Thứ Bảy, 31 tháng 3, 2018

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Champions - Anders Holm Plays "What's in the Box" (Digital Exclusive) - Duration: 2:40.

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CEO da Dash Dinheiro Digital anuncia nova parceria de negócios - Legendas em Português - Duration: 14:54.

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EWSWEBS | Best Digital Marketing Agency, United Kingdom | SEO Agency, UK | Ad Agency UK - Duration: 0:33.

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My 1st tutorial Digital Painting in Photoshop Tamil Tutorials - Duration: 10:29.

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The Best Rap Label | Great Taste - Duration: 10:43.

- Bad Boy's still here and y'all ain't doing nothing.

- We got French Montana.

- Man, French Montana is trash.

As a rapper?

Drop some French Montana bars right now.

(overlapping chatter)

Not a chorus. - Not a chorus?

Hey, man, that's not fair to French.

- Give me a regular bar. - Don't do that to French.

- He sounds like a sandwich, let me get the French Montana.

(laughing)

Trash as a rapper.

Trash as a rapper. - That's funny.

(mellow jazz)

Tahir, come on, talk about Def Ham.

(laughing)

- Childish, bro.

You mad childish.

- Hey, what's up? It's me, Megscoop, repping

the best rap label in the game, I'm talking

'bout Cash Money taking over for the 99 and the 2000.

You already know.

(overlapping chatter)

That's what I'm saying, when you hear that.

You know what's up.

- What do you do when that happens?

- What'd you do in the church when you heard that song?

(laughing)

- That is not...

- They don't wanna make that song anymore.

(laughing)

- What up, it's ya boy DoBoy, a.k.a. Jabeta,

and this is the millennium of Aftermath

and ain't gon' be nothing after that,

so give me one more platinum placard, you can have it back.

- You got plaque on your teeth.

(laughing)

You got plenty of that. - Shut up.

- What up peeps? Tony Baker here to talk about

the best rap label for raps, Loud Records.

- Who? - Loud Records.

Home of Wu-Tang Clan, Mobb Deep, Xzibit,

Krayzie Bone, Three 6 Mafia, Project Pat--

- Krayzie Bone? - Krayzie Bone.

- What's good, it's Sabrina Plug, and I'm about

to put you guys on to the best rap label, Ruff Ryders.

(booing)

- Trash! - Alright, relax.

- Sabrina, your voice is quiet, you're the hush riders.

(laughing)

- I'll give you that. - Stop. Drop.

- It's not about... (laughing)

- Quiet down.

- What up y'all? It's your boy, Kevonstage,

and I'm here to tell you why Bad Boy

is the greatest rap label of all time.

(booing) - For like two years.

- Otherwise known as Bankruptcy Label.

'Cause everybody went bankrupt.

- Otherwise known as the home of The Notorious B.I.G.,

who is in everybody's top three.

- Who else, who else? - Who else?

- Besides B.I.G.

- Biggie Smalls, Big Poppa, Christopher Wallace,

that's four right there, if you ask me.

- What's up guys? Tahir Moore here,

and I'm here to talk about the best rap record label

of all times, and it has to go

to none other than Def Jam.

The father of all of these little small companies.

They are peons in the shadow of Def Jam.

- Who else, beside Biggie?

- Diddy, Sean Combs. - No.

- Loon. - Loon, really?

- G. Dep. (laughing)

(overlapping chatter)

Craig Mack, Black Rob, and Mase, Harlem World.

- [Tony] Mase had one album.

Da Band, Dylan, Dylan, Dylan, Dylan, and Dylan.

- If you're from the South, you love Cash Money,

because of course there was rappers in the South,

but this is what put us on the map.

- No it's not.

- Everybody, I'm talking about Hot Boys, Lil Wayne,

Birdman, you got Slim, you had Turk.

- Did you just name Slim?

He don't rap.

(laughing)

- He's the owner!

- Okay, let's talk about the artists,

you started off with the godfather

of West Coast music, Dr. Dre.

- He wasn't a great rapper.

- Chronic 2001 was one of the highest selling albums ever.

- Oh, we just talking 'bout sales?

'Cause Vanilla Ice's debut, man.

(laughing)

That's six million records, right there.

The albums Loud put out, they still dope today.

- [DoBoy] Like what?

- Wu-Tang's first album is still dope right now.

