sensuality

of this scene above what the original was able to communicate.

In general, the anime does an excellent job at preserving this aspect of the manga; these

teenagers are, well, teenagers, and they act like it.

I've seen a lot of people claim to get hot and bothered by the end of episode 9, as Touko

and Yuu make out, and it's hard to argue against the fact that it perfectly communicates

how it feels to kiss someone you're attracted to for an extended period of time without

feeling gratuitous.

It is sexual but not objectifying.

At the same time, the animation adds nuances to this that only elevate the emotions at

play.

Here, Yuu pulls away from the kiss, something she didn't do previously, indicating that

she's attempting to avoid dealing with the fact that now, she's fallen in love with

Touko.

Contrast this with the kiss in episode 12, where she leans in, a moment which is shortly

followed by her admitting to herself that yes, she's in love.

It wouldn't be hard to describe the direction as both Aoki and Yamada-influenced.

Kato is, of course, a protege of Ei Aoki's and demonstrates much of the tenderness displayed

in certain shows of his such as Wandering Son.

The first person-shots are a good example, and while there's been criticism of them,

I think it's very important to communicating the aforementioned solipsism.

The manga achieves this through tall, thin panels that isolate its characters, but being

bound to a 16:9 aspect ratio, the anime is forced to take things into its own hands in

order to deliver the same effect.

It's fortunate that these traits of Aoki's blend so well with Yamada, another clear influence

on Kato's style here.

I had already believed Yamada's vision would work perfectly with Bloom, given the heavy

number of shots focusing on individual parts of the body.

The anime increases these, particularly by adding a number of leg shots, which is of

course Yamada's specialty.

Similarly, the lighting, something which obviously isn't present in the manga, has a Yamada-esque

quality to it, rather than the Dezaki-style that many others in the industry make use

of.

The influence of these two directors perfectly matches the tone of the manga, so it's only

natural for it to show up in the adaptation.

I hate to harp on a point for too long but the touch that Katou and his crew of storyboarders

and episode directors has brought to this show is excellent, to say nothing of the animation

staff.

Few anime can expect to have source materials this good and few manga can expect such talented

hands to adapt them.

It's truly a marvelous scenario.

But of course, that does not simply come down to the storyboards, brilliant though they

are.

One key element that I have not yet looked at it is writing.

The original work, of course, already exists, so the broad aspects of plotting and scriptwork

are already handled for the team.

However, adapting the writing is no easy feat, so it's fortunate that the writer is one

Jukki Hanada.

Part of such works as Love Live, A Place Further than the Universe, and Hibike Euphonium, Hanada's

works spans the gamut of seriousness and comedy.

A noted fan of the latter work, Nakatani describes herself as being "a Hanada fan to begin

with, so I was able to entrust it to him with peace of mind."

The anime's pacing, a common cause of complaint for many anime, shows no issues.

Each volume of the manga takes up about three episodes.

For a work that spends many pages on inaction and subtle movements, this is a slow rate,

but it's important to slowly pondering the feelings of all of its characters, which is,

after all, what the series does best.

And, due to the decision of the staff and Nakatani herself, it's been able to end

off on a good place, with roughly half the manga to go, so a season 2 would be an easy

sell.

However, what I'd really like to focus on as I close out this section is the show's

use of sound.

Really, it's brilliant.

First, the staff understand that this is a work where music should not constantly be

playing.

Silence says more than a thousand words in this show; it reflects our intuitive understanding

that relationships and their associated feelings can be awkward, that lengthy monologues and

dialogues are not always the ideal way to discover our feelings.

Sometimes, simply sitting and thinking is what we really need.

Still, when the show does need to make use of music, it does a great job, as Oshima Michiru's

soundtrack perfectly underscores the many moments of struggle and jubilation that our

leads are put through.

Similarly, it's important to recognize how much the voice acting adds to the experience.

What in manga can only be conveyed through the drawn expression, or perhaps, to a light

degree, the choice of typeface, can be expressed in full through real voices.

Take Touko, whose actress, Kotobuki Minako, adds just the right amount of strain to her

voice whenever her character shows Yuu her vulnerability, doing a far better job than

anything else could at emphasizing that yes, this is a scared, damaged girl who's finally

found a person who she's needed for years and is afraid of breaking this tenuous connection.

The level of detached self-hate in her voice in episode 6 and 12 is deeply disturbing but

oh-so-perfect and she excels at putting a subtle bite in Touko's voice.

And Yuu's actress, Takada Yuuki, stands out similarly well.

I was initially worried, only having known her as Aoba in New Game, when I had always

imagined Yuu as someone more along the lines of Tomoyo Kurosawa.

Yet Takada excels, painting Yuu as an energetic and kind girl who's somewhat lacking in

confidence, as someone who often doesn't know which way to go, while still being able

to plow full speed ahead when she makes her decisions, showing a level of determination

that characters like Touko couldn't even hope to demonstrate.

