-------------------------------------------
Miwa - Don't Cry Anymore【闇音レンリVer.】Synthesizer V Cover - Duration: 4:38.
Even if it's the last moment, even if I'm all alone giri giri datte hitorikiri datte
I don't want to give up, this isn't a joke maketakunai no joudan janai wa
I don't cry anymore
I don't cry anymore
I tell myself to be strong tsuyoku nara nakya iikikaseteru
No matter what happens, I won't cry donna toki demo nakanai kara
the feeling of falling asleep in the warmth made me happy nukumori kanji nemuru to shiawase datta sore ga
I thought it would go on forever eien ni tsuzuku to omotteta na no ni
Why does it have to be like this? doushite nan darou
everything I believed in turns out to be a lie shinjiteta mono wa uso datta no
At a time like this I want someone by my side konna toki soba ni itekuretara ii no ni
My legs are shaking furueru ashi de
But I need to keep moving on ima fumidashitai yo
Even if it's the last moment, even if I'm all alone giri giri datte hitorikiri datte
I don't want to give up, this isn't a joke maketakunai no joudan janai wa
I don't cry anymore
I don't cry anymore
I tell myself to be strong tsuyoku nara nakya iikikaseteru
No matter what happens, I won't cry donna toki demo nakanai kara
Anywhere I search doko wo sagashite mo
I can't find my place atashi no ibasho ga mitsukaranai
I want to hear your voice koe ga kikitai yo
Though I'd rather meet you honto wa aitai kedo
but I have to face forwards and walk on furikaerazu ni aruiteikanakucha
Even if it's the last moment, I still want to shine giri giri datte kagayakitakute
If it's me, I know I can do it atashi nara made yareru hazu da wa
I don't cry anymore
I don't cry anymore
I'll hold back the tears and soar onwards namida koraete kao wo agetara
And under my breath, say "It's alright" daijoubu da yo tte tsubuyaitemiru
I'm not sure what to believe in nani wo shinjitara ii no kamo
so I struggle, and lose myself wakaranakute mogaite mayotte
if I could have my wish granted tsukamitai ima kanaetai
I'd grasp onto it with my tiny hands and not let go chisana kono te ni takushite nigirishimeru no
I'm sorry, I'm not that strong gomen sonnani tsuyokunai n da
and there are times I feel down kujikesou ni naru toki datta aru yo
But if there's even a small bit of hope tatoe kasukana kibou da toshite mo
I'll hold onto it forever machitsuzuketai zutto
Oh~
Even if it's the last moment, even if I'm all alone giri giri datte hitorikiri datte
I don't want to give up, this isn't a joke maketakunai no joudan janai wa
I don't cry anymore
I don't cry anymore
I tell myself to be strong tsuyoku nara nakya iikikaseteru
I'll force myself muriyari datte
I'll force myself (even if it's reckless) muriyari datte (gamushara ni natte)
I'll keep living on, it's not over yet ikiteyuku n da owari janai wa
I don't cry anymore
I don't cry anymore (I don't cry anymore )
I'll remember your voice anata no koe wo omoidashiteru
No matter what happens, I won't cry donna toki demo nakanai kara
Someday I'll be able to smile again itsuka kitto waraeru kara
-------------------------------------------
Getting calls from your own number? Don't answer it! - Duration: 2:19.
For more infomation >> Getting calls from your own number? Don't answer it! - Duration: 2:19. -------------------------------------------
Please, Mom, Don't Shoot - Days of our Lives (Episode Highlight) - Duration: 1:19.
For more infomation >> Please, Mom, Don't Shoot - Days of our Lives (Episode Highlight) - Duration: 1:19. -------------------------------------------
Trump Declares National Emergency, Claims Media Backers Don't Influence Decisions | THR News - Duration: 1:52.
Donald Trump is pushing back against those who think his backers in conservative
media tell him what to do. In a White House address on Friday, Trump said popular
personalities, including Fox News host Sean Hannity, radio host Rush Limbaugh
and pundit Ann Coulter, "don't decide policy."
The three hosts have all been seen as crucial outside advisors to the president on the
topic of immigration, with Hannity referred to as Trump's "shadow chief of staff"
in the press. Trump said,
Of Limbaugh, he said,
Trump also spoke fondly of Fox News hosts Laura Ingraham and Tucker Carlson,
two strong voices in the conservative world on combating illegal immigration.
He said, "Laura's been great, Tucker Carlson's been great."
He then added that he's gotten backing from pundits on CNN, a network he
strongly dislikes.
Okay, so it looks like everyone's terrific, unbelievable, and great. Great!
Trump also used the address to announce his decision to declare a national
emergency to fund the building of a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.
According to aides, bypassing Congress, which approved $1.4 billion, far below the
$5.7 billion he insisted he needed, Trump announced he'll be spending roughly $8 billion
on border barriers. And to do so, he'll be combining the money approved by Congress
with funding he plans to take from federal military construction and counter drug
efforts for the wall. A move that is already drawing bipartisan criticism on Capitol Hill
and is expected to face rounds of legal challenges.
For more on Trump's address, head to THR.com.
For The Hollywood Reporter News, I'm Jordyn Rolling.
-------------------------------------------
BRITISH REACTION TO DON BIGG LMERD LKBIH 4K ANIMATION - Duration: 4:21.
For more infomation >> BRITISH REACTION TO DON BIGG LMERD LKBIH 4K ANIMATION - Duration: 4:21. -------------------------------------------
Karan Aujla :: don't worry :: song - Duration: 0:15.
Karan Aujla :: don't worry :: song
Karan Aujla :: don't worry :: song
-------------------------------------------
The Top 10 Secret Fact of Bruce Lee That You Don't Want to Miss Out - Duration: 11:38.
Even the Bruce Lee Pass away almost 45 years ago
-------------------------------------------
😟Why I DON'T Worry About What Other People Think? #TheNORoutine 40 ★ #TheDay1Journey Ep. 110★ - Duration: 17:52.
hey I have a question for you do you worry too much
sometimes about what other people may say may think
maybe your parents maybe your spouse your
husband your wife your close friends
well in today's episode I will share with you
why don't worry too much about what they think
even my parents I'm serious more about that
right after the intro welcome to the day 1
journey episode 110 1-1-0
chi ching yeah well do you worry about what
other people think do you worry sometimes
too much about other people's opinions well
as I told you in today's episode I will share with you
why don't worry too much about them
I do worry about them but not too much about
their opinions even my parents and I tell you the truth
I told them that my parents in front of their face and
I love them to the moon and back I just love them and I'll
probably dedicate just an episode for my amazing parents
but let's dive right in into today's episode let's
dive in right in today's episode I want to share with you my
personal view about this I live in my own mind
I do listen to people the fact that I'm saying
I'm not worried about what other people may think
doesn't mean that I don't listen doesn't mean that I don't care
about their feelings and their fears I will listen
but at the end of the day at the end of the day
I know I'm aware that they don't know me
as I know myself they don't know me as much
as I know myself and I will have the final say
I urge you to do the same listen to others respect their opinions
but at the end of the day listen to yourself
and right now I want to speak to my children
some of you that already know me know that my children are not born
yet but that doesn't stop me from talking to them
in these specifically in the day one journey episodes
so dear children I'm talking to you and as I told in the first
first episodes of the day one journey
I want to set the best example I can for you
so what I will say in the following minutes is an example for you
I want you to act in a similar way I'll be 100% honest with you right now
right now I'm not I'm not living in my home country Israel
right now I'm in Iceland before that I was in Bangkok
and I'm not planning to come back soon
for some reasons some of them
some of the reasons are I need that time alone
with myself I need that quiet no opinions no noise
I need this time for myself to work on my projects
I want that I chose that this is my life so when I had my
conversation with my parents and they weren't that happy
about that and then I think they gave their advice for me
I just told them that I was listening to their advice
I was empathetic to their fears but at the end of the day
I told them this is my life
and this is what I'm saying to you dear children
my children also my grandchildren this is your life I don't want
you to live your life for me I want you to live your life for you
if you want you can listen to my opinion you can listen
to my advice I want to give you as much tools
that I can for you as much tools but
you will use the tools to do whatever you want in life
don't live your life for me and how can I instill this message
in you if not be a role model if not to be and set the best example
I can for you so this is what I'm saying to you
my children also to my parents and everybody else
and everyone else who's listening
I live my life for myself first I believe that in order to be selfless
first you need to be selfish first you need to take care of yourself
because if you're not happy how the people around you can
be happy how can you help them be happy
if you're not happy think about it
you're on the plane right you are on the plane
and there's the oxygen mask one of the instructions
the instructions tell you don't put the mask on your child
first put it first on yourself so you can help other people
your children your family members other people on the airplane
you need to take care of yourself first this is what I'm pushing you to do
to think about everybody that is watching
this episode cuz on your deathbed the only person you will need
to give answers to is yourself this is your life
you were given your life it is yours
this present moment is your present it is yours
don't live your life of someone else they gave you your life
when I'm talking to you my children I gave you your life
but this is yours I don't want you to
live your life for me in the same manner that I don't
I told my parents I don't live my life for you
I live my life for me that might be a little bit harsh
people might not agree with me but this still doesn't
doesn't make it not my truth this is my truth
I still remember till now that the conversation
I had with my parents 2016 summer in Israel just before
I moved to Bangkok I still remember the smile on
on my mother's face when we had a good conversation
it was pretty deep they offered their opinion
about what I'm going to do I told them that I'm planning
to go aboard working on my projects for at least 1-2 years
like at least and they shared their fears
and their opinions and maybe their advice
and I was listening I was respecting I was listening I really cared
to understand what they are fearing of but then they
gave their advice and then I just said
straight forward to my mother I just said to her
I won't take your advice for the simple reason you
didn't do the path you didn't walk the path that
I'm going for and not only that you don't know anyone else
that did something that even resembles what I'm up for
that's why I won't take your advice because you have no experience in
what specifically I want to do and I was honest
I was empathetic but I was saying my truth
and till this day I remember she was smiling because
she knew I was speaking the truth she knew I was speaking the truth
she still has a little bit her fears her opinions but she knows
that I know what I'm doing and she trusts me
both my parents rusts me and this is probably the best time
to say how much I love them how much I appreciate them
for so much I think one of the most one of the biggest things
that I'm so appreciative of is for them for letting me be
Who I am which is for many aspects very different
from them which makes the fact that they let me be
Who I really am not that easy for them
I'm a little bit emotional I'm super grateful for you
my parents mom dad IMA ABBA
so this is my message to you children also
also parents I'm living my life for me I want people that are watching this
episode live your life for you it is your present
live your life for you not for other people
have the voices in your mind be your own voices
live within your mind and some of you may say
if I put all the voices outside and I'm leaving
