Hearted Youtube comments on Vox (@Vox) channel.
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I've lived in Phoenix nearly my whole life. When I finally bought my own house a few years ago, I decided to plant several trees in what little yard I have in order to lower temperatures. The result is, my yard is literally several degrees cooler, plus since you can grow tropical AND temperate plants in Phoenix, I grow my own peaches, mangoes, guavas, Barbados cherry, pomegranates, almonds, grapes, and bananas, among other annual plants like squash.
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The weirdest thing my Netflix has ever done is what it did to the Shrek thumbnails. I was just searching for Shrek two, like you do, and I realized that all of my Shrek thumbnails were weirdly.... sexual......? The thumbnail for Shrek was from the scene when Farquaad is in bed looking at the princesses on the magic mirror. The specific frame is him, holding up his drink, his shirt off with the covers over him which makes him look naked, with his eyes half closed and smirking, which is a seduction face if I ever saw one. The thumbnail for Shrek Two was from the beginning of the movie when Shrek and Fiona are on their honeymoon and they’re on the beach. The frame is them in their swimsuits, staring lovingly into each other’s eyes. This one was the most romantic of the weirdly sexual Shrek covers. Finally, Shrek the Third was of a scene where Donkey wakes Shrek up at night. The frame shows Donkey at Shrek’s bedside, smiling at Shrek who is shirtless, again with the covers on him which makes him look naked.
I don’t know what this says about me but it gave me a good laugh
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I am one of the nurses in this video and I had no idea until a high school friend sent me the link. After reading many of the comments I just want to share a small part of my story. I moved to the USA from Honduras when i was a child. My mom was a single mom who started working in a nursing home as a laundry lady and stayed in that same nursing home until I was a sophomore in high school. I was in that nursing home ALL the time. It was my daycare, I grew to love the elderly patients... and I saw the nurses. I thought they were so cool. They had nice cars (much nicer than ours), they seemed so happy and they gave me candy. lol There was a variety of male and female and I just grew to think of them as heroes. I decided I wanted to be one of them when I was five years old. Twenty years later and my dreams came true, I work in a large intensive care unit and I’ve been accepted into an Ivy League University to get my doctorate in nurse anesthesia practice. I owe everything in my life to nursing. A four year academic research scholarship gave me the chance to earn a degree that would allow me to work and save for the next phase of my life which is obtaining my DNAP. Having that opportunity was an absolute blessing considering my mom simply couldn’t afford to put money toward my tuition. She’s an amazing mom, and I’m glad I’ve chosen a career that will allow me to give back to her in a major way. In no way have I ever felt less masculine for being a nurse, but I’ve been blessed by working in a unit FILLED with men. However it’s more than that, nursing is a family. It’s the dream I had since childhood and I think if anyone, man, woman, whoever. Wants to become ANYTHING they shouldn’t be afraid to chase their dream. I think this was a great video (except for maybe the disapproval of ads showing male nurses doing stereotypical manly things). Overall it was exceptional. Chase your dreams kids. Whatever they may be, chase your dreams.
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As a London resident, it's fascinating to see this perspective on the divide between the elites. You go past these areas quite often in Mayfair, Soho, Marylebone, etc and they all seem like lovely houses, but you do wonder how they get such astronomical values (other than money-laundering, which London is the capital of in the world). I guess this is partly how; massive basement conversions underground adding more and more layers. It's surprising how many of them can go that far underground at all, considering the complex layers underneath such as the Tube, water and gas pipes, sewage system, etc. which are essentially impossible to move entirely. I guess it's an issue that arises when you want to love in the centre of an historic city and basements just aren't a thing for Brits usually, so we never think about them and the transformation occurring underground. Great video
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Another excellent video from Vox, but 5 minutes can't cover everything. Here's some other stuff that happened:
- California mudslides 🇺🇸
- North Korean missile false alarm in Hawaii 🇺🇸🇰🇵
- Terrorists attacks in Kabul killed hundreds 🇦🇫
- Super Blue Blood Moon 🌑
- Roller-coaster stock market 📉
- Skripal poisoning 🇬🇧🇷🇺
- Climate change, gun control marches worldwide 🌏
- Xi Jinping named "President for Life" 🇨🇳
- Putin reelected as Russian president 🇷🇺
- Chemical attacks on Syrian civilians 🇸🇾
- US-China tarrif war 🇺🇸🇨🇳
- Nicaragua anti-government protests 🇳🇮
