Coffee Shop | The Video Vault


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From: SI Ron (Hall Monitor)8/11/2012 1:33:37 PM
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I don't know about anyone else, but I love that sound of the Bugle:


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From: Carolyn8/13/2012 2:42:54 PM
4 Recommendations   of 9388
 
Do you know your Constitutional rights?

youtube.com 

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From: SI Ron (Hall Monitor)8/14/2012 10:43:46 PM
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If you are not a computer gamer you may want to pass on this. This is video from my game-play in Call of Duty - Modern Warfare 3.

Hardhat - Storm Drain Camping





Camping is frowned upon by the gaming community, but people still do it. Camping is staying in one spot, usually a good spot for picking off the enemy. I am camping here to rack up some easy kills, but don't make a habit of it, as it really pisses off the other players.

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From: pcyhuang8/15/2012 7:37:06 AM
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Final Days of Perigrine's Downfall






live.wsj.com 

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From: Stan8/15/2012 5:30:57 PM
2 Recommendations   of 9388
 
James Randi blows away Barbara Walters about Uri Geller (Remember him?). Classic Randi at his best.


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From: SI Ron (Hall Monitor)8/16/2012 10:47:37 AM
1 Recommendation   of 9388
 
Listening to my favorite song this morning I decided to do some research on it, and found they made a commercial with the song in it:

It's pretty funny.





The song is "I Ran" by A Flock Of Seagulls (a popular 80's band). I was trying to see how much money this very popular song made on royalties. I know one of U2's songs makes $2000 dollars a week, just on royalties from being played on the radio around the world and I believe the song is over 20 years old.

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From: SI Ron (Hall Monitor)8/17/2012 10:00:24 AM
2 Recommendations   of 9388
 
Volvo Trucks - The Ballerina Stunt (This is INSANE)



World record-holding highliner Faith Dickey battles in the wind to cross the line between two speeding trucks. Will she make it before the trucks reach the tunnel that lies behind the next bend?

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From: Neeka8/17/2012 10:51:56 AM
1 Recommendation   of 9388
 
Warning: Language


"Bike Thief Gets Owned"




Jake Gillum loves his bike. So when it got stolen in Portland, Ore., while he was on a date, he was determined to get it back.

The quest seemed hopeless, but a week of poring over online postings for his 2009 carbon fiber Fuji paid off when he spotted the road bike offered for sale in Seattle. That sparked an elaborate interstate sting operation last weekend in which Gillum not only got his bicycle back but used it to chase down the suspect before police arrested him.

Gillum documented it all on YouTube under the username Simon Jackson.

"This is why you don't steal from bicyclists!" Gillum shouts as he trails the suspect while recording with his phone. "Because we care about our rides! Because I will go 160 miles to get my $2,500 bike back! You are going to jail!"

In an interview Thursday, the 28-year-old added: "Best feeling in the world, seeing that guy get locked in the police car."

The success of the sting heartened bicyclists around the world as the video spread. Such stings are far from unheard of -- there have been at least four in Seattle alone recently, two involving the same suspect -- but they don't typically wind up on video that goes viral.

In May, Dave O'Hern got one of his two stolen bikes back when its new owner took it to a repair shop that recognized a crack in the frame. The new owner, University of Washington law student Noel Merfeld, helped O'Hern set up a sting to catch the guy Merfeld bought it from. Police showed up and arrested a man who had been arrested in a similar bust two months earlier.

Also in Seattle, Matt Goyer retrieved his stolen bicycle last month after seeing it on Craigslist. The seller let him take it for a test spin -- and Goyer never looked back.

"People have a right to reclaim their stolen property. It belongs to them," said Seattle police spokesman Sean Whitcomb. "Obviously, the first and best method to do that is through the police."

Gillum's ordeal began Aug. 3 in Portland when he realized his bike was missing and filed a police report. He has no car and uses it to travel to odd jobs and yard work around town, as well as for exercise. Over the next week, he checked online obsessively and on Aug. 9 saw it advertised in Seattle.

"I flipped out -- just started jumping in the air and yelling," Gillum said. "Immediately I thought, `I have to go up there and get it, no matter what."'

He talked it over with friends, as well as his dad, who gave him some sage advice: Don't be an idiot. Don't beat up the guy.

A plot began to take shape.

Gillum and two friends, Chris Williams and Williams' younger brother, Shannon Hardie, created the online persona Simon Jackson with a fake email account. They also used a cellphone app to call the seller and make it appear they were calling from Seattle. When the seller sent photos of the bike, Gillum became even more certain it was his.

The trio drove north and met the seller outside a grocery store. The others called police as Gillum started chatting with the seller, later identified as Craig Eric Ackerman, also of Portland.

Gillum said that about 40 minutes later, police still hadn't arrived and the seller seemed to be getting nervous, so Gillum agreed to buy it and said he needed to walk inside a nearby bank. A teller told him she would call security, and Gillum walked back outside and began filming.

"Here's the deal. I live in Portland, and you stole my bicycle," Gillum says.

"All right," the nervous seller replies. "I don't know what you want me to say."

"I would like you to apologize."

"For what?"

"For stealing my bicycle."

The seller insisted he lives in Seattle and bought the bicycle off Craigslist, though he acknowledged knowing it was stolen. When Gillum says police are on the way, the seller runs away, so Gillum hops on his newly recovered bike, starts chasing and repeats over again: "He cannot get away from me!"

Police arrived and arrested Ackerman for investigation of possessing and trafficking in stolen property. He has not been charged, and his lawyer, Holli Giffin, declined to comment because of the pending investigation, except to say, "We have a lot of concerns about the way things have been portrayed."

Whitcomb, the police spokesman, cautioned people against using stings without being absolutely sure they're right, which can be difficult using a picture on an Internet message board.

"Personal injury is not worth your bike," he said.

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From: SI Ron (Hall Monitor)8/20/2012 10:42:03 AM
2 Recommendations   of 9388
 
From a solider that was there - US Marines Helo Extract From Hot LZ! (LZ = Landing Zone)




Summer 2011, Approximately 40 Marines from Lima Co. 3rd Battalion 4th Marines are dropped off by two CH-53's in the 'green zone' in Helmand province to check out a few suspect buildings. During the wait for the 53's to pick us up the Taliban set in all around our position and waited for the helicopters to return. As you can see it took two tries for the pilot to actually land because the LZ was too 'hot'. The whole ordeal lasted about 3.5hours.

Filmed on an iPhone 4

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From: SI Ron (Hall Monitor)8/20/2012 12:18:42 PM
4 Recommendations   of 9388
 
Grizly Bear Cub & Wolf Cub Playing




Lil' Bear and Tala playing in the Gift Shop of the Woodland Zoo. Note: In the middle of the clip there are pictures of these guys as they are 6 years later. Also note that in the clip I keep referring to the bear as a "boy", it's actually a girl.

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