Enter by the narrow gate.
Enter by the narrow gate. #jesusistheway #jesus #christ #holyspirit #jesussaves #jesuslovesyou #revival #victoryinjesus #amen
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We can complain, or we can rejoice
We can complain, or we can rejoice. #Pray #devotionalvideos #christianquoats #christian
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Dancing Manhole Cover
The Ninja Turtles must be having one hell of a party under Denver
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Try Not To Laugh or Grin While Watching
Try Not To Laugh or Grin While Watching Funny
Gym Fails compilation IMPOSSIBLE CHALLENGE!
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Adorable Toddler Kisses Horses
This adorable toddler kisses the horses in the barn. The horses seem to love it.
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Dam Failure in Uzbekistan
The western wall of Uzbekistan's Sardoba Reservoir breached on May 1st, 2020 after a week of heavy rain. Thousands were evacuated as water rushed north into farmland and villages across the central Asian country and into neighboring Kazakhstan. Imagery from Europe's Copernicus Sentinel-2 satellite shows water pooling across a wide area. In the May 4th image 3 days after the breach, the reservoir appears partially drained. The water stored in the Sardoba Reservoir is used for irrigation. This imagery indicates the extensive farmland in the region, largely cotton, a water-intensive crop. And because this region is upstream from the Aral Sea, these images help answer a question many people have about the disappearance of the large lake: Where did the Aral Sea water go? The answer: It's used to water all these crops.
Details
Date Taken: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2020
Length: 00:01:10
Location Taken: UZ
Video Credits
Graphics Support - Benjamin De Groot (Contractor)
Public Domain
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Tennessee Tuxedo "Mad Movie Makers"
The series centers on Tennessee Tuxedo, a penguin, and his friend Chumley, a walrus. They live in the Megapolis Zoo along with friends Yakkety Yak and Baldy the Eagle.[8] Four episodes featured Howler, a dog that Tennessee got from his Uncle Admiration.
Tennessee and Chumley deal with several recurring antagonists. Most often seen is the ill-tempered zoo director, Stanley Livingston. Others are Rocky Maninoff, a gangster who often orders them to do his will at the point of a machine gun, and Tennessee's rival, Jerboa Jump, a kangaroo rat. All three have sidekicks: Stanley Livingston has his assistant, Flunky; Rocky Maninoff has a dim-witted guy called Pretzel, and Jerboa Jump has a henchman named Tiger Tornado, a boxing tiger.
Tennessee and Chumley regularly escape from the zoo, only to find trouble outside. Whenever Tennessee proposes a hare-brained scheme, Chumley is skeptical. Typically, Tennessee assures the dim-witted Chumley that his superior intelligence will carry the day, often with his catch phrase, "Tennessee Tuxedo will not fail!" (though he more often than not does) Chumley then responds with his own phrase, "Duh, okay Tennessee!"
When faced with more trouble than they can bear, the pair turns to their friend Phineas J. Whoopee, the “Man with All the Answers". The latter knows about everything, and he often lectures the pair on diverse topics, from the physics behind the hot air balloon to how musicians become popular. His lectures are illustrated and animated on his Three-Dimensional Blackboard, which he pulls from an avalanche of junk that falls out of his overstuffed hallway closet when he opens the door. At the end of a Mr. Whoopee lecture, Tennessee praises his mentor with the line, “Phineas J. Whoopee, you’re the greatest!” Tennessee and Chumley occasionally must consult Mr. Whoopee again when they fail their first attempt to solve any problem. Mr. Whoopee snorts: "But I've tried to warn you...". In a couple of episodes, Whoopee makes the pair to promise him not to fool around with electricity and television, explaining the dangers involved in those fields.
In the series, Tennessee and Chumley have to overcome a personal problem that children can relate to, such as Chumley's requiring treatment for a toothache but fearing the dentist.
The pair attempt to use their newly gained knowledge to get out of the mischief they created, but they frequently end up in more trouble with zoo director Stanley Livingston, who punishes them in different ways, from police arrest to scrubbing pots and pans in the cafeteria for six months. Episodes sometimes end with Stanley chasing Tennessee and Chumley around the zoo. Although there are some cases where the duos never caused trouble at all, such as when they had stop Tiger Tornado from bullying the zoo animals and succeed, another case would be when they trained for the Zoo Olympic Games without any damage or trouble at all and won.
