Thứ Năm, 2 tháng 2, 2017

Waching daily Feb 3 2017

GOING TO TALK ABOUT NICKI

MINAJ AND DRAKE, WHO HAVE NOT

SPOKEN IN OVER TWO YEARS.

LAST TIME THEY SPOKE THEY DID

A SONG.

THEY DID "TRUFFLE BUTTER,"

GREAT HIT FOR HER AND THEN

MEEK MILL CAME ON THE SCENE --

IT'S OVER.

HARVEY: THE WAR BETWEEN DRAKE

AND MEAL MILL CAUSED NICKI

MINAJ TO CUT HER RELATIONSHIP

WITH DRAKE AND IT SEEMED LIKE

THIS UNION THAT WAS GOING ON

FOR SO LONG AND THEY WERE WITH

YOUNG MONEY FOR SO LONG, THAT

EVERYTHING BLEW APART.

GUESS WHAT?

SHE'S NO LONGER WITH MEEK AND

GUESS WHO'S BACK IN THE

PICTURE?

CHARLES: DRAKE IS BACK IN THE

PICTURE.

NICKI ACTUALLY POSTED A PHOTO

WITH DRAKE.

THERE IS A WHOLE STORY BEHIND

THIS PHOTO.

HARVEY: COME ON IN,

RAQUEL.

RAQUEL: YES, SO THE STORY IS

BASICALLY NICKI DECIDED TO DO

HIT FACTORY WITH DRAKE.

MCMAIN CALLED THEM TOGETHER

BECAUSE THEY WERE ON A CLIP OF

ESPN OR -- NO, NFL NETWORK

WHERE NICKI MINAJ

PASSED BY LIL WAYNE THEN WHEN

SHE PASSED BY DRAKE IS LIKE

WHAT?

I DIDN'T KNOW WE WERE BACK

FAMILY AND STUFF.

THEN THAT I HE JETTED IN A

PLANE ALL THE WAY TO

MIAMI.

HARVEY: HE WAS IN NEW YORK,

GOT IN A JET AND WENT TO

MIAMI.

AND TOOK THIS PICTURE.

IT'S YOUNG MONEY BACK

TOGETHER.

RAQUEL: IT'S GOING TO BE

EPIC.

DRAKE SAID DON'T COME BACK

UNTIL YOU TELL ME THEY'RE

FRIENDS TYPE OF THING.

THEY'RE FRIENDS.

HARVEY: IT SEEMS LIKE THEY'RE

UNIFIED BY THEIR DISLIKE FOR

MEEK MILL.

RAQUEL: NO, THERE'S UNITED

BECAUSE OF THE MONEY AND

THEY'RE FAMILY.

CHARLES: THE TIMING IS

INTERESTING.

NICKI ANNOUNCED SHE WAS

BREAKING UP WITH MEEK ON

JANUARY 5.

ONE WEEK LATER, JANUARY 12,

SHE WAS IN THE STUDIO WORKING

WITH DRAKE AND HANGING OUT

LIKE NOTHING HAD HAPPENED.

HARVEY: ARE THEY REALLY BACK

TOGETHER AS THE YOUNG MONEY

TEAM OR IS THIS A PHOTO

OP?

CHARLES: THEY WERE AT THE HIT

FACTORY, RIGHT?

RAQUEL: YES, BUT THEY DID NOT

MAKE ANY MUSIC.

THEY DISCUSSED THEIR

SITUATION.

CHARLES: THAT'S THE ONLY

REASON THEY DO IT.

HARVEY: NO, THE ONLY REASON

THEY DO IT IS TO SAY IN YOUR

FACE, MEEK MILL AND TAKE THE

PICTURE.

CHARLES: MEEK HAS TAKEN A LOT

OF --

RAQUEL: IT'S A LITTLE

TRICKY.

For more infomation >> Nicki Minaj and Drake: The War Is Over | TMZ Live - Duration: 2:36.

-------------------------------------------

Pokeland Legends: VIP Zero meets Ho-oh and Palkia! - Duration: 10:03.

HELP THIS CHANNEL GROW! KINDLY LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE!

For more infomation >> Pokeland Legends: VIP Zero meets Ho-oh and Palkia! - Duration: 10:03.

-------------------------------------------

February snow survey paints promising outlook for 2017 - Duration: 1:36.

AS WE NEED MORE

WINTER SEASONS IN THE MONTH

AHEAD.

-- INTERSYSTEMS IN THE MONTH

AHEAD.

FRANK HAS BEEN MEASURING THE

VALUE OF SNOW IN EL DORADO

COUNTY FOR DECADES.

>> SO THE FIRST ONE IS 100 FEET

FROM HERE OBVIOUSLY.

VICKI: IT PROBABLY GOES WITHOUT

SAYING.

>> IT ALWAYS FEELS WEIRD TO

ON SNOWSHOES AFTER BEING ON SKIS

MOSTLY.

VICKI: THE CHIEF OF THE

CALIFORNIA SNOW SURVEYS PROGRAM

IS A WINTER ENTHUSIAST.

>> COME ON DOWN.

VICK

PUNCTURING THE PACK OF

POWDER, DETERMINING THE WATER

EQUIVALENT IN THE SNOW.

TO SEE HOW THE STATE WILL FARE

WHEN THIS MELTS DURING THE

CRITICAL DRIER MONTHS OF THE

YEAR.

>> 90 AND 85.

VICKI: AFTER SEVEN SNOW LEVEL

RECORDINGS THIS MORNING.

>> THERE WE GO.

91.

VICKI: THE OUTLOOK IS PROMISING,

THE OUTLOOK IS PROMISING,

FOLLOWING FIVE YEARS OF DROUGHT.

>> WE'VE GOT A VERY GOOD

SNOWPACK, A VERY ROBUST SNOWPACK

ON THE GROUND RIGHT NOW.

