https://www.youtube.com/embed/OWcf7RN7mdQ
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Songs] Music]
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https://www.youtube.com/embed/Swrr92xQy2w
i think the concept of reworking and reinterpreting another designer's work is very exciting i think it creates an opportunity for there to be creative tension i love the idea of reinterpreting that actually i even more love the idea of creating a moment between two identities to culture a moment of meeting whatever this is in my favorite color already rice wow gorgeous when i opened the box from valentino for the very first time i was incredibly nervous because i'm a bit of a planner so i like to know what i'm getting in advance beautiful but it was completely kept a secret so when it arrived i opened up the box and was this beautiful fuchsia pink oat couture dress with these incredible pleats laying it on the table you really start to appreciate the level of work and craftsmanship that has gone into this garment and it's quite a lot of fabric on it not only the silk taffeta but inside it's lined with a very soft pink teal and then under there a very hard and even harder tool it really is a work of art and you almost have to just stand and be really arrested by its beauty even if it does come apart i think we will just replete the section that we need yeah stressful but it'll be okay it was very exciting this idea of reworking and recontextualizing another designer's pieces because it speaks to the conversations we're having already around this idea of overproduction you know instead of making new things let's look at what we already have and try and upcycle and reinterpret and change that the look that tab sent me was the very classic contemporary suit done with the blankets from his history his heritage i love the idea of reinterpreting i even more love the idea of creating a moment between two identities to culture i'm italian we are here in roma and we're working on a work of a human that comes from another part of the world and i wanted to get this heritage into my own culture which is the culture from a conversation always comes something something different especially when when you talk with people that are different from from you that have different stories of course i still feel that fashion is a self-expression is a language actually the the things that impressed me the most was this letter the one that tebby sent me he says something that is very moving to me and parallel tribe called the bassot and blankets form a very big part of our culture so i wanted to light this fabric but also this his culture and so that was the very starting point of this collaboration work or interpretation whatever you are calling i often say i'm not a great verbal communicator so to make up for that i use my clothes in a way to almost speak on my behalf i really wanted to take this out couture piece and move it into my universe my context and especially my way of working which is more in a really to wear context so for the dress i'm thinking it's going to break my heart but i'm going to completely unpick it remove the skirt part remove the top part and use one of my patterns to re-cut it as a very elevated trench coat and with the leftover fabric i think we're going to create a wide leg pair of pants with a very generous cuff on it and a matching shirt the cape is the the purest expression of future because it's so simple so pure and it's done with uh just cut and super knot decoration we deconstructed the suit actually and we we are applying the suit the the fabric on top of the cape giving shape to the cape but using the blanket as an embroidery saw between the cape as expression of couture and the blanket that is expression of debbie's culture i think this creates a conversation and a good tension between our history and his heritage i was very excited to work with pia paolo on this project i deeply respect what pierre paulo does as a as a designer i think his relationship to color his relationship to proportion is so fresh and i think he's certainly contributed to the changing conversation around what old creature is i love it clip there and it creates a really beautiful shaped hat i thought tepe has something to say he's from south africa which is i think it's difficult it's not exactly in the middle of fashion i think we share same values because talking about identities being faithful to who you are trying to face another world i think it's it's interesting i think the connection has to be human first of everything actually i don't have idea of what tev will do i sent him a very say classic in volume future tough address and i hope that he will handle it in his own way i think i've been respectful of his work but i've worked with my own instruments and i hope he will do the same i expect that he's going to do the opposite of what i'm doing so taking something uh and ready to it and moving it into his very high old couture universe i'm almost doing the opposite in a lot of ways taking this incredible piece that he's created at valentino and moving it into ready to wear where more people essentially can't see themselves in it what i did there was a exactly the mix between creating something which was the connection between your uh identity and my own identity it was actually quite intimidating because it arrived in like a very big metal flight case with not only one but like two keys but once we opened it you really get such a even bigger appreciation of like okay turn what uh pia pilot does because you know it's it's precision to look absolutely effortless you know and everything like nothing was out of place and i think the exciting challenge with it was using absolutely everything the zips the corsetry um the construction the tube i felt like if i was going to un-pick the beautiful cleats um on the waist i was going to just get struck down by lightning so we just preserved all the plisay pleats and moved it into the armhole and then the white tube that was inside the dress um we took for dying with this incredible dye master called paul in the south of johannesburg and we matched the pink to the exact level um as the as the original fabric on top so there was a lot of there was a lot to play with it was a lot of fabric right it was a lot of memory as i told you i love the the fact that this this fabric was originally a blanket and was it was definitely part of your culture i i wanted to be to yes to light the your identity your culture and your heritage with something that could be uh more like italian kind of cucu it's like a melting between the two the cape is a symbol of you know italian madonnas the renaissance culture and it's also a symbol of cujul because it is the purest shape in couture the fabric was the the starting point of the process and so what we did was to cut the the fabric in order to give it a different placement to a light the the fabric itself so i used a different fabric because there were not as much to to yeah i wanted to use the fabric as the embroidery itself or the of the game i'm very happy of you know this this the connection we created because i felt that even in yours there's something something that came out from our meeting and that's it so it's not something that i could do alone or nor you could do alone so yeah it's the result of the meeting of two humans which i like in my own work i really do love throwing opposites together just that idea of things that shouldn't even be together just like being meshed into one thing i think that's where a certain magic can happen the final look reflects the respectful conversation we we have in a way it reflects the roots of table his tribe it became a suit and now he had a new transformation becoming a cape because of how i grew up i used to be so embarrassed about everything around me but like i've made it my own personal mission to almost take that and move it into the echelons of luxury you know i think people have really stale ideas about what african fashion is i just want to show people that we're very nuanced so it's like a cape in a facing contemporary and it's of course the end of this path we had with tabeth i just hope that tebbe will recognize himself i think when you explore collaborative efforts like that and you test things that are very disparate i think when they come together it forms something new altogether something challenging and i think this project was exactly that i'm very happy i have to say that what i saw because at the end the challenge was to to reflect two stories to identities two big cultures melting together into something that could reflect both together you
https://www.youtube.com/embed/OF9z_Yibuxk
To us. To us being more fabulous, gorgeous, making more money. This is Sandton, Johannesburg. The richest square mile in Africa. Not one person here is a weak . We're African all-stars. To be young, African, famous. That's the most beautiful feeling. I don't know what you do to men. Men never get over you. Girl, it's the Ugandan sauce. You gotta give me some of that . They call me the OG, and I'm just a winner in general. I know myself, I'm a player.
You will know about me. -I feel it. -Let's see what the vibes are. I always come out on top, and that makes me a boss lady. Being rich and famous is not easy. You messed up. Diamond has kids with this woman. He said, "I want to jump your bones now." Zari's looking good. How could you break the bro code? -You don't touch your friend's ex. -Keep your hands off her titties. It just went zero to 100 real quick! I want castles where you expect to see princesses. -Yes. -But you're getting this. There's some bones to be picked between the women. You can't tell my husband I'm insecure. How do you know him? -You are very insecure. -Pow! -And he is not even my type. -Pow, pow! -Do you think there's gonna be fire? -So much fire. -Let's go. -You're coming across as a little girl. Is this how we want everybody to speak? You guys are dividing this friendship and this group.
Follow and like, and shut your mouth. We're in the thick of the war. -Bye, . -Have a nice day. Shoot me right now..
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https://www.youtube.com/embed/liYKQlhJ-CM
♪♪ -Hey, what's up, everyone? I'm J.J. Johnson. I'm the chef and founder of Fieldtrip in Harlem. I'm making West African peanut sauce with some udon noodles. It's gonna be super delicious and you're gonna want to cook it for everybody you know. I'm going to make the peanut sauce. Small dice on the onion. I'm going to use half of this onion. So, listen, there's five mother sauces right now. Tomato, bechamel, veloute, espagnole, hollandaise. And that's how you learn the cuisines of those regions of the world, through the mother sauces, in culinary school; I want culinary schools to add the West African peanut sauce and then culinary schools from around the world will be learning what West African food is all about.
And that's where it starts, right with the mother sauces. I don't like to peel my carrot. I like to taste a carrot before I peel it. If it tastes nice and sweet with the skin on, it's great. I'm going to small dice these carrots too. And the flavor here is gonna be a little bit spicy, a little bit sweet. You don't need them to be the perfect size because you're gonna blend this all up at the end. So, some oil. Onions -- have my pan at a medium heat. And add some salt just cause I don't want to get any color on my onions. Sweat those out for thirty seconds. I'm gonna throw my carrots in. I'm gonna add salt again. I'm gonna let these go. -Smash my garlic. Gonna small-dice this here too. Normally I would add garlic in first, but I want the garlic just a little bit of heat because I want the spiciness in the garlic.
When you talk about mother sauces, they come from a specific region in the world. And none of the mother sauces include Africa, which is one of the largest continents in the world. You learn cuisine through mother sauces so if there's no mother sauce that is taking us through West Africa, then how can you understand the food? So a little bit of celery, gonna sweat this down, and add a little bit more oil, a little bit more of salt. I love seasoning in layer, so everything is getting seasoned evenly. So I seasoned my carrots, my celery, my onions. Nobody's being disrespected in the pan. Tomato. Again, another medium dice, or small dice. I want the seeds and the guts. I want everything from the tomato in there for that flavor. Plum tomatoes are good, good balance of water and sweet flavor.
And then add some cumin, not powdered cumin, cumin seeds. I went this cumin, the seeds to pop, and you get all that nice flavor from that fresh cumin when it hits the oil. This is really smelling amazing. So good. So a couple of keys here. I'm going to add in the tomato paste first and I'm going to pincage this, and you know pincaging means separating the oil in the fat, but really cooking the paste to ignite the flavor so it doesn't taste like canned tomato paste.