- Armenian revolution 🇦🇲
- Swaziland changed its name to Eswatini 🇸🇿
- Hawaii's Kilauea eruption 🇺🇸
- Trump - Kim Jong-Un meeting 🇺🇸🇰🇵
- Israeli Netta Barzilai won Eurovision 2018 in Lisbon 🇮🇱🇵🇹
- First new ruling party in Malaysia since 1957 🇲🇾
- Cuban plane crash killed 112 🇨🇺
- First non-"Castro" Cuban president since 1976 🇨🇺
- Guatemala volcano eruption killed 190 people 🇬🇹
- EU GDPR rules came into effect 🇪🇺
- Canada legalized marijuana 🇨🇦
- FIFA awarded the 2026 World Cup to the US/Canada/Mexico 🇺🇸🇨🇦🇲🇽
- US pulled out of the Iran Deal, the UNHRC, and the INF treaty 🇺🇸🇷🇺🇮🇷
- first body of water on Mars discovered
- Wildfires in Greece killed 100 people 🇬🇷
- DRC Ebola outbreak killed 359 people 🇨🇩
- Genoa bridge collapse killed 43 🇮🇹
- India decriminalized homosexuality 🇮🇳
- Fire destroyed Brazil's National Museum 🇧🇷
- A ferry capsize killed 228 in Lake Victoria 🇹🇿
- Longest bridge in the world opened linking China and Hong Kong 🇨🇳🇭🇰
- New Caledonia voted against independence 🇳🇨🇲🇫
- Indonesian tsunami killed 430 🇮🇩
- Huawei conflict between China, Canada, and the US 🇨🇳🇨🇦🇺🇸
- Indonesia plane crash killed 189 🇮🇩
- Russia-Ukraine maritime crisis 🇷🇺🇺🇦
- US withdraws from Syria 🇺🇸🇸🇾
- Angela Merkel announced she will not seek reelection as Chancellor in 2021 🇩🇪
- Up to 1,000,000 ethnic Uighurs have been detained and held in Chinese "reeducation" camps 🇨🇳
- Romanian anti-government protests 🇷🇴
- Andres Manuel López Obrador became the first leftist president of Mexico in seven decades 🇲🇽
- 100th anniversary of the end of World War I 🗺️
- Student road safety protests in Bangladesh 🇧🇩
- Stephen Hillenburg, creator of SpongeBob, died 🇺🇸
- Plane crash near Algiers killed 257 🇩🇿
- In Saudi Arabia, women are allowed to drive and the first cinemas since 1983 opened 🇸🇦
- New trade deal (USMCA) is signed to replace NAFTA 🇺🇸🇨🇦🇲🇽
- Greece and Macedonia ended a 27-year dispute which will rename Macedonia to the Republic of North Macedonia 🇲🇰🇬🇷
- anti-goverment protests in Sudan 🇸🇩
- Apple became the first public company to hit $1 trillion market capitalization 🇺🇸
- Russia, Kazakhstan, Iran, Turkmenistan, and Azerbaijan settled the Caspian Sea's territorial status 🇷🇺🇰🇿 🇮🇷🇹🇲🇦🇿
- Venezuela crisis continued 🇻🇪
- Yemen crisis continued 🇾🇪
Comment stuff I missed and I'll add it if it's big enough.
(A like from Vox? I'm honored. 😁)
Here's to a better 2019, everyone! 🎆🎉
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What a timing Vox. Today is a special day, and this is the story of me, my grandpa and the Game of Life.
Back when I was 10, I had saved up enough money to buy a lightsaber toy and my mum asked her father (my grandpa) to take me to the store. He didn’t know what I wanted to buy and once I showed him the lightsaber, he argued to me that such thing is useless. He then suggested me to buy something else that has an educational value. I couldn’t think of anything educational in the store except for the board games. So, I ended up buying the Game of Life because I had never heard of it. Buying the Game of Life definitely didn’t make me as happy as if I were to buy that lightsaber.
Coming from a non-English speaking country, I learned many English vocabularies while playing the game.
Fast forward to today, I am currently pursuing my studies in Canada.
7 hours ago, my mum told me that my grandpa passed away. I can’t go back home to see him for the last time as I’m half way across the world. This video feels like it’s his final message to me; he is no longer here with me to help me make the right choices, I have to make the right choices on my own from now on.
Thank you Vox team, this means a lot.
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Someone who tests slot machines here.
Just to be clear: When the video mentions that newer machines are "Algorithm driven", for the large part, this means that it's being strictly driven by a Random Number Generator. The virtual reels, the bonuses, etc, they are all derived from RNG algorithms that are designed and rigorously tested to be as truly random and unpredictable as possible. The trick is that the outcomes of all these random outcomes are meticulously engineered so that the game overall will have a roughly 85-95% probabilistic return-on-wager in the long term. Most machines are even required to advertise what their long term return percentage is (varies by jurisdiction).
Also for the most part, Most US gaming jurisdictions have regulations stipulating that top advertised awards must occur at least once out of 17 million instances, while others have regulations for 50 million or 100 million odds requirements for all awards, it varies heavily by gaming jurisdiction, but its one rule that is pretty heavily enforced throughout the nation.
Also, the "near miss" has been around since the first 3-reeled slot machines too, it is literally twice as likely to occur as a "hit" just by how the reels are designed for any natural layout of reels. I don't think it's wholly accurate to say it is a new phenomenon with newer virtual machines.
Overall, this is a decent video. Regulated gambling is a relatively new concept for humans, and it's definitely something that needs more discussion to arrive at a desired end point with minimal unintended consequences.