VICKI: CALIFORNIA SNOWPACK IS

173% OF THE FEBRUARY AVERAGE, A

DRAMATIC JUMP FROM JUST LAST

MONTH WHEN THE STATE WAS BELOW

AVERAGE.

>> HUGE.

FANTASTIC JANUARY.

VICKI: AND THIS FEBRUARY IS THE

STRONGEST IN TERMS OF SNOWPACK

IN THE PAST FIVE YEARS.

THE LOWEST, JUST 14% OF THE

IN 2014.

>> OUR SNOWPACK OVERALL IS WAY

ABOVE AVERAGE.

VICKI: WITH THE EXPERIENCE OF

STRONG WINTERS PAST, AND RECENT

MEMORY OF PROFOUND DROUGHT,

GEHRKE IS OPTIMISTIC, WITH MORE

For more infomation >> February snow survey paints promising outlook for 2017 - Duration: 1:36.

-------------------------------------------

Hollywood Residents Say Homeless Encampment Is Growing Out On Control - Duration: 2:47.

NBA, AND THEY ARE THE ELITE

TEAM.

RICK: ABSOLUTELY, IF ANYBODY

CAN DO IT, THIS GUY KNOWS HOW

TO WIN.

PAT: WELCOME BACK, I'M PAT

HARVEY.

RICK: AND I'M RICK GARCIA.

HOLLYWOOD HAVEN FOR THE

HOMELESS IS GROWING, AND SOME

SAY IT'S OUT OF CONTROL.

PAT: KRISTINE LAZAR IS IN

HOLLYWOOD.

REPORTER: THE ENCAMPMENT IS IN

CAHUENGA ACROSS THE FREEWAY.

IT'S ON PRIVATE PROPERTY WHICH

IS WHY IT TAKES TIME TO CLEAN

IT UP.

PEOPLE WHO LIVE IN THE

NEIGHBORHOOD SAY THEY'VE HAD

ENOUGH.

IT STARTED OFF AS A FEW

TENTS AND NOW PRETTY MUCH

EQUIVALENT TO LIKE A DUMPING

GROUND.

REPORTER: IF YOU DRIVE NORTH ON

CAHUENGA THROUGH HOLLYWOOD

PARALLEL TO THE 101 FREEWAY

YOU, WILL SEE THIS SIZABLE

HOMELESS ENCAMPMENT FILLED WITH

TRASH, TARPS AND TENTS.

PEOPLE LIGHT UP AND ALL IT

TAKES IS ONE MISTAKE AND IT'S

GOING RIP UP THE HILL, ANOTHER

FIRE.

REPORTER: HEATHER NICOLE IS THE

HEAD OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH

PROGRAM.

SHE SAYS PEOPLE WHO LIVE IN THE

SURROUNDING NEIGHBORHOODS HAVE

BEEN TRYING GET THE ENCAMPMENT

CLEANED UP FOR MONTHS WITH NO

SUCCESS, SO IT KEEPS GETTING

BIGGER.

RIGHT THERE.

REPORTER: FRANCOIS CUSTER

WORRIES ABOUT THEIR SAFETY.

THEY'RE SPREADING OUT AND

COMING INTO THESE LITTLE COVE

NEIGHBORHOODS.

THEFT HAS GONE UP.

REPORTER: THIS IS PRIVATE

PROPERTY.

THE MAN WHO OWNS IT SAYS

INITIALLY HE WAS OKAY WITH

PEOPLE LIVING HERE, BUT AS OF

YESTERDAY, HE ASKED THEM TO

LEAVE.

I ALSO FEEL SORRY FOR THE

HOMELESS AND FEEL BAD THAT THE

HOMELESS HAVE MOVED IN.

REPORTER: THE PROPERTY OWNER

ALSO OWN THIS CAR WASH IN

STUDIO CITY, HE TRIED TO

DEVELOP THE PROPERTY YEARS AGO,

THIS IS

PROJECT.

HE INITIALLY HAD CITY APPROVAL

AND SAYS NEIGHBORS IN

COMPLAINED THAT PERMITS WERE

DENIED.

HE IS UNAPOLOGETIC ABOUT

ALLOWING THE HOMELESS TO LIVE

ON HIS PROPERTY.

THAT'S WHAT YOU GET WHEN YOU

SHOOT DOWN A $200 MILLION

PROJECT PROPOSED FOR THE SITE.

REPORTER: WE TALKED TO A

HOMELESS VETERAN WHO HAS BEEN

LIVING HERE.

HE SAYS THEY CAME HERE AFTER

BEING PUSHED OUT.

REALLY I WOULDN'T, BUT RIGHT

NOW THERE'S NO PLACE WHERE WE

CAN REALLY GO.

REPORTER: AND DOC WALKED BY OUR

CAMERA HERE, I ASKED IF HE

TALKED TO ANYBODY FROM THE CITY

ABOUT MOVING OUT.

HE SAYS HE HAS A SOCIAL WORKER

AND TRYING TO FIND HOUSING.

BUT AT THIS POINT THEY'RE

STAYING THERE.

THERE HAS BEEN A MEASURE THAT

PASSED IN THE CITY FOR HOMELESS

HOUSING.

THAT PASSED BACK IN NOVEMBER.

For more infomation >> Hollywood Residents Say Homeless Encampment Is Growing Out On Control - Duration: 2:47.

-------------------------------------------

My Favorite Fountain: Firefighters Memorial Fountain | Arts Upload - Duration: 2:46.

- Here on "Arts Upload," we like to say we''re out

to prove Kansas City is America''s creative crossroads.

- But it''s also still the City of Fountains,

which, we think they kind of go together.

- That''s why we created My Favorite Fountain,

where people tell us about the one they particularly like,

and then Dave Burkhardt goes out and shoots pictures of it.

- This week, newscaster Lara Moritz explains

why the Firefighters Memorial Fountain

means so much to her.

[serene music]

♪ ♪

N- This is my favorite fountain in the city because

to me, it speaks to me, and it makes me reflect

and just find a place of gratitude

for our public servants.