I'm gonna let that cook for a couple minutes. I'm gonna get my peanut butter ready. Unsweetened peanut butter. And it's okay if the oil separates on the top. That's some good peanut butter. If your peanut butter doesn't separate, you should question the peanut butter maker, because peanut has oil in it and it should separate because it's... ...it's a liquid. Now, I'm going to add in my peanut butter. My history with the sauce is I cooked in Ghana in 2011. That's where my inspiration has always come from. I look through food to the West African lens everywhere I go when I travel. The next largest population of West Africans in the world is Brazil. And in this certain region in Brazil, the Japanese and the West Africans live together and they eat stewy meets with pasta or noodles.
So this was my inspiration of, you know, doing research and really seeing that these cultures really have an influence from West Africa from a food perspective. And that's what I celebrate. So you can start to see the peanut butter and the oil starting to separate. That's really good stuff. I'm going to turn this down so we don't burn the peanut butter. I'm going to add in the tomatoes and add in a little bit of my stock. I'm gonna stir this up, bring it to a simmer, as you can see. I'm gonna add the rest of the stock, or a little bit more stock just to see when it reduces. Gonna add a bay leaf. I'm gonna cut this bird's eye chili in half for some spice, with the seeds and the stem, because the stem is the spiciest part of the pepper in any pepper -- I learned that from a grandmother in her kitchen in Ghana when they were making their hot sauce.
And when she would add the stems in and blend it up, the fragrance and the aroma and the spice would just be at another level, so... Okay, let me add in the cilantro. Give it this nice, herbaceous flavor. I don't like to take the stems off. I think a lot of us remove the stems from our herbs and the stems have really great flavor. I'm gonna add that in. Gonna bring it to a hard simmer. Let it go for about 10 to 15 minutes. I'm going to make the udon noodles now, or the base for the udon noodles. So this time I'm using a yellow onion. And a little more oil here; salt. Okay, carrots. The food past of West African food around the world doesn't come from a celebrated moment in life.
There was West African slaves, they were taken around the world. When they didn't want to do the work, then there was other cultures that came in -- so you had the migrant Chinese workers, you had the migrant Vietnamese workers, the migrant Japanese workers that filled in to do the work because West African slaves refused to do it. I researched those places and I figure out how to make super crave-able amazing food around it. Let me check this West African peanut sauce. Ooh, yeah, look at that. It's coming together nice. I'm going to blend this sauce. I'm gonna blanch off my udon noodles. So you'll just drop them into some hot simmering water, doesn't need to be like a hard boil, for about two minutes. At a young age my grandmother injected DNA -- like, food DNA into me, like, I didn't watch cartoons at a young age, I was, like, in the kitchen with her.
I don't know if I was really cooking. I was there peeling carrots and onions, supposedly. My kids, they're in the kitchen with me all the time. I believe that if you cook with your kids in the kitchen, they will eat better because they feel like they're involved. You're able to teach your children the world through food. So, some udon noodles here, some peanut sauce. Ooh! Look at that! Little salt... Black pepper. The final touches -- some edamame. ♪♪ Just going to add a little bit of fresh lemon juice here.
Brighten it up. All right. Let's plate this up. A little bit of these edamame on top. ♪♪ Some Thai basil, little bit of mint, a little bit of basil flavor. It's going to be creamy. It's going to be like, goodness. Good. Great nutty flavor. You get a little bit of the cumin, a little heat from the bird's eye chili. And the basil goes so good with the peanut butter, get a little bit of that mint flavor, a little bit of the -- that nice sweetness. So good that you need to click the recipe below and come uptown to Fieldtrip between 115th and 116th on Malcolm X Boulevard, right in front of the 2 and the 3 train, and you can see me there.
♪♪ ♪♪.
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/west-african-peanut-sauce-with-udon-noodles-how-to/
it looks like he's quite badly injured from it looks like the size of that injury it looks like he tangled with another big elephant and it looks like a test punch or something he's pulled out a lot of his insides so this is quite a serious injury and that's why he was probably trying to rest his head up on that on that tree okay so shame boy now we can't really see what's going on on the other side well a lot of you were wondering would Elif other elephants come round to inspect the carcass and indeed there are now it's a young elephant bull probably I'd say between 25 and 30 years old and that was killed by a much bigger bull probably around 40 years old the big bull was in the must must is a heightened hormonal stage that African bull elephants have when they are wanting to mate so they've got lots of testosterone and there can be quite unpredictable and aggressive when they are in that state and massive carcass like this will produce a huge amount of food for vultures for elephants for Lions for hyenas oh he just popped the stomach he just popped the stomach here we go oh so this is not for sensitive viewers beware be warned as hyenas just popped open the elephant stomach that's been filling with a gas throughout the day so now the smell is well and truly out and if you had enough now a new full hyena and now you'll watch the vultures immediately take that gap now for this many vultures it's a very small gap look at them clambering over each other to try get in their last little flurry something that pushed all the way out hyenas coming back might chase them hmm making way making room well the hyena Oh it's the vulture army and that hyena is giving up the battle with the vultures just look at them descend amazing be the last of the real proper meetin in they'll just be little bits around and you'll find the vultures will feed a little bit they'll kind of eat as they go and you'll find lioness will kind of come in and out as they have been over the course of the sort of last a few days but we're gonna get a situation now we're gonna get very in the soil in the way of lions or leopard a dark either one of them are going to come into this area it's still a lot of kind of Bones here but and smell but it really isn't much for lions or later this caucus is a bit rotten for both of them I don't think they'd really be interested but you can see the power that hyenas possess it really is amazing
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https://www.youtube.com/embed/RzT-NqqazDw
The individual vocal singing is Wizkid. He'' s a Nigerian singer. As well as this moment, when Wizkid sings on this track, was a huge deal for a musical genre It'' s called Afrobeats. It ' s high-energy, autotune-heavy, with a constant percussive beat as well as a kind of electro-hip-hop sound. It'' s likewise way even more than that. pop music all over the world. It'' s the tale of Africa ' s social impact, He'' s one of the most significant Afrobeats stars in the globe. Today, SARZ is one of the top Afrobeats producers out there, as well as he'' s a huge component of why Afrobeats appears the means it does. Afrobeat was Fela Kuti'' s large band, jazz-style, Afrobeats is entirely different. It'' s electronic, catchy; the noise of urban millennial Africa. As well as there'' s likewise this, and also certainly the kick drums. it simply made every little thing integrated. Also, there are keys. And also, include her vocals to it, as well as we have Maradona."" So, as African as this appears, it also appears. universal, like any person can hear this ... - ... And associate with it? - And also connect to it. As well as for me, that'' s a winner. This is The Beat FM, a London radio station. that plays nearly completely Afrobeats. - We'' re still in the UK.This is Afrohits on The Beat London 103.6 FM. Maintain it on The Beat! Allow'' s go!- As soon as it came, it simply took control of. DBoy and also Shopsy Doo are DJs here. And also they state this noise is anywhere in London. - The only songs they intend to hear their events, at their clubs,. at their occasions, is African prominent songs, a.k.a. Afrobeats. The Beat FM is possessed by a Nigerian firm. Their sis terminal is one of the greatest stations in Lagos. And if you ask these people why Afrobeats is removing. Bigger than the songs itself. I went back to Nigeria when I was 11 years old. Afrobeats faucets right into one of the most loyal. and prevalent fan bases on the planet: the Nigerian diaspora.Any area on the planet where there are Nigerians, Afrobeats allows.- The Nigerian diaspora is without a doubt one of the most essential. part of promoting Afrobeats to the remainder of the globe. Afrobeats has only been able to spread out around the globe as a result of YouTube,. and also social media, and streaming systems like Spotify as well as iTunes. As well as that ' s done something actually crucial. for'Afrobeats artists back in Nigeria. It ' s permitted them to in fact make cash from selling their songs.- Do you have an iTunes account? - No, I put on ' t. -Exactly. Spotify isn ' t available in the majority of Africa.'And also Nigeria is among great deals of countries where Apple ' s. settlement regulations make iTunes nearly difficult to utilize. The major songs circulation system in Nigeria is this: Road hawkers offering pirated music.These individuals can get you practically any type of. of the most popular Afrobeats tracks.
- You have music? In Lagos, Africa ' s biggest city, thousands. of CDs like these are scorched everyday.'And when it isn ' t taking place in the roads, it ' s happening. online, where lots of young people download complimentary music. -Provide me Tiwa Savage. And while it ' s casual as well as disorganized, it ' s quite reliable. The trouble is that it ' s awful for artists. Also as Nigeria ' s music scene flourishes, the. Or else, you can just truly generate income. from shows, wedding celebrations, ringback tones. - The origin and also the heart of the music is in Africa. -Twenty years from currently, you ' ll have appears coming from every edge. And also that ' s when we ' ll have our sector. Eze desires to develop a music distribution network in Africa that ' s so strong, music won ' t have to travel to London, or to New york city, for artists to make cash. African musicians can generate income selling their music in Africa. As well as for Universal, this is larger than just Afrobeats. -We have many various sounds, so numerous different. markets, and we still need to connect to every other. Eze claims a continent with greater than 54 nations, with over. a billion people shouldn ' t be reduced to selling one noise. And that ' s what Afrobeats has actually unlocked. There ' s a whole lot extra going on musically in Africa than just Afrobeats. Due to the fact that if the increase of Afrobeats proves anything, it ' s that markets from Lagos to London are prepared for even more. And additionally sign up for the Quartz network for even more video clips similar to this one. And also when it isn ' t taking place in the streets, it ' s happening. And also while it ' s informal and unstructured, it ' s pretty effective. And also that ' s when we ' ll have our market. Eze desires to construct up a songs circulation network in Africa that ' s so strong, songs won ' t have to take a trip to London, or to New York, for artists to make money. There ' s a lot much more going on musically in Africa than simply Afrobeats.