All of this is in the manga, and yet it's made so much stronger in the anime.

All things told, that's what true about this adaptation in general.

Every aspect of audio-visual language is used to elevate the material from one medium into

another.

And now that we've discussed how this anime conveys the manga's core, let's start

diving into what that core is, while continuing to look at how the anime uniquely communicates

it.

Part 2: Shoujo and Theater Bloom into You is a work that understands

the lineage it's a part of.

Yuri is, after all, a genre which comes from shoujo.

Not just shoujo manga, though it is true that the first works appeared in magazines aimed

at that demographic.

No, the genre's roots lay in shoujo shousetsu, girls' prose fiction, most notably that

written by esteemed queer icon Yoshiya Nobuko.

Even dating back to that point, there were strong ties between shoujo and theater.

Yoshiya's writing is itself very showy and due to the common focus on queer characters

— though in that time it was seen as natural for girls to care greatly for other girls

— it make sense to portray the theater, where performance is everything.

The first yuri manga ever serialized, Shiroi Heya no Futari, features a play — specifically,

Romeo and Juliet — as a central part of its narrative.

Bloom into You understands this.

However, it's also critical and unwilling to take the history of shoujo at face value.

The negative endings so common to works of yuri past, including Shiroi Heya, are not

something it's interested in.

To Bloom, these girls' feelings are not just a phase.

It's fairly normalized in yuri at this point to criticize the idea that girls will inevitably

fall away from their sapphic inclinations as they age.

As I commented in my video on Citrus, it's almost so common as to be superfluous, so

in itself, Bloom's decision to do so is pedestrian yet understandable.

However, while it would certainly be acceptable to simply throw away the shoujo trappings

that it criticizes, it instead incorporates them into its own thesis, merging them with

a focus on the theatric in order to pull out the reality of performance these Class S works

contain, a process necessary to properly articulating queer life in a general sense.

It's this that I'd like to examine.

It's first important to note that there is value in Class S works.

When a writer like Yoshiya Nobuko has the girls she writes about break up, this is not

due to some personal belief on her part that girls should go out and marry men.

She vehemently detested this idea, never doing so herself and, in fact, spending the last

50 years of her life with her girlfriend.

No, this occurs in these works because it reflects the lived experiences common to the

times.

Yoshiya, in her fame and wealth, was able to escape the shackles of marriage, but most

girls and women could not do so.

It's only natural, then, that yuri works would move away from the consistent depiction

of departures when society changed enough for women to end up together happily.

This is, without a doubt, a good thing, but it needs to be put into the proper historical

context to be understood.

Any criticism of Class S that discards these facts will always be a limp one which ignores

the material conditions of a time in favor of petty moralism.

Queer people today deserve media that reflects their lives, the good and the bad, and that

was true in the past as well, but the Overton Window has shifted, so it's only natural

that the horizons painted by yuri works have in turn.

So, how does Bloom into You — a work which, I must remind you, runs in a seinen magazine

— handle the topic of shoujo manga, the good and the bad?

Well first, let's look at the role of shoujo in the story.

To Yuu, shoujo manga represent a false ideal.

Having gazed at them for too long, her views on love have been skewed to the point that

she can not, until much later in the story, recognize herself as feeling the emotion.

Of course, much of this comes down to her personal nature, as someone who's almost

certainly demiromantic, but it's inarguable that shoujo manga, in portraying sparkly worlds

of beating hearts, have warped her fundamental sense of what romance is supposed to be.

This obviously paints a pretty poor portrait of shoujo romances.

However, I don't want to deceive you into believing that Nakatani simply despises the

genre.

Yuu is hurt by the idealized image they've helped build in her but that does not mean

that they have no value and as I said, some of the effect is due to Yuu's own nature.

The best demonstration of what I mean by this is in episode 1.

Touko helps guide Yuu to the student council room, and as she stops and stands there, we

see Touko surrounded by flowers, a classic symbol of romance in shoujo manga.

Notably, however, they are not the traditional flower frames.

Rather, these are diegetic flowers, existing in the actual world.

This work has taken a lot from shoujo, and it's willing to admit that, yet it also

strives to stay grounded.

A similar occurrence happens in episode 7.

Resident third wheel Sayaka remembers back to when she first dated a girl.

Occupying at a girls' school and being between senpai and kouhai, it's very much the typical

Class S relationship.

In itself, having Sayaka be frustrated by her upperclasman's insistence that "we

should grow up and move past this phase" would be enough to rebut things.

Yet this was an important time for Sayaka and if she hadn't dated the girl who Sayaka's

voice actress refers to as nasty-senpai, she wouldn't have been able to truly accept

her lesbianism upon seeing Touko for the first time, a moment which is itself quite tinged

by shoujo trappings.

Even the OP, drenched in flowers galore, has them hanging from the ceilings or strewn across

the ground.

Flowers, as a signifier of shoujo culture, are present all over the series and yet they

do not overwhelm the actual frame.