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Looney Tunes | Foghorn Leghorn on the Farm | Classic Cartoon Compilation
Origin
The character of Foghorn Leghorn was directly inspired by the popular character of Senator Claghorn, a blustery Southern politician played by Kenny Delmar who was a regular character on The Fred Allen Show, a popular radio show of the 1940s. The rooster adopted many of Claghorn's catchphrases, such as "That's a joke, ah say, that's a joke, son." Delmar had based the character of Claghorn upon a Texas rancher who was fond of saying this.[2]
A leghorn is a breed of chicken, and foghorn describes the character's loud, overbearing voice. At its most raucous, it sounds similar to that of another Blanc voice: Yosemite Sam (an almost exclusive Friz Freleng character). Both parts of the name suggest the association with "Senator Claghorn." According to Leonard Maltin, the character's voice was also patterned after a hard-of-hearing West Coast-only radio character from the 1930s, known simply as The Sheriff, on a radio program called Blue Monday Jamboree.[3] The voice has similarities to that of another Mel Blanc voice, Yosemite Sam, a strictly Friz Freleng character, and even more similar to a proto-Sam character in "Stage Door Cartoon".
Foghorn debuted on August 31, 1946 in the Henery Hawk short Walky Talky Hawky.
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Woody Woodpecker | Redwood Sap | Woody Woodpecker Full Episodes | Videos for Kids
Woody Woodpecker is an animated cartoon character, an anthropomorphic red-headed woodpecker who appeared in theatrical short films produced by the Walter Lantz animation studio and distributed by Universal Studios. Though not the first of the screwball characters that became popular in the 1940s, Woody is perhaps the most indicative of the type.
Woody Woodpecker is a cartoon anthropomorphic woodpecker that has appeared in theatrical short films produced by the Walter Lantz Studio and distributed by Universal Studios[2][3] between 1940 and 1972.[4]
He was created in 1940 by Lantz and storyboard artist Ben "Bugs" Hardaway, who had previously laid the groundwork for two other screwball characters, Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck, at the Warner Bros. cartoon studio in the late 1930s. Woody's character and design evolved over the years, from an insane bird with an unusually garish design to a more refined looking and acting character in the vein of the later Chuck Jones version of Bugs Bunny.[5] Woody was originally voiced by prolific voice actor Mel Blanc, who was succeeded in the shorts by Danny Webb, Kent Rogers, Ben Hardaway, and, finally, Grace Stafford (wife of Walter Lantz).[6]
Woody Woodpecker cartoons were first broadcast on television in 1957 under the title The Woody Woodpecker Show, which featured Lantz cartoons bookended by new footage of Woody and live-action footage of Lantz. Lantz produced theatrical cartoons longer than most of his contemporaries, and Woody Woodpecker remained a staple of Universal's release schedule until 1972, when Lantz finally closed down his studio.
The character has been revived since then for special productions and occasions, as well as for The New Woody Woodpecker Show, a Saturday-morning cartoon television series featuring prolific voice actor Billy West as Woody that aired from 1999 to 2002.[7][8]
Woody has a motion picture star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7000 Hollywood Boulevard. He also made a cameo appearance alongside many other famous cartoon characters in the 1988 film Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
Like Mickey Mouse of The Walt Disney Company and Bugs Bunny of Warner Bros., Woody Woodpecker is the official mascot of Universal Studios. Woody and his friends are also icons at the Universal Studios Theme Parks worldwide, as well as the PortAventura Park in the PortAventura World, Salou, Spain (they were originally brought to the park by Universal Studios, and remain there today despite Universal no longer having a financial stake in the park).
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Hypnotic Sounds,Fall Asleep, Heavy RAIN with ThunderStorm on a LAKE, Relaxation, Study, Insomnia
With the black screen so you don't have to deal with any light from the screen. Most popular nature sounds of thunder and rain blocks out distractions, take you into deep relaxation. I recommended for sleeping and insomnia. Heavy rain with thunder helps for relaxing or studying. Heavy rain with thunder works well for reducing stress or anxiety.
👍 Share this video, may be useful for family or friends too. Enjoy 🤗
🌐⛈ Sound recorded location: New Jersey
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Face to Face with Communism, 1951
This Film is in the PUBLIC DOMAIN
Scope & Content: This film tells the story of an airman, in town on furlough, who discovers an entire town has been taken over by Communists. He later found out the experience had been staged by the citizenry to show what could happen in such an event.