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/afrobeats-is-the-nigerian-sound-taking-over-pop-music/
(lively pop music) ♪ Homegrown alligator, see you later ♪ ♪ Gotta hit the road, gotta hit the road ♪ ♪ Something changed in the atmosphere ♪ ♪ Architecture, unfamiliar ♪ ♪ I could get used to this ♪ ♪ Time flies by in the yellow and green ♪ ♪ Stick around and you'll see what I mean ♪ ♪ There's a mountain top that I'm dreaming of ♪ ♪ If you need me, you know where I'll be ♪ ♪ I'll be riding shotgun underneath the hot sun ♪ ♪ Feeling like a someone ♪ ♪ Someone, someone ♪ ♪ I'll be riding shotgun underneath the hot sun ♪ ♪ Feeling like a someone ♪ ♪ We're south of the equator, navigator ♪ ♪ Gotta hit the road ♪ ♪ Gotta hit the road ♪ ♪ Deep sea diving round the clock ♪ ♪ Bikini bottoms, lager tops ♪ ♪ I could get used to this ♪ ♪ Time flies by in the yellow and green ♪ ♪ Stick around and you'll see what I mean ♪ ♪ There's a mountain top that I'm dreaming of ♪ ♪ If you need me, you know where I'll be ♪ (ball hitting bat) ♪ I'll be riding shotgun underneath the hot sun ♪ ♪ Feeling like a someone ♪ ♪ Someone, someone ♪ ♪ I'll be riding shotgun underneath the hot sun ♪ ♪ Feeling like a someone.
♪ ♪ We got two in the front ♪ ♪ Hey ♪ ♪ Two in the back ♪ ♪ Hey ♪ ♪ Sailing along ♪ ♪ And we don't look back, back, back ♪ ♪ Back, back, back, back, back, back ♪ ♪ Time flies by in the yellow and green ♪ ♪ Stick around and you'll see what I mean ♪ ♪ There's a mountain top that I'm dreaming of ♪ ♪ If you need me, you know where I'll be ♪ ♪ I'll be riding shotgun underneath the hot sun ♪ ♪ Feeling like a someone ♪ ♪ Someone, someone ♪ ♪ I'll be riding shotgun underneath the hot sun ♪ ♪ Feeling like a someone ♪ ♪ I'll be riding shotgun underneath the hot sun ♪ ♪ Feeling like a someone ♪ ♪ Someone ♪ ♪ I'll be riding shotgun underneath the hot sun ♪ ♪ Feeling like a someone, someone, someone, someone ♪ (upbeat trumpet music) ♪ Shotgun underneath the hot sun ♪ ♪ Feeling like a someone ♪ ♪ See what I mean ♪ ♪ I'll be riding shotgun underneath the hot sun ♪ ♪ Feeling like a someone ♪ - Thank you very much.
(crowd cheering).
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/george-ezra-shotgun-official-lyric-video/
https://www.youtube.com/embed/w6q9obdfe3c
It may be hard to believe that products based on racial stereotypes survived well into the 21st century. There was always these friends I had breakfast with and they always would take out their Aunt Jemima jug. I haven't really heard of any other syrups, so I usually just gravitate towards that one. It just seems like a super exploitation of a stereotype. What do we want? Justice! And when do we want it? Now! It took widespread protests in 2020 to send some companies a wake-up call.
But even as some of this controversial branding slowly disappears off store shelves, there could be an even more insidious and harder to fix form of racial bias coded into the technologies that have become ubiquitous in everyday life. Start your day with natural freshness from Darlie. One of the most popular toothpaste brands in East Asia, Southeast Asia, is called Darlie Toothpaste. Darlie is owned by Colgate-Palmolive and a local partner, and has a long history, goes back to, I think, 1930s. And it originally started out as Darkie toothpaste.
The packaging was pretty explicit. It had a picture of minstrel singer in blackface on the package with the big smile with white teeth. This came about at a time when movies like "The Jazz Singer" with Al Jolson were very popular. ♪ Smile, Darkie, smile for me ♪ Darkie Toothpaste gives you a cool, fresh, tingling taste. You see how this is working in terms of marketing. There's nothing wrong with wanting white teeth, but when you contrast that with this jet-black person, the message is very clear. If you don't want to have dark teeth, you don't want anything dark, use Darkie. It will solve that problem. They changed the name in English to Darlie, so one letter gets rid of the problem. They also got rid of the packaging, so it was no longer just a picture of a man in blackface. On the box, it was somebody who was in a top hat, and there was a black and white contrast, still getting the point across, like, look "black, white," but it wasn't blackface.
That said, though, they didn't change the name in Chinese. The issue of having these kinds of brands with these racist legacies, it's a bit more complicated here in Asia than it is in other parts of the world, in part, just because of the different racial dynamics in Asia. You don't have a lot of Black people. And so, people just don't think about these issues the same way. So there's less pressure domestically to do anything about them. Meanwhile, across the world, the United States has its own version of the Darlie story, in a product familiar to many people on their breakfast table.
There were two Black families in the town I grew up in. And Aunt Jemima was literally the only Black person I knew most of my life. We used to use it a lot when we were kids and making pancakes in the morning and using the syrup too. I had good memories from my childhood, using it all the time. Well, I don't necessarily think Aunt Jemima was racist. I felt like it was just a brand that named it by that, and nothing more than that really. At the time of Aunt Jemima's inception, 1889, this was something where it was marketed to White folks. You have this very recent memory back then of just slavery, what it meant to people and what subservience meant in terms of not only a proposition but a role in the American way. The gentleman who came up with the idea for the Aunt Jemima motif and brand, Chris Rutt, he attended a minstrel show in Missouri in the 1880s, where he saw a White man in blackface performing a minstrel role as a mammy to target and make fun of African Americans, but also African American women. And it's out of that performance that Rutt got together with his collaborator, a guy by the name of Underwood, to come up with this marketing strategy for the Pearl Milling Company's brand of self-raising flour.
In the 1920s, Quaker Oats bought Pearl Milling Company, increasing the market share and cultural presence of the brand. Around the same time, mob violence and new forms of repression against African Americans were becoming more widespread. In the small Missouri town where the milling company behind Aunt Jemima's was based, a 19-year-old Black man was lynched in 1933 after he was accused of making a pass at a White woman. That's the immediate context, because if you think about it, in comparison to the sort of brutal lynching of a young African American man, Aunt Jemima's something very different.
It's a contrast to that sort of threat of Black masculinity. Aunt Jemima is the embodiment of the sort of safe, loyal, trusting house servant of slavery times. So that imagery of Aunt Jemima was both reassuring and nostalgic to White Americans, and particularly White Southerners. Nostalgia is an important emotion. People buy products on emotion. For generations, frosty mornings have seemed warmer with stacks of... Aunt Jemima Buckwheats. Quaker tweaked the brand image over time, replacing the kerchief on the Aunt Jemima character's head with a plaid hairband in 1968. And again, in 1989, by adding pearl earrings, a lace collar and then-fashionable perm hairstyle. It's got more maple in it. In the early '90s, a commercial campaign starring performer Gladys Knight tried to further normalize Aunt Jemima by showing how much African Americans themselves loved the product.
But even after the brand was acquired by PepsiCo in 2001, some still felt that the minor branding shifts over the years were mostly a convenient corporate distraction from a lingering racial bias. Aunt Jemima was a very strong brand, strong enough where it was never discontinued. And when we look at these products, the ethos of them and just being easy, ready-made products, that was the whole design.
To bring in these caricatures, to convey this ease as if you have this person, "Mammy," in your kitchen, cooking the pancakes for you. It's that easy that it's as if someone else did it for you. So racism is commerce, and in terms of this marketing, unfortunately it was hinged on a lot of this. Aunt Jemima buttermilk pancakes. Perfect pancakes in 10 shakes. This is a classic example of a corporation commercializing and capitalizing on racial stereotypes, and making in the process billions and billions of dollars in profit. Aunt Jemima is history. Quaker Oats announcing today that it is retiring both the logo and the name of the 130-year-old brand. Quaker, the latest company to take action as demonstrations protesting racial inequality continue across the country.
PepsiCo has recognized that we are in one of those moments, and that's to not lose market share, and to seem as though it's continuing to be relevant, they need to make this attempt. And so, they've done that with the Pearl Milling Company branding. Now the Pearl Milling Company branding sort of harken backs to the very beginning of this in St. Joseph, Missouri, that era in relation to racial violence. I don't know that it goes far enough to separate it from that racist and oppressive past that so many African American people were exposed to. While Aunt Jemima was probably the most notorious mainstream brand to face a reckoning after the 2020 protests, a few others, such as Land O'Lakes and Uncle Ben's, have also come under scrutiny in the wake of the renewed conversations around systematic racism. As corporations continue to navigate how to address racial stereotypes in advertising while still protecting profits, there's a whole other arena now where the problem of embedded racism may be even harder to detect and harder to stamp out.
I think my blackness is interfering with the computer's ability to follow me. As you can see, I do this, no following. Not really, not really following me. I back up, I get really, really close to try to let the camera recognize me, not happening. Now, my White coworker, Wanda, is about to slide in the frame, you'll immediately see what I'm talking about. Wanda, if you would, please. Sure. It stems from the roots, and AI is just the next branch.
Everything is the exact same when it comes to the application, the technology behind it. Because when you look at who's in the room, it's not Black people who are testing these AI algorithms. The system I was using worked well on my lighter skin friend's face, but when it came to detecting my face, it didn't do so well, until I put on a white mask. There's a really groundbreaking piece of research that I think many people sort of associate with this concern and movement around AI fairness and bias, and that's the 2018 research done by Joy Buolamwini and Timnit Gebru. They were trying to figure out whether popular facial-recognition programs could correctly pick out the gender of different photographs. And what they found was that the facial-recognition software that they looked at, which was from Microsoft, IBM, and Face++, misidentified darker-skinned women far more frequently.
