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October 29, 2011

Chonny D'Arcy and Princess CooCoo like Dogmeat

Girls by activity - Girls by Continent (really as specific as possible)

Tag Jerry Lee Lewis and Taquila Mockingbird!

Naked Store Window Bathers Video

sylvetteBlanc02
さすが実験の時代 1960~70年代

これは1968年、そりゃそうなるだろうな人(男)だかりの前でお風呂に入るInternational Cover Girl Contestで優勝したフランス人モデルのSylvette Blancさん。ロンドンにあるバスタブを取り扱うお店のプロモーションとは言え、本物が水着もなく泡々とは、ビートルズやウォーホルを生んだあの時代のテンションがここでも伝わってきますね。

クラシックなバスタブと柔らかい笑顔でエロすぎなくて、いい感じ。

ところで最後に一瞬映るスーツ姿の男性、あれ何でしょうか。微妙なとこで映像きれてて気になりまくりになるからヤメて。

さすが実験の時代 1960~70年代 これは1968年、そりゃそうなるだろうな人(男)だかりの前でお風呂に入るInternational Cover Girl Contestで優勝したフランス人モデルの Sylvette Blanc さん。ロンドンにあるバスタブを取り扱うお店のプロモーションとは言え、本物が水着もなく泡々とは、ビートルズやウォーホルを生んだ あの時代 のテンションがここでも伝わってきますね。 クラシックなバスタブと柔らかい笑顔でエロすぎなくて、いい感じ。 ところで最後に一瞬映るスーツ姿の男性、あれ何でしょうか。微妙なとこで映像きれてて気になりまくりになるからヤメて。 » 画像は ...»See Ya

Top Govlinks Today!

Top 10 Links for October 28th, 2011

Link Clicks Agency
 

NHC Satellite (Very Large)
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/mobile/sat_zoom_2/ge_gmex_loop.html

2,194 www.nhc.noaa.gov

Looking Inside Hurricane Rina : Image of the Day
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=76249

1,633 earthobservatory.nasa.gov

sc13d
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/16875/000095012311093086/y05282sc13d.htm

1,517 www.sec.gov

NASA - NPP Being Readied for Launch
http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/imagegallery/image_feature_2092.html

1,486 www.nasa.gov

NASA - Multimedia - Video Gallery
http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/videogallery/index.html?media_id=117952441

1,365 www.nasa.gov

NASA - NASA TV
http://www.nasa.gov/ntv

1,057 www.nasa.gov

NASA - NPP Launch Blog
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/NPP/launch/launch_blog.html

1,008 www.nasa.gov

Document -
http://www.weather.gov/ptwc/?region=1&id=pacific.TIBPAC.2011.10.28.1902

852 www.weather.gov

2011 Meeting Materials, Anti-Infective Drugs Advisory Committee
http://www.fda.gov/AdvisoryCommittees/CommitteesMeetingMaterials/Drugs/Anti-I...

824 www.fda.gov

Document -
http://www.weather.gov/ptwc/?region=1&id=pacific.TIBPAC.2011.10.28.1902&a...

743 www.weather.gov
View All October 28th, 2011 Links Download JSON Download CSV

Top 10 Links for October 28th, 2011 via govclicks.us ...»See Ya

You just shared a link?

September 6, 2011

You just shared a link. How long will people pay attention?

How long is a link “alive” before people stop caring? Does it matter what kind of content it is, or where you shared it? At bitly we see a lot of links, and while every link is special, we’re learning a few general principles that we can share.

Let’s take a look at one particular story - Baby otter befriended by orphaned kittens - which was first shared by StylistMagazine on Facebook on Tuesday at 7:12am.  If we plot clicks over time for this link, we see:




Rate of clicks per 10 minutes on “Baby otter befriended by orphaned kittens

We can evaluate the persistence of the link by calculating what we’re calling the half life: the amount of time at which this link will receive half of the clicks it will ever receive after it’s reached its peak. For this link the half life was 70 minutes, which captures all the clicks between the grey lines on the graph above.

Let’s look at a second link - East Coast earthquake: 5.8 magnitude epicenter hits Virginia - , this one first shared by the Washington Post on Twitter.




Rate of clicks per minute on “East Coast earthquake: 5.8 magnitude epicenter hits Virginia

While the exact details of the traffic are a little different, and the scale of the traffic to this link is much larger, we see essentially the same pattern: a fast rise, and a more relaxed drop-off. Noticeably though this link a half life of only 5 minutes: after 5 minutes this link had seen half of the clicks it would ever see.