31st and Broadway is always busy,

yet this place, with the water,

and the firefighters, is a place of calm.

NYou see a fire truck and you-- you may even be

irritated if they''re going on a call.

But you come here, and it makes you

realize how intent and how determined they are

to keep you and your family

and your--your home safe.

I think that''s a lesson that I learned

as a little kid when we had

our family barn burn down,

and I remember, as a little girl,

watching these big firefighters

in all their garb go running

into our barn to save our animals.

It never dawned on me that they could be hurt,

or they could die doing that.

On that night in October of 2015,

when Larry Leggio and John Mesh died,

Kris Ketz and I were on the set.

We''d been covering the fire.

We learned, as we''re covering this on set,

that they had passed away.

It was a heartbreaker.

Knowing how everybody reacted and felt so deeply,

I think that the community--

the firefighters and the community as a whole

needed to have something that was permanent,

and this fountain is permanent.

And when you think about it,

I mean, how beautiful is the fact

Nthat you have two firefighters

determining, in my mind,

what--how they''re going to attack this fire,

and you have water, their greatest weapon,

all around them.

I think that if you come here

and if you just pause,

you will reflect on

how firefighters try and keep us safe,

and keep us alive.

And I don''t think anyone could

not walk by and stop,

and not think about firefighters.

♪ ♪

- All right, that particular fountain, like most,

is turned off for the winter, but, hey,

positive thoughts for warmer days ahead.

- And speaking of the future, next week on "Arts Upload,"

we''ll share a story about how the UMKC Conservatory

gets ready for the big Crescendo program.

- And judging from what you''re about to see,

they also do a good job teaching media and filmmaking.

- It''s a student-made project about Arny Young,

a jazz drummer we often see

quite a bit of around Mardi Gras time.

- All right, let me see what I can do with the names.

Julian Schempf is the director/editor,

working along with Kyle Womelduff

and Justin Longmeyer.

[frenetic drumming]

♪ ♪

- I''m Arnold Young.

I play drums and cymbals

and other various instruments.

Percussion, flute.

Mainly that''s just for composing.

That''s how I compose, but mainly I play the drum set,

which consists of drums and cymbals.

It''s called the drums, but it''s really the drums and cymbals.

Cymbal''s a big part of it.

I''m from, uh, um,

Paola, Kansas.

That''s it. That''s where I''m from.

[jazz music]

♪ ♪

You know, I moved here when I was 17,

so, man, during the time,

I''ve been here ever since then.

That was like 1963.

You know, and like, but-- but in that time,

I''ve also spent about 12 or 13 years in other cities.

Like, I lived in San Francisco for eight years;

I lived in New York for a couple of years,

I lived in LA a little bit.

You know, I''ve moved around.

You know, so, but I end up back here.

It''s kind of like a whirlpool or something.

I don''t know.

And I''ve been here 27 years now.

This last stretch.

[lively jazz music]

♪ ♪

I started playing professionally when I was about--

I guess I was 15 then?

And I played in terrible bars out in Kansas.

There was a guy my stepdad knew who was a guitar player.

And he''d come pick me up,

and I had a pituitary deficiency,

so I looked like I was like seven or eight years old

even though I was in high school,

and I''d go play in these horrible dives out in Kansas.

Just terrible, I mean, biker bars and stuff.

♪ ♪

Well, my style is--is also,

uh, it''s a group effort, you know?

It''s not just me.

It''s like I have a group with, uh,

really great musicians,

and they''re not necessarily jazz musicians, per se.

Some of them are; some of them aren''t.

Some of them go out and play straight-ahead jazz gigs.

Other guys don''t.

Like, Patrick Alonzo Smith Conway

is this fantastic musician-- now, he''s not a jazz guy.

But he plays alto sax in my band, and he''s--

now he''s playing bassoon too.

Through effects, man. That''s awesome.

And then, like, he happens to be the best conga player,

AfroCuban conga player, in--in Kansas City.

So we have percussion in my group.

Sometimes the whole group--my group''s called the RoughTet.

We''re dedicated to rough jazz.

We don''t like smooth jazz.

You know, we think jazz should be rough.

And it''s not just jazz-oriented.

We use a lot of different kinds of music in our music,

like, sometimes, we might all be on percussion.

Sometimes we might all be on bamboo flutes.

So we use traditional, non-Western instruments,

but mainly, we use, like, uh--

and we got a guy that does electronic music.

See, that''s-- that''s important to me.

To have something that fits the sound profile

of this time we''re living in.

I''m not trying to recreate what happened

in 1965 or something.

You know, that''s great, I was-- back then, I was,

but it''s not 1965.

[upbeat jazz music]

♪ ♪

You know, if there was even 10 or 20--

I mean, if you go back and look at the ''30s,

the heyday of Kansas City jazz?

Kansas City was the top place in the nation

in the ''30s-- swing was invented here.

Swing is Kansas City''s gift to the world.

Today, because of Bobby Watson

coming back 16 years ago and taking over

the jazz program at UMKC,

has become a magnet for all these

great young musicians to come here, and guess what?

Like, for instance, Ben Leifer.

He''s one of the finest bassists anywhere, I think.

He moved to New York for a year and a half.

He didn''t like it, he came back and lives here.

People are moving here from other towns

because the scene is so hot.

But what we don''t have is clubs.

We don''t--there were five jazz clubs.

Take Five, there''s, uh, the Majestic,

there''s the Blue Room, and there''s, uh,

Green Lady, they have jazz like seven nights a week,

I think, upstairs and down, that''s a good thing.

And that''s--that''s really-- but then there was

Broadway Jazz, that''s gone.

Take Five''s gone.

And so there''s just nowhere

for all these great young musicians to play.

It''s really tragic-- I mean, like I say,

if there were ten jazz clubs in town, even I''d be working.

Somebody needs to step up, and get some balls,

and open a couple of jazz clubs.

If there were a few more clubs here that had jazz,

and there are--there are a few opening up,

and it''s getting better, you know,

but there''s just not enough places

for all these great young

musicians that live here to play.

♪ ♪

I think jazz is very much alive.

I mean, it''s been shot full of holes

for the last 100-some years,

and it''s still going, man.

♪ ♪

- Well, the Arabia Steamboat Museum isn''t devoted to art,

but I''d say there''s an art to the way the Hawley family

and their associates put this place together 25 years ago.

- Well, first they had to dig up the boat.

It was covered under tons of mud

sitting in a field near Parkville,

sitting where it sank in 1856

while heading up the mighty Missouri.

- The amazing thing is how much of what was on board

the Arabia is still intact.

And so much fun to look at.

- The colors and the details on the clothing,

a true time capsule.

Even some of the canned food was still edible.

- Maybe the coolest part of this whole story,

they think they''ve now found another boat, the Malta.

- They''ve run tests, and they are encouraged

and are hoping to start the big dig

maybe even as soon as this fall.

[upbeat music]

- No doubt about it, this is a true homegrown treasure,

so while we''re here, we decided to share with you

the story of how another city has devised a way

to look back at its past.

- Old Milwaukee isn''t just a yard beer.

It''s also a very popular exhibit

at the Milwaukee History Museum.

[upbeat music]

♪ ♪

- This is "The Streets of Old Milwaukee,"

and we''ve been calling it

"The Reimagined Streets of Old Milwaukee,"

because we''ve done a whole lot of new things within it,

but it still is, fundamentally,

the old, beloved Streets of Old Milwaukee.

♪ ♪

The Streets of Old Milwaukee was designed

and built 50 years ago.

It was the first major exhibition to be put on

in the museum''s new building here.

It was designed by Ed Green,

and he''s still around, still a Milwaukeean,

and, um, it''s actually rather rare

for an exhibit to last for 50 years,

especially one that''s as interactive

and well-used as this one.

So the idea that an exhibit

would last for 50 years really speaks to the quality

of the original design.

♪ ♪

Whatever we did had to make what was beloved

about The Streets of Old Milwaukee already

deeper, broader,

more of what people love The Streets of Old Milwaukee for.

And from asking both visitors and internal people here,

what people love about it is that sense

of going back in time,

so we wanted to enhance that sense

of really being there.

♪ ♪

So the first major experience that people will have

when coming into the exhibition

is one of the larger things that we''ve added.

We''ve added the streetcar that is traveling to Old Milwaukee.

And the streetcar starts in the present,

and as you walk through it into the exhibit,

you''re going back in time.

This is your time machine.

This is your wardrobe to Narnia, if you will.

Uh, this is the way that people go back in time

to experience what Milwaukee was like.

There''s a rumble underneath the floor.

There are buildings going past, and they''re--

they''re getting newer as they go past you.

So it''s that sense of walking back in time.

♪ ♪

We wanted to engage all of the senses

with our Reimagined Streets of Old Milwaukee,

to enhance that sense of being there, as I''ve said.

Um, we added the smell

of fresh-baked bread to the bakery.

We''ve added a number of interactive items.

Things you can put your hands on and interact with.

A high-wheel bicycle you can get on and ride.

We''ve repaired the old pump that used to work,

so it pumps real water again.

Uh, you can, uh, find a little butterfly

hidden in the fruit cart

and tap its jar to make it fly.

All of these little details

are to make you feel like you are there,

not just looking through the windows.

♪ ♪

The nickelodeon now will be open for, uh,

all visitors most of the time.

For the general store, we created a glass box inside.

So you can get really close to the artifacts,

uh, inside as well.

So there''s a lot of detail

in there for people to find.

I like to tell everybody that

all of your old favorites are still there.

It''s true, Granny got a little bit of a face lift.

50 years, you know, puts a little

wear and tear on just about anybody.

But it''s the same old Granny

rocking on her porch there.

And people can still buy candy

in the slightly spruced-up,

but still the old candy shop

that everybody loves.

So I think everything that we''ve added

is not taking away from what people loved,

but just more of it.

[whimsical orchestral music]

♪ ♪

Well, one last thing I''d love to tell you

about this exhibition is that

it will change over time.

We have numerous stories,

numerous characters we want to bring to life.

And periodically, the entire Streets will change

in subtle ways.

New movies in the nickelodeon.

New headlines on the newspaper.

New sounds that you hear as you go through.

Supporting new themes.

We''re starting with the theme of entertainment,

but we''re gonna go on to public health,

public safety, immigration,

all things which were important to people

in Milwaukee of that era,

and still important to people in Milwaukee.

But the most key part of that is gonna be

an app, a storytelling app, where you can follow

various characters who are telling their perspective

in what it was like to live in Milwaukee at that time,

through the streets, and it''s a very interesting app

that people can do.

People have told me stories after stories

about how, "Oh, my grandfather

used to work at that store,"

or "my great, great aunt

actually donated that particular object."

This really is the people''s exhibition.

There''s pieces of them, pieces of their history

embedded throughout this exhibit.

So there probably isn''t another exhibit

in the state of Wisconsin

that has so much of the public

invested directly in it.

The museum is engaged right now in

reimagining throughout the institution.

It''s an exciting time here.

We''re refreshing a lot of different things,

rethinking the way that we do it,

and listening to the public about what they want too,

so I hope people come back again and again

to discover what''s new at the Milwaukee Public Museum.

♪ ♪

- Well, while the big wheel keeps on turnin''

here at the Arabia Steamboat Museum,

our time this week is pretty much up.

- Next week on "Arts Upload,"

among other things, a trip to Hamilton, Missouri.

- Home of the crazy successful

Missouri Star Quilt Company.

- Until then, I''m Vanessa Severo.

- And I''m Randy Mason.

How ''bout some more chicken footstools?

- [laughing]

[laid-back music]

♪ ♪

announcer: Production funding for "Arts Upload"

has been provided in part by:

For more infomation >> My Favorite Fountain: Firefighters Memorial Fountain | Arts Upload - Duration: 2:46.

-------------------------------------------

Evidence suggests COMPLEX Life Forms may have existed on Earth BILLIONS of years ago - Duration: 7:29.

Evidence suggests COMPLEX Life Forms may have existed on Earth BILLIONS of years ago.

There is pressing evidence which suggests that Humans may not have been the FRIST complex

life form to appear on the planet.

In fact, recent studies�and archaeological discoveries�point to the fact that complex

life forms may have appeared on Earth at a time when scientists state NOTHING existed

on Earth.

�Twenty years ago, this would have been heretical; finding evidence of life 3.8 billion

years ago was shocking��

Looking at the history of our planet, we will find that scientists agree Earth is around

4.6 BILLION years old.

However, recent findings have given rise to numerous theories which suggest that our planet,

and life on it �not just single cell organims� may have called Earth home even before modern

humans appeared.

Telltale signs and scientific evidence

Scientists have discovered carbon-laced crystals which are up to 300 million years older than

the previously considered �oldest life on Earth�, which go back around 4.5 millions

of years.

Even though these crystals are not proof of the existence of biological life, they indicate

the presence of chemical signs of life.

A team of geochemists at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) have just

found evidence that there was life on Earth 4,100 million years ago.

The finding implies that life came into existence very soon after our world was formed, 4.554

million years ago.

The work was recently published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

�Twenty years ago, this would have been heretical; finding evidence of life 3.8 billion

years ago was shocking,� said Mark Harrison, co-author of the research and a professor

of geochemistry at UCLA.

Another study�of great interest�was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy

of Sciences, as lead author Michael Kipp, a UW doctoral student in Earth and space sciences,

analyzed isotopic ratios of the element selenium in sedimentary rocks in order to measure the

presence of oxygen in Earth�s atmosphere between 2 and 2.4 billion years ago.

The findings are extremely interesting.

Lead researcher, Eva St�eken and Roger Buick, state in the paper,

�There is fossil evidence of complex cells that go back maybe 1 � billion years,�

said Buick.

�But the oldest fossil is not necessarily the oldest one that ever lived � because

the chances of getting preserved as a fossil are pretty low.

�This research shows that there was enough oxygen in the environment to have allowed

complex cells to have evolved, and to have become ecologically important, before there

was fossil evidence.� He added, �That doesn�t mean that they did � but they

could have.�

Basically, scientists used selenium in sedimentary rocks as a tool to measure oxygen levels in

our planet�s atmosphere up to 2.4 billion years ago.

The study offered new evidence on how selenium had been changed by the presence of oxygen

and even affected the appearance and DISAPPEARANCE of COMPLEX life forms.

The results show that there was enough oxygen for complex life cells to develop.

Controversial discoveries

Referred to as pseudoscience, conspiracy or other names along that line, numerous discoveries

point to the possibility that life may have flourished on Earth thousands if not millions

of years ago.

Giant footprints scattered around the globe suggest that in the distant past, before written

history, beings of freakishly large proportions may have roamed the earth.

If we look at ancient writings from South America, North America, Europe and Asia, we

will find that ancient cultures mentioned giants in their ancient writings.

However, some ancient texts not only mention giants but suggest they were real.

One of the most controversial footprints was found in Africa, in the vicinity of the town

of Mpaluzi, close to the border with Swaziland.

The granite block where the massive footprint is located on is believed to date back between

200 Million and 3 billion years.

This fascinating footprint was discovered over a hundred years ago when a hunter called

Stoffel Coetzee stumbled across it in 1912 while hunting in the area.

Due to the fact that the footprint is located in an extremely isolated and remote region

of the African continent, the chances of the footprint being a carved hoax are extremely

low.

One of the possibilities is that we are looking at an actual footprint, left behind by giant

beings millions of years ago when our planet was much different than it is today.

The other possibility, highly unlikely according to many, is that the massive footprint is

the result of natural erosions and that a phenomenon called pareidolia is making us

see a familiar shape, which in this case is a footprint.

Recently, photographers exploring an area near a Chinese village came across a sensational

finding.

They discovered (and photographed) a footprint left behind by a massive being.

In the image �se below� you can clearly see the footprint embedded into rock.

Compared to an ordinary foot of a human being, the footprint embedded into rock is at least

twice as big.

A footprint which dates back nearly 300 million years.

Impossible right?

The discovery of the 290 million-year-old footprint was made in New Mexico by paleontologist

Jerry MacDonald in 1987.

The discovery of the human impression has left MacDonald particularly puzzled and not

he or anyone who has seen and studied the impression has not been able to explain how

this modern footprint could have been located in the Permian strata, which according to

scholars dates from 290 to 248 million years, a time period which occurred long before man

or even birds and dinosaurs existed on this planet.

Furthermore, artifacts which date back millions of years have been discovered scattered across

the globe.

One of them is a controversial artifact discovered in 1889 near Nampa, southwest Idaho, when

workers were drilling, searching for water.

The small figure, skillfully formed in clay has since remained one of the greatest mysteries

creating both confusion and amazement among scholars.

Researchers have stated it dates back around 2 MILLION years.

For more infomation >> Evidence suggests COMPLEX Life Forms may have existed on Earth BILLIONS of years ago - Duration: 7:29.

-------------------------------------------

City Girl Farms | Arts Upload - Duration: 7:50.

- The first thing to know about City Girl Farm

is that it''s not actually a farm.

- Ah, but it does yield something

you might find in a barnyard,

and no, it''s not a cow.

- The City Girl Farm is a place

from which chicken footstools emerge.

- And they don''t go for chicken feed either.

They''re serious pieces of fiber art

probably best described simply by showing you.

[laid-back music]

♪ ♪

- Okay.

I''m really in the finishing process of this chicken.

Just going around and making all the final passes.

And Mom is working on basting on her chicken,

making sure everything''s covered,

and you''ve got a head on.

Great.

♪ ♪

- Yep, poultry parts.

Being, for lack of a better term, upholstered,

inside a small storefront just west

of the Country Club Plaza

by the mother-daughter team

that''s at the heart of the City Girl Farm.

- Mom gets a lot of credit for

being involved from birth on.

[laughs] Creatively.

So, yeah, I grew up on a farm in central Kansas,

in Lyons, and I was given the gift of chickens,

I think, sometime in middle school.

And so I had a lot of

happy childhood chicken experiences

and loved collecting the eggs,

and just watching them around the farm,

and I think they''re so ridiculous

and quirky and unique, each chicken,

that they make me feel better about

my own quirks and uniquenesses.

- The story moves onto Sally''s

graduate studies at Kansas State,

where she majored in interior architecture.

Inspired by the French artist Francois Lalanne''s

sheep footstools, she introduced

a product of her own.

- Henny and Penny were the result of a semester

of designing how to, um, how to make a chicken.

What''s the essence of a chicken? What parts need to be there?

And I was honestly just hoping

that they would stand up. [laughs]

- They stood.

And an idea was hatched. Sorry.

Teaming one newly minted college graduate

with her mom''s skills at the spinning wheel

and her father''s abilities to build.

The first chickens were white and basic.

They sold.

So did the next batch.

And the next.

As have the increasingly not found in nature

varieties which continue to emerge.

- We create our own rule.

We''ll look at each other, and we''re like,

"There''s nobody to ask, we have to solve this,

"and we may do it wrong; we may do it right;

and we''re just taking that risk."

One of the first shows we went to,

there was somebody that looked in our booth,

and they said, "Are you taxidermists?"

They looked at it. They knew it was a chicken.

Their minds told them, then the second later,

they realized, "Oh, well, there''s no chickens

that big running around any farmyard."

But it was the scale of it that she created

that, I think, made it real.

But yet, they knew they weren''t real,

so it was a real play on, you know, their--

what their mind and their eyes

were telling them at the same time.

- Our goal is always to create a chicken,

but the way that we get to the end result

is always changing based on the fiber,

based on the feather-making processes,

and then what we-- what we pin on the chicken

and how we decide to stitch it.

- So far, the roughly 500 chickens

that have gone out the door have

at least one thing in common:

they''re sturdily constructed.

With bronze legs and beaks,

and a solid wooden egg at the core.

They are, after all, footstools.

Expensive footstools that take weeks to create.

- People will say, "I wouldn''t buy this

and put my feet up on it," and--or they ask us,

"Do people use it that way?"

And we''re like, we really have no idea.

It''s up to them, you know?

But they are engineered as a footstool,

and the price is, you know, reflects that.

We did recognize, kind of, a couple years ago,

that these chickens were going

to some pretty cool homes.

And I was--I was starting to get a little jealous.

There''s one we know of that-- that has

the view of the Pacific Ocean

every single day, and I''m thinking,

that isn''t quite fair!

- While there may not be an ocean view here,

Susan does get to see something

that many parents would envy her for:

her daughter, nearly every day,

as they tackle this task

for which there is no manual.

- I don''t know, somehow,

our differences

and our strengths have made this work.

As long as I don''t comment about her hair,

or what she''s wearing. [laughing]

- Okay. - We have a similar work ethic.

I think that''s really big.

We will push and put in, you know,

to the midnight hour

without even questioning it,

and that''s hard to find people,

pay people to put in that kind of,

you know, effort.

- Except, perhaps, for this group of chickeners.

Among them you''ll find architects, nurses,

students, and friends-- even friends of friends.

They come together nearly every week

for conversation and camaraderie,

some snacks, and no matter what their sewing skills may be,

to play some small role

in the unfolding tale of the City Girl Farm.

- They do get compensated for their stitches.

We do our best to decide

how much of a chicken they''ve stitched,

and then pay them accordingly.

- So what I''m trying to do is...

Sally is very good at directing

and teaching, but then she allows you

to have, like, flexibility

and your own creative look on things,

and that''s, I think, how you can get so much,

and then if you''re nervous, she''s like,

"No, you''re doing such a good job!"

And she''s just very positive,

which I think is great.

You get...you get her today. [laughs]

- It''s tempting to say that the chicks are in charge,

and apparently I just did,

but there are some guys involved at the farm too,

including Dave in the back room.

He''s the designated felter,

transforming raw fibers like wool into fabric

using the powers of water and heat,

and a process that falls somewhere

between science and magic.

- Look at that. - Then there''s Joe.

Recently added to the CGF team

to help Sally keep a more vigilant eye

on those pesky numbers.

- Definitely learning more this year, particularly,

about the business end of things,

which was not my forte and never has been,

but I''m learning a lot, so it''s a beautiful mix

of, like, production that needs to--to happen,

and, um, just wanting to protect the culture

of flexibility and spontaneity

and--and creativity in the making.

- We never get bored.

I mean, it''s like, you know,

we''ll look at each other and just kind of,

"Really?" You know? "We get to do this?"

[laughing]

- We''re having a lot of fun,

and I''m really, really thankful

for the idea, um, and just the joy

and delight that it seems--

that they seem to spread into the world.

♪ ♪

- Here on "Arts Upload," we like to say we''re out

to prove Kansas City is America''s creative crossroads.

- But it''s also still the City of Fountains,

which, we think they kind of go together.

- That''s why we created My Favorite Fountain,

where people tell us about the one they particularly like,

and then Dave Burkhardt goes out and shoots pictures of it.

- This week, newscaster Lara Moritz explains

why the Firefighters Memorial Fountain

means so much to her.

[serene music]

♪ ♪

N- This is my favorite fountain in the city because

to me, it speaks to me, and it makes me reflect

and just find a place of gratitude

for our public servants.

31st and Broadway is always busy,

yet this place, with the water,

and the firefighters, is a place of calm.

NYou see a fire truck and you-- you may even be

irritated if they''re going on a call.

But you come here, and it makes you

realize how intent and how determined they are

to keep you and your family

and your--your home safe.

I think that''s a lesson that I learned

as a little kid when we had

our family barn burn down,

and I remember, as a little girl,

watching these big firefighters

in all their garb go running

into our barn to save our animals.

It never dawned on me that they could be hurt,

or they could die doing that.

On that night in October of 2015,

when Larry Leggio and John Mesh died,

Kris Ketz and I were on the set.

We''d been covering the fire.

We learned, as we''re covering this on set,

that they had passed away.

It was a heartbreaker.

Knowing how everybody reacted and felt so deeply,

I think that the community--

the firefighters and the community as a whole

needed to have something that was permanent,

and this fountain is permanent.

And when you think about it,

I mean, how beautiful is the fact

Nthat you have two firefighters

determining, in my mind,

what--how they''re going to attack this fire,

and you have water, their greatest weapon,

all around them.

I think that if you come here

and if you just pause,

you will reflect on

how firefighters try and keep us safe,

and keep us alive.

And I don''t think anyone could

not walk by and stop,

and not think about firefighters.

♪ ♪

- All right, that particular fountain, like most,

is turned off for the winter, but, hey,

positive thoughts for warmer days ahead.

- And speaking of the future, next week on "Arts Upload,"

we''ll share a story about how the UMKC Conservatory

gets ready for the big Crescendo program.

- And judging from what you''re about to see,

they also do a good job teaching media and filmmaking.

- It''s a student-made project about Arny Young,

a jazz drummer we often see

quite a bit of around Mardi Gras time.

- All right, let me see what I can do with the names.

Julian Schempf is the director/editor,

working along with Kyle Womelduff

and Justin Longmeyer.

[frenetic drumming]

♪ ♪

- I''m Arnold Young.

I play drums and cymbals

and other various instruments.

Percussion, flute.

Mainly that''s just for composing.

That''s how I compose, but mainly I play the drum set,

which consists of drums and cymbals.

It''s called the drums, but it''s really the drums and cymbals.

Cymbal''s a big part of it.

I''m from, uh, um,

Paola, Kansas.

That''s it. That''s where I''m from.

[jazz music]

♪ ♪

You know, I moved here when I was 17,

so, man, during the time,

I''ve been here ever since then.

That was like 1963.

You know, and like, but-- but in that time,

I''ve also spent about 12 or 13 years in other cities.

Like, I lived in San Francisco for eight years;

I lived in New York for a couple of years,

I lived in LA a little bit.

You know, I''ve moved around.

You know, so, but I end up back here.

It''s kind of like a whirlpool or something.

I don''t know.

And I''ve been here 27 years now.

This last stretch.

[lively jazz music]

♪ ♪

I started playing professionally when I was about--

I guess I was 15 then?

And I played in terrible bars out in Kansas.

There was a guy my stepdad knew who was a guitar player.

And he''d come pick me up,

and I had a pituitary deficiency,

so I looked like I was like seven or eight years old

even though I was in high school,

and I''d go play in these horrible dives out in Kansas.

Just terrible, I mean, biker bars and stuff.

♪ ♪

Well, my style is--is also,

uh, it''s a group effort, you know?

It''s not just me.

It''s like I have a group with, uh,

really great musicians,

and they''re not necessarily jazz musicians, per se.

Some of them are; some of them aren''t.

Some of them go out and play straight-ahead jazz gigs.

Other guys don''t.

Like, Patrick Alonzo Smith Conway

is this fantastic musician-- now, he''s not a jazz guy.

But he plays alto sax in my band, and he''s--

now he''s playing bassoon too.

Through effects, man. That''s awesome.

And then, like, he happens to be the best conga player,

AfroCuban conga player, in--in Kansas City.

So we have percussion in my group.

Sometimes the whole group--my group''s called the RoughTet.

We''re dedicated to rough jazz.

We don''t like smooth jazz.

You know, we think jazz should be rough.

And it''s not just jazz-oriented.

We use a lot of different kinds of music in our music,

like, sometimes, we might all be on percussion.

Sometimes we might all be on bamboo flutes.

So we use traditional, non-Western instruments,

but mainly, we use, like, uh--

and we got a guy that does electronic music.

See, that''s-- that''s important to me.

To have something that fits the sound profile

of this time we''re living in.

I''m not trying to recreate what happened

in 1965 or something.

You know, that''s great, I was-- back then, I was,

but it''s not 1965.

[upbeat jazz music]

♪ ♪

You know, if there was even 10 or 20--

I mean, if you go back and look at the ''30s,

the heyday of Kansas City jazz?

Kansas City was the top place in the nation

in the ''30s-- swing was invented here.

Swing is Kansas City''s gift to the world.

Today, because of Bobby Watson

coming back 16 years ago and taking over

the jazz program at UMKC,

has become a magnet for all these

great young musicians to come here, and guess what?

Like, for instance, Ben Leifer.

He''s one of the finest bassists anywhere, I think.

He moved to New York for a year and a half.

He didn''t like it, he came back and lives here.

People are moving here from other towns

because the scene is so hot.

But what we don''t have is clubs.

We don''t--there were five jazz clubs.

Take Five, there''s, uh, the Majestic,

there''s the Blue Room, and there''s, uh,

Green Lady, they have jazz like seven nights a week,

I think, upstairs and down, that''s a good thing.

And that''s--that''s really-- but then there was

Broadway Jazz, that''s gone.

Take Five''s gone.

And so there''s just nowhere

for all these great young musicians to play.

It''s really tragic-- I mean, like I say,

if there were ten jazz clubs in town, even I''d be working.

Somebody needs to step up, and get some balls,

and open a couple of jazz clubs.

If there were a few more clubs here that had jazz,

and there are--there are a few opening up,

and it''s getting better, you know,

but there''s just not enough places

for all these great young

musicians that live here to play.

♪ ♪

I think jazz is very much alive.

I mean, it''s been shot full of holes

for the last 100-some years,

and it''s still going, man.

♪ ♪

- Well, the Arabia Steamboat Museum isn''t devoted to art,

but I''d say there''s an art to the way the Hawley family

and their associates put this place together 25 years ago.

- Well, first they had to dig up the boat.

It was covered under tons of mud

sitting in a field near Parkville,

sitting where it sank in 1856

while heading up the mighty Missouri.

- The amazing thing is how much of what was on board

the Arabia is still intact.

And so much fun to look at.

- The colors and the details on the clothing,

a true time capsule.

Even some of the canned food was still edible.

- Maybe the coolest part of this whole story,

they think they''ve now found another boat, the Malta.

- They''ve run tests, and they are encouraged

and are hoping to start the big dig

maybe even as soon as this fall.

[upbeat music]

- No doubt about it, this is a true homegrown treasure,

so while we''re here, we decided to share with you

the story of how another city has devised a way

to look back at its past.

- Old Milwaukee isn''t just a yard beer.

It''s also a very popular exhibit

at the Milwaukee History Museum.

[upbeat music]

♪ ♪

- This is "The Streets of Old Milwaukee,"

and we''ve been calling it

"The Reimagined Streets of Old Milwaukee,"

because we''ve done a whole lot of new things within it,

but it still is, fundamentally,

the old, beloved Streets of Old Milwaukee.

♪ ♪

The Streets of Old Milwaukee was designed

and built 50 years ago.

It was the first major exhibition to be put on

in the museum''s new building here.

It was designed by Ed Green,

and he''s still around, still a Milwaukeean,

and, um, it''s actually rather rare

for an exhibit to last for 50 years,

especially one that''s as interactive

and well-used as this one.

So the idea that an exhibit

would last for 50 years really speaks to the quality

of the original design.

♪ ♪

Whatever we did had to make what was beloved

about The Streets of Old Milwaukee already

deeper, broader,

more of what people love The Streets of Old Milwaukee for.

And from asking both visitors and internal people here,

what people love about it is that sense

of going back in time,

so we wanted to enhance that sense

of really being there.

♪ ♪

So the first major experience that people will have

when coming into the exhibition

is one of the larger things that we''ve added.

We''ve added the streetcar that is traveling to Old Milwaukee.

And the streetcar starts in the present,

and as you walk through it into the exhibit,

you''re going back in time.

This is your time machine.

This is your wardrobe to Narnia, if you will.

Uh, this is the way that people go back in time

to experience what Milwaukee was like.

There''s a rumble underneath the floor.

There are buildings going past, and they''re--

they''re getting newer as they go past you.

So it''s that sense of walking back in time.

♪ ♪

We wanted to engage all of the senses

with our Reimagined Streets of Old Milwaukee,

to enhance that sense of being there, as I''ve said.

Um, we added the smell

of fresh-baked bread to the bakery.

We''ve added a number of interactive items.

Things you can put your hands on and interact with.

A high-wheel bicycle you can get on and ride.

We''ve repaired the old pump that used to work,

so it pumps real water again.

Uh, you can, uh, find a little butterfly

hidden in the fruit cart

and tap its jar to make it fly.

All of these little details

are to make you feel like you are there,

not just looking through the windows.

♪ ♪

The nickelodeon now will be open for, uh,

all visitors most of the time.

For the general store, we created a glass box inside.

So you can get really close to the artifacts,

uh, inside as well.

So there''s a lot of detail

in there for people to find.

I like to tell everybody that

all of your old favorites are still there.

It''s true, Granny got a little bit of a face lift.

50 years, you know, puts a little

wear and tear on just about anybody.

But it''s the same old Granny

rocking on her porch there.

And people can still buy candy

in the slightly spruced-up,

but still the old candy shop

that everybody loves.

So I think everything that we''ve added

is not taking away from what people loved,

but just more of it.

[whimsical orchestral music]

♪ ♪

Well, one last thing I''d love to tell you

about this exhibition is that

it will change over time.

We have numerous stories,

numerous characters we want to bring to life.

And periodically, the entire Streets will change

in subtle ways.

New movies in the nickelodeon.

New headlines on the newspaper.

New sounds that you hear as you go through.

Supporting new themes.

We''re starting with the theme of entertainment,

but we''re gonna go on to public health,

public safety, immigration,

all things which were important to people

in Milwaukee of that era,

and still important to people in Milwaukee.

But the most key part of that is gonna be

an app, a storytelling app, where you can follow

various characters who are telling their perspective

in what it was like to live in Milwaukee at that time,

through the streets, and it''s a very interesting app

that people can do.

People have told me stories after stories

about how, "Oh, my grandfather

used to work at that store,"

or "my great, great aunt

actually donated that particular object."

This really is the people''s exhibition.

There''s pieces of them, pieces of their history

embedded throughout this exhibit.

So there probably isn''t another exhibit

in the state of Wisconsin

that has so much of the public

invested directly in it.

The museum is engaged right now in

reimagining throughout the institution.

It''s an exciting time here.

We''re refreshing a lot of different things,

rethinking the way that we do it,

and listening to the public about what they want too,

so I hope people come back again and again

to discover what''s new at the Milwaukee Public Museum.

♪ ♪

- Well, while the big wheel keeps on turnin''

here at the Arabia Steamboat Museum,

our time this week is pretty much up.

- Next week on "Arts Upload,"

among other things, a trip to Hamilton, Missouri.

- Home of the crazy successful

Missouri Star Quilt Company.

- Until then, I''m Vanessa Severo.

- And I''m Randy Mason.

How ''bout some more chicken footstools?

- [laughing]

[laid-back music]

♪ ♪

announcer: Production funding for "Arts Upload"

has been provided in part by:

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét