
1. The face of evil: Confronting the killer of 10-year-old Zahra Baker | 60 Minutes Australia
Subscribe here: 9Soci.al/chmP50wA97J Full Episodes: 9now.app.link/uNP4qBkmN6 |
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For forty years, 60 Minutes have been telling Australians the world’s greatest stories. Tales that changed history, our nation and our lives. Reporters Liz Hayes, Tom Steinfort, Tara Brown, Liam Bartlett and Sarah Abo look past the headlines because there is always a bigger picture. Sundays are for 60 Minutes.
#60MinutesAustralia
2. Mr. G's English 11B Class 03-31-2020
3. Common Lit Lesson #11
The Devil by Guy de Maupassant
4. May 10 2022 - Sims 2 - Hanging out and running a little Shop!
Broadcasted live on Twitch
Games Played:
0:00:00 The Sims 2
4:33:37 Minecraft
--Watch live at twitch.tv/drgluon
5. 19th Century Reforms: Crash Course US History #15
In which John Green teaches you about various reform movements in the 19th century United States. From Utopian societies to the Second Great Awakening to the Abolition movement, American society was undergoing great changes in the first half of the 19th century. Attempts at idealized societies popped up (and universally failed) at Utopia, OH, New Harmony, IN, Modern Times, NY, and many other places around the country. These utopians had a problem with mainstream society, and their answer was to withdraw into their own little worlds. Others didn't like the society they saw and decided to try to change it. Relatively new Protestant denominations like the Methodists and Baptists reached out to "the unchurched" during the Second Great Awakening, and membership in evangelical sects of Christianity rose quickly. At the same time, Abolitionist societies were trying to free the slaves. Americans of the 19th century had looked at the world they were living in and decided to change it.
Hey teachers and students - Check out CommonLit's free collection of reading passages and curriculum resources to learn more about the events of this episode.
Of all of the reform movements of the 1800s, few were as impactful as the movement to abolish slavery: commonlit.org/texts/the-revolutionary-rise-of-abolitionists
Women were heavily involved in the abolitionist movement and firsthand stories like freed slave Harriet Ann Jacobs' Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl were important to the cause: commonlit.org/texts/what-slaves-are-taught-to-think-of-the-north
Learn more about the abolitionist movement in Crash Course Black American History:
Maria Stewart (#14): youtu.be/nsVnWD5PrIg
Frederick Douglass (#17): youtu.be/7QOTexnD-NE
Chapters:
Introduction: Religious & Moral Reform Movements of the 19th Century 00:00
Shaker Communities 0:33
Latter Day Saints 1:21
Brook Farm 1:46
Other Utopian Communities 2:50
The 2nd Great Awakening 3:21
The Oneida Community 3:44
Values of the 2nd Great Awakening 4:25
The Temperance Movement 5:59
Asylums 7:02
Common Schools 7:29
The Abolitionist Movement 8:13
Resistance to the Abolitionist Movement 10:02
Abolitionist Writers 10:45
Mystery Document 11:40
Frederick Douglass 13:06
Credits 14:14
6. 10 3 Corruption Plagues the Nation
Next lecture in the series...a brief survey of the corruption found in politics of the Industrial Revolution.
Quizlet Vocab Terms: quizlet.com/_76oyn6
Sway Presentation Link: sway.office.com/dmJwPrm5NgZEEJyt?ref=Link
7. Whose Vote Counts (full documentary) | FRONTLINE
As America chooses its next president in the midst of a historic pandemic, FRONTLINE investigates whose vote counts — and whose might not.
Subscribe on YouTube: bit.ly/1BycsJW
In this documentary with Columbia Journalism Investigations and USA Today, New Yorker writer Jelani Cobb reports on allegations of voter disenfranchisement, how unfounded claims of extensive voter fraud entered the political mainstream, rhetoric and realities around mail-in ballots, and how the pandemic could impact turnout.
With director June Cross, the Fred W. Friendly Professor of Media and Society at Columbia, and producer Thomas Jennings, Cobb scrutinizes one of the first elections held during the pandemic — Wisconsin’s April 2020 primary, which saw long lines, claims of disenfranchisement, an unprecedented number of absentee ballots and dueling legal battles between Republicans and Democrats. The film places the election within the context of America’s history around voting rights and suppression, and discovers lessons for the country as a whole as the November presidential contest approaches.
#Election2020 #WhoseVoteCounts #Documentary
Watch "Whose Vote Counts" starting Tues., Oct. 20: to.pbs.org/3jecZef
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Twitter: twitter.com/frontlinepbs
Facebook: facebook.com/frontline
FRONTLINE is streaming more than 300 documentaries online, for free, here: to.pbs.org/hxRvQP
Funding for FRONTLINE is provided through the support of PBS viewers and by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Major funding for FRONTLINE is provided by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Ford Foundation. Additional funding is provided by the Abrams Foundation, the Park Foundation, and the FRONTLINE Journalism Fund with major support from Jon and Jo Ann Hagler on behalf of the Jon L. Hagler Foundation. Additional support for "Whose Vote Counts" is provided by the Jonathan Logan Family Foundation.
8. YOUR CHILD’S MOST ANNOYING TRAIT MAY JUST REVEAL THEIR GREATEST STRENGTHS | Josh Shipp | TEDxMarin
Those grating behaviors of your own child might just hint at their hidden talents. Author, Youth Empowerment Expert
Josh Shipp helps adults understand teens and teens understand themselves. He is the bestselling author of The Teen’s Guide to World Domination and Jump Ship, a global youth empowerment expert, and an acclaimed speaker. One of Inc. Magazine’s 30 under 30 successful entrepreneurs, he has appeared on MTV, Lifetime, the Oprah Winfrey Show, CNN, FOX, 20/20, Good Morning America, and in the New York Times and other media. A former at-risk foster kid turned youth advocate, he is renowned for his documentary TV series (A&E) that followed his groundbreaking work with teens. His organization, Kids These Days, provides resources for parents, educators, and youth workers. He lives in Los Gatos, California.
joshshipp.com
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx
9. Jan 17 2022 - It's the 1980s in the 100 baby house!
Broadcasted live on Twitch
Games Played:
0:00:00 The Sims 4
4:16:04 Eco
--Watch live at twitch.tv/drgluon
10. More Touhou A Live! [Vtuber] (Part 2)
Part 3 of my playthrough of the Touhou-themed fan sequel to Live-A-Live, Touhou-A-Live!
It's really fun and I can openly recommend it to anyone who's beaten the original!
Playlist: youtube.com/playlist?list=PLkZj_UQhorioSNCWdpNZNJ9yEWhIFxAV9
Broadcasted live on Twitch -- Watch live at twitch.tv/saralene
11. KLIP - Stations, Stations, Stations - Carter County
Stations Stations Stations
Create Challenging and Engaging Stations for ALL Learners, Standards Based Stations w/ Engagement, Student Accountability, Develop 5-6 Station Ideas and Be Ready to Go!
Teena Liles, Jared Salyers- Carter County
12. May 21 2022 - Super Duper Long Stream Shenanigans - Part 1
Broadcasted live on Twitch
Part 2: youtu.be/hOZu6Rs0pDI
Games Played:
0:00:00 The Sims 4
5:42:09 House Flipper
--Watch live at twitch.tv/drgluon
13. Get Started- Creating or Joining a class and Managing a class. (Session No 1 The 27th May 2020.)
14. Jan 10 2022 - James and Gluon Minecraft Adventures
Broadcasted live on Twitch
Games Played:
0:00:00 Minecraft
3:11:36 Eco
-- Watch live at twitch.tv/drgluon
15. Theodore Ward and the Black Arts Movement
African American dramatist Theodore Ward (1902—1983) had a complex relationship to the Black Arts Movement (BAM) of the 1960s and 1970s. He was both an influential elder to the movement, and something of an antagonist. As a playwright, Ward came of age in the 1930s and 1940s, as part of an earlier black cultural movement known as the Chicago Renaissance. He largely has been left out of American theater history and African American literary studies, primarily because of his radical politics. During the BAM years, Ward was lauded by some BAM dramatists, such as Amiri Baraka, as an important pioneer of black American theater, and his plays were revived by some of the most impactful BAM theater projects, including the Free Southern Theater in New Orleans and the South Side Center for the Performing Arts in Chicago. However, he also was dismissed as irrelevant or antagonistic by many BAM participants, especially in Chicago. He often criticized the “Black Aesthetic” being advanced by BAM artists in the period, and in turn, BAM artists—especially those in theater—criticized him for his racial politics as well as his dramatic focus on the black past, rather than the present. His relationship to BAM raises questions about the movement’s relationship to earlier cultural movements and literary generations. Michelle Y. Gordon, JWJI Visiting Fellow, examines Ward’s marginalized relationship to BAM, which provides critical insights into the dynamics of the movement itself, and also provides important lessons for scholars who seek to reconstruct or recover movement histories. (April 11, 2016)
The Race and Difference Colloquium Series is sponsored by the James Weldon Johnson Institute for the Study of Race and Difference, which supports research, teaching, and public dialogue that examine race and intersecting dimensions of human difference including but not limited to class, gender, religion, and sexuality.
jamesweldonjohnson.emory.edu