Before And After Pictures of Being Called a Good Boy
Your pet knows your voice. And they especially know your voice when you say the magic words “Good Boy!” Scroll down to see the proof!
In memory -- claimed by COVID-19 last week, but to be remembered through a most resonant gift...
In the short documentary “Joe’s Violin,” a Holocaust survivor donates his violin to a local instrument drive, changing the life of a schoolgirl from the nation’s poorest congressional district.
A short film by Stephen Reynolds of the NYC shutdown during the Covid-19 outbreak
Music by Gavin Luke Music Opening percussions: William Ruiz
Scientists Discover That Trees Have A "Heartbeat"
There is a huge number of living things on Earth, all with their own set of characteristics and unique ways of life. All the way from the smallest ants, up to the huge giraffes and elephants, one thing that everyone has in common is that they are alive! One type of living organism is plants and trees. While they may not walk around like other organisms, or have a kidney and liver, they do actually have their own set of organs, so to speak.
The Secret Heartbeat While a tree definitely doesn't have a heart, the idea that they have their own beat and sense of rhythm isn't as far fetched as many people think. According to a study which was headed by András Zlinszky, Bence Molnár and Anders S. Barfod from Hungary and Denmark, trees do in fact have a special type of beat within them which resembles that of a heartbeat. Who would have known? To find this hidden heartbeat, the researchers used advanced monitoring techniques known as terrestrial laser scanning to survey the movement of twenty two different types of trees. The results shocked everyone and revealed that at night, while the trees were sleeping, they often had a beat pulsating throughout their body, just as humans, and other living creatures do too.
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It Is Spring and the Tulips Are in Bloom and The World is Still Beautiful! Happy Easter!
Tulip fields in Plomeur, western France on the twenty-third day of a nationwide lockdown. DAMIEN MEYER/AFP via Getty Images |
Tulips bloom in the Keukenhof flower garden in Lisse, Netherlands, which is closed because of the coronavirus. Patrick van Katwijk/Getty Images |
People visit an ecological garden to enjoy the tulips in Zaozhuang City, Shandong Province, China. Costfoto/Barcroft Media via Getty Images |
Tulips in bloom at the Virginia State Capitol in Richmond. AP Photo/Steve Helber |
Tulips bloom in the Keukenhof flower garden in Lisse, Netherlands. Patrick van Katwijk/Getty Images |
Intensity Graph From Writing Treatments That Sell
“Rising and falling action” is a literal, not a metaphorical, description of strong dramatic structure. Here’s the way we showed it in Writing Treatments That Sell.
1. First, make a list of the primary scenes (shown here as page numbers in a screenplay) in your story.
2. Then draw a line ending with an à to rate the intensity of each scene on a scale of 1 to 5, 1 being least intense, and 5 being most intense.
3. Then connect the arrowheads.
4. Turn the graph on its side—and you will see what we call the “Rollercoaster graph” that shows the “rising and falling action” of your story.
If the graph doesn’t resemble an exciting roller coaster, replace and reshuffle scenes until it does!
1. First, make a list of the primary scenes (shown here as page numbers in a screenplay) in your story.
2. Then draw a line ending with an à to rate the intensity of each scene on a scale of 1 to 5, 1 being least intense, and 5 being most intense.
3. Then connect the arrowheads.
4. Turn the graph on its side—and you will see what we call the “Rollercoaster graph” that shows the “rising and falling action” of your story.
If the graph doesn’t resemble an exciting roller coaster, replace and reshuffle scenes until it does!
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