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tv   Gaddafi Rendition The West  Al Jazeera  October 18, 2018 4:00am-5:00am +03

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of so i think it was a bit of we are going to wait and see we're not listening to you we have not made our judgment yet so what will the judgment be eventually there are three possible scenarios scenario number one is that trump and pompei zero will stand behind crown prince mohammed beside him and his father the king because they place their bets on them for the last one two years even three years in terms of the united states and i think they want to continue to do that especially that they have asserted j. against iran and saudi arabia is one of the pillars they want to sow them arms and they are the biggest importers of arms from the united states there is oil there are economic interests and we know that the american presidents prefers money to human rights the second scenario which i think is probably more likely is that they will continue to support the regime in saudi arabia but they will give it some time until they go through the mid-term elections so as not to do it and the crisis is they will give the saudis a bit of time to clean their own house from within if possible but when the time
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comes within weeks or months they would clip that wings of the crown prince they would contain him they would make sure he would not do anything reckless in the future that's not to their liking meaning no more launching a war in a neighboring country without american green light no more and many faction ring of the diplomatic crisis with the likes of qatar and kind of that without american green light and so on so for the third the last scenario is we're going have to wait and see because we don't know what's coming if any of the gruesome. scenes that are now being weird tall are recorded by the turks of what happened inside the consulate what exactly happened. if any of the gruesome details and i'm not going to recount any of them now are true then president trump knows he has no other way but to do something about it but if there are nordic or those coming out of the americans can contain the turks if they can work out
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a deal and this crisis does not continue to snowball and the next few weeks there will act accordingly they are going to keep their options open we don't know what you're one of the thieves in our ears will probably be most likely thank you very much. so. border crossing is reopening between syria and its neighbors promising a boost for trade on two years of war it doesn't reflect the political reality. of afghan politician is killed by a targeted bomb blast as the taliban ratchet up attacks disrupt this weekend's election. how are the weather is fine and dry across many parts of central and eastern europe last the clear skies as you can see deal with the rain in hungary having said that
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the river danube at record low levels for this time of the year further west we have some more fun beheads a rumbling away across that western side of the mediterranean we are going to see further showers coming back into malta easing up towards the corsica and the ericsson really heavy rain coming in across the the costers pushing into the eastern side of spain it is a loss of weather there for thursday going on into friday fabulous spain seeing some rather wet weather at this stage further north there we go with that fabulous sunshine twenty celsius in paris not too bad sixteen in london is not too bad actually down towards the southeast we could touch twenty three in bucharest some assumptions for athens a little bit of cloud here lots of dry weather meanwhile across the northern parts of africa until we get to the far north of tunisia easing across the but it's right near coastal fringes of algeria and back across the into northern parts of morocco very heavy downpours here over the next couple of days flooding is certainly likely
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for a time dry weather does come back in behind by friday about where the top temperature of eighteen. whether online for humanity has been taken out of its goals of this would hold you down. or if you joined us on set i guarantee no one else has a back story like yours this is a dialogue i'm just tired of seeing the negative stereotypes about native americans everyone has a voice resurfacing that's your comments your questions i'll do my best to bring them into the cell join the global conversation on how to zero.
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in on the top stories here on jazeera turkey's team of investigators have finally entered the saudi council's residence in istanbul the day after they were denied access comes as u.s. president donald trump calls access to video and audio evidence from turkey. turkish sources have told al-jazeera a bodyguard working for the saudi crown prince led the operation against jamal khashoggi. trip apparently made nineteen phone calls with saudi officials on october the second the day the veteran journalist went missing. there's now just over two weeks since jamal khashoggi was last seen his nor a bad manly with a timeline of a key event since then. jamal khashoggi visited the saudi consulate in istanbul on october the second as he collected documents to get married it was the last time the saudi journalist was seen alive his fiance had t.j.
