Witchy Feelin'

5:41 AM Add Comment

pretty woman walking down the street pretty woman the kind i'd like to meet i don't believe you, you're not the truth no one could look as good as you mercy pretty woman won't you pardon me pretty woman i couldn't help but see


pretty woman that you look lovely as can be are you lonely just like me pretty woman stop awhile pretty woman talk awhile pretty woman give your smile to me pretty woman yeah, yeah, yeah pretty woman look my way pretty woman say you'll stay with me 'cause i need you, i'll treat you right


come with me baby, be mine tonight pretty woman don't walk on by pretty woman don't make me cry pretty woman don't walk away, hey, ok if that's the way it must be, ok i guess i'll go on home, it's late there'll be tomorrow night, but wait what do i see?


is she walkin' back to me? yeah, she's walkin' back to me oh, oh, pretty woman.


Witchy Feelin'

Winning Hand

5:41 AM Add Comment

- okay, you guys ready? - [mark] i'm readyif you're ready. - i'm coyote peterson, and i'm about toenter the chomp zone with the common snapping turtle. one. two. three. (chomping)


ow! (dramatic music) for several years, ihave been on a mission. to find and catch a worldrecord size snapping turtle. throughout the process,i've encountered many of these elusivereptiles, and to do so, i usually have tojump from a kayak and into water over my head. this is one of the mostdangerous aspects of my job.


trust me when i say thati always try my best to avoid being bitten. but try as i might, when youwork with this many turtles, accidental bites dooccasionally happen. this turtle just bitthe top of my thumb off. and boy can they be painful. hold on, he's-- (screams) that's what you get forclimbing in the cage


with a bunch of turtles. then there are theintentional bites, and i think we allremember the episode where i was chomped by thealligator snapping turtle. agh! the ultimate goal wasto show you what happens when a snapping turtle locksits jaws around a victim. oh, jeez! ah!


he's through, he's through,he's through into my arm. unfortunately forme, the giant reptile just decided to chomp on my arm until its beakpierced the brace, ultimately bringingthe scene to an end. okay, the turtlecan take a break. it was one painfulexperiment that didn't exactly go according to plan. through social media irecently asked the coyote pack,


"would you liketo see me chomped by a common snapping turtle?" oh, ooh, that hurt! but it didn't draw blood. i wonder what a largerturtle would do. you guys wanna see me chomped, by the common snapping turtle? well, a whopping 95% ofyou said "yes get chomped!" so today i'm goingto do just that,


and demonstrate what happens if you ever get your hand locked in the jaws of asnapping turtle. now i know you're watchingthis video and you're thinking, "coyote this isabsolutely crazy. "this turtle's gonnabite off your finger, "it's gonna bite off your hand. "it's going to causeso much damage, "you'll have to goto the hospital."


we have thoughtabout this in advance and we actually havesome safety precautions in place to makesure that that turtle does not take achunk out of my hand. we purchased these dowel rods. what i'm going to do iscut a section of the wood and then glue it tothe side of my hand, so that when theturtle bites down, my hand will be sideways.


it's going to strikeout, wap, and latch on. now the beak is goingto pierce the top and bottom side of my hand, but what i'm reallyworried about is the scissor power of those jaws. that's why a snappingturtle bite can be so bad. their jaws are razor sharp,lined with that beak. as they bite down, thebeak cuts through the skin. now, what the wood will do


is create a barrierbetween the turtle's beak and it's ability to scissorall the way through my hand and take out atriangle shaped chunk. i know you're probablythinking to yourselves, "well, it's stillgonna bite you, "it's still gonna hurt." yes, it absolutely isand hopefully the turtle holds on the first time so i don't have to bebitten more than once.


now, once the turtle bites me, i'll show you how to geta snapping turtle off, and there are a coupleof methods you can use. the first one is water bottles. simply dumping wateronto the turtle's face, in its mouth and on itseyes should make it feel as if its back into itsnatural environment, which would be the water, and it will let goand try to get away.


now, if the water bottlemethod doesn't work, what you can do is completelysubmerge the turtle in water. if this does not work, thelast resort is rubbing alcohol. now this is somethingthat i've seen a number of different people usewhen they've been bitten by snakes or alligators. it's not gonna hurtthe animal in any way, but it's just kind of a sharp,pungent taste in its mouth, and it should force it to,agh, let go of my hand,


and the hopefully i'llbe able to show you guys how to take care of thatbite with some first aid. - [mark] and if none of thosework, you just have to wait. - yes, that is theworst case scenario. if it doesn't let go fromone of these methods, i'll have to sit there,bite my tongue in pain, and hope that eventuallythis turtle loses interest in my hand or being angry atme for letting it bite my hand, and then lets go.


oh boy. we are seconds awayfrom me being chomped by the common snapping turtle. i am definitelynervous right now. this is gonna hurt. just imagine that beakpiercing through my skin. if it bites andit holds on, hoo, it is going to beincredibly painful. and, it's not a small turtle.


it's about ten pounds in size. it is going to crunch my hand. (hissing) okay, okay. okay. now coming across asnapping turtle of this size isn't super rare, butoften times i catch turtles that are significantlylarger than this. a turtle larger thanthis would definitely do


a massive amount ofdamage to my hand. - [mark] camera two,camera three are rolling. coyote your go pro is rolling. - all right. - [mark] this is crazy! this is crazy. oh my goodness, you'reactually doing this. - yeah, well, let's seewhat happens, right? i'm coyote peterson, and i'mabout to enter the chomp zone,


with a common snapping turtle. are you ready? - [mark] let's do this. - one. he missed the wood! he's latched on my hand! - [mark] you all right? - agh! oh, he's rippingthe side of my hand!


oh my gosh! okay, i'm not gonnatouch the turtle. he missed the wood, this is bad. he's, agh! mario, gimme a bottle of water! as you can see theturtle's beak has pierced through the top of my hand andit is latched into the skin. he's got his eyes closed,jaws locked in place. just lightly drip thatonto the top of his head.


ah, ah, ah! he's biting down harder,he's biting down harder, that's not working,that's not working. argh! to lift him up andget him into the water is going to be extremely painful i'm going to go straightto the rubbing alcohol. now you can see theway that his jaws have scissored into my hand.


the beak has piercedthrough the skin. oh my gosh that hurts so bad! - [mario] you ready? - he's got the backside of my hand. yep, go ahead, just kinda dumpsome into his mouth, there. real light, real light. okay, there he goes,he's trying to get off, he's trying to getoff, there he goes. oh, wow, he cut majorholes in my hand.


okay let me dip him in the water to get that rubbing alcohol off. there you go, little buddy. - [mark] oh my goodness. - [mark] i am really nervous. you okay? - yeah. ah, jeez. oh, man, he bit right thereand slid off to the side.


oh, that hurt. hold on a second. it's almost like hismouth wasn't big enough to reach aroundand bite onto me. okay i'm gonna just getthis piece of wood off. there's the bite rightthere, you see that? - [mark] oh my goodness! he tore into you, wow. - well, the water actuallyjust caused the turtle


to bite down harder. it wasn't until we got therubbing alcohol into is mouth that it actually would let go. now you can see where the jawsscissored through my skin. wow, and the crushingpower was insane! i honestly thought thewater was gonna work and i thought i'd beable to get it back into that container ofwater to dunk it underwater. only in an emergency situation


where you didn'thave rubbing alcohol would you wanna do that. - [mark] dowel rodwas ineffective, itdidn't help at all. - it missed the dowel rod. it bit to the side. i mean i guess that's one thing you can't anticipate exactlywhere a turtle's gonna bite. let's bring the turtle back up. make sure he's okay.


come here, buddy. oh, okay, yeah, yeah, i see you. - [mark] he's like,"let's go again!" - let me hold himup kinda like this. well, that was actually apretty quick chomp and release. i thought i was gonna beable to take that pain a little longer than that, guys, but having the turtlelocked onto my hand was... phew.


that was intense. just imagine what aturtle that weighs 40 or 50 pounds could do. definitely would break your hand if not take off your fingers. i'm coyote peterson. be brave, stay wild. we'll see you onthe next adventure. (mellow music)


i know you were all thinking, "coyote, getting bittenby a snapping turtle "was totally crazy!" i agree, and trustme, it really hurt. but hopefully me being chomped by what i considerto be a small turtle will serve as a warning toeveryone out there watching. snapping turtleshave the potential to be incredibly dangerous.


do not try to catch them. do not try to pick them up. in fact, if you comeacross one of these turtles in the wild, simply admireit from a safe distance. unless the animal is provoked there's absolutely no chanceyou will end up taking a chomp. if you thought being chompedby this turtle looked painful, make sure to go back andwatch the time i put my arm into the mouth of thealligator snapping turtle.


and don't forget, subscribe, so you can join me and the crew on this season of dragon tales. he slipped in-betweenthe bamboo, and went into my arm.