Creator(s): Department of Defense. Department of the Air Force. (09/26/1947 - ) (Most Recent)
Series : Armed Forces Information Films, compiled 1950 - 1977
Record Group 111: Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer, 1860 - 1985
Contact(s): National Archives at College Park - Motion Pictures (RD-DC-M), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD 20740-6001
Phone: 301-837-3540, Fax: 301-837-3620, Email: mopix@nara.gov
National Archives Identifier: 6120833
Local Identifier: 111-AFIF-21
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/6120833
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Woody Woodpecker in Pantry Panic 1941
Weatherby Groundhog predicts a cold #winter and advises all the birds to fly south. But Woody Woodpecker decides to stay, and nearly starves. Animation by Alex Lovy and Lester Kline, story by Ben Hardaway and L.E. Elliott, music by Darrell Calker.
Pantry Panic is the third animated cartoon short in the Woody Woodpecker series. Released theatrically on November 24, 1941, the film was produced by Walter Lantz Productions and distributed by Universal Pictures.
Woody stays behind to swim while the other birds in the forest migrate south for the winter. Just after the other birds leave, the cold of winter sets in instantly, to the point that Woody's swimming hole freezes solid after he jumps in ("Must be hard water", he remarks). Woody does not worry, because he has stored up plenty of food. However, a snow storm enters his house and makes off with all of his possessions, food included.
Two weeks later, Woody is delusional and literally staring starvation, personified as something vaguely resembling the Grim Reaper, in the face. A month later, a hungry cat happens upon Woody's cabin, breaks the 4th wall, and conspires to eat the woodpecker. The famished Woody, however, plans just as quickly to eat the cat, and the two have at it. Eventually a moose appears at Woody's open door, and the starving cat and woodpecker chase after it to capture and eat it. Afterwards, however, the meal proves not to be enough to satisfy both Woody (whose voice is suddenly much different) and the cat, who instantly resume their game of trying to eat each other.
Voices
Danny Webb was the voice of Woody Woodpecker; the Cat and the Moose, and bird voices were likely done by Sara Berner, Bernice Hansen, Jack Mercer, Pinto Colvig, and Mel Blanc.[citation needed]
Production notes
Like most of the early 1940s Lantz cartoons, Pantry Panic carried no director's credit. Lantz himself has claimed to have directed this cartoon, which features animation by Alex Lovy and LaVerne Harding, a story by Ben Hardaway and Lowell Elliott, and music by Darrell Calker. This is also the only Woody Woodpecker cartoon (not counting Knock Knock) in which Woody's iconic laugh is not present in the opening credits before the short starts.
Pantry Panic was the third cartoon in the Woody Woodpecker series, featuring an early, garish Woody Woodpecker design. It was the first short with Danny Webb as Woody's voice. However, the woodpecker's famous laugh (provided by Mel Blanc) would continue to be recycled until 1951, when Grace Stafford rerecorded a softer version. Woody's "Guess Who?" (also Blanc), however, would continue to be used until the end of the series in 1972.[1]
Pantry Panic would be reworked in 1946 as Who's Cookin' Who?. The starvation personification would also reappear in the remake as well as 1951's The Redwood Sap. This entry is the only Woody Woodpecker cartoon in the public domain. As such, it is freely distributed, and can be downloaded from the Internet Archive
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Here Comes The Boom -Webtalk Style (OFFICIAL TV COMMERCIAL)
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The Real 2020 Debate: Biden Vs. Biden
WOW: Joe #Biden has been on every side of every issue. He might as well #Debate himself.
Great job Benny Johnson and Students for #Trump
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They Tried To Warn Us... ( Make Mine Freedom - 1948
This Cold War-era cartoon, ("Make Mine Freedom" - 1948) tried to warn us all the way back in 1948. Spread this around. Share with a friend. There is an important message here.
Creative Commons - Attribution (CC-BY - reuse allowed)
Producer: Sutherland (John) Productions
Sponsor: Harding College (Searcy, Arkansas)
Audio/Visual: Sd, C
Keywords: Cold War; Animation: Advertising; Capitalism
Creative Commons license: Public Domain
Archive.org
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1995 GMC pickup. Getting from the shop
Just walking to get my pickup from the shop. 1995 GMC
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This Video Recieved Over 1.2 Million Views And 4600 Comments On YouTube
Watch what happens when this would be burglar tries to mess with the wrong girl! #Glock's pro-gun #commercial is sure to offend some, and make others laugh out loud.
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Why Webtalk is the best app to create more success…
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Popeye for President
Popeye and Bluto are both running for president. They are tied with exactly the same number of votes, but Miss Olive Oyl has yet to cast her ballot. Which candidate will be able to impress her the most and earn her precious vote?
#Popeye for #President March 30 Tom Johnson
Frank Endres Robert Connavale Jack Mercer Seymour Kneitel
In the Public Domain in the United States.
5.00
Paramount Pictures
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