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shinji says she waited outside for him into the night but she never saw him again while saudi officials confirmed his disappearance the next day they said he left the consulate but they didn't provide any proof turkish security sources say they have information he was tortured and killed inside while saudi arabia cause it all baseless lies and in interview with bloomberg crown prince mohammed bin some months said enter the concerts but left a little later and didn't return to riyadh he said turkey could inspect the consulate any time but investigators want allowed in for another two weeks while turkish media publish the names and movements of what it calls a saudi security squad that landed in is some go on board to private jets on the same day because shock she disappears where u.s. media says at least for the suspects have ties to the saudi crown prince and saudi
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king salmon spoke to the text present russian type two on that monday a joint turkish and saudi investigation team searched the consulate and hours later turkish investigators say the shock she was killed without being interrogated and his body was dismembered while the u.s. president spoke with saudi crown prince about the missing journalists donald trump said the prince denied any knowledge of what took place the day the shock she vanished and u.s. secretary of state might compare flew to riyadh to meet king solomon and his heir apparent promise to carry out a transparent investigation and police hope to find more evidence in the saudi consul general home to unlock the shock she's mystery disappearance. british prime minister to resign may has addressed the other twenty seven european union leaders in brussels at the start of a two day summit that will be dominated by brics it. may had private meetings with
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the european commission president. european council president donald tusk and irish prime minister there veronica the u.k. is due to leave the e.u. in march and negotiations over a deal stalled once again over the weekend. what we've seen is that we've solved most of the issues in withdrawal agreements there are still three still questions the northern irish facts start but i believe everybody around the table wants to get a deal done by working intensively and closely we can achieve i believe a deal physically from now is the time to make it happen our correspondent jonah howell is following events in brussels generated series may have anything new to offer headrest e.u. leaders. modi says a deal is doable and now is the time i hasten to add not tonight or tomorrow to resume a spoke to the leaders for half an hour before they went into dinner about an hour or so ago she wasn't invited to that today she's had to find in elsewhere in
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brussels we heard a short while ago from the president of the parliament antonio to johnny who said that while there was a greater degree of you of goodwill in that room and there's been in recent meetings there was still nothing substantially new from the british prime minister that despite calls ahead of this summit for a fresh new thinking imaginative ideas concrete new proposals from the british they got none of that from to resume a why well because her position has been made plainly clear this week backed by a very fragile unity in her extremely divided cabinet she really can't move very much from it she has rejected the use plan for this contentious issue of the backstop the insurance policy against the border being re erected on the island of ireland they want to see northern ireland a british territory stay within the structures for perhaps years to come while a trade deal is negotiated she says she can't stand for that she's counter proposed that the whole u.k. stay in but for a time limited period only the e.u.
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says well that's a temporary insurance policy that's no good to us they insist on the northern ireland plan staying in place the reason may there's a deal can be done but frankly on the question of the irish border they are still miles apart it's a given all that how are the e.u. . it is likely to respond. with a question they'll be discussing over dinner is whether or not to offer britain another summit of leaders in november one has been pencilled already in other words whether enough progress has been made for their realistically to be a chance of gathering all these leaders together again in a month's time for a deal to be struck listening to them coming in some expressed cautious optimism that that might be a possibility they may push for that others openly pessimistic saying she's an unreliable negotiating partner she's politically weak mrs may they talk up the prospect of a no deal with everything from visa travel for a british passport holders to the long and difficult queues at borders there may be
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a push now to stretch things out this far as they possibly can to perhaps the end of december a five to midnight deal which is often the case here in the e.u. that would put maximum pressure on the u.k. the message would be we won't meet again until we've got a deal to discuss or there be no deal at all jane hall thank you very much indeed. at least nineteen people have died after an explosion and shooting at a school in crimea russian investigators say an eighteen year old student went on a shooting spree before taking his own life steps and has more from moscow. panic in crimea as the bomb exploded in a school in the most eastern city of here. ambulances and military trucks rushed to the scene among the dead many teenagers dozens of students in the vocational training school suffered injuries they were taken to hospitals in both crimea and russia the two story school is happily damaged
