Monday, May 28, 2018

DisneyCarToys House Tour and Showing Off My Toy Closets

DisneyCarToys House Tour
Hey, everyone! Its Sandra from the Disney
CarToys Channel, and today, Im doing a house tour, because everyones been asking
me for about two years now, and I always say My house is pretty boring! But, you
guys have asked for a million times, so Ill show it to you anyway. So, I am in the toy
room. This is my kids toy room, and we honestly, we film in here sometimes. Um, you
might recognize its been less dirty.

Uhuhuh. Looking great. Its a little dirty right
now, but we filmed like our first fall pit challenge in this room. Um, but we have tons
of toys in here, and these are the toys I.

Usually dont film very much, cause theyre
like older games. I mean, Im not going to film Risk and Im, we have wooden puzzles
like these ones. You know, this is from when my kids were babies, basically. Um, we have
a whole lot of baby toys I here I havent really filmed, like this little block set.
And then, um, tons of old dolls and other things weve filmed.

So, weve got Elsa
here, and shes been played with. So, this is what happens after the toys get filmed.
They get loused a little bit. Um, but honestly, its a lot of toys. Uhuhuh, we have like.
Yeah.

Honestly, a lot of these we have filmed. Weve got our nice little reindeer puppet,
um, you know, some Star Wars characters. This is stuff my kids will get for like, Christmas
and stuff. Um, oh yeah.

One of my favorites, Toby, from Sheriff Kelly! Um, so a lot of.
I dont know. Just a lot of older toys. Oh! I wonder if this works. Lets see.

Uh,
no. The batterys dead. Normally, this spins around and lights up. Its pretty cool.
Lightning McQueen is awesome! Um, let me show you some more, other.

Oh, wait, wait. I found
something cool. Hold on. George Pig.

Very cool. But this is a little kangaroo I got
in Australia when it was in Miss Toys. Very awesome. Little baby.

Um, okay. Now. Now,
were done. Well, with this side! Um, and honestly, even though it looks like tons of
toys, I probably donate like ninety-five percent of our toys, huhuh, and most of these toys
are from when, before I did YouTube, or from when I was a kid.

So, heres a lot of our
board games and even these we have a total like. I fell in love with Disney Cars Tractor
Tipping probably three, maybe four years ago on my channel, forever long. And here, Mister
Famous Cookie Monster. He is my like little thumbnail, user name, picture, whatever it
is, of Cookie Monster eating cars.

This is Captain Crunch Cookie Monster. Pretty much
every You Tuber has seen filmed this guy, I feel like.Um, so here he is, Cookie Monster.
More games. Um, we filmed these. Theyre cool like little sandwich games.

Theyre
awesome. Um, and then others that weve never really filmed. I got this at a garage
sale for five bucks like years ago, with a gazillion track pieces. I know.

Its like
Thats so hot!, But I never filmed it. Huhuh. And, yeah! Like, this is all the
random balls and other random toys. Um, usually what happens is kids come over to my house
to play, and then they mess up everything.

So, its like a little messy in here and
unorganized. This is supposed to be more of the Disney Cars kind of stuff, but this got
kind of messed up I mean. We got Blaise. We got Mater, um, a little bit of everything
in here.

So this is, I guess, Toy Room Number One. We have some toy closets which Ill
show you, but first, Ill show you the kids rooms and then more toys. Okay, so this is
my daughters room, and she has like the coolest room in the house I feel like. Its
kind of long and skinny.

Um, but shes got a cute little Disney Princess bed with Frozen,
cause she loves Disney Princess and Frozen. And then, heres some of her favorite stuffed
animals right now. These are like Cabbage Patch bunnies that I actually had as a kid.
She found these and has been like playing with them, and the cool thing about them,
their little tail speaks! So cute. Um, and her beds kind of cool too because its
like a trundle, so she can do sleep-overs and stuff.

There we go. Anna and Elsa. Its
a good sisters bed I guess, right? Huhuh. So this pulls out which is really nice, and
she has a doll house in her room right here.

Lets go on over. There we go. Um, this
is a Kid Craft Doll House. Ive filmed tons of these, and I kept one.

So I think I gave
away like four of five or like lots of doll houses have been given away. Um, we kept this
one. Its really cool. Weve got all the princesses sleeping in there, eating dinner,
and so on.

She kind of re-arranged the furniture, so like its kind of odd. Like up here,
its supposed to be like a patio deck for barbecues, and we have like a bath tub. So,
you know. Three-year old imagination! Huhuh.

Okay. So, here is her closet which is actually
super awesome, which kind of sold me the house, which is weird that a closet did. Anyway.
Um, so it has tons of storage, which is really awesome. Weve got tons of dresses and stuff
here and then in the back  like this goes, well its hard to see way back here, Ive
got like a doll house, a whole bed and some books, like, diapers, I dont know.

Really
nice storage, huhuh, back there. And then in here, more storage. And this stuff, so
this weekend, I have to get rid of mass amount of toys, so I plan on getting rid of this
little baby thing, and then this wire thing. Um, here is all of our ball pits.

We actually
filmed a mini one here, like a long time ago, a Balloon Pop in this whole room. It
was really hot. Huhuh like. Um, but yeah.

I need to get rid of like this and this, so
a lot of these toys are like I need to get rid of, but I just try to like save enough
to fit my whole car, and then I get rid of the toys. Um, we have Anna and Elsa, my size,
or smaller than my size. Elsa. There we go.

Ooh! Say hello. Hello. So, weve got Elsa,
and now, Ill show you my sons room, which is cool. Okay.

So, here is Alexs
room. Its a little less exciting than Avas room, but still kind of cool. So obviously,
he likes Star Wars and Legos, and Lego Star Wars right here! Tadah! Lego Yoda! Someone
gave us these and they kind of stay on, but kind of not. Um, but, um, my son or my husband
films a lot of Ninja Turtles, so this is actually really cool.

All the different Legos from
all the different Ninja Turtle TV shows and stuff, so every night we play a game to like
guess the difference between the turtles. So, for example, this turtle here has black
toe nails, which is really strange, where everybody else has green. So like we
try to find the difference between the turtle pointed out. He reads a lot of books.

He cleaned
his room himself. You can tell, cause the books are everywhere. Um, Star Wars bed, which
is exciting. Its actually pretty soft.

Um, and then, um, plane stickers, cause
he really likes planes too, so we kind of have a little bit of everything going on in
here. And then, this is like Lego City. All his Lego sets, um, and then a lot of characters
like Luke Skywalker. Its pretty cool.

Um, and then the last thing I want to show you
is he has a really cool like 1990s exit sign. This was really cool when I was a kid. Um,
and it lights up. Wait.

Let me find it. Tadah! Whoo! So, its a nice night light. And here
is my son Adams room. So this is under three.

Its the smallest of the kids
bedrooms, but we did paint it blue, which is really cool, so here we go blue. A little
Disney Car stuff. Um, heres the Cars bedding. Honestly, with this room, I dont need to
show you much, cause Ive already filmed it before, but, Cars bedding, Cars camper,
and thats about it.

So, I dont know. Baby room. And heres my bedroom. Honestly,
you dont need to see it.

Its pretty basic. So, I need to make my bed still. And
now for the main part of the house. This is a total toy tour, like living room, nice,
and then whoop! Ball pit! So, um, we filmed this recently.

My kids have been playing with
it still so I feel like a lot of times my living room is overtaken by like a giant toy
that Im filming, so, living room and then heres the dining room, which every house
has, but you never use. So like, every Christmas and Thanksgiving I use this, otherwise, eh!
Okay. So, Im sure you guys are wondering Wheres all the toys?Its actually
in here, so make sure to pay attention. We get to the toys here! Okay.

Lets see it
all. Oh, by the way, heres my. Oops. I.

Lost it. Here we go. Limited Edition Tag for
what is the name again, The Sunny, yeah, The Sunny Screen from Shopkins Season One. I lost
this forever, and then realized was on my idea board which I never come with up with
ideas I guess, cause it took me a long time to find that thing.

Um, so heres my
grand toy closet. Ive actually filmed this before. Um, Ive got tons of Disney Cars
up at the top; Doc McStuffins. And then, this is a weekend project as well, cause its
not super-organized.

I need to go through and donate a ton of toys. Honestly, like half
of this is probably going to Good Will this weekend. Huhuh. I need to get rid of so much.
Um, oh heres a, lets see, Silver Play Button.

There we go. Toysreviewtoys right
there, and Disney CarToys. I need to hang these up, so, oops! Um, and then I have my
golden play button hiding under my bed, cause I dont want my kids breaking it. Um, whoa,
here we go.

Heres something interesting. Pooh Splat. Whoo! Um, and then in these drawers,
lets see. I know I have like.

Okay. So, like for example, all of this needs to go.
Like its just junk. Huhuh, got to get away from here. And heres some old Play-Doh
toys, cause like two years ago its really cool that, from Play-Doh.

Um, and then heres
the one of our costume stuff, so heres Spidey, and Doctor Sandra, um, you know, Kid
Spidey, , um, and then masks and headbands and everything. So like all our dress-up stuff
is here, which is a good spot. Um, so now I have another toy closet to show you. So,
heres my Disney CarToys closet, um, literally with Disney CarToys, So, Lightning McQueen,
Mater, and all that.

I actually have like a huge collection of Disney Cars, but I just
boxed them up into like Rubbermaid totes just to keep them like kind of more concise. So,
heres kind of what I didnt box up. I. Still need to clean this up and then hopefully
I can store more toys to donate or who knows what in here, but.

Yep! Theres some more
toys! And now, Ill show you everything thats super boring which you really dont
care to see, but Ill show you anyway. Heres the kitchen, bathroom, family room, laundry
room, another bathroom, and then heres a really weird room in our house thats
kind of like a guest room, but its got like a tiny kitchen in it. So we film most
of our videos in here, because its always clean, since no one really sleeps here. Huhuh.
And then also you can use like the kitchen for videos and the bed and everything else.
But I also like working here too.

So, its a little bit of everything. And just when
you holler I dont have enough toys, I have way more in here, so this is actually like
my garage. And all of these toys are toys that Im giving away, so usually like if
I have friends over, or if I like need to donate certain age groups, then Ill like
go in here, and its almost like a toy store. So seriously, all this stuff is like my To
Go pile.

Like, um, I rather I used to kind of save up toys throughout the year doe Christmas,
and I still do a little bit, but now I start kind of saving in October for Christmas. So
like Ill save up these toys and then around Christmas time, Ill get like a huge list
of like gender and ages and then Ill box up all the toys and give them away that way,
where now with these I just kind of need to get rid of and then Ill have room to save
more toys for Christmas time. So, all of these have to go. Okay, so, with all of these toys
need to get donated and find a good, happy home.

And heres all the Barbie stuff I
need to give away and its crazy! Nobody seems to like Barbie for some reason, cause
every time Im always like Hey, do you want Barbies? And then people would say
like No and Im like Why not?, Cause I do love Barbie, but, um, so hopefully
I can find a good home for these Barbies as well. Okay. So we finally did it! Heres
my house tour. Like I said, its I guess to me kind of boring, but if you enjoyed,
please click like; subscribe to the Disney CarToys Channel.

In the comments, let me know
what you think. Click on a picture to watch another fun toy video, and click on the question
mark to watch a mystery video. Thanks for watching, and have a great day..

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Would a Flat Tax Be More Fair

Would a Flat Tax Be More Fair
The American Revolution started as a tax revolt
over a single tax on tea! Now look at us. It seems like everything we do is taxed. The system behind these taxes is a bureaucratic
monstrosity; a dead weight on the economy. And it erodes our trust in the government
that's taxing us.

If you have enough lawyers, lobbyists, and
loopholes at your disposal maybe you can game the system. That's fine for big corporations and wealthy
individuals, but what about the small business owner or the middle class taxpayer? He just has to shut up and pay up. Nothing better illustrates the disaster that
our tax system has become than the mother of all taxes: the federal income tax code. This tax alone, with all its attendant rulings
and interpretations, is estimated to be about 10 million words  and rising! Several years ago, Money magazine took a hypothetical
family's finances and gave the numbers to 46 tax preparers.

Forty-six different estimates came back. In some cases those differences ran into the
thousands of dollars of what the family owed. This from experts who are considered to be
the best in the business. But the taxes themselves are only part of
the cost of this toxic code.

There's also the cost of compliance  the
time, money and effort it takes Americans to prepare their taxes. A George Mason University study puts the annual
cost of compliance as high as $378 billion and the total annual economic cost (including
work hours) at more than $600 billion. Again, these are annual costs  as in every
year! That's a lot of money that could be used in
more productive wayscreating new products, new services, new medical devices, new cures
for diseases. Clearly, the time has come to drive a stake
through the heart of this tax monster.

So, what should be done? Like most things, the best solution is the
most simple: A single flat tax with no deductions, except for a deduction for each adult and
for each child. Fill out a sheet of paper or key in a few
numbers on your computer, and you're done. This one change would not only make every
citizen's life easier, it would also transform government, our economy, and our society by
ending the complexity that gives bureaucrats and politicians so much power. They have power because they're the ones who
dole out the tax favors.

It wasn't always this way. There was a time when corporations primarily
lobbied Washington to keep government out of their businesses. That has changed. In the words of The Atlantic, The evolution
of business lobbying from a sparse reactive force into a ubiquitous and increasingly proactive
one is among the most important transformations in American politics over the last 40 years.

This favor-seeking is centered on getting
special treatment and tax breaks. A flat tax will help us begin to scale back
that special interest-loving, crony-capitalist big government that we all complain about. Everyone would pay lessnot only in taxes,
but also in compliance. Investment and job creation would skyrocket.

We'd experience a recovery that would grow
the tax base andirony of ironies ultimately generate more revenue for government. I go into this in much greater detail in my
book, Reviving America, but here, in essence, is how it works. Everyoneindividuals and corporationspays
a 17 percent flat rate. This single rate is absolutely critical.

Whenever we have two or more tax rates, they're
like rabbits: they breed. We saw that with the 1986 tax reforms, which
consisted of two rates. They've since multiplied into the seven we
have today. Well, you might argue, this sounds great for
the rich, and even the middle class, but what about the poor? Seventeen percent is a big burden.

That's why, under this plan, a family of four
who makes less than $52,800 would pay no income tax. That's double the current federal poverty
level. This will let people at low income levels
keep more of their money. And for those who think the rich should pay
more, they will.

Prior to the passage of the tax cuts that
President Ronald Reagan pushed through Congress in 1981, the top one percent of American earners
accounted for nearly 18 percent of federal personal income tax revenue. By 1988, that same group accounted for nearly
28 percent, an increase of 10 percentage points in only 7 years. By eliminating loopholes and requiring everyone
to pay their fair share, the flat tax offers a model of tax fairness. More than 40 countries and jurisdictions have
enacted the flat tax.

