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readtilyoudie · 2 years
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Earlier in the year during an overseas tour, I came to the realization that what we were doing in WWE was no longer pro wrestling. I know WWE uses the term “sports-entertainment” all the time, but it should still be the same thing. Instead, what most of WWE had become was actually a parody of wrestling. Yes, there were times to be a parody and entertain people, but I wanted something more. Cesaro and I were riding together at the time, and we talked about it at length. I didn’t want to be a parody of wrestling anymore. And in my mind, being a wrestling parody was the worst possible thing a wrestler could be.
-  Yes!: My Improbable Journey to the Main Event of WrestleMania by Daniel Bryan, Craig Tello
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Multiples of 2 for the oc ask meme :DD
OOOOH! I totes get it now! I do have all that info written down in my sketchbook, and almost done with the OC profiles in the main lineup so here we go!
2. Here’s a list of potential actors (I still need to give the core cast a cool group name):
Fizza: Saara Chaudry, Parvana The Breadwinner
Yara: Kody Kavitha, Norma Khan Dead End: Paranormal Park
Salem: Charlyne Yi, Domino Amphibia Finale: The Hardest Thing
Euterpe: Dana Davis, Kit Craig of the Creek
Tello: Jack Dylan Grazer, Alberto Scorfano Luca
Moira: Karen Fukuhara, Alexis Craig of the Creek
Proteus: Vico Ortiz, Jim Jimenez Our Flag Means Death
Ronan: Aaron Dismuke, Crown Prince Arslan The Heroic Legend of Arslan
4. Fizza and Yara are fluent in Arabic. Salem speaks Hebrew and is teaching Proteus. Euterpe is learning Greek. Moira speaks Greek and Japanese. Ronan has taken interest in Irish Gaelic.
6. For instruments. Fizza and Yara’s theme would definitely have an Oud and Qanoon. Salem and Proteus would have a Nevel, Goblet Drum and the flute of Moses. Euterpe would obviously have a Kithara. Tello would be a Mandolin. Moira would have a koto. Finally Ronan would have the Irish Bouzouki and Fiddle.
8. This one was super easy. Staring off is Ronan, Belos’ second nephew (you might’ve figured this out if you’ve watched the whole series). Then Euterpe, (thankfully their family is nowhere near as rich as the Blights). Moira and Tello’s Familes are Working class. Finally The Irfans (Fizza and Yara) and Pangurs (Salem and Proteus) are trying their hardest to stay out of the range that is ‘Quite Poor’.
@chucktaylorupset thank you so very much for asking and I’m really busy at work with my Murder They Cast Concepts!
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natehoodreviews · 2 years
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2021 Year End Compilation
White Noise, Don DeLillo
What’s this book “about?” I’d argue the dissipation of the individual in the face of consumerist devaluation and the commodification of sociological signifiers. In short, the revolution IS being televised and sold in shrink-wrapped six-packs in the supermarket beer aisle.  And...I'm not sure if I can 100% explain what I mean by this so don't ask me to try...but this book is exactly what I'd hoped Todd Haynes' Safe (1995) would be before I watched it.
I, Claudius, Robert Graves
“Since [the sacred chickens] do not wish to eat, let them drink!”
Chemistry, Weike Wang
A little dry, but brisk enough to not overstay its welcome. 
Stride Toward Freedom: The Montgomery Story, Martin Luther King, Jr.
One of the most dangerous books I’ve ever read. A step-by-step how-to guide for nonviolent revolution. I can’t believe the US government has never tried to ban and suppress it.
Upright Women Wanted, Sarah Gailey
Charming enough lesbian reclamation of the Western genre. I do wish it had a few more drops of vinegar, though.
Pizza Girl, Jean Kyoung Frazier
It’s difficult to NOT compare this book to Weike Wang’s Chemistry: they’re both stories of second generation Asian-American women having quarter(ish) life crises despite (or because of?) having seemingly perfect white boyfriends. But this book goes darker and gets a lot nastier and meaner than Wang’s and it’s honestly all the better for it. Maybe a little TOO mean, dark, and nasty for my taste. But somehow Frazier stuck the landing well enough that I’m happy I gritted my teeth and pushed through.
Rebel Chef: In Search of What Matters, Dominique Crenn and Emma Brockes
Was it a mistake to read the biography of a 3-Michelin Star French chef chock-full of food porn in the middle of a deadly pandemic where going to ANY restaurant could potentially get you killed? Probably. Do I regret it? No. (Also, hearing Anthony Bourdain being written about in the past tense and eulogized was quite the sobering experience.)
The Sirens of Mars, Sarah Stewart Johnson
A decent enough primer on Mars exploration that shoots for the cosmological wonder of Carl Sagan...and sometimes even pulls it off.
Why We Can’t Wait, Martin Luther King, Jr.
The Birmingham counterpart to Stride Towards Freedom’s Montgomery. Essential reading, if only for its inclusion of King’s "Letter from Birmingham Jail.”
When in Romans, Beverly Roberts Gaventa
Proof that the world would be a better place if more biblical theologians used Terrence Malick films and Bruce Springsteen songs as reoccurring metaphors for explaining complicated exegesis. 
Motherless Brooklyn, Jonathan Lethem
It’s interesting to compare this book with Edward Norton’s 2019 film version which turned Lethem's 80s hardboiled potboiler about mobsters and into a 50s noir fever dream about gentrification and city corruption. Norton's radical changes remind me a good deal of Herzog's NOSFERATU THE VAMPYRE (1979) which re-imagined F. W. Murnau's re-imagining of Bram Stoker's Dracula into a Teutonic parable of humanity's destined destruction at the hands of nature. Both take certain core elements from their source materials—a stuttering detective tries to solve his boss' murder; an ancient vampire attacks a modern European city—and uses them as springboards to tell their own stories exploring their own thematic obsessions. Yet both films feel like fully realized adaptations of their sources, though ones shined through a glass darkly. They would make a fascinating double feature.