and I'm left only with my my voices they are self-destructive
they are there are negative voices so first we all have this
self negative talk going on but the thing that I want to
push that I've just heard from Gary Vaynerchuk
one of my favorite speakers he mentioned and I totally agree
with that these voices this negative self negative talk
that you have is not your voice it's someone else's voice
think about it go back to the go back to the past
go back to the past when you were a baby
when you were a child you didn't have these voices right
so somewhere along your life someone instill these voices
inside your head these are not your voices
this negative self-talk put them away think within your mind
consider other people's opinions consider them take them as input
use them understand the world through them but at the end of the day
make your own decisions this is your life
at the end of your days or when you're on your deathbed
the only person the person that you will need to give answers to is the
person you look at in the mirror every morning yourself
be true to yourself this is my message for you
especially you my children live your life for you not for me
and not for any other person but you this is your life
squeeze the most out of it this is my message for you
for the day in the day one journey
and until tomorrow until tomorrow by the way
it might be the last episode of the NO routine series
so let's do the last connection what is and what was the
NO routine all about it was cutting off the
not so much important stuff to make room to make space
for the stuff that is really important for us
and what's the connection to this episode I urge you I push you
the process that I am trying to do everyday to push off to cut off
other people's opinions or worrying about other
people's opinions to make room to make space
for my opinions for my voices for my wants
for my needs for me doing what I want with my life
which is mine I push you to see your life
as yours your present moment is your present this is yours
don't do that don't live your life for others
yes this is what I'm saying to you in this episode
so back to you we are really out of time
so back to you next time and it can be very very soon
when when you hear read see someone's opinion of you
or some someone's opinion about what you did
whether it's a social media comment whether it's an SMS that
that you got from a friend anything any piece of opinion
that someone says about you or your work I want you
to remind yourself that they don't know you
as much that you know yourself they don't have the full picture
they don't know also what you're going to do with it
so take it as an input take it as an input
don't ignore it totally take it as input but then
keep on doing what you want to be doing
then listen to your own voices your real voices
your positive voices is that push you forward to do
what you want to do take this information
take this opinon these opinions as input
use them if they're useful use them if not if they are not
ignore them and move on this is the NO routine series
cutting off the not so much important stuff
I was pretty harsh but pretty honest with you
100% honest with you I told you people's opinions
is not important enough then my opinions
cuz I know what's best for me cuz this is me this is my life
I will deal with the consequences at the end of my days
my parents won't be there at the end of my days
also children dear children you won't be there
only me facing me in my mirror so this is my message to you
my children at the end of the day you need to give answers to yourself
so the back to you assignment for all of you
next time you hear someone's opinion about you about what you do
remember at the end of the days when you are on your deathbed
the only opinion you will care about is yours
put if FIRST and put it LAST this is my message for you for the day
do this do this today get the power back into your hands
it is your life it is your present enjoy it do this today
and of course have an amazing amazing day one
-------------------------------------------
Laguna Beach Prepares For More Rain And -- They Really Don't Want Any More - Duration: 2:24.
For more infomation >> Laguna Beach Prepares For More Rain And -- They Really Don't Want Any More - Duration: 2:24. -------------------------------------------
Why Deaf People Don't Like The Movie "Hush" | Film Fridays - Duration: 13:21.
Listen, there is just absolutely no reason
that Madison, Maddie, whatever her name is, would not be
able to know that her neighbor was getting killed
two feet away from her.
It is absolutely impossible.
(intro music)
Hello and welcome back to the channel and Film Fridays.
I know it's been a while, but I lost my notes for
this movie called Hush.
If you don't know what Hush is,
it is a movie that came out on Netflix
and it stars Kate Siegel.
You might know her from the show called
Haunting of Hill House.
Hush is a horror movie.
To put it simply it is about a deaf woman who lives
alone in the middle of nowhere.
She has a couple of neighbors.
She's a writer and she moved out to
the middle of nowhere for writing.
This is a movie that many hearing people loved.
They thought it was a great movie.
They thought they really understood what
it would be like to be deaf in the middle of nowhere,
and what would happen if some murderer,
who we don't even
understand why he was there in the first place,
or why he wanted to kill her in the first place.
They just think they understand that this is what
it would be like.
People have recommended this movie
to me, to watch and I've seen people recommend
this movie to other people.
Especially with Bird Box coming out and what not.
I just want to say overall, stop recommending this movie.
I'm going to tell you why.
First things first, there's no real actual deaf
representation which is already a problem in itself
because what happens when you don't have
an actual deaf person playing a deaf person,
you get things incorrect.
I understand that this is a horror movie and
horror movies are fantasy, as well as other movies out there
unless they are based on a true story.
But, a little something right would be really nice and
just the fact that, you know, deaf actors want jobs too.
This should have been perfect for them.
One of the biggest complaints about the movie was how the
ASL was.. (disappointed shrug)
Which is really the case for a lot of films that have
hearing people who don't know ASL, playing a deaf person
who does know ASL or sign language in general.
Now, I am no expert.
I said this when I did my video on A Quiet Place,
but I even found it to be a little bit...
And, you know, when you have people who are fluent in this
language and have been using it all their life, they really
know what they're talking about.
So, you know, I want to take their comments
and take them seriously.
I remember one scene in particular.
I think it was when she was talking to her neighbor
in the beginning, and, you know, there are some cases
when you're supposed to put your damn eyebrows down.
You know when you're kind of asking a question,
the who, what, when, where, why sort of questions.
She doesn't put her eyebrows down.
It's like, can you please put your eyebrows down?
Now with the whole deaf representation thing
Mike Flanagan, is that his name?
He said that the reason why he wanted a hearing person to
play this part is because there is spoken dialogue in this.
But in the person's mind.
In Maddie's head.
It happens at the end of the movie when, you know, you're
supposed to start wrapping things up and get ready to kill
the bad guy, right?
All I could think of is, that reasoning is hilarious
to me because there are a lot of oral deaf people,
or just deaf actresses that are able to speak,
and they do choose to speak sometimes.
For example, Shoshannah Stern.
You might have seen her in Jericho and Weeds.
She was Eileen, was that her characters name?
Eileen in Supernatural.
All three of those were speaking parts.
My friend, Amanda McDonough, she grew up speaking
and she has also done a lot of speaking roles.
Marlee Matlin might be too old to play the role, but
she has also done speaking roles.
So you would have been able to find a deaf person
who can speak for this film.
Or if you really wanted to, you could just take a deaf
actress for the role and then have Kate do the voiceover.
Easy, simple fixes.
Going back to the part about the neighbor and how
they were speaking in the beginning of the video.
One of the things that Maddie says is,
"You don't have to sign."
If a person is learning sign language for you.
If a person is learning sign language for us
in order to make communication easier, we love that.
I can't think of anybody who flat out says, if they
are trying, and they really wanna make things work,
and make things accessible for you. I don't know any of
us who have actually said, "You don't need to do that."
When I'm going to random people at the airport
or something and I need something done quickly, I
don't need you to sign and learn how to say something
in five seconds. I don't need you to hold up your
phone, and wait, and pause the conversation,
and look up how to say "hi" or "how are you."
But, if you were somebody that I know and you have
been really trying, why wouldn't I want you to do that?
That was so weird to me.
I found it very odd that there were no
flash alerts on her phone.
I have flash alerts on all of my phones.
I have them on this.
I have them on my iPhone back there.
So if there's an emergency or something, you're aware.
Or do deaf people in general just not do that?
I wanna know.
Do you have-
My fellow deaf friends and viewers, do you have your
flash alerts on your phone because I feel like that's
just a thing that we do.
I don't think they were on her laptop either.
And while I'm here, I should mention that I also
did a video about Hush.
It was an interview with
spookyastronauts A.K.A Emma, and she brought up when
they're outside and the kitchen is practically burning
down and the alarm is going off.
The smoke alarm has lights on. She doesn't really notice
it until it's too late.
I can kind of relate to that because if they were
really far away and they're not in an enclosed space.
They're out in the open.
The house behind them is enclosed but you can't really
see the lights flashing.
Especially in peripheral vision.
I can get that.
I'm not mad at that.
SimCom A.K.A. simultaneous...
SimCom A.K.A. speaking and signing at the same time.
Basically trying to use two completely different
languages at the same time.
It doesn't work out.
It's very clunky and I also personally hate doing it.
It can be difficult to understand.
If you are able to sign well enough, which the neighbor
looked like she was able to, you should be able just
not use SimCom
But, you know,
the reason why hearing people do this in their movies
is purely for hearing audience.
Now here's where things really tick me off.
When her neighbor slams herself into the kitchen door
because Maddie is cleaning the dishes and she's not
even maybe five feet from the door.
Her neighbor is banging on the door.
Glass door and the woman
has no damn idea that there's vibrations going on.
That's just not possible.
Unless Maddie were to have this weird thing where
she cannot actually feel anything.
This is just not possible.
When you bang on something really loud, you're creating
force, right, and it vibrates and it spreads.
Someone who is just a few feet away from the door
is going to feel that.
You will feel stomping.
You will feel knocking on the door.
Let me tell you, when I'm upstairs right here, I can
hear when something is going on downstairs or I can
feel when something is going on downstairs.
When I was in a different apartment,
when people would be coming in and out of the door
on the other side of the apartment, even when it was
just gently being shut, I could feel that.
It is just mind boggling that they make it so that
Maddie has absolutely no idea that her neighbor
is banging for her life on the door.
Now, would Maddie had been able to save her?
Maybe not, but at least she would have
acknowledged it and tried.
That part just makes me so angry.
That is by far the worst part of this entire movie.
That alone, is why I don't recommend this movie at all.
So ASL is very visual, especially in the face, right?
Your face is part of the grammar.
When Maddie is trying to tell her sister that
something is really loud,
I swear, she has the most boring facial expressions.
She's just like, "It's loud."
I'm like, woman, it's loud!
Come on, get that in your face, ma'am.
Come on!
Just get that in your face!
Who takes way too long to call 9-1-1?