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a gas explosion was initially thought to have caused the blast but it soon became clear it wasn't an accident investigators say the bomb exploded in the canteen and the gunmen walked around the school with a rifle shooting everyone he saw then police found the body of an eighteen year old student in the school library they say he shot himself and consider him to be the only attacker your future religious symbolism in years it is already clear that this is a crime motives and versions of this tragedy of being carefully investigated russian president putin held a minute of silence for the victims after his meeting with egyptian president sisi in sochi put in recently opened a new bridge which connects russia with crimea the peninsula was annexed from ukraine by russian troops four years ago and the violence in crimea has the potential to escalate simmering tensions between the russians and ukrainians
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there's been an outpouring of sympathy for the victims of the school attack here in moscow russians are laying flowers at the memorial near the kremlin mourners are asking what brought a young student to commit such a bloody attack step fasten al-jazeera moscow now i want to apologize for something that appeared on our screen earlier we mistakenly identified the shooter as an eighteen year old. off actually an off is of course the head of the republic of crimea he is not a shooter and we apologize. the u.n. special envoy for syria has told the security council he will step down from the role next month staffan de mistura has spent years mediating between the syrian government and rebel groups seventy one year old told the council he's moving on for personal reasons several border crossings between syria and neighboring countries have reopened in the past week easing years of political and economic isolation for the country on monday than
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a crossing with jordan open for the first time in three years it's a vital trade route across syria from lebanon and jordan ports syria had only one land crossing during the war and that was to lebanon things are now changing for both countries. for the first time in hears lebanese produce will be able to reach far off markets in the gulf thanks to the reopening of the border crossing between syria and jordan syria is trying to reestablish its role as a regional transit hub. syria wants to end the siege imposed on it what we're seeing is the beginning of the end of its isolation in our world there is recognition that bashar al assad is staying in power the resumption of trade between jordan and syria doesn't just improve the economies of both countries it is a step towards normalizing relations after years of tension u.n. peacekeepers have also returned to patrol the demilitarized zone with israeli
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occupied syrian golan heights and syria and iraq are planning to reopen their borders following the defeat of eisel in the region government leaders in baghdad who did break ties with damascus say syria shouldn't be marginalized and it must return to the arab fault. that the free syria is not an intruder in the arab league syria should not be marginalized and nobody can marginalize it that. but many arab states remain hostile to president bashar assad and the government leaders may have withdrawn much of their support to the rebellion but are weary of iran's influence i think for. the conflict it's now. whether bashar assad would stay afloat or not. how much into the weekend how big the future of syria the syrian leadership are celebrating the reopening of borders as a sign of victory in the war as well as stability but that narrative doesn't reflect the whole reality russia says the international community is no longer
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focusing on making syrian president bashar assad leave power but the west is demanding what it calls a credible peace process that will lead to free elections and until that happens it is withholding much needed money for reconstruction. the united states is even threatening what it calls a strategy of isolation if syria doesn't cooperate on a settlement of the war the reopening of borders is a step towards ending syria's economic isolation but a longer road lies ahead to international legitimacy. israeli airstrikes have targeted twenty sites in the gaza strip killing at least one palestinian the israeli military says the strikes were in response to earlier rocket fire which struck a house in southern israel but how must which controls gaza distanced itself from the attack it says the rockets were an irresponsible attempt to undermine egyptian
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efforts to broker a truce. a bomb attack in afghanistan has killed another candidate in saturday's election the blast was in the southern province of helmand the taliban have claimed responsibility and us threatening to target polling stations and security forces and these ten candidates already been killed during campaigning reports from kabul . crumbing was killed inside his a literal office and lashkar gah helmand province this morning a bomb was planted and a huge cheer eight people were wounded in the attack three people died later of the injuries the taliban took responsibility for this attack they had warned they would do this ahead of the elections and on election day the parliamentary elections here on saturday if you die in the blast it was a very well known politician here in afghanistan a former military general who had been a politician here ever since the fall of the taliban in two thousand and one he had
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worked in helmand for the last three years he was determined that they were just it wouldn't be a fight a military fight between the government the taliban he wanted to speak to them he wanted to negotiate and people called him a dream and yet he continues this morning people who had a lot of supporters a lot of people would have voted for him on saturday but a tsunami and karama in which in diary means champion or here and for a lot of people here this morning his surname. quick reminder you can always catch up with all the news on our website the rest of that is al-jazeera dot com. reminding our top stories here are just turkey's team of investigators a family and to the saudi council's residence in istanbul a day after they were denied access they're hoping a search of the site which is near the consulate will provide answers as to what