When all the facts are considered, the real
question is not whether America should implement this vital reform, but what are we waiting
for? It's time for another tax revolution. I'm Steve Forbes for Prager University..

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Weather News Today Evening Edition with J7409 ThursMarch 22,2018 Another Snow Storm

Weather News Today
And  a good evening everyone time now for weather news today with J7409 the evening edition the name You know the news you can use and while do I have some pics to show you people? I've got a whole bunch of pics. There's no way I can get them all on it. That's for the thumbnail so I'm gonna take them like in pairs and if I don't get yours up if you sent me one it does not mean I'm not going to use it.I will use them all. Hang in there.

Okay? What we're looking at now. This is from my friend be friendly mr. Bill Castro now this is up in Baltimore He has bees and he's in Baltimore, and he went hey Jay check out the snow on the beehives That's pretty cool. Isn't it caution bees in the area? Hey? Bill you do a wonderful job Please everybody we need to help the bees the bees help us I admire you for what you're doing with the bees bill, and thanks for sending us this photo and Check out this fella hey.

He's a husky He's not the snows and I'm bothering this dude at all I bet check it out look at that skyline anybody want to take a guess of where this is this is in the Shenandoah Valley area in Virginia and Jennifer Sylvester sent this in thank you so much Jennifer I appreciate this we get to see the snow in the different areas what you guys Got or what you were getting it means so much. Thanks so much and what a great dog And wrapping it up this came in early this morning, and this is from Patricia and say via, Long Island New York she wrote a quick message and said I woke up to this mess This is what it was like this morning in that area so Patricia Thanks for sending it in if you have any kind of weather photos The sky phenomena photos anything that you think is just really cool beautiful or very Unused and you would like for me to I share it with everyone use it as a cover thumbnail for the most part please Click show more under the video scroll down you'll find an email address to send it to and once again Thanks, and I thank all of you for sending me all of these pics I have many many many more to share with you if it's your first time here And you're into the weather you want to know what's happening all the time and if something pops up around your area Please hover over the j7 4:09 in the bottom right hand corner Click it subscribe click the bell and make sure that you get all of the latest weather news forecasts and alerts as we take a quick look at the Watches and warnings map the first thing that catches my eye Is this long blue streak well folks you know what that is? It's winter storm warnings. Yes. I hate to even say this but a late season Snowstorm is going to be going through all these areas from North Dakota parts of Minnesota Parts of Wisconsin South Eastern, Minnesota and northeast, Iowa down into Eastern, Iowa northwestern, Illinois in the Quad Cities right on down to Northeastern, Illinois and northwestern and in Indiana and the Chicago area over to northern, Indiana and northwestern, Ohio and southwestern, Ohio And nope Northern, Kentucky Look at all of those states.

It is going to pass through let's check it out on another map now It's looking like about 6 a.M.. In the morning is when this system is going to slide on down from Canada, okay? That's when it's going to start out in North Dakota with a mixture of freezing rain snow and rain We'll move it on up some to lunch time tomorrow, and we'll see how it moves along Snow is getting much much heavier still got that freezing rain line that separates no from the rain itself Also some heavy sleet ice pellets are falling at the same time Moving along to 7:00 p.M.. Tomorrow night We can see now it is moving from North Dakota to parts of Minnesota with light snow starting the Minnesota Rain down in South Dakota with that Freezing rain line and lots of sleet and ice pellets in between at this time this around 7:00 p.M. Tomorrow night Moving along midnight tomorrow night the snow bands get really really heavier and Minnesota here at this time Will clicks on let's see what it says what it may turn out to be 4.2 Inches in three hours, yes.

This is going to be Heavy heavy snow and the wind's going you guys are going to get some wind I mean no big Nothing like tropical storm, or hurricane winds, but you could get to around 35 mile-per-hour winds okay? Looking like the sleet line is Decreased some but we do have some still over here in Minnesota Freezing rain is just about gone. It's just raining snow at this time when we're moving to 7 a.M.. Saturday morning We see the snow has lightened up some still got some snow falling in Minnesota over in Wisconsin Down around Chicago just starting to get a flurry now And then but there's still some heavier snow bands in this and that Freezing rain line has progressed all the way down into Kentucky at this time Or lunchtime tomorrow This is what it's looking like leaving, Minnesota We're in parts of Iowa we got heavier bands right in here Here's the Chicago area looking like you may be still getting some you may not The snow is progressing on down to Indiana The ice line is from Indiana Still a little bit in the Kentucky area, Kentucky is mostly getting rain right now And I can go no further than 6:00 p.M.. Tomorrow night.

I'm on the NAMM. This is the way it really should be happening people and by six o'clock tomorrow evening Kentucky and Northern Kentucky up here. You will have snow the rest will be freezing rain all the way through Indiana with rain behind it and the snow is now in West Virginia and parts of Virginia Now check out the GFS map courtesy of tropical tidbits. You'll see everything that's going on now heavy rainfall and flash flooding expected to continue into The evening hours across portions of Southern California this evening now periods of heavy rain are expected to continue across the portions of Southern California into the evening hours as a moisture Laden cold front moves onshore now dangerous flash flooding and debris flow still remain a concern especially in the vicinity of areas recently impacted by wildfires Rains however are expected to subside by early tomorrow as a front news east of the region widespread precipitation across the Great Basin in the central Rockies With locally heavy mountain snows can be expected as a front moves further east tonight into tomorrow morning Now by tomorrow morning as the system begins to move across the Rockies light to moderate precipitation Is expected to develop across the northern Great Plains? Precipitation is expected to quickly spread south and of The northern Great Plains into the upper and mid, Mississippi and lower, Ohio valleys is an area of low pressure Strengthens and moves east across the central Great Plains now the system interacting with a much colder and drier airmass Extending south from central Canada is going to raise the potential for wintry precipitation with locally heavy snow accumulations possible across, North Dakota tomorrow What I was just showing you shifting further south and east across portions of southern Minnesota, Northern, Iowa and Illinois central Indiana and Southwest, Ohio late tomorrow and early Saturday accumulating snows may reaches far south and east as the southern Appalachian and central Mid Atlantic region by Saturday back to the west Unsettled weather is expected to continue across the Pacific Northwest and Northern California area to the Northern Rockies as a Series of upper disturbances and their associated frontal systems push through the region now This is expected to produce periods of heavy precipitation Along the Southern, Oregon and Northwest, California coast with heavy snow accumulations likely in the coastal ranges and southern cascades Meanwhile snows will continue to diminish across New England That's a good thing as a low pressure system most recently responsible for the widespread heavy snows across the mid-atlantic and northeast moves further north toward Nova Scotia tonight Now an upper-level system dropping south out of the eastern Canada area is expected to encourage snow showers across, New York and New England tomorrow However accumulations are expected to remain very very light, so there you have it folks I hate to tell all you guys up in those areas that I just Showed you and told you it's coming and you've seen for yourself.

It's just that late season snowstorm That's going to be coming in and moving on through Nothing like what has happened to the people up north, but some of you could get some maybe five to ten inches of snow I'll check it all out in the morning to let you know what's going on But go ahead and get yourself right forward tonight because it is coming. Thank you so much for watching subscribing The upvotes The comments and the sharing it means so much to me when you do this guys pass us on to your friends and family Let them know what's going on around them, and so they can stay informed -. I love you guys. I love you so much With that all said and done have a good evening have a safe evening peace loving kindness to all.

Deaf and Hearing Couple Vlog A Tip to Getting Your Car Battery Replaced

Deaf and Hearing
Hey everyone! If you want to know all the signs that are signed in this vlog, please turn on closed captions thanks! Hello there starting a new vlog today this is vlog number three today and this is the third time we've jump started my car we're taking it in to honda dealer and get it fixed today ryan's such a handy man i feel so lucky to have him so, we're at honda center, ok? One and a half years ago, my girlfriend got a new car here and the battery just died, started dying like last week, or three days ago and we thought oh maybe just left the lights on and normally if you leave lights on, then you jump it and let it run for 30 minutes. It should build a charge enough to last again, and it would be fine because that's how the cells work. You have to reactivate the chemicals in the cells anyways, we thought that's fine, but then it wouldnt start over and over we had to jumpstart it four times right? So, now, today, we came to honda center because we checked the manual and saw that it has a warranty for three year replacement battery replacement so i told ellen, you should't have to pay for a new battery or go to the auto store. I told her let's go to honda and tell them its not right for the car to die before three years so, we're here and you see how i put a "X" on the battery? You see that? You see it? Ok so, i did that for a reason.

Because, some car places sad to day, but they don't replace the battery they just re-charge it then claim that they replaced it so, if i have a "X" mark if i ask for a replacement, they will have to replace if i see the "X" when we get the car back, then i know that its the same battery that's a helpful hint we wanted to give a shout out to our first patron! Hillary Pojoy thank you thank you thank you that night we posted our annoucement she pledged sign for pledge? She pledged. So surprised and we are still growing we've done the first three days successfully i just feel more motivation. We are really excited about it i hope you guys enjoy our vlogs and that it means something to you all because it means something to us too, that you guys watch thank you hillary, we really appreciate it i sent you a message in patreon i don't know if you got it. I just sent a little thank you, thats all so i hope you're having a great start to your new year we definitely appreciate you alright! We got the car fixed! Yay and they have a date on it thats amazing because we know which month and year they used to replace it they did a good job i feel really lucky to have ryan as my boyfriend because he makes sure my car is maintained oh, maintained sorry.

This is maintain. The sign for maintain not maintain. Maintain, same sign as caring caring. Maintaining I've actually had many cars.

I replace them almost every year so i know how to maintain cars and so i don't mind making sure her car is perfect thank you for that i'm actually selling both my cars soon. For a new one peace this is my left overs from last night it smells like seafood so we actually made dinner from the leftovers from last night from kicking krab so we decided to make ramen but, we thought  of how to use the shrimp so we took the shrimp shells off the shrimp we put the shells in hot water and let it boil in and absorb all the flavor then we put the rest of the sauce from the shrimp in the pot then we left it for like 10-15 min, then we took out the shells (drained) out and then we cooked the ramen in a separate pot cooked that, finshed, then we put the shrimp in the first pot and a bit of sausage and egg. Then ramen in the broth. So delicious so, today was a long day .

I'm tired if you are new to our channel, we are doing a 31 day challenge. Vlog challenge and now we're on day 3 or 4, i'm not sure but we're progressing good so far..

Tuesday, May 22, 2018

We Buy Junk Cars Alsip IL 630-517-5688Cash For Junk Cars Alsip IL 630-517-5688

We Buy Junk
We are here in the back office of We Buy Junk
Cars, Alsip, Illinois, and we are going to give you a quote on a 2005 Nissan Altima.
Okay, we added all the information, it's a 2005 Nissan Altima, it's a SL, it's in Alsip,
Illinois, and some other following questions that we ask, are all the tires inflated? Can
you verify it drives in its current condition? What is the mileage? The mileage of this vehicle
is under 250,000. Are all the major body panels, like doors, still intact to the car? Is the
car free of dents? Yes. Are all mirror and glass intact? Yes. Is the car free of flood
damage? Yes.

Are all interior components like the seats and airbags and radio intact? Check. Now we go and get our offer. For this particular
car in Alsip, Illinois, We Buy Junk Cars, Alsip, Illinois will give you $575 cash on
the spot. It doesn't matter what condition your car is, if you have a title or not, we
may be able to get you an offer without a title.

So, just give us a call today and get
your free quote so you can get cash for your junk car. Thanks..

Monday, May 21, 2018

Used Car DonationHow to Donate a Non-Working Car

Used Car DonationHow to Donate a Non-Working Car
Hi, my name is Luz Luis and I'm here to tell
you how to donate a car a non running vehicle to a charity. The most important thing is
you need to call the charity on the telephone and ask if they take cars that don't run.
There are some organizations that only take running vehicles. So, usually contacting them
by phone or if they have on their websites a place for you to submit a question, you
might ask them right off that if they take a car that doesn't run. Then from there, the
donation process is generally the same.

If they do take your car whether it runs or not,
they're probably going to give you a phone number a 1-800 phone or a website of where
to submit your donation information and that includes who's going to get the tax receipt,
the address where they're going to mail the receipt. They want to know the year, make
and model of the car anything about the car's condition including the fact of whether or
not it runs. If it has wheels, they'll need to know the contact information of who to
call to go out and pick up the vehicle and the location of where to get the car. Then
they will ask you to sign over the title.

Generally, running or not, charities will
need the title to accept a vehicle donation. The charity will ask you to sign your name
and date your signature and they will ask you to put the charities name in the buyer
of the new owner section. So, again call your charity of choose. Make sure that they accept
non running vehicles if your car doesn't run.

You'll still need a title for the vehicle
and then call to get the details about how to donate either 1-800 number or their website..

Used Car DonationHow to Donate a Car to Charity

Used Car DonationHow
Hi my name is Luz Luis and I'm here to tell
you how to donate a car to charity. The first thing you'd like to do is pick the charity
that you'd like to receive your car donation, call the charity yourself, make sure that
the charity benefits a mission, a charitable mission that you'd like to donate to. Ask
that charity what percent of their proceeds go directly to fund their programs and what
percent pays for administrative cost. You really do not want to donate to any organization
that has an administrative cost more than 25 percent.

Once you've established that that's
your charity of choice then you'll want to ask if they accept your car donation. You'll
also want to ask what percent of the sale of your donated vehicle will actually benefit
the charity. Again, never donate your car to a charity that does not give more than
75 percent of the proceeds of the sale of your car to that charity. There are a lot
of organizations that look like charities that are not, they're for profit organizations
accepting your car donation and giving 5 to 10 percent of your car donation to a charity.
So make sure to call a charity that you want to donate, make sure that that car goes directly
to the organization that you choose to donate to.

That charity will probably give you a
1800 number or a website. You'll want to get your title of ownership for your vehicle and
then go to the website or call the phone number that that charity gave you to submit your
donation information. They'll ask you information like, whose name goes on the tax receipt,
what kind of car is it, year, make and model, they might ask you the VIN number for the
vehicle, they'll ask you the condition of the vehicle, and also contact information
so that they can go get the car. They'll need to know the contact phone number and the contact
address.

Once they have the information, generally it's about 2 to 4 days to go out and pickup
the vehicle. They'll want you to sign the title over directly to the charity. Never
leave the title blank. Sign to release your ownership of the car, date your signature
and make sure that the buyer section or the new owner section of the title says the name
of the charity that you're choosing to donate your car to, never leave this blank.