This link is associated with a very timely event (an earthquake on the US East Coast) as opposed to the previous link (pictures of otters and kittens are clearly interesting all the time). We think that this difference in content drives the difference in dynamics of these two links. However, one alternative theory that comes up again and again is that the dynamics of the link traffic depend on where the link is posted: do links posted on facebook last longer than they do on twitter?

So we looked at the half life of 1,000 popular bitly links and the results were surprisingly similar. The mean half life of a link on twitter is 2.8 hours, on facebook it’s 3.2 hours and via ‘direct’ sources (like email or IM clients) it’s 3.4 hours. So you can expect, on average, an extra 24 minutes of attention if you post on facebook than if you post on twitter.

Distribution of half-lifes over four different referrer types. Facebook, twitter and direct link (links shared via email, instant messengers etc.) half lifes follow a strikingly similar distribution.

Not all social sites follow this pattern. The surprise in the graph above is links that originate from youtube: these links have a half life of 7.4 hours! As clickers, we remain interested in links on youtube for a much longer period of time. You can see this dramatic difference between youtube and the other platforms for sharing links in the image above.

The graph shows the distribution of half lifes for each referrer. So we’d expect to see link half lifes of less than 20K seconds (5.5 hours) for facebook, twitter and links shared directly, and we’d be very surprised to see any link maintain significant traffic for a lot longer than 60K seconds (16 hours). But for youtube, we’d be a little surprised to see half lifes of less than 5 hours!

In general, the half life of a bitly link is about 3 hours, unless you publish your links on youtube, where you can expect about 7 hours worth of attention. Many links last a lot less than 2 hours; other more sticky links last longer than 11 hours over all the referrers. This leads us to believe that the lifespan of your link is connected more to what content it points to than on where you post it: on the social web it’s all about what you share, not where you share it!

September 6, 2011 You just shared a link. How long will people pay attention? How long is a link “alive” before people stop caring? Does it matter what kind of content it is, or where you shared it? At bitly we see a lot of links, and while every link is special, we’re learning a few general princip ...»See Ya

Miss Asnatch

October 28, 2011

Jimi Hendrix First TV Appearance 1965 Views: 13,808

   
Added: 9 months ago
From: gaejangguk
Views: 13,808
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  • i hadn't noticed he was playing a jag, and frankly can't believe it. i'm going back in to watch. wait which one is he again? hahahhaahaha.

    Black_heart_suit
    next guy who points the arrow fuckup out gets it removed for everyone
    Er
    Entprovoca

  • playing a Jaguar, like Kurt later...

  • AWESOME ! Very Horny Experience across the board.....Jimmy ~

  • that Was not Jimmy, jimmy is two guys to the left, playing lefty

  • Know how to spell his name?

  • ive never thought "skinny jeans" existed way back!

  • Yes. Jimi is the left-hand player. Can't believe the fool got that wrong.

  • @aristotle358 DEAR dickhead; i did you the service of uploading it i didn't bother to correct the filmmakers obvious mistake. i assure you that he and I and everyone else on this thread know who the fuck Jimi Hendrix is, but that those same people had not seen this clip. go back to criticizing your mom's cooking and fuck off of this and every other video with adults who don't want to read teenage bullshit

  • Dear! Gay or not, they sing and dance so well as to leave all others behind!

  • Wow that was gay.

  • Jimi is playing a Jazzmaster, actually. And these guys have some "jazz hands"

  • that is not jimi hendrix he is not next to the saxaphone player and that guy is playing the guitar right handed

  • after seeing this lucky jim saved music with voodoo child and what not!

  • I think this is from a Nashville TV station--WSM. Jimi had just been discharged from the 101st Airborne and he was living in Nashville in those days.

  • @JimBrinkley1 bingo

    

  • Excellent, TY!

  • man, they are "light on their feet!"

  • Did anyone notice the star looking design right behind hendrix?! And the three looking figures pointing at him kind of?! Cool. He soon was a star!

  • Hendrix in the background doing what he does best, playing the shit out of a guitar.

  • Yeah,

    Jimi is obviously the far left one. Look at the way he's going with his hand above his neck and doing some totally different stuff than the others haha.

    And h's left handed off couse!

  • how can you be so fucking gay?

  • @Hawolation finally a guy who knows. i agree that stacy and whatshisface are the gayest performers I have ever seen!!!