Yes!: My Improbable Journey to the Main Event of WrestleMania, Craig Tello and Daniel Bryan
I have a good friend who said he didn’t like the corporate-speak prologues to each chapter, but to me they provided a fascinating kayfabe counterpoint to Daniel Bryan’s pre-2016 retirement career.
My Sister, the Serial Killer, Oyinkan Braithwaite
Reading this book is like slowly twisting a knife under your fingernails. You see the feel-bad ending coming a mile away, but like a boulder rolling down a hill you know you can’t stop it. Not a molecule of narrative fat on this one.
A House for Mr Biswas, V. S. Naipaul
Though this may be Naipaul’s most personal novel, my favorite parts probably had the least to do with the specific elements that were directly inspired by his family’s stories. For me, the heart of this novel is its depiction of Hindu Trinidad and Tobago in all its tragic detail: little children drinking bottles of Coca-Cola, glasses of Ovaltine, and cups of condensed milk mixed with sulfur; opulent ceremonial dishes laid out for impoverished Brahmin; rabid crowds massing into theaters to watch American Westerns. It’s a cross-segment of an entire society, warts and all.
Killing the Business, Matt Jackson and Nick Jackson
In addition to being a brisk and engrossing read, it also sorta doubles as an informal history lesson on the rise of the American indie wrestling scene in the 00s and 10s.
The Witches, Roald Dahl
I’m starting to think that the people who write the best children’s books are the ones who hate children the most. That’s certainly the case here. What a nasty, lovely little book.
Underland: A Deep Time Journey, Robert Macfarlane
Writing a book about the human concept of “underneath” or “underground” might seem as preposterous as writing a book about the color brown or the number three. Yet Macfarlane creates an encyclopedia of such hypnotic esoterica as the Parisian catacombs and hostile architecture guarding buried nuclear fallout that once you start it you’ll scarcely want to put it down. My finishing it in about a day is proof of that.
Gilead, Marilynne Robinson
“I heard a man say once that Christians worship sorrow. That is by no means true. But we do believe there is a sacred mystery in it, it’s fair to say that.”
The Wapshot Chronicle, John Cheever
One day Cheever will regain his place as one of the great American prose stylists alongside Twain, Hemingway, and McCarthy. It’s simplistic to suggest that this book represents an Americanized Dickens what with its detailed sense of environment and place, its Bildungsroman structure, and its cast of exaggerated eccentrics and grotesques. But the similarities are there. What Cheever adds, however, is a twentieth century frankness about sexuality and performative masculinity as well as a distinctively New England sense of wistfulness. And again, what beautiful, beautiful language...
Tropic of Cancer, Henry Miller
A paean to philosophical and sexual amorality. Monstrously misanthropic and misogynistic. Pretty words, though.
Pnin, Vladimir Nabokov
That last chapter broke my brain. Damn that Nabokov and his unreliable narrators!
Friday Black, Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah
The short stories in this collection range from “fine” to “good.” But “The Finkelstein 5” is a scorching heat wave of fury. It’s terrifying not because the story itself is scary, but because it gives white readers like myself an unfiltered glimpse at the rage we’ve spent centuries of supremacy kindling in other people. That might be the best story here, but my favorite is “Light Spitter” which sees a college shooter and his victim meeting in the bardo. You could structure an entire novel out of the afterlife mythos presented here.
The Wings of the Dove, Henry James
James has this odd way of writing where it feels like he never knows where his sentences will end up going when he starts them. I just couldn’t get a feeling for his prose.
Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal, Christopher Moore
Somehow simultaneously stupider and smarter than I thought it would be.
Sisters, Daisy Johnson
Very possibly the best horror story about an evil sister dominating their sibling since We Have Always Lived in the Castle. Ghastly, hypnotic stuff.
A History of the World in 10½ Chapters, Julian Barnes
Uneven but by and large quite good. I do think it's hilarious how the last short story beat the finale of THE GOOD PLACE to the punch by over thirty years. But my favorite of these short stories was “The Wars of Religion” which had me rolling on the floor.
Dear Committee Members, Julie Schumacher
Read it in one sitting. Poisonously acerbic and wickedly funny, it’s one of the best looks at the reality of modern liberal arts colleges ever written. And talk about an ending that knows how to twist the knife in the wound...
Vacationland: True Stories from Painful Beaches, John Hodgman
So dry it makes Garrison Keillor feel like Robin Williams. Still, it has its moments. (“I’m sorry, Pump-Daddy!”)
The White Castle, Orhan Pamuk
I can’t believe it took me this long after high school to read another Pamuk novel. Needless to say, it was fantastic.
The Elephant Vanishes, Haruki Murakami
At the very least, this short story collection gave me the opportunity to read Murakami's "Barn Burning." It definitely gave me a new appreciation for Lee Chang-dong's BURNING (2018) in that it made me realize how much he sucked all the tantalizing ambiguity out of the story. And that he, you know, adapted a brisk short story into a bloated, dreary 2½ hour slog.
Flaubert’s Parrot, Julian Barnes
Whether the assembled material was all invented, all authentic, or a mixture of the two, this book is a truly astonishing compilation of obscure miscellany concerning Gustave Flaubert. Whether or not it all adds up to a compelling novel is an entirely different matter.
A Moveable Feast, Ernest Hemingway
For a book ostensibly about Hemingway in Paris, it’s surprising how much of it doesn’t take place in or even have anything to do with the City of Lights. But then, it’s a book about Paris as a state of mind rather than as a metropolitan city. It helps that the writing is moving and beautiful and true.
If Cats Were to Disappear from the Earth, Genki Kawamura
Talk about a million dollar elevator pitch! Lovely book with an exquisite melancholy about life and death at its center.
French Exit, Patrick deWitt
DeWitt can’t seem to decide if he finds the wealthy amusing, tragic, or cruel. I think the book would have been all the stronger if he’d definitively came down on one side of the equation, but as it stands this book is still one of the most howlingly funny I’ve read in some time.
Shadows on the Rock, Willa Cather
Very little happens in this book, and I think that’s in large part why I love it. Cather creates such a vivid sense of place that you feel like you’re actually inhabiting late seventeenth century Quebec. Very few writers speak to me on such a personal emotional, spiritual, and aesthetic level, and this novel in particular felt like a balm on my mind.