And a few months later, Buolamwini along with Deborah Raji, published a subsequent paper that looked at Amazon's cloud facial-recognition program, which is called Rekognition. They were already pitching it for use by police and by immigration services, and we pretty much said, "Well, these products are already out there in the market. Do they actually work for faces that look like ours? Darker, female faces." What we found was that these models were performing at less than 70% accuracy for darker female faces, while performing at pretty much 100% accuracy for lighter male faces, revealing a discrepancy in the performance of these systems for different demographic groups, and in particular, sort of endangering the lives of those that would be impacted by the deployment of these systems.
Eventually Microsoft fixed its facial-recognition software, and big tech companies, including Amazon and IBM, said they would stop selling facial-recognition products to the police. Some local governments have also passed laws regulating facial-recognition software, or banning its use in policing, but there's no federal law regulating its use. At the same time, there are other companies that sell their facial-recognition software to police departments. And there've been at least three cases of Black men who are suing because they say that they were wrongly flagged by this facial-recognition software. Police came after them because the software told them that they were a suspect they were looking for. This is what happened in the case of Robert Williams, who was one of the first recorded cases of a false facial-recognition match escalating to a false arrest. I picked that paper up and hold it next to my face. And I said, "This is not me." I was like, "I hope you all don't think all Black people look alike." And then he says, "The computer says it's you." Facial recognition is not the only example of algorithmic bias.
Machine learning, a subset of AI, powers many technologies. Huge data sets are used to train machine-learning models to make predictions. So we want a computer, for example, to learn the difference between a dog and a cat. We can show the computer a lot of examples of what a dog looks like, show the computer a lot of examples of what a cat looks like. And as a result of that, the computer kind of figures out that, well, pointy ears means a cat. Whiskers might mean a cat. Floppy ears means a dog, and uses these features in order to differentiate between any new image that it might see of what could potentially be a dog or a cat. If all of your cats are white and all of your dogs are gray and black, what happens if you put in a photo of a black cat? All of the cats that this algorithm has learned are cats are white.
Everything that it's seen is black is a dog. And so, the algorithm may decide, oh, this is black, it must be a dog. In reality, it's a black cat. Sometimes a data set that lacks diversity is the problem. Other times, the design of the model is the issue. It can be a completely unaccountable process. These data sets are so large. The AI system is analyzing data that they haven't, they can't even know the full scope of. It's sort of on the order of millions and millions of examples. The algorithm is sort of identifying patterns in order to create a relationship between inputs and outputs, but those patterns are not necessarily things that humans can understand or see very well. These algorithms should be able to learn over time, they should be able to incorporate new data from the people using it. Even if you create an algorithm, you check it for bias and it's fine, the new data, the way people use the algorithm, could work the algorithm over time and make it biased.
You know as an example of what could go wrong, a ProPublica article looked at software that's used to predict future criminals. Who is more likely or less likely to commit a crime? And a ProPublica investigation found that that algorithm, which was pretty widely used, was biased against Black people. And the issue here is that that algorithm gets used for all sorts of things. It gets used for deciding who gets what sort of bail, who gets what sort of sentence, who gets parole. And the algorithm was considering Black defendants as a greater risk than White defendants. And ProPublica tracked some of these cases, and it actually turned out that the White defendant did re-offend and the Black defendant didn't. The unwillingness on the part of some tech companies to fully disclose their algorithms makes it hard to hold them accountable.
In April, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission warned that it could crack down on companies that use biased AI software. But overall, regulation has been slow. So we're only going to see these AI systems being more and more prevalent, invisibly ubiquitous in society. If we don't do a good job of really thinking about how we're going to hold them accountable now, it's going to be even much more difficult later on to try to reel things back.
Just as with the ongoing fight to create more equitable political and socioeconomic systems, overcoming racism in product design may require more than simply renaming, rebranding or recoding. These changes, although helpful, only scratch the surface of the deeper problem. It just says a lot about corporate America when Black people ask for equality for hundreds of years, and then they're heard in a span of three months last year, and the solution was changing a box of pancakes..
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/how-product-design-was-transformed-by-2020/
https://www.youtube.com/embed/Zr6tC-ihIEE
- Oh, yeah, it's on and cracking. Let's do it then, we got the top six answers on the board. Points of double let's quit playing around. - (exhales) - Here we go. Name or part of a chicken that South Africans love to eat? (ringing sound) - The drumstick. - The drumstick. (crowd cheers) (buzzing sound) - Ooh! (crowd claps) - Everybody love drumsticks. Everybody like drumsticks. Okay Jesse. - Livers. (crowd cheers) Yeah, livers. Yeah livers. - You can't buy no livers in no store. (crowd laughs) what! Livers? - You can walk into the store and buy a packet of livers. - Livers. (bell ring sound) (crowd cheers) - Uh huh. - Come on Jesse, pass the play. - Play? - Play. - They gon play. - Lets go. - Lets do it? (crowd cheering) - (exhales) Name a part of a chicken, that South Africans love to eat. - As I throw my bones, I see chicken feet. - Yes. - Yes. (crowd cheering) - What! What! Are you serious? - Yes. - Are you, are you.... - Yes. - Chicken feet. - Yes. - Ain't no meat on no damn chicken feet. (crowd laughs) What are you eating, what are you eating? - Chicken feet.
(laughs) It aint nothing but bones and toenails? - No. (laughs) - This better not be up here, this bet not... Chicken feet. (bell ring sound) (crowd cheers) - (laughs) number one. (laughs) - The number one answer. - Yes. - Of a chicken part, people eat in South Africa. (crowd laughs) Is skinny damn feet. (crowd laughs) (crowd claps) That's the most believable. Chicken feet. (crowd laughs) I don't, yeah hell well. Name a part of a chicken that South Africans love to eat. - (speaks in foreign language) (crowd cheers) Also known as giblets I think? Yeah. Giblets. - Yes. - Oh giblets? - Giblets. - Wow. (crowd claps) Okay. Giblets. (bell ring sound) (crowd cheers) - Well done. - I'm scared of your answer Mzamo, I don't know what the hell you getting ready to say. Name a part of a chicken that South Africans love to eat. - Wings. (crowd cheers) - Please. Now drumstick wasn't up there please. You have to like wings. - Yes. - Wings. (bell ring sound) (crowd cheers) - Yes, - Petronella. - You got this.
(laughs) - Name a part of a chicken that South Africans love to eat. - yeah (speaks in foreign language) (crowd applauds) Neck, necks. - Neck! - Necks, chicken necks. - Chicken necks? - Yes - Yes. - What! (crowd claps) - Chicken necks. - What! Chicken necks. - Yes. - Feet, necks. - it's on there. - Yes. - There's more meat on a chicken. (crowd laughs) (ironic imitation) Neck. Man. Y'all need to cut, necks. (buzz sound) - Ooh! (claps) - Jesse. - Yeah. - You got one strike. - Mm hmm. - Name a part of a chicken that South Africans love to eat? - You know, I'm gonna go with chicken breasts actually. Yeah (crowd applauds) - Chicken breasts. (buzzing sound) - Ooh! - Ah! (crowd claps) - We've got two strikes Rhythm City. We gotta to be careful. Scandals can steal. Name a part of a chicken that South Africans love to eat. - I'm gonna have to go for those juicy thighs. (crowd applauds) - Thigh. (bell ring sound) - Yes (crowd applauds) - Tebogo you got this, it's all on you but you got this. - You got two strikes Rhythm city, you can clear the board with this right here or Scandal can steal.
Gimme a chicken part that South Africans love to eat. - I'm gonna go with chicken hearts. (crowd applauds) - Hearts? - Hearts Steve. - Y'all tripping. (player crowd laughs) Y'all tripping now, really chicken hearts. - Yes. - Hearts. (buzzing sound) - Ooh! (crowd claps) - Name a part of a chicken that South Africans love to eat. - Chicken heads. (crowd applauds) - You have got to be kidding. (crowd laughs) You eat chicken heads? - Yes. - Chicken heads.
(bell ring sound) - Yes. (crowd applause) (dramatic upbeat music) (upbeat music).
https://www.youtube.com/embed/eyQ4t1wHl2M
African swine fever is a viral disease of domestic and wild pigs, often fatal. No vaccines or treatments have been developed. The socio-economic consequences in the affected countries are severe. The virus can live for several months in the environment and in corpses. It does not always die in the processing and smoking of pork. People cannot get sick, but they can spread the infection through clothing or equipment. Clinical signs can be different and are not always easy to recognize. Usually, sick animals have some or all of the following symptoms: high fever, weakness and inability to stand, vomiting, diarrhea, sometimes with blood, red or blue skin, especially around the ears and snout, coughing and difficulty breathing, sloughing, stillborn piglets and weak sows. Most sick animals die within ten days. Domestic pigs can become infected in many ways, including: contact with sick pigs purchased from infected areas; feeding with kitchen waste (in the EU this is prohibited by law since 1980); contact with infected objects, e.g.
from people with infected shoes or clothing. Contact a veterinarian immediately if you suspect that your herd is infected with African plague. Do not take animals out of the farm. Change your clothes and shoes when leaving the farm. Before buying feed, piglets and pigs, make sure they are from reliable farms where measures are taken to protect against the virus. Do not allow contact with wild boars or pigs from other farms. Don't give them kitchen scraps. Avoid growing outdoors in African plague areas. Do not import pork products from infected areas if there is a risk. After hunting, wild boar hunters must not come into contact with domestic pigs. Hunters and breeders must not dispose of offal from wild game or domestic pigs. Do not dispose of food and waste where feral pigs may be present. Contact veterinary authorities if you find a dead wild pig, even if it was in an area not affected by African plague..
