- published: 16 Jun 2010
- views: 45480
- author: modotvideo
4:18
All About a Roundabout
The Missouri Department of Transportation embraces roundabouts. These one-way circles of t...
published: 16 Jun 2010
author: modotvideo
All About a Roundabout
All About a Roundabout
The Missouri Department of Transportation embraces roundabouts. These one-way circles of traffic are designed to make intersections safer and more efficient ...- published: 16 Jun 2010
- views: 45480
- author: modotvideo
2:10
Learning to Drive : How to Drive in a Traffic Circle
A traffic circle, also known as a roundabout, is a one-way loop that requires yielding to ...
published: 26 Nov 2008
author: expertvillage
Learning to Drive : How to Drive in a Traffic Circle
Learning to Drive : How to Drive in a Traffic Circle
A traffic circle, also known as a roundabout, is a one-way loop that requires yielding to cars within the circle, entering into the right lane and following ...- published: 26 Nov 2008
- views: 30900
- author: expertvillage
3:03
Highways for LIFE: Modern Roundabouts
[Closed Captioned] ALTHOUGH YOU MAY NOT BE AWARE OF IT, CRASHES AT INTERSECTIONS ACCOUNT F...
published: 09 May 2011
author: USDOTFHWA
Highways for LIFE: Modern Roundabouts
Highways for LIFE: Modern Roundabouts
[Closed Captioned] ALTHOUGH YOU MAY NOT BE AWARE OF IT, CRASHES AT INTERSECTIONS ACCOUNT FOR ABOUT 45% OF ALL TRAFFIC COLLISIONS NATIONWIDE. THAT'S A PRETTY ...- published: 09 May 2011
- views: 2348
- author: USDOTFHWA
1:02
Traffic circle of death
This is the wosrt traffic circle I have ever driven in. This is in Paris, France. Never ag...
published: 15 Mar 2009
author: m h
Traffic circle of death
Traffic circle of death
This is the wosrt traffic circle I have ever driven in. This is in Paris, France. Never again.- published: 15 Mar 2009
- views: 10177
- author: m h
2:43
Germans Don't Understand Traffic Circle
http://www.gossipberry.com/ Must be all Gerwoman drivers....
published: 19 Jan 2011
author: obamaallah5
Germans Don't Understand Traffic Circle
Germans Don't Understand Traffic Circle
http://www.gossipberry.com/ Must be all Gerwoman drivers.- published: 19 Jan 2011
- views: 32914
- author: obamaallah5
1:13
#16 K53 Lesson Traffic Circle
This animated video will give you a run down on how to manage a traffic circle during your...
published: 17 May 2012
author: moombahme
#16 K53 Lesson Traffic Circle
#16 K53 Lesson Traffic Circle
This animated video will give you a run down on how to manage a traffic circle during your drivers test.- published: 17 May 2012
- views: 1067
- author: moombahme
1:34
Ho Chi Min Traffic Circle Madness
Oh My God!!! I have never seen anything like the traffic in Ho Chi Min, Vietnam. Thousands...
published: 18 Jul 2009
author: Greg Goodman
Ho Chi Min Traffic Circle Madness
Ho Chi Min Traffic Circle Madness
Oh My God!!! I have never seen anything like the traffic in Ho Chi Min, Vietnam. Thousands of motorcycles weave in and out of traffic mixing with cars, buses...- published: 18 Jul 2009
- views: 3302
- author: Greg Goodman
2:33
traffic circle at west end of Champs-Elysées, Paris
traffic circle at west end of Champs-Elysées, Paris....
published: 28 May 2008
author: kb8kb
traffic circle at west end of Champs-Elysées, Paris
traffic circle at west end of Champs-Elysées, Paris
traffic circle at west end of Champs-Elysées, Paris.- published: 28 May 2008
- views: 7648
- author: kb8kb
1:30
TRAFFIC CIRCLE NIGHTMARE
...