    Gaejangguk 개장국 Boshintang 보신탕 mrjyn dogmeat "dog meat" "traci lords" cicciolina cynophagie

  • @gaejangguk the guy you pointed to in the beginning was not jimi, jimi played left hand and that guy was playing righty, the guy on the far left was jimi.

  • @jroxx11211 Good call, I was wondering about that!

  • @esslar1 thanks, if you look close you can see its definitely jimi playin left handed all the way on the left side, ROCK ON!!!

  • @Hawolation i give buddy and stacy two snaps up for being such well dressed mens

  • the picture that points out who jimi is is wrong. he is on the far right in the line of guitar/brass players

  • @sublime88sublime far left, sorry

  • @sublime88sublime goddamnit we know. i'll just remove it if that's all you can pick out from this monument

  • i dont believe the still picture is JH, cuz Jimi is left handed and the guitarist is right.

  • @sosidecop64 he is playing a fender jaguar flipped over to a lefty setup

    Jimi Hendrix First TV Appearance 1965 2:50 Added: 9 months ago From: gaejangguk Views: 13,808 Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta) see all All Comments (31) Respond to this video... characters remaining OK Cancel or or Create a video response i hadn't noticed he was playing a jag, and frankly c ...»See Ya

Not much i wouldn't do for a Better Version of Apple

Many of the Coats of Arms of the Russian nobility include the ciphers of sovereigns and charges taken from the Arms of the Romanov emperors. One of the most augmented Coat of Arms of all time were those of Count Alexander Suvorov-Ryminsky, commander of the Russian Armies, whose brilliant strategies helped bring about the eventual defeat of Napoleon. As commander-in-chief of the Russo-Austrian Army during the Second Coalition, he drove the French out of northern Italy in 1799 and was created Prince Italiysky. He had also previously defeated a Turkish Army on the banks of the River Rymnik in Turkey in 1789. The augmentations on his Coat of Arms included a rendering of the map of Italy, an escutcheon (small shield) bearing the name of Emperor Paul I, and two lightening bolts issuing from thunder-clouds striking a crescent reversed above a river in bend inscribed R Rymnik . His services to the Russian nation were commemorated not only by an imperial decoration, but also by the Soviet Union. In Germany the emperors made full use of the Prussian eagle, often as supporters at the side of the shield, in augmentations to those who had helped them in their rise to power. Alexander von Schleinitz, Prussian Foreign Minister, received supporters to his Coat of Arms of two Prussian eagles charged on the breast with the Arms of Hohenzollern. Otto, Prince Bismarck, who brought about German unification, was granted a Prussian eagle (black) and a Brandenburg eagle (red) as supporters. They supported two armorial bearings, those of Alsace and Lorraine, the territories regained from France in 1870.

In the late 18th and early 19th centuries Heraldry in most European countries was in a state of decay. The augmentations granted to the military and naval heroes in Britain were typical of the period being overly bombastic and frequently too detailed to be legible on a typical Coat of Arms. The Arms of Rear Admiral Sir Charles Brisbane included “a chief thereon on waves of the sea a ship of war under sail between two forts, the guns firing and on the battlements the Dutch flag all proper”. Colonel James Stevenson-Barnes had a canton charged with his gold cross and the Portuguese Order of the Tower and Sword; his Arms also included a chief bearing a curtain of fortification and the name St. Sebastian. Medals and decorations remained in vogue as augmentations to Coats of Arms well into the 20th century. On May 2nd 1918 the Finnish city of Vaasa was informed that “To commemorate the time when Vaasa as the temporary capital was the heart of the liberation of Finland from Russia, the Senate have decided to give the city the right to add the Cross of Liberty to its Coat of Arms”. Another city in Finland, Mikkeli, housed the headquarters of Marshal Mannerheim’s army, ands on December 21st 1944 the medal of the Cross of Liberty was suspended from its shield. This was the second augmentation given to Mikkeli, in 1942 it was granted a pair of crossed marshal’s batons.
http://www.facebook.com/notes/doug-meet/frightening-facebook-folderol-hateboo...

via youtube.com Many of the Coats of Arms of the Russian nobility include the ciphers of sovereigns and charges taken from the Arms of the Romanov emperors. One of the most augmented Coat of Arms of all time were those of Count Alexander Suvorov-Ryminsky, commander of the Russian Armies, whose brill ...»See Ya

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