Chủ Nhật, 30 tháng 7, 2017

Waching daily Jul 30 2017

Lalay Kids Tv

Red

Blue

Yellow

Orange

Green

Purple

White

Black

Brown

Gray

Pink

Let's count starting with zero.

Zero

One

Two

Three

Four

Five

Six

Seven

Eight

Nine

Ten

[Clapping and cheering]

Great job! That was fantastic counting!

See you next time! :)

Thanks for watching!

Don't forget to like, subscribe, and share!

For more infomation >> Teach Baby Colors Counting Educational - Learn Colors and Numbers for Kids - How to Count to Ten - Duration: 2:25.

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How to add and Edit Tags on Your Phone for Android and iOS - Duration: 1:29.

Hi Des here, and in this video I want to show you how to add YouTube TAGS from

your mobile device whether it be iPhone or Android. Before we get started, if you've

stumble across this channel and you're not yet subscribed, go ahead and hit that

subscribe button I release videos like this one weekly to help

businesses and individuals just like yourself get online with video. Right

let's get started. I'm going to switch over to the mobile screen and show you

how to add YouTube tags. Make sure you're signed into your Google or YouTube account

on the top right tap on your avatar, then press 'My

CHANNEL. On the top of the menu tap on 'Videos', now scroll to find your

desired video and then press on the three dots on the right of the video

from the pop-up menu press edit and then press on the tags to add or at the

bottom of the existing tags to add more. Once you've added a tag

press save on the top right and you're done. That's right it's a simple process

to add YouTube tags on your mobile device. I hope you found this video

interesting and informative if you like this video consider giving it a thumbs

up. Please subscribe so I can deliver more videos just like this one to help

businesses and individuals just like yourself get online with video and share

your message. Thanks for watching. --music--

Bloopers

For more infomation >> How to add and Edit Tags on Your Phone for Android and iOS - Duration: 1:29.

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Is LGBT+ content appropriate for kids? with Lindsay from Queer Kid Stuff | Riley J. Dennis - Duration: 9:16.

- Hey everybody, today I'm here with:

- Lindsay.

- Yeah, she has a really great channel

called Queer Kid Stuff

and today I just kinda wanna talk about LGBT+ stuff

and talking about that stuff with kids

and is that an appropriate topic and all of that stuff.

Can you just tell me a little bit about your channel

and what you do?

- Yeah, okay.

I do LGBTQ+ education for kids

ages three and up, pretty much.

So it's like all-ages content.

And it's something I've been wanting to do for a while.

I used to do it in theater

and then I transitioned into digital platforms

with the work I was doing.

The biggest thing for me is about

media representation for children

about just general diversity and inclusion,

just showing the world as it is

with all the different colors and identities and humans

that live in it

and making sure that,

content right now is so focused on what's normalized

and that really feeds into children's content

in a very pervasive, overwhelming way,

and diversity is hard to come across in children's content.

- A little bit.

A little bit. - Yeah, just a little bit.

I mean, it's generally hard to come across in any content.

- Yeah, yeah.

But one of the things I've noticed in a lot of media

is even when it becomes okay for two men to kiss onscreen

or two women to kiss onscreen in an adult show

or in just a regular TV show or whatever,

it's still inappropriate for that to happen in a kids show.

It's like people are able to be like,

"Oh this is okay, just not for children."

It's like they've kind of accepted it but not really.

- I think it's very tied to this stigma around queerness

and the fact that

if you're talking about queerness with children

that you have to explain queer sex to children.

And that's just,

it's this huge misconception

that children equate sexuality with sex.

Because here's the thing: children don't know what sex is.

They're not coming at queerness from that context,

which is the context that adults are coming from,

and why a lot of queerness is taboo

is because your sex looks different for adults who are queer

versus adults who are straight.

- I think people sexualize queer people in general.

- Yeah, definitely. - It's like with children

to a three-year-old girl, you can be like,

"She's gonna have a strong boyfriend someday."

or "She's gonna be such a princess when she grows up,"

and that's really gendered stuff,

but it's also about their sexual orientation.

It's like saying the people they will date in the future

and that's okay,

but if it's the other way around,

then it's like you're sexualizing them somehow.

- Yeah, and what's important about it is that

kids understand the two things that are important

about sexuality and identity,

which are gender and love and romance

and connections with humans and empathy.

Kids understand those concepts,

and you can talk about queerness in terms of those ideas

and sex doesn't have to be a part of the conversation.

And that's kind of what I try and do on the channel

is bring these ideas that can be so complex

and heavy and confusing to adults

and show that they can be very simplified

and they can be understandable

from a three-year-old's perspective

and that it's not a hard thing to wrap your brain around.

- Yeah, I feel like one of the things

when we talk about sexuality

is people focus so much on sexual attraction

and not on romantic attraction,

and forget that oftentimes gay people or bisexual people

are also biromantic or homoromantic or whatever.

It is about love a lot of the time and not just sex.

- Yeah, I worked on a video on defining what asexual is,

and that was really interesting to talk about for children

because I did have to avoid sex,

'cause it's not appropriate.

Also, sex doesn't concern children.

It's not something they need to know about.

I mean, reproduction is important for children to understand

because babies are in three-year-olds' lives,

and that's something that can be conceptualized

on their level.

But you don't need to talk about sex with kids.

It's just not necessary.

There's sex-ed topics that should be talked about,

I did a consent episode I thought was important,

but yeah, in my asexual episode

I basically talked about asexuality as aromanticism,

and talking about different kinds of love,

so looking at platonic relationships,

and looking at romantic relationships,

and then kind of using a metaphor of like,

kissing for sex.

So it's definitely something you can touch upon.

- 'Cause it's simplifying things for children.

- Yeah, exactly. - Trying to bring it down

to that level so that they can understand.

They don't know attraction and all that,

they know liking people and not liking people or whatever.

- And there was a,

I came up in theater for young audiences,

and so I had this fantastic playwriting teacher,

this professor of mine in undergrad

who always told me to write children's content

from under the doorknob.

So looking at the world from a perspective of smallness.

'Cause children are just little people.

And people just forget

that children are also humans with brains

and capabilities and autonomy.

So it's about respecting a child's brain

as having the same capacity as an adult's

just without the experience.

- One of the things that I think is really important,

in addition to all the education stuff

is just normalizing it, just having that to exist

as a thing that they see.

Can you talk a little bit about that?

- Yeah, I mean it's also about making it fun, too.

That's why I have Teddy on,

that's my childhood toy.

That's from when I was a baby,

and having the songs and stuff,

and making it something that becomes,

something that's not scary to talk about.

A big part of the videos that I make

is about starting a conversation between grown-ups and kids,

and really making it something

that can be talked about regularly,

and if you have the vocabulary for it,

you can integrate it into your life more,

and point out like, if you are watching Beauty and the Beast

and that's a very invisible moment that happens,

and I doubt that kids are actually picking that up,

and so you can have an adult talk to the kid about,

"Did you see that moment?

Let's talk about what happened there."

- Or when a child has same-sex parents

and a lot of people are like,

"How do I explain that to my kid?"

But there are ways to do that,

there are easy ways to explain it.

- Yeah, and there's kind of two camps of it as well,

of making it visible and talking about it directly,

but then also just allowing it to exist in your space

and not even talking about it.

I think it's important for kids,

especially in the climate that we're in

I think it's important to talk about it,

but I wanna live in a world where nobody has to come out.

- Yeah, where it's just a thing, you're like,

"Oh, there are all of these people that are different

and that's cool."

- Exactly.

Apparently, I've heard that kids these days

are cluing in instead of coming out.

- What's cluing in?

- Cluing in is letting people in on the fact that you're gay

rather than it being like, "I'm gay!"

and a big coming-out-of-the-closet moment

because it's not as big of a deal anymore.

- I've seen people criticize it

and say that's not appropriate for that age range,

that you should be making content for an older age group,

and I'm wondering how you would respond to that.

- There's a lot of content

that actually targets those age ranges already,

and that's kind of where,

in most schools, it depends on where you are,

but most schools do start integrating sex ed

in middle school

and talking about these things in middle school

and then in high school, obviously.

But for this age range,

for elementary, preschool,

that's essentially where my content is targeting.

There really isn't any content at all for these age groups,

and I think it's super important to target them

because this is such a formative age

where you're really learning about

the totality of what the world is and who exists in it,

and what the different categories are,

and just building your whole structure

of how the world functions.

And if you're learning about that world

in a way that is normative and focused on the majority,

you're not getting a whole picture of the world,

and you're growing up

in this false sense of what the world is and is like

and who exists in it.

And that's where bigotry happens,

and that's how you internalize homophobia,

and that's how you get people

who don't understand other marginalized identities

because they don't understand that they exist

and they don't understand that oppression exists.

And especially if you're growing up in a conservative space

and you happen to be a queer person

and you find that out later,

that's something you have to unlearn

and work through a lot of internalized bigotry,

and I think if you are talking to kids at this age,

you avoid a lot of that

because you're teaching them correctly the first time.

- You're just teaching them this stuff is normal and okay,

or even that just it exists.

I don't think I knew growing up that trans people existed.

And so just knowing that that was a thing

would've made me feel so much better

when I started to question my own gender.

And I know a lot of other people feel that way,

especially, as you were saying,

if they grow up in conservative spaces.

But I didn't even grow up in that conservative of a space,

it was just like,

"Oh, we don't really talk about it

because it's not a thing that you deal with

unless it directly affects you."

So I dunno,

I'm really glad that you do this stuff that you do,

I think it's really important,

and yeah, thank you for being here.

- Yeah, totally.

- So go check out Lindsay's channel.

I will link it in the description,

it's called Queer Kid Stuff.

Thank you so much for watching, and I'll see you next time.

For more infomation >> Is LGBT+ content appropriate for kids? with Lindsay from Queer Kid Stuff | Riley J. Dennis - Duration: 9:16.

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Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho to make £90m raid for Gareth Bale next summer - Duration: 2:16.

Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho to make £90m raid for Gareth Bale next summer

Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho to make £90m raid for Gareth Bale next summer MANCHESTER UNITED boss Jose Mourinho is ready to bring Gareth Bale to the club next summer.

The Red Devils manager would prefer to sign the Real Madrid star to Old Trafford at the end of the upcoming season. But the Daily Express say a move could also still materialise during the current transfer window.

Zinedine Zidane is reportedly ready to sacrifice Bale once he completes the mega signing of Kylian Mbappe from Monaco. The Wales international struggled to make much of an impression at the Bernabeu last season because of injury.

Bale started the Champions League final in Cardiff on the bench with Isco preferred by Real boss Zidane.

Mourinho could still move for Bale this summer but only if the Spanish champions clearly make him available. The reports also claim a provisional bid has been earmarked for this time next year.

United have so far added Victor Lindelof and Romelu Lukaku to their ranks this summer as they get ready for a return to the Champions League. Manchester United are plotting a £90m raid for Gareth Bale.

Mourinho has also been linked with Inter Milan winger Ivan Perisic and Chelsea midfielder Nemanja Matic. United start the new Premier League campaign with a home clash against West Ham on Sunday, August 13.

For more infomation >> Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho to make £90m raid for Gareth Bale next summer - Duration: 2:16.

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Construction Trucks for Kids: Beach Playtime:Playing with Toy Bruder Excavator Dump Truck Bulldozer - Duration: 10:19.

For more infomation >> Construction Trucks for Kids: Beach Playtime:Playing with Toy Bruder Excavator Dump Truck Bulldozer - Duration: 10:19.

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Vegetables Finger Family #2 – Nursery rhyme for children - Duration: 1:32.

Daddy finger, daddy finger,

where are you?

Here I am, here I am.

How do you do?

Mommy finger, Mommy finger,

where are you?

Here I am, here I am.

How do you do?

Brother finger, Brother finger,

where are you?

Here I am, here I am.

How do you do?

Sister finger, Sister finger,

where are you?

Here I am, here I am.

How do you do?

Baby finger, Baby finger,

where are you?

Here I am, here I am.

How do you do?

Daddy finger, daddy finger, where are you?

Here I am, here I am.

How do you do?

Mommy finger, Mommy finger, where are you?

Here I am, here I am.

How do you do?

Brother finger, Brother finger, where are you?

Here I am, here I am.

How do you do?

Sister finger, Sister finger, where are you?

Here I am, here I am.

How do you do?

Baby finger, Baby finger, where are you?

Here I am, here I am.

How do you do?

For more infomation >> Vegetables Finger Family #2 – Nursery rhyme for children - Duration: 1:32.

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Nathaniel Clyne a major doubt for Liverpool's Premier League opener at Watford - Duration: 2:43.

Nathaniel Clyne a major doubt for Liverpool's Premier League opener at Watford

Nathaniel Clyne is expected to miss Liverpool's opening Premier League game of 2017/18, according to reports on Sunday afternoon. Having been one of the Reds' more injury-free players since joining from Southampton in 2015, Clyne has been dogged by issues this summer.

It is claimed from several reliable sources, including the Telegraph's Chris Bascombe, that the 26-year-old will miss the Premier League curtain-raiser at Watford on August 12.

The England international has been struggling with a hamstring problem in recent weeks, preventing him from taking part in Liverpool's pre-season matches in Asia and Germany, and a back injury is now sidelining him.

It means Clyne will play no part in the upcoming clashes with Bayern Munich and either Atletico Madrid or Napoli in the Audi Cup, which take place on Tuesday and Wednesday.

With the 26-year-old appearing increasingly unlikely to feature at Vicarage Road in less than a fortnight, it paves the way for two of the Reds' most exciting youngsters to shine.

Trent Alexander-Arnold has already been tipped to usurp Clyne at some point this season, due to some superb performances for the U23s in 2016/17, and he could be in line for just his third Premier League start.

Joe Gomez is perhaps the more likely option, however, with the 20-year-old impressing at right-back in Saturday's 3-0 win over Hertha Berlin.

Jurgen Klopp spoke highly of Gomez after the game, and his more imposing physicality over Alexander-Arnold could give him the edge against a sturdy Watford outfit.

It is far from ideal to have a player as steady as Clyne out injured, but there have been calls for him to improve in recent times.

Klopp has always been a manager to promote youth, and if Alexander-Arnold or Gomez flourish against the Hornets next month, there is no guarantee that Clyne will return as first-choice.

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