The Fran Lebowitz Reader, Fran Lebowitz
Verily, Fran Lebowitz is the heir apparent to Dorothy Parker. And much like with Dorothy Parker, I have trouble reading too much of her work in one sitting. Her carefully curated self-absorbed cynicism grates after a while. I think the best way to experience Lebowitz’s writing might very well be to try and replicate its original medicinal drip in monthly publications by only reading one of her articles a week.
To Have and Have Not, Ernest Hemingway 
Dreadful. Had to force myself to keep turning pages. Howard Hawks was right to throw most of it out when he made the movie.
St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves, Karen Russell 
My goodness! I’m not sure I’ve encountered another writer who so enjoys torturing children since Edward Gorey. I really wish Russell didn’t tend to end her stories right when they seem like they’re starting their third acts. Still, it was nice to read a version of Swamplandia! that didn’t end with child rape. And the short story that gave this collection its title was positively superb.
Sold, Patricia McCormick
Jeez...this book was written for young adults?! I’m a full-ass adult and I don’t think I was old enough to read this.
In Calabria, Peter S. Beagle
Not just a superb coda to The Last Unicorn, but a stirring parable about the disruptive and soul-restoring power of faith.
Matilda, Roald Dahl
Honestly a little hard to read? Imagine if someone took all the scenes of child abuse from Stephen King’s novels and turned them into a kid’s book.
Summer Crossing, Truman Capote
So, about that ending. Did Capote always plan on it ending like that or did he just grow tired with writing the damned thing and decided the easiest way to finish it was to kill everyone off? Because I think I’d believe either answer. What a bore of a book.
Chekov—Eleven Stories, Anton Chekhov
I read a few of these stories a number of years ago. But I feel like I’m only now mature enough to truly appreciate them. “The Black Monk” is one of the finest short stories I’ve ever encountered.
The Sisters Brothers, Patrick deWitt
A moving--if occasionally cruel and gory--story about the futility of violence as a lifestyle. The more outlandish it got the more I liked it.
Leaf Storm, Gabriel García Márquez
A morbid, macabre welcome to the village of Macondo.
Plain Song, Jim Harrison
Favorite poem: “Northern Michigan” for how it captures the spirit of rural decay.
Honorable mentions: “Lost”; “Fair/Boy Christian Takes a Break”; “Lisle’s River”; “John Severin Walgren, 1874-1962″
Revenge, Jim Harrison
I understand why some people might not like the anticlimactic ending, but I found Harrison’s subversion of traditional revenge narratives refreshing and ultimately inspiring.
The Man Who Gave Up His Name, Jim Harrison
One of the measures of Jim Harrison's genius was that he was one of the only writers who could write the phrase "he made a melancholy bouillabaisse" and not only make it seem non-pretentious but utterly essential to the story at hand.
Legends of the Fall, Jim Harrison
Fecund with the stark poetry of nature, violence, and vengeance.
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fefefernandes80 · 4 years
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Vazamento de petróleo: por que os habitantes das Ilhas Maurício estão recolhendo cabelo
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Técnica descoberta por um cabelereiro ajuda a conter derramamentos de petróleo como o que está acontecendo agora nas paradisíacas ilhas do Oceano Índico. Voluntários trabalham para conter vazamento em Maurício Reuters/Dev Ramkhelawon/L’Express Maurice O governo e os moradores de Maurício, país no Oceano Índico, estão em uma corrida contra o tempo para salvar a ilha de um desastre ecológico que pode ser causado por um navio-petroleiro encalhado desde julho no seu litoral. O navio MV Wakashio, de bandeira japonesa, encalhou em Pointe D’Esny, que é um conhecido refúgio de vida silvestre e zonas úmidas de importância internacional, não muito distante de uma ilha famosa por seus recifes de corais. O turismo é parte crucial da economia. Se estima que o barco contenha 4 mil toneladas de petróleo bruto, sendo que mil deles já foram derramados nas cristalinas águas do Oceano Índico. O premiê de Maurício, Pravind Jugnauth, declarou estado de emergência e solicitou ajuda da França, antiga metrópole que colonizou a ilha, para auxiliar na limpeza. A população local está engajada em conter os danos de qualquer maneira. Sua principal estratégia é armar barreiras absorventes com sacos entrelaçados cheios de palha, cana e… cabelo humano. O MV Wakashio já derramou cerca de mil toneladas de petróleo no mar Getty Images/BBC Campanha O cabelo humano não absorve a água, mas apenas óleos. Por isso os mauricianos começaram a colher grandes quantidades para lutar contra o derramamento. Romina Tello, fundadora da agência ecoturística Mauritius Conscious, confirmou à agência de notícias Reuters que “existe uma grande campanha em toda a ilha para se juntar cabelo”. Por toda a ilha, os salões de beleza estão oferecendo descontos ou até cortes gratuitos para os moradores que doarem seus cabelos. Os estrangeiros também estão se mobilizando para ajudar. Um grupo de voluntários se dedica a colocar o cabelo, junto com a palha e a cana, nos sacos, que são cilindros flutuantes usados para conter o petróleo na superfície da água. Centros de mergulho, pescadores e outros moradores participam das operações de limpeza e fornecem comida ou estadia para os voluntários. Voluntários armam cilindros flutuantes para conter o derramamento Getty Images/BBC Lontras O cabelo humano é muito eficiente e ideal para a limpeza do petróleo. É um produto natural, barato e renovável. Além disso, há outra vantagem sobre os materiais sintéticos e dispersantes químicos usados pela indústria petroleira para limpar desastres: ele é biodegradável. A pessoa que percebeu esse fenômeno foi Phil McCrory, um cabeleireiro do Estado americano do Alabama que observou pela televisão como o cabelo de uma lontra marinha estava saturado com óleo derramado no famoso acidente do Exxon Valdez de 1989 que atingiu a costa do Alasca. Ele pensou: se o petróleo gruda no cabelo de uma lontra, por que não faria o mesmo