Winning Hand

Wilson Pickett's Greatest Hits

5:41 AM Add Comment

first of all, i do kind of have to apologizefor being so late with the program. i had some things going on back in march and i hadto make a trip to accommodate some things that were going on, but tony and angie werevery gracious to reschedule the program for today. so this is officially our last mid-wintertalk for 2014. the date is pretty, actually worked out pretty well, april 27th, becausethe 150th anniversary of the wilderness is going to be in ten days. so if anyone is planningat trip down to the wilderness for that, you're going to get a little preview of what's goingon. of course we're talking about longstreet to the rescue and actually the second dayof the battle of the wilderness. before we can get there though, we have to go back severalmonths to september of 1863. in september


of 1863, general longstreet, along with twodivisions of infantry and some of his artillery, are ordered west to reinforce the army oftennessee. some of his troops arrive on the battlefield of chickamauga towards the endof the first day's fighting. when longstreet arrives, he's placed in command of the leftwing of the army. and as command of that left wing, he would mount a massive attack thatbreaks through the right half of the union army of the cumberland, sending that halfof the army in retreat back to chattanooga. caught up in the retreat is the army's commander,general rosecrans, who happened to be not only longstreet's classmate, but also longstreet'sroommate at west point. during the fighting on september 20th, though, longstreet is goingto lose one of his division commanders. major


general john bell hood is hit in the leg,the leg would eventually have to be amputated, and hood is gone now from longstreet's command;he would never report back to him. longstreet, or actually on september 25th, five days afterthe battle, longstreet receives a message from general lee, and among other things,lee said, "finish the work before you, my dear general, and return to me. i want youbadly and you cannot get back too soon. your departure was known to the enemy as soon asit occurred." now longstreet tries to convince the commander of the army of tennessee generalbraxton bragg, to leave a token force around chattanooga and take the rest of the armyto reoccupy tennessee, possibly move into kentucky, and maybe even besiege the cityof cincinnati, ohio. bragg is not going to


do that. he is going to sit back and try tomount a siege of chattanooga. bragg, though, doesn't have enough men to completely encirclethe city, so it's not a true siege in that sense. also coming to the relief of chattanoogaare two army corps from the army of the potomac and william sherman's army corps from generalgrant's army of the tennessee. and ulysses s. grant himself is placed in overall commandof the troops around chattanooga. to try to keep the north from extending its supply line,bragg will have longstreet try to launch an attack near wauhatchie, tennessee on the westernside of lookout mountain, and this is one of the most botched attacked longstreet'stroops are going to carry out. longstreet, of course, will blame evander law for thedefeat at wauhatchie. law is going to blame


longstreet, and general bragg will also blamelongstreet for what happened. so things are not going well for longstreet and his menat this point. law had taken over command of hood's division after hood's wounding atchickamauga, just as law had done here after gettysburg, and law felt he deserved to bepromoted to take command of the division. longstreet wants micah jenkins to take commandof the division. at this point, he can't really do that, but that's what longstreet is anglingfor, so there's a conflict now between law and jenkins. longstreet will also get intoarguments with general braxton bragg, along with just about everybody else, and the upshotis on november 3rd, 1863, bragg ordered longstreet to knoxville to try to lay siege and capturethat city. knoxville is a well-fortified town,


the defenses were started by the confederates,and when they left, they were improved by union forces. the union forces now in knoxvillewere commanded by ambrose burnside, and he actually has more troops than general longstreet,so again, longstreet can't conduct a proper siege of knoxville. but on november 29th,1863, he's going to try to break through at a place called fort sanders. this is anotherpoorly-executed attack. from here, longstreet would fall back to russellville, tennesseeto establish his winter headquarters by december 10th. he's 82 miles from bristol, tennesseeand 52 miles from knoxville. as bad as things had been for the first corps up until now,they're going to get even worse. on december 17th, longstreet will relieve major generallafayette mclaws of command of his division


and bring charges against him. mclaws is goingto be charged with neglect of duty stemming from the attack on fort sanders. on the sameday, longstreet will bring charges against brigadier general jerome robertson of thetexas brigade and also relive robertson of command. robertson is going to be chargedwith conduct highly prejudiced as a good order in military discipline. two days later, ondecember 19th, evander law, who heard he was going to be charged, offered longstreet hisresignation, and longstreet is going to accept it. longstreet had planned to charge law withconduct highly prejudiced as a good order in military discipline and conduct unbecomingan officer and a gentleman. to replace mclaws, longstreet would choose senior brigade commander,brigadier general joseph kershaw. on february


12th, 1864, major general charles field, underorders from the war department assumed command of hood's old division. now, longstreet stillwanted micah jenkins to command hood's division and he actually wrote the war department,"can i transfer field over to mclaws's division and put jenkins in charge of hood's division?"and the war department wrote back and said, "no, field is directing hood's division byour orders," and the only people that can change that is the war department, not longstreet.while at russellville, longstreet received orders on april 12th, 1864 to report backto lee in virginia. he is to return to charlottesville by april 14th. at this point, longstreet himselfis somewhat despondent, he's become a little demoralized, and it's arguable that the easttennessee campaign was longstreet's worst


performance in the whole civil war. douglassouthall freeman, in "lee's lieutenants" wrote, "longstreet has failed in a semi-independentcommand and failed to maintain peace in his corps. his strategy continued, despite discouragements.a bitterness toward the administration had developed in his heart. he was less the imperturbableold war horse and more the aggrieved, restive lieutenant who thought all authorities exceptlee are readied against him." and even one of his most ardent defenders in the 20th century,lieutenant colonel donald bridgman sanger wrote, "all in all, he failed to measure upto the standard required for the role of an independent commander. there was a fatal lackof harmony in his command and it appeared at times as if he could not handle his owntroops and preserve that quality of discipline


which he had formerly instilled in the firstcorps. most serious of all, longstreet, for the first time, lost confidence in himself."when longstreet's men returned to virginia, the divisions were commanded by major generalcharles field, hood's old division, and brigadier general joseph kershaw commanded mclaws'sdivision; all in all about 10,000 officers and men. pickett's division had been sentto north carolina in september of 1863 and had not yet reported back to longstreet'scommand. longstreet is going to write to lieutenant colonel walter taylor, lee's assistant adjutantgeneral, about when lee can come to review the troops. taylor wrote on april 26th thatlee would visit the first corps as soon as possible, and then he added a personal note.he told longstreet, "i really am beside myself,


general, with joy of having you back. it islike the reunion of a family." and it seems as though once longstreet has made it backon virginia soil, everything in east tennessee is going to be forgotten. for some reason,just because they're back from tennessee, the old esprit de corps and longstreet's handlingof the corps is going to be like it was in the old days. east tennessee is kind of ablack mark, but it's passing now and longstreet will soon have a chance to redeem himselffrom east tennessee and some modern historians might say redeem himself from gettysburg aswell. lee is going to review the troops on april 29th at gordonsville. longstreet saysgordonsville on the line of the orange and alexandria railroad in case of a federal advanceagainst richmond - he can use the line to


get to richmond pretty quickly. on may 2nd,lee is going to meet with his corps and division commanders on clark's mountain here in thebackground. from clark's mountain, they can see the army of the potomac encampments acrossthe rapidan river. field's division has moved north of gordonsville to meet a possible federaladvance toward richmond along the rail line. if meade and the army of the potomac, though,advance against lee's right near germanna or ely's fords on the rapidan, longstreetis going to be at least a day's march away. lee was willing to take that chance and wouldtry to offer some cover for richmond. on may 4th, longstreet is going to be ordered tomarch. his objective is richard's sharp on the catharpin road. the recommended routewas by brock's bridge on the north anna river.


kershaw starts to move out about 4:00pm inthe afternoon to brock's bridge, a distance of about ten miles. field has a distance ofabout sixteen miles to cover. these are also the opening moves in what's going to becomegeneral grant's overland campaign. you have general meade commanding the army of the potomac,but the new commanding general, ulysses grant is going to establish his headquarters withthe army of the potomac. grant's going to cross the rapidan river on the evening ofmay 3rd and 4th. longstreet's initial orders were to continue on the catharpin road totodd's tavern; that would place him on general meade's southern flank. early in the morning,the guard resumed the march to richard's sharp, a distance of about sixteen miles on the catharpinroad. most of longstreet's units are going


to cover thirty-two miles in twenty-four hoursand still be about ten miles short of the battlefield. also, the morning of may 5th,lafayette rallies his confederate cavalry and skirmishes with james wilson's union cavalryat todd's tavern and wilson's cavalry is going to get the worst of it in this engagement.it's also the first day of the battle of the wilderness and lee is trying to use the tangledmess of the wilderness to neutralize grant's and meade's forces. at the best, by the endof the first fighting on the first day of the wilderness, you're going to have a stalemate.lee can't force grant out of the wilderness and grant can't seem to move forward at thatpoint. but major charles venable would be sent by lee to longstreet with a change ofmarching orders. longstreet is to cut across


country now to the orange plank road and linkup with general hill and his corps. major venable later wrote, "my message to you wasto reach general lee as soon as practicable on the morning of the 6th." longstreet himselfwrote, "the accounts we had of the day's work were favorable to the confederates, but thechange of direction of our march was not reassuring." at 1:00am on the morning of may 6th, longstreet'smen would start their march for parker's store and they arrived at parker's store at dawnwhich was about 4:40am in the morning of may 6th. he is there to relieve heth and wilcox'sdivisions about another three miles from parker's store. longstreet wrote, though, of this cross-countrymarch, "such a march and under such conditions was never before experienced by the troops.along blind roads overgrown by underbrush,


through fields that had lain fallow for years,now stumbling over bushes and briars." even the so-called "roads" through the wildernessare not like the nice country roads up here in pennsylvania which are nice and brightand, in some cases, hard surfaced. these are, in some cases, just tracks through the wilderness,and there is a good reason in 1864 that they called this the wilderness. it's just a massive,tangled woods broken up by small farms and that's it, and there's a lot of undergrowthin the wilderness as well, so this is not an easy march across country for longstreet'smen to make. in fact, longstreet actually ordered his divisions to double up into tighterand more efficient marching columns to get his men through this.