This woman is playing cat and mouse with this
random guy who we still don't understand why he's
there in the first place, besides to kill her.
You would think maybe there's a reason.
Just because it's a movie you would think there's
some back story about this but, she's just playing
cat and mouse this entire time.
For like ten minutes.
She doesn't want to try to call 9-1-1
Also, when the male neighbor, the neighbor's husband
comes over and he's like,
"Oh, well, she can't call 9-1-1"
Yes, we can!
First of all, there's video.
Second of all, can't we text 9-1-1 now.
I think we can text 9-1-1 now?
But also, I would assume that this is something that
works in real life,
watching it in the TV shows and movies
but this is a movie right?
If you call 9-1-1 and leave it there, they can still
ping your location, I would hope, and get you there.
At the very least you could probably shout,
"Hi, I'm deaf," over and over and then, I don't know, they would still
figure out, hey, this is an emergency.
I feel like people have done this in real life before.
This is something that I would do.
She just takes way too long to call 9-1-1 and of course,
you know what happens?
The power goes out.
The evil guy cuts the power because that is a...
And, you know, when they're having that stare down and
the guy goes, "Can you read my lips?"
First of all, why is this always the most popular question
with hearing people?
Also, he barely moves his mouth anyway.
No. Nobody can read your lips when you're basically
talking with your mouth closed.
Also, it's too dark.
How is anyone supposed to be able to read your lips
when it's too dark?
You wouldn't- You can't see anybody!
You can't lip read in the dark!
You need light!
Even then, thirty to forty percent of the English
language can only, maybe, possibly be read under
the best circumstances.
Great lighting, no other background noise and
distractions if the person has residual hearing.
Lip reading is too difficult.
A lot of people can't do it.
But of course, this person, this deaf person is a great lip reader.
Like an expert at it.
Every single deaf person made by a hearing person
is an expert at lip reading.
The fact that she's too quiet in this doesn't make
any sense to me.
We are loud people.
I like to think that we are loud people because
we can't hear that we are being loud.
For example, when I think I'm whispering, I'm too loud
and China can hear me.
When I think that I'm being sneaky now, I used to be
really good at this, but now, I'm not so sneaky anymore.
People know when I'm coming.
When I think that I'm closing a door
or putting things down quietly.
No, I'm bad. I'm bad. People can hear it.
We are so noisy! But this movie is like...
Maddie is so wonderfully quiet. No. That's- no.
Also, peripheral vision and vibrations suddenly exist
now that her neighbor is dead and when this guy is
doing not as loud things as her neighbor.
She suddenly knows that he's doing stuff.
I seem to recall something about being deaf-mute.
Somebody said "deaf-mute".
I think it was the neighbor's husband again.
That's a term that we don't like in the community.
It's very outdated.
So should you ever make a movie or a book or anything
with a deaf character, just say "deaf".
Deaf and non-verbal if they are non-verbal.
There are out of frame signs, also a very popular thing.
This also occurs at Switched at Birth a lot and,
yes, I will have something on that eventually.
If you're gonna do a movie with sign language in it,
keep the language in the frame.
I think what really makes this movie bad for a lot of
us in the community is the reaction from Mike and Kate.
But even with the most calm, constructive criticism,
these people were blocking left and right.
Kate Siegel has me blocked.
I think Mike might have me blocked.
It's just something that keeps on happening.
You know, there's job opportunities that are perfect for us but
people want to take it away.
And then, you know, in the same sort of sentence, in the same breath,
people wonder why we don't even try.
People are like, "Why don't you try and audition?"
You kind of have to be given the opportunity to
attempt to be able to audition because a lot of times,
these people just flat out don't want
us to try to do anything.
Whether it's audition for a movie or apply for your
regular mainstream jobs.
Overall, I don't recommend this movie.
If you want a deaf movie, a deaf horror movie, watch A Quiet Place.
But you know what? You are welcome to your own opinion and if you
have a different one or if you have a similar one,
you can leave it down below in the comments and we
can talk about it.
As always, I very much appreciate you watching
and if you would like to help translate this video,
I'll have a translation link down below.
Go check that out.
Again, thank you very much for watching
and I'll see you later. Bye!
(music)
-------------------------------------------
What You DON'T Know About The Kobe Bryant & Tracy McGrady NBA Rivalry (Ft. Elbows & Trash Talk) - Duration: 14:33.
There was Kobe.
And
there
was T-Mac.
They had admiration for each other, but also were rivals.
What is up dudes, dudettes, ballers, players.
It's ya boi MJ.
Tracy McGrady and Kobe Bryant have a long history and rivalry that includes Disneyland,
Black Mamba's Origin story, elbows, and Germany.
Yeah so strap in.
Also, I'm sick so bare with me and I'm trying to get another video out tomorrow on
something people don't know about Kobe.
The Kobe Bryant Tracy McGrady rivalry started back when they were teenagers.
Remember, both Kobe and T-Mac went into the league straight outta high school and both
were hotheads, Tracy more than Kobe.
McGrady went from being a relatively unknown high school prospect in his junior year to
dunking on LaMar Odom who was the best prospect at the time, wow.
Those dunks got McGrady famous quickly and he declared for the draft saying that he would
be gone by the 8th pick and that he wants to at least get playing time in the playoffs
like "his boy" Kobe did.
Because before T-Mac was drafted.
He had talked to players like Jermaine O'Neal and Kobe Bryant to get a feel for how the
NBA life would be.
Kobe had entered the league the year before in 1996 and although he had an up and down
rookie season, he still got minutes in the playoffs and so T-Mac had aspirations to do
the same.
Kobe had encouraged Tracy to keep pushing on the path he was on.
So when T-Mac was drafted to the Raptors, Kobe and T-Mac apparently met in the offseason
according to T-Mac and had a bit of interaction.
T-Mac was 18 at the time and was about to workout, but Kobe told T-Mac not worry about
working out because it was the offseason, relaxing T-Mac but then was in the workout
room a couple hours after.
Tracy then understood, Kobe was all about mind games and they developed a friendship
after that.
Even went to Disneyland and everything.
*Awwww.
Tracy McGrady stayed at Kobe's house because Kobe saw the potential in T-Mac and felt a
connection with another high school prospect.
T-Mac would even lean heavily on Kobe throughout his rookie season as he got adjusted to not
being the main man like he was in high school.
Kobe and T-Mac would play against each other for the first time on March 31, 1998 but there
wasn't much in that.
Tracy was already getting inconsistent minutes, but Kobe was starting to develop and dropped
17 on the Raptors while Tracy dropped 2 points on 3 shots.
In the lockout season.
They didn't get a chance to play against each other and in December 1999, it was more
of the same with T-Mac getting better, but not showing his star potential.
Kobe dropped 26, T-Mac dropped 8 on 10 shots.
Kobe had already become a star and more distant as he focused on getting his team the championship
and so T-Mac and Kobe just didn't talk as much.
Kobe was becoming uber competitive and he saw T-Mac as competition.
The Lakers won a ring and McGrady watched his role model becoming what he had set out
to do.
You see, the first three seasons of Tracy McGrady were eerily similar to Kobe's first
2 seasons, where there were glimpses of star potential, but it wasn't consistent on a
night to night basis.
You could tell that both of them were going through the motions, Kobe in his 4th season
was able to average over 20 points per game and get the championship.
T-Mac saw how the Lakers had give Kobe the minutes,the belief, the glory all things that
McGrady had wanted coming out of high school.
His mini-feud with Vince Carter who was the main man in the Raptors didn't make it any
better and McGrady wanted his own team, somewhere he wouldn't be held back by a guy who was
more developed than him at the time.
That sounds really familiar like really familiar, he's EXACTLY like Kobe.
So in 2000 he joined the Orlando Magic who had just gotten their main star in Grant Hill,
wait what.
Well Grant Hill was more of an all-around player which would work well with a guy like
T-Mac.
Also Florida was T-MAc's home so there you go.
McGrady always compared himself to Kobe and so now he finally had a similar situation
to Kobe, you know just without the rings.
We're gonna have to work on that one.
Anyway, this is when their on-court rivalry really began because McGrady blossomed into
a star averaging over 26 points per game.
This is the time Kobe Bryant also became a force averaging over 28 a game.
These two high school prospects were taking over and that's where you get their first
real battle.
Well not exactly, Rick Fox still took on the majority of that defensive assignment, but
Kobe wasn't able to stop McGrady while McGrady was able to bother Kobe as Kobe went 5-17
from the field.
T-Mac scored 29 with 10 rebounds, Kobe scored 16 with 7 rebounds and that was the moment
Kobe looked at T-Mac and saw a rival, not just a friend.
Because T-Mac was single-handedly keeping the Magic in the playoff race.
Remember Grant Hill, he's been injured since the 4th game of the season and so it's been
all T-Mac.
In the playoffs, he would drop a 42-10-8 game which was called his superstar audition tape.
Kobe was paying attention to all of this, even if he wasn't necessarily communicating
with Tracy.
The Lakers would win another ring behind the deadly Shaq and Kobe combo.
He at least got a nice block on Kobe.
They both guarded each other in the 2001 All star game but McGrady on shot 4 times and
came away with 2 points while Kobe had 19 and 7 assists.
The 2001-2002 season was more of what we saw in March.
In November 2001, T-Mac and Kobe went at it with Kobe getting 28 and 8 assists and T-Mac
getting 22 and 7 boards.
All these battles so far, Kobe has always won, large part due to the Lakers being better
than those teams McGrady has been on.
I mean name T-Mac's teammates on the Magic.
Yeah that.
It was no different in January of 2002.
Similar stats once again and once again, not really matched up on each other because Rick
Fox took the assignment on T-Mac and the Magic put multiple defenders on Kobe.
Another ring for Kobe and now T-Mac was looking for some sort of win.
He understood his team was not gonna be a championship team and he ain't lying.
So the next season was T-Mac's time.
The 2002-2003 season had the more memorable matchups.
The first matchup of the season in November was a one to remember.
Both T-Mac and Kobe had 38 each and the Magic came up with the win.
Both were making some tough shots and after the game Tracy was asked about the Kobe and
T-Mac debate because yes at the time, that was a legitimate debate.
Tracy declined to give an answer and said he was a team player not caught up in that,
but he was through the moon and happy that that was his first victory over Kobe.
Teammates recall that McGrady was super pumped about the win, more than normal.