no cabelo humano? O cabelo humano repele a água ao mesmo tempo em que absorve agentes de contaminação Getty Images/BBC Ele fez um experimento em casa, enchendo uma meia de sua esposa com o cabelo que juntou de seus clientes no seu salão de beleza. Ele botou a meia em uma banheira cheia de água e óleo e viu como ela fez uma limpeza eficiente da água. Várias instituições, como a Nasa e a Universidade de Tecnologia de Sydney (Austrália), colocaram à prova a técnica de McCrory. A Nasa comprovou que, depois de utilizar o filtro de cabelo humano em uma mistura de água e petróleo, uma única filtragem deixou “17 partes por milhão de petróleo bruto na água”. Já um estudo da Universidade de Sydney concluiu que o alto teor de cutícula do cabelo humano o torna um “biossorvente altamente hidrofóbico”, com um córtex muito poroso que captura vários tipos de agentes contaminadores. Esferas e cilindros Phil McCrory se associou à ambientalista Lisa Craig Gautier para criar o programa Clean Wave, que coleta cabelos, penas, peles e outras fibras para fazer esteiras e barreiras cilíndricas flutuantes recicláveis. Os cilindros com cabelo humano são muito eficientes para separar óleos da água Getty Images/BBC Muito do que eles coletam é aplicado pelos departamentos de obras públicas para filtrar ralos e esgotos. Eles também coordenam operações de emergência na limpeza de praias com cilindros flutuantes. A técnica foi utilizada em diversos derramamentos em partes do mundo. Em especial no desastre da ilha de Guimaras, nas Filipinas, quando a população local fez a limpeza de um derramamento de 130 mil galões de óleo combustível em 2006. No entanto, os cilindros com cabelo humano, penas e pele têm um defeito. Eles não flutuam bem. A Guarda Costeira dos Estados Unidos testou o seu uso para a limpeza do Golfo do México após o desastre da Deepwater Horizon em 2010, quando um vazamento na plataforma da BP derramou milhões de barris de petróleo bruto nas águas do golfo, mas os cilindros afundaram nas águas agitadas do mar. Essa técnica é mais eficiente em praias, mas isso exige muita mão de obra, que é o que está acontecendo agora nas ilhas Maurício.
Artigo Via: G1. Globo
Via: Blog da Fefe
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carolinagoma · 4 years
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Vazamento de petróleo: por que os habitantes das Ilhas Maurício estão recolhendo cabelo
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Técnica descoberta por um cabelereiro ajuda a conter derramamentos de petróleo como o que está acontecendo agora nas paradisíacas ilhas do Oceano Índico. Voluntários trabalham para conter vazamento em Maurício Reuters/Dev Ramkhelawon/L'Express Maurice O governo e os moradores de Maurício, país no Oceano Índico, estão em uma corrida contra o tempo para salvar a ilha de um desastre ecológico que pode ser causado por um navio-petroleiro encalhado desde julho no seu litoral. O navio MV Wakashio, de bandeira japonesa, encalhou em Pointe D'Esny, que é um conhecido refúgio de vida silvestre e zonas úmidas de importância internacional, não muito distante de uma ilha famosa por seus recifes de corais. O turismo é parte crucial da economia. Se estima que o barco contenha 4 mil toneladas de petróleo bruto, sendo que mil deles já foram derramados nas cristalinas águas do Oceano Índico. O premiê de Maurício, Pravind Jugnauth, declarou estado de emergência e solicitou ajuda da França, antiga metrópole que colonizou a ilha, para auxiliar na limpeza. A população local está engajada em conter os danos de qualquer maneira. Sua principal estratégia é armar barreiras absorventes com sacos entrelaçados cheios de palha, cana e... cabelo humano. O MV Wakashio já derramou cerca de mil toneladas de petróleo no mar Getty Images/BBC Campanha O cabelo humano não absorve a água, mas apenas óleos. Por isso os mauricianos começaram a colher grandes quantidades para lutar contra o derramamento. Romina Tello, fundadora da agência ecoturística Mauritius Conscious, confirmou à agência de notícias Reuters que "existe uma grande campanha em toda a ilha para se juntar cabelo". Por toda a ilha, os salões de beleza estão oferecendo descontos ou até cortes gratuitos para os moradores que doarem seus cabelos. Os estrangeiros também estão se mobilizando para ajudar. Um grupo de voluntários se dedica a colocar o cabelo, junto com a palha e a cana, nos sacos, que são cilindros flutuantes usados para conter o petróleo na superfície da água. Centros de mergulho, pescadores e outros moradores participam das operações de limpeza e fornecem comida ou estadia para os voluntários. Voluntários armam cilindros flutuantes para conter o derramamento Getty Images/BBC Lontras O cabelo humano é muito eficiente e ideal para a limpeza do petróleo. É um produto natural, barato e renovável. Além disso, há outra vantagem sobre os materiais sintéticos e dispersantes químicos usados pela indústria petroleira para limpar desastres: ele é biodegradável. A pessoa que percebeu esse fenômeno foi Phil McCrory, um cabeleireiro do Estado americano do Alabama que observou pela televisão como o cabelo de uma lontra marinha estava saturado com óleo derramado no famoso acidente do Exxon Valdez de 1989 que atingiu a costa do Alasca. Ele pensou: se o petróleo gruda no cabelo de uma lontra, por que não faria o mesmo no cabelo humano? O cabelo humano repele a água ao mesmo tempo em que absorve agentes de contaminação Getty Images/BBC Ele fez um experimento em casa, enchendo uma meia de sua esposa com o cabelo que juntou de seus clientes no seu salão de beleza. Ele botou a meia em uma banheira cheia de água e óleo e viu como ela fez uma limpeza eficiente da água. Várias instituições, como a Nasa e a Universidade de Tecnologia de Sydney (Austrália), colocaram à prova a técnica de McCrory. A Nasa comprovou que, depois de utilizar o filtro de cabelo humano em uma mistura de água e petróleo, uma única filtragem deixou "17 partes por milhão de petróleo bruto na água". Já um estudo da Universidade de Sydney concluiu que o alto teor de cutícula do cabelo humano o torna um "biossorvente altamente hidrofóbico", com um córtex muito poroso que captura vários tipos de agentes contaminadores. Esferas e cilindros Phil McCrory se associou à