once they reach parker's store they're goingto pass colonel henry c. cabell's artillery battalion of the 1st corps. this is one ofthe units left behind when longstreet went to tennessee. included cabell's battalionis the 1st richmond howitzers. one soldier from the howitzers wrote, "everything brokeloose as general longstreet in person rode past. like a fine lady at a party, longstreetwas often late in his arrival at the ball. but he always made a sensation, and that ofdelight, when he got in, with the grand old first corps streaming behind him as his train."another soldier of the howitzers wrote, "the instant the head of his column was seen, thecries resounded on every side. here is longstreet, the old war horse is up at last, it's alrightnow." at 5:00am, on the morning of may 6th,


major general winfield scott hancock and brigadiergeneral james wadsworth would launch a massive attack against the divisions of heth and wilcoxof a.p. hill's corps. those troops are going to be quickly pushed back from their advancedpositions and they start to retreat almost in a pell-mell fashion. the right flank oflee's line now in the wilderness is in danger of collapse, and along with it, maybe eventhe army of northern virginia. the only troops ready to stop this union advance is poague'sartillery line in the widow tapp field. in there with the batteries is lieutenant colonelwilliam h. palmer, general hill's chief of staff. he was walking along the guns tryingto encourage the gunners when he suddenly looked up and there was general longstreeton horseback. palmer, who knew longstreet,


went over to him and said, "ah general, wehave been looking for you since twelve o'clock last night. we expect to be attacked at anymoment and are not in any shape to resist." longstreet started replying, "my troops arenot up - i have ridden ahead. and then the rest of what longstreet said kind of got lostin the growing crescendo of the battle. but palmer noted that longstreet turned his horseto meet his oncoming soldiers. field and kershaw are coming up, side by side, on either sideof the orange plank road; field on the north side of the road and kershaw on the southside of the road. it was reported that they also came up in perfect order, ranks wellclosed, and no stragglers. "those splendid troops came on regardless of the confusionon every side, pressing their steady movement


onward like a river in the sea of confusionand troubled human waves around them." moxley sorrell, longstreet's capable chief of staff,also reported that, "never did his great qualities as a tenacious, fighting soldier shine forthin better light. i have always thought that in its entire splendid history, the simpleact of forming line in the dense undergrowth under heavy fire, and with the third corpsmen pushing to the rear through the ranks, was perhaps its greatest performance for itssteadiness and inflexible courage and discipline." again, the field discipline of the first corpsis coming to the front and longstreet and his officers have the troops well in handand know exactly what to do. even major charles venable of lee's staff, in the postwar yearsno particularly great friend of longstreet's,


had to admit, "i met your two divisions withinless than half a mile of the battlefield coming up in parallel columns very rapidly on theplank road side by side and that they came in grandly, forming line of battle. it wassuperb and my heart beats quicker to think about it, even at this distance of time. leadingfield's division is going to be the texas brigade under brigadier general john gregg.gregg had joined the division and longstreet's troops in tennessee, so he was an unknownquantity to general lee, lee didn't know who the guy was. so he goes riding over to greggand asks, "what brigade is this?" and of course general gregg proudly says, "the texas brigade!"and lee said, "i am glad to see it. when you go in there, i wish you to give those menthe cold steel. they will stand and fight


all day and never move unless you charge them.the texas brigade has always driven the enemy and i want them to do it now, and tell them,general, that they will fight today under my eye. i will watch their conduct. i wantevery man of them to know i am here with them." and then lee rides to the front of the texasbrigade and starts to shout, "texans always move them!" and the texans shout back, "leeto the rear!" here is the famous episode of the texans trying to get lee to move to therear, out of danger. lee, at first, isn't moving. he's determined to lead the texasbrigade in person. and then charles venable shows up again, this guy seems to be all overthe place, and he points out to lee that general longstreet is on the other side of the road.so lee rides over to longstreet and they have


a little conference, and longstreet assureslee that he can restore the line if given a free hand on the battlefield. but if leewants to take charge of everything, longstreet's more than willing to go to the rear, becauseas he said, "it was not quite comfortable where we were." lee took the hint, startedto ride to the rear to leave the battlefield in longstreet's capable hands, and longstreetknows exactly what to do. this is the view the texans had of the union forces. they haveto charge across this open field as the union troops are just emerging from the treelinein the distance. lieutenant colonel palmer, who also seems to be all over the place, saidthat, "longstreet rode down the line, his horse at a walk, and addressing each companysaid, 'keep cool men, we will straighten this


out in a short time. keep cool.' in the midstof the confusion, his coolness and manner was inspiring." longstreet's going to sendfield's division in one brigade at a time. so field's division will be attacking withsledgehammer blows against the union line. kershaw goes in to a slightly more extendedline, but these soldiers now would start pushing back the union troops, regaining a lot ofthe lost ground. almost about eight o'clock in the morning, major general richard h. anderson'sdivision arrives on the battlefield. prior to the army reorganization in may of 1863,anderson had belonged to longstreet's command; in the reorganization, he was transferredto the third corps. so at the wilderness, as he's coming up, he belongs to the thirdcorps. but when anderson arrives on the battlefield,


lee's going to reassign him to the first corps,acknowledging longstreet's command on that part of the field. a.p. hill, meanwhile, istrying to extend his line into the chewning farm, north of longstreet's position. andnow, in what had to be somewhat embarrassing circumstances, hill had to send palmer overto longstreet to request a brigade from anderson's division. remember, just prior to this, andersonhad been under hill's command and now suddenly he's under longstreet's command, so duty andprotocol dictates hill has to ask longstreet for a brigade of anderson's division. longstreetis very helpful; when palmer asks for the brigade, he said, "certainly colonel, whichone will you take?" and palmer said, "the first one." and longstreet said, "that's goodenough for me." longstreet, though, he's pushing


back the union forces, he's regaining lostground, but that's not good enough for him. he wants to try to organize an attack thatwill lead to a possible confederate victory on the field. coming up to longstreet at teno'clock in the morning is brigadier general martin luther smith, the chief engineer forthe army of northern virginia and a member of longstreet's class of 1842. smith reportsto longstreet that he's found a way through the wilderness to turn hancock's left flank.there is an unfinished railroad cutting through the wilderness, and just like the railroadcut here in gettysburg, the area had been cleared, but there were no tracks throughhere. they won't be any railroad tracks until several years after the civil war. longstreet'sgoing to direct his chief of staff moxley


sorrell to conduct three brigades by the route,have them face to the left, and march against hancock's flank. the three brigades makingthe assault would be william wofford, william mahone, and george "tige" anderson. in supportwould be the davis-stone brigade in reserve; four brigades from four different divisionsnow making this attack. since william mahone is the senior brigade commander, he is goingto be in charge of the attack. lieutenant colonel e.m. field and 170 men of the newly-organizedsharpshooter battalion from mahone's brigade would lead the advance. mahone's attack isgoing to smash into the left flank of hancock's line and completely disorganize and startto rout it. longstreet later wrote: "the movement was a complete surprise and a perfect success.it was executed with a rare zeal and intelligence.


the enemy made but a short stand and fellback in utter rout with heavy loss to a position about three-quarters of a mile from my attack."years later, even general hancock had to admit to longstreet, "you rolled me up like a wetblanket and it was some hours before i could reorganize for battle." in a sense, thesethree under-strength confederate brigades would overpower five times their number onthe union side, and that's the effect of a flank attack on an enemy force. you can stillget to the site of longstreet's flank attack, but you have to go through the entrance ofthe fawn lake development to get there. now fortunately, the development has recognizedthat path through the wilderness and its historical importance, so they have still maintainedit. the last time i was down there, we actually


had to call ahead to get into the place becauseit is a gated community. as longstreet's men are advancing up the orange plank road they'regoing to pass by the mortally wounded brigadier general james wadsworth, and there's a monumentto wadsworth's wounding on the battlefield today. so longstreet's men are pushing pasthim on the road. what longstreet is aiming for is this intersection between the orangeplank road and the brock road. if longstreet can control this crossroads, he's going tolimit the union options in the wilderness. general hancock's men, though, are erectingfortifications along the brock road, or at least improving the ones they've already putup. they're trying to clear a field of fire in front of it well. general smith now comesback to longstreet and he reports that this


rail line extends even further into the wilderness,and they can take more troops in to attack hancock's position along the brock road. smith,now, is going to be authorized by longstreet to lead the attack. wofford's brigade is movedby what's called inversion, in other words, he's going to move from the left flank ofthe line over to the right and form the new attack. mahone's brigade in the middle isstill advancing toward the orange plank road. general kershaw is going to report: "we metthe lieutenant general commanding, coming to the front, almost within musket-range ofthe brock road. exchanging hasty congratulations upon the success of the morning, the lieutenantgeneral rapidly planned a direct attack to be made by brigadier general jenkins and myselfupon the position of the enemy upon the brock


road, before he could recover this disaster.the order to me was to break the line and push on to the right of the road towards fredericksburg.jenkins's brigade was put in motion by a flank on the road; my division in the woods on theright. i rode with general jenkins to the head of his command and arranged with himthe details of our combined attack." so longstreet wants not just his flank attack, he wantsto keep up the pressure on the front as well, to keep hancock from trying to get organized,while the flank attack is being organized itself. what's going to happen next? the 12thvirginia of mahone's brigade, as the brigade was nearing the plank road, encountered afire in the woods and they had to go around it. they found themselves about fifty yardsnorth of the road, separated from the rest


of the brigade, so the officers organizedthe 12th virginia, turned around, and started to head back to the south side of the road.jenkins's brigade, as we mentioned, is in the middle of the road and column and they'redescribed as being in new uniforms so dark or grey as to be almost black. jenkins wasriding with general longstreet and he said, "i am happy. i have felt despair for the causefor some months but am relieved and feel assured that we will put the enemy back across therapidan before night." and turning to his brigade, jenkins said, "why do you not cheermen?" and they answered him with a hearty round. andrew dunn, one of longstreet's aide-de-campssuggested the general was too exposed at the head of the column. longstreet responded,"that is our business." then suddenly, shots


are going to ring out. some men cried out,"show your colors!" and the 12th virginia color bearer walked onto the road to showhis flag. kershaw reported that, "two or three shots were fired on the left of the road andsome stragglers came running in from that direction. a melee or volley was pouring intothe head of our column from the woods on our right occupied by mahone's brigade." kershawsaid, "the leading files of jenkins's brigade on this occasion faced the firing and wereabout to return it, but when i dashed my horse into the ranks crying, 'they are friends!'they instantaneously realized the position of things and fell on their faces where theystood. this fatal casualty arrested the projected movement." in longstreet's party, captainalfred e. doby, kershaw's aide-de-camp, and