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may have happened to a saudi journalist jamal khashoggi he was last seen entering the consulate on october the second and has not been seen since and the u.s. president has called for access to video and audio evidence that turkey claims it has against saudi arabia. turkish sources have told understeer a bodyguard working for the saudi crown prince led the operation against khashoggi by her abdul aziz mitra has been photographed on a number of occasions with mohamed bin so much on the trigger apparently made nineteen phone calls to saudi officials on october the said second of the day khashoggi went missing for those where with bin salmond's private secretary the british prime minister has addressed the other twenty seven european union leaders in brussels at the start of a two day e.u. summit that will be dominated by brics it earlier to reason may held private meetings with the european commission president and the european council president as well as the irish prime minister u.k. is due to leave the in march but negotiations over
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a potential hard border in our land are proving to be a sticking point for what we've seen is that we've solved most of the season with strong agreements there are still very strong questions in northern irish truckstop but i believe everybody around the table wants to get a deal. by working intensively and closely we can achieve that deal i believe a deal is achieved now is the time to make it happen at least one thousand people mostly teenagers have been killed in an explosion and shooting at a school in crimea russian investigators say the attack at couch polytechnic was an act of mass murder not terrorism as say an eighteen year old went on a shooting spree in the school before killing himself the un special envoy for syria has told the security council he will step down from his role next month citing personal reasons staffan de mistura has spent more than four years mediating between the syrian government and rebel groups there's
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a top stories to stay with us and i was their next stop it's the stream more news for you after that folks watching. oh no my name. who expose her had. an. r. and. r. in. the strain.
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feeling anything yet you are going to need a pair of really good headphones for today show for me ok today we are diving into the world of autonomous sensory meridian response or a s m r now the term is used to describe the sensation people feel when they watch certain types of stimulating videos so do you find the sound of whispers soothing desisting to someone crying call wrapping paper lol you like a lullaby if so you're probably one of the millions of people poring through a s m r videos on you tube but is there more to it than brain tingles joining us to talk about this in singapore melinda lauer she's the co-creator and artistic director of whisper large an immersive spiral for the senses in new york comedian and a s m r enthusiastically glaser in the studio we have craig richard he's professor of biopharmaceutical sciences and shenandoah university you also founded the n.a.s. m.r.
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university and that was in an effort to encourage research and in london you've already seen or heard or emma smith is an a.o.s. m.r. artist so low everybody's good to have you here emma and the people watching the show the vote on the show will be thinking what is going on here explain answer. a tingling sensation it's very relaxing it usually begins in the crown of your head and works its way down the back of your head down your spine often through your limbs it's tricky. by certain sounds soft. someone playing with your hair during letters on your back. but ultimately the best way to describe it is that it's an extremely relaxing calming feeling and i make videos on you tube along with lots and lots of other people we use different sounds and our voices to to get that feeling in
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the viewer and people who are experienced so calm that they're able to fall asleep that they're able to feel happy and rested and all kinds of different things that people are using the videos for so many different things m a u s m r ring us right now are you doing it on us right now i think you might yes you are. let me share this with you this i'm falling asleep yes but for good reason stay with us here as you know what to say yes exactly is that tim lewis on twitter because i was talking about quiet what we were doing today and i said this is a s.m.r. and tim says i had to google i had no idea what this is it's quite new in terms of giving it a name you know it yeah the name didn't get created until two thousand and ten before that it was referred to as brain orgasm right some people were uncomfortable
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talking about again because i want everyone to hear this that it used to be more so known as a brain orgasm so before two thousand and ten that's what people called it but jennifer allen decided in two thousand and ten that she and others were not comfortable falling to it as a brain orgasm or what is just more so a very deeply relaxing experience so she gave it this more clinical sounding name of autonomy a century meridien response and as a researcher i super appreciate them because when i go to research conferences and i share data about as some are it's much easier for me to submit my abstract to a scientific community and have a have the words are taught in a century meridian response and instead of brain or gas although it might get more red if it was caused by the hormone named true i would get more people reading my papers looking at how that how did you find a s.m.r. . it's funny because i guess i found it right when it was quiet and because i was just one night i just stumbled upon a video of
