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Learn colors with Motu Patlu and watercolors for children | Motu Patlu Hindi video for kids

For more infomation >> Learn colors with Motu Patlu and watercolors for children | Motu Patlu Hindi video for kids - Duration: 2:12.

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Firehouse Adventure - Game App for iPad, iPhone - Duration: 11:07.

Firehouse Adventure - Game App for iPad, iPhone.

For more infomation >> Firehouse Adventure - Game App for iPad, iPhone - Duration: 11:07.

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Jepoardy: Inside the auditions for popular US game show - Duration: 8:56.

Jepoardy: Inside the auditions for popular US game show

Jepoardy: Inside the auditions for popular US game show       .   The Fumble This Jeopardy! contestant discovered the perils of getting a question wrong.

This wasnt just a game-show audition. This was a hallowed crowd. Every season, some 70,000 people take an online test in the hopes of gripping a buzzer and asking a question of the silvery, stoic host Alex Trebek on Jeopardy!.

But only 2500 to 3000 – just 3 per cent – make it this far: A windowless room at the bottom of the Westin Hotel in downtown Seattle, where Jeopardy! producers have set up for three days of formal, in-person testing and interviews with those who have made the cut.

They were young and old, men and women, teachers on summer break, programmers and planners from Seattle, Portland, Bellingham and Berkeley. One woman flew in from Reno, and another walked four blocks from her apartment.

The 34th season of Americas Favourite Quiz Show (its trademarked) is already underway, and there is only room for 400 contestants.

But if chosen, the people summoned to the Westin are put into a contestant pool for 18 months, and could get a call to appear on the show as soon as next week.

A successful Jeopardy! contestant has to be able to know difficult material, said Maggie Speak, a gregarious, pistol of a producer who has been running Jeopardy! auditions for 20 years.

  Jeopardy! producer Maggie Speak shows what it was like for her to give a US$2.5 million cheque to Ken Jennings, who won 74 games in a row. Shelly Al-Hadrami receives the cheque.

Its more recall than anything else, Speak said. Good players are usually well-read and interested in a wide variety of things. Were also looking for people who play well and have something that people want to watch.

Down in Hollywood, the Jeopardy! folks see Seattle as a place teeming with potential players of all stripes.

  Being a Jeopardy! contestant is not just about knowledge, but also personality. You have tech types, fit types, the very well-read. The term nerds is not what it was when I was young..

Most people who audition arent in it for the money. Its a matter of pride, Speak said, then paused. Theyre not going to turn down the money, but its a matter of pride..

  Contestants trying out for Jeopardy! test the clicker, trying to be quick but not jump the gun  .

Seattle is also known as the hometown of legendary champion Ken Jennings, who in 2004 set a Jeopardy! record for the most consecutive games played while winning 74 games in a row. Hes also the second highest-earning contestant in game-show history.

Ive seen people around him, Speak said. Hes like Paul McCartney..

Speak is the one who handed Jennings his US$2.5 million check. Jennings joked that he was going to put it in a jacket pocket and then put it in the laundry for his wife to find.

  Producer Maggie Speak advises budding Jeopardy! contestants to use their big voice and have fun. Speak advised against it.

Each hopeful stood for a photograph and was given a Jeopardy! pen to fill out a questionnaire that included five interesting stories or lies.  (The pens oversized red clicker doubled as a practice buzzer).

They then completed a 50-question quiz (they had eight seconds for each answer) before participating in a mock round of Jeopardy! Three at a time, just like on TV.

In between, Kelly Miyahara, a University of Washington graduate who is now part of the shows Clue Crew – three show ambassadors who deliver clues from around the world – opened the floor to questions.

They film a weeks worth of shows in one day: three in the morning, a break for lunch and then two in the afternoon. So contestants are encouraged to bring a few changes of clothes.

There isnt really a dress code, Miyahara said, but be careful with patterns.

The moires, the man beside me said to no one. I had to look it up. an independent usually shimmering pattern seen when two geometrically regular patterns are superimposed especially at an acute angle. Thanks, Merriam-Webster!).

And for Petes sake, Miyahara said, remember to eat. We had a fainter, years ago, she said. A man worried that the camera added 10 pounds, so he had been starving himself. We had to stop tape..

The categories on this day: Italy, Notable Birthdays, TV IQ Test, Ends in EN, Student Aid and The Old Testament. It wasnt easy up there.

One man who said he was a science buff couldnt remember the name of astronomer Neil deGrasse Tyson, and despite a clue that contained the word crisp, couldnt come up with Sir Francis Bacon.

Then Speak asked the contestants about themselves: what they did, hobbies, how they would spend the money if they got to the end of the game-show rainbow.

onna Brown of Seattle told Speak that her mother had appeared on Sale of the Century when she was pregnant with her (she still uses the luggage she won on the show) and that her brother, Eric was a Jeopardy! winner who took her on a trip to Mexico.

I have to fulfill this destiny, Brown said about why she auditioned. Portland schoolteacher Scott Montanaro said if he wins, hed love to take his students on a trip.

Every time I show them a photo of a pyramid, they say, field trip! So Id love to do that. I skipped the mock round, but not the test. On my way out, I had to know if I was Trebek-worthy.

So, howd I do? I asked Rebecca Erbstein, one of the producers who tallied the results. Did I bite it?.

Come on, I told her. I didnt even fill in 14 of the 50 answers.. You did do very well, she said, then all but patted my arm. You dont need a perfect score.

For more infomation >> Jepoardy: Inside the auditions for popular US game show - Duration: 8:56.

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Kids Learn Colors With Eggs, How to Draw with eggs Colorful, Coloring Pages for Children Video Baby - Duration: 8:44.

coloring tv

For more infomation >> Kids Learn Colors With Eggs, How to Draw with eggs Colorful, Coloring Pages for Children Video Baby - Duration: 8:44.

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Learn colors with Motu and hammer for Children | Finger Family song - Duration: 1:56.

Learn colors with Motu and hammer for Children | Finger Family song

For more infomation >> Learn colors with Motu and hammer for Children | Finger Family song - Duration: 1:56.

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Kim Kardashian: Starving Herself for Nude Photo Shoot! - Duration: 2:21.

For more infomation >> Kim Kardashian: Starving Herself for Nude Photo Shoot! - Duration: 2:21.

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CNN 10 - August 6, 2017 | How sudden rain for a drought-stricken state made some matters worse - Duration: 10:01.

It`s the third day of the third month of 2014. Happy you taking ten minutes for CNN STUDENT

NEWS. I`m Carl Azuz. It was a tumultuous weekend in Ukraine. We`ve told you about protests

in the capital Kiev that led to the ouster of Ukraine`s president last month. Most of

those protesters want their country to have closer ties with Europe, but many Ukrainians,

like their ousted president, want closer ties with Russia. And one region where support

for Russia is strong is Crimea. It`s in southern Ukraine. It`s where most residents identify

themselves as Russian, and it`s where what we assume to be Russian troops came in the

Ukraine over the weekend and took control of the Crimean peninsula, according to the

U.S.

The troops surrounded three Ukrainian military bases. There wasn`t any combat, but the U.S.

calls this an active Russian aggression and says Russia is breaking international law

by sending troops to Ukraine. Russia says there is no open confrontation here, but that

it has the right to defend its people and interests in Ukraine.

Time for "The Shoutout." What`s the most populated state in the U.S.? If you think you know it,

shout it out! Is it Florida, Texas, New York or California? You`ve got three seconds, go!

With around 38 million residents, California is far and away the most populated state in

the U.S. That`s your answer and that`s your shoutout.

It`s been the season of extremes for residents of southern California. While other parts

of the country were shivering under snow, ice and bitter cold, areas near Los Angeles

have been parched by drought. Windy dry conditions fostered the spread of wild fires, and when

rain finally came from a recent storm system, there wasn`t much vegetation left to soak

it up. So that meant mudslides. Thankfully, no death have been reported because of the

rain and mudslides, but the drought has been so bad that the storms barely made a dent

in water levels. Much of the rain is streaming back out to sea and water reservoirs are still

at minimum levels. Even a forecast for more rain isn`t good news for some folks.

It happened in minutes. Fire scorched land couldn`t hold the rain, so mud poured down

from the Glendore (ph) foothills below.

It`s (INAUDIBLE). It`s bad. It looks - I mean it`s bad. It hasn`t been this bad in a long

time. It wasn`t like this 20 minutes ago.

They are getting out while they can.

But you are not taking anything with you, just grabbing your dog?

No, we got my laptop. I don`t need too much, too many things. Everything is going to be

fine. It`s all replaceable.

Just a couple of inches of rain and you can see the effects here when the ground, which

is burned by the fire can`t hold all of this and something you`ll notice - the debris it

shows - it`s been scarred by wildfire.

We need to make some friends to help get you out. OK?

Yeah.

1,000 homes are under a mandatory evacuation order. Because they sit below these scorched

hills. Two months ago, it was wildfire. Today, mud into their pools and backyards. California

has been in drought for months. The sudden rain caught some by surprise.

Two people were found stranded in a tree trying to escape the rising water of the Los Angeles

River. Take a closer look. It`s not just people, but there are two dogs. You can see the rescuers,

the Los Angeles firefighters as they carefully move the frightened animals out of the tree

one by one to the nearby rescue boat.

And there`s more rain coming. Just bad news for Kim and Dennis Kralik. They chose not

to listen to the mandatory evacuation order. Their one road in and out too covered in mud

to drive.

Because you can`t get out.

No, not right now. Until they clear this, we`re stuck here.

What has Mother Nature been like the last couple of months for you?

We had fire, droughts and now torrential rain. Winds.

Yeah, pretty much everything.

Yeah, we`ve hit all four elements at this point. I think we are done at this point with

any more crazy storms.

There may not be much we could do about the weather, but we do a pretty good job of keeping

track of it. And NASA has teamed up with Japan`s Aerospace exploration agency to launch a satellite

that will track rain and snow. It`s called the Global Precipitation Measurement Co- observatory.

And if that sounds like an advanced name, it`s a pretty advanced satellite. It`s designed

to circle the earth every hour and a half, observe where it`s raining and send that info

back to scientists every three hours. It can tell the difference between rain, ice and

snowfall, and the different amounts of each. And it will help researches keep track of

the global climate and its water cycle. This is not a cheap project. The satellite cost

NASA $933 million. It`s designed to last at least three years.

First "Roll Call" of the month begins in the Pacific Northwest. We`re starting in the Evergreen

state where Waterville high school shockers are watching CNN STUDENT NEWS. Glad to be

part of your day in Waterwheel, Washington.

Moving east to South Dakota, specifically gregarious South Dakota. It`s where we find

the gorillas of Gregory High School. And on the Atlantic Coast, the Collinswood Language

Academy Jaguars are on today`s roll, hello to everyone in Charlotte, North Carolina.

March is women`s history month in the U.S. Congress designated this in 1987, and it honors

the accomplishments of women and how they`ve changed the country. Good report to kick off

this month is about Julia Ernst. You won`t find her in history books, yet she is currently

a high school student, a future Harvard student and a 120 pounds wrestling champion.

(BV)

There you go!

On the mat, the wrestler in green is fast, fierce.

Stop that!

And female. It is a rear sight even now in this overwhelmingly male sport. But Julia

Ernst is a rare soul, a young woman beating the boys at their own game.

Nice, Julia. Wow!

One of only three females on the seventh grade team at her private school, by freshman year

the others had quit, and Julia stood alone.

Despite the fact that I have supportive coaches and supportive teammates, it`s still an interesting

feeling to walk into a room and be the only person of your type. You know, you`re in a

locker room and you can`t really josh around with the boys, you can`t really make nicknames

for each other. Talk about whatever - cool moves your learned in practice.

All right, Julia. Yet encourages by her parents who are into

martial arts, she`s started winning over and over again, sparking a range of reactions.

Some boys would outright refuse to wrestle her, others .

Yes, they are coming into the match with this sense of pride, and the sense of superiority

that they are male, they are for there, they are going to win the match. If I do end up

beating them, then often, you know, those are the kids that are going to go off and

cry in the corner or be really ashamed or have parents that come and yell at them.

She`s one of the hardest working wrestlers I`ve ever met. The hardest working person

I`ve ever met, whether it`s school or whether it`s athletics, she`s just - she just goes

as hard as she possibly could on every .

That wins tournaments and fans. With the season winding down, Julia, a team captain, faced

one match to become the winning wrestler in her school`s history.

Everybody was on their feet, shouting and cheering Julia! Julia! And when she won, everybody

jumped up and down, women were literally crying to see this victory. She represents for all

of these women, and I`ve had many conversations with women at this matches. Julia is my hero.

She`s doing, you know, she`s trailblazing for women.

Julia believes her little brother may soon enough eclipse her record, but for now she

reigns supreme 26 losses, 107 wins. All against men.

When you hear your coach talk about your record at your school, what do you think?

I - I`m happy. I`m very happy. I get a little bit giddy to do a little bit of a happy dance,

maybe.

Call it Carnival, call it Mardi Gras. In New Orleans right now, it`s whatever floats your

float. Despite this video, there is no crabbiness here. Thousands in the Big Easy. To let the

good times roll, the party is going on for nine days now. It wraps up tomorrow. Mardi

Gras, after all, means "Fat Tuesday." It ends when the Roman Catholic season of Lent begins

on Ash Wednesday. The Mardi Party may not be as big here, as it is in Rio de Janeiro,

for instance. But for those who are here, it takes the king cake. The crowd just lent

yeps (ph) this up. They`ve got to beat on all the funds. Some might say, they are - crew,

but they are OK by me if they are OK by you. We`ll float some more news. See you tomorrow

on CNN STUDENT NEWS.

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