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Just a minor correction, in minute 1:55, the video states that Qatar went through a blockage from neighboring countries, while its mention Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, UAE, Egypt, and Kuwait. I would like to point out, Kuwait was not part of the blockade. On the contrary, trade between both countries flourished, and citizens became friendlier. Kuwait took the middle ground in its political stand, and was an integral part in ending the blockage, as the US was.
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I think about this question a lot. I love animals and being able to see them so easily at zoos/aquariums is such a privilege. For me I’d like to see just a general, higher standard for zoos/aquariums with more actual focus on conversation. Having fewer animals so there is more space for each enclosure could be one big improvement at many zoos. I’ve left a lot of zoos with my heart aching for the animals. I’ve always wonder if rules could be put in place ie aquariums with sea animals exist next to the ocean, kinda like Monterrey Bay does, or there can only only be animals in climates that mimic their own, so no polar bears in Texas, or even further the idea of local ecosystem, so maybe you can’t see a giraffe in Michigan instead seeing local animals and if you want to see the ‘big’ animals you’d have to travel to where they actually live (which I understand is the beauty of zoos bc you see exotic animals)
Lastly, in the future I’d love to see animatronic animals become a thing! In places, for example the cognitively complex animals, where keeping these animals confined shows obvious signs of boredom and unnatural behavior, we replace them with life like- I mean like swap them out in the night and tell no one- animatronics. The possibilities of there also being an animatronic zoo of extinct animals would be p cool as well.
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I appreciate this focus on policies affecting car dependency and its impact on climate, safety, and what choices we have (and don't have) in our built environments. I work as an urban planner, and it's clear that there is increasing pressure to design cities to be yet more hostile to pedestrians, cyclists, and transit users as well as city finances in order to accommodate large vehicle traffic.
That said, I think work like this has really supported a lot of policy support for de-emphasizing auto-oriented design and making our cities more human-centric. As an example, Oregon recently sharply reduced the amount of off-street parking (some) cities can mandate, and the largest cities (e.g. Portland, Bend, and Salem) simply opted to remove mandates altogether. I don't think that would have been possible without policy communicators like Vox.
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The one I really like is in Dexter in S1, where the police have caught the self-confessed villain of the season, one who should know the main protagonist Dexter, a serial killer working in the police, very well. When Dexter enters the guy's room, we are greeted with a Dutch Angle to show Dex's anxiety, however, the "killer" doesn't recognize him at all, letting us and Dex know that this guy is lying, and as a grin pulls up on Dexter's face, the camera returns to a normal angle.
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Dear Vox, I would really like more Climate Lab videos. They were interesting, fun, important, intriguing, and intelligently made. I really love, live, and dream of Vox and hope this commented video suggestion makes it into your top votes. I want to become a climatologist or an environmental activist or something, and your climate change videos helped me learn a lot. I think it’s great that you have 3 million subscribers already, I subscribed when there was only about 1 million! Your videos give me the answers to some questions I never even thought of! Thank you for changing my life, but more generally, millions of others’. 😆
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I am currently a senior Nursing student, out of 75 people in my class I am one out of five men. Before I got into nursing school I worked as a nursing tech (glorified cna) and let me tell you, Nursing school is a different beast, they will weed out the week sophomore year we went from 160 down to 80 students, that was only the beginning right around junior year when you get into Medical-Surgical Nursing that is when it gets real, every answer on a test may be right, but what is the most right? At times cramming 10 or more chapters onto an exam, we have to know everything, the pathophysiology, etiology of a disease, what diagnostic tests do they run, collaborative care, what medications what are the major adverse effects, anything under a 77 is failing there is no rounding, it goes on and on. On top of all that we have to go to a clinical (at the area hospital) mine is a level 1 trauma center, there we pretty much work as "nurses" give medications, assessments etc, along with this clinical comes pages and pages of paperwork, none of the clinical stuff is graded it is either pass or fail. However The bond I have with my fellow students and nurses is like no other, I wouldn't change it for anything thank you nurses, and good luck to future nurses
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Being part of the "Video Lab", I have to say that Vox has not hidden any of their actual content behind a paywall. Sure, there is Explained which you can only get through Netflix, but on this channel, the members really only get actual, real bonus material. As in things that were cut out from Vox videos, behind the scenes looks, interviews, and some live questioning. What you would call "content" is always there for everybody to see, as would the members probably also want it to. I support the channel because they put out great content to the world, not to get said content just for myself. ;-)
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Hi Jayne!
I've been contributing to Vox for a couple of years now. I love the YouTube channel, I subscribe to Vox Sentences, and I regularly listen to Unexplainable and Today, Explained. In recent months, I've been subscribed to The Free Press, because, on paper, it seemed like a good addition to my media diet. But, ultimately, I found that TFP would rather clumsily provoke you than adequately inform you. I've come to realize that Vox simply does a much better job at providing valuable information than Bari Weiss could ever dream. So, I'm dumping TFP, and I'm doubling my monthly contribution to Vox.
May you all continue to blow every other news outlet out of the water!
Thanks!
--Warren
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