So again,
find your charity, call the charity directly, ask them questions about their charitable
mission and how much goes to their charitable mission. Get the phone number for the car
donation agency directly from that charity, and then follow their instructions. Make sure
to stay close to the charity and keep in contact with them until you have your receipt in your
hand for your tax deduction. If you itemize on your taxes, generally you can use that
as a charitable donation..

Sunday, May 20, 2018

Used Car DonationHow to Donate a Car in Utah

Used Car DonationHow
Hi my name is Luz Luis. I work for the National
Kidney Foundation of Utah in Idaho, and I'm going to be giving you some tips about how
to donate your car to charity here in Utah. The most important thing is to call the charity
directly. Find out about their charitable mission.

Make sure that the programs that
they're funding are ones that you want to benefit with your car donation. Ask the charity
what percent of their funding goes to administrative costs and what percent goes to fund their
charitable mission. Never donate to a charity that has an overhead cost of more than 25%.
You want at least 75% of all of the proceeds that go to that charity to fund their charitable
mission. Then ask them how they accept their car donations.

Sometimes they'll refer you
to a 1-800 number, or they'll refer you to a website. Then you need to get out a title.
You have to have a title to donate a car in Utah. If you don't have a title to the vehicle,
you can usually get a replacement title from the DMV. When you find your title you're going
to sign your name over to release your ownership of the car, and you're going to need to make
sure that the buyer section or the new owner section is filled out with the name of the
charity.

Never leave a title blank. Always put the name of your intended charity here
in the buyer's section. To donate your care to the National Kidney Foundation of Utah,
it's very simple. Get out your title, and call 1-800-TOW-KARS.

It's t-o-w-k-a-r-s. Or
even easier, donate online at Towkars.Org. That's t-o-w-k-a-r-s. Get out your title,
answer all of the questions.

We'll come out and get the vehicle, write your receipt for
your tax purposes. And be in contact with the Kidney Foundation during the donation
process. Again to donate, call 1-800-TOW-KARS, or donate online at Towkars.Org..

Saturday, May 19, 2018

Undercover Lyft with Shaquille O'Neal

Undercover Lyft with Shaquille O'Neal
My favorite Laker player is Kobe. [Laughs]
You cant get out the car! Are you not entertained? Do you not recognize
what Ive done as a Laker? Whats up everybody, this is Shaq, were
in Atlanta. This is Undercover Lyft and I am the big Glowstache. My name is Charles.
Nice to meet you Charles.

Im Saika. Know what I do?
What do you do? Make bracelets.
You make bracelets? Yeah. Know what this called?
Whats that called? Its called the steam room.
Cause if you look inside you can see the steam, see? My name is Pierre.
Hey Pierre. I am from France.
Angela.

Tu parles francais?
Speak no French. How are you?
Good,  Im Heather. My names Goose. My real job is Im a
cop.

Im off duty right now but I still keep my eye out for stuff.
Look at this. Illegal u-turn in the middle of the street.
Lucky I aint got my badge, lady. Whattup cuz!
Whats going on? Where you from?
I am from Brazil. I went there one time for a singing competition.
Singing? Singing I dont know this song.

Like basketball?
I recently got into basketball because of the Hawks.
Cawh, Ahw. I had a friend who was a Hawks fan.
You know what that is right? Thats a dead hawk. A dead hawk? I dont know a thing about basketball.
Nothing? Nothing.
You know about free throws? Spread your fingers out. And then follow through.
Watch your nails.

Dont want you to do your nails though. Do it 10 times. Three again. Four You know what? You just learned from the greatest
free throw coach of all time.

I wanna play ball but I run funny. My pants
get stuck in my butt. You look like the basketball type. Like you
can get down on the court a little bit.

Nah, mon. I had hoop dreams but they didnt
work out. Did you chase em?
You know, I used to chase trains when I was little. You chased trains? Used to chase trains.
You got a pretty pretty rich backstory.

Whos your favorite basketball player?
I gotta stick with Dikembe, I mean. No, no, no.
No, no, no. He block everybodys shot?
Mmhm. Nobody ever dunked it in his face?
Not that I saw.

Huh. Not that you saw. My favorite movie. Kazaam.
Kazaam? Its a movie Its a good No, no.

Its everybodys favorite movie. Can you rap? Let me hear freestyle. Ima give you a beatbox. Ready?
[Rapping] Rollin my Lyft with my rasta.

We dont eat pasta. We washin our cars.
Stop. Thats terrible, mon. I mean, lets see yours, though.
Im good, Drake.

[Rapping] Je ne sais pas cause I dont
know, cause Im from France and yo, yo, yo. [Singing] Vigilante shes a renegade. Brave,
but deep inside shes afraid shell never let it be known.
Steam room. Donuts.

[Singing] Ahhhhhhhh. Me, Im wondering if you are Shaquille O'Neal now, man.
No, man. Stop it! My beard is itching. Ah.

Do I look familiar
to you? Oh my gosh. You ever see my face before?
Oh my god! Ah! Its me! I had a feeling. No you didnt! I didnt know it was you at all. I kinda figured it out.

Like early on, when
I saw your wig, sir. I just lyfted with Shaquille ONeal guys. Did you not know it was me, for real?
I really didnt. Im about to brag to everybody today, watch.

Ive come a long way since Kazaam..

Friday, May 18, 2018

U.S. congressman in critical condition after mass shooting at Virginia baseball field

U.S. congressman in
Now a developing story from the U.S... A mass shooting near Washington, D.C. Has
left a Republican congressman and four other people injured, the Congressman critically. The shooter, who was killed in a gun battle
with the police, was known to be highly critical of President Trump and his allies...

Frequently
taking to social media to vent his frustrations prior to the shooting. Yu Joonhee has the latest. A gunman opened fire early Wednesday morning
at a baseball field in Virginia, in the suburbs of Washington D.C., Where a congressional
baseball team had gathered to practice ahead of a charity game. Armed with a semi-automatic rifle, the shooter
fired at and wounded four people, including Republican congressman and House Majority
Whip Steve Scalise.

Scalise was shot in the hip, and was taken
to a nearby hospital where he remains in critical condition following surgery. The gunman was killed by police in the subsequent
shootout. He's been identified by law enforcement as
66-year old James Hodgkinson from the state of Illinois. According to witnesses, Hodgkinson asked bystanders
whether the players on the field were Republicans or Democrats before he started shooting.

He was known to be highly critical of President
Trump and other Republicans on social media, and had reportedly traveled to Washington
to protest against the administration. Leaders in Washington have called for solidarity
following the shooting, with House Speaker Paul Ryan saying "an attack on one of us,
is an attack on all of us", and declaring that Congress was united in its response to
the attack. President Trump said he and Vice President
Pence were deeply saddened by the attack, and wished Scalise and the others injured
a speedy recovery. The congressional baseball team had been practicing
ahead of their annual charity game that has been held since 1909.

Members of Congress said the game would still
go ahead as planned at Nationals Park in Washington on Thursday night. Yu Joonhee, Arirang News..

CSR2 Secret tune to win every live race and strategy to win $1,000,000 in 5 minutes

CSR2 Secret tune
In this video I will show you how to win every live race you enter. I will also show you how to get your opponent to accept 200K max bets 90% of the time and win millions of dollars in a short amount of time. Using this method, I have gone on win streaks of 20+ races earning 200K a race and making $1,000,000 every 10 minutes give or take depending on how many racers challenge me. All you need is a Ferrari F12 Berlinetta for this tune.

Chek out my channel for other car tunes or comment below to suggest a car for my next video The exact upgrades you have fitted do not matter as much as the tune. The most important upgrades to have fitted are stage 5 tires and transmission, and 2, 3, or 4 body. I've used many different upgrade combos and successfully won every live race at $200k per race so the upgrades aren't extremely important. Now for the most important part, the tune.

You want to tune it to the highest possible evo score, then slide tires to 100 grip and final ride anywhere from 2.0-3.0. You can see here that I have a 14.267 Dyno, but with this tune, I can beat that by about 1.5 Seconds which is what allows me to win every live race. Pay close attention to the take off and shift times and the time that I use my nitrous, Play the video at half speed to see the exact times for take off, shifting and nitrous. Ill test run one more time so you can get a better idea of when to take off, shift and use nitrous.

You're gonna want to lose your first race on purpose and try to race close to your dyno instead of beating it. This will give you an idea of how fast the racers in the lobby are. I see that he just raced a 13.994, And I know that I can race around a 12.7 So I know that I'm in the right lobby. Now you want to change your name to something like 200K per Race or MAX BETS ONLY and wait for someone to challenge you.

This is the best way to get racers to accept max bets because the see your name so most of the time, only racers who are willing to bet that much will challenge you The rest of the video is just videos of me winning multiple races in a row with high stakes. You can win 20+ races before losing any, but eventually the lobby will get too hard. Click the i in the upper right hand corner to watch the video on how to get back into lobbies you will dominate Then go into a lobby and lose a few races on purpose, then exit lobby and reenter. Do this until you find a lobby racing times that you know you can beat.

Thank you for watching. Comment below if you would like me to teach you how to do this with a different car.

Thursday, May 17, 2018

The Challenges of Deaf in Cameroon, Africa by Sr. Charity Mbarah at Swarthmore College.

The Challenges of
Hello! We are here at the auditorium in the
Science Center Room 101 at Swarthmore College. On August 27, from 6:30pm to 9:00pm, we will have a community presentation by Sister Charity Mbarah. She has flown over here from Cameroon in Africa and  She will discuss the challenges the Deaf -especially Deaf
children at Deaf institutions-face in her native Cameroon. She founded and currently runs an institute for
the Deaf and hard of hearing children.

She rescued many Deaf children including some who did not have
names and abandoned by their families because they were deaf. Many Deaf children were abandoned by their families and
left by the side of the road.  In addition, the government in Cameroon does not know what to
do with Deaf children due to lack of resources. Sister Charity's mission is to rescue Deaf children and educate them and
she started with three Deaf children in in 2002 by providing Deaf children with an education in sign language
and the tools to live independently.

Currently, Sister Charity has approximately 150 Deaf students at her school, known as Morning
Star for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Primary School in Cameroon. We are thrilled and privileged to host Sister Charity right
here during her brief visit to America.  We are taking advantage of this opportunity to invite her to
present about the challenges the Deaf face in Cameroon. This community presentation event is sponsored by three community partners: Deaf-Hearing Communication Centre, Inc (DHCC); Swarthmore College's Department of Linguistics;  and the Archdiocese of Philadelphia's Office of Deaf
Apostolate, coordinated by Sister Kathleen Schipani.

We thank our partners for making Sister Charity's Presentation event possible.  We hope to see you on August 27, from
6:30pm to 9pm, at Science Center 101.  This is where we meet in the auditorium, and we
have plenty of seats.  Come on over!  Now, do you want to come over here and watch Sister Charity's presentation?  But where and how can you find your way to Swarthmore College?  You can look at Swarthmore College's website for driving directions.

When you get on Chester Rd (Route 320) to Swathmore College. When you see the main entrance at Swarthmore College off Chester Road, please ignore that entrance
and stay on Chester Rd until you see the next street at left.  Make a left onto Elm Ave. Drive up on Elm Ave until you see Whittier Place at
left, and go through the North Entrance gate.

Proceed to find the sign that says "Dupont Parking" That is where you will park your cars.  Then you walk pass the first building at your right, and find
the next building is connected to the Science Center.  Enter the Science Center and watch Sister Charity's presentation on August 27.
 It starts at 6:30pm, and finishes at 9pm.

We will have a volunteer standing outside to
guide you to the right building. .

St. Clair County sheriff investigating incident during charity bike ride

St. Clair County
CRIMINAL MISCHIEF CHARGES. >> CAN YOU NOT RIDE YOUR BIKE. SOMEWHERE ELSE? LISA: A CHARITY RIDE CAME TO A. SCREECHING STOP.

VIDEO POSTED TO YOUTUBE SHOWS A. MAN LEANING OUT OF TRUCK TO. CONFRONT A GROUP OF CYCLISTS, YELLING AT THEM FOR RIDING IN. THE ROAD.

THE CYCLISTS WERE TRAVELING. THROUGH ST. CLAIR COUNTY THIS. WEEKEND FOR THE TOUR DE BLUE.

RIDE TO RAISE AWARENESS FOR. PROSTATE CANCER SCREENING. THEY WERE RIDING ON COUNTY ROAD. 23 WHEN THE WHITE TRUCK STOPPED.

>> YOU ARE MAKING A HUGE. MISTAKE. HUGE MISTAKE! CALL THE POLICE! LISA: ST. CLAIR COUNTY SHERIFF'S.

OFFICIALS ARRESTED TWO SUSPECTS. THE SHERIFF POSTED ON FACEBOOK, WELCOMING RIDERS TO THE..

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

South Omaha Bikers Donate Cash to Wipe Away Graffiti Stains

South Omaha Bikers
THEY SOLD T- SHIRTS, HAD 8 BANDS PERFORM....AND. RAFFLED OFF. PRIZES. ALL TO RAISE.

MONEY TO WIPE. OUT GRAFFITI. THE "SOUTH. OMAHA BIKERS" HAVE JOINED IN.

THE FIGHT. AGAINST. GRAFFITI FOR. THE LAST 8 YEARS.....AND ALL.

TOGETHER HAVE. DONATED. $35,000. THE BIKERS.

GOAL IS SIMPLE -- TO KEEP THE. NEIGHBOR. HOODS IN SOUTH. OMAHA CLEAN.

ANDY DICKINSON/SOUTH. OMAHA BIKERS. "WITH THE GRAFFITI. OUT THERE IT.

BRINGS DOWN THE. VALUE OF THE. NEIGHBORHOOD, IT. MAKES PEOPLE.

THINK THAT IT'S A. VIOLENT. NEIGHBORHOOD OR. BAD NEIGHBORHOOD.

AND THEY DON'T. WANT TO GO THERE. BECAUSE THEY. THINK THERE'S.

GOING TO BE. TROUBLE OR. HARASSMENT." THE CHECK. PRESENTED.

TODAY BY THE. SOUTH OMAHA. BIKERS WAS FOR. MORE THAN - FOUR-THOUSAND.

DOLLARS... THEY SAY THEY. HAVE PRIDE IN. THEIR NEIGHBORHOOD.

MAYOR STOTHERT WAS. ALSO ON HAND. FOR THE CHECK..

Tuesday, May 15, 2018

SIU Automotive Technology Program Video

SIU Automotive Technology Program Video
Hi, I'm Mike Behrmann and I'm Chair of the Automotive Technology Department.  Welcome to Southern Illinois University! Some of the things that we attribute to a positive learning environment here at SIU. Is several things.  One, outstanding faculty and faculty that has to be committed to excellence Providing great learning opportunities for our students.