- You've referenced that like seven times.

- Mobb Deep's first three albums are still dope right now,

there's a war going on outside no man is safe from,

everybody knows that.

- It's not about how many people were on the roster,

'cause there wasn't that many.

- Who was it? - How many on the roster?

- DMX. - Okay.

- DMX is really all I really have to say.

(laughing) - Okay.

- That's all you can say.

(overlapping chatter)

- And we got Eve, and we got The Lox,

and then we have The Lox, separately.

- But you got Jin, though. - Jin?

- Oh, let's talk about that. (overlapping chatter)

- Listen, Jin was the only mistake we made.

- Whatchu mean? Jin was amazing.

- Jin was fire.

(overlapping chatter)

- When you see Def Jam, you can't help but think

of comedy, you can't help but think of dope rappers,

you can't help but think of great movies.

- Keep it to rap!

- Listen, I'm sorry that we have so much to offer.

- Diddy make hits, he also had Yung Joc.

- You know what the problem was?

- Two records and dropped.

- Diddy makes hits.

Most rappers don't have fire after two or three albums,

so Diddy signs you, makes you hot,

then when you go to be weak--

(overlapping chatter)

Were y'all doing this when Yung Joc came out?

- To this day, Cash Money still got a big imprint on hip hop

because now they've got Young Money, Cash Money,

Rich Gang, as well, so you got Nicki Minaj---

- And Lil Wayne don't have no money.

- Young Thug, you've got Drake.

(overlapping chatter)

I can just leave now, I just said Drake.

- When you think about three rappers on the same label

and you say that you have Kendrick, you have Fifty,

you have Eminem, there's nothing more--

- Jay Z, Kanye, and Beanie Sigel are all one the same label.

(overlapping chatter)

Beanie Sigel was an amazing lyricist.

- Beanie Sigel was really good.

- Take it easy man.

- Wu-Tang is a movement, they changed the game.

- Wu-Tang is for the children.

- People still wearing Wu wear. Still.

- Wait, wait, wait, Tony, how did--

- People still wear Wu wear.

- Tony, how did they change the game?

- They changed the game with just raps, karate movies.

(laughing)

They changed the game, they brought out,

let me tell you this, let me tell you this.

- Karate movies? - Karate movies.

Karate movies and rap.

- LL Cool J, Beastie Boys, DMX.

- Okay. - Jay Z.

- That's a big gap.

- Kanye. - Hold on, hold.

- I can go back!

- Beastie Boys '84, then DMX.

- Try to stay in order, time-wise.

- Okay, Q-Tip. (laughing)

- They got LL.

- They got Beanie Sigel.

- Stop dropping Beanie Sigel!

He not good like that!

- What is your love affair with Beanie Sigel.

- Beanie Sigel was really good.

- Beanie Sigel is dope, though.

- Beanie Sigel was a dope rapper, we talking about rappers,

he one of the dopest rappers.

- All of their big artists have complained

about not getting paid, from Juvenile,

to B.G., to their biggest artist, Lil Wayne.

- Juvenile should be rich right now.

- They should change their name

from Cash Money to Owe Money.

- Hold on, here's what's so funny,

because if he, hold on, if he complained so much,

why did he re-sign in 2014? - Who did?

- Juvenile did. - Oh, he did?

- 'Cause they wouldn't let him out of his deal.

- And Turk. - But is he rich?

- No, he was already out of the deal.

- 'Cause he was working at Home Depot weeks before.

- He came back. (laughing)

- That's why he re-signed!

- Two records and shelved, that's what it is.

- That's fine, you can give me two albums,

if they're gonna be fire.

Biggie's one album, gimme one of Biggie's albums,

that's better than most labels ever have to offer.

- The West Coast was literally dead,

they came out with The Game.

The Game is one of the most slept on rappers ever.

- He's slept on for good reason.

- No, he's not.

The Game is-- - The Game ain't fire.

- Yes he is!

- The Game ain't in your top 25 rappers right now.

- He's in my top three!

- Who's your top three if The Game is in it?

- Fat Drake is one. - No.

(laughing)

- Drake is number one. - Oh, really?

- Jay Z number two, I put Game at three.

- And The Game?

- The Game is hard!

- I had Wu wear, I had a Wu-Tang--

- That was your first mistake.

- And you was practicing your karate moves.

- I had a Wu-