It's important to recall that just because we're critical of something does not mean

we must entirely avoid it.

Problematic works can have value to people, and Bloom into You acknowledges that in drawing

from deeply flawed sources that still contain some kernel of poignance.

The theatrical elements of the series, of course, are not hard to spot.

The show's drama feels fitting for the stage itself, and this is no shock given what a

strong grasp Nakatani has of how theater works.

The play she writes within this play is, first of all, a fantastic work on its own, something

I would gladly pay to watch were it made flesh.

Even the first rendition was fantastic, but her understanding that a story needs to have

the characters make decisions based on what actively happens during its run rather than

in its past, shows a deep understanding of the craft of writing.

Furthermore, the manner in which the script reflects Touko's situation is genius.

Part of what makes theater work so well in queer works is the nature of performance.

In being someone else, an actor is free to express themselves openly without fear of

reprisal.

In Shiroi Heya, the main characters can kiss without getting in trouble due to their lead

roles.

In Wandering Son, the protagonists get the chance to defy their prescribed gender presentation.

Bloom, however, depicts the opposite of this.

Touko is not getting the chance to be someone else, she is forced into explaining herself,

and in doing so, has to seriously confront the self-destructive attitude that's gotten

her to where she is in the aftermath of her sister's death.

This play makes her confront the fact that the mask she wears, as shown brilliantly in

the OP, is simply a part of her true face, and that we as people are defined by our actions,

whether those actions are read off a script or not.

She may rather die than hear that people truly like her, but this is a drama, so a figurative

death's not out of the question.

The play's the thing, as they say, and while only Yuu and perhaps Sayaka are aware of how

true to life Touko's role is, it will, in this case, push our Queen to catch her own

conscience.

Yet, the importance of queer performance is not ignored.

Sayaka's role, as Touko's former girlfriend, may not be quite as hard to play, yet it still

creates a situation of both deep happiness at getting to act the part she's afraid

to express as well as intense fear over her inability to play this role in real life.

Yet there's a progression here from the yuri theater of times past.

Sayaka is not acting as Touko's boyfriend, no, they both remain girls within the play.

To bring things back to the earlier point, material conditions have changed, and you

can get away with portraying your lead role as a serious lesbian now without repercussion.

Class S was an important movement and period within Japanese history for queer girls, so

it's fortunate that Bloom writes off the attitudes and systems that made it hard to

prosper at the time, and not the ways in which people attempted to express their true selves

in those oppressive conditions.

Ultimately, Bloom puts forth a pretty straightforward thesis on this front: Shoujo, as with theater,

is an important realm for expressing feelings and coming to terms with love, so while we

can't ignore their problems, we can not write them off either, as they can prove greatly

useful.

These characters could not exist without the history of shoujo works, so let's remember

that as we move on to discussing them in particular.

Part 3: Characterization Koito Yuu, as the main character, is the axis

around which the entire series revolves.

The title, Bloom into You, refers most evidently to two ideas.

The first of these is Touko's attempt to become her late sister.

The second, and the one I'd like to focus on right here, is Yuu learning more about

herself, becoming a person she's happy to be.

It would be impossible to discuss Yuu without diving into the topic of aromanticism, though

as I am not the best resource on this, I recommend you search out sources from aro people, such

as my good friend Mathwiz.

Regardless, this has certainly been a topic of discourse and that's no shock.

Asexuality and aromanticism are certainly underrepresented and it's fairly inarguable

that Yuu, at the beginning, is incapable of falling in love.

Of course, given that this is and has been marketed as a yuri romance from the beginning,

it's fair to say that anyone who expected her not to do so was building up some false

hopes, but it's understandable why they would do that and I sympathize.

Even then, her being aromantic isn't ruled out, and remains likely, given that it, as

with most things, is a spectrum.

Like I said, feelings are messy, and it's plenty obvious that Yuu is not the sort of

person who can easily or regularly fall in love, even if she's capable of doing so

eventually.

She may not be Maki, but she isn't Sayaka either.

It's made clear throughout the series that Yuu is not the kind of person who easily makes

decisions.

Aside from the question of romance, the indecision in regards to which leaves her stunted and

incapable of movement for most of the show's run, she simply has not historically been

the active participant in most her choices, instead going with the flow.

She played softball in middle school because her friend asked her to, and joined the student

council because a teacher roped her into it.

This isn't to say she doesn't enjoy what she does.

She did care about the softball, but she did not get invested in it the same way her teammates

did.

Touko's appearance, however, offers her something new.

While initially drawn to the upperclassman due to the potential connection between their

feelings, Yuu remains invested even after finding out that the girl has fallen in love

with her.

She has hope that she could come to love her and from the beginning feels some sort of

affection for her, if not a romantic one.

It's episode three that really makes this clear.

Touko wins the student council election because, well, she's nearly perfect, though of course

Yuu is aware of her weak side.