Another piece that goes into a positive learning environment  is an engaging industry.  An industry that is engaged and wanting to see our students learn and succeed.  The third component, I believe, of a positive learning environment  is a passionate student body and a passionate alumni group that is out there that will continue to support the program.   My name is Michael Adamczyk, I'm a senior at SIU.

Graduating May 2013. And right now, currently, I'll be working for General Motors in Service Operations Group. This program enables us  gives us a lot of internship opportunities.   Vehicle and Lab wise, there's plenty of vehicle to work on.

There's always donations for new vehicles. We got the Chrysler SRT8 300 and various other things.  Hi, I'm Jessica Suda I am a graduate of the Automotive Technology Program at SIU. I'm finished with the automotive program.

And I'm in electrical engineering now. I love the scantool diagnostics, electrical systems. How different sensors do different things to affect fuel-trims and I want to be the brains behind it someday.  That is my goal.

The role I see industry playing in an educational environment.  Is one that, they have to understand that we are trying to develop their future. Their future workforce, their future customers, their future technicians, and their future shop owners. But it's beyond just that, it's also understanding That we are trying to develop people to be their future leaders,  their future managers,  So, the technicians, the shop owners, the product managers, the product trainers, the marketing managers.

Those are the people that we are developing here at SIU. What excites me about this program is that it's really hands-on. Its something that I can actually go out and use.  Me I'm a Kinesthetic learner, so I need to learn  through touching things I need to learn through seeing it visually.

In lab, yeah, we definitely had alot of time for hands-on so that way I can put my skills that I've learned in class to practice and  we had sufficient time every day to do our lab sheets and learn above and beyond what we wanted to that day. Actually, we were able to work with vehicles, for instance and example is we worked on a Autocross vehicle. And strip the vehicle down was able to repaint it. To make it to a nicer standard.

Since this is a vehicle that we do use on a regular basis.  For Autoclub related activities. Being part of a club and especially a club that involves with your major is pretty big. It let's the employer know that  you can do things outside of the school and your major and still have a good time.

Some of the alternative fuel projects we've seen so far     between Alt (alternative) Fuels class and teachers driving around campus. Mr. Tate has an all electric PT Cruiser that he build.   And on top of that, we are trying to make a Miata that is all electric.

And we also had some people from Finland come with an all-electric all-wheel-drive electric race car. That was really fun to see and drive. That was here last year.  My Alt Fuels teacher, Blaine Heisner.

He taught us how to make Hydrogen Generators. Which some of the students made to try to increase the fuel mileage on their cars.  He also drive a vehicle that burns old and used motor oil. And sometimes trans-fluid.

Depending on what he puts in there. Then Mr. Collard has an old Mercedes Diesel that he runs on waste veggie oil. We have kinda been playing around with that and more hybrid type vehicles.

This new facility is pretty awesome! We've got three alignment racks all in one shop and one bay. And there's two more bays still.  I would like to thank the program for driving me to pursuing something that I thought was impossible. I love the fact that you can talk to your professors, give them an idea,   and they won't shoot you down and tell you  that it's a bad idea.

They'll tell you to work for it. They'll tell you to work towards that idea. Professors in there helped me keep that drive alive. If I were to thank any of them,it'd be, I would thank them for keeping my dream alive.

And keeping me focused on to surpass what I thought would be impossible. And never take "impossible" as an answer. I'm Alvin Lardizabal and SIU has helped me drive my passion. .

Monday, May 14, 2018

Should Government Bail Out Big Banks

Should Government Bail Out Big Banks
In 2008, America experienced the biggest meltdown
of its financial sector since the Great Depression. The conventional wisdom is that this failure
and subsequent government rescue, commonly known as "the bailout" was brought about by
three decades of bank de-regulation. There were a lot of causes for the meltdown, but
deregulation wasn't one of them. Ironically, it wasn't because the banks had become unmoored
from government control that led them into the financial storm, it was because they had
become too closely tied to government.

For three decades Uncle Sam, like an enabling
parent, had always "been there" when the big banks got into trouble. The shock in 2008
was that for one brief moment, Uncle Sam wasn't there. In the wee hours of September 15, 2008, Lehman
Brothers filed for bankruptcy. The financial industry waited for the Feds to step in and
save Lehman bondholders like it saved those of Bear Stearns some months earlier.

That
didn't happen. Global financial markets seized up. As the Dow Jones Industrial average fell
498 points, or nearly 4.4 Percent, financial institutions effectively went on strike. Banks
wouldn't lend money to other banks and thus, indirectly, to the public because they had
no idea which financial institution might go belly up next.

The economy can withstand
a stock-market crash, but a credit-market freeze -- essentially a cash freeze -- can
cause a Depression, as credit underpins almost all business and personal activities. Indeed,
some large companies, including General Electric, were so dependent on these short-term credit
markets that they were in danger of not being able to pay their workers. The financial industry pleaded with the government
to act. Later in the same day, September 15, it did.

The Feds wouldn't save Lehman's but it would save AIG, the primary insurer of mortgage loans. A month later, the Troubled
Asset Relief Program (TARP), a $700 billion plan to pump taxpayer cash into America's banks and financial institutions was approved by Congress. Public officials generally agreed that the
free market had failed. In November 2008, President George W.

Bush came to New York
to explain why he, a Republican president, had signed TARP into law. "I'm a market-oriented
guy, but not when I'm faced with the prospect of a global meltdown," he said. But free-market capitalism had not melted
down. Again, the problem was not that banks had been too free, but that they had grown too dependent on government over the last few decades.

Here's a brief history. America's first post-Depression bailout of
a big bank came in 1984 when the Republican administration of Ronald Reagan, with help
from the Federal Reserve bailed out Continental Illinois, the eighth largest commercial bank
in the nation. The bailout introduced the phrase "too big to fail" to the financial
media's vocabulary. The premise for rescuing Continental was simple:
the bank had many global bondholders, big investors, and the government feared that
the bondholders might pull their money out of all American banks if they saw that a bank
like Continental could fail.

That might have stemmed a short-term panic, but it created
a long-term monster. The government had effectively said to financial markets: if you lend money
to a big bank, it's just like lending money to the U.S. Treasury -- only it's better because
the banks will pay you more interest than you can get from your Treasury bonds. And so money poured in from investors.

The
banks got bigger... And more reckless. And when the next crisis rippled through the financial
industry, there was Uncle Sam, ready with his checkbook. In 1998 the government, this time under Democrat
Bill Clinton bailed out Long-Term Capital Management, a hedge fund that teetered at
the edge of bankruptcy and threatened to drag some big banks down with it.

The message to
the banks was clearer than ever: take bigger risks. Uncle Sam would be there, if any thing
went wrong. Indeed, as I noted, early in the crisis, in
March 2008, the government brokered the purchase of the Bear, Stearns investment bank (to JP
Morgan) to save its bondholders and other creditors from suffering huge losses. And
that summer, Washington rescued Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the giant government sponsored
mortgage companies.

It's the fact that the government didn't rescue
Lehman Brothers that set off the 2008 panic because the financial world simply assumed
that Uncle Sam would. Would we have been better off had the government saved Lehman's? Maybe
in the short run. But it's likely that crisis would have occurred anyway. Because banks
assumed that the government would always bail them out, their risk models by 2008 were all
out of whack; conservative practices, like lending only to credit-worthy borrowers, a
relic of the past.

What's the solution? How do we bring sanity
back to the financial industry? Not by passing thousands of new regulations. The banks' army
of accountants, lawyers and lobbyists can always work their way around those. The solution
is that the government must stop guaranteeing the big banks' losses. Only then will bondholders,
the big investors like pension funds and insurance companies, who lend the financial sector the
money they need to operate, have an incentive to police the industry.

It's that simple. I'm Nicole Gelinas, a senior fellow at the
Manhattan Institute, for Prager University..

Sunday, May 13, 2018

Reports of stolen vehicles up in Milwaukee

Reports of stolen
LEGISLATURE. WELL IF YOU THINK IT COULD. , NEVER HAPPEN TO YOU WHEN IT. COMES TO GETTING YOUR CAR.

STOLEN, THINK AGAIN. THE MILWAUKEE POLICE DEPARTMENT. ESTIMATES NEARLY 7,000 CARS WERE. STOLEN LAST YEAR, AND THEY'RE.

ALREADY AHEAD OF THAT PACE THIS. YEAR. ON SUNDAY, A GROUP OF TEENS. STOLE A CAR THAT WAS WARMING UP, AND THEN BLEW THROUGH A STOP.

SIGN AT 84TH AND WILBER, KILLING. TWO PEOPLE. AND AS 12 NEWS' BEN HUTCHISON. SHOWS US TONIGHT, NEW AT 10:00 CAR THEFTS CAN HAPPEN FASTER.

, THAN YOU COULD EVER IMAGINE. WHEN IT'S. COLD OUTSIDE, WE. ALL WANT TO GET INTO A WARM CAR.

YOU MIGHT STARTED UP, WALK AWAY, HEAD TOWARDS HER HOUSE, BUT BY. THE TIME YOU WERE CORRECT YOUR. CAR, IT COULD ALREADY BE GONE. MURDER, MANSLAUGHTER AT THE.

VERY LEAST. THAT IS THE ONLY SUITABLE. PUNISHMENT SEEN FIT BETWEEN THE. PEOPLE BEHIND THE CONTROL OF A.

STOLEN SUV. THIS VEHICLE WAS STOLEN WITH. THE KEYS IN IT. THIS ACCIDENT POSSIBLY COULD'VE.

BEEN PREVENTED IF IT WEREN'T FOR. THE FACT THAT SOMEBODY WANTED TO. KEEP THEIR -- WARM. THE OWNERS SAY THEY.

WERE SWITCHING DRIVERS, TO MORE THAN. A FEW MINUTES, THE CAR WAS GONE. LOCAL SHOPS ARE SEEING MORE. PEOPLE GETTING REMOTE STARTS PUT.

IN. ONE WAY TO FIGHT AGAINST CAR. THEFT. AS LONG AS THERE'S NOT A KEY.

IN THEIR, THEY'RE NOT GETTING. THE CAR. RANDY SAYS HE CAN INSTALL UP. TO 10 REMOTE STARTS ASSISTANCE A.

DAY. IT GETS WORSE. PEOPLE GET COMPLACENT. THEY DON'T REALIZE THAT THERE.

ARE PEOPLE OUT THERE THAT ARE. TRYING TO STEAL THE CAR. THERE ARE ALARMS THAT YOU CAN. PUT ON YOUR CAR TO SCARE THIEVES.

AWAY. THANK YOU. THE CHEAPEST REMOTE STARTED YOU. CAN FIND COSTS NEARLY $200.

HERE ARE THOSE STAGGERING. NUMBERS FROM MILWAUKEE POLICE. THEY TOLD US THAT ABOUT 6,600 CARS WERE STOLEN IN 2014. IN 2015, THERE HAVE BEEN 800 CARS STOLEN SO FAR THIS YEAR..

REALIST NEWS - Chain-Restaurant Apocalypse Next

REALIST NEWS -
So speaking of The last time since 2009. We haven't seen this since 2009. Wolf Street I've been waiting to do this thing for a few days, I just kind of put it on the back-burner, 'cause I thought there were more important things going on. I don't wanna flood too many videos in one day.

Sometimes there's just too much stuff that's important that I want to get out. So this one was on the back-burner for a few days. Still important, though. Is the chain restaurant again, wolfstreet.Com Is the chain restaurant recession becoming structural? So I'm like, Ok, retail auto loan, sub-prime, just auto sales apocolypse that's two apocolypses.

How about a third one, right? "Three's the charm." Here's the third one. Restaurant recession. Now I did tell you, a little while back, Subway stores Subwaaaay No longer the pedophile role-model of what's-his-nameJared Jared's gone now. Little pedophile problems.

But, uh, They had to close, like, 349 or something stores that just happened to be in the US, but other countriesthey're expanding. First time, I think, they said, in 50 years 50 years, and like Isaid before, they skated through 2000 dot com crash/bubble. They skated through 2008-09 crash, no problem.   But we're not in a crash.

We're not in a crash right now. We're not in ayou know.... What's going on? It's like, because normally you look at the stock market and that's, like, the defining moment of crash, recession, something, you know but since they've falsely pumped it up, it's like that stuff's here crash or recession, whatever you want to call it, is here without the stock market crash Confusing. The stuff is here...

That goes with the stock market crash. People, you know, recession kicking in sales down everywhere, stores closing, you know. The crap I'm telling you every single day. The market looks phenomenal.

The market looks great. USA must be doing great, man. But it's not. A 15-month downturn here goes longest since 2009 and no end in sight.

"There's simply no respite for chain restaurants. Industry-wide, same-store sales fell again in May." "The last time, same-store sales actually rose year-over-year was in February 2016." "On that basis, the chain-restaurant recession is now in its 15th month,..." So again, one off, little blip Did you go back and revise something? No. This is a trend, my friends. And it's not just here.

It's Retail Apocolypse, Auto Sales Apocolypse, this is all together. So if you have all these differentlyall completely different industries, not even kind of related fast food chains, restaurants, etc., Not necessarily "fast food," but they are certainly chain ones. Cars. Car loans and the sub-prime loans over there.

And then... You've seen housing and all of a sudden, Toronto's Ooo, did they get slammed the other day. Looks like we're right at that peak. You see all these different industries, and they have the same issues, essentially, recession issues.

This is this recessionary stuff, here. If it looks like a recession, walks like a recession, even quacks like a recession, It's a recession. "But the markets are up, so it can't be a recession!" Got it, got it, got it. Go ahead.

Let me continue. So yeah, "On that basis, the chain-restaurant recession is now in its 15th month, the longest downturn"another
stretch of, you know, the longest length of a downturn "since the Financial Crisis." Of '09. "In May, same store sales fell 1.1% Year-over-year." Same-store foot traffic fell 3.0%. "Food sales were down, and alcohol" Woah! No, no, no, no, no, no.

No, I'm not reading that right. "... And alcohol sales were down..." ?! People must be broke these days! "...According to TDn2Ks Restaurant Industry Snapshot,..." "... Tracking sales at 27,000 restaurant units from 155 brands, generating about $67 billion in annual revenue." "But the average amount of the check per person increased by 2%,..." "...

And not because they ordered more food and booze, but because prices rose." Federal Reserve says inflation is not... ...Hardly anything at all. But they don't look at food prices and they don't look at energy. Ok, got it.

Right. Gosh, silly me. "Florida was the,..." Ooo! Florida! Hey! Jsnip, here! :D. Florida guy.

"Florida was the least bad region,.." No kidding! "...With same-store sales up..." "...0.1%" Ok, that's nothing to brag about. "And foot traffic...." Rather than being down 3% like the other one, was only down 1.9%. "Texas was the worst region with sales down 2.4% And foot traffic down 4.3%." "Of the 196 markets, 140 (71%) experienced sales declines." That's nearly three-quarters showing sales declines. "The report  as the reports in prior months  is perplexed by the long downturn:" "Recently, there has been an upturn in retail spending on most goods and services.

That stands in stark contrast to the continued decline in sales growth at restaurants." "This change in consumer spending patterns was..." "... Identified about a year ago, and how much longer it will continue is unclear." "Now the hope is that year-over-year sales comparisons this year will look less bad ..." "... Based on the relatively soft sales last year." "That has been the hope for months, and it hasnt happened yet." "But the pain is not evenly spread in this sector," "... According to the Restaurant Industry Snapshot:" "Dine-in sales have been negative year-to-date, but to-go is up 2.9%." "Sales are also up in catering, delivery, and drive-thru." So, now, that's interesting.

At least, drive-thru and, uh, to-go To-go stuff is up 2.9% Is that because people say, "Oh honey, I don't want to go sit down, and leave a tip,..." "Yeah let's just order it to-go, so we don't have to do that." Is that what that means? It could. Just gonna throw that out there. "Breakfast and mid-afternoon sales offer..." "...Continued opportunities for growth, while lunch and, especially, dinner sales continue to stumble." "While sales in May were weak across all segments, ..." "...The fine dining segment was able to achieve very small positive same-store sales growth. " "Until May, that sector had done well.

Now it too is losing its edge." "All segments were weak, but the least weak were at the top of the price spectrum..." " (Dining experience) " "... And at the bottom (value and convenience). " "Everything in between was particularly weak." "The weakest performing segment in May was casual dining." "This was a bit unexpected since the segment showed improved performance during the first four months of 2017 after lagging..." "... The industry for several years.

Casual dining has added a modest number of new units, but same-store sales..." "... Declines have contributed to its overall loss in market share." "Despite weak sales results year-to-date, fast casual continues to win the market share battle." "It gained the most share in the first quarter of 2017 compared with the same quarter a year ago. " "Aggressive expansion has driven total sales growth, but increased competition and market build-out have undoubtedly impacted same-store sales for the segment. " "The only other segment that gained market share year-over-year was quick service." You know, "let's go in for a quickie." Not THAT kind of quickie.

;) ;) ;) "The chain restaurants 15-month travails contrast with overall sales at 'food services and drinking places,'..." "... According to Census Bureau retail data." "In 2016, sales at these places rose 5.5% To $657.8 Billion." " In April, the most recent data available, sales rose 3.9% Year-over-year to a record $56.6 Billion." (Graph in article) Sales at "Food Services and Drinking Places". So... Is that, like, bars? People wanna drink their, you know, sorrows and worries and Paycheck-to-paycheck worries over? I mean, is that what that is? "Since January 2010, nominal sales at food services and drinking places (then at $37.5 Billion) have surged 51%, in part due to price increases: ".

Conan Unveils His Superhero Vehicle- CONAN on TBS

Conan Unveils His
Hey, this is pretty exciting. Last year, you may recall, I premiered a superhero suit at Comic-Con, blew everyone away. Well, this year we're taking it to the next level. A superhero needs his ride.

He needs to get around. I am going to build a super-vehicle, and I'm going to do it with the help of these guys, West Coast Customs.
(Applause) They are the people that design cool cars. They did things for Mad Max. They did a Batmobile.

They've done 30, count 'em, 30 custom cars for Shaquille O'Neal, which is probably why he's doing all those Icy Hot commercials.
(Laughter) When the heat is on, the pain is gone. Anyway, the point is this. I need a vehicle. We're gonna design it today, build it, take it to San Diego for Comic-Con.

Sign of the devil, woo!
(Applause) Makes no sense. I'm going. This is pretty exciting. This is the guy who runs the joint, Ryan.

Ryan, how many years have you been working on to customize cars? About 27 years now. 27 Years. Just give me a rough estimate. What is something like this gonna cost this guy? Ballpark.
Between 50 and 75 grand.

I got a bit of a budget today. Okay. Did they tell you?
No. We're looking to spend about $400.

(Laughter) That's so cool. (Laughter) This looks dangerous.
Yeah, it's probably-- This Smurf looks like. Was this Smurf struck by the car, and rolled up over the top? He looks like he's bleeding internally, and he's not gonna make it, and this one's a sociopath that doesn't care. (Laughter) Hey Ryan, what do you think? Could this be my superhero car? Okay, tell me.

Conan, there's been a bank robbery. You've got to get there right away. Yeah, Conan, there's been a bank robbery. You gotta get there right away.

You've gotta give it a little more urgency than that. I'm sorry, sorry.
It's a bank robbery. There's a bank robbery going on right now. You need to get there right away.

You gave it a little too much. Let's take it down a step. One more time. Just say there's a bank robbery, we got-- There's a bank robbery going on right now.

You need to get there. Still not satisfied, but okay. I'll get them. (Laughter) Oh, jeez.

Oh, god. Okay, hold on. Hold on. Hold on.

There's nowhere for this foot to go. Shut the door. (Laughter)
Shut the door. This doesn't really instill fear, does it? God, who fits in this? This is like the Kevin Hartmobile.

(Laughter) Hey, wait a minute. Now we're talking. This could be the skeletal frame of what we do, right? Right. You know what I like? It's got no door.

I just jump in. The knees come up a lot, but we can adjust the seat maybe. We can move the seat back. 'Cause right now, this doesn't feel like, "I'll get you, evil-doers!" This is crazy.

This paint job right here. Fast boat, kind of reminds you of fishing. It reminded me of a whore (laughter) more than a fast boat, but yeah, we'll go with yours. Okay.
Yours is a better association.

I wish I hadn't said whore, but I did. (Laughter) That one's outta the... That one's out. So this is Musa.

Musa does, basically takes everything out of my mind and puts it on paper. And then this is Lorenzo to make sure everything gets done. Is it Musa? Musa.
Okay. Say it again, Musa? Musa.
Now you got it.

Gentlemen, let's start hearing some ideas. Women want to have sex with Conan in this car. Men fear this car. Animals want to be hit by this car.

(Laughter) I don't know why I added that, just something I thought of. Is there a way we could get a sneak peak of this dark uniform you wear? Gentlemen. Behold. (Cheers) We want to get this image in, the hair.

Mm-hmm. Okay? Don't sketch yet, Musa. Just think.
All right. Think, then sketch.
Okay.

This is something we should talk about. Yeah, the package.
The package. Yeah. This is an exact duplicate of my own extremities.

I want to also draw your attention, gentlemen, to the ass.
(Laughter) Now, again, it is sculpted. You could crack walnuts with this thing, and frankly I have.
Oh. You just, you really just, just grab it. Musa, come here, come here.
Mm-hmm.

Just get in here beside it and just grab that. You see, now that's a man's ass. Yeah, why would you do that? [Ryan] Why would you? That's-- You can say no, Musa. I'm wondering if there's some sort of a (exhales) shape, and let's not be afraid to go with it.

Is there any point, maybe in the front of the car, where there's a desk right here with a microphone, you know what I'm saying? I want to say something. I know you've built some cars for some pretty big celebrities. I'm not just another celebrity coming in who wants a car. I know the boy from the Sopranos called you last week, and had you, you know, make him a custom something.

Okay, fine, he was good. Don't know how he's doing now, but he had his day, but I'm not that kid. What's his name? Find out Research, and flash it up. [Announcer] Robert Iler.

There you go.
(Laughter) Excellent. Let's do it. (Tense music) (cheers) (heroic music) Behold! You've got the hair. You've got the talk-show desk inside.

Cup-holder. Check out that hood ornament, everybody. (Cheers) Look at the flying cape in the back. What car has that? (Cheers) And last but not least, the bulge horn.

Look at this bulge horn right here, ladies and gentlemen. (Horn rawrs) (horn rawrs) (horn rawrs) (cheers).

Saturday, May 12, 2018

Police search for vandals who shot out car windows

Police search for vandals who shot out car windows
WASHINGTON D.C. REACTION TO HIS DEATH AS POLICE. SEARCH. FOR HIS KILLER.

BUT FIRST, THOUSANDS OF. DOLLARS IN DAMAGE TO CARS ON A. TRAIL OF VANDALISM THAT. STRETCHES FOR MILES.

GOOD EVENING I'M MIKE DARDIS. I'M SHEREE PAOLELLO. SOMEONE SHOT OUT. THE WINDOWS OF.

MORE THAN A DOZEN CARS OVERNIGHT. FROM MOUNT AIRY. TO NORTH BROOKE. IN COLERAIN TOWNSHIP.

BRIAN HAMRICK IS LEADING WAY. LIVE FOR US TONIGHT WITH. MORE ON. THIS DEVELOPING STORY.

IT LOOKS LIKE THE WEATHER. MADE THIS DAMAGE EVEN WORSE. THE VANDALS. USED A BEE PEA GUN.

TO SHOOTOUT THE WINDOWS AND EVEN. A WEAK ONE CAN SHOOTOUT A WINDOW. IN THIS. WEATHER.

ONE BROKEN CAR WINDOW. THAT IS UNCALLED FOR. AFTER ANOTHER. IT HAS OWNERS OF DAMAGED CARS.

LIVID, INCLUDING JOHN. ROITER. FRUSTRATING, UPSETTING. COLERAIN TOWNSHIP POLICE ARE.

WORKING TO CRACK THE CASE OF THE. SHATTERED WINDOWS, A TRAIL OF. DAMAGE RUNS FROM MOUNT AIRY TO. THE NORTH BROOKE AREA IN.

COLERAIN. WILL THEN. WE GOT A REPORT. FROM SOMEONE SAYING THAT.

THERE -- THEY COULD SEE A GUN IN. A LOT SO WE WENT. AND RECOVERED A. GUN.

IT SEEMS TO BE ON THE TRAIL SO. WE BELIEVE IT WAS THE GUN. THIS IS THE GUN POLICE SAY. IT'S A BB GUN APPARENTLY TOSSED.

INTO A VACANT LOT AFTER THE. DAMAGE WAS. DONE. INVESTIGATORS HAVE TAKEN MORE.

THAN 20 REPORTS OF CAR WINDOWS. SHOT OUT AND AT AUTOGLASS. NOW -- I HEAR YOU NEED A NEW. DOOR GLASS, RIGHT? THERE ARE NO BREAKS FOR THOSE.

FIXING THE CRACKS. THEY'VE HAD A STEADY STREAM OF. VEHICLES HERE BECAUSE OF THE. VANDALISM.

LOTS OF CALLS, LOTS AND LOTS. OF CALLS. WE HAVE BEEN RINGING OFF THE. HOOK.

WE HAVE HAD CALLS SO FAST THAT I. GOT TO ANSWER. PHONES, TELL. PEOPLE, HEY CAN YOU HOLD ON ONE.

SECOND FOR ME AND GRAB ANOTHER. ONE. ALL OF THIS COMES AFTER MORE. THAN 40 VEHICLES WERE VANDALIZED.

A COUPLE. OF WEEKS AGO, SOME. REPORT THEY'VE BEEN HIT BOTH. TIMES.

SO POLICE CONTINUE TO SEARCH FOR. SUSPECTS, AND THOSE LIKE JOHN. ROITER LOOK FOR AN EXPLANATION. I DON'T UNDERSTAND WHAT IS.

GOING ON. YOU KNOW, OF COURSE I KNOW KIDS. ARE KIDS, BUT STILL, THAT'S. DAMAGE.

AND THERE ARE WITNESSES. POLICE SAY THEY ARE LOOKING FOR. A DARK OR MAROON SUV, SOMEONE IN. THEIR TEENS OR EARLY 20S.

WAS DRIVING. REPORTING LIVE, BRIAN HAMRICK, WLWT NEWS 5. BRIAN, THANKS. INVESTIGATORS ARE NOW CHECKING.

TO SEE IF ANY OF THESE CRIMES..

Friday, May 11, 2018

Podcast 13 Club Hub name change, student athlete earns award

Podcast 13 Club
(Upbeat music) >> Hello, and welcome to the
13th "Collegiate News Podcast." Here's what's in
the news this week. Student leaders
voted in approval for three budget requests
and one change at last week's
Student Alliance meeting. Students voted to change
the name of the Club Hub to the "Molly Maczka
Leadership Hub." The hub will now
be named after the former Student Life
Office Manager Molly Maczka, who died
October 26th. The Club Hub was
opened this semester in the Student Life office as
a place for student leaders and club members to
network and collaborate.

The Anime Club's request
for more than $3,600 to attend Anime Central
in March was approved. The 25 students will drive
to Rosemont, Illinois, for the convention and
will stay in a hotel. The approved monies
will cover hotel costs and admission to
the convention. All students going on the trip
will pay for their own food, gas, tolls, parking,
and a $10 fee to help reduce the
total cost of the trip.

The Hispanic Student
Organization's request for over $5,000 to
attend the United States Hispanic Leadership
Institute was approved. The 16 students will take an
Amtrak to Chicago in February. Each student has contributed
$150 as a deposit to help with
trip costs. With the approval
of the request, that money will be given
back to the students for, quote, "academic purposes,
such as buying books "and applying for
tuition," end-quote, said HSO President
Hector Marin.

The Asian Student Union's
request for over $3,700 to attend the annual
East Coast Asian American Student Union leadership
conference was approved. Seven of the most active members
will attend the conference. The request will cover
the traveling expenses and the hotel
expenses. The members will pay to drive
themselves to the airport in Chicago and pay to
park their cars there.

They will also pay out-of-pocket
for the registration to the conference, and all food
expenses for the three-day trip. In sports news, the GRCC
women's basketball team finished with their
biggest win of the season against Cornerstone
University's JV team. The winning score
was 65 to 46. The women's team is
now 5-3 on the season.

The men's team also
played this past Saturday, but suffered a tough loss
to Macomb Community College. The score
was 69 to 77, and resulted in their current
record of 3-4 on the season. Both the men's and
the women's teams will play Hope College's
JV teams tomorrow at 5:30 PM
for the women and 7:30 PM
for the men. Both games will be home
at the Ford Fieldhouse.

GRCC volleyball player,
sophomore outside hitter, Lauren Wieber, was named
Honorable Mention All-American for NJCAA
Division II. Wieber finished the season
with 433 kills, 103 digs, and 30 blocks
on the season. "The Collegiate"
is partnering with the Associate
Degree Nursing Club to host a food drive
through next week. All proceeds will go to the
GRCC student food pantry, which can be found in
the Student Life office.

Bins for donations will be
located in the Health Lab on the 4th floor
of Cook Hall, the Math Lab on the
first floor of Cook Hall, the Tutoring Lab on the first
floor of the Science building, the Student Life Office
on the first floor of the Student Center, outside of the
Enrollment Center on the first floor
of the Main building, and "The Collegiate"
office, room 339 in the
Main Building. To see a full list
of items to donate, check out "The Collegiate"
Facebook page. You can read full stories
of campus news, features, and sports coverage 24/7
at thecollegiatelive.Com. You can always send us
story tips via social media or email us at
collegiate@grcc.Edu.

Students and staff are also
welcome to contribute letters to the editor. Be sure to check us out, and
follow us on social media. Stay tuned for next
week's news update. For "The Collegiate" at
GRCC, I'm Kayla Tucker.

Have a good week. (Upbeat music) The music in this podcast is
titled "Energy" by bensound.Com. (Upbeat music).

Thursday, May 10, 2018

Other Guys Concert

Other Guys Concert
Hi. My name is Brian Concordia, and I am at the Other Guys show with my brother Kevin. And we're here to see our little brother Alex perform in his acapella group. I'm here with my cousins Jack and Liam, my Uncle Mike, and my mom and my dad.

Al has been in the Other Guys for a few years now. And it's just good to have everyone here. What's your favorite part about the Other Guys? I think the best part about the Other Guys is they're very professional. They do a lot of practicing, and um (Cuts him off) Yeah, well enough of that.

Who do you rank the top in the Other Guys? Oh AlAlex is the best. Well me, I don't knowI kind of like Wyatt. You know, he's just so cool. Wait, who's your favorite? Wyatt definitely, you know...

I mean in his description he sounded like Ferris Bueller. Jack, who's your favorite? Well, you know... To me I would like to sit down and have a drink with Tyler Schell. He's your favorite? Si! Hi.

This is Brian Concordia. I'm a senior at the University of Illinois. And I'm here with my older brother Kevin and my younger brother Alex. We all have gone to the U of I.

Kevin is graduated. Why don't you say a little bit about your time here? We'll we've been coming down for years to see Other Guys shows. I was the first one in the family to come to U of I, and then these two followed. It's a great school.

It's just been really fun to come back and visit, and see my little brothers and how they've gone to the school, and the things they're doing, and to see Alex in the Other Guys has been really fun too. Now, like Kevin said Al is in the Other Guys. So, he is the singer of the family. And, Al why don't you talk a little bit about how you got into the Other Guys.

I got into the Other Guys actually my brother Kevin was also a singer. He was in the bigger choir, and I went to his concerts and saw this other group, the Other Guys. And that's how I got into it.  I was very interested.

And now that I made it, it kind of gives the family an excuse to come back to campus, see what's going on, and have a good time. And he just loves when everyone comes down to see him! I do, I love it!.

NOVA scienceNOW55 - Can My Car Live Forever,Replacing BodyParts,Can We Slow Aging,Human Hibernation

NOVA scienceNOW55 -
Can We Live Forever? NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON (Astrophysicist, American
Museum of Natural History): Hi, I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, your host of NOVA scienceNOW, where
this season we're asking six big questions. On this episode: Can We Live Forever? Some folks seem to be built to last. This
guy is 91! CHUCK YOGI (Honolulu Heart Program Participant):
I'm 96. WOMAN (Jewish Centenarian): Ninety-seven.

SAMUEL HARANO (Honolulu Heart Program Participant):
Ninety-eight. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: These people live long
and healthy lives. So what's their secret? And where can I get some? The answer may lie in these guys. CYNTHIA KENYON (University of California,
San Francisco): They're like 90-year-old people who look 45.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: And what if you could
replace your broken down human organs as easily as you replace the muffler on your car? Researchers
insist that day is coming, and sooner than you think. DORIS TAYLOR (University of Minnesota): I
absolutely see a day where there will be jars of kidneys, jars of livers and jars of lungs,
whatever it is you need. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: They're growing body
parts in the lab. So if you can make a working living lung,
then it seems to me...

HARALD OTT (Massachusetts General Hospital):
...Build, literally, any organ. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Could we cheat death
if we were guaranteed replacement parts? DORIS TAYLOR: It really makes you go, "What
is life?" The first time you see something beat that was dead. It's one of those "yes"
moments in life. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Also...

JASON LEIGH (University of Illinois, Chicago):
Can I live forever? NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Just in case our human
bodies can't live forever, this computer scientist is trying to design virtual replicas, avatars,
that will. JASON LEIGH: An avatar is an instance of yourself
that's digital, that will never die. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Inspired by Star Trek
and Superman. MARLON BRANDO: (As Jor-El, Superman/Film Clip):You
do not remember me.

I am your father. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: He thinks we can build
digital copies of real people that will carry our thoughts, memories and wisdom into the
future, for all posterity. JASON LEIGH'S AVATAR: You mean me? NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: All that and more, on
this episode of NOVA ScienceNow. You know, we take it for granted that nothing
lasts forever.

And that's true of life itself. Every living thing will eventually break down
and die. But does it have to be that way? Can we live forever? We begin our show with a man who seems to
have done the impossible. He's completely stopped the natural decay and death that all
of us expect; not for himself but for his car.

IRVIN GORDON (Car Owner): My name is Irvin
Gordon. My car now has 2,741,000 miles on it. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: You heard him: more than
two-point-seven million miles. The Guinness Book of Records says it's the highest mileage
automobile in the world.

IRV GORDON: Every time the car goes go out,
I break my own record and make it harder for anybody else to catch up. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: And they'd have over
four decades of catching up to do. He drove his new Volvo off the lot 44 years ago, and
he and his car have been going strong ever since. IRV GORDON: You don't have to be the fastest
to drive a million miles, you got to just hang in there the longest.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: So this is your baby,
huh? IRV GORDON: This is my baby. Don't touch that
car. Watch your knees. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: It's hard to understand
how a car can last so long, look so good and ride so well after all those miles.

Irv's
car has the same mileage as all of the Apollo moon landings combined! How many places on
Earth and things to do take you 3,000,000 miles to get there? IRV GORDON: Commuting 125 miles a day, to
and from work. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: One-hundred-twenty-five
miles round-trip? IRV GORDON: Thirty-five years. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Are you retired now? IRV GORDON: I'm retired. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: So, retired from what? IRV GORDON: I'm retired 12 years ago.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: From what? IRV GORDON: I was a science teacher. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Excellent! Most of the nearly 3,000,000 miles have come
from 44 years of crisscrossing the country. The odometer turns over every hundred-thousand
miles. Do the math, it's turned over...

IRV GORDON: Twenty-seven times; it's on its
28th. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: So, what does Irv do
to get his car to live forever? Well, number one, regular maintenance. IRV GORDON: I just do the things it says to
do, when it says to do them. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Things like regular tune-ups
and oil changes.

Irv figures he's gone through 110 tires, 440 spark plugs, 788 oil filters
and 3,143 quarts of oil! Sounds like there could be some lucrative
endorsement deals. So they put you on the payroll? IRV GORDON: I'm still waiting for my first
box of oil filters. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Tip number two: if something's
broke, fix it. Replace the worn-out parts.

Old cars drip oil. How much do you just drip
out of this car? IRV GORDON: You can go underneath my car with
a rag, and you won't find any oil. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Really. I don't see anything dripping.

IRV GORDON: Bone dry. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: That's because, over
the years, Irv has placed his car into the hands of an elite few. IRV GORDON: This is my A-Team here. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Richie Vermont serviced
the car, from when it was brand new, until he retired seven years ago.

He's replaced
three clutches and countless brakes and mufflers. That sounds like it popped. Irv's maintenance bills helped pay for the
education of Richie's kids. RICHIE VERMONT (Auto Mechanic): I tell you,
I sent my kids to college.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: The engine has been rebuilt
twice, first by Richie, after 680,000 miles, and in 2009, by this man, Duane Metejka. All right, what do we got here? He said it was in pretty good condition. Oil pump. IRV GORDON: There was nothing wrong with the
oil pump, but I figured after 2,000,000 miles it's a good idea to put a new one in.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Another rule of thumb? BOB (Auto Mechanic): Every 2,000,000. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Obviously you've replaced
pieces of this engine. All right, does that allow it to count as the original car, even
though you're replacing the parts that wear out? IRV GORDON, RICHIE VERMONT, DUANE METEJKA,
BOB: Yeah. Sure.

Un huh. Mmm hmmm. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Irv says it's not any
different from a living organism. IRV GORDON: Like your body replaces parts.
How many times have all those different cells replaced themselves completely, from beginning
to end? Does that make you not you? It's the same argument.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: And of course Irv would
know. IRV GORDON: Well, this is coming from a science
teacher. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: And so, Irv will keep
on going. IRV GORDON: Who would expect how a car would
change your life.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: When you look at pictures
taken over the years, you see a man getting older as his car remains as new as the day
he drove it off the lot, more than four decades ago. IRV GORDON: It doesn't show any signs of giving
up. And hopefully this second rebuild will outlast my ability to keep driving. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: And that leaves me with
one last question: Can I drive your car? IRV GORDON: Absolutely not.

Nobody drives
my car but me. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Nobody? IRV GORDON: Nobody. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Nobody? IRV GORDON: Nobody. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Nobody? IRV GORDON: Nobody.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: If something in your
car breaks or stops working, like your radiator, you can always just take it out and replace
it, but what about us? If my body parts break down, like my heart, I might be able to get
a transplant, but right now, even if I could find a replacement part, one, it's going to
be used, and two, my body might just reject it. The dream would be to replace my heart,
or whatever's broken, with a brand new version, in perfect, working condition, but exactly
like my original. People have been talking about this for years, but now, thanks to some
brand new discoveries, the dream of custom-made, personalized body parts may soon become a
reality. In the 2005 sci-fi thriller, The Island, people
have found a way to live forever: they grow clones and harvest their organs.

But real
science may be on the verge of a less diabolical solution. This, for example, is no special effect. It's
a lab-grown lung, no clone attached. DORIS TAYLOR: I absolutely see a day where
you'll walk into a manufacturing facility somewhere, and there will be jars of kidneys,
jars of livers and jars of lungs, whatever it is you need.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Just as in The Island,
your body would accept the new organ because it would be yours, grown from your cells. JOSEPH VACANTI (Massachusetts General Hospital):
And there would be no more waiting lists for organs, there would be no more rejection.
We would enter a new era, where we could build you an identical, ideal replacement. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: But how do you make an
organ without a body to build it in? We've been growing cells in the lab for decades,
but they just sit around in flat layers or clumps. So how would you coax them to form
a three-dimensional organ like a heart, with chambers, valves and blood vessels? Maybe it's the same way you go from this to
this.

See, an organ is not unlike a building. It's
a collection of parts that has to come together and work together. You can think of a cinder
block as a cell. The problem is a block or a cell alone is not enough.

To construct a
building you need to begin with an internal framework, or scaffold, to define the parts
and hold them together. Thirty years ago, transplant surgeon Jay Vacanti
and chemical engineer Robert Langer realized that to build an organ, cells also need a
framework, a scaffold to guide their growth. The challenge was to engineer scaffold materials
living tissue could grow on. ROBERT LANGER (Massachusetts Institute of
Technology): So this is a material that we call "bio-rubber." NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Bio-rubber; and you use
the prefix "bio," because whatever is the material, it will take to flesh or living
cells? ROBERT LANGER: That's right.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: So why does the cell
even care? ROBERT LANGER: Because a, because of a lot
of things could be toxic to a cell, or the cell wouldn't like their surface and wouldn't
be able to grow on it. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Picky cells. ROBERT LANGER: Cells are picky, and some are
more picky than others. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: But sculpting a scaffold
out of the right material was only a start.

To turn one into a living body part, an ear,
for example, it must then be seeded with cells. A few weeks in an incubator allows those cells
to multiply, covering the scaffold. Then comes a rather strange test. This is really creepy.

I mean, mice are creepy
enough, and this one has no hair and a human ear growing on its back. JAY VACANTI: Yes. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: He doesn't seem to mind
that he has an ear growing on his back. JAY VACANTI: No, he knows he's here for a
bigger purpose.

But this is a very, very important step in the science, because, on the back
of this animal, we're actually incubating and growing perfect cartilage in the shape
of a human ear. And it's completely connected to the blood vessels, so that it's just like
a native ear in a normal circumstance. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: In the head of a person? JAY VACANTI: That's correct. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: So when this finally
gets implanted in a human you don't expect rejection, as is so common with new body parts.

JAY VACANTI: Exactly, because we're going
to start with the patient's own cells, it'll make his own tissue, and, therefore, the body
will accept it. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Within a year, Vacanti
and Langer expect to be implanting their ears directly on the heads of soldiers wounded
in Iraq and Afghanistan. But these will not be the first recipients
of lab-grown body parts. Already, patients of other doctors have received blood vessels,
skin, muscles, even bladders built the same way.

ROBERT LANGER: I think, with enough research,
most parts of the body will be replaceable. And I haven't come across very many body parts
where somebody, somewhere isn't working on trying to replace them. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Which is certainly encouraging
news for people who need more complex body parts, like 20-year-old Stacey. STACEY (Liver Disease Patient): I was in the
hospital, and that's when they came in and told me that I may need a new liver.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: But will she get one?
Every day, nearly 20 Americans die, waiting for donor organs. JAY VACANTI: So, this problem is an extraordinary
problem. There are too few organs for the well-over-100,000 Americans waiting. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: But if we are ever to
make the complex organs most needed to save lives, like livers and hearts, the scaffold
builders will have to overcome an obstacle, namely, plumbing.

In a building it's pretty
straightforward. Pipes carry fluid where it's needed, just like blood vessels in the body,
except that in a major organ like the heart... DORIS TAYLOR: You need a blood vessel per
cell, because the heart works all day every day. And I don't know if you've ever seen
blood vessels, really.

But they look like a tree. And the challenge is not to build
that big limb, but to build those little tiny branches that come off. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: But building these intricate
branches might be unnecessary, if we take advantage of a remarkable fact: organs are
not just made of cells. DORIS TAYLOR: So if you wash the cells away,
what's left? And what's left are these proteins on which the cells sit.

And they form the
framework of the organ, the scaffold. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: These natural scaffolds
hold an organ's shape down to the smallest detail, including every blood vessel. So could
they be used to build a complex organ like a heart? Six years ago, no one could say, because no
one had ever stripped a heart of its cells, leaving the scaffold intact. But Taylor's
colleague, Harald Ott, thought he could find a way.

He would use the blood vessels in a
rat's heart to deliver a chemical that would dissolve its cells, and nothing else. But
which chemical? HARALD OTT: So the process of finding the
right chemical was literally a trial and error process, starting from A to Z on the chemical
shelf. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: First, Ott tried enzymes,
but they dissolved both the cells and the scaffold. Other chemicals caused the hearts
to swell up.

Finally, he tried a soap commonly found in shampoos. HARALD OTT: We saw the heart become translucent.
And it was obvious to us all that something had happened that hadn't happened in the months
before. DORIS TAYLOR: What we had is this thing that
looked like a heart, but it looked like a ghost heart, if you will. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Injections of dye showed
the scaffold to be undamaged, down to the smallest blood vessels.

And we now know that
this technique works with many organs, including human-sized ones. DORIS TAYLOR: This is essentially the scaffold
of a heart. Who knew a heart had a full skeleton? But it essentially has no cells, dead or alive.
It's beautiful. You can see the blood vessels here, the chambers of the heart.

You can see
the valves. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: But could a bare scaffold,
once again become the framework of a living heart? Taylor soon discovered it was more
than a matter of injecting cells. DORIS TAYLOR: Just putting cells on a scaffold
isn't enough. It's putting cells on a scaffold and giving them an electrical signal, and
giving them a mechanical blood pressure, and then giving them oxygen.

It's not just a heart
in a jar. It's a heart in an artificial body. So, it's simple in many ways, and it's unbelievably
complicated. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: After eight days, the
first lab-grown heart beat on its own.

DORIS TAYLOR: It really makes you go, "What
is life?" The first time you see something beat that was dead. It's one of those "yes"
moments in life. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Since then, Ott has joined
Massachusetts General Hospital and used the same method to build a pair of lungs. After
coming back to life, one lung was successfully implanted in a rat.

So, if you can make a working living lung,
then it seems to me that you can... HARALD OTT: ...Build, literally, any organ. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Any organ! This novel approach has already made a difference
in the real world. In Barcelona, Spain, this woman, Claudia Castillo, might be dead without
it.

Two years ago, tuberculosis devastated her
windpipe, making it difficult to for her to breath. But surgeon Paolo Macchiarini saw
a solution: give Claudia a new windpipe, which her body would never reject, because it would
be made of her own cells, grown on a natural scaffold. And so, in June of 2008, Macchiarini and an
international team of specialists removed a windpipe from a human cadaver, washed it
clean, and reseeded it with living cells from Claudia's body. Four days later, the new windpipe was transplanted
into Claudia.

PAOLO MACCHIARINI (USP Instituto Universitario
Dexeus): If you transplant an organ without tissue engineering, you need immunosuppression,
you need close watching. And this was absolutely not the case for Claudia. She never had any
sign of rejection. Indeed, four days after surgery she was home.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: More than a year later,
Claudia is living a normal life, free of the fear that she will reject her new body part. CLAUDIA CASTILLO (Windpipe Transplant Recipient/Translation):
I feel like the transplant is not from the body of another person. It's mine. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: That sense of ownership
might soon be crucial to organ recipients, because their scaffolds might not come from
a person at all.

DORIS TAYLOR: This is a pig kidney, sliced
in half, and it's the same size, same complexity as a human kidney. We could cover this with
human cells and, in theory, build you a kidney. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Human organs built on
natural or artificial scaffolds, made from a patient's own cells to avoid rejection,
available in unlimited supply? Most researchers believe it will be a reality within decades,
and Taylor is even more optimistic. DORIS TAYLOR: Kidney, liver, lung...We're
not decades away from building something complicated, we more like years away.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: (As an auto mechanic)
Just like some well-made cars, some people last longer than others. They don't fall apart,
and they don't even need replacement parts. What's up with that? (As a medical patient)
You know, if medical researchers figure it out, maybe everyone could last longer. (As
an auto mechanic) Correspondent Ziya Tong tracked down some lucky folks who don't age
like most of us and the doctors who are trying to figure out the secret to their Fountain
of Youth.

(As a medical patient) So how'd I do? ZIYA TONG: (Correspondent): Some people are
like forces of nature: aging gracefully is simple for them. CHUCK YOGI (Honolulu Heart Program Participant):
My name is Chuck Yogi. I'm 91 years old, ever since the last couple of days. So, I'm fully
91.

ZIYA TONG: Somehow, James Harai got to 91,
too. JAMES HARAI (Honolulu Heart Program Participant):
And I've been blessed with, uh, good health, I guess, you know? ZIYA TONG: Kind of makes you wonder how they
do it. Do you have a secret to looking so young at
90? SAMUEL HARANO (Honolulu Heart Program Participant):
Just don't worry about unnecessary things, you know? I'm happy-go-lucky. ZIYA TONG: But while these guys are living
proof that longevity comes naturally for some, other people are pulling out all the stops
to try and live as long as they possibly can.

Computer scientist and inventor Ray Kurzweil
takes 150 pills every single day. RAY KURZWEIL (Kurzweil Technologies, Inc.):
That might sound like a lot, but it's not enough to just be natural. I take 400 milligrams
a day of resveratrol, a lot of vitamin D. ZIYA TONG: So what's he doing with all those
pills? RAY KURZWEIL: In my view, death is a great
robber of all the things that give meaning to life.

It destroys knowledge and wisdom
and relationships, and there's actually a lot that you can do to slow down these aging
and disease processes. ZIYA TONG: But is Ray wasting his time looking
for a Fountain of Youth that's just a myth? RAY KURZWEIL: The goal, right now, is to live
long enough to get to a future point where we will have technologies that will extend
our longevity even further. ZIYA TONG: In fact, scientists have been tinkering
in the lab, trying to extend life for a long time, and they've come up with a couple of
things that do work in animals. Calorie restriction, for instance, basically putting an animal
on a diet, seems to kick in a survival response and helps it live longer.

And they've found
a substance in red wine that has a similar effect. But what if somebody could figure
out how these guys did it so effortlessly? JAMES HARAI: The fish not cooperating today.
I think they're camera shy, I mean. ZIYA TONG: Cynthia Kenyon thinks she may have
found one of the keys to a long life in a tiny, nearly microscopic worm called C. Elegans.

So how can we learn anything about human aging
from these tiny little worms? CYNTHIA KENYON: I know they look really different
from us, but the basic processes of life are very similar at the molecular level. ZIYA TONG: The good thing about these little
guys is that they get old and die in just a little over two weeks. CYNTHIA KENYON: Okay, watch this. I'm going
to show you something really cool, now.

So, this is the normal worm when it's young. ZIYA TONG: So that's a nice, sprightly worm;
what I'd expect a worm to look like. Quite fiesty! CYNTHIA KENYON: Now, I'm going to show you
the same kind of worms, but just two weeks later, when they're old. ZIYA TONG: Wow! CYNTHIA KENYON: So this is a, yeah, normal
worm when it's old.

You can see that they're about to die. ZIYA TONG: Oh, wow. So these are really slow-moving
here. I didn't think you could see aging in a worm so dramatically.

CYNTHIA KENYON: Okay, so now what I'm going
to show you are worms that are the same age, but you'll see that they look much younger. ZIYA TONG: So these worms are the exact same
age as the ones that we saw that were almost dead? CYNTHIA KENYON: Yup, they look much younger,
even though they're the same age. ZIYA TONG: And they're wriggling about just
like the other ones, huh? CYNTHIA KENYON: So they're like 90-year-old
people who look 45. ZIYA TONG: That's incredible.

So what's different
about these? CYNTHIA KENYON: We've changed one gene; that's
all. ZIYA TONG: Kenyon changed one gene in the
worm. Genes are made of D.N.A., Long strings of 4 chemicals, best known by their initials:
A, G, C and T. Together, they form the basis of all life on Earth.

Kenyon found that there
was a gene that scientists call FOXO, which had a central role in keeping her worms freakishly
youthful. CYNTHIA KENYON: What FOXO does is it helps
the animal to protect and repair its tissues. The reason that it can do it is this one gene
controls a lot of other genes. ZIYA TONG: FOXO is a master control gene,
meaning it regulates hundreds of other genes, genes that have a profound effect on the worms'
health.

CYNTHIA KENYON: So you can think of it as
a superintendent of a building. So if you have a building, a nice big building, obviously
it has to be maintained. What FOXO does, or the building superintendent does, is to keep
the building in good working order. ZIYA TONG: The superintendent makes sure that
the electricity works and that the roof doesn't leak.

CYNTHIA KENYON: It makes sure that the walls
are painted, by hiring painters; it makes sure that the floors are swept. ZIYA TONG: But the superintendent doesn't
actually do all these important jobs. CYNTHIA KENYON: The building superintendent
would hire workers to do these different things. What FOXO does, in the cell, is it switches
on other genes.

ZIYA TONG: Those worker genes do jobs like
enhancing the immune system and protecting the cells from bacterial infection. CYNTHIA KENYON: Some of these genes that protect
the cell make proteins that will kill invading micro-organisms. Others are switched on that
are antioxidant genes. ZIYA TONG: Kind of like a rust inhibitor for
a cell.

Now, most living things need oxygen, but oxygen
can actually be damaging to cells that aren't prepared to deal with it. And, yes, there's
a worker gene for that, too. CYNTHIA KENYON: I'd say, altogether, there
are probably about a hundred worker genes that have very important roles. And, together,
what you get is a cell or tissue or an animal that stays in really good working condition
for a lot longer.

ZIYA TONG: All those processes are actually
directed by the FOXO superintendent gene. Kenyon tweaked one gene in the worms and made
FOXO more active. With a more active superintendent, the cells became more resilient than normal
and Kenyon's worms lived twice as long. If there's one gene that dramatically increases
lifespan in worms, could the same be true in humans? JAMES HARAI: I went to Alaska 10 times.

ZIYA TONG: Yeah? They have big fish in Alaska,
right? Mr. Harai and the others are part of a groundbreaking
45-year study in Hawaii that's trying to find out. BRADLEY WILLCOX, M.D. (Kuakini Medical Center):
The Honolulu Heart Program population is a group of Japanese-American men...

SAMUEL HARANO: Beautiful sunset... BRADLEY WILLCOX: ...That we have followed
since the 1960s. CHUCK YOGI: When you hear people my age, they
say it's so hard to even get out of bed, so I say, "So why don't you jump up?" But they
say, "No, no!" ZIYA TONG: What's he have that other people
don't? CHUCK YOGI: Thirty-five times. BRADLEY WILLCOX: What's important for aging
is it's a process.

So we've studied the process in these men for decades. ZIYA TONG: Willcox and geneticist Timothy
Donlon wanted to see if they could find out anything about the genetics of human aging
from this unique scientific resource. TIMOTHY DONLON (Kuakini Medical Center): This
is one of the freezers that houses the over 8,000 samples from this project that's been
conducted over the last 45 years. ZIYA TONG: Wow.

So this is, like, data, frozen
in time? TIMOTHY DONLON: That's right, safely tucked
away, here. ZIYA TONG: Using these samples, they tested
five genes that had already been shown to help animals live longer, to see if any of
them would extend human life as well. BRADLEY WILLCOX: And based on that list, we
found one gene that was heads and shoulders above everything else. And that was the FOXO
gene.

ZIYA TONG: The FOXO gene! That's right: the
same superintendent gene that helped double the life of Cynthia Kenyon's tiny worms. Though
everybody has the FOXO gene, these Hawaiian men seem to be living longer, healthier lives
because they have a protective version of FOXO. TIMOTHY DONLON: We found that if you have
this FOXO gene, you have a two-fold chance of living to a hundred. And if you have two
copies of this, you have a threefold chance of living to a hundred.

ZIYA TONG: A gene typically consists of two
copies. You get one copy from your mother and one copy from your father. BRADLEY WILLCOX: So with FOXO, the area that
we looked at, you could have a C or a G from your mom and your dad. The vast majority of
us have two Cs.

About 25 percent of us have one G and one C, and about 10 percent have
two Gs. If you have two Gs, you hit the jackpot: that's triple the odds of living to be a hundred.
You can go to Vegas with those odds! ZIYA TONG: I'm not very good at this, but
I read palms a little bit, and, believe it or not, you actually have an incredibly long
lifeline. SAMUEL HARANO: No kidding? ZIYA TONG: Yeah, you do! BRADLEY WILLCOX: And not only triple your
odds of living that long, but being healthy. So it was a gene that appeared to be associated
with extended health-span, not just lifespan.

CYNTHIA KENYON: It tells us that FOXO in humans
affects aging. You could have imagined that we have the gene, but it doesn't do the same
thing, but this says it does! ZIYA TONG: News of the Hawaii study sped around
the world, and scientists confirmed the results in population after population: in Germany,
Italy, New England, California and in China. Nir Barzilai of the Albert Einstein College
of Medicine in New York... HAROLD LAUFMAN (Jewish Centenarian): I'm now
98 years old.

ZIYA TONG: ...Also found a similar pattern
in the FOXO genes of Ashkenazi Jewish centenarians. WOMAN (Jewish Centenarian): I'm 96. MAN (Jewish Centenarian): Ninety-seven. WOMAN (Jewish Centenarian): Ninety-eight.

NIR BARZILAI (Institute for Aging Research,
Albert Einstein College of Medicine): This data on the FOXO pathway that came from Hawaii
and then confirmed by us, was confirmed by other groups. And, in fact, it's the most
consistent, validated study in this field, suggesting that this is real and important
for human aging and longevity. ARTHUR STERN (Jewish Centenarian): We don't
feel old; we feel young. ARTHUR STERN'S FRIEND (Jewish Centenarian):
We don't feel old.

NIR BARZILAI: And it's also consistent with
what we have learned, that there's this whole concept of a superintendent that is regulating
whatever is going in the house. ZIYA TONG: Oh! You got one, you got one, you
got one! And in the future, that knowledge could be
used to develop new drugs to combat age-related diseases... JAMES HARAI: Fish on! ZIYA TONG: ...And, perhaps someday, to help
us live longer. Good job, Mr.

Harai! BRADLEY WILLCOX: The vast majority of us get
an average set of genes. So it's what you do that becomes most important: eating a good
diet, regular physical activity, engaged in life. CHUCK YOGI: As you age, I think every little
thing pleases you more than in the past. SAMUEL HARANO: And now I've got to aim for
the century mark, yeah? ZIYA TONG: So how do you think you're going
to celebrate your 100th birthday? SAMUEL HARANO: Hundred candles? It would be
a fire hazard, huh? ZIYA TONG: Yeah, it would be a fire hazard.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: (As an auto mechanic)
At least for now, it's much easier to extend the life of a car than of a person like you
or me. The car's not flesh and blood and complex organs. But what if you could create a version
of yourself that was indestructable? In this episode's profile, we'll meet a computer
scientist who wants to build virtual versions of ourselves, avatars, that look, act and
talk like real people and who will hang around, long after the flesh and blood versions of
us are dead and gone. In 1987, when Jason Leigh tuned in to Star
Trek: The Next Generation, he saw the holodeck for the very first time:...

BRENT SPINER (as Lieutenant Commander Data,
Star Trek: The Next Generation/Film Clip): I was curious to see how three of history's
greatest minds would interact in this setting. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: ... A place where people
from the distant past can live on as computer-generated holograms. BRENT SPINER (as Lieutenant Commander Data,
Star Trek: The Next Generation/Film Clip): End program.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: And that's when a sci-fi
TV show gave this computer scientist his big idea: a way to allow all of us to, in a sense,
live forever. JASON LEIGH: If you were to think about that
when Star Trek first came out, you would think, "Oh, this would be impossible to do," but
now it's possible. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: At the University of
Illinois, Chicago, Jason has been obsessed with turning this fantasy into reality through
Project Lifelike, a plan to make immortality available to anyone by creating a virtual
copy of you as an avatara concept that intrigued Jason, long before James Cameron
parlayed it into a billion dollar blockbuster. JASON LEIGH: An avatar is an instance of yourself
that's digital, that will never die.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Jason knows he can't
really make you live forever, but he can use computers to preserve your thoughts, memories
and even the way you look, for eternity. JASON LEIGH: Can I live forever? JASON LEIGH'S AVATAR: In the future your children's
children will be able to meet with you. Students will be able to talk to scientists long gone,
like Steven Hawking or Neil deGrasse Tyson, even. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Who, me? Well, I'd be
honored.

Jason's vision of a world where we can build
relationships with dead people, from the famous to family members, was deepened by another
movie. JASON LEIGH: In the film Superman, Jor-El,
who is Superman's dad, is long-gone and dead. MARLON BRANDO: (As Jor-El, Superman/Film Clip):You
do not remember me. I am your father.

JASON LEIGH: But his dad's able to counsel
him, as if he were still alive. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Jason's journey began
in 1960s Hong Kong, where he was a shy, awkward boy, with no real friends. JASON LEIGH: I was really, I guess a "geek"
would be a good term for it, but I was also artistically inclined. And I was drawing anything
I saw in science fiction.

ACTOR'S VOICE (Star Trek/Film Clip): It's
a missile, and it's heading straight for us. JASON LEIGH: Star Wars blew my mind: all these
wonderful and cool technologies that we, as mere mortals living today, didn't have access
to. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: And before long, Jason
was drawing his own inventions. JASON LEIGH: I remember we had these three-ring
binders and paper would always rip, and it just drove me nuts.

And so I was imagining
some futuristic computer. It wasn't a computer thenI didn't know what a computer wasa
futuristic magical pad, where I would write on. Of course, nowadays we call that a tablet
computer. STEVE JOBS (Apple/File Footage): And we call
it the iPad! JASON LEIGH: If only I'd patented it back
then.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Then Jason saved up to
buy his own computer. And he instantly became obsessed, spending nine hours a day at the
keyboard. JASON LEIGH: Even when I went to sleep, I
was writing code, while I was asleep. And I would find an error, and I would wake up,
and I would find, yep, certainly there was an error in the code.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: When Jason left Hong
Kong to go to college, he had promised his parents he would study the well-established
field of chemical engineering, but he had a secret plan. JASON LEIGH: The first day I landed in the
U.S., I head straight for the computer science department and said, "How do I switch majors?"
And then I wrote a letter back to my dad and said, "I switched to computer science." He
was actually supportive. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: After college, Jason
was eager to make his mark designing computer graphics, and he learned about E.V.L., The
Electronic Visualization Lab, in Chicago. JASON LEIGH: It was people who had long hair,
all sorts of strange and crazy people.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: These self-proclaimed
"techno-hippies" were finding new ways to merge computers and art. JASON LEIGH: And I thought, "Wow, finally,
a program that thinks and does things the way I've always wanted to do." I said, "Well,
I'm going to just let my hair grow out." So I fit in and became one of the techno-hippies. So I think it's a great time to be a geek. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: At E.V.L., Jason blends
games and movies into every aspect of his life, from his work to his play, to his car
and even his kendo, which is as close as he's going to get to a lightsaber battle in Chicago.

JASON LEIGH: It very much is bringing Jedi
knight-ism into reality. No respectable Jedi knight would use any other
Jedi's sword. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: After 15 years, Jason
became lab director, and he could now take aim at his most ambitious sci-fi fantasy:
how to create a realistic avatar. Still an artist at his core, Jason used art
as inspiration and his drawing skills to develop ideas.

In 2007, Jason joined the growing field
of avatar researchers, as he began work on his plan to live forever. As usual, Jason
started with a drawing. JASON LEIGH: I always start with a picture
in my mind. The picture goes onto paper.

The picture goes into the computer. I spin the
thing around to see if it makes sense. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Next, Jason had to make
an avatar look like a living, breathing person. For a guinea pig, he used himself.

JASON LEIGH: First of all, we take photographs
of their face from multiple angles, so that we can use software to reconstruct the face
in three dimensions, as realistically as we can. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Then Jason teaches his
double to move just like he does. JASON LEIGH: And so, for that, we put them
in a motion-capture suit. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Jason even records and
modifies his avatar's emotional expressions.

JASON LEIGH: Like, whether they were happy,
sad, angry. Let's look at a little bit of anger. There
you go. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: As Jason fine-tuned the
graphics, he needed to teach his avatar to think and talk.

So he turned to artificial
intelligence experts. JASON LEIGH: Our collaboration involves researchers
in Florida. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: To overcome the thousand-mile
gap between collaborators, Jason's team invented their own 20-foot video wall, so the researchers
in Chicago and Florida could work on the avatar's intelligence as if they were in the same room. FLORIDA RESEARCHER(On Video Conference): The
avatar doesn't use its hands a lot to talk, and I think at some point, they need to show...

JASON LEIGH: Yes. FLORIDA RESEARCHER (On Video Conference):
...Some hand-waving motion. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Jason records the ideas
and thoughts he wants his avatar to be able to express... JASON LEIGH: Designing computer algorithms
is like writing poetry or painting a picture.

NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: ...So that someone can
sit down ask his avatar dozens of questions. JASON LEIGH: Why is Star Trek important to
you? JASON LEIGH' AVATAR: Star Trek portrayed so
many compelling ideas about our future. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: And this idea of preserving
our life experiences for future generations has been catching on. JASON LEIGH: When I watched Avatar, the most
interesting notion about it was when these people passed on, their knowledge is absorbed
into this tree of past knowledge.

And I thought, "Aha! That's what we're trying to do." Ultimately, what you have is a collective
knowledge of people. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: Jason dreams of a future
where anyone can program all of their thoughts, feelings, memories, hopes and fears into a
virtual replica of themselves, so people can actually speak directly to those long-gone. JASON LEIGH: What we'd like to do in the future
is to try to break the avatar out of the box, make it a person in the real world, conversational
avatars that are as intelligent as humans. JASON LEIGH'S AVATAR: You mean me? You mean
I'm not really alive? NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: (As a driver) Most things
that break in a car can be fixed, but every now and then, some things can go catastrophically
wrong and the results could be fatal.

(As an auto mechanic) In those situations,
if we could freeze time, we could fix the problem before the worst happens. (As a driver) Well, some doctors think they
can do just that with people who are in the middle of life threatening crises like a heart
attack or stroke. Correspondent Peter Standring found out how freezing, or at least slowing
down time, is already saving lives. (As an auto mechanic) All set.

Drive safely. (As
a driver) Thank you! PETER STRANDRING (Correspondent): Every once
in a while there are news reports of miraculous survivals that seem almost too incredible
to be true: people who drown in icy water or are buried in snow; their hearts stop beating
and they're getting no air; they seem to be dead, yet, mysteriously, they come back to
life. Somehow, their bodies seem to go into a state of suspended animation, so they can
survive without oxygen for an hour or more, instead of mere minutes. But how? Researchers have been looking for clues in
some surprising places, starting with this guy: the thirteen-lined ground squirrel.

He
might not look like he has much in common with near-death survivors, but, in fact, he's
an expert at surviving an experience that seems like it should kill him: hibernation. Today, I've come to Minnesota in search of
these hibernating squirrels, and it's freezing. So the squirrels are actually underneath all
of this snow and under the ground, right here? MATT ANDREWS (University of Minnesota): All
around here. The animals are probably about four feet below the surface of the snow.

PETER STRANDRING: Man, how do they survive
that? MATT ANDREWS: That's a great question, and
it's something we're trying to figure out in the laboratory. PETER STRANDRING: Matt Andrews is trying to
unlock the secrets of hibernation. Could the hibernating squirrels have something in common
with people who mysteriously come back from the dead? So what is this place? What is this room,
Matt? MATT ANDREWS: This is the environmental chamber
where we keep our animals in a state of hibernation. PETER STRANDRING: Why are we whispering? MATT ANDREWS: We want to duplicate the conditions
that the animal experiences underground during the winter, and so we're duplicating that
here, in the laboratory setting.

PETER STRANDRING: The squirrels' dark laboratory
home is kept at 40 degrees, about the same as it would be underground. So, underneath all this sawdust we have our
thirteen-lined ground squirrel? MATT ANDREWS: This is exactly what they would
look like when they were in their burrow. And there is a hibernating thirteen-lined
ground squirrel. PETER STRANDRING: Comfy, cozy, rolled up in
a ball.

MATT ANDREWS: And this is the way this animal
spends the winter. It can survive in this state for months. Would you like to hold one? PETER STRANDRING: Absolutely. Wow.

Look at
that: my own little bundle of fur. I think it's a first for me, holding a hibernating
animal. When these squirrels go into hibernation,
it's an amazing process. Their heart rates drop from 300 beats per minute to three or
four.

Their body temperature drops from about 98 degrees to about 40. They only take a few
breaths a minute and use barely two percent of the amount of oxygen they need when they're
awake. Now, you might think that all those drastic
changes would be enough to kill off these little guys, but despite it all, they emerge
from their long winter slumbers completely fine. There's no damage to any of their organs.
There's no damage to their brains.

It's really incredible. MATT ANDREWS: Okay, it's time to put him back
to bed now. PETER STRANDRING: Okay, make sure you tuck
him in good. Hibernation is deeply mysterious.

MATT ANDREWS: So, Ann, what do you have going
on here? PETER STRANDRING: In his lab, Matt Andrews
studies its impact on genes. He's discovered several genes that get turned on in some cells
only during hibernation. He hasn't completely solved the mystery, but one thing is clear:
somehow, those genes seem to reduce the hibernating squirrels' need for oxygen. Andrews' ultimate goal is to figure out how
we could do the same for people.

MATT ANDREWS: If you can understand the molecules
that are expressed when an animal hibernates, you can, possibly, develop a therapy that
can mimic the hibernation experience, so that a person can survive a traumatic injury: a
heart attack, a stroke, those sorts of things. PETER STRANDRING: Heart attack victims usually
die from a lack of oxygen, but if we could reduce the body's need for oxygen, even temporarily,
who knows how many lives could be saved. While the squirrels do it with their genes, those
drowning and avalanche victims who come back from the dead somehow appear to survive without
oxygen because of the cold. Now, at a handful of hospitals around the
country, emergency room doctors are attempting to replicate those miraculous recoveries.

Todd Van de Bussche is living proof it can
work. Todd was just 39 years old when one day he collapsed in the shower with a sudden
cardiac arrest. BETH VAN DE BUSSCHE (Todd Van de Bussche's
Wife): All of a sudden, Todd fell over and then he stopped breathing. PETER STRANDRING: When the paramedics arrived,
Todd was technically dead.

Luckily, he was brought to this E.R. In Virginia, where doctors
are trying out a new treatment. E.R. STAFF PERSON: It sounds like E.M.S.

Got
a pulse back in about 20 minutes. PETER STRANDRING: While one team worked frantically
on Todd's heart, another flooded his bloodstream with a solution of icy fluids and drugs. JON ORNATO (Virginia Commonwealth University):
By cooling as quickly as possible, we're trying to lower the body's metabolism; we're trying
to lower the rate at which the body consumes and burns up oxygen. E.R.

STAFF PERSON: You're going to have to
wait till we get these tubes in. We're hurrying as fast as we can. PETER STRANDRING: As the cold fluid flooded
his veins, Todd's body temperature dropped from 98 degrees to about 92. His heart-rate
slowed, and all the cells in his body used a fraction of their normal oxygen.

Much like the hibernating squirrels', Todd's
body was carefully put into a state of suspended animation. JON ORNATO: We're trying to stretch time,
to give the body a chance to recover from the cardiac arrest. PETER STRANDRING: Twenty-four hours later,
Todd was slowly warmed up and brought back to life. Now, two years later, he's in good
health and enjoying life with a new baby.

JON ORNATO: We're seeing that some of the
patients that years ago we thought could never survive are now waking up and going back to
a fully functional existence. PETER STRANDRING: This cooling therapy is
still relatively new, but, in the few places it's been tested, it's substantially increased
survival rates for some kinds of heart attacks. And Todd has had one of the best recoveries
so far. TODD VAN DE BUSSCHE: I've gone through it,
and look how well my outcome has been.

It's truly a miracle. NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON: And now for some final
thoughts on living forever. The urge to not want to die is as natural as life itself.
But you should always be careful what you wish for. One day, it just might come true.
If, starting now, everyone in the world lived forever, then Earth's current population of
seven billion, which would, at its current rate of growth, double in 60 years, would
instead double in only 35.

Take this forward six centuries or so, and you have so many
people on Earth that everybody will have to stand up straight, just to fit on all the
world's land area. So that leaves interplanetary colonization as the only obvious next step
to accommodate such vanities. But not all planets are Earth-like. Actually, none of
the known planets, inside or outside our solar system, are Earth-like.

Which means if bio-mechanical
genetic engineering is what grants you immortality, then why not alter or enhance our organs in
ways that allow us to thrive under the exotic conditions of alien planets? And that could
only be decades away. There's just one catch. You need a space program capable of leaving
Earth entirely, rather than just driving round the block in Earth orbit. Until then, our
bodies may out-advance our access to space, making Earth a very crowded place to come.
And that is the Cosmic Perspective.

And now, we'd like to hear your perspective
on this episode of NOVA ScienceNOW. Log on to our Web site and tell us what you think.
You can watch any of these stories again, download additional audio and video, explore
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We'll see you next time..