published: 22 Mar 2013
author: NCphotogSeth
TRAFFIC CIRCLE NIGHTMARE
0:42
3rd exit for the traffic Circle in Sherwood Park, Alberta
This is a basic video on how to handle the traffic circle in Sherwood Park. I am taking th...
published: 17 Jun 2013
author: Ashif Nanji
3rd exit for the traffic Circle in Sherwood Park, Alberta
3rd exit for the traffic Circle in Sherwood Park, Alberta
This is a basic video on how to handle the traffic circle in Sherwood Park. I am taking the 3rd exit so I enter from the left lane and signal left and yield ...- published: 17 Jun 2013
- views: 9
- author: Ashif Nanji
1:37
Episode 2: Traffic Circle
A simple traffic circle on a neighborhood street is more effective for traffic than a stop...
published: 29 May 2012
author: strongtowns
Episode 2: Traffic Circle
Episode 2: Traffic Circle
A simple traffic circle on a neighborhood street is more effective for traffic than a stop sign and makes the street friendlier for pedestrians as well.- published: 29 May 2012
- views: 866
- author: strongtowns
1:31
School Bus on top of Car-Accident Traffic Circle
A school bus travelling across the Causeway from Riverview, onto the West Main Traffic Cir...
published: 08 Sep 2011
author: Newschaser
School Bus on top of Car-Accident Traffic Circle
School Bus on top of Car-Accident Traffic Circle
A school bus travelling across the Causeway from Riverview, onto the West Main Traffic Circle into Moncton,had to stop for traffic and was rear ended by a ca...- published: 08 Sep 2011
- views: 14099
- author: Newschaser
Vimeo results:
29:57
The Bridge
The Vision:
Back in October of 2009, I set out to make a film that would push my talents ...
published: 10 Sep 2010
author: Marlon Torres
The Bridge
The Vision:
Back in October of 2009, I set out to make a film that would push my talents as both a storyteller and a filmmaker. I wanted to create a film that would challenge myself and my audience, meshing both classical and experimental storytelling techniques from music, books, & films that have inspired me in one way or another. I wanted to make a film that didn’t do any spoon-feeding, where my audience would leave with questions as well as answers. It was a long a difficult road to get to this point and there were days where I felt that I was in way over my head but eight months later, I can proudly say I’ve finally completed my film “The Bridge” and it was an experience I would never forget.
The Inspiration:
The story of The Bridge was a story a cousin had told me when I was eight years old. It was a ghost story about two siblings on a bridge. I remember it haunting me for weeks and causing many sleepless nights under my sheets. Obviously, it had a lasting influence in my life. It had always been one of those stories that I wanted to adapt into a short film so when the opportunity finally came one day, I decided to pull to trigger.
When I was in film school, I would constantly fantasize about making some sort of epic period piece, especially one that took place during WW2. So when I decided I was going to make The Bridge, I instantly followed it up with “hell, why not make it into a WW2 movie”? I could have easily made this film as a contemporary piece but where would the fun be in that? I never do things because it’s easy; I do it because it’s hard. I love a challenge. I figured I could keep the same characters, themes, motifs, style, and wrap it around a WW2 setting. So I did.
Pre-production:
So it began. After a quick outline, I started writing the screenplay and, being a one-man crew at the time, I also started doing work on costumes and props. I lived and breathed WW2 24/7. I watched every WW2 movie and documentary I could get my hands on. I even got my hands some real WW2 letters to get a grasp on the era’s language. I felt like a student again and I loved it. I scoured eBay for every WW2 field gear I could afford to buy and the stuff I couldn’t get, I had them custom made cheaply in China. I wanted it to be detailed and authentic as possible while keeping my almost non-existing budget down. I remember coming home one day and having almost a couple dozen eBay packages on front door. It looked like the front door of the post office.
Casting:
The casting of The Bridge was actually one of the smoothest aspects of the entire process. I first went to my good friend Amy and asked her if she would like to help me produce the film. Having worked with each other before, I didn’t really have to ask twice. She was happy to be my first recruit.