This was also the game T-Mac broke Kobe's ankles and Kobe came down the other hand and
dunked on the whole team while getting a technical.
Straight savage.
But let's talk briefly about the Kobe McGrady debate.
So during this time, there was a debate between who's better Kobe or T-Mac.
Some said T-Mac because he's a year younger, he's bigger, longer wingspan.
Amd he's doing what he's doing without any help.
Others said Kobe because he's a better defender, better leader, works harder, and is a champion.
There was a slight sway towards Kobe but that Mcgrady performance was a testament to McGrady
saying, I'm here.
The next meeting was less than a month away in December and this was more of what had
happened with the Lakers winning and both putting up 21 points.
However, remember how I said Tracy was looking for any win, so he lead the league in scoring
at 32 points per game, despite Kobe scoring 40 for 9 straight games.
T-Mac said he wasn't gonna let Kobe get the scoring title over him.
In Kobe's stretch, T-Mac averaged 37.4 points including a 52 point game and a 46 point triple
double.
He was not gonna let Kobe win and was always trying to one up him.
During this time, both Tracy and Kobe were signed with Adidas.
Kobe swears T-Mac and Kobe played one on ones and he beat him 11-2 based off a tweet and
Kobe said he beat him 11-3 in their recent interview.
A further look into it and Adidas did run ABCD camps in Germany and while it's not
confirmed they were there together, T-Mac did go to Germany to launch his shoes, the
T-Mac 3s and Kobe was also in Germany for a promotional tour.
So Kobe would most definitely be working on his game in the offseason and if both of them
are together, most likely a 1 v 1 would break out.
And if Kobe did uhhh *ahem roast T-Mac, I don't think McGrady would ever admit that.
The 2003-2004 season was memorable for the game Kobe Bryant became the Black Mamba on
March 15, 2004.
While I have focused on T-Mac trying to catch up to Kobe, let's talk about Kobe for a
sec.
Kobe was dealing with many off-court problems.
For one, he was dealing with rape accusations, his wife Vanessa had just thrown out his clothes
on the street and for the first time in his life, Kobe didn't want to be on the court,
even if it was against a guy like T-Mac who Kobe always wanted to face.
Tracy couldn't even recognize Kobe in the first half as Kobe only had 1 point and Tracy
was cooking with 21.
In the locker room at half time, everything was looking bad and Kobe just wanted to focus
so he came up with the persona of the Black Mamba to be a menace on the court away from
distractions so he could play the game he loves.
In the second half, Kobe went on to score 37 points, hit the game tying shot in regular
time and win in overtime.
I made a video a while back going in more detail about this, but this time Tracy had
brought out a better version of Kobe who couldn't take being outplayed by his opponents.
Tracy also did this although it didn't count.
Kobe did elbow T-Mac in the back which was not necessarily friendly.
At the end of the season.
Kobe got his wish to be the man, similar to how McGrady had earlier got his wish to be
the man.
Now I've went into detail to describe how these two players impacted each other in the
early part of their careers.
And that's because the early part of their careers really established a groundwork for
the people they would become.
Kobe called Tracy McGrady the toughest player he ever had to guard and that was from the
reputation T-Mac had in Orlando.
He was a shooting guard with a 7 foot 2 wingspan that could do everything Kobe could, except
their personalities were very different.
Where Kobe was expressive with his teammates and a leader in his own right, McGrady was
reserved, more of a beta personality.
At the end of the 2004 season, T-Mac went to the Rockets and Kobe had his own team without
Shaq.
Yes, Kobe and McGrady would still have legendary battles like the crazy overtime game in 2007
in which Kobe scored 53 points and McGrady dropped 30 and 10 assists which the Rockets
won.
But McGrady never was able to lead his team to a championship.
Daryl Morey approached Tracy McGrady, asking him to be more of a leader on the Rockets
and McGrady politely refused saying that wasn't him.
Even when the Rockets were with T-Mac and Yao and they were doing amazing things, Chuck
Hayes apparently was their leader.
Yeah him.
The rivalry of who was the better player had finished
by the 2007-2008 season with their last great battle being in October 2007 when Kobe scored
45 and T-Mac dropped 30.
Kobe was able to lead a team to a championship, was the better defender, the better leader,
the more healthy counterpart.
The rivalry wasn't filled with animosity, it was more of friendly competition, but knowing
Kobe, nothing was friendly.
It recently came up again with Kobe and T-Mac's interview which made me realize how influential
each player was on the other.
These two were at a point the best shooting guards in the league and were in competition
in crucial times for the player's career.
Tracy has given Kobe all the praise, calling him the best player he has ever faced including
Jordan and LeBron.
T-Mac has said that Kobe got the best out of him.
I just think you gotta see that this rivalry made the two better and at the same time,
both looked up to each other.
It was one of those rare instances where yeah there was a rivalry between the two, but it
was a friendly one.
So yeah I could just say that this was more a history between the two's relationship,
but I like calling it a rivalry and I'm pretty sure Kobe and McGrady do too, but what
do you think?
How good would a team with T-Mac and Kobe be?
Drop a like for Kobe and T-Mac cause man were they special.
The instagram shout of the day goes to David and the ALLDAY notification squad shout out
goes to Christian Blake.
Thanks for the ALLDAY support.
Make sure to hit the bell for ALLDAY notifications and if you're not a sub, hit that subscribe
button to join the ALLDAY community for more fire content and ALLDAY support.
It's ya boi MJ.
We Out!
-------------------------------------------
Don't Think God Can't Expose Your Sin - Ryan Fullerton - Duration: 2:38.
Don't think you can hide from God.
And don't think He can't expose you.
Even if it's true that no one knows your sin,
God can give a prophetic word to someone
to expose that sin.
There is no possible way in the universe to hide.
But even if you did hide
until the day of your death,
God has planned a day where He will bring
all things to light.
And there will be no hiding then.
And why get caught then?
When it's too late?
When the judgment day has been sealed?
When your destiny in hell is sealed?
When you could come clean now?
And receive mercy and grace in this life
and for eternity?
If you look like a fool and a wicked sinner
for the rest of your life,
wouldn't it be worth it if you
were counted righteous in eternity?
In fact, why not model
your response to God's exposure after David's?
Look at chapter 12:13,
"David said to Nathan,
'I have sinned against the Lord.'"
Verse 13 of chapter 12.
"David said to Nathan,
'I have sinned against the Lord.'"
No if's. No and's. No but's.
No excuses.
Just a simple confession:
Yes, I agree with what I have been accused of.
I have sinned against the Lord.
It is a miracle when anyone says those words.
It is an absolute miracle of the Holy Spirit
when anyone says those words.
And the only words more miraculous
than those words are then the following words:
"And Nathan said to David,
'The Lord also has put away your sin.
You shall not die.'"
Christian, that is what is over your whole life.
The Lord has put away your sin.
You shall not die.
But if you hold on to your sin and hide it
how do you even know you're a Christian?
The mark of a Christian is that they come clean.
If we say we have no sin,
we deceive ourselves
and the truth is not in us.
But if we confess our sins,
He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins
and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
-------------------------------------------
WHY WE DON'T REMEMBER OUR PAST LIVES explained by Hans Wilhelm - Duration: 5:52.
Hi, I am Hans Wilhelm.
Many people are wondering why we do not remember our past lives.
They think if we would only know what we did wrong in the past we could do it better in this
life time.
Now, this sounds logical.
But would it really be an optimal way for us to grow?
Let me share with you the reasons why we do not remember our past lives every time we
incarnate into a human body.
Firstly, we have to remember that as human beings our understanding is shaped by the
three-dimensional world that we live in.
So, to fully grasp the 7-dimesionality of our spiritual existence is virtually impossible
from our present limited perspective - although everything that ever happened, is stored in
our soul.
Another reason is divine Mercy.
Chances are that we have lived many, many lives before.
And we can assume that in some of these lives we might have done some horrific things to
others or even to ourselves - after all, life in the past centuries was far more violent
than today.
Remembering these cruel acts could create major guilt and even depressions and hopelessness
in us.
Therefore, at birth - or shortly thereafter - divine Mercy lovingly shields these memories
from us with - what is called - the "veil of forgetfulness" so that we can live without
any distracting memories from past life times
A further reason is our conscience, also called the "little voice within".
In my video about the conscience I have explained that after our physical death each soul is
going through a life-review where we experience how all our thoughts, words and actions have
impacted others and ourselves.
The pain of these self-reflections remains in our soul and will be part of our "inner
voice" that guides us to not repeat the same mistakes again in our present life time.
So, we don't need the actual detailed memories of our past lives, because we have the emotional
reactions to our past life choices as our conscience within us.
And our conscience is based on LOVE, because it knows we have most likely been both: victim
as well as perpetrator.
But I believe that the most important reason why we don't remember our past lifes is
to make our today's choices from LOVE and not just from our intellect.
Let us look at a typical example: Imagine I hate my brother in this life time.
If I had a total memory recall of my past life, I might see the actual cause of this
hatred.
Something happened between the two of us that created this animosity.
With this sudden understanding I could now decide to have a better relationship with
my brother.
Now, this might sound like a step into the right direction.
But it was an intellectual decision based on memory.
It came totally from my head and not from my heart.
It didn't come from unconditional, unlimited and all-inclusive LOVE, but from intellectually
rationalizing a situation.
Our spiritual growth is based on LOVE and actualization of that LOVE but not on our
intellect.
And finally, everything that we ever need to solve and undo from our past mistakes comes
automatically to us as the daily building blocks.
I have explained that in greater detail in my video about the Amazing Earth School.
Our karma is stored in the huge causal computer of the stars and planets that make up the
material and fine-material cosmoses.
These repository stars and planets are in constant movement and when they reach a certain
position, they download portions of our karma back to us on Earth.
These portions are carefully attuned to the strength of our soul.
These downloads are the building blocks that make up a good chunk of our days from moment
to moment.
It is like a mighty current of energy which brings to each one of us what is relevant
for us today to recognize and clear up.
Every moment, every second, every minute and every hour of our day is carefully orchestrated
for us - or strictly speaking: by us, because we created that karma in the first place.
Therefore, there is absolutely no need to know and remember all the gruesome details
of any old negative karma.
Can we now see that it is a blessing and not a mistake why we do not remember our past
lives?
It is all part of this magnificent, wonderful divine plan to bring us HOME, back to GOD,
back to unconditional, unlimited and all-inclusive LOVE.