ambientalista Lisa Craig Gautier para criar o programa Clean Wave, que coleta cabelos, penas, peles e outras fibras para fazer esteiras e barreiras cilíndricas flutuantes recicláveis. Os cilindros com cabelo humano são muito eficientes para separar óleos da água Getty Images/BBC Muito do que eles coletam é aplicado pelos departamentos de obras públicas para filtrar ralos e esgotos. Eles também coordenam operações de emergência na limpeza de praias com cilindros flutuantes. A técnica foi utilizada em diversos derramamentos em partes do mundo. Em especial no desastre da ilha de Guimaras, nas Filipinas, quando a população local fez a limpeza de um derramamento de 130 mil galões de óleo combustível em 2006. No entanto, os cilindros com cabelo humano, penas e pele têm um defeito. Eles não flutuam bem. A Guarda Costeira dos Estados Unidos testou o seu uso para a limpeza do Golfo do México após o desastre da Deepwater Horizon em 2010, quando um vazamento na plataforma da BP derramou milhões de barris de petróleo bruto nas águas do golfo, mas os cilindros afundaram nas águas agitadas do mar. Essa técnica é mais eficiente em praias, mas isso exige muita mão de obra, que é o que está acontecendo agora nas ilhas Maurício. Artigo originalmente publicado primeiro no G1.Globo
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estherdel-blog · 6 years
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Yes! - Daniel Bryan & Craig Tello | Sports & Outdoors |957426444
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itunesbooks · 5 years
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Yes - Daniel Bryan & Craig Tello
Yes My Improbable Journey to the Main Event of WrestleMania Daniel Bryan & Craig Tello Genre: Sports & Outdoors Price: $9.99 Publish Date: July 21, 2015 Publisher: St. Martin's Press Seller: Macmillan YES! YES! YES! Daniel Bryan is the real deal. Everyone's favorite underdog, he's proven to the world and to all of WWE that looks can be deceiving. Just ask everyone who's ever underestimated him…right before he went out and whipped the WWE Universe into a frenzy. This is Bryan's behind-the-scenes story told for the first time ever — from his beginnings as a child wanting to wrestle to his ten years on the circuit before finally making it in WWE. When his "YES!" chant becomes a full-fledged movement, his career skyrockets. This book chronicles all the hard work, values, influences, unique life choices and more leading to his watershed week at WrestleMania 30. You won't want to miss it. Yes! We're sure about this. http://dlvr.it/R1jHpj
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tombancroft1 · 7 years
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Original pencils by Mike, of course. Inks by the lovely and talented Rob Stull. Amazing color by Paul Mounts. Thanks to my pal, Craig Rousseau, for the design, the cool font and the saint-like patience— Thank you all so much! todd Inline image 1 Im proud to have contributed (penciled and inked) two pages to this great 2 part story that brings the TELLOS characters back!Order yours today! Limited time offer! All proceeds go to the ASPCA! Go to www.mikewieringotellostribute.com for more details
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milliondollarbaby87 · 4 years
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Ghosts of Mississippi (1996) Review
Ghosts of Mississippi (1996) Review
Medgar Evers was murdered in 1963 by a white racist named Byron De La Beckwith, Mississippi district attorney Bobby DeLaughter is determined to eventually bring him to justice 30 years after the event and let his widow Myrlie Evers find peace.
⭐️⭐️⭐️
*New title – Ghosts from the Past*
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readtilyoudie · 1 year
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“I am comfortable wrestling. I have fun wrestling. You put me in some spandex in front of a group of people, I’m a hundred percent fine. You put me in a suit in a room of fifty press people and I get really nervous.”
-  Yes!: My Improbable Journey to the Main Event of WrestleMania by Daniel Bryan, Craig Tello
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notihatillo · 4 years
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El Hatillo 9 de Marzo del 2020
Buenos días, este resumen informativo llega a ustedes gracias a @NotiHatillo /La Ceiba de Ramón Muchacho /Alcaldía de @ElHatillo
Titulares
@eliasayegh: Continuaremos informando, explicando y consultando a nuestros vecinos de nuestras distintas comunidades sobre el tema del aseo. Mañana estaremos en Res Rubí, El Cigarral a las 6pm. En los próximos días anunciaremos nuevos encuentros. ¡La desinformación no es buena consejera!
@javiergorrino: Nueva directiva de la Policia Municipal de El Hatillo impulsa procedimientos de saturación de áreas, lo que significó un buen número de capturados solicitados.
@PoliciaHatillo: El Hatillo es un municipio con un alto potencial turístico, y parte de su atractivo es la seguridad.
Trabajamos día y noche porque hacer de El Hatillo el espejo de la Venezuela posible.
#ElHatilloSeguro
Usuarios suscritos al proveedor de servicios de Internet "INTER" denuncian cobros sin recibir la prestación de dicho servicio, aseguran que no reciben respuesta de la empresa y son informados que de no pagar les será cortado el servicio. En algunos casos según denuncias hay suscriptores que tienen hasta tres meses sin servicio pero pagando religiosamente el mismo, similar situación se presenta con los servicios de telefonía e Internet ABA que también son pagados por los suscriptores y no lo recibe. Las autoridades de CONATEL tienen la última palabra.
Prosigue el suministro de agua en varios sectores del municipio.
Alcalde @Eliasayegh se reunirá con vecinos para tratar el tema de la tarifa de recolección de desechos propuesta por FOSPUCA y aprobada por el Concejo Municipal, igual situación indican usuarios se presenta en Baruta y Chacao donde los vecinos aseguran que las tarifas aprobadas por los ediles son simplemente impagables por la gran mayoria.
El Coronavirus preocupa a Venezolanos, no es una simple gripe que pasa. Es una virosis que mata, hay que estar prevenidos.
VPItv. Trump: Marzo es el mes de la máxima campaña contra el régimen de Maduro.