She doesn't choose to stick with her simply because that soft, needy aspect of her personality

is cute and deserving of support, though.

She also remains by her side due to what she says in her speech: Touko is not defined by

the aspects of herself that she hides, she's also made up of those that she shows to the

world.

Her dependability is real and it's this, combined with the desire to help her and perhaps

fall in love with her over time, that spurs Yuu to remain in the Student Council, by Touko's

side.

This is important, as it's the show's first signal that Touko's understanding,

wherein her ideal sister-imitation is her good but fake side, while her needy-weaker

self is the bad but real side, is a flawed conception of the truth, as Yuu is able to

see both of these as part of Touko's whole being.

An important aspect of Yuu's character is the development of how she understands queerness.

Early on in the story, a number of comments will be made about two girls dating and her

reaction to these changes over time.

When her friends express frustration that Yuu's beloved senpai is female, Yuu defends

herself as believing Touko is cool but she shows no negative reaction to the heteronormative

implications that lie there.

This is what one might call a microaggression, but Yuu, not yet conscious of her dormant

interest in girls, is not aware that it targets her identity.

She herself expresses surprise when Sayaka tells her that girls have confessed to Touko,

something that's followed up at the end as Yuu doubts Touko's clearly romantic confession

was romantic, merely because they're both girls.

This is a direct confrontation with the cliche so common in the yuri genre, one which often

comes up more as a way to assure the reader this is yuri than to serve any actual purpose

to the narrative or add to the richness of the characters.

Here, fortunately, it has an actual purpose.

It's funny, of course, that Sayaka, the only one who already conscious of the fact

that she's a lesbian is the person to jokingly tell Yuu this, and it indicates Nakatani's

understanding that heteronormativity will force even queer people themselves to adopt

a subtle outward homophobia in order to disguise their internal being.

She may have said that, "I didn't want it to become an obstacle simply because it

was between girls.

Regardless of what's present in reality, I didn't want the difficulties of the love

between girls in the first place.

I didn't want to put it into the center of their story," but it's constantly made

clear in the story that these are problems.

They're simply not the most important ones to the characters right now, especially not

to Yuu and Touko.

Over time, however, Yuu comes to react differently to this.

In episode 2, her insistence that they're both girls comes across less as an unchecked

assumption and more as a desperate attempt to avoid facing the truth, one of many that

she employs throughout the show's run.

In episode 3, when she's come to accept Touko's feelings as romantic, while denying

to her family that they're dating, she expresses discomfort after her dad jokes that he wouldn't

be able to deal with that.

Even at this point, where Yuu has no real belief she'll ever fall in love with the

girl, she's come to accept queerness as genuine and not strange, so this time, the

microaggression is one that's able to hit her.

For a while, this is entirely based on her worrying over Touko.

When Maki confesses that he saw them, she's visited by a dark image of what that could

mean for Touko's reputation, not even considering what it means for herself.

It's clear however that Yuu grows more cautious in her relationship with Touko as she inches

closer to admitting her own romantic feelings.

In the beginning, she basically lets Touko do whatever she wants, inviting her to her

room with not a hint in her mind that something untoward could occur, merely because the library

where they've been studying is full.

She certainly does care about studying with Touko in particular at this point, counter

to her frenzied denial of that fact, yet she was not aware of the implications of inviting

a girl who's into you into your room until it's pointed out to her.

In episode 12, however, she invites Touko specifically because she wants to spend more

time with her that day, making no excuses at all, fully aware of what may result and

almost disappointed when nothing horny occurs.

Yet in this case, she's more nervous of being caught, as the presence of the door

that could easily be opened behind them looms large in the storyboards.

She has grown more nervous of being caught, because at this stage it would be so much

harder to deny that her feelings for Touko are romantic.

Shout over it though she might, she knows she's in love.

Her story is not yet done, and I can only hope that a second season arrives so the rest

of her wonderful material can be animated, but she has accepted her feelings.

It's only natural then, that having come to understand herself better, having broken

the promise that she made to Touko, she must attempt to force Touko to open her eyes in

front of the mirror and see that what she saw as a hideous reflection was just the result

of cracks.

It's more than understandable that Nanami Touko is as broken as she is.

Losing a family member is never easy, and before her sister, Mio, passed away, she was

a fairly average kid.

Looking up to your siblings and using them as a guiding force can be a totally healthy

process, but lacking an active identity on her own, Touko strove to become her sister,

though only the side of her that she knew.

She only wants people to love her Mio imitation, not the entirety of herself, even demanding

that Yuu never fall in love with her because she's aware of the whole picture.

Simultaneously, she sees love as a motion that demands a lack of change.

She loves Yuu because the girl will never fall in love with her, and believes she would

stop were that to change.

This is, of course, a deeply unhealthy mindset, one that could easily lead to a very abusive

relationship.