And it is not complicated to do.
We all know the Golden Rule, "Do to others as you want them do to you" or the other
way around, "don't do to others what you don't want them do to you." In this simple
rule lies the secret of an ethical lifestyle that balances out negative karma and makes
each day an interesting experience in the school of life.
It's as simple as that.
-------------------------------------------
Monty Don's Japanese Gardens Episode 1 - Duration: 59:01.
The snow-clad slopes of Mount Fuji
are one of the stunning images of Japan that we all recognise.
But despite a fascination for the country and its culture,
there remains something mysterious and intriguing.
And although we may admire Japanese gardens -
and our own gardens are full of Japanese plants,
like cherries and maples and hostas -
few of us really understand or know them.
They remain an enigma.
So, I have set out to try and get to the heart of the culture
that lies behind some of the most beautiful gardens in the world.
I shall be visiting Japan during its two most radiant seasons -
spring and autumn.
I'll follow the development of stroll gardens,
experience the serenity of a tea garden,
and learn the secrets of creating a Zen landscape.
The stone said to me, "It's OK - this angle, this position."
The stone is talking to you?Yes.
I'm setting out to relish, contemplate,
and hopefully learn to understand these iconic gardens of Japan.
Most of us have an idea of what a Japanese garden should contain.
There should be cloud pruning of azaleas,
maples with their delicate leaves shimmering in the light,
moss gardens, rock, gravel, water gently flowing.
And this garden has it all.
But this is not Japan.
We're at Tatton Park in the heart of the Cheshire countryside,
and there is a story behind this garden
because it was inspired by an exhibition in London
over 100 years ago.
The Japan-British Exhibition at White City in 1910
lifted the curtain on a country shrouded in mystery.
And this was the first chance
for most people to see anything from Japan.
Buildings, costumes, pottery and art
all dazzled audiences with their novelty,
and on top of this, two gardens had been brought over to England.
This inspired a craze for building Japanese gardens.
Lord Egerton, the owner of Tatton Park,
visited the exhibition, fell in love with these gardens,
and decided to create his own version at Tatton.
So, a team of Japanese gardeners arrived
and created what we see today.
This is a lovely garden
and it certainly gives you a real flavour of Japan,
but I want to see the real thing,
and for that, I need to go to Japan.
Talk to anybody about the best time to come to Japan,
and they will always say spring,
when the cherry blossom is at its best.
Well, that's all fine and good,
but the cherry blossom comes at different times,
it only lasts for a few day and can be destroyed by the weather.
But it looks like I've got lucky.
For this handful of precious days,
the blossom is gloriously everywhere,
and I've decided to head first to a garden in western Japan.
I'm beginning my journey here, at Kenrokuen in the town of Kanazawa,
because this is one of the three great gardens of Japan.
The name Kenrokuen means "Garden of the Six Sublimities"
and refers to the legendary six qualities of the ideal garden -
spaciousness, seclusion, creativity,
antiquity, water and scenic views.
Kenrokuen features ponds, waterfalls, bridges,
and, of course, spectacular blossom.
It was originally the private garden of the local feudal lords,
the hugely wealthy Maeda family.
They began to create it in the 1670s
as the pleasure ground for nearby Kanazawa Castle
in order that their wealth and power wouldn't attract
the adverse attention of the shogun in Kyoto.
And it was developed and redesigned for nearly 200 years until,
in 1874, at the end of the feudal era,
the garden was made into a public park.
Today, Kenrokuen is meticulously tended
by an army of gardeners,
including the women scrupulously picking through
the velvety carpet of moss,
weeding out every single unwanted blade of grass.
Even on a site of 28 acres,
there is a fastidious attention to detail.
So often, when I visit a garden, people say,
"Oh, you should've come last week," or, "You should come next month."
But this is the first time when I can absolutely say,
"I should be here today."
This is the sublime, perfect moment.
The cherry blossom, briefly, for this one day,
is at its fragile, outrageous, ecstatic best.
Before I came to Japan, people said,
"Well, you must try and see the cherries
"because they're really lovely."
But they were wrong. They're not really lovely.
They're amazing. They're mind-blowing.
Although the cherry blossom lasts for just one short week,
it is THE horticultural mascot of Japan.
Hanami, cherry blossom festivals,
have been held in Japan since the seventh century,
and the arrival of the blossom is the nation's top news story for days
and the excuse for national celebration.
And Kenrokuen is a paradise of cherry blossom of every kind.
To understand the cultural significance of this,
I'm meeting Professor Suzuki,
who is an expert on traditional Japanese gardens.
Sitting here in this lovely garden
that is considered to be one of the greatest in Japan, why is that?
This garden has a lot of features of landscapes with water
and also a panoramic view towards the mountain
and to the ocean.
Japan itself, it's an island nation,
so this is kind of a compacted environment of Japan.
Clearly, the cherry blossom is really important.
What is it about the cherry blossom that is so special?
Just because we love it.Yes.
We celebrate spring has come.
One of the aspects of Japanese gardens
that is very different from the West is the huge care
given to the relationship between solid objects,
such as the branches of a tree.
One of the things that is evident is this careful control of space,
and also this idea of ma.
Ma is the space in between.
So, one branch and another branch,
we have to think about the in-between.
Any visitor to Japanese gardens
is bound to notice the presence of a lot of rocks, wood, moss.
Why is this?
Because we have really naturalistic landscaped gardens.
So, we kind of mimic or we learn from the nature.
So, you're saying it is part of the natural world?
It always relates?Yes.
Despite all the thousands of cherries
that are billowing blossom everywhere,
this rather scrawny tree,
with just a few flowers emerging, is really special.
It's called Tai-haku - the great white cherry.
In 18th-century Japan,
this was the most prized cherry of them all,
and then it disappeared.
But in 1923, in a Sussex garden in England,
a man found a cherry growing
that he liked very much but couldn't recognise,
so he called upon the great cherry expert,
Captain Collingwood Ingram,
who recognised it as the missing Tai-haku,
but couldn't work out how it got there,
so he grafted it, took the trees back to Japan,
and in due course, it was acknowledged
as the missing Tai-haku,
which means, amongst other things, that this tree here
is taken from the grass from that Sussex garden.
Now, why it disappeared, and even more,
why it turned up in Sussex in the 1920s, no-one knows.
The most dramatic evidence of the constant desire
to reflect nature at Kenrokuen
is in its hundreds of majestic, sculpted pine trees.
This is the Karasakinomatsu pine,
and in a garden that is full of magnificent pines,
this is probably the best of the lot.
The 200-year-old pine characterises the Japanese desire
for trees to look as natural as possible
by virtue of extreme artifice, and this isn't in any way hidden,
so the branches are propped up
and held in precise place by wooden posts,
which is all part of the pursuit of distilled nature.
This is something that is very particular to Japanese gardens,
and the bigger and older the tree,
the more prominent the props will be,
but that doesn't, in any way, detract from their magnificence.
Pines will grow in harsh mountain landscapes
and survive extreme cold,
and the Japanese revere them as a symbol of man's inner strength
in the face of adversity.
For centuries, gardeners have been trying
to recreate the natural appearance of the weathered mountain pine,
and to that end, have developed incredibly skilled
and intricate pruning techniques.
Kenrokuen's head gardener, Mr Hitoshi Shishime...
Hello.
..is in charge of this vast garden,
these hundreds of manicured ancient trees,
and he shows me what he and his team are aiming to achieve.
The idea is to prune the branches into a triangular shape,
creating space between them in accordance with ma.
And if that seems extraordinarily precise,
it is nothing compared to the next stage.
Last year's needles are stripped away,
leaving just the fresh new growth.
You do this by hand in the trees?
That must take a lot of man hours, a lot of work.
Wow!
The thought of 60 gardeners in one tree
stripping off the pine needles is just mind-boggling.
I clearly have got a long way to go
before I really get into the Japanese gardening psyche.
Japan might be a crowded and often hectic country,
but like its pruning, train travel involves precision and accuracy.
I love the way that, when you buy a train ticket,
you don't just book a seat,
but also an exact spot on the platform
where the door nearest to your seat will inevitably open before you.
Japan's gardening culture dates back over 1,500 years,
making it one of the oldest in the world.
So, I am now heading to its garden capital -
the ancient city of Kyoto.
For 1,000 years,
from the 8th century to the middle of the 19th century,
Kyoto was the capital of Japan -
the centre of government, of the military and the arts -
and there are hundreds of gardens down there in amongst the city.
So, if you want to see all the different styles
that evolved throughout that 1,000-year history,
this is the place to come.
Kyoto is unique in Japan because even in quiet backstreets,
there are temples, one after the other,
and most of them have gardens,
so that the net effect of that is that there are hundreds of gardens.
Nori Hamamoto is a local garden designer,
and I'm meeting her over tea and green-tea ice cream
to find out just why gardens are so important.
Kyoto is a city full of gardens. Why is that?
Kyoto City is surrounded by mountains,
and a lot of rivers came from the mountains.
So, the natural circumstances were very good
for making gardens in Kyoto.
Japanese gardens have a kind of reverence about them.
Is this directed at gardens or just part of a reverence for nature?
Attitude to the nature, yes.
The nature of Japan is sometimes very...strong -
sometimes too strong - like a volcano or things like that.
So, Japanese people traditionally think,
admire and respect the nature.
I've seen the most fabulous cherry blossom in the last few days.
So many people enjoy cherry blossom parties,
viewing parties.
What is it that people are celebrating?
I know the flowers are beautiful, but what does it mean?
Drinking. It's a drinking party, I think. Drinking?Yes.
And so gathering with neighbours and friends.
It's an excuse to go out and drink, and especially outside.
Well, that explains quite a lot. BOTH LAUGH
The cherry blossom inspires a release from the daily grind,
and there is a real sense of celebration and pride.
Shops rent out kimonos for photo opportunities,
and the whole nation celebrates with a carnival spirit.
Although the cherry-lined streets of Kyoto are packed,
there is an atmosphere of gentle delight.
Romance fills the petal-strewn air,
and the amazing blossom is the ideal backdrop
for wedding photos.
This is an unforgettable experience
quite unlike anything I've ever seen before.
It gives me a fresh insight
into the importance of this spring flowering.
It's a mistake to think of the cherry blossom
as being essentially a transient, fragile beauty.
It's much more robust than that.
It's about renewal and refreshing the world.