VPItv: Donald Trump aseguró que marzo es el mes de la máxima campaña contra el régimen de Nicolás Maduro y comentó sobre un posible bloqueo naval contra Venezuela “si la situación lo ameritaba”, así lo informó la periodista Gabriela Perozo este domingo.
EFE: Bolsonaro fortalece alianza la militar con EE.UU. con la firma de un acuerdo de defensa que, según el jefe del Comando Sur, Craig Faller, va a ayudar a enfrentar regionalmente amenazas como la que supone la crisis de Venezuela.
Trump y Bolsonaro reiteran su apoyo a Juan Guaidó.
“No se da por casualidad estos eventos”, alertó Vecchio sobre la reunión de Trump y Bolsonaro.
El Nacional. Jorge Rodríguez: Guaidó solo existe en Estados Unidos y Colombia.
El Nacional: Tibisay Lucena calificó de sabotaje al sistema electoral el incendio en Mariche.
Efecto Cocuyo: Lucena dice que en incendio de Filas de Mariche se destruyeron 40.408 máquinas de votación. Un total de 49.323 captahuellas se perdieron. Están afectados procesos de inventario y producción de máquinas.
AP. Venezuela: Incendio en sede electoral deja grandes daños.
Reuters: Pocos equipos se salvan de incendio en principal almacén electoral de Venezuela.
Delcy Rodríguez: Incendiaron y atacaron el sistema electoral porque tienen miedo.
Vecchio a Lucena: El sabotaje es del régimen que acabó con la democracia en Venezuela.
TalCual: Frente Patriota Venezolano se atribuye incendio en galpones del CNE en Mariche.
Juan Pablo Guanipa: “Tenemos que ganarnos la democracia y la libertad en las calles”.
Diosdado Cabello anuncia contramarcha del oficialismo el 10 de marzo.
TalCual: Estudian a paciente sospechoso de contagio con coronavirus en hospital de Maracaibo. El Hospital Universitario de Maracaibo (HUM) admitió la noche de este sábado 7 de marzo que sí mantiene aislado a un hombre sospechoso de ser portador del coronavirus, desechando así la versión de la Gobernación del estado que dijo que se «trataba de un simulacro».
El Pitazo: Periodista Milagros Socorro denuncia amenazas de chavistas por escribir sobre coronavirus.
El Pitazo: Trabajadores petroleros detenidos por tráfico de combustible irán al Ministerio Público el 9 de marzo.
Guaidó reconoció el valor de todas las venezolanas al enfrentar al régimen de Maduro.
Reportaron un intenso bajón del sistema eléctrico en varios estados este 8 de marzo.
Al menos 13 estados del país con fallas de Internet, reporta Netblocks este domingo.
Efecto Cocuyo: El 70% de las unidades hidroeléctricas paralizadas en 2019 no han sido reactivadas.
Caraota Digital. «Son obligados a desnudarse»: En Ramo Verde no tienen piedad ni con los niños, dicen familiares de militares presos.
Juan Requesens «sigue fuerte y convencido»: Rafaela visitó a su hermano tras 21 días de aislamiento.
Lapatilla: Policía colombiana halló ocho cadáveres tiroteados que trasladaron a Cúcuta desde Venezuela.
VPItv: Citgo designó a Mariela Poleo como presidenta de la Fundación Simón Bolívar.
La Iglesia Católica celebra una misa multitudinaria en Argentina contra la ley del aborto.
Mujeres se manifiestan en todo el mundo en defensa de sus derechos.
El número de países afectados por el coronavirus supera ya el centenar.
AP: Pronto podrían probar vacunas contra el coronavirus.
AP: California cierra escuelas y espacios públicos por el virus. Estados Unidos supera los 400 casos de coronavirus.
AP: California recibirá crucero con 21 casos del coronavirus.
Infobae: Las residencias de ancianos, muy vulnerables al coronavirus. En EEUU ya se plantean la posibilidad de restringir las visitas. La mayoría de los muertes en el mundo se registraron entre adultos mayores.
Trump: Tenemos un plan perfectamente coordinado y ajustado para nuestra lucha contra el coronavirus.
Italia anuncia la compra de 22 millones de mascarillas contra el coronavirus. Positivo por coronavirus el jefe del Estado Mayor del Ejército italiano.
El Papa reza el Ángelus en "streaming" en una plaza con baja afluencia.
Presidente de Portugal aislado en su residencia por posible contagio de coronavirus.
Francia prohíbe las reuniones de más de 1.000 personas, para evitar la propagación del nuevo coronavirus.
Alemania insta a la cancelación de eventos con más de 1.000 participantes.
Peregrinos terminan en cuarentena al visitar Tierra Santa.
Moscú dice que quienes se salten cuarentena pueden ir a la cárcel.
Hombre con coronavirus ignoró la cuarentena para trabajar en un hotel y visitar locales nocturnos en Australia.
México reporta séptimo caso de coronavirus en hombre que convivió con contagiado de EEUU.
Costa Rica eleva a cinco casos confirmados de coronavirus, hay un paciente grave. Aumentan a 10 los casos de coronavirus en Chile y a 12 en Argentina.
Órgano comercial de la ONU prevé un fuerte impacto del coronavirus en inversión extranjera directa.
Reuters. Coronavirus afectará crecimiento en muchos países hasta bien entrado 2do trimestre: Moody’s.
Reuters: El Banco Central Europeo ha pedido a la mayoría de sus más de 3.500 empleados que trabajen desde sus casas el lunes para probar su capacidad de reacción ante un cierre por el temor al coronavirus.
EFE: El exvicepresidente Joe Biden recibió el respaldo formal de la senadora Kamala Harris, exaspirante a la candidatura demócrata.
Turquía y la UE se reunirán para tratar acerca de la migración el lunes.
Corea del Norte lanzó tres proyectiles no identificados, asegura Corea del Sur.
El País: El petróleo se desploma tras la ruptura entre la OPEP y Rusia, y aviva las dudas en los mercados. La volatilidad extrema se apodera del crudo entre el temor al avance del coronavirus y la posibilidad de una guerra de precios entre Riad y Moscú.
El petróleo cae 31% en su peor pérdida desde la Guerra del Golfo. Goldman Sachs advierte que los precios pueden caer hasta cerca de $20.
El Brent colapsó, cayendo tanto como 31% en la noche del domingo, en lo que es su mayor caída diaria desde que EEUU invadió a Irak en 1991.
CNN: Los mercados globales están colapsando este lunes mientras el coronavirus y el quiebre del petróleo sacuden a los inversionistas.
CNN: Los contratos a futuro del S&P 500 cayeron hasta 5% el domingo en la noche, disparando limitaciones que impiden que los futuros caigan por debajo de ese nivel. Los futuros del Dow cayeron más del 4,2%. Los del Nasdaq estaban 4,5% abajo.
Enrique y Meghan tendrán su último compromiso monárquico este lunes.
Dudamel y Residente se funden en Los Ángeles en una noche para el recuerdo.
Gran Premio de Bahréin de la F1 se correrá sin público por temores sobre coronavirus.
La ATP y la WTA se ponen de acuerdo para luchar contra el coronavirus.
EFE: Suspenden el Indian Wells. El torneo de tenis BNP Paribas Open (Indian Wells), primer Masters 1.000 de la temporada, fue suspendido tras confirmarse un caso de coronavirus en el Valle de Coachella (California).
Comienza en Suiza juicio por el proceso de atribución del Mundial Alemania 2006.
Yulimar Rojas está entre las deportistas que dejarán huella en Tokio 2020.
Ministro de deportes de Italia pide suspender la Serie A por el coronavirus.
Jugadores del Pescara italiano saltaron al campo con mascarillas.
El Betis castiga a un Madrid terrible. Un gol de Tello deja a los de Zidane sin liderato.
La Vinotinto femenina Sub-20 remonta y sigue imparable.
EFE: Los centrocampistas Darwin Machís, Tomás Rincón y Yeferson Soteldo y el atacante Salomón Rondón encabezan el listado preliminar de 39 jugadores con los que Venezuela afrontará los partidos contra Colombia y Paraguay en las dos primeras jornadas de las eliminatorias sudamericanas al Mundial de Catar 2022.
Efemérides de hoy.
590 - Bahram Chobin es coronado como rey Barham VI de Persia.
1230 - Batalla de Klokotnitsa, el zar búlgaro Iván Asen II derrota a Teodoro del Despotado de Epiro.
1276 - Augsburgo se convierte en una ciudad libre del Sacro Imperio.
1500 - zarpa de Lisboa rumbo a Calcuta la flota mandada por el portugués Pedro Álvarez Cabral, quien al final llega a las costas de Brasil.
1565 - en Quito (Ecuador) se funda Hospital Real de Misericordia y Caridad, actual Hospital de San Juan de Dios.
1595 - en la provincia de Chiquimula (Guatemala) llega la imagen del Cristo Negro Crucificado a la ciudad de Esquipulas.
1781 - en Florida, Bernardo de Gálvez sitia el fuerte George.
1796 - se casan en Francia Napoleón Bonaparte y Josefina de Beauharnais.
1809 - Juan Clarós está a punto de liberar Barcelona de las tropas napoleónicas, pero un temporal lo impide.
1811 - el general paraguayo Manuel Cabañas, de las fuerzas realistas, derrota al ejército de Manuel Belgrano en la Batalla de Tacuarí.
1831 - en Francia se crea la Legión Extranjera.
1839 - se firma en Veracruz el tratado de paz entre México y Francia, que da fin a la Guerra de los pasteles.
1842 - se estrena la ópera de Giuseppe Verdi Nabucco, en La Scala de Milán.
1862 - batalla naval de los ironclads, navíos blindados de la Guerra de Secesión estadounidense. Tras el ataque sureño con el USS Merrimack en Hampton Roads, Virginia, los norteños envían al acrazado USS Monitor. El resultado fue indeciso pero los norteños se quedaron con la bahía.
1868 - en París se estrena la ópera Hamlet.
1873 - en Canadá se funda la Real Policía Montada.
1902 - en Madrid, el club de fútbol Real Madrid celebra su primer partido en una explanada que había en la avenida de la plaza de toros.
1908 - en Milán (Italia) se funda el Football Club Internazionale Milano.
1916 - Pancho Villa realiza una incursión militar contra la ciudad de Columbus, en Nuevo México.
1916 - Alemania le declara la guerra a Portugal.
1917 - manifestación obrera en San Petersburgo, contra la que los cosacos se resisten a cargar, en un preludio de la revolución rusa.
1921 - se funda el club Central Norte, de Salta, Argentina.
1923 - en la Unión Soviética, la enfermedad obliga al comunista Lenin a abandonar definitivamente el poder.
1924 - Italia anexa a Fiume a su territorio.
1932 - se constituye el Gobierno del Estado libre de Irlanda, presidido por Éamon de Valera.
1936 - la República Dominicana y Haití firman un tratado de fronteras
1937 - se casa el poeta Miguel Hernández.
1938 - promulgación del Fuero del Trabajo por el gobierno del General Franco.
1944 - el general Pedro Pablo Ramírez dimite como presidente de la República Argentina.
1945 - los japoneses ocupan militarmente la Indochina francesa. Aviones B-29 estadounidenses atacan Tokio con bombas incendiarias matando a unas 100 000 personas.
1954 - El periodista Edward R. Murrow, en su programa See it now, presenta un completo reportaje acerca de los excesos cometidos por el senador Joseph McCarthy durante los interrogatorios llevados acabo cuando era presidente del Comité de Actividades Antiamericanas.
1955 - Nikita Jrushchov es nombrado secretario general del Partido Comunista de la Unión Soviética.
1959 - se pone en venta Barbie, la muñeca más famosa del mundo.
1961 - el Sputnik 9 lleva a la perra Chernushka al espacio.
1973 - España y China restablecen relaciones diplomáticas.
1979 - en Copiapó (Chile) se funda el Club Regional Atacama.