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/african-swine-fever-how-to-stay-one-step-ahead/
https://www.youtube.com/embed/7IKab3HcfFk
- We just landed in Antarctica, and also we'' re gon na make it through the next 50 hours right here. We'' re essentially at the bottom of the world, at the coldest area on Planet.( bell dings) - Can'' t wait to freeze to death.( aircraft engine hums). - And there goes the plane. Right, all right, see you later. As well as since that plane has actually left, children, there'' s no other way out for the next 50 hours. -We ' re stuck. - Initially, we require to. trek in the direction of the mountains, to get some defense from the wind. - This is the most beautiful. place I'' ve ever seen. - Shut up, Nolan. ( laughter) - There'' s already a snowstorm inbound. Just our good luck. - The climate is so poor already. - This is so poor! - Holy crap. - What are the odds that. a blizzard would happen right when we obtain below? - It'' s cool!- Jimmy, brother, this is outrageous. - Allow'' s go!- We ' ll established sanctuary at.
the bottom of that mountain.Woo, I practically passed away. - Antarctica! Antarctica! Antarctica! - I proclaim this Camp Monster. It'' s negative 30'degrees, and also if we ' re gon na endure 49 even more hrs - -Grab it!( screams) - They'' re like little kids. - Look at us, we'' re the ideal! ( drums pounding) A typical issue in Antarctica is extreme weather condition surprising your outdoor tents. We got ta cut snow blocks to. safeguard the tents from wind. So we'' re gon na make use of these ice blocks to build a wall surface as well as maintain our camp safe. It'' s literally dropped 20. We require to construct the wall faster. (significant music) - (grunts) Divine cow. hardest thing we'' ve ever done.- Beast Camp is now finished! ( applauding) Now that the ice wall surface is completed, with any luck, the wind won'' t. strike away our tents. The tough component concerning Antarctica. You don'' t know when it ' s evening or not. - Whoa, it ' s red in below. -Oh, you wear ' t know just how good that preferences. - You ' re going to bed, right?- Yeah. - I am'so weary, I'' m sick. Antarctica', not a good. area to get ill in. -Jimmy has no'suggestion. We ' re excavating a tunnel. - Oh my God. -Allow ' s go.- It ' s so crazy just how he ' s until now down. - Jimmy, I wear ' t think. I ' m gon na make it 50 hrs. -The wind is getting, so we ' re gon na have'a tough time sleeping. All right', guys, well, brother clenched fist out. The sunlight.- It ' s the next morning, and also I'wear ' t recognize if I ' m meant. ' Create the sunlight ' s just constantly up.- Early morning one, this is unpleasant. -Bro, Antarctica is not a funin ' area. (George chuckles). I ' m ill, male. I awakened spending blood. -Before you can leave. your camping tent in Antarctica, you need long pants, a long-sleeved t-shirt, a 2nd pair of pants( grunts), a 3rd set of pants, a jacket, a coat for your
coat, a ski mask, whatever this is, gloves,. gloves for your handwear covers, gloves and also goggles so'your. eyeballs don ' t freeze.And despite having all this. on, I can still get frostbite. Entering into day two, there ' s 2 extremely vital. points we require to take care of. Top: In Antarctica, you would. assume you can just pee in the snow, however you can ' t. So we have to pee in these bottles as well as keep it until. the end of the video. It ' s unfavorable 20 levels. Allow ' s see if I can pee. Hey, I obtained it!- He did it!- I got it.( event excitement )- Good.- Woo, that took like five mins. As well as second: A great deal of the young boys have to poop, so we ' re quiting. camp to establish a poop outdoor tents.- I obtained ta poop. - The worst part of Antarctica is that gigantic snowstorms would certainly. - (slapping) Bad outdoor tents, poor.- Stay down, outdoor tents. I ' m gon na come out a better male. - Nolan, exactly how is it? -See that hill right there? And also everybody recognizes that. - I ' ll just get my stuff. - The weather condition ' s kind of negative.- I could simply have to ...- Hey, you ' re climbing. - Just cause I ' m the last'one below? - I require somebody to be. - Well, I ' m grateful it ' s not windy.- Seriously, since that. essentially obtain to call it whatever we desire. - Bye, guys! -Bye.- Bye, bye. - Now, Operation Opening. Begin.( George laughs)( Karl sighs)- For the previous 20-something hours, we ' ve been excavating this hole. By the time Jimmy'' s back,. this is gon na be large"!( "massive" echoes through hills) - We'' re not even at the hill, and we encountered our first obstacle.It ' s a sea of ice. Take a look at this view. Antarctica ' s insane. Guy, stunning. -Just be very careful, Jimmy. -Woo, this is really unsafe. - Very careful. Much less than 10 people on earth. have actually ever before stepped below. - That'' s the mountain'. we ' re gon na be climbing up. Anyways, let'' s climb before we die. - Forward! - Oh, my gosh. -Whoa, oh, wear ' t slip. -Oh, this is wild. I ' m so frightened. There ' s a drop to my right. If I drop in reverse, I roll for 2000 feet. (Jimmy grunts).-'Jimmy. - What? - We ' re 30 hrs in!- Oh, yes! - This is a substantial cliff. No joke, no joking. - If we drop there, we pass away. - -Karl ' s still digging. It ' s so deep.- I ' m right here.Just keep stepping. ( Nolan laughs) - I despise you. - Hey, Jimmy? (Jimmy exhales). - Hey, just don'' t mix up the water containers. - Oh yes. See those small little flecks over there? That'' s our base camp. I question what the children are up to. - Here comes the aircraft, mmm. - Ah-um. - Yummy. - Yum! - The opening supplies, and currently. he needs to provide for the hole. - While Jimmy'' s climbing up the mountain, we might have constructed up extra. walls to fortify our camp. We can have tidied up their tents. We coulda cooked them meals. for them to get residence to.But instead, we dug this hole. This is the most effective usage of our time feasible. - Stop recording me and. movie that view over there. It really feels like we'' re on a different earth. You can'' t persuade me this is Earth. And while we climb this hill, I wan na inform you individuals regarding Shopify. A platform that makes starting. an organization exceptionally very easy. Shopify assisted me provide. YouTube channel into a company. And they can do it for whatever. you'' re passionate concerning. Like climbing up hills. Woo. If you'' ve ever bought. my merch or feastables, you'' ve used it. Oh, let ' s see, how do I do this? I ' m forever grateful for them since I'' ve been making use of ' em since we had 3 million subscribers.Shopify literally powers
companies. Oh, God, um. All right, gim me a second Shopify. Woo, we'' re climbing! Shopify powers businesses. in 175 nations. Beginning a business can be scary. Kinda like climbing this mountain. - Yeah. - However entrepreneurship. We'' re virtually to the top. I can see it! experience of my life. - This is actually distressing, we'' re so high today. - Can you build an. lift next time, Jimmy? (music swells) Right right here, you got it? I made it.
( triumphant music). We made it, and also we didn'' t die. We ' ve claimed the hill. Since, to be truthful, I couldn'' t have actually done it without Shopify. interview with Shopify. This is currently Shopify Mountain. Karl, can you hear me? - Yes, I can hear you, over. - We climbed the hill. - Congratulations, man! - Could you see us in addition to the hill? - One secondly, we have to. - Wait, what opening? - No, I claimed the whole tent. The entire outdoor tents. 3 little ants up there. - Our base camp mores than 10 miles away. If that lens might see us, that'' s crazy. You understand the most effective part. around climbing up a hill? - What? - You have to get down.
- No, no. - Additionally, you can'' t leave points behind, so I got ta take this flag down. - I carried it up all the method for that? What do you believe they'' re. doing at camp now? - Not something smart. (George grumbles) - Best snow day ever! - These sleeping bags are complicated. What is this? (both laugh) (Karl imitates a seal) - Dude, I obtained ta go to whiz. - Okay, individuals, it'' s four in the morning, as well as Jimmy ' s finally arriving back after climbing up the hill.
- This may have been the. hardest point I'' ve ever before done.- The hardest, however many fulfilling point. - He has no idea we dug this hole, so we'' re gon na obtain in and stun him. - Residence wonderful residence, ah! - I require a massage therapy. Ow, Jimmy. (buzzing audio). I'' m not a bed. Where is everybody? - Nolan. - Dream. - Dream! - Oh, my god! The length of time were you chosen? - Something'' s not regular. I don'' t hear Karl going. "bleh, bleh, bleh!"" Karl? They'' re most likely asleep. '' cause it ' s 4:00 AM.Karl? Wait, what, is everybody up? - Jimmy'' s around, you can see him. (George coughs) -What is down right here? Oh, my god! Whoa, delay, just how deep is that hole? - It'' s like 8 feet deep. - I'' m confused. - What'' s so complex? It'' s simply a hole. - Yeah, however why?- We ' re simply trying to, you. - I'' m also tired to understand this. - Get in the opening! Opening, opening, hole. - How? Just how did they do this? - Opening, opening, hole, opening! - I wan na get in the opening. - This is in fact a convenient hole. Can you grab my iPad? - Yeah. - Do you recognize what'' s on this iPad?- Penguin video clips. (Nolan laughs). Our following 2 Mr. Beast videos. - I'' ll let you men pick. - Blind Man Sees for the First Time. - I wan na see the blind male, in fact. - There you go. There'' s a little iPad.( iPad beeping) - Inform me what you assume. Is that crazy? - Yeah, what? - That was awesome. - That was so great. - Oh, my god, it is chilly here. It'' s so chilly that the screen. on the video camera just went black. - This is actually freezing exterior. - I wear'' t wan na be below any longer. I'' m gon na head to bed. -This the electronic camera tent.We ' re claiming excellent night. Good evening, everybody. - Climbing a mountain. actually took it out of me. And we got back at 4 in the early morning. It was nearly impossible to. wake up on day 3. - It'' s the last day. You people prepared? Jim? - What? - We need to evacuate. prior to the airplane leaves. Otherwise, we'' re stuck below. Look, if we miss this trip, Jimmy, we'' re below for like one more day.
- I'' ll placed pants on soon. - Jimmy, get up! - Or is this your initial survival video clip? - Yes. - They place'' t went out. of the tent, Derrick. We are mosting likely to miss the trip. Actually, let me put in other words that. They'' re gon na miss out on the trip. I'' m still making it. - We'' re making the flight, baby. - It is incredibly important to preserve the unblemished. We can'' t leave a single. I made the boys put. - However they were as worn down as I was, so things didn'' t get done rapidly. - I'' ve obtained definitely no power left. All right, now place that in it. ( slapping noise) (little surge) - No! - There she is, exposed. No, no, no, no, quit, no. (rapid clunk). Quit!- Opening. - Load it in now. - All right, get to filling, children. Three, 2, bye-bye hole. - Goodbye, hole. ( snow thumping) - There'' s an opening in my heart, instead. (rising music) - As well as boom! We can now head residence! - Yes, residence, home, home, residence! - Hey, if we maintain this speed, we'' ll get to the ice strip. - Hey, Antarctica trip. Antarctica! Antarctica! - Okay, I see the plane. (all cheer). ( George laughs) I'' m happy with all of you for making it through 50 hours in Antarctica! ( all joy) We'' re going house, and also we endured! They made this journey possible. - We'' re going house! House, residence, house! (explosion). ( wind shouts). You don'' t recognize when it ' s evening or not.- It ' s the next early morning, and I'put on ' t understand if I ' m expected. ' Cause the sun ' s simply constantly up.( "huge" mirrors via hills) - We'' re not also at the hill, as well as we encountered our first obstacle.It ' s a sea of ice. ' reason it ' s 4:00 AM.Karl?
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/i-survived-50-hours-in-antarctica/
Africa has many different cultures and it's not always easy to know which one you're in. Many people think that they know what African food is but they don't really know much about it. The truth is that there is a lot more to African food than just fried chicken and hotdogs. In fact, Africa has some amazing cuisine that can rival any other continent for taste and quality. Here is a list of some of the most popular African foods:
1. African food is known for its spices and herbs. One of the most popular African dishes is called "Jollof Rice". This dish consists of rice, onions, tomatoes, peppers, and other spices. It's served with a variety of meats such as beef, chicken, lamb, or goat. Other popular African dishes include "Mole Pibil", which is made from pork and chicken.
2. Another very popular African food is "Kwashiorkor". This is a dish that is high in protein and low in carbohydrates. It's also very rich in vitamins and minerals. This dish is usually eaten in Africa by people who are malnourished.
3. "Baked Yams" are another African dish that is quite common. This dish is made from yams that have been baked in a variety of ways. Some recipes call for yams to be baked in a pan with oil and butter, while others use baking powder. There are also recipes that call for yams to be roasted.
4. African food is also known for its vegetables. Most African countries grow a variety of different types of vegetables such as okra, tomatoes, eggplant, cabbage, and squash. These vegetables are used in a variety of dishes such as soups and stews.
5. African food is also famous for its fruits. Some of the most popular African fruits are bananas, mangoes, pineapples, papayas, oranges, and avocados. These fruits are commonly used in salads and desserts.
6. African food is also known as a meat lover's paradise. This is because most African countries are known for their cattle and sheep. They also raise goats, chickens, and ducks. Some of the most popular meats in Africa include beef, lamb, pork, mutton, chicken, and goat.
7. Finally, African food is also known for having a large variety of seafood. Some of the most popular fish include tuna, sardines, and salmon. Other seafoods include oysters, crabs, shrimp, mussels, clams, scallops, and octopus.
These are just a few of the most popular African foods. If you want to learn more about African food then you should visit the African Food Network website.
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/african-food-a-taste-of-the-world/
https://www.youtube.com/embed/DO3m95j_U8c
Okay, currently we'' re going to obtain ready to do the bottom ring. So you currently have your piece of rope cut to size, so currently count your ring, count your top ring, "count the knots on your leading ring. "" The number of do we have". "Twenty 6". So currently we'have to put, we ' re going to get another piece of rope to do twenty six knots on the bottom ring.So you ' re mosting likely to increase it up just as you had it prior to and also you ' re going to begin making the knots where it'' s double. So order your piece of rope, and there'' s your first knot. These ones are not mosting likely to be spaced two fingers apart. These are mosting likely to be actually close together.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/QQlUzS00dVg
We didn'' t come right here to play King Kong! Rockstar! Oh Yeah Yeah Okumchorla (Miracle) ye ye If you put your body on me I placed my cash on you I put the buck on you girlll If you place your body on me After that I put my cash on you I put my dollar on you girlll Oh girl you'' re looking so amazing For you I believe I'' m going nuts Oh lady your body so outstanding And also I wear'' t wan na leave your sight Girlll ... If you put your body on me I put my cash on you I put the dollar on you girlll. If you place your body on me I placed my cash on you I placed the dollar on you girlll ... I go make you see that Okumchorla (Miracle) Chorla Chorla ee ee ee Okumchorla (Wonder) I go make you see that Okumchorla (Miracle) Chorla Chorla Okumchorla (Miracle) ee ee You make I fall in love My heart recommends you I go show you money cash cash Keep being you, don'' t change My vehicles dey outside I go show you money money cash Oh lady you'' re looking so remarkable For you I think I'' m freaking out Oh lady your body so impressive As well as I wear'' t want to leave your sight Girlll ...
If you put your body on me I put my cash on you I put the buck on you girlll. If you put your body on me I put my money on you I put the buck on you girlll. I go make you see that Okumchorla (Wonder) Chorla chorla ee ee ee Okumchorlaa (Miracle) I go make you see that Okumchorla (Wonder) Chorla Chorla Okumchorla (Wonder) ee ee If you place your body on body on I go place my cash on cash on I go put my dollar on dollar on you Oh yeah yeah If you place your body on body on I go place my cash on cash on I go place my buck on buck on you I go make you see that Okumchorla (Wonder) Chorla chorla ee ee Okumchorla (Wonder) I go make you see that Okumchorla (Wonder) Chorla Chorla Okumchorla (Wonder) ee ee Okumchorla (Miracle) ee ee Rockstar Made It.
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/kuami-eugene-dollar-on-you-official-video/
Watch two of Africa’s Big 5 come face to face in an ancient rival standoff… Captured by 34-year-old Joe Gregory, while on a safari vacation. Joe gives his account to LatestSightings.com: “We embarked on our afternoon game drive and were driving around the marshy wetlands.” “We encountered a herd of elephant and a crash of rhinos – it was here where the standoff began.” “It was amazing to see & be a part of the standoff where a young elephant bull in musth showed this male white rhino who was boss.” “We could all physically feel the testosterone aura which surrounded the battlefield of these 2 ancient rivals.” “The sighting ended in a stalemate with no winner.” “I would, however, say, the balancing act of the branch and the elephant “throwing” the branch at the rhino was a somewhat cheeky ending to the tussle.”
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/elephant-shows-rhino-whos-boss-2/
>> My background in dance really stems from social dancing at home, which led me to a more formal study of dance. Then I went to London and joined the London Contemporary Dance Theatre, which was a modern dance company, and also Ballet Rumba. So, for 10 years I performed and taught for those companies, led me on to developing my own work, as I started a company called Jazz Exchange Music & Dance Company - which is where I really forged my ideas around jazz as a contemporary form of dance that embodies improvisation that's really the essence why one dances to jazz. And that's what eventually brought me to the States, working with composers and improvisation. That sort of then continued into bringing me to UCI.
>> I need to feel your presence coming to the step. You all kind of step through, and it's like, OK, we're coming forwards. >> At this time, I am looking at how to engage audiences in the whole experience of improvisation. Thinking about the next generation, a generation that is very tied to their technology, I developed this idea of using mobile or cell phones as you call them here within the performance. So it created a structure where by specific points in the narrative, the audience are provoked to respond to something that's happening. And there are also a series of questions through which the performance redirects itself.
So it responds to the presence of the audience. Within the department, I am developing an ensemble. We called the ensemble "Insight." It is really to develop an outlook for jazz in the program. I'm sort of playing with the idea that having dancers think of themselves as musicians. Thinking of their movement as tonality, the dynamics, the harmonics, being able to synthesize things that seemingly don't go together. So, creating harmony out of discord. Being able to absorb those things, really all those things are what are essential to jazz. At least where I am coming from..
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/sheron-wray-blending-jazz-african-dance-technology-uc-irvine/
https://www.youtube.com/embed/WwO9i_qneYc
all right coming in from javon rods african-american collard greens mac and cheese yams ribs cornbread potato salad or deviled eggs uh big beans and at the bottom how could you not say fried chicken guys ah man you can't have a meal without fried chicken in general guys everybody should have fried chicken in their culture right we're gonna jump right into it guys because we got a lot to cook so collard greens so i don't have any collard greens i have mustard greens so i apologize guys this has been washed cut rinsed few times a lot of times guys and it's ready so tablespoon of oil here i got two tablespoon of garlic i got half an onion chopped going in oh man i needed some of that that's okay half an onion saute these bad boys in ham hop right here i chopped them down just in the beginning because it's gonna take a while for this to render down so this is the hawk if you guys want to hop by all means right grab the hawk and gnaw on that next we got two liters chicken stock here look at this one tablespoon white vinegar have it steaming up mustard greens in i'm going to let this cook down for about one to two hours candy yams got some yams here nice and organic cup of water we got i want to say a cup and a half of brown no just a cup of sugar just a touch of ground ginger try it guys got a clump of butter some salt maybe 2 teaspoon some pepper as well some maple syrup all right cornbread has followed three quarter cups of cornmeal we got half cup sugar next teaspoon salt tablespoon baking powder a cup of flour okay mix that all in one crack egg third cup or another cup one three cups of oil a cup of milk oh they're putting the pork oh i did put it in for a minute maybe i'm excited okay there's this cornmeal batter we're gonna jazz it up a bit we're gonna do cheddar cheese cornmeal here we go muffin tins nice and oiled up everybody gets a scoop okay just one scoop all right next baked beans last time i made baked beans you guys told me to try bush's best baked beans because they're better than the ones i was using before right here we go ovens preheat at 420.
Let's do this one-handed baked beans going in you know what it's going to spill it's okay oh no no no ocha i got it cornbread hang in sweet potato or candy sweet potato going in as well for 20 30 to 35 minutes for all three right next we're gonna do mac and cheese my twist my take on it inspired by houston kitchen oh sorry cupcake houston kitchen guys check them out we're going to use spaghetti for our noodles okay next our cheese sauce two tablespoons of butter going in once you got butter to melt two tablespoon flour one cup chicken stock two cups heavy whipping cream half tablespoon onion powder teaspoon garlic salt teaspoon black pepper sauce getting nice and thick i'm gonna turn off the fryer and we're gonna add in three cups of cheddar cheese make sure your fire's off before you add in the cheese all right yes guys it may look a little runny right now but just wait okay i keep telling everybody when it cools down it will thicken up i promise that's nice and green and cooked right here get up on this cheese sauce hey don't say it guys like i'm telling you guys this cheese sauce will thicken when it cools down all right more cheese last minute of serving guys i'm gonna toss this in for about almost like 10 minutes before we start serving that all right barbecue spare ribs the cheat way so into the pot one little water here i got half a cup of soy sauce here ribs nice and skin washed and clean toss them into the instant pot it takes roughly about i won't say 40 minutes all right 40 minutes on the clock two pounds of chicken wings here half tablespoon salt half tablespoon black pepper we got a cup of frank's hot or you can use louisiana but i can find any today tablespoon hot chili powder marinate this in for about three hours minimum all right stay on the list some deviled eggs so everybody into the pool i don't care if i swim i just have to get it cooking time for this 15 minutes nice cook peeled and clean so take this throw to the side throw that over there take this oh shoot i guess we're eating this one very simple some salt just a pinch pepper tabasco i got some honey mustard everybody's favorite break it in piece of egg little filling toss it to the bottom right there how simple is this dried onions on top and some paprika okay you ready marinated chicken corn flour or corn cornstarch corn flour okay pack it in pack it in very well shake off any excess into the pool i don't care if you could swim you just have to get it cooking time for this i'll say eight to twelve minutes you can hate wine cry complain throw hissy fits say this save that and when it comes out of my fried chicken game you better respect my fried chicken all right last things right here our ribs are nice and cooked and cool all we're going to do put them on the grill to get a nice char sweet baby raise hickory flavor okay we're just gonna baste these front and back until it becomes nice and sweet and stick out that looks mighty tasty my friends how easy is this rib recipe this is your ultimate so this is so food right here guys look at this look at this cornbread cheese muffin oh everybody gets an individual muffin guys next beautiful collard greens oh man whoever wants that you can take it but i will take it at the end all right next beautiful fried chicken oh man you'll slap somebody if we try one of these wings here i promise you don't slap me though we got the baked beans ah big beans baked beans we got all bush baked beans actually we got the devil dates this right here inspired by cupcake houston oh man mac and cheese with spaghetti yes guys gotta try it i promise you candy yams you know they're candied here they cool down a bit more they will start caramelizing okay it's a little hot right now okay i promise you it's sweet it's very sweet last but not least easy barbecue ribs oh when you guys come by quick time guys stop playing around let me fold that over again okay let's do this everybody there's plates right here under here all right okay everybody has one all right let's do it what is this deviled eggs next we got the candy yams help yourself right make sure your shoes is off first all right before you come in okay candy yam they will candy more guys okay when they cool down like this like the mac and cheese i have to the ones that were complaining about my mac and cheese sauce being too runny get your behind over here let me show you you know what ain't ronnie you know it ain't running look at this look at this you know it ain't running oh man that's too much for me this one a bit i want to try everything you don't think okay next we got the beans i don't know what's up with beans guys but a lot of americans love beans right okay beans just a bit we got some fried chicken my favorite this will be we got some collard greens close up on the greens these are actually mustard greens i want to say they work as just well fish cornbread muffin and we got some ramps over here let me show you the ribs these are the easiest ribs you guys will ever make in your entire life just falling off the bone just like that my friends my friends this is what you call good soul cooking right here guys ribs collard greens fried chicken deviled eggs um what is this called again candy yams spaghetti macaroni and cheese and we've got that cornbread cheese right here can you hear that i'm salivating all right let's do this this is some good home cook soul food right here guys legit it is guys start with the beans i don't know why i'm starting with the beans i guess where the fork is guys quick time let's get it nice so pump this but whoever said bush beans these are really good beans the somewhat what is it watery watery mac and cheese look how watery it is okay it's got a nice soup off this that is not watering my friend let's go this my friend is beyond craft my friend that's how you make crap i showed you guys that's how you do it try it just try it at home and sell it collard greens like that it's got a nice soup i want to taste wise very similar to collard greens these are mustard greens but it's very similar tasting these are slap somebody fried chicken like that there's good nice super pumped all right definitely want to slap somebody after this guys the easiest most crunchiest tastiest fried chicken you guys ever pop in your mouth i promise you just simple ingredients that make the world go around all right perfectly seasoned perfectly crunch perfectly delicious perfectly crunched and makes sense but penny yum they're sweet deviled eggs hmm very delicious right i was gonna put jalapenos in this oh man next time i will right bite on this click that that's got it soup pump this um it's buttery cheesy dry but that what makes a cornbread that's a nice texture right there out of the ovens these are soft and moist um when you keep it like keep it um keep it laying out it's still moist but i prefer eating this right out of the oven try mm-hmm these ribs are fantastic though next time you guys make mac and cheese make it this way with spaghetti noodles it's going to change your life so definitely makes you want to slap somebody that's how delicious it is all right that's what i want to do next day we'll do a mexican hook up this is bringing about cookout first things first i should have said in the beginning but this is not i don't know last time i put up caucasian cook up i i didn't know it was funny everyone's laughing but i didn't i didn't really get the joke um i didn't mean to offend anybody um i just didn't get the joke i was laughing um i just want to show america or the whole continent of north america on how we are known for cookouts you know after north america i'm going to span out here's a question who has the best cookouts we've seen caucasian we've seen african-american next up is mexico indigenous people indigenous people nato's american you're up next as well i didn't forget about you alright all right if you made it this far to the video guys yes this is a lot of food i want to say it again it is a lot of food and a lot of guys ask what i do with the extra food i throw it out just kidding i give it to my family and friends that's it guys family and friends if you guys enjoy someone don't forget to subscribe peace out
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/an-african-american-cookout-feast/
https://www.youtube.com/embed/rQj6W87jB1M
RAYMOND KING: This clip right here is a little of hip jump, directly, traditional funk hip jump. It generally begins with a little hi-hat time in, this time around you make use of a little edge shot That'' s. the very first component. The second part is the snare part and. the third component is the bass That'' s hip-hop.
African food is a diverse cuisine. It can be found in almost every country and continent on the African continent, although some countries have their own specialties. The most common foods include cassava, millet, maize, rice, sorghum, yams, plantains, tomatoes, beans, peanuts, fish, poultry, and meat. There are many other foods that are eaten in Africa. Some examples include mangoes, pineapples, watermelon, guavas, papayas, sweet potatoes, bananas, oranges, coconuts, cashews, dates, figs, raisins, grapes, cherries, apples, pears, plums, peaches, apricots, and almonds. Many other fruits and vegetables are also eaten, such as pumpkins, cucumbers, carrots, lettuce, onions, garlic, spinach, kale, cabbage, lettuce, celery, radishes, chives, cilantro, mint, parsley, fennel, basil, thyme, rosemary, oregano, bay leaves, tarragon, dill, cumin, cilantro, chives, and sage. In addition to vegetables, there are many types of spices that are used in African cooking, including chili peppers, turmeric, coriander, cloves, cinnamon, cardamom, ginger, nutmeg, mace, pepper, and cloves.