This is April 1st today - the beginning of the financial year,
the beginning of a new term, a new job,
new resolutions and a new life.
And it's that, and the energy of that,
that the blossom symbolises and celebrates.
However beautiful and important it may be,
I've come to Kyoto for more than just the cherry blossom.
Nowhere in Japan has more garden history,
and on the edge of the city,
in the grounds of the vast Daikakuji Temple,
is the Osawa Pond.
The temple was originally a palace
constructed for the Emperor Saga in the ninth century,
and he created the garden based around a large artificial lake
made by damming a nearby waterfall.
Imperial gardens of the Heian period like this one
were all essentially water gardens
made to be enjoyed not just from the banks,
but from on the water itself.
This is one of the earliest of all surviving Japanese gardens,
and certainly the earliest water garden.
It's a style known as a pond spring boating garden,
which pretty much describes it.
And the idea was that you both looked out onto the water
and saw the reflection of the mountains
and enjoyed the water itself, and also took to it on boats.
And there are stories of parties and games enjoyed by the court.
The 11th-century Tale Of Genji
beautifully describes these garden frolics...
..detailing the floating orchestras and seductions
that took place on the water.
We're all very familiar
with the red bridge in a Japanese garden
as being a really distinctive feature,
and they're often very beautiful, but they lead somewhere.
In this case, they lead to islands set in the lake,
and islands are really important in Japanese culture.
It's very aware of itself as an island nation.
More importantly, the gods resided on islands.
On this one is an ancient oak that is believed to contain spirits.
Now, in Shintoism, the indigenous religion of Japan,
many kinds of natural objects have this property,
and they are all revered.
Could be a tree. Could be a rock. It could even be a building.
And to protect those spirits, the object is wrapped in rope,
hence this wonderful thick rope bound around the oak tree.
The essence of this early style of garden is open.
The light is reflected on this great expanse of water.
But I now want to move on
to see a style of garden that is different,
in that it is intimate and enclosed, even hidden.
Around the same time as the Osawa Pond was made,
Japanese monks travelled to China
and returned with Buddhist teachings.
The first Buddhist temples in Japan
were built in the isolated spots on hills and mountains
to provide quiet places for the monks to study.
CHANTING
Half an hour north of Kyoto is the Sanzenin Temple
built in the mountainous village of Ohara in 1156.
The garden within its walls couldn't be more different
from both the open expanse of water at Osawa
or the blousy, blossom-decked streets of the city...
..because here, all is a glowing, velvety green,
created by a plant that we in the West vilify,
but which the Japanese revere - moss.
I've never seen moss like this.
It is extraordinary, the way that it's sort of slightly rolling
and bubbling and lapping up the trunks of the Japanese cedars.
And when you walk in, it has a kind of green intensity
that's like walking into a vast, cathedral-like building.
In fact, the actual temple buildings
are completely surrounded by giant trees
growing out of the sea of moss, which grows slowly
and can take years to cover a large area.
So, in Japan, it has become a symbol
of the patient virtues of tradition and antiquity.
As it's intolerant of air pollution or too much sun,
it's also valued for its sensitive nature
because only precisely suitable conditions
will allow it to thrive.
Although I know that many British people
see moss as a particularly pernicious weed
sent to blight their lawns, in fact, it's treasured in Japan.
There are over 2,500 different types of moss,
and a moss garden typically will have a number of different ones,
which will be very carefully manicured and tweaked
for their contrast and effect.
So, it is very highly prized.
The combination of the moss and the trees
inevitably creates a reverential air,
but that's punctured by these little round faces
appearing out of the moss,
and that lightens the whole atmosphere.
In fact, there is a slightly more serious side to it
because these are Bodhisattvas,
and they're there to protect the souls
of children that have died young or died before birth.
Taikan Uda is a monk at the temple.
What is the relationship between Buddhism and gardens?
Yes, absolutely.
This garden captures perfectly the spirit of the Buddhism
that came to Japan in the eighth century.
But then, 400 years later, a new brand of Buddhism came here,
and with it, a brand-new style of garden.
This is Kodaiji Temple in central Kyoto...
..and outside, like most Buddhist temples,
there are stalls selling omamori,
which are amulets dedicated to Buddhist figures.
These are good-luck charms, and they're very specific,
so you have good luck on social success...
..protection against traffic accidents,
good health there.
And the red one is "pass exams".
"Work luck." Probably need that.
"Love fortune." So, really, all your needs are sorted.
The temple was originally built in 1606 as a memorial,
and remains very calm and beautiful today.
Kodaiji was founded by the widow of a warlord.
She spent the rest of her life here mourning her fallen husband.
And as well as the spectacular covered bridge,
water and carefully placed stones,
there was another completely new element to the garden.
Known in Japanese as karesansui,
which literally translates as dry mountain water,
this is a Zen garden, and this style of gardening,
with its carefully placed rocks, raked gravel,
and minimalist planting has come to exemplify the austerity
and intellectual rigour of Zen Buddhism.
These were intended for quiet contemplation,
having first, of course, removed your boots.
This garden does have some of the recognisable features
of trees and moss,
but that moss very quickly runs out
and laps against a shore of raked gravel -
a great expanse of empty space.
You arrive at a couple of very precise features,
circles with mini cones on it, and that's it.
And that does seem like no kind of garden at all,
but when you think about Zen Buddhism
and how monks were trained very rigorously
to empty their minds, to completely remove everything
in order that there might be space for enlightenment
and a full appreciation of the world to come in,
then you see that these gardens are examples of that.
They're, if you like, pictures of the Zen mind.
Zen is really difficult to understand
and practically impossible for the Western mind.
But Zen gardens have to be tended, and as a gardener,
I think I can probably relate best to them in practical terms,
so I'm going to learn a little piece of Zen gardening.
And my lesson is taking place next door
in the sister temple, Entokuin, with the monk Hiroshi Kitayama.
The rake draws rills in the special river gravel,
so that the lines flow with the surrounding boundaries,
curving as they bend
and keeping dead parallel to straight edges.
OK. OK.Shall I have a go?
No stop-go. No stop. No stop-go. No? Well, I've got to breathe!
I've raked many a furrow in my time, but never quite like this.
The rake is very heavy. There's a lot of weight on it.
And the teeth are bamboo. Rather beautiful.
OK, so...
Eventually, remembering to breathe, I do get the hang of it.
Great. Beautiful.
The raking is a form of meditation,
and the monks would do this daily, so the breathing is very important.
So, I breathe in and slowly breathe out.
In Zen Buddhism, every human activity
is potentially an act of prayer, even raking.
So, the process becomes just as important
as the garden that it results in.
Focusing completely on what you're doing...
..not only makes you aware of the process,
but actually is very calming,
and the truth is, I often find this in my own garden -
whether you're raking or mowing or sweeping leaves,
it's a form of liberation
that I suspect most gardeners would recognise.
Zen gardens were designed as a way of translating
fashionable, 12th-century, Chinese ink paintings
into three-dimensional reality.
Misty landscapes became white sand,
and jagged mountains and islands were turned into stones.
Zen gardens were also a practical response
to the conditions of 15th-century Japan.
Master designer Yasuo Kitayama explains.
Mr Kitayama also has advice on how best to appreciate Zen gardens.
The biggest problem for the Western visitor
is that there is so much to find out
before you can really work out what you think or feel.
But these gardens are definitely still relevant today,
and in modern Japan,
they can be found in some unlikely places.
Tsurumi Station in Greater Tokyo
is probably not the first place
you'd expect to find a garden designed for quiet contemplation.
And yet, here, amongst the city bustle and the crowds,
is a garden on the station rooftop every bit as peaceful as a temple.
And I'm keen to know how this is used
by contemporary city dwellers, so I'm meeting its designer,
the Buddhist monk Shunmyo Masuno.
Tell me how relevant a garden like this is
in 21st-century Japan.
This society, many people work
and have very busy days,
so I hope that people should have the good time
to feel the fresh air and to see the beautiful sky.
So, tell me why you've chosen the elements you have
and how that relates to Zen philosophy.
Zen is very simple and not decorative,
so I thought to use only stone and soil.
Things like... You have this, the concrete and the wood.
This is not concrete.Oh, it isn't? It is soil.It is soil!
Well, there you are. There you are.Yeah.
I thought humans should feel the natural...
Yes...materials.
So, that's why I used stone and wood and soil.
No artificial... So, no artificial at all.
And how do you feel about things like the vending machine
in your garden? Does that...? You don't mind that?
I accept it.You accept it. OK.
The rooftop also has a more traditional gravel garden.
Tell me about this garden. What is happening in here?
These are stone arrangements.
Yes, I understand. It is to make them not perfection.
Imperfection is our beauty.
So, that does seem to be the key -
that if imperfection is the beauty,
that allows room for movement and change.Mm.
Another concept that's illustrated here is mu -
the expression of emptiness.
This space is just vacant.
We say mu.Mu. Mu.I understand. Nothing.Yes, nothing. Yes, yes.
We can't express everything.
That's why we keep mu - vacant space.
How do you set about doing this,
and how do you know when it is right?
Well, I always communicate with each stone.OK.
My expression is, the stone said to me,
"It's OK - this angle, this position."
The stone is talking to you?Yes.
Well, thank you very much indeed for talking to me.
Thank you.Thank you very much. It's my pleasure.
Thank you very much.Thank you.
AS VOICEOVER: I'm not sure who's supposed to stop bowing first.
There's no question that, for the average Western gardener,
it's quite demanding to come in here
and see it as just a place of beauty.
But this combination of very natural materials
with these very modern sort of intrusions
of 21st-century life need not be mutually exclusive.
They can work together.
And it does create a place for quiet reflection
in the middle of a frenetically busy city.
Zen gardens can be found right across Japan,
and with their characteristic elements
of gravel and stone, they've largely remained the same
since their initial creation in the 15th century.
But in 1939,
one designer working in the grounds of Tofukuji Temple in Kyoto
challenged that status quo.
To many modern visitors,
this is just another fascinating rock and gravel garden,
but when this was first made, it caused an uproar.
Mirei Shigemori,
now reckoned to be one of the great landscape designers
of the 20th century,
was commissioned by the abbot to create gardens around his hall.
This is the result.
The way that the stones were laid on edge
and gathered in large groups was considered shocking.
One of the reasons why there was such a furore
when this garden was made was because
it overturned conventions and traditions
that had lasted for over 1,000 years.
And it began with a book called Sakuteiki -
Notes On Gardening -
which outlined all aspects of gardening,
and amongst other things, it said, in regard to stones,
that if you placed a stone the wrong way up
or grouped them badly together,
it would bring bad luck to the household.
I first visited this garden over 10 years ago now.
I kept thinking about it in that time,
but it's not the rocks and the gravel
that keep nagging away at me.
It's the moss and the way that Shigemori used it.
Instead of just stone,
Shigemori used moss to create islands.
And on the west side of the hall,
waves of moss run into clipped azalea bushes,
creating an abstract design.
Round the corner,
past this lovely fresh green of the maple leaves,
is the garden that has haunted me.
It consists of a simple chequerboard
of paving stones and moss
in a pattern that begins geometrically uniform,
but as it moves along, starts to unravel.
Quite soon after I visited this garden,
I had a bout of ill health,
and I had a lot of time to think when I was recovering.
And amongst other things, I thought about my own mortality,
and this garden was one of the things that kept coming back,
and particularly the way that this pattern of life
that seems so regular and predictable
breaks down and dissolves and disappears,
and yet, despite all that, retains its vitality,
retains that sense of life running through all things.
And for a garden to do that so simply and beautifully is,
I believe, a work of genius.
One thing that unites all styles of Zen gardens is their use of stone,
and I've now come to the town of Okazaki,
on Japan's east coast,
which is famous for its stonemasons.
Nicknamed the stone capital of Japan,
with a chisel as its mascot,
it's been the centre of the craft since the 16th century,
and at one time, was the hub for over 350 individual craftsmen.
Today, I'm meeting one of Japan's few female stonemasons, Azusa Ueno.
Hello. Hello. Nice to meet you. Very nice to meet you.
This is fascinating.
How old were you when you began to learn the stonemason craft?
And how long does it take to become a master?
I would very much like to see a few techniques. Could I try?
Sure.Thank you.
Konnichiwa. Konnichiwa.Hello.
When you're striking it, is the angle relevant?
Right, the moment has come. SHE LAUGHS
I noticed they put their foot up, like that. So, it's just...
Is this right? Am I doing it badly?
If I were them, I'd be very worried about me ruining their work.
I wouldn't let someone come in and work in my garden like that.
I love all crafts and skills, and to be allowed to do it,
and importantly, to use their tools, was a great privilege,
but also cos it gets you closer to the heart of these objects.
It's not just knowledge. It's feeling, too.
Now, if there's one type of Japanese garden
that is almost the complete opposite to a Zen rock landscape,
it is the traditional tea garden.
Tea arrived from China in the ninth century
when Buddhist monks drank it to keep them awake
during long meditation sessions.
But over the centuries,
the drinking of it became highly ritualised,
and samurai, monks and geishas served tea
in elaborately formal ceremonies.
Today, it's as popular as ever,
harvested, traded and enjoyed in cafes and ceremonies
right across the country.
A style of garden dedicated to tea drinking
emerged in the 16th century,
and was soon to be found up and down the nation.
Tea gardens were built around teahouses,
with the approach - very carefully controlled and planted -
to be an essential part of the experience.
Today, I've come to visit the tea garden
at Kenninji Temple in Kyoto.
The temple was originally founded by a 12th-century monk named Eisai,
who's famed for first spreading tea culture across the country.
As people approached the teahouse,
they had to get rid of all the status and grandeur of office
so that they entered in as equals.
And this is where it began.
Immediately, you find yourself on a path made out of stones
that are not straight, they're not even,
they're not evenly spaced, so they're tricky to walk on.
It's difficult and you have to concentrate.
This slows and focuses the mind away from the busy world.
In fact, the tea ceremony itself
is the culmination of the approach through the garden.
The plants and rocks along the way
are meant to look as natural as possible,
creating the image of a winding path deep in the mountains,
leading to a hermit's hut.
There are few flowers, lest they distract the visitor.
As you carefully teeter along this awkward path,
you're surrounded by green.
There's the green of the foliage, the green of the moss on the ground,
and you get glimpses of the garden.
It's planted and pruned so that your view is obscured,
and the effect of this is to envelop you
and make you concentrate, and all the cares fall away.
Everything becomes focused on what is to come,
which is the tea ceremony itself.
Every tea garden had stone basins at strategic points
so you could stop and wash your hands and cleanse yourself,
and then you go and sit and wait.
And finally, when you're called...
..you have to come in
and crawl through this very low opening,
so that the last traces of self-importance are left behind.
I have previously attended a formal tea ceremony in Japan,
but today, I'm going for something a little bit more relaxed.
Thank you.
This form of tea is incredibly intense.
It's like a sort of double espresso of tea.
As part of the tea ceremony,
you have a little taste of something sweet...
..before drinking the very bitter tea...
..which is an acquired taste, but will certainly keep you awake.
But in contemporary Japan,
not all tea gardens are quite so traditional.
Behind this modern-looking gatehouse...
..I'm told that there is an unusual take on the teahouse...
..and I'm curious to see what it looks like.
This old-fashioned temple
is also the beautiful home of Mr and Mrs Inoue.
Thank you. Thank you.
But it is theIR garden that I've come to see.
The previous one was destroyed by an earthquake in 1995,
so they asked their famous architect friend,
Terunobu Fujimori,
to design a teahouse and garden in its place.
The smell of green tea is so distinctive.
But this tea garden is anything but traditional.
It is completely unique.
A traditional tea garden is clothed in green plants,
but as with all the work of Fujimori,
this one is totally different.
Here, there isn't much planting at all,
but an enormous great arch and what looks like a snake,
but in fact, that relates to the building.
This is a Buddhist temple
and the arch is the arch to heaven that you have to pass through.
And what might be seen as a snake, in fact,
is the river that you have to cross to get to heaven.
And then you approach the teahouse itself.
Now, like all teahouses,
this has a conventionally low opening,
so you have to abase yourself.
It's very small so that you crawl in.
But, unlike any other, this is a teahouse and a treehouse.
And inside here is everything you need...
..for a proper tea ceremony.
I really like the way that modernity and wit
mingles with the traditional, and it's a really clever way
of keeping those old traditions alive
in the modern world.
That compact design is evocative of one thing
that unites the country today - space, or rather the lack of it.
Although that was a tiny teahouse and a tiny garden,
actually, by Japanese standards, it was a luxury.
Most people have no space at all,
and yet that desire to grow things is evident everywhere you go.
There are pots in the street.
There are pots outside shops and houses.
And, actually, that desire has been channelled
into a very traditional art and craft,
and it's called ikebana.
Today, there are over 1,000 schools in the world teaching ikebana,
or flower arranging,
but the oldest and perhaps the most famous is Ikenobo,
set amidst a Kyoto temple.
The art of flower arranging dates back to the seventh century,
when flowers were left as offerings to gods.
The eighth shogun, Ashikaga Yoshimasa,
a great patron of the arts,
decreed that flowers left on altars should be placed in a way
that showed thought in their preparation.
I've been invited to a class here at Ikenobo,
but as it's for the advanced flower arranger,
it isn't deemed suitable for a rank novice like myself,
but just watching is fascinating enough.
The class takes place in almost total silence,
which is a mark of their respect for the art.
However, I do have a private lesson lined up,
although I first need to buy all my materials in the school shop.
The idea is that you wander around,
see what you like and select it, and then that's wrapped up for you,
and then you can go and do your flower arranging.
What I'm thinking is
it would be nice to do some sort of arrangement
that got the essence of the cherry blossom,
the essence of spring here in Japan.
No doubt it's been done before, but not by me.
And here is cherry blossom.
See, this is absolutely lovely. It's beautiful.
OK, let's give it a go.
It's a good job I put on my best socks
because I'm meeting the deputy headmistress,
Senko Ikenobo.
Hello. Hello. Hello. Nice to meet you.
I've chosen these stems.Yes.
So, please, any advice you can give me
in the spirit of ikebana would be very interesting.
OK. First of all, because you chose only these cherry blossoms...Yes.
..and only one kind... Yes. ..so I think it's very unique,
because when we arrange ikebana,
we usually pick up flowers and leaves
and we try to make a harmony between them.
But the reason...
I'm not sure the reason why you chose only one kind,
but it's really very...artistic.
I think you're being polite. I clearly failed
at the first hurdle... No, no. ..but let's push on, nevertheless.
And also the very important thing about ikebana
is we have to focus on each branch.
Right. The individual beauty.OK. I mean, the less is the more.Right.
If possible, we have to check which angle is the best.Mm-hm.
This way or this way or like this or like that.
What do you think? Oh, it's you.OK, it's me.
Because it depends on the person.
Is elegance and sophistication important?Yes. Yes.
It's also important because, when we look at ikebana,
people feel the wind blowing.
Right. So, the wind blowing. Blowing. It's very important.OK.
So, you're trying to capture
the wind blowing through the branches...Yes.
..and capturing it at a sort of perfect moment.Yes.
It's a lot to ask, isn't it? It's that perfect moment.Oh, yes.
It's a very high ideal.Yes.
Can I start cutting? Yeah. Yeah, please.
Yeah, I mean, I would just take that out there.
Is that right?Yeah. Can I do that?Yes.
At least take that off to start with.
We could take that out.
Cut from this point. Yeah.This point.
I tried.Yeah.
Please be careful. Don't worry. I've used these before.
And for example, if you find it a little bit too flat,
looks too flat...Yes. ..you can bend.Oh.
Very soft tree.Right.
You have to be very, very careful.Yes.
And...
You just bend, for example, this branch.
You... Like a little bit up.OK.
I would say that was a little bit busy,
so we cut that off, like that.
You just bend like this.
OK, you just bend it without breaking it.
Yeah, without breaking.Yeah.
You have to be very careful. Careful.
You need a very high technique in bending,
because if you cut it all, it looks a little bit empty.
I have a suspicion that she doesn't approve.
Oh, yes, yes. No, no, I think you had better try bending.
OK, I better try bending it. Yeah, because cutting is easier,
but you had better use the technique for bending.
So, we're bending.Yeah.
I think take that.
I hope to stop cutting. I'm going to stop cutting.
Don't worry. I'm going to stop cutting.
And it's been so, so interesting, actually,
that I've learnt a lot.
So, thank you. It's my pleasure. Thank you very much indeed.
And your ikebana arrangement - very good.Thank you.
She was being very polite,
but clearly, I was a profound disappointment.
But I enjoyed myself enormously,
although, like everything to do with Japanese gardens,
ikebana is so much more than first impressions may imply.
It is essentially the carefully modulated control of space, or ma,
and that captures a specific moment in time.
And you can see this everywhere you look
just as clearly as you can in a vase of flowers.
I've seen so much and crammed so much in
that I think I need to take a break.
Japanese culture is very different in lots of ways.
The more you learn, the more you realise.
The meticulous attention to detail
is as evident in their sushi as it is in their gardens,
and I'm struck just by how deliberate everything is.
Nothing is done by accident
and everything has reference points
that you really do need to know about
in order to fully appreciate them.
So, I'm going to go away, think about it,
but I shall come back.
Next time, amongst the autumn colours,
I will explore the many forms of stroll garden...
So, you should see the garden
as a scroll that you move along like that?Yes.
..and the ways the Japanese are bringing nature
to their concrete jungle...
Playing with this idea of the inside, the outside.
..with a few unexpected detours along the way.
This is not what you would expect to see in the middle of Tokyo.
-------------------------------------------
don't become a programmer (brutal truth) - Duration: 21:14.
For more infomation >> don't become a programmer (brutal truth) - Duration: 21:14. -------------------------------------------
this is why i don't do livestreams!!!!😡 - Duration: 1:42.
-------------------------------------------
Will Kaepernick play again? What we know, and what we don't - Duration: 8:01.
4:15 PM ETKevin SeifertNFL Nation CloseESPN.com national NFL writer ESPN.com NFC North reporter, 2008-2013 Covered Vikings for Minneapolis Star Tribune, 1999-2008Follow on TwitterFacebookTwitterFacebook MessengerPinterestEmailprint The announcement came Friday, seemingly out of nowhere
Colin Kaepernick and Eric Reid have settled their joint collusion grievance with the NFL, ending with little fanfare a case that has transcended the sport into the cultural debates of the country
Let's read between the lines into what we know, what we think we know -- and what we might never know
What exactly were Kaepernick and Reid claiming? Kaepernick first filed the grievance in October 2017, saying that NFL teams were in violation of the anti-collusion clause of the collective bargaining agreement (CBA)
In the grievance, Kaepernick's attorney claimed he had gone unsigned because the NFL and its owners "colluded to deprive Mr
Kaepernick of employment rights in retaliation for Mr. Kaepernick's leadership and advocacy for equality and social justice and his bringing awareness to peculiar institutions still undermining racial equality in the United States
"Editor's PicksKaepernick, Reid settle grievances against NFL The NFL, Colin Kaepernick and Eric Reid issued a joint statement Friday saying they have resolved the collusion grievances filed by the players against the league
Reid: New deal with Panthers helps grievance Safety Eric Reid is returning to the Carolina Panthers, signing a three-year contract on Monday
AAF reached out to Kaepernick, Tebow to no avail Alliance of American Football co-founder Bill Polian told The Athletic that the league spoke with quarterbacks Colin Kaepernick and Tim Tebow about joining the league, but both declined
2 RelatedBut this has gone on for years. Why would either side settle now? The case was about to reach a new level
Arbitrator Stephen Burbank was going to conduct a hearing to begin resolving the issue, probably early this spring
That would have forced both sides into a semi-public airing of grievances that could have exposed inner workings of league business, along with the details of depositions attorneys have taken with high-level executives and some owners
So did the NFL think it would lose? Or did it want to avoid discovery? The latter, most likely
It's also likely that the NFL viewed a settlement as an important milestone in moving past a controversy that drew the ire of President Donald Trump, among others
But the facts are eye-opening. Kaepernick began taking a knee during the national anthem in 2016 to protest police brutality and system racism
In a league that is in perpetual need of quarterback depth, Kaepernick isn't known to have received a single firm contract offer since he parted ways with the San Francisco 49ers in May 2017
It sure seems suspicious. Of course, but the CBA states explicitly that lack of opportunity cannot in itself be evidence of collusion
From the CBA: "The failure by a club or clubs to negotiate, to submit offer sheets, or to sign contracts with restricted free agents or transition players, or to negotiate, make offers, or sign contracts for the playing services of such players or unrestricted free agents, shall not, by itself or in combination only with evidence about the playing skills of the player(s) not receiving any such offer or contract, satisfy the burden of proof set forth
"Former 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick and Panthers safety Eric Reid have reached a settlement with the NFL concerning their collusion grievances against the league, it was announced Friday
Ed Szczepanski/USA TODAY SportsThen what did Kaepernick and Reid need to do to win? They needed to show that a "club, its employees or agents" had "entered into an agreement" to restrict or limit whether to offer them a contract, according to the CBA
In other words, they needed a "smoking gun," something league officials could easily have avoided even if they did engage in a conspiracy to keep Kaepernick and later Reid out of the league
So was there a financial settlement? The only accurate answer is we don't know. And because the agreement requires complete confidentiality on both sides, we might never know
But collusion, if found, can carry significant penalties. Had he found the league guilty, Burbank would have determined compensatory damages -- the amount a player had been damaged by the collusion
The CBA then calls for Burbank to double those damages in cases of first offense and triple them for a second offense
We'll really never know? Not unless someone breaks the confidentiality agreement. There is a small possibility that the Green Bay Packers' annual release of their accounting books could provide a clue
Each team would contribute to any financial settlement that is agreed upon, but it's more likely that the money would be deducted from league revenues rather than be a line-item charge
Colin Kaepernick has not been with an NFL team since severing his contract with the 49ers in March 2017
Greg Allen/Invision/APDoes this mean Kaepernick will play in the NFL this season? Not necessarily
Even if he had won the grievance, the CBA does not require him to be signed. The claim of collusion probably isn't what kept Kaepernick off a roster
Teams appeared to have made up their mind after the 2016 season, long before Kaepernick filed the claim
The NFL has no mechanism to force the signing of a player, and it is it is hard to conceive that the settlement included a job guarantee
Are we sure Kaepernick wants to play?2019 NFL Free Agency Teddy, Earl and Le'Veon will be available
Here's everything to know on the class. • Key offseason dates and priorities » • Experts predict: Answering top questions » • Ranking the top 50 NFL free agents » • Meet the offseason quarterback market » • Top free-agent decisions for all 32 teams » • Biggest offseason needs for every team » • Predicting QB Nick Foles' future » More NFL coverage » He has rarely talked publicly, at least about football, since leaving the 49ers
But in one of his few public comments, in September 2017, he affirmed his desire to continue playing
Kaepernick is known to have continued football-centric workouts, and at 31, he is still relatively young for a quarterback
The new Alliance of American Football reached out to gauge his interest in playing this spring, according to co-founder Bill Polian, but he ultimately did not sign a contract
Why was Reid involved? Didn't he play last season for the Carolina Panthers? Reid joined Kaepernick's grievance in May 2018 after he went unsigned during the early part of free agency
He agreed to terms with the Panthers in September 2018 and recently signed a three-year contract extension
Reid had joined Kaepernick in kneeling during the national anthem when both players were with the 49ers
So is this the end of it? It is the end of the grievance process, and after two years away from the game, Kaepernick faces longer odds to resume his career in a productive way
But as long as Kaepernick is young enough and in shape, it will be fair to question why teams are not demonstrating interest
-------------------------------------------
Ri Kyong Suk (DPRK) - Don't Ask My Name (eng sub) - Duration: 3:02.
Please don't ask for my name
Please don't ask, its just a name
What is the big deal,
about my name that you're asking for?
While sweat is being accumulated
Youth flourishes for a reason
When one leaves his name
is it then supposed to be feat in itself?
So concerning my name,
Please don't ask for it
Please don't ask for my name
Please don't ask, its just a name
What is the big deal,
about my name that you're asking for?
Think about those far from home
Young people like us, in the north
While in cold wind and snow
Is that the reason they build our railways?
So concerning my name,
Please don't ask for it.
Without asking my name
I just want you to understand the feeling
Burning in my chest
Please understand my sentiment
Our Party that raised and embraced me
Whom we offer our loyalty to
That feat I do like to brighten
Lets keep that name in our mind
So concerning my name,
Please don't ask for it.
So concerning my name,
Please don't ask for it.
Please don't ask for it
Please don't ask for it
-------------------------------------------
Prince Philip crash: The REAL reason the Royals DON'T wear seatbelts REVEALED - Duration: 2:11.
Both Prince Philip and Queen Elizabeth II have recently been spotted driving around without seatbelts
Last month, the Duke of Edinburgh was involved in a two-vehicle traffic accident near the Queen's Sandringham estate in Norfolk where he escaped without any injuries
So why don't the Royals wear seat belts?Why don't the Royals wear seatbelts? The Royals actually have a particular reason for not wearing seatbelts
Simon Morgan, a former Royal protection officer has revealed the reason has to do with their own personal safety
According to Mr Morgan sometimes Royals don't wear seat belts in order to escape quickly in an emergency
He told Hello magazine: "There are always anomalies. READ MORE: QUEEN ELIZABETH II: THE ONE THING THE MONARCH REFUSES TO TRAVEL WITHOUT "In the threat and risk matrix it's a matter of looking at each individual situation to decide what is the best way of achieving what needs to be achieved
"For example, considering that a quick entry or exit to a vehicle is easier when people aren't strapped into seat belts
" He added: "Also, what is significant about this event or situation? "Is an individual's look and appearance important? READ MORE: PRINCE PHILIP CRASH: DUKE WRITES TO INJURED WOMAN "And also an individual's choice
"Protection is a very unique area of policing and there are a lot grey areas, but you are always judging each situation to weigh up the risks and threats with the outcomes you are trying to achieve
" However, in Britain, it is illegal not to wear a seatbelt under UK law unless a doctor provides a medical exemption
The law states: "You must wear a seat belt if one is fitted in the seat you're using
READ MORE: MEGHAN MARKLE SECURTY FEARS: DUCHESS URGED TO STOP CLOSING HER OWN CAR DOOR "You can be fined up to £500 if you don't wear a seat belt when you're supposed to
" And after news broke Prince Philip's Land Rover turned off the seat belt alarms, road safety campaigners have reacted in fury
A source said Jaguar Land Rover was told to disable the beeping alarms on vehicles supplied to the Royals
The source told The Sun: "It's so the driver doesn't have the continuous warning beeps if they don't wear a seatbelt
"
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét