Hey guys this is Zig-Zach Gamer back with another Joke of the Day.
And the joke is...
Whats invisible smells like bananas?
Anyone know?
It's a monkeys fart.
This is Zig-Zach signing out. Bye!
you
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Celebrity New : How is Dwayne Johnson powerful? - Duration: 4:20.How is Dwayne Johnson powerful?
The 30-year-old actress - who stars alongside the wrestler-turned-actor in Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle as Ruby Roundhouse - thinks the 45-year-old hunk should reconsider running for President of the Untied States.
She said: Hes such a good leader in a situation, I just feel like he needs to run the world one day.
I think he should.
I would vote for him. The flame-haired beauty said the former WWE champion would win hands down in a fight between him and their co-star Kevin Hart, whose respective characters, Dr.
Smolder Bravestone and Moose Finbar, have a rumble in the jungle in the sequel to the 1995 classic.
She told Metro.co.uk: In a fight? Thats a tough one.
Im gonna say The Rock.
Hes a wrestler! The former Doctor Who star heaped praised on Dwayne and said there is not a bad bone in his body.
She said: I wish I had some insider story to give you, but hes just genuinely one of the most generous, kind, professional human beings that Ive ever encountered.
Hes just great. The San Andreas star previously expressed a desire to turn his hands to politics, but whilst he was very flattered by the response, he wont be acting on it any time soon.
He quipped: Its been very flattering.
Theres been this really interesting uptick in public opinion, [people] wanting that to happen.
The problem is that [Kevin Hart] will completely sabotage the campaign in 2020, 2024.
Hell literally sabotage it from the inside. Kevin jokingly added: 100 per cent.
I will take you down.
I dont want it to happen because it will make you that much better than me, and I just dont want it.
I would sabotage it in a heartbeat..
Back in May, Dwayne admitted running for president is a real possibility and said he had been considering moving into politics more and more.
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Lebanon is a Heroic Country | ELAI 27 - Duration: 4:31.Ladies and Gentlemen, Lebanon is a heroic country.
The Lebanese people may be the only reason the entire Middle East isn't at war right
now and nobody is giving them credit for it.
Today I'm going to give them that credit.
You may ask, isn't the whole Middle East at war right now already?
The answer is no!
No it is not.
There are ongoing and quite awful conflicts in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, and Libya, two of which
I've talked about at length.
This is all very bad, but it's not yet a region-wide conflagration.
It could be so much worse.
And the conflicts in Syria and Iraq do seem to be dying down with the defeat of ISIS.
Some people don't want that to happen.
Saudi Arabia, the richest country in the region, is actively trying to start a war with Iran
before Trump loses his majority in Congress next year.
They're well aware that Trump may be their last chance to confront Iran, and they are
taking steps to make a wider war happen.
Lebanon is at the center of that effort.
It's a small country, with a rough history and a complex system.
Folks share power in Lebanon along confessional lines.
The Prime Minister is always Sunni, the President is always Maronite Christian, and other roles
are dedicated to other Muslim and Christian sects.
This system has existed in some form since 1943, and it has already fallen apart horrifically
at least once.
When I was growing up, Lebanon wasn't known for its heroism, it was known for a disastrous
civil war and proxy war that lasted from 1975 to 1990.
It killed over 120,000 people in a country that then amounted to around 3 million people.
Beirut, the country's capital, went from being known as the Paris of the Middle East
to being an entire generation's symbol for urban warfare.
The Lebanese people know what war is.
And that's what may be saving us today.
Lebanon is a small country.
Because of their difficult religious politics they haven't taken a census since 1932,
but we guess the Lebanese population to be around five million.
Since 2011 they have taken in at least 2 million Syrian refugees.
Imagine that for a second.
Turkey, a country of 80 million is having trouble digesting 2.5 million Refugees.
Europe, a wealthy continent of hundreds of millions of people has been throwing a multi-year
hissy fit over just a million refugees.
Lebanon has taken in over a third of its population in refugees.
And it wasn't that stable a country to begin with.
For five years I have been expecting Lebanon to fall into Syria's maelstrom.
Lebanon's politicians are not impressive, and their government is a mess, but the place
just kept not failing.
Because the Lebanese people know what war is.
This success is extraordinary.
Last month it got even more impressive.
At the beginning of November, Crown Prince MBS summoned Lebanon's Sunni prime minister
to Saudi Arabia and forced him to resign.
Lebanon was supposed to fall to pieces, drawing Israel and the US into war with Iran.
Instead the opposite happened.
The country became more unified.
Muslim and Christian, Shia and Sunni, they demanded their Prime Minister back, and they
got him.
Once again, the Lebanese people opted against war.
I don't know enough about Lebanon to cover the country in any detail.
It's a tremendously complex place.
But I can see that they know what war is.
And their choice to avoid it, over the past six years, and over the past month, can only
be described as heroic.
The Lebanese people deserve more credit for that than they get, in the Middle East and
in in the world at large.
Thanks for watching, please subscribe, and if you want to help me make more videos like
this one, please click on the patreon link here to find out more about my crowd-funding
thing.
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After Juilliard | Juilliard Drama 50: The Readiness is All - Duration: 4:00.--What I've left with, from this school, is a community that's much bigger out in
the world, and it's great that the school constantly reminds us of that.
♫ ♫ ♫ [gentle upbeat music]
--You know, when you're sort of released out into the world, there is this wild sort of
invisible string that connects all the alums together, whether they're aware of it or not.
--And to this day when we see each other, I think there's a real strong
brotherhood and sisterhood.
--There's the shared experience of your
time at the school that nobody else understands, and we always used to think
of it like, you know...sort of like you've been at war with somebody, right? You come
back, and you have those stories of what it was like and nobody else can understand.
--It's, you know, it is a big crazy family [laugh] in a big weird mansion
at, like, Lincoln Center. And we did a lot of crazy ... there.
--I always look forward to working with Juilliard people,
like, if one gets cast in a play that I'm in or a TV shoot or something, and it's
another Julliard person I feel like right away
we have a nice common language and we sort of trust each other. We trust that
this person is going to be present and competent and interesting and interested.
--My experience here was brilliant right now. My experience was brilliant because
it gave me every, every step that I needed to get to the place that I am in now.
--Now that we're in the fourth year, we're moving into the industry side of
things, and you always need someone else to help you with auditions and it's sort
of like this "I'll do one for you, you do one for me" thing.
--You have to have the long game in mind, because even if you
are successful there are ups and downs.
If you're not a name, you can still have a wonderful career working all the time.
--Then I started to become proactive and I created my own future. I was also
flexible enough to not insist on it being acting.
--So now I'm an artistic director. I run a theater that's connected to a school.
--Through my doctoral work, created a new methodology within the the field of psychology,
called Embodied Theater Ecology. And it's actually following that path of love
uh, which what came up for me in grad school was theater nature and the body.
--I've had a very successful career as a dialect coach, and I would not have
had that without my training, and what I really want to put out there for the
kids that are there now is to say there are a lot of roads that actually might
even make you happier.
--A, uh, a tear came to my eye, because I had been out of it
so long and said, "Well, who remembers me?" But...
the school remembers me, and I remember the school.
--There's an incredible loyalty that this school somehow...
Ah, what's the word I'm looking for?
--Engenders --Engenders in you.
--Community is what Jim Houghton was trying to create here, you know,
because it was a brilliant school, but he wanted a stronger sense of community
--He said you know we want you to know that you're
welcome and that you're part of the family, part of this community, whether
you were here for four years or one year or six months, and that we know that a lot
of you left with...never wanting to come back and we want you to be able to come
back. We want you to know the doors are open. We want you---he literally
said this! He said we want you to be able to tell your story and heal some of those wounds.
--In my romantic heart, I think of the American transcendentalists,
I think of us, I say, you know what? We gathered always around a conversation
that said let's inspire each other. And every time we gather with each other, I
walk away inspired just like it was all time.
♫ ♫ ♫ [gentle upbeat music]
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