his orderly marcus barnum, are going to bekilled. also private john f. menga of the 12th virginia will be killed in the same volley.the worst casualty is going to occur to general longstreet himself. first of all, micah jenkinshimself was hit in the head and mortally wounded. general longstreet is going to be hit frombehind, the bullet exiting the throat. longstreet's servant said that, "he, longstreet, was aheavy man with a firm seat in the saddle," but he was actually lifted straight up andcame down hard. longstreet was about 6'2" and weighed close to 200 pounds. longstreethimself wrote that he felt, "a severe shock for the minie ball passing through my throatand right shoulder. the blow lifted me from the saddle and my right arm dropped to myside, but i settled back to my seat and started


to ride on, when in a minute, the flow ofblood admonished me that my work for the day was done." a lot of historians and some contemporarypeople thought that the bullet hit longstreet in the throat and came out his back. thatprobably could only happen if either somebody shot the general from a tree or if the generalwas somehow leaning over the saddle like this, and that's not happening. all the reportswere that the general was sitting upright in the saddle when he took the hit. the bestscenario, if you will, is that he's hit in the back with the bullet coming out of histhroat. general charles field reported that, "i was at longstreet's side in a moment anin answer to my anxious inquiry as to his condition, he replied that he would be lookedafter by others and directed me to take command


of the troops and push ahead." colonel walterfairfax, one of longstreet's staff officers reported, "on reaching the line of troops,you were taken off the horse and propped against a tree. you blew the bloody foam from yourmouth and said, 'tell general field to take command and move forward with the whole forceand gain the brock road.'" longstreet's wounding occurred roughly half a mile from the brockroad and almost one mile from the widow tapp field. moxley sorrell is going to be sentto report to general lee and sorrell said, "here is the report what had been accomplishedand urged him, lee, to continue the movement he, longstreet, was engaged in, the troopsbeing already successful for truly far along, and grant, longstreet firmly believed, bedriven back across the rapidan." dr. john


synge dorsey cullen, the medical directorof the first corps was on the scene. he checked the flow of blood and also noted the bloodyfroth at the general's mouth and throat. this is sort of a modern diagram of the general'swound. to put it in medical terms, the bullet entered the right side of the general's backjust along the medial border of the scapula. it traveled in an anterior superior directionand angled medially, transecting the right brachial plexus and the right recurrent longtudinalnerve. it then passed through the right lobe of the thyroid gland and the right anteriorlateral wall of the trachea, exiting almost at the midline. in other words, the bullethit the general right below the scapula, traveled up and to the left, cut the nerve going tohis right shoulder, and then exited out through


his throat. and that explains why the generalnever really recovered the use of his right arm and why after this, even though beforethis he had a booming voice that could be heard over the whole battlefield, after this,he could never speak above a whisper. longstreet himself is going to place a hat over his face.this is noon of may 6th and the sun is shining down on him so they put the hat on to coverhis face. well the troops saw the general going back with the hat on his head and theyimmediately thought he was dead. they're telling us he's alive, but he's actually dead. longstreetheard these comments and he took his left hand, lifted his hat off his face, and thenreported that, "the bursting of voices and the flying of hats in the air eased my painsomewhat."


an artillery officer observed all that wasgoing on here, and these are all the members of longstreet's staff, and he reported that,"i never on any occasion during the four years of the war saw a group of officers and gentlemenmore deeply distressed. they were literally bowed down with grief. it was not alone thegeneral they admired that had been shot down, it was rather the man they loved." this sameofficer saw longstreet in the ambulance when they placed him in there, and he said longstreettook his left hand and lifted up the blanket to look at the saturated shirt he was wearingand after seeing it, longstreet but the blanket back down again. this officer said, "he isnot dead and he is calm and entirely master of the situation. he is both greater and moreattractive than i have heretofore thought


of." lee is going to arrive on the battlefieldnow with richard anderson. since anderson outranks charles field, lee, by military protocol,would place anderson in charge of the first corps. even though lee had been encouragedby longstreet to continue the attack the troops, to lee's mind, are so disorganized at thispoint, he doesn't want to press the attack. so he's going to take the time to reorganizethe troops. by the time they get things moving forward, it's about four o'clock in the afternoon.jenkins's men, along with one other, are going to capture part of the defenses along thebrock road before union reserves come up and force him back again. by the end of the secondday there is still somewhat of a stalemate in the wilderness. now longstreet was convincedhe could force grant back across the rapidan;


some ardent historians dispute that. theymake the argument that lee had used the woods to counter grant's strength in the wilderness.grant could now use those woods to mask whatever he was doing. to show you the importance ofthe brock road, by the end of the day, hancock's troops controlled the intersection; that'sgoing to give grant one major option. lee probably thought if he hadn't defeated inthe wilderness, grant's going to do what what every other union general would do - that'sfall back across the rapidan. well grant's not exactly a guy to fall backand start over again. with the brock road in his hands, grant now can move the armyof the potomac south around lee's flank and head towards a place called spotsylvania courthouse. if longstreet's men had controlled


the brock road intersection, grant might nothave had that option. some of the first corps troops would fall back to the widow tapp fieldand start to erect entrenchments just in case of another union attack the next day. hereare some of the stops on the driving tour of the places we've been talking about. stopfive is the chewning farm where hill is trying to set up his line, stop six is the widowtapp field, and stop seven is the longstreet wounding marker. there's actually a littlepull-off there and they have some wayside exhibits that talk about longstreet's wounding.dr. lafayette guild, the medical director for the army of northern virginia, and otherdoctors, examined longstreet's wound and they determined that it was not necessarily fatal.alexander dunn heard this report and wrote


back to general lee, "i assure you general,nothing can be announced to general longstreet's staff that could give them more pleasure,and we hope that in a short time, he will be on duty again. it will afford our deargeneral great pleasure to know that what he inaugurated has been successful, that is,the entire repulse of the hated enemy." and, of course, as we learned, lee is not goingto do that; he can't force grant out of the wilderness. longstreet is first taken to meadowfarm, the home of major erasmus taylor, his chief quartermaster. he is then transferredto taliaferro hospital in lynchburg, virginia. on may 18th, mrs. susan blackford, the wifeof longstreet's provost marshal, is going to see longstreet in the hospital. she isgoing to write, "he is very feeble and nervous


and suffers much from his wound. he shedstears on the slightest provocation and apologizes for it. he says he does not see why a bulletgoing through a man's shoulder should make a baby of him." longstreet is later transferredto the home of mrs. caroline garland, his cousin-in-law by marriage and the mother ofgeneral samuel garland, who had been killed at south mountain in september of 1862. longstreetwas moved to campbell county court house in rustburg, virginia where he stays with coloneljohn d. alexander until they're chased down with word of union cavalry coming to capturethem. longstreet later moves down to georgia and first stays with josiah sibley and hissecond wife emma eve longstreet. emma longstreet was the daughter of gilbert longstreet, abrother of the general's father. so emma is


the general's first cousin. he later movesto union point, georgia to stay with the hart's and daniels' families who were friends ofhis. also staying with him this whole time is going to be his wife, mrs. longstreet,and captain t.j. gorey from texas, who longstreet had been with on his first trip when he wascoming back to join the army in 1861. longstreet is going to write, around the 1st of october,"i was strong enough to ride horseback, and after a little practice, and having becomevery weary of idle hours, took leave of wife and children and traveled back to richmondto find our great commander and his noble followers." on october 7th, longstreet wouldwrite to walter taylor, "i have not reported formally for duty because i doubted the proprietyof being assigned in my crippled condition


to a position now filled by officers of vigoroushealth. if i can be of service in any position, i prefer to go to duty." and he actually asksfor assignment to the trans-mississippi. "the doctors give me little reason to hope to recoverthe use of my arm even within a year hence my desire to be assigned for duty or to havean extended leave of absence." general lee is having none of that. ten days later, onoctober 17th, longstreet is ordered to resume command of the first corps, and he'll returnto lee two days later on october 19th, 1864. lee is going to take personal responsibilityfor the defenses around petersburg, virginia. longstreet is going to be commanding virtuallyeverything else, from the james river, up to and around the defenses of richmond, andhe'll hold that position until april 2nd,


1865 when he's ordered to finally rejoin leeat petersburg for the retreat that would end at appomattox. to repeat a few things, generalhancock, as we said, in the postwar years, had to admit to longstreet that, "you rolledmy line up like a wet blanket" and moxley sorrell had been directed by longstreet toreport to lee what's going on and to urge lee to press the advantage and drive grantout of the wilderness. longstreet firmly believed that if lee had pushed the attack, that'sexactly what would have happened. grant would have been pushed out of the wilderness andback across the rapidan. some modern historians debate that, dispute that, but it is one ofthose things that brings up an interesting "what if" question at the battle of the wilderness.and that is what if longstreet's plan had


succeeded. if lee had continued the attack,as longstreet planned, and pushed grant out of the wilderness. what effect would thathave had on the overland campaign of 1864? and more importantly, what effect would ithave had on grant's military career which might have been cut short in such an event?i'm going to leave the last word here, though, to colonel walter taylor, lee's adjutant,and he wrote in the postwar years, "i have always thought that had general longstreetnot been wounded, he would have rolled back that wing of general grant's army in suchmanner as would have forced the federals to recross the rapidan. a strange fatality attendedus. jackson killed in the zenith of his successful career; longstreet wounded in the act of strikinga blow which would have rivaled jackson at


chancellorsville and its results, and eachcase the fire was from our own men. a blunder, call it so. the old deacon would say thatgod willed it thus." i want to thank you, folks, for joining me this afternoon for theprogram. does anybody have any questions at this point about anything i've talked about?[audience member] how long did longstreet live? [karlton smith] how long did longstreetlive? he died in 1904, just two days short of his 84th birthday. he never recovered theuse of his right arm, and he never spoke above a whisper. what apparently happened is hecame down with a case of pneumonia and all the coughing reopened the old wound and that'swhat lead to his death. he had lost a lot of weight because he had also been treatedfor cancer of the eye. among other things,


he had rheumatism, he was deaf by that time,he had a speaking trumpet, but he was still, officially, a u.s. railroad commissioner.and among other things, in the 1890s, he had taken trips out to san francisco to reporton the conditions of the railroads out there, so still fairly active, almost up to the end.yes ma'am? [audience member] you know, one thing that you hear about wounded personnelduring the war that so many of them died not from their actual injuries but from infectionsand so forth. did he have some type of, or were his doctors more progressive, or modernmedical care than any other doctors? [karlton smith] well, in one sense, longstreet is goingto get what's today called v.i.p. treatment. i mean he not only has his own medical officer,chief medical officer with him, he's got the


chief medical officer of the entire army ofnorthern virginia, and three or four other doctors, looking after him. so he is goingto get kind of v.i.p. treatment, in a way, because he is general longstreet. this isone guy lee cannot afford to lose, especially longstreet. if he loses longstreet, he's gotrichard ewell, a.p. hill, and maybe richard anderson commanding his army corps. a lotof people have wondered if longstreet bungled here at gettysburg, why didn't lee just getrid of him? if there was an officer lee didn't like, or lee didn't think was up to standards,he got rid of him. after gettysburg, lee's got two great opportunities to get rid oflongstreet; he could very easily have told the administration, "i need longstreet's troops,but keep longstreet himself in tennessee."


and here, after he's been wounded, lee can'twait for longstreet to get back. longstreet soon requests, on october 7th for either transferor an extended leave, and ten days later, pretty fast for any war department, he's gotorders to report back to lee, and that has to be coming from lee himself. this is theone man, at this point, that lee depends on the most. yes? [audience member] didn't longstreet'ssecond wife lived until 1962? when were they married? [karlton smith] they got marriedin, i want to say, 1896 or 1898. [audience member] he was quite an old man then. [karltonsmith] yeah, she was the assistant state librarian for the state of georgia when they met andthat was an unusual position for a woman to have in georgia, so she was quite progressivein the 1890s. longstreet's excuse was that


an old man gets lonely sometimes, so that'swhy they got married. yes? [audience member] when did his first wife die? [karlton smith]his first wife died in the early 1880s and we don't know exactly why because this isone of the cases where, i think, shortly after that, longstreet's house burned down and helost almost all of his personal correspondences, lost his civil war uniform, his mexican warsword that he wore in the civil war, all of that was lost, and all his personal paperswere lost as well. yes? [audience member] did he have children? [karlton smith] he andhis first wife, prior to the civil war, had six children, two died before the civil war,and within the period of one week between february and march of 1862, they lost threemore. so between those six children, only


one survived, and then afterwards, mrs. longstreethad six more. so altogether, they had twelve children, but lost five of them. there areno direct descendants of general longstreet, though, it's through branch families instead,but i can tell you that two of his sons served in the spanish-american war in the army andone is buried in arlington cemetery because of it; they followed in their father's footsteps.longstreet is one of those guys who viewed the spanish-american war as the major reconciliationpoint between north and south. his sons were fighting in the war, the nephews of generalpickett were fighting in the war, lee's nephew, fitzhugh lee, was the american consular inhavana when the maine was blown up, and general joseph wheeler, the famous confederate cavalrycommander, is an american brigadier general,


u.s. army brigadier general in cuba, he wasactually teddy roosevelt's commander. there is a story that longstreet was able to makeit up to the west point centennial in 1902 and there's a story that he was sitting onthe porch with at least one or two other officers and they see joe wheeler walking down thepath to the hotel. well wheeler is wearing his dress uniform from the spanish-americanwar which is blue, and as he started getting closer, longstreet tells wheeler, "i hopei die before you do because i want to be at the gates of hell when jubal early sees youwearing a yankee uniform." i've heard somebody else said that to wheeler but it's usuallyattributed to longstreet. if you want a book that covers the general's whole life, it'ssimply "james longstreet" and that's by donald


bridgman sanger, and, i forget his first name,but a guy named hay. now that book is probably out of print. it doesn't have a lot of footnotesto it, but that covers longstreet's whole life. sanger was a former lieutenant colonel,he was able to write the first half of the book which covers longstreet's life up throughthe civil war and then thomas hay took over writing the second half of longstreet's life.longstreet lived to be the age of 84. he was 42 here at gettysburg, so he's got half hislife to lead after the war. he gets involved in louisiana politics, georgia politics, he'sa u.s. marshal for georgia after the war, he serves briefly as u.s. ambassador to turkey,and u.s. railroad commissioner. he actually took over for wade hampton. that commissionerappointment was a political appointment so


when the republicans came in, they threw wadehampton out and appointed longstreet, and it had a pretty nice salary too. plus he wrotehis memoirs, in 1898 it came out. it's actually been sort of, since i started working hereat the park, that there's been a concerted effort to rehabilitate longstreet's reputation.some of the older historians like glenn tucker were trying to do it back in the '60s, butit's really been since the early '90s that it's hit full stride. anything else? alright,once again, i want to thank everyone for joining us today and i hope you have a good afternoon.


Wilson Pickett's Greatest Hits

Wild Heart

5:41 AM Add Comment

i'm giving everything i've gotgod knows i know it's not a lot i'm headed somewhere but i don't know where just yet i've still got something left to proveprove that there's nothing i won't do do what it takes so i can bring you back again all my lifeyou're the one thing that's always been real i’m gonna follow my heart right back to you you’re the one thing i can’t stand to lose i’m gonna follow my heart back to you if it’s the last thing i do


i've seen my share of miserybut i've never felt a cut so deep all i remember is what i wish i could forget in every single thing i doi'm gonna make it up to you it might be crazy but i won't give up just yet


Wild Heart

Wild Frontier

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(wind whistling) ♪ ♪ ha ha! pow! pow! pow!ha ha! pow! pow! pow! pow!ha ha! pow! pow! pow!pow! pow! ha ha ha ha ha ha! (clanging noise) (whistles)


huh huh huh... huh huh huh...huh huh huh... hyah! look! look!look! (pink panther theme plays) grrr... (crashing noise) ha ha ha haha ha ha...


(snaps) boom! (booming noises) (teeth chattering) (accordion notes play) (accordion notes play)(accordion notes play) boing! tink! (muttering)


(whimpering) hee hee heehee hee. (popping noise) (dramatic music) ahem. (motor buzzing) hmm. (growls) heh heh heh.(smacking noise)


(smooches) (gasps) (barking) aah! (hammering) (panting) (heavenly chorus sings) duuuhhh... mmm-mmm-mmm...


ah! (popping noises) (spitting) unh! uh-oh-uhh-ooh... (choking) (crying) hmm? (hollow clicking noises)


(clicking noises) (birds tweeting) (birds tweeting)(birds tweeting) (crunches) uhh... hyah! hyah! heh heh hehheh heh... yee-haw! heh heh heh heh heh...


aah! aaaaaaahh... hyaaaaaaaaah! aaaaaahh! doink! (laughs nervously) (laughs nervously)(laughs nervously) (grunts) aaaa--aaaaaahh... unh...unh!


(slurping) thwop! thwop!thwop! (cheers and applause) (horn beeping) (crowd gasps) (spurs jangling) heh heh. (growling)


heh heh heh. (grunting) (grunting)(grunting) (sobbing) (branding iron sizzles) (horseshoe creaks) (clanking) (crickets chirping) (alarm clock ringing)


(alarm stops) (crowing) (boing) (bright western music) (doors crash) (smack) (doors flapping) (snoring, whistling) (flies buzzing)


(mutters) (doors creak) (guitar music) (eye shade snaps) (snores) (snoring and whistling) (sniffing) (carrot crunching) (gulps)


(whistling) (pants snap) (carrots crunching) (gulping) (objects clattering) whoo-hoo! (neighing and laughing) (lips puckering) (horseshoes clanging)


(nail creaking) (clanks) (crashes) (feet tapping) (tapping) (wood crunches) (clangs) (neighs and laughs) (cinch creaking)


(inhales) (sputtering) (exhales) (laughing) (exhales and inhales) (creaking) (saddle pops) (air whistling) (thuds)


(pulley creaking) (apples crunching) mmm? (gulps) (metal clanks) (reins creaking) nnnh! ugh! (reins snap) (wall thuds) (laughs)


(knuckles crack) (tractor engine running) mm! (angry neighing) (spurs jingle) (whistle) (sultry music) (apple crunches) ya-ha!


yoo-hoo-hoo! (neighing) (boing boing) hee hee, hee hee,hee hee, hee hee! (western-style pink panther theme)


Wild Frontier

Whoopin'

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aj styles wants answers on why he’s been screwed several times out of the wwe championship match. the man has valid points, but we all know that this is building up to a styles vs shane o mac wrestlemania match personally, i wouldn’t be upset if this comes to past. let's get it goin'! becky lynch defeats natalia only to be attacked from behind by carmella. is it me or is the super kick just so overused in wrestling? shawn michaels must be god in the wrestling move handbook. the shit was a finisher man! and people are kicking out if it now! the miz is el fuego on the mic nowadays. shit is getting personal people. miz and maryse going hard on the fact that nikki bella won’t ever marry john cena. now, john cena has been put on record that he doesn’t want to marry or to have children. miz and maryse vs cena and nikki. saw it coming. should be interesting. wish daniel bryan punched miz in the face. world would’ve exploded!


mickey james vs alex bliss. this one was a bit of a sloppy match overall. the “mick” kick could’ve been more fluid. but, eh…. aj styles whooped on shane's ass and got it poppin in the parking lot! i’m stoked for this match now. shane sold that ass whoopin like a champ! daniel bryan fired aj styles….. really? i mean, mick foley had a tough time just doing that to anybody on raw, but you fired him without second thought. come on man, you know his ass ain’t fired. i really hate matches that dq, especially in a countout. that dolph ziggler match man, ugh! they’re really trying to sell this aj styles attack on shane mcmahon tonight. and where the fuck did the camera inside the car come from? it was all a ruse according to randy orton. if ya can’t beat them, join him. play the game to change the game. i see you randy! baron corbin has to understand, you can’t kill what already dead… that has nothing to do with dean ambrose cuz he ain’t dead.


a little fork-lift action ain’t nothing but an energy drink to him. usos vs american alpha and the focus shifted to shane mcmahon, again. we get it man, he got whooped and he’s a tough guy. no need to get an update every waking minute of a 2-hour show. shane comes out and says aj styles has an opponent at wrestlemania. saw it coming. i think that match is going to be lit! overall it wasn’t a bad show. it was a bit better than raw mainly because of that hood ass whoopin by aj styles to shane! let’s hope for a better show next week. see you monday!


Whoopin'

Who Else!

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you know that feeling you get when two things that seem completely unrelated turn out to have a key connection. in math especially, there's a certain tingly sensation that i get whenever one of those connections starts to fall into place. that is what i have in store for you today. it takes a little time to set up, i have to


introduce this fair division puzzle in discrete math, it's called the stolen necklace problem, and we also have to set up a certain topological fact about spheres that we'll use to solve it called the borsuk-ulam theorem. but trust me, seeing how these two seemingly disconnected pieces of math come together is well worth the setup. and


more fun, i coordinated this video with mathologer, who just put out a video solving a very similar fair division problem, but with a completely different tactic. so after this video, if you're eager to learn more, head on over to his channel. if somehow you don't already know about mathologer, his stuff is some of the best


math on youtube, definitely poke around the rest of the channel and subscribe if you like this stuff as much as i do. so here's the puzzle that we're going to solve, the stolen necklace problem. you and your friend steal the necklace full of a whole bunch of very valuable jewels. maybe it's got some sapphires, emeralds diamonds, and rubies. and let's say


they're all arranged on the necklace in some totally random order. moreover let's say that there happened to be an even number of each type of jewel. right here i have 8 sapphires, 10 emeralds, 4 diamonds, and 6 rubies. you and your friend want to split the booty evenly, with each of you getting half of each jewel type: 4 sapphires, 5


emeralds, 2 diamonds, and 3 rubies each. of course, you could just cut all of the jewels off the necklace and divvy them up evenly, but that's boring. there's not really a puzzle there. instead the challenge is to make as few cuts to the necklace as possible so that you can divvy up the resulting segments between you and your co-conspirator and


still have each of you end up with half of each jewel type. for example, i just did it using 4 cuts. if i give these top three strands to you, and these bottom two strands to your co-conspirator, notice how each of you ends up with 4 sapphires, each of you has 5 emeralds, 2 diamonds and 3 rubies. the claim, the thing that i want


to prove in this video, is that if you have n different types of jewels, it's always possible to find a fair division using only n cuts or fewer. so with 4 jewel types like this example, you should always be able to find a way to make 4 cuts and divvy up the 5 resulting pieces so that each thief has the same number of each jewel type. if


there were 5 jewel types, you should be able to do it in five cuts, no matter what the arrangement is. it's kind of hard to think about, right? i mean, you need to keep track of all of these different types of jewels, ensuring that they're divided fairly, but at the same time you have to try to minimize how many cuts you're making. depending on your


disposition to puzzles in math, maybe this feels a little contrived, but the core characteristics that make this problem hard, like trying to minimize sharding and trying to allocate some collection of things in a balanced way, these are the kinds of optimization issues that actually come about a fair amount in practical applications. for the


computer system folk out there, i'm sure you can imagine how this could relate to some kind of efficient memory allocation problem. also, if you're curious to actually see it in action, i've left a link in the video description to a certain electrical engineering paper that uses this very problem. independent from its usefulness, though, it certainly


makes for a good puzzle. can you always find a fair division using only as many cuts as there are types of jewels? so that's the puzzle, remember it, and now we're going to take a seemingly unrelated sidestep to the total opposite side of the mathematical universe: topology. imagine taking a sphere in


three-dimensional space and squishing it somehow onto the 2d plane, stretching and morphing it however you want as you do so. the only constraint is that you do this continuously, which you can think of as meaning just never cut the sphere or tear it in any way during the mapping. now, as you do this, continuously squishing that sphere onto the plane, many


different pairs of points on the sphere are going to land on top of each other once they hit the plane, and that's not really a big deal. the special fact that we're going to use, known as the "borsuk-ulam theorem", is that you will always be able to find a pair of points that started off on exact opposite sides of the sphere which


land on each other during the mapping. points on the exact opposite side of the sphere are called "antipodes" or "antipodal points". for example, let's say you're thinking of the sphere as earth, and the mapping you choose is to just project every point directly onto the plane of the equator. well in that case the north and the south poles, which are antipodal,


each land on the same point. and in this example that's the only antipodal pair that lands on the same point. any other antipodal pair will end up somehow offset from each other but lets you tweak this function a bit, maybe shearing it during the projection. in that case the north and south pole probably don't land on each other


anymore, but when the topology gods close a door, they open a window, because the borsuk-ulam theorem guarantees that no matter what, there must be some other antipodal pair that now land on top of each other. the classic example to illustrate this idea, which any math educator introducing the borsuk-ulam theorem is required by law


to present, is that there must exist some pair of points on the opposite side of the earth where the temperature and the barometric pressure are both precisely the same. think about it for a moment, associating each point on the earth with a pair of numbers, temperature and pressure, is the same as mapping the surface of the earth into a 2d


coordinate plane, where the first coordinate represents temperature and the second one represents pressure. also each of those values varies continuously as you wander around the earth, so this association is a continuous mapping from the surface of a sphere onto the plane, some non tearing way to squash that surface into two dimensions. so what the


borsuk-ulam theorem guarantees is that no matter what the weather patterns on earth, or any other planet for that matter, some pair of antipodal points somewhere must land on top of each other, which means they mapped to the same temperature pressure coordinates. now, i imagine if you're watching this video you're probably a mathematician at heart,


and you want to see why this is true not just that it's true. vsauce actually taled about the borsuk-ulam theorem in a great video that he recently did about fixed points, and he gave a really beautiful line of reasoning to explain it intuitively, which i'm just gonna shamelessly co-opt for my own use here. given some function


from the sphere onto the plane, imagine walking around the equator. the corresponding outputs on the plane are going to form some kind of closed loop. and let's say that your sister is on the exact opposite side of the globe and as you walk around she continues keeping herself perfectly antipodally opposite from you. since the two of you eventually


swap places, at some point along the way the x-coordinates of your corresponding outputs have to line up. the first time this happens, i want you to mark where you are on the sphere, as well as where your antipodal sister is. then if you tilt the equator slightly and walk along a slightly different great circle, the corresponding loop in the output space


is going to alter a bit. but by the same line of reasoning there has to be some point on your walk where you and your antipodal sister land on outputs with the same x-coordinate, lining up vertically. mark those two points on the sphere as well. if you repeat this continuously turning that equator 180 degrees around the full circle, your


marked points are going to make up some new closed loop around the sphere. this is what that might look like in the output space, keeping track of all of the points where you and your antipodal sister first line up vertically. every point on this new loop is one word you and your antipodal sister by definition end up with the same x coordinate. so if the two of


you are walking around this new loop you always line up vertically. but what's more, since the two of you are eventually going to swap places, there must be some point along the way where you also have the same y-coordinate, aligning horizontally. that gives the point where you and your antipodal sister must land on the same output. pretty cool, right? to


help set the stage for how the heck this applies to the necklace problem, i want to write what this means a little more symbolically. points in 3d space are represented with three coordinates, right? i mean, in some sense that's what 3d space is, to a mathematician at least, all possible triplets of numbers. now, the simplest sphere to describe with


coordinates is a standard unit sphere centered at the origin, the set of all points a distance one from that origin, meaning all triplets of numbers with the special property that the sum of their squares equals 1. so the geometric idea of a sphere is related to the algebraic idea of some set of positive numbers that add up to one. remember that. if you


have one of these triplets, the point on the opposite side of the sphere, the corresponding antipodal point, is whatever you get by flipping the sign of each coordinate, right? so let's just write out what the borsuk-ulam theorem is saying symbolically. this is going to help for where we're going. for any function that takes in points on the


sphere, triplets of numbers who squares sum to 1, and spits out some point in 2d space, some pair of coordinates like temperature and pressure, as long as that function is continuous there will be some input so that flipping all the signs doesn't change the output. and with that on the table, let's turn back to the stolen necklace


problem. part of the reason that these two things feel so unrelated is that the necklace problem is discrete, but the borsuk-ulam theorem applies to a continuous situation. so our first step is to translate the stolen necklace problem into a continuous version. for right now, let's limit ourselves to the case where there are only 2 jewel types,


sapphires and emeralds, and we're hoping to make a fair division of the necklace after only two cuts. as an example to have on the screen, let's say that we have eight sapphires and 10 emeralds on the necklace. just as a reminder this means that the goal is to cut the necklace in two different spots and divvy up those three segments


so that each thief has half of the sapphires and half of the emeralds. notice how the top and bottom here each have four sapphires and each have five emeralds. think of this necklace is a line with length one, with the jewels sitting evenly spaced on it. now divided up that line into 18 evenly sized segments, one


for each jewel. and rather than thinking of each tool as a discrete indivisible entity on the segment, remove the jewel itself and instead just paint that segment the color of the jewel. so in this case painting the whole necklace appropriately, 8/18 of the line are going to be painted sapphire while, 10/18 of the line are going to be painted


emerald. the continuous version of this puzzle is to now ask whether we can find two cuts anywhere on this line, not necessarily on these 1/18 interval marks, that let us divide up the pieces so that each thief has an equal length of each color. in this case that means each thief should end up with a total length of 4/18 of sapphire colored segments and 5/18


of emerald colored segments. an important but somewhat subtle point is that if you can solve this continuous variant of the puzzle you can also solve the original discrete version. to see why, let's say that you do find a fair division, but whose cuts don't necessarily fall cleanly between jewels. maybe it cuts part of the way through an


emerald segment. well because this is a fair division, the length of emerald in both the top and the bottom group has to add up to exactly five emerald segments. a whole number multiple of the segment length. so even if the division does cut partially into an emerald segment on the left, it would have to also cut partially into an emerald segment on the right here


so that the total length can add up to a whole number multiple of the segment length. what that means is that we can adjust each cut without affecting the division so that they ultimately do line up on these 1/18 marks. now in this continuous case where you can cut the line wherever the heck you want, think about all of the choices that go into


cutting the necklace and allocating its pieces. first you choose two different places to cut the interval. but another way to think of that is to choose three positive numbers that add up to one. for example, maybe you choose 1/6 1/3 and 1/2. that would correspond with these two cuts here anytime that you find three positive


numbers that add to one, it gives you a way to cut the necklace, and vice versa. then after you cut it, you have to make a binary choice for each one of those three pieces for whether it goes to the thief 1 or if it goes to thief 2. now compare that to if i asked you to choose some arbitrary point on the 3d sphere. some point with coordinates (x, y, z) so that x


squared plus y squared plus z squared equals 1. well you might start off by choosing three positive numbers that add up to one. maybe you want x squared to be 1/6, y squared to be 1/3, and z squared to be 1/2. then you have to make a binary choice for each one, choosing whether to take the positive


square root or the negative square root. so in a way that's completely parallel to choosing a necklace division, choosing a point on the sphere involves first finding three positive numbers that add up to one and then making a binary choice for what to do with each one of them. that right there is a key observation for the whole video. it gives


the correspondence between points on the sphere and necklace divisions. for any point (x, y, z) that sits on the sphere, because x squared plus y squared plus z squared equals one, you can cut the necklace so that the first piece has a length of x squared the second has a length of y squared and the third has a length of z squared. then to choose how


to allocate these pieces, if x is positive give it to thief 1, otherwise give it to thief 2. if y is positive give that second piece to thief 1 otherwise give it to thief 2. and then similarly to allocate the third piece if z is positive give it to thief 1 otherwise give it to thief 2. and you can go the other way around, this is a


one-to-one correspondence. any way to divide up the necklace and divvy up the pieces would give you a unique point on the sphere. it's as if the sphere is the perfect way to encapsulate the idea of all possible necklace divisions using a geometric object. and with that association, we are


tantalizingly close. take a moment and think about the meaning of antipodal points under this association. if the point (x, y, z) on the sphere corresponds to some necklace allocation, what does the point (-x, -y, -z) correspond to? well the squares of all of these coordinates are the same, so it would


correspond to making the same cuts on the necklace. the difference is that each piece switches which thief it belongs to. so jumping to an antipodal point on the opposite side of the sphere corresponds to exchanging all the pieces between the two thieves. now remember what it is that we're


actually looking for. we want the total length of each jewel type belonging to thief 1 to equal that for thief 2. in other words, in a fair division, performing this antipodal swap doesn't change the amount of each jewel belonging to each thief. your brain should be burning with the thought of


borsuk-ulam at this point. specifically the way you might move forward is to construct a certain function, a function that takes in a given necklace allocation and spits out two numbers, the total length of sapphire belonging to thief 1, and the total length of emerald belonging to thief 1. what we want to show is that there must exist a way to


divide the necklace with only two cuts and divvy up the pieces so that those two numbers are the same as what they would have been for thief 2. or set a little differently, where swapping all of the pieces won't change those two numbers for thief 1. because of this back and forth between necklace allocations and points on the sphere, and because pairs of numbers


correspond to points on the (x, y) plane, this is in effect a mapping from the sphere onto the plane. so what the borsuk-ulam theorem guarantees is that some antipodal pair of points on the sphere land on each other in the plane. and what that means is there is some necklace division and allocation so that swapping the pieces between the two thieves won't


change the amount of each jewel that each one has. that's a fair division. that, my friends, is what beautiful math feels like. and if you're anything like me, you're just basking in the glow of what a clever proof that is, and it might be easy to forget that we actually want to solve the more general stolen necklace problem, one that has more than


just 2 jewel types. for that we can use a more general version of the borsuk-ulam theorem, one that applies to higher-dimensional spheres. as an example one dimension up, borsuk-ulam also applies to mapping a hypersphere in 4d space into 3d space. what i mean by a hypersphere, the way to think about it, is all possible lists of four coordinates where


the sum of the squares equals 1. those are all of the points in 4d space a distance 1 from the origin. the borsuk-ulam theorem says that if you try to map that set, all of those special quadruplets, into three-dimensional space, continuously associating each one with some triplet of numbers, there must be some antipodal collision. an input (x1, x2, x3, x4)


where flipping all of the signs wouldn't change the output. i'm going to leave it to you to pause and ponder and think about how that would apply to the three jewel case, and about what the general statement of the borsuk-ulam theorem might be and how it can apply to the general necklace problem. needless to say, actually trying to


visualize a 4d sphere mapping into 3d space is rather difficult. nevertheless, for the final animation i'm going to try to show you what that might look like. but before that i actually have multiple announcements for you guys today. well i guess the first one is not really an announcement, i just want to say thank


you to the people making these videos possible on patreon, as always. but number 2, i just partnered with dftba to open a 3blue1brown store. so if you go check it out you can get a pause and ponder t-shirt, as well as three different fractal curve posters. and if things go well maybe we're going to add some more shirts, more posters and


potentially some little pleasure pi creatures. number 3, don't forget that mathologer just put out a video on a very different approach to a very similar fair division problem, so after the 4d sphere thing definitely go give him a look. if you don't already know about his channel, check out the rest of it. and finally, this particular video is


sponsored by the great courses plus. i imagine that many of you watching this channel, especially those of you who found it through the linear algebra series, are into binge learning on the internet, and the great courses plus has hundreds of lecture series where you can do just that. one that actually think you guys would like a lot is "the


inexplicable universe: unsolved mysteries" by neil degrasse tyson. i don't think i need to tell you what a great speaker neil degrasse tyson is, and the series itself does not disappoint. by going to the url on the screen, or more easily by just following the link in the description, you can get a one month free trial to see what i'm talking about.


alright, so here's that final animation. it's a little confusing, so for analogy on the upper left here i'm rotating sphere in three dimensions and projecting it into 2d. but i'm only showing the lines of latitude on that sphere and not shading it or anything like that. so similarly, in the center i'm rotating a four dimensional hypersphere


in 4d space but projecting it into 3d space. but all i'm showing is the spheres of latitude, so to speak. keep in mind, you don't actually need to be able to visualize a 4d sphere mapping into three dimensions to be able to understand the borsuk-ulam theorem, much less how it applies to the stolen necklace problem. this is just for


fun. but it is pretty to try, don't you think?


Who Else!

White Sugar

5:41 AM Add Comment

top five beauty tips with sugar sugar is a common ingredient available in everyone's kitchen here are 5 beauty tips with sugar 1st tip pigmentation & dark spots for this we need lemon juice and sugar take a bowl , add one tablespoon of sugar and 1 tablespoon of lemon juice mix well until sugar dissolves in lemon juice wash your face and apply this


mixture all over the face and leave it for 5 minutes after five minutes wash it with cold water do this weekly tries for better results by doing this regularly you can remove dark spots and pigmentation 2nd tip anti aging for this we need sugar milk & aloe vera gel, take a bowl add 1 tablespoon of sugar


and 1 tablespoon of aloe vera gel and 1 tablespoon of milk wash your face and apply the pack all over your face and leave it for 10 minutes, then gently massage some water and wash it with cold water by doing this weekly twice you can reduce pigmentation and dark spots 3rd tip: sun tan we can remove sun tan


by doing the following tips for this we need sugar, tomato juice and besan flour(gram flour) take a bowl add 1 tablespoon of sugar, 1 tablespoon of tomato juice 1 tablespoon of besan flour(gram flour) and mix all ingredients well apply this on your face and leave it for


10 minutes, then wash it with cold water do it weekly tries, for removing removing tan on the skin and you will get clear fair complexion 4th tip: lightning dark lips to pink lips we can change dark lips in to pink lips by doing this, for this we need sugar, olive oil and lemon juice take a bowl add 1 tablespoon sugar,


add 1 tablespoon lemon juice and 1 tablespoon of olive oil mix all ingredients well apply this on your lips and leave it for 10 min and wash it with cold water do it regularly for 10 days by doing this you can reduce darkness on lips and get pink shiny lips 5th tip: scrub for all skins for this


we need rice flour sugar and milk, take a bowl 1 tablespoon of rice flour and 1 tablespoon of milk wash your face and apply this paste and massage gently in clock wise and anti clock wise directions for 5 minutes and leve it to dry, then wash it with cold waters thank you for watching this video like


and subscribe for more videos


White Sugar

When The Levee Breaks - The Best Of

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here's what happened after all their dreams came true (be a, be a man) after saving china i went home alone i was feeling conflicts in my lower zone i've been dressing like a guy for months now i'm losing all control i think i am a guy in my soul (be a, be a man) i wanna be a man! (i've never seen a guy so hot)


time to reinvent the new me! every time he speaks it makes me want to sing (i'm so confused) be quiet, or we'll get caught! maybe one day he'll screw me (gasp) now i really get why my nickname is ping! (i've gotta be a man!) i've got the brains and the bite of females plus the brute and the brawn of dudes i know i'm ready for transformation


it's time to replace all these useless tubes (good for you) the prince was absolutely the only single wish my heart made guess my wish came true... but we never really talked much before he, discovered my shoe the night after we got married i recounted all of my plights of how i fit inside a pumpkin, my canines turned to coachmen..


prince threw me in bedlam that night! the white jackets say i'm nutty (she's nutty as a bat) cause my clothes are sewn by rats (put some meds in her food) but their pills turn my brain to putty (*swish* got her) now lucifer's not just my cat (i am satan) their insulin puts me under.. shock therapy's made me insane *electricity intensifies* and after years of steady frying (bzzt, bzzt bzzt, bzzt)


the doctors gave up trying they stuck 2 steel rods in my brain *electricity wins* i spent a bloomin lifetime to open my cafe then i took a dive in 2005, now it's washed away (it's all washed away) i was picked up by a chopper after four nights on my roof now my new home is the astrodome cause new orleans ain't katrina proof


ya better carry 'round a shotgun or looters take your kids (hide your kids!) ya better pee inside of jam jars (ew) be sure to keep those lids now, nowe needed noah but we got bush our "savior" flew away and hid rough seas and levees x3 i'm dead there is no snow on the mountain tonight


just sulfur in the air... a kingdom of greenhouse gases only bill nye seems to care my town is melting, breaking off into the sea it's time i show the strength of an evil queen (of an evil queen) with germany and putin, too i'll free the penguins and throw you in a zoo we're going green by spilling red and if you're not dead


i built a horde of evil snowmen they're gonna take over the world let it snow, let it snow now fox news will need heat lamps (mother russia) let it snow, let it snow (let it snow!) i hope you concentrate in camp (heil elsa) we don't care who we have to slay (don't care) let my troops march on (the troops march on) the cold's coming back and it's here to stay


[tiana:] i sunk like a brick [cinderella:] prince thinks i'm sick [elsa:] ice is melting quick [mulan:] now i have a... lot of self esteem wah wah wah waaaahhh wah waahhhhh ~all subtitles done by dillan clair ♥


When The Levee Breaks - The Best Of

What A Difference A Day Makes

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please enjoy this is a great insght into beautiful south korea.enjoy one year ago i went on a strictly guided seven-day tour in north korea where they took away my passport and didn't allow me to explore anything on my own north korea was the weirdest country i had ever visited and throughout that trip i kept wondering what life was like in the south, becuase itsed to be the same country just over 60 years ago that is why is promised to visit south korea this year why at the end of that trip i promised myself to visit south korea this year so that i could compare my experiences in both those two countries, and that is exactly what i did during the second world war korea was under the control of japan when the war ended in


1945 the japanese forces had to leave korea and it was eventually divided into two spheres of influence the north was controlled by the soviet union and the south by the united states in 1950 a war broke out between the two koreas and it only ended in three years having claimed lives of millions of people on both sides then korea was once again split into two along the 38th parallel which is called the demilitarized zone when i was sitting on my plane to south korea it has already been over 60 years since the division and even though i knew the countries have grown apart during this time. i could never have imagined. how this they have actually my first glimpse of life in south korea was the internet international airport. it was one of the biggest airports


i had ever seen that was filled with thousands of travelers from all around the world after an hour-long ride on the metro. i finally reached my hotel which was a traditional korean house situated in the center of seoul currently half past 12:00 at night? so there's not much happening and that is why i'll go straight to that and wake up early tomorrow morning to explore as much as i can the next morning. i met up with my friend jumped on his motorbike and went for a ride around seoul it didn't take me long to understand why so was the 16th largest city in the world featured tons of high-rise buildings historic monuments construction sites and millions of cars eventually we made our way to this tiny amusement park that was situated just a few kilometers away from north korea


that is an amusement park that north korea a few meters away from the park they had the so-called freedom bridge that basically connects the two koreas and is almost never being used by train and yang the capital of north korea is only 208 kilometers away from where i am now this is the banks no one can cross because not create. they're on the other side so what can we see inside?


others there's another fence okay, so still a few kilometers until you reach north korea, but it's basically just there just one year ago i was there on the other side just a few kilometers away, and now i'm here i'm this close yet at the same time so far because it's impossible to get to the other side from here. you would have to fly to china and then the next morning it was a very fortunate to have the chance to meet john who was born and raised in north korea but escaped the country ten years ago and was now living in south korea when i asked him whether he was from pyongyang he started laughing and told me only the privileged people get to live in the capital and that it's very difficult for ordinary north koreans like him to reside there he told me he came from a little town in the north of the country he told me stories about how the people living in


that area smuggle foreign movies from china and when they watch them they think all of those things on the screen are fake the tall skyscrapers the modern cities the fancy cars and everything else meanwhile we arrived in this extremely beautiful islands called nami psalm that attracts over 1.5 million tourists every year first off we put some life vests on and hopped in a super-fun speed then we rented a tandem bicycle and went for ride around us gorgeous little it's apparently there are dozens of middle-aged people playing baseball with with a football turn ah ah she's writing that ha ha ha ah


she made it for his base ok after the game we walked back into the car and talked about how jang managed to escape from north korea told me she was led out of the country by some people smugglers who did it for a thirty thousand dollar fee that he had to be won. he reached south korea? escaping the country with extremely difficult jang had to spend three years working on a farm in china until he got all of his papers to get into south korea eventually we arrived to the garden of morning calm which was a traditional korean garden house and over?


5,000 different types of plants the park was filled with gorgeous water ponds traditional korean houses tons of visitors and a super fun bridge this bridge is variant. thank you later that evening junk. took me to a part where he said only the local people hang out being there, i couldn't stop thinking about the park i visited on my last day in north korea it also happened to be the birthday of their eternal president kim il sung you see our guides also told us that we were finally allowed to visit a part where only the local people hang out when we entered the park we were surprised to see hundreds of people dancing and seemingly having a good time that felt a little strange? to us because throughout the whole time in north korea people seemed afraid to even look at us and in this park everyone suddenly very outgoing and sociable


that's why most people on my guided tour were convinced this must have been staged and then it suddenly hit me that if jang had not escaped the country ten years ago i might have met him right there in that part where we'd be a few meters away from each other but couldn't even talk or look one another in the eye however here in the south. we're riding rico's together have an awesome lunch exploring gorgeous botanical gardens, and we're free to do whatever else. we wanted to do even something as crazy as this over the next few days i visited dozens of interesting places in seoul the first one was the largest palace in the city. that was originally built in 1395 and still looked as beautiful as ever i also visited this place called myeongdong


which is one of the most expensive shopping districts in the world that attracts millions of visitors every year? then i went to check out the famous hanok village which was over 600 years old it's a very very famous traditional, korean village where apparently the houses look exactly the same way they looked hundreds of years ago and there's so many of them the same day i made my way to the han river which was filled with thousands of people having picnics riding bicycles and marring the local street it is friday night, and there are literally hundreds of people in this park just having picnics and hanging out with their friends and the vibe is amazing. i don't know everyone's so happy and i don't know just having a great friday evening. i love it


as much as i enjoyed all of those places my favorite one was called lotta tower which was the fifth tallest building in the world so apparently this shopping mall has nine floors of luxury good. that's got the nine floors look i can see the bottom with it it's quite far eventually i found an elevator going to the top and jumped on so we're are that's the beds over son look at the building game. it's drawing the observation deck features six floors of spacious halls with incredible views of seoul and the surrounding area wow everyone's dating pictures


my last day in seoul. i met up with my korean friend kim. who are studying political science master's degree in new york. yes i rose at first stigmatise former university campus which was established in 1885 and was the oldest university in south korea being as at university brought back memories of my days in north korea where almost every day we would be taking to various schools or other learning centers and pretty much every time the students have to perform here however divide was very different students couldn't care less about a tourist visit because they were all busy studying and hanging out for their friends


later that evening kim took them to a few bars with his friends where everyone made sure i tried all the traditional food and drinks and dishes i got the next day i took advantage of the fact that i was free to travel all around the country and hopped on the same as bullet train going down to the south of south korea 285 blocks an hour welcome to the bamboo card. it's just me and millions of bamboo trees right now on all sides. oh man. this is so good then i continued my trip to a little mountain town situated next to the biggest national park in south korea there wasn't that much happening in that town, so i decided to check out the roof of my hotel. wow look at that through faked


being on that roof i couldn't stop thinking about otto warburg he was a university student from the united states who visited north korea just a few months for i visited the country myself ready all right ready to throw it at me soon what? he allegedly went to the staff only area of this hotel and tried to steal some propaganda poster that was hanging on the wall he was later discovered and sentenced to 15 years of hard labor in north korea then he reportedly fell into a coma and was released in the united states over a year later where she died just a week after returning home? autumn was exactly the same age as me and he went to north korea. almost the same time as me a year later


i was entering staff on the area of my hotel in south korea and walking a little feeling completely safe whereas he was dead for trying to steal some random poster from a staff only area the hotel early next morning i set out to hike the second tallest mountain in south korea that stands at 1900 15 meters above sea level so far kilometers away from the top but is not that little way i wasn't very lucky with the weather that day, but i couldn't care less because i was surrounded by beautiful nature being free to do whatever i wanted to do oh


oh this is it right. yeah, the summit. it's a 1950 meters above sea level yeah, we're in the cloud and i can see quite a bit of nature. it's all surrounded by gorgeous rocks that's got good back, then i visited the opal wetlands which were the biggest wetlands in the country at that park i made friends with this guy called ben who explained to me that most of their visitors would either be young school kids or elderly people no because it was difficult to make them remember the names of various


plants and animals he created over 30 different dances to help them memorize wow that's so cool haha eventually he told me we had to go dance together apparently ben has traveled all around the world he finishes masters in new york he spent six months living in australia visited london paris and quite a few others. lee ah good guy i'm very good as does with him representing, okay dancing is a smoking habit, nz something every single day that i spent in south korea i couldn't stop thinking about how weird it was


that even though just a few dozen years ago the korean people lived in the same country under the same conditions these days they were leaving such dramatically different lifestyles. i kept asking myself why the people in the north needed special permits travel in their own country and going abroad was completely impossible? while people in the south could really go to any place, they wished both inside and outside their country why was the whole power in the north concentrated in one person's hands was considered to be a god? whereas in the south people had the power to elect their own leaders and dismiss them if they didn't do a good job and why were the people in the north not allowed to freely interact and share their thoughts with me well the people in the south will do whatever the heck they wanted seeing these differences firsthand broke my heart


why has life become so different for the korean people? in just a few generations you


What A Difference A Day Makes