1990 - en Estados Unidos, toma juramento como General Surgeon (ministra de Salud) la Dra. Antonia Novello, siendo la primera mujer e hispana que ocupa este cargo.
1999 - en Chile se funda el club de fútbol Deportes Copiapó.
2002 - en Jerusalén, un terrorista palestino hace estallar una bomba que llevaba adosada a su cuerpo; mata a 11 personas y hiere a 54 en un café.
2008 - en las elecciones generales celebradas en España gana el PSOE por lo que es reelegido Presidente de Gobierno, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero. Resultado final de las elecciones en escaños: PSOE 169 - PP 154 - Otros 27.
La cita de hoy.
Hay que dejar la vanidad a los que no tienen otra cosa que exhibir.
Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) Escritor francés.
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goalhofer · 6 years
Conversation
1st 10 Results Of Player Jersey #s By Sport On Google: #43
Hockey: Matt Bartkowski (Boston Bruins), Conor Sheary (Pittsburgh Penguins), Nazem Kadri (Toronto Maple Leafs), Garrett Richards (Anaheim Ducks), Tom Wilson (Washington Capitals), Darren Helm (Detroit Red Wings), Danton Heinen (Boston Bruins), Valeri Nichuskin (Dallas Stars), Scott Hartnell (Columbus Blue Jackets) & Jordan Schmaltz (St. Louis Blues).
Baseball: Adam Warren (New York Yankees), Garrett Richards (Anaheim Angels), Lance McCullers; Jr. (2017 MLB All-Stars), Dennis Eckersley (Oakland Athletics), Addison Reed (Minnesota Twins), Luis Avilan (Los Angeles Dodgers), Lance McCullers; Jr. (Houston Astros), R.A. Dickey (Toronto Blue Jays), Dave Dravecky (San Francisco Giants) & Seth Maness (St. Louis Cardinals).
Basketball: Brad Daugherty (Cleveland Cavaliers), Grant Long (Detroit Pistons), Pascal Siakam (Toronto Raptors), Drew Barham (Gonzaga University Bulldogs), Anthony Tolliver (Sacramento Kings), Terry Davis (Miami Heat), Anthony Tolliver (Detroit Pistons), Thanasis Antetokounmpo (New York Knicks), Spenser Dalton (University Of North Carolina Tar Heels) & Mike Gminski (Duke University Blue Devils).
Football: Troy Polamalu (Pittsburgh Steelers), Marcus Williams (New Orleans Saints), Josey Jewell (University Of Iowa Hawkeyes), T.J. Ward (Denver Broncos), Craig Dahl (San Francisco 49ers), Darren Sproles (Philadelphia Eagles), T.J. Ward (Tampa Bay Buccaneers), Julian Howsare (New York Jets), Marcus Cromartie (Seattle Seahawks) & Joseph Jones (Dallas Cowboys).
Soccer: Lukas Nmecha (Manchester City F.C.), Conor McAleny (Everton F.C.), Cameron Borthwick-Jackson (Manchester United F.C.), Ryan McLaughlin (Liverpool F.C.), Andres Tello (Juventus F.C.), Fikayo Tomori (Chelsea F.C.), Alessandro Semprini (Juventus F.C.) & Elliot Parish (Aston Villa F.C.).
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dawnlindse-blog · 6 years
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Yes! - Daniel Bryan & Craig Tello | Sports & Outdoors |957426444
Yes! Daniel Bryan & Craig Tello Genre: Sports & Outdoors Price: $12.99 Publish Date: July 21, 2015 YES! YES! YES! Daniel Bryan is the real deal. Everyone's favorite underdog, he's proven to the world and to all of WWE that looks can be deceiving. Just ask everyone who's ever underestimated him…right before he went out and whipped the WWE Universe into a frenzy. This is Bryan's behind-the-scenes story told for the first time ever -- from his beginnings as a child wanting to wrestle to his ten years on the circuit before finally making it in WWE. When his "YES!" chant becomes a full-fledged movement, his career skyrockets. This book chronicles all the hard work, values, influences, unique life choices and more leading to his watershed week at WrestleMania 30. You won't want to miss it. Yes! We're sure about this.
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meredithandre-blog · 6 years
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Yes! - Daniel Bryan & Craig Tello | Sports & Outdoors |957426444
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annerodr-blog · 6 years
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Yes! - Daniel Bryan & Craig Tello | Sports & Outdoors |957426444
Yes! Daniel Bryan & Craig Tello Genre: Sports & Outdoors Price: $12.99 Publish Date: July 21, 2015 YES! YES! YES! Daniel Bryan is the real deal. Everyone's favorite underdog, he's proven to the world and to all of WWE that looks can be deceiving. Just ask everyone who's ever underestimated him…right before he went out and whipped the WWE Universe into a frenzy. This is Bryan's behind-the-scenes story told for the first time ever -- from his beginnings as a child wanting to wrestle to his ten years on the circuit before finally making it in WWE. When his "YES!" chant becomes a full-fledged movement, his career skyrockets. This book chronicles all the hard work, values, influences, unique life choices and more leading to his watershed week at WrestleMania 30. You won't want to miss it. Yes! We're sure about this.
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estherdel-blog · 6 years
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Yes! - Daniel Bryan & Craig Tello | Sports & Outdoors |957426444
Yes! Daniel Bryan & Craig Tello Genre: Sports & Outdoors Price: $12.99 Publish Date: July 21, 2015 YES! YES! YES! Daniel Bryan is the real deal. Everyone's favorite underdog, he's proven to the world and to all of WWE that looks can be deceiving. Just ask everyone who's ever underestimated him…right before he went out and whipped the WWE Universe into a frenzy. This is Bryan's behind-the-scenes story told for the first time ever -- from his beginnings as a child wanting to wrestle to his ten years on the circuit before finally making it in WWE. When his "YES!" chant becomes a full-fledged movement, his career skyrockets. This book chronicles all the hard work, values, influences, unique life choices and more leading to his watershed week at WrestleMania 30. You won't want to miss it. Yes! We're sure about this.
0 notes