Many of these foods are prepared with different methods. For example, some are baked or fried while others are steamed or boiled. The cooking methods may also differ according to the region of Africa where the food is prepared. For example, some African countries use coconut milk for cooking certain dishes while others do not. Also, some countries use salt in their cooking while others do not. Some countries use spices like chili peppers, while others do not. Some African nations use animal fat in cooking while others do not. There are also many variations of traditional African recipes. Some examples include the following:
African fashion is also very diverse. African fashion can be seen on the streets of cities throughout the continent. The most common clothing includes colorful fabrics, brightly colored beads, leather sandals, and animal skins. There are many different styles of clothing that are worn by Africans. Some examples include the following styles:
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/african-food-and-fashion/
https://www.youtube.com/embed/M8cF4Ca8yJI
BRUH, I MA NEED YOU-. YOU KNOW WHAT I SUCH AS YOUR SMILE YOUR SMILE IS RIGHT. GO ON INSIDE EH, EH, EH, I SEEM LIKE. YOU A LITTLE LITTLE BIT BITTER AH, I ASSUME YOU A LITTLE MESSY I MA REQUIREMENT YOU TO GO ON. THROUGHOUT OF THE LINE. AS WELL AS GET YOUR CHAKRAS WITH EACH OTHER SIS, SIS, APPEARANCE, LOOK,. I SUCH AS YOUR AMBIANCE, I MA LET YOU. IN THE CLUB BUT I CAN T LET YOU IN. JUST AT THIS MOMENT, OKAY? LOOK, YOU TIN WAIT. FIVE MORE MINUTES - SIS. - HI THERE WHAT S THE REGULARITY? OH, THE REGULARITY IS ALL LOVE,. BROTHER. YOU GO AND LOOK TAKE PLACE, ENJOY YOURSELF,. ENJOY YOURSELF YOU UNDERSTAND I AM OF COURSE, OK, GO ON SIS,. TAKE PLACE SIS HEY NEPHEW HELLO! Y ALL DELIGHT IN YOURSELVES. LOOKING EXCELLENT LOVE! LOVE! LOVE! LOVE! LOVE! LOVE! THE AMBIANCE IS GOOD, YES! WELCOME TO. IF YOU AIN'' T COME TO BOP? IF YOU AIN'' T COME. YOU AIN'' T OBTAINED TA GO HOME,. BUT YOU GOT TA OBTAIN. THE FUCK UP OUTTA RIGHT HERE! PERIOD! (GET IN YOUR BAG,. REMAIN IN YOUR BAG) (ENTER YOUR BAG, STAY IN. YOUR BAG) WHAT I'' M TALKIN SPELL (OBTAIN IN YOUR BAG, REMAIN IN YOUR. BAG) TURN THE REGULARITY UP WE OFF THE GRID (ENTER YOUR BAG,. REMAIN IN YOUR BAG) -( ENTER YOUR BAG,. REMAIN IN YOUR BAG). SHE DON T NEED MY. LOVE, I GUESS I OBTAINED TA CARRY ON HEY, OH YEAH, OH YEAH,. OH BUT SHE DON T NEED MY LOVE,. I PRESUME I GOT TA CARRY ON OH YEAH, OH YEAH, OH NO SHE DON T NEED MY LOVE,. I THINK I GOT TA GO ON I THINK, I PRESUME, I GUESS I CAME A LITTLE TOO STRONG,. I GUESS SHE DON T WANT MY LOVE, I. GUESS I GOT TA PROCEED, I GUESS I ATTEMPTED, I ATTEMPTED. TO PROVIDE ALL OF IT TO YOU, BABY ALL NEW MERCEDES,. A NEWBORN AND I TOLD YOU,. YOU LIKE ALSO LAZY DAMN, ALL YOU HAD TO DO. WAS LOVE ME, INFANT AS WELL AS IT OBTAINS. SO FRUSTRATING, YEAH WHY YOU WAN NA GO. AND ALSO TEST ME, BABY? YEAH GRADE ME AND ALSO TELL ME. I M FAILING, YEAH KEEP TELLING ME THINGS LIKE YOU DONE ATTEMPTING WITH ME DONE OF FIGHTING. WITH ME, YEAH GAVE YOU A RING CURRENTLY IT S GOING OFF. THE DEEP END, YEAH ON DELEON. MY DRINK FOR THE WEEKEND SENT YOU SOME POINTS, YEAH WHEN I WAS DONE DRINKING LIKE, GIRL HE WITH YOU. FOR THE INCORRECT REASONS CREATE YOU WAS WITH ME, UH,. TELL HIM START REACHING THAT S NASTY, JEALOUS IN ME I M SALTY, I REQUIRED IT,. MY WOUNDS KEEP HEMORRHAGING YOU FOUND A NEW MAN SO I OBTAINED TA GO ON GUESS YOU GOT A NEW SCHEDULE WITH SOMEONE YOU HARDLY RECOGNIZE I WON T SAY YOU RE WRONG ASSUMPTIONS YOU HAD TO CARRY ON,. ON, ON, ON (OH). SHE DON T WANT MY LOVE,. I PRESUME I OBTAINED TA GO ON I GUESS, I PRESUME, I PRESUME I GUESS, I CAME. A LITTLE TOO STRONG, I GUESS SHE DON T WANT MY LOVE, I. HUNCH I OBTAINED TA CARRY ON, I THINK I GUESS I GOT TA MOVE ON. AND ALSO I PRESUME WE GOING UP, WE GOING LIVE CANISTER T STOP, WON T STOP,. TOLD Y ALL SEE ME BRING UP NO PROBLEM I CAN NEVER EVER EVER BEFORE. BE NO PERSON CHOICE PULL UP ON ME WITHOUT ANY BLOGS NOW YOU WAN NA. STATE YOU WAN TALK NOW YOU WAN NA. SAY YOU WAN TALK NOW YOU WAN NA SAY YOU WAN YEP, YEAH, CHILD STATED YOU GOT NO TIME TO WASTE,. NO, CHILD IMITATE MY. NO WASTE, NO, CHILD ASK ME WHY YOU WOULD. ACT SO SHADY, AH WHY I CAN SMELL YOUR INTUITION. DON T LIE LADY, INTUITION DON T EXIST STATED WAY A LOT OF GOODBYES NUMBERS DON T LIE PERMIT ME TO SAY THIS TIME SEE YOU OUT. WITH YOUR BRAND-NEW GUY NO, I WON T SAY. YOU'' RE OUT OF LINE I WON T SAY YOU RE INCORRECT GUESS YOU HAD TO PROCEED,. ON, ON, ON STATED SHE SHE DON T NEED MY LOVE,. I PRESUME I GOT TA CARRY ON I THINK, I THINK, I THINK I CAME A LITTLE TOO STRONG,. I THINK SHE DON T WANT MY LOVE, I. ASSUMPTION I OBTAINED TA PROCEED, I THINK (I WEAR'' T WAN NA. WASTE YOUR TIME) I THINK I GOT TA MOVE ON,. I GUESS OBTAIN IN YOUR BAG,. REMAIN IN YOUR BAG ENTER YOUR BAG. AS WELL AS SPEND FOR THESE DRINKS, BRO YOU OWE BRYSON, MALE I ACQUIRED MAD BOTTLES TONITE. I AIN'' T GET NO IDEAS OR ABSOLUTELY NOTHING AND I HAD FREE HOOKAH. EVERYBODY HERE HAD FREE HOOKAH AYO, GIVE HIM. OH MY GOD! CONTAINER T STOP,. WON T STOP, TOLD Y ALL SEE ME PULL UP NO PROBLEM I CAN NEVER EVER. BE NO ONE OPTION THAT S RIGHT YEAH ...
TELL HIM TO CLOSE. ON THE HOME YEAH ... AS WELL AS SEND MY MOTHER. 5 MILLION WHAT S UP LOVE? WHAT S UP? I PRESUME I GOT TA. CARRY ON, I PRESUME. YOU AIN'' T OBTAINED TA GO RESIDENCE,. YOU GOT TA OBTAIN. YEP, YEAH, INFANT SAID YOU OBTAINED NO TIME TO WASTE,. I AIN'' T GET NO TIPS OR ABSOLUTELY NOTHING AND I HAD FREE HOOKAH. I PRESUME I GOT TA.
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/diddy-feat-bryson-tiller-gotta-move-on-official-video/
https://www.youtube.com/embed/_E5G1dz7eL0
The drum audios when the hawk appears with a rabbit - Nigerian stating This is how the complete rhythm appears at medium speed Now, let'' s simplify djembe 1 Currently a bit quicker ... djembe 2 Now a bit faster ... djembe 3 Currently a little bit faster ... Dundun & & bell Now a bit faster ... Drum-Along: allow'' s start by inspecting how each drum line beings in the complete rhythm Now just keep drumming.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/t1XaIlVUEx4
FALSE:: MISTAKE: UNSUPPORTED ENCODING
https://www.youtube.com/embed/nnYXAGdCb7Y
this job, you wear'' t intend to need to begin once more, because you stood out the skin with your. scissors. The sides are really very easy to nick, specifically. if your scissors are great.
African art has been a hot topic of discussion in the past few years. With the growing interest in African culture, there are many opportunities to learn about the history and traditions of this continent.
The continent of Africa is one of the most diverse in the world. The continent has over 54 countries and almost as many languages. It is also the home of some of the oldest civilizations on earth.
Africa was inhabited by people who lived in caves as early as 100,000 B.C. These people were hunter gatherers and their primary source of food was meat. They made tools from stone and bone. The first known civilization to develop in Africa was the Egyptians. They built the pyramids and developed writing.
Around 4000 B.C. the Egyptians began to build cities and temples. The ancient Egyptians also had a religion called polytheism which is the belief in many gods. They believed that each god had his own special power. This was a belief system that was passed down from generation to generation.
Around 3000 B.C. the ancient Egyptians began to make pottery. They also began to trade with other countries. The Egyptians traded goods such as gold, ivory, and slaves. They also traded grain and livestock.
Around 2000 B.C. the ancient Egypt became a great empire. The Egyptians ruled much of the Middle East and North Africa. The Egyptians also conquered much of Asia and parts of Europe. The Egyptian Empire lasted for about 1000 years.
After the death of the last pharaoh in 664 B.C., the Egyptian Empire collapsed. During the next 400 years, many different groups of people tried to control Egypt. These groups included the Assyrians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabs, and Turks.
During the 20th century, many countries fought wars in Africa. The first major war in Africa was the Boer War in South Africa. This war started in 1899. The Boers were farmers who were fighting for their independence from British rule.
The second major war in Africa was World War I. This war was fought in Europe and Africa. The war ended in 1918.
In the 1970s, many African countries gained their independence. Many African countries have since become independent nations.
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/history-of-african-art-2/