After all, self-hatred is a from of self-abuse, and Touko uses Yuu to offload her self-hatred,

confident — for a time at least — that the younger girl will never come to love this

despicable her.

That probably sets warning bells off in the heads of many viewers and I know that some

see Touko's behavior as intensely off-putting.

Fortunately, Touko still has a moral core that keeps her grounded.

She consistently asks for Yuu's consent before engaging in any activities, backing

off when she recognizes that the girl is uncomfortable.

This isn't a relationship that could last as it is, but if anyone's being hurt by

it, it's Touko herself.

Yuu serves as a crutch that she refuses to get rid of.

She won't let herself stand on her own two feet again because doing so is deathly terrifying.

What if everyone hates the real her?

The her that she forcibly abandoned?

Even if they said they love her, even if she could believe that for a moment, she can't

come to love herself.

Yuu may be the series' axis, but Touko provides it real weight.

After all, according to Nakatani herself she, "was created first, Yuu was born as her

partner.

For me, I wanted to draw a girl that would be unmanageable, so I made Touko the heroine.

For me, Yuu has the image of a hero who would help that unmanageable girl.

That being said, I think of the characters as if they were born as individual people.

It is at most a discussion of "At first it was like that."

Yuu is forced to serve the driving role of the series, in spite of the hard time she

has of making decisions, because like her character in the play, Touko's choices are

all based on the past.

It takes action from Yuu to cause her to make decisions due to what's happened in the

narrative, and we know from Yuu and Koyomi how necessary that is to make a good story.

Saeki Sayaka is the last of the trio, and much like Nakatani, I'll be forced to neglect

her a tad.

Firstly, because I already said much of what I have to say about what she means for the

story's commentary on queerness.

In actively acknowledging that she's someone who only falls in love with girls, she takes

a step that many characters in anime don't take.

Some may be annoyed that she does not actively call herself a lesbian, but while self-identified

lesbians certainly exist prominently in Japan, the culture surrounding queer identity is

different there and an imposition of Western standards is hardly a fair one, especially

given the way in which lesbian has been tainted as a male-focused porn term.

Sayaka certainly understands herself to be attracted to girls by nature, something she

confirms upon talking to adult lesbian Miyako.

Which, I must say, is quite important in itself.

Young queers require elders to get through life well, and that's something which isn't

oft-represented in yuri anime and manga.

Miyako is well aware of this, sympathizing with the girl and relaying how when she was

that age, she too felt as if she was in some way perverted or strange, something she was

able to move beyond with time and love.

Sayaka's situation is an unfortunate one and conditioned as we yuri fans are to root

for the gay underdog, it's only natural to cheer for her before her inevitable failure.

What I can only hope is that Sayaka comes out of this with a fuller understanding of

herself, akin to what Touko and Yuu will reach.

Sayaka is a somewhat petty and cruel girl who's easily made jealous and constantly

frustrated by the chance that her best friend will leave her grasp.

Yet she's also a scared 16-year-old who's struggling to deal with the fact that she's

in love with someone right next to her who she can't bear to confess to, on top of

being queer in a society which disapproves of that.

She may be nasty herself at times but are any of our characters entirely blameless?

What makes this series work so well as a drama is the fact that almost every situation that

occurs is driven by how the characters' personalities interact with one another.

The only sudden entrance that changes everything here is the appearance of the coach, who tells

Touko what Mio behaved like around him, and that's a far cry from a contrived love rival

appearing from nowhere to frustrate the plot, alongside the viewers.

Every character is rich, containing positive and negative attributes, ones that clash and

also spur them forwards.

As a result, the story does what Nakatani believes any good narrative should do: it

moves as as result of the decisions of its characters over the course of it.

In doing so, it takes an approach that ignores much of the world, focusing on the feelings

of a select few instead, so it's fortunate that Nakatani understands how to create captivating

personas out of people we meet for no more than five minutes, ensuring the series never

becomes ungrounded.

What a work.

Part Final: An Eternal (Queer) Anime Bloom into You is one of the most expertly

crafted dramas every born from this medium.

From its skill at transferring its source into anime in a way seen a couple times a

year at most, to the manner in which it engages with the history of queerness in shoujo and

theater to create both a brilliant critical response and loving send-up, to the way it

centers the emotions of its characters in the procession of events, understanding that

the best way to keep the viewers interested in a soft, emotive drama is not through a

comedy of errors or the appearance of sudden obstacles but the fleshing out of personality

clashes inherent to any relationship.

Yet there's ever more to discuss.

As I alluded to earlier, the manner in which it deals with aromanticism should be considered

in more depth by someone with greater qualifications to do so.

The way Yuu and Maki are counterposed is something particularly worthy of analysis.

Similarly, further attention should be paid to the the writing of its theater elements,

though again, that is something for a writer with more expertise than me to discuss.

I myself would like to spend more time speaking on how the series deals with the bitterness

common in so many romantic relationships.

Ecstatic as I am with the one I'm currently in, events that transpired towards the start

caused emotions that could certainly be called complex and I believe this is true for a great

many people.

Being queer puts you in a vulnerable position, so even the happiest and most fulfilling relationships

can very easily have sore points.

Exploring this is important, not just as representation or for the sake of educating both cishet audiences

and younger queers, but because it simply makes better stories that more accurately

reflect the world.

Comparing this to a work like Citrus, which tries similar things but frequently fails

in the process, would be a useful comparison, as would be one with a manga like Nettaigyo

wa Yuki ni Kogareru, created by a similarly talented artist who's even more concerned

with the solipsism inherent in focusing on your own budding romantic feelings.

I'm sorry to say that I don't have time to conduct these comparisons today.

However, even without addressing those aspects, I'd like to think that I've covered the

series in enough detail to provide a building point for future analyses.

Discourse between writers generates far more worthwhile material than cloistering ourselves

off and I always hope that my pieces can inspire responses, be they positive or negative, to

my points.

When I look at an anime landscape that's full of important queer works, ones that helped

me to come to terms with the fact that I'm a trans lesbian, I'm happy to know that

this year, among other works, Bloom into You was added to the general queer canon.

Hopefully, it can be completed.

This series will eternally live not just as an important anime but as an important part

of queer fiction.

I'm very happy to have experienced that firsthand.

And please fair viewers, be sure to ask Seven Seas to bring over

the Sayaka novel in

their surveys, it's very important.

For more infomation >> Bloom into You is the Queer Yuri Anime we Needed, and Here's Why - Duration: 48:39.

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Nunca Jogue Fora o Caroço do Abacate, Veja a Razão! - Duration: 4:42.

For more infomation >> Nunca Jogue Fora o Caroço do Abacate, Veja a Razão! - Duration: 4:42.

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Every Gilets jaunes is Here ! - Duration: 2:47.

The beginning of next year

A smic worker's salary increase by 100 euro per month

From 2019

Without it cost 1 euro more to the employer

Made your policeman's job

The republic it is me

It is me who am parliamentary

The angel it is to fly away

Mr Lassale please remove this vest immediately

Perfect Mr Lassale this point of order will obviously be entered at trial

A vintage article which returns

Thanks to macron fashion lately

The Parisian small pavement

It doesn't seem like what we want to be

This violence

Owe stopped

I'm a journalist

You leave me past

I'm a journalist

Down

I'm a journalist

I was under the media "thunderstorm"

We told a lot of nonsense about me

And

My Benalla

no one has the right to parody it

Thus delete this video

For more infomation >> Every Gilets jaunes is Here ! - Duration: 2:47.

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Here's a look back at football's greatest moments in 2018 - Duration: 7:42.

 Football analyst Michael Edgley has travelled the world watching the beautiful game in 2018

From unbelievable goals to culture changes, these are his top 10 moments of the year

No.10 In July, Frenchman Benjamin Pavard's 57th-minute goal in the epic 4-3 win by France over Argentina in the round of 16 of the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia was voted goal of the tournament

 Not only was this goal an individual highlight reel, it drew France level in a critical phase of the knockout match, gave it the impetus to go on win

The match is described by most pundits as the match of the tournament. No.9 In May, Real Madrid's Welsh wizard Gareth Bale scored an astonishing overhead kick to seal Real Madrid's 3-1 Champions League final victory over Liverpool

The substitute scored a phenomenal goal on one of football's biggest stages secured his team European glory – again! No

8 In December, as Ada Hegerberg stood on stage achieving the respect of the football world, accepting her Ballon dÓr award, French DJ Martin Solveig asked her to twerk

It was a putrid question that prompted global outrage. However, Hegerberg showed her class by refusing calmly walking off stage

Well played, Hegerber has since turned this incident into a message for equality

 No.7 In October the governance crisis that enveloped Australian football for more than two years ended with the resignation of Football Federation of Australia chairman Steven Lowy, ending his family's 15-year leadership reign over Australian football

 In the aftermath, a new FFA board was elected Chris Nikou emerged as the new chairman Heather Reid his deputy

 No.6 The emergence of the fledgling Association of Australian Football Clubs the work they continue to do to promote the establishment of a second tier of professional football in Australia the eventual reconnection of the football pyramid to the A-League

 The movement is gaining momentum.No.5 Those of us who work in the football industry have known it for some time

 However, the rise rise of the Matildas – underpinned by Samantha Kerr's profile  performances on the international stage –  is now capturing the imagination of the wider Australian community

 The Matildas continue to perform, as reflected in their ascension to sixth in FIFA's rankings

They are heading into the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup in France full of confidence

 No.4 In April, Swedish legend Zlatan Ibrahimovic debuted for Los Angles Galaxy in the MLS

 Ibrahimovic was subbed on with his team 3-1 down. He scored to equalise for Galaxy, then backed it up to score a 90th-minute winner

 Hello, America – meet Zlatan! No.3 At last, we have an expansion to the Hyundai A-League

 Western Melbourne Group (entry in the 2019-2020 season) Macarthur South-West Sydney (entry in the 2020-2021 season) will inject new interest, attendances broadcast viewers

 But is it enough to get the A-League back on track?No.2 In October, Socceroos debuts were hed to Awer Mabil Thomas Deng in a friendly match against Kuwait

 As Johnny Warren once said, "The most courageous Australians are the ones that choose to make it their home"

 Mabil Deng, both South Sudanese refugees, shared a wonderful moment when Mabil scored his maiden Socceroo goal

 Football again displayed its power to unite, while the Socceroos continue to reflect the diversity of the Australian community like no other national sporting team

 No.1 The 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia was an amazing event superbly hosted expertly executed by a proud nation that understood the impact of global major events

 In a normal year only 4000 Australians visit Russia. However, for three weeks in June, 8000 travelling Australians attended the event

 The support they provided to the Socceroos was impactful impressive. Collectively, they were outsting ambassadors for Australia helped forged a new understing of Russia its culture

 I'm biased, but the FIFA World Cup in Russia was my football highlight of 2018. Spasiba (Thank you!)

  

For more infomation >> Here's a look back at football's greatest moments in 2018 - Duration: 7:42.

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Think You Can Make It on to Jeopardy? Here's How to Take One of Their Practice Tests - News today - Duration: 2:45.

If you're looking for something to do over the holiday weekend and you're a fan of Jeopardy, we've got just the thing for you.

The game show's official website offers practice tests for aspiring contestants in the adult, college and teen sections. The adult practice test presents 30 categories and clues on a number of subjects, giving you 15 seconds to respond to each.

Responses aren't required to be in the form of a question, and you can only compare your answers with the correct ones when the test is over.

A sample question from the practice test? For the botany category, for example, it asks you to name the green pigment necessary for plants to carry out photosynthesis, which is chlorophyll.

The practice test is intended to give you an idea of the pacing and difficulty level of the official online test, which presents 50 categories and clues.

The online test, which was developed in 2006 as a way of encouraging more viewers to participate in the contestant qualification process, are offered to adults one to two times per year. (For teens and college students, tests occur roughly once per season, or as upcoming teen and college tournaments are scheduled.)

Passing scores are submitted to be considered for an audition, but since space is limited, only a few lucky applicants who succeeded are randomly selected.

Once selected, aspiring contestants must appear for a two-hour in-person audition where the goal is to let their unique personality shine.

Those who perform well at the audition are placed in a pool of potential contestants for 18 months after their audition date — but that doesn't guarantee they'll be invited to appear on the show.

Jeopardy, which is in its 35th season on the air, ranks as the Guinness World Record holder for most Emmy wins by a TV game show, having amassed 34 awards.

Sony Pictures Television announced in November that it had renewed its deal with the game show's longtime host Alex Trebek through the 2021-22 season.

Trebek, 78, had previously said he was considering retiring from the program that made him a household name, admitting the odds of him staying after 2020 were "50-50 and a little less." He has hosted Jeopardy since 1984.

For more infomation >> Think You Can Make It on to Jeopardy? Here's How to Take One of Their Practice Tests - News today - Duration: 2:45.

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Here We Are Again, Another Year - Duration: 1:08.

Here we are again, another year!

Another chance to change, to do things better.

Praised be those who still believe and care!

Praised be hope, that would the will unfetter.

Yes, we know we've been through this before, New Year after New Year.

Yet we still Endure in our desire for something more,

Wind-borne across bare treetops, bleak and chill.

Yes, we know our resolutions are Easy to make and break, and still we make them;

And still pursue our dreams beyond the bar,

Resolved as ever, never to forsake them.

For more infomation >> Here We Are Again, Another Year - Duration: 1:08.

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Gift card to closing Boston restaurant? Here's what to do - Duration: 1:54.

For more infomation >> Gift card to closing Boston restaurant? Here's what to do - Duration: 1:54.

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Here's the 1 Thing You Need to Do in 2019 (and Beyond) - Duration: 7:03.

this video I want to share something with you that's gonna benefit you

greatly in 2019 that's something that I want to work on very very diligently on

with serious intent and regardless of whether it's to do with your personal

life to do with your career to do with your business this one thing is going to

be a huge benefit to you

I saw a red recently I saw a video about Bill Gates and Warren Buffett Warren

Buffett is one of the wealthiest men in the world is a legendary investor

businessman an investor and he owns a company called Berkshire Hathaway and

Berkshire Hathaway is in Omaha Nebraska and Warren Buffett is worth reckon one

hundred and seventy billion dollars that's billion dollars or thereabouts in

addition to Warren Buffett there's another man that you'll have heard of

called Bill Gates Bill Gates inventors Microsoft Bill Gates is worth about one

hundred and eighty billion dollars so between the two of them they're worth

something like four hundred billion dollars or thereabouts

and friends for a long time and when they first met a long time the law would

many years ago I don't know exactly when Bill Gates father asked both men to

write down on a piece of paper one word that helped them the most in their

endeavor to that point one word and remarkably both men wrote down the same

word and that same old is the word that I'm gonna tell you or advise you and me

to use in 2019 to ensure that we actually can do stuff get stuff done

that matters that word is focus both men independently wrote down the word focus

in terms of the biggest help in their endeavors to that point in their life

and heading into 2019 with the massive draw and call on your attention and on

your attention span with social media mobile phones and tablets and Kindles

and laptops and PCs and instant gratification and notifications and our

notifications and visual notifications it is actually difficult to really do

work serious work concentrated focus work in

that sort of an environment and the one thing that you need to focus on and I'm

gonna focus on in 2019 he's actually focusing on doing the work the important

or the concentrated focused work that I need to do to be the best

Solicitors I can be and to achieve the things I need to achieve and to ignore

the notifications to ignore the attractions to ignore the dopamine

rushes that you get from looking at notifications or lights or whatever from

social media and the various notifications that you might get and

distractions you might get from your mobile phone my focus for 2019 is

ironically to focus on that one word and that is focus I want to be able to do

deep work I want to be able to do concentrated work I want to be able to

do work that matters and I think you if you're honest just like me

will have noticed over the last number of years with the growth of the

smartphone and the growth of social media and the growth of apps and

notifications and so on that are vying for your attention I think you'll accept

that your concentration your ability to concentrate and your ability to focus

has probably shortened to narrowed and diminished and degraders and that's

something that I'm going to address in 2019 I'm gonna get back to really

working with intent and intention on the things that matter and I'm gonna do that

by being able to and working on that one more focus I did another video not too

long ago and I'm gonna link to it and on the top decide no they said I'm

gonna link to their that's a video that I did about a book written by a guy

called Cal Newport Cal Newport is a Georgetown University professor and the

professor of computing he went to MIT where he wrote a book called deep work

and deep work is basically Newports thesis about being able to do really

good quality concentrated focused work and the necessity for us nowadays to

actually battle against the distractions of your smartphone mobile phone social

media and so on so I'll link to that on the right hand side as you look up this

side have a look at it it's a similar video to this one but to get back to my

original intent with this video is to give you one thing that I suggest will

do you huge benefits in 2019 and it's something that I massage I'm going to

personally commit to and have been actually over the last few days that is

to really with intent to focus on work that really matters and try to block out

and ignore the degrading attention-seeking

stuff does and inhibits us from doing the very best we can do as I say I think

this is gonna benefit you greatly whether it's in trying to achieve

something whether it's trying to progress your career whether it's in

trying to start a business or grow a business or whatever hope you find this

video useful if you do give it a thumbs up down below and you might be

interested in subscribing to my youtube channel

For more infomation >> Here's the 1 Thing You Need to Do in 2019 (and Beyond) - Duration: 7:03.

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My Discord Is Here! - Duration: 1:18.

For more infomation >> My Discord Is Here! - Duration: 1:18.

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Think You Can Make It on to Jeopardy? Here's How to Take One of Their Practice Tests - 247 news - Duration: 3:22.

If you're looking for something to do over the holiday weekend and you're a fan of Jeopardy, we've got just the thing for you.

The game show's official website offers practice tests for aspiring contestants in the adult, college and teen sections. The adult practice test presents 30 categories and clues on a number of subjects, giving you 15 seconds to respond to each.

Responses aren't required to be in the form of a question, and you can only compare your answers with the correct ones when the test is over.

A sample question from the practice test? For the botany category, for example, it asks you to name the green pigment necessary for plants to carry out photosynthesis, which is chlorophyll.

The practice test is intended to give you an idea of the pacing and difficulty level of the official online test, which presents 50 categories and clues.

The online test, which was developed in 2006 as a way of encouraging more viewers to participate in the contestant qualification process, are offered to adults one to two times per year. (For teens and college students, tests occur roughly once per season, or as upcoming teen and college tournaments are scheduled.)

Passing scores are submitted to be considered for an audition, but since space is limited, only a few lucky applicants who succeeded are randomly selected.

Once selected, aspiring contestants must appear for a two-hour in-person audition where the goal is to let their unique personality shine.

Those who perform well at the audition are placed in a pool of potential contestants for 18 months after their audition date — but that doesn't guarantee they'll be invited to appear on the show.

Jeopardy, which is in its 35th season on the air, ranks as the Guinness World Record holder for most Emmy wins by a TV game show, having amassed 34 awards.

Sony Pictures Television announced in November that it had renewed its deal with the game show's longtime host Alex Trebek through the 2021-22 season.

Trebek, 78, had previously said he was considering retiring from the program that made him a household name, admitting the odds of him staying after 2020 were "50-50 and a little less." He has hosted Jeopardy since 1984.

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