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a foot being massaged and i really wanted a foot massage at the moment and just watching it gave me the feeling that maybe my foot was being massaged but then i just started getting this feeling that i had fell out my childhood that very pivotal moments where i just felt it's what has been described this extreme position that starts in the crown of your head and it goes down your spine and all this and i was like oh my god it's happening and i'm making it happen and then i just started going down this wormhole of massage videos and then you eventually start to see if the mark i'm up in the titles and i was like what that and then it turned it over to the whole world. yes it's and that's how people stumble across it they start searching for something relaxing and then they end up coming across this what is this some are and they find all these videos and once you start with one it's like the chip thing once you start with one you have to try another one you have to try another one and it's great because there's such a diversity of videos that if you don't like the first one or the second one you
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just keep trying more because there's thousands of artists who are each creating hundreds of videos i'm looking at something called the whisper. which is a sensor response which i have never heard of a million to can explain what he is what he's doing sure so we are in my safe performance company and i have always had yes m.r.s. so it was such a pleasure for me to hear kind of combine both of my interest in create a brand that essentially. is and. foremost is and i got it and guess sort of like. as he could have guests coming through this center. it's great what melinda does because most of us first experience very smart unintentionally like say it's from a hairdresser or the attention of a teacher some of us personal attention but what melinda has created is intentional
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as some are so it's like if you want to go and get a massage you go to a professional ms soups if you want the world's best a smart experience in person with someone you're not going to ask your teacher or your hairdresser to give you that experience you're going to go to a place like melinda offers for intentional it's more sessions right and it's really amazing as well i've been there myself and melinda this is just all my goodness she's got the most beautiful car a little guy and. she went into her room her experience and she was doing what we would normally do in a video but to my face which was really a different experience for me and she just got very simply got a cotton bud and started running it over the top of my and talking to me and it was so nurturing and so lovely. i want to do it all again but yes she
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is fantastic i remember that and even years for her. own children well a lot of what we do is like. so much influenced by what you guys do. and how we develop them in person practice is basically by studying what. i said doing and then trying to translate that into something tangible yeah and it works it works really well let's not wait to do it people myself you have story a time where you like flip through because i'm always watching people watching me like reading through magazines very delicately and that if there is there's something like that you're far. well not currently but we do have a theme that we called the aa is that you there's all kinds of paper and packaging which. we do some charcoal drawing and i remember that the beauty of.
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the extent of so many eggs are much bigger without their glory so i guess i want our audience watching this to work out do they have so intricate as that means that they can actually enjoy this experience so craig you put together certain sounds that may well be triggers let's have a listen to some of them. it . so.
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craig was we know about the science if there's not a lot yet known for the science the first publication science publication came out in twenty fifteen so we're only three years deeper into the publication world what we do know is that whenever people are surveyed why do you enjoy some are their number one response is they find it relaxing their number two response is it helps them to fall asleep and that is consistent all the research studies so far and we also have seen with some m.r.i. studies that there appear to be some differences in the brains of individuals who can and can experience i've got some pictures here and you can help me with this this first picture what are we looking at right now. this is an m.r.i. study that was just published by bryson locked myself and some other investigators
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right and we had some people watch a some are videos they select to be a small videos that stimulate their areas tomorrow the strongest and then we captured brain images right while they were experiencing and some are to see what areas of the brain are activated i'm going to take to another image and this is people at sleeping activated by a.s.m. so what do what will the only engine the yellow dots what are they those are areas in the brain that are having more activity during the moments of a as some are so by doing those brain images that allows us to look at well what are these brain which is what do they have to do with human behavior and what we show in the paper is the brain areas that are active. are very similar to the brain areas that would be activated if you were to think about someone who you care about or who cares about you right someone was to play with your hair or to give you like a grooming experience of any kind we have certain areas of our brain that are activated during those interpersonal bonding moment you know that even though
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research is only a couple of years out you're certain of this so far so good right there's no there's no such thing in science as conclusive evidence there's only supportive evidence and so par so. this fits the target patterns what we see interpersonal connections being made between people there's partly we've also had another paper published as well in sheffield in this country that was published earlier on this year wasn't it and that that showed that the heart rate decreases considerably in people that watch videos and experiences some are much in the same way that meditation does so some people say to me when they're trying to understand what i assume are is they say to me war is a sexual thing and now i'm able to say to them well actually we've had research published now to say that the heart rate lowers so that's a really nice thing to be able to say because it's been
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a lot of years when we haven't really had that much research so now we have three papers and it's so emma this was the eight hundred pound very quietly spoken gorilla in the room for me because i've been watching some of your videos and your videos are beautiful but when i see them you're hot mama i'm not going to camp here right let me just say let me just play one and then you can then continue to tell me how this is not sexy let's have a look. are you ready. so
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you're telling me this is not sexy all sense us because it's not affecting the illusion it's part of the brain quake right you don't depend on the viewers moment if you're already in a sexually aroused state then maybe that will be but if you're visualizing there is maybe you're sick or maybe you're just looking for some personal attention then what you're going to feel is someone who's caring for you're going to feel that moment of how it's just someone giving you positive personal attention rather than it being sexually arousing and we've had research that does support that shows that the majority of people who are watching videos ninety eight percent say they feel relaxed eighty two percent say it helps them fall asleep only five percent say that they feel sexually aroused during the video and that may be more about how they feel at the moment than all the intent of the video so i'm getting some live comments from people watching on you tube including the piano haven it definitely helps me relax before i sleep and like it goes indeed. just intentionally getting
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the soothing feeling you get when you listen to comforting music and so forces from people like bob ross. over us ok nikki what do you get out of listening to s.m.r. and then i'll find the picture i've got a boss who is a famous american painter go ahead tell it can explain describe. i just feel i do feel nurtured i just feel safe and call me and i meditate but it even a deeper feeling than that and it's just it's one of the greatest feelings in the world and i feel like so lucky that i can add it i mean it stands out to me as a child when it was brought on to me i felt it honestly felt very indecent because it felt so good i think it didn't feel sexually bad but it felt so pleasurable that
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it felt naughty to have this kind of pleasure in public so it would happen in my classroom the teacher was reading a book and it. freaked out and then it was women's voices always brought it on for me so then i was like am i gay for a while it caused me to have kind of a identity crisis and so when i found out and some are community i have to say i was like you know not that i don't want to be gay it was just like oh this isn't something to be ashamed of this is something that happened that ever really one not just me and it's not sexual i because i don't i know the difference and it's not sexual i trust you soumillon says among just it is on you tube. right now so the man is saying the tingles i can't feel the tingles you'll do in performance a.s.m. ah this is going to be important to you is some people going to a show and they still nothing do you give them the money back. and was not impressed. what we found is that people who don't
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experience if they find it incredible the thought is well for i think if i were to simplify it down to the main effect. it's the feeling of being taken care of and then not you have that angle well we get to you because it involves so much personal attention and you just being seen and you feel like someone is actually. being present with you and that is something that's just universally enjoyable. and i don't know that they're going. with the heart rate reduction yes. that was a great study because it did show that when people watch it from our videos their heart rate goes down if their spirits are some are what the study also showed is that the people who don't normally experience as some are their heart rate also went down so you may not feel the tingles necessarily you may not feel the main signature but you still can feel relaxed even if you're not feeling what we
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consider that strong brain tingling experience because i have to guess the watch it was just a fail relaxed rather than the tingles they still hope people to relax and fall asleep quickly just by listening to the soft sounds in the voices you don't have to feel a tingling sensation just a nice calming feeling and it's enough i'm looking here at c r m r n who sent us this tweet she talks about a seminar relaxing her and she says i have a lot of hectic energy in my day it's almost meditative to sit and do nothing while listening to a s m r videos and i actually only follow one a s m r artists gentle whisper and i wouldn't touch a gentle whisper and if you're wondering what gentle whisper in is like you don't have to wonder for a much longer have a look just start. so. you know i see them and.
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you know. me you. and your hand. other zero never be the same again. it was watching a maria gentle whisper in the video early on when i first discovered s m r that made me understand probably what is the origin of a smart right because i was watching one of her videos just like there and are suddenly had this feeling this is what an infant must feel like when their parent is soothing them the worst the light touching the gentle voice the caring disposition and it made me think well that's probably the origin we're probably are born to be soothed by those gentle sound those gentlewoman's because that
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communicates to us as an infant who doesn't know a lot of information this person is someone we can trust this is someone we can feel relaxed with and i think it's something we just carry as we get older even if you don't feel the tangles yeah all those behaviors are behaviors that do relax people whether you meet a stranger somewhere here or it's a friend and you say are this is someone i feel come for out it's the same exact kind of experience getting this isn't live on the i have to say this conversation is creating some some live comments coming in right now this is coming in from facebook this is to be here in sri lanka i was having a s.m.r. since i was a little kid it's to your point but only now have i learned what it is it was because of this i became very fond of music and i'm also wondering. about how lucrative this is this is a business for you. and i started doing this as my full time job just
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last year and i've been doing it for five years so it took me a long time to build just a you tube channel that was earning enough so that i could earn a living it's never been about earning a living. it's it's who i am it's kind of five finally found my purpose in life and in a way i'm so passionate about it and it's something that reaches out to so many people i have my world is so be now. and i connect with people all over the world i mean it's just incredible and i just feel so lucky that now i can even earn money from it that's just crazy. so yeah you know would never say to anyone starting and i assume our channel if you want to get rich is huge here because you tube is a strange place anyway and it's very difficult to grow a channel and everything it's just more about being a part of a community it's about developing skills i didn't know how to edit videos before i
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started doing this or work microphones and everything so it's been a very big learning curve but mostly it's been about connecting with people and widening my worldview. just just learning that were all very similar and we're all very sensitive and this incredible experiences it's an incredible community the community to be a part of as well but it was the most positive aspect of a s.m.r. that you've seen as you've been doing your work in terms of the performance part of a.s.m. are you doing for people. i guess providing intimacy to a lot of people and that intimacy is not just what you get and unless. it's in that sense of connection but it's also physical touch and the net so. uniquely to be inside my community that when i am going to brescia ham and actually brushing your
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hair. and just kind of combining. that physical pain these we. performative with yuckiness in our. editors used a great word intimacy and that is a term a lot of people will use and experience people feel even nicky's description that she had what she described is intimacy and it it feels strange to experience that with a stranger someone you just met whether it's at whisper large or someone who's a stranger in a video and so people do have a lot of discord with that of why am i suddenly feeling very comfy with someone i don't even know and that's because our brains just seem to be hardwired that when someone acts in a gentle caring way to us our brain lets that in and that's the feeling relaxation but it's also feeling the intimacy that when you first experience it like nikki described it may not be comfortable i've been in committee meetings at my diversity
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hearing and there's and there's someone whose voice just will trigger it and all sudden in the middle of this committee meeting i'm getting sleepy i'm getting drowsing like this is a bad time for areas to monitor meetings like that see what i didn't think it was a. macand i still see i mean i seem to be in a sentence and my fear is that people that get some are had really harsh mothers and so they're searching for it elsewhere i mean i know i did and when my grandma would sometimes draw on my back i was like can i get that every very hand i think that i just have a this yearning for it and she's a great woman but like not a lot of hot so. all right so guess who i'm just starting this conversation there's so much more to talk about if you are intrigued and you've been watching this program look out online for hash tag a s m ah and then you can find out more you'll find it online and you'll find in our own you tube as well you'll find some of our guests there on you tube as well and also you can check out craig which is book is
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called bring tingles all sell all good which bookshops until next time i will see you online thanks for watching take everybody thanks kate. wish the world innovation summit for health one community of two thousand health care experts in of ages and policy makers from one hundred countries. one
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experience sharing best practices and innovative ideas. one goal to hopefully a world through global collaboration. apply now to attend the twenty eighteen wish summit. you don't know where public service stops and private interest begins what's at stake is the very essence of democracy we have never had a president so brazenly treating the oval office as an opportunity to focus. all lines follows the money investigating with the donald trump is profiting from the presidency and asking what the cost will be for democracy the usa will the president's profits on al-jazeera. there's no one way of telling the story keeping is top right and to be respected it's great to get to know the person for me.
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what makes this period we're living so. we haven't seen the president this unpredictable. leader. is a valid godly play that is a formula for authoritarianism and here in the early years the lights are. on there's nowhere to hide let me ask you straight out here is the two state solution no good from britain on al-jazeera. with headlines around turkey's team of investigators have been searching the saudi consuls residence in istanbul a day after they were denied access hoping a search of the site which is near the consulate will provide answers as to what may have happened to the saudi journalist jamal khashoggi he's not been seen since he entered the consulate on october the second child has more from the consul
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general's residence in his temple. sources at the attorney general's office told al-jazeera that forensic experts that have been searching the residence behind me were able to uncover they said. were identical to those that they uncovered inside the consulate itself a couple of days ago they pointed to those samples as providing evidence further evidence of the conclusion that she was murdered essentially killed inside that building. they said that they would also be requesting officially from the united states that the u.s. would pass on d.n.a. and blood samples. to the gators here as well it seems that they are being able to maybe build a stronger case at least that's based on the information they have told us. as this search goes on behind me they did send another smaller group to the consulate for
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a second time to search the building they were focusing more specifically on a certain area within the diplomatic missions compound known as c. block that is an area that you would need specific clearance as consular staff to enter and it's the area where they had uncovered more evidence a couple of nights ago. president. to hand over any video and audio recordings it has of. killing if they exist and he remains supportive of america's relationship with saudi arabia. it's if you look at saudi arabia they are an ally of tremendous purchasing of not only military equipment but other things when i went clear they committed to purchase four hundred fifty billion dollars worth of things one hundred ten billion dollars worth of military they're an important ally but i want to find out what happened where is the fault and we will probably know
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that by the end of the week with white power players coming back with a level on top british prime minister has addressed the other twenty seven year opinion leaders in brussels the start of a two day e.u. summit that will be dominated by brics it earlier to reason may help private meetings with the european commission president and the european council president as well as the irish prime minister the u.k. is due to leave the e.u. in march but negotiations over a potential hard border in ireland a proving to be a sticking point. what we've seen is that we've solved most of the season with strong agreements there are still we still the question is the northern irish rock star i believe everybody around the table wants to get a deal. by working intensively and closely become a team deal i believe a deal is achieved now is the time to make it happen. at least nineteen people mostly teenagers have been killed in an explosion and shooting at a school in crimea russian investigators say the attack at couch polytechnic was an
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act of mass murder not terrorism they say an eighteen year old went to a shooting spree in a school before killing himself israeli airstrikes have targeted twenty sites in gaza killing at least one palestinian and israeli military says the strikes were in response to earlier rocket fire which struck a house in in southern israel but how mass which controls gaza distance itself from the attack says the rockets were an irresponsible attempt to undermine egyptian efforts to broker a truce. the u.n. special envoy for syria has told the security council he will step down from the role next month staffan de mistura has spent years mediating between the syrian government and rebel groups seventy one year old told the council he is moving on for personal reasons he says he'll be making every effort to get an agreement on a new draft constitution for syria before he steps down there's the top stories do
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stay with us on al-jazeera next up it's witness to forget you can catch up anytime with our website al jazeera dot com seeing a bit. nothing
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.
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just thought it was a tall order to. do it is if i don't know who was who was under all this and the. people will tell you that when i am able to talk we were italian and one of the tide was in doubt i did i saw dr no more to come up but i thought i put him up there will ever get in one end and indeed to not need to go there when it is see
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some of our hunted i did before was sat down to other than he had come with us and enough.
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i want to be done. with the. children to see if there are any easier to teach. children it ok i want to throw you into mum couldn't even be annoyed you. know how to. live your kind of a part of the training but of. course i will be the little one on the wall. you'll get us home i think. it will be time for the beginning of
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a trip down there in the. lawn that's a big summer day on sunday but. i don't open. it up. the payoff is the truth let him go. on the bottom. of the top of. your little.
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see. if. he's up to somebody. and suits him so that you don't come to the polls to. him. until you can visit the city not like you. know.
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ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. god. was. what do you when i read you something so good so that you. read about him and moral even pictures just. don't it's i'm so we. chose or not you. was.

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