For the leading role, I asked my good friend Pablo Soriano to take the part. Having worked with him before, we have a good understanding of each other. He is just a naturally gifted actor and he makes my job as a director so much easier. Plus, his puppy dog eyes make him a perfect protagonist.
For the leading female role, I went looking for a girl who had beautiful, almost hypnotic eyes. That’s when I spotted Leah in one my good friend’s music video. I called up Carlos and basically told him, “I need to have that girl for movie”. A few days later, she was on board.
I owe the discovery of Mike, the character who plays James Connolly, to my producer Amy. She had read the script and recommended him. I remember her telling me “Mike IS James”. Words that any director would love to hear and as usual, Amy was right.
So a couple months later, the script was complete, the costumes and props were ready, and the cast was cast. We were ready to shoot!
Production:
With our extremely limited budget, I knew right from day one that we were going to shoot “The Bridge” on DSLRs, specifically the Canon 7D and 5D Mark II. With this in mind, I knew (as also the DP of the film), I was going to push these cameras to its limits. I wasn’t going to let my equipment limit my vision of the film. I knew at the very beginning that I may or may not have a crappy movie in the end but hell, it’s gonna look damn good! We all know about the camera’s limitations but I wasn’t going to bitch and moan about it, I was going to work around it. I took it as a personal challenge to make these cameras work and I did.
About 75% of the film was shot with the 7D and the rest with the 5DM2. The main reason I shot with the 7D more was the 24p firmware update wasn’t available for the 5DM2 during the bulk of the shooting. I prefer the 5DM2’s full frame sensor the 7D cropped sensor.
Production, like any other shoot, had its ups and downs. Ours was mainly San Francisco’s unpredictable weather. You can blink and the bay area can go from miserable foggy weather (which is what I wanted for the film) to perfect summer beach party weather.
Also, being
2:50
SFpark Overview
Find parking faster. Pay more easily. Avoid tickets. SFMTA’s SFpark project is a two-year ...
published: 03 Aug 2010
author: SFpark
SFpark Overview
Find parking faster. Pay more easily. Avoid tickets. SFMTA’s SFpark project is a two-year federally funded pilot of new parking management technologies and approaches. Less circling and fewer double-parked cars give us cleaner air and safer streets for bicyclists and pedestrians. With less traffic, public transit and emergency vehicles move more easily.
16:19
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS (HQ) - PART גשטאלט - מודעות - חלק 1
HQ. gestalt work on awareness, part 1. hebrew subtitles added.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER ...
published: 13 Aug 2011
author: franklyn wepner
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS (HQ) - PART גשטאלט - מודעות - חלק 1
HQ. gestalt work on awareness, part 1. hebrew subtitles added.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER SEPTEMBER 1, 2006
HOW I WORK: GESTALT DREAMWORK AS THEATER AND PROPHECY
GESTALT DREAM WORK AS PREPARATION FOR PERFORMING
Since 1975 I have been using Gestalt work on awareness, dreams and personal relationships as a way to train and direct performers. The basic principle is simple. I use the Gestalt work to peel the onion of layer after layer of social cliches, ego games and unfinished personal business, and then I do the reverse process reconstituting the onion in the form of characters or other artist structures. The existential message of the dream becomes the superobjective or action of the tragedy, and then I build up the way the performer handles the characters and the plot around that.
My usual procedure is to begin the training with three Gestalt sessions, one on one. The first session, two hours long, deals with the three zones of awareness. During the first hour I simply let him relate what he aware of, since I want to know how he operates before I start meddling with his life. This is important since overall during the Gestalt sessions we are peeling the onion of cliches and games to get to authentic action, and later we will need all of those layers to rebuild the onion as characters involved in the unfolding action of a drama. We need his cliche and game layers for the beginning of the action in Act One as much as we need his authentic action at the end of the dramatic action for Acts Four and Five of a tragic drama.
During the second hour of the first Gestalt session on awareness I attempt to guide him towards a balance of the zones of awareness: outer zone awareness of the environment, inner zone awareness of his body, and fantasy zone awareness of his daydreams. The second and third Gestalt sessions are each three hours long, and each is a typical Gestalt dreamwork session as presented by Fritz Perls in Gestalt Therapy Verbatim. The performer tells the dream in the here and now, identifies with (play acts) several of the main images of the dream in dialogues with each other, and experiences the rhythm of contact and withdrawal. That is to say, after each major dialogue of polarized sides of himself (the contact part) he is instructed to close his eyes, enter his body awareness and daydream (the withdrawal phase of the rhythm).
Since my goal is theater as well as healing, whenever possible during the Gestalt dreamwork I encourage lots of expression using sound and movements. I work with a palette of about 200 different types of recorded musical excerpts, and whenever appropriate I ask him if that image or emotional state were part of a movie what sort of music might be the sound track. Then I find something close to that in my palette of musical colors and ask him to express the mood using the music along with his vocalizing and expressive movements. While he is doing the entire session I spend most of my time jotting down near verbatim notes and making stick figures of his poses and movements, since later in the work I will feed all this back to him and encourage him to explore using it as creative material for acting, dance or whatever his medium is. Taping the session is less useful, since then I would need to spend too much time replaying the tapes. Taking notes live forces me to sort out the wheat from the chaff very efficiently, even at the cost of not observing or notating every detail.
WORKING OUT FROM YOUR CENTERS
After the three introductory one on one Gestalt sessions, session number four is for feedback and discussion of the results. I show him in my notes and diagrams all of the stages of competed and uncompleted actions, and together we search for characters in the theater literature that have similar patterns of action. Is he a Hamlet type, or an Oedipus type, for example? In contrast to the usual practice in acting classes, his first acting assignment probably will be a monologue from a serious tragedy, since I want him to begin with a dramatic action with which he can identify totally. In this process he is using his major Gestalt moments as what Michael Chekhov in his book "To The Actor" labels "psychological gestures". Perls calls them the "essences" of a patient's personality, or we can say he is working from his "centers", stretching those sounds, moves and psychological motivations in as many creative directions as he can. I monitor closely to be sure he is not faking it, the way most actors end up doing since they do not have the centers to begin with.
Before the performer begins working with others doing improvs and scenework, there is an important transitional stage in the work in which I help him get comfortable using his very personal Gestalt material freely as creative material. He needs to shift from seeing himself as a patient to enjoying the role of an artist of the
29:21
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS WITH BEL part 3 (HQ)
part 3 of a two hour gestalt session on awareness with actress bel baca. the focus here is...
published: 01 Jan 2011
author: franklyn wepner
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS WITH BEL part 3 (HQ)
part 3 of a two hour gestalt session on awareness with actress bel baca. the focus here is "the rhythm of contact and withdrawal", alternating between contact with the environment and withdrawal into the void of "not knowing" to discover what fantasies and new ideas are waiting to emerge into awareness there.
TO VIEW OR DOWNLOAD ALL OF MY VIDEOS, PLUS 1500 PAGES OF MY EXPLANATORY ESSAYS (ALL AT NO CHARGE) PLEASE VISIT MY WEBSITE: franklynwepner.com. ALSO PLEASE NOTE MY NEW EMAIL ADDRESS, IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SHARE WITH ME ANY COMMENTS ABOUT MY WORK: franklynwepner@gmail.com. IN THE LISTING OF VIDEOS THE LETTERS (HQ) REFER TO A HIGHER QUALITY VERSION OF THE VIDEO, WHICH IS AVAILABLE TO YOU IF YOUR COMPUTER CAN HANDLE IT.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER SEPTEMBER 1, 2006
HOW I WORK: GESTALT DREAMWORK AS THEATER AND PROPHECY
GESTALT DREAM WORK AS PREPARATION FOR PERFORMING
Since 1975 I have been using Gestalt work on awareness, dreams and personal relationships as a way to train and direct performers. The basic principle is simple. I use the Gestalt work to peel the onion of layer after layer of social cliches, ego games and unfinished personal business, and then I do the reverse process reconstituting the onion in the form of characters or other artist structures. The existential message of the dream becomes the superobjective or action of the tragedy, and then I build up the way the performer handles the characters and the plot around that.
My usual procedure is to begin the training with three Gestalt sessions, one on one. The first session, two hours long, deals with the three zones of awareness. During the first hour I simply let him relate what he aware of, since I want to know how he operates before I start meddling with his life. This is important since overall during the Gestalt sessions we are peeling the onion of cliches and games to get to authentic action, and later we will need all of those layers to rebuild the onion as characters involved in the unfolding action of a drama. We need his cliche and game layers for the beginning of the action in Act One as much as we need his authentic action at the end of the dramatic action for Acts Four and Five of a tragic drama.
During the second hour of the first Gestalt session on awareness I attempt to guide him towards a balance of the zones of awareness: outer zone awareness of the environment, inner zone awareness of his body, and fantasy zone awareness of his daydreams. The second and third Gestalt sessions are each three hours long, and each is a typical Gestalt dreamwork session as presented by Fritz Perls in Gestalt Therapy Verbatim. The performer tells the dream in the here and now, identifies with (play acts) several of the main images of the dream in dialogues with each other, and experiences the rhythm of contact and withdrawal. That is to say, after each major dialogue of polarized sides of himself (the contact part) he is instructed to close his eyes, enter his body awareness and daydream (the withdrawal phase of the rhythm).
Since my goal is theater as well as healing, whenever possible during the Gestalt dreamwork I encourage lots of expression using sound and movements. I work with a palette of about 200 different types of recorded musical excerpts, and whenever appropriate I ask him if that image or emotional state were part of a movie what sort of music might be the sound track. Then I find something close to that in my palette of musical colors and ask him to express the mood using the music along with his vocalizing and expressive movements. While he is doing the entire session I spend most of my time jotting down near verbatim notes and making stick figures of his poses and movements, since later in the work I will feed all this back to him and encourage him to explore using it as creative material for acting, dance or whatever his medium is. Taping the session is less useful, since then I would need to spend too much time replaying the tapes. Taking notes live forces me to sort out the wheat from the chaff very efficiently, even at the cost of not observing or notating every detail.
WORKING OUT FROM YOUR CENTERS
After the three introductory one on one Gestalt sessions, session number four is for feedback and discussion of the results. I show him in my notes and diagrams all of the stages of competed and uncompleted actions, and together we search for characters in the theater literature that have similar patterns of action. Is he a Hamlet type, or an Oedipus type, for example? In contrast to the usual practice in acting classes, his first acting assignment probably will be a monologue from a serious tragedy, since I want him to begin with a dramatic action with which he can identify totally. In this process he is using his major Gestalt moments as what Michael Chekhov in his book "To The Actor" labels "psychological gestures". Per
Youtube results:
1:14
Rebel 250 traffic circle
Long Beach Traffic Circle....
published: 21 Sep 2011
author: longbeachgary
Rebel 250 traffic circle
Rebel 250 traffic circle
Long Beach Traffic Circle.- published: 21 Sep 2011
- views: 86
- author: longbeachgary
1:08
Petike in the traffic circle
Petike in the traffic circle, körforgalom-drift....
published: 05 Apr 2010
author: valory1984
Petike in the traffic circle
Petike in the traffic circle
Petike in the traffic circle, körforgalom-drift.- published: 05 Apr 2010
- views: 3417
- author: valory1984
6:51
Traffic Circle: Activity Based Learning
DIRECTIONS AND APPLICATIONS http://mikeandken.com/ ACTIVITY CREDIT Activities in the game ...
published: 01 May 2007
author: kenandmike
Traffic Circle: Activity Based Learning
Traffic Circle: Activity Based Learning
DIRECTIONS AND APPLICATIONS http://mikeandken.com/ ACTIVITY CREDIT Activities in the game world can be hard to tack as they get passed from one trainer to th...- published: 01 May 2007
- views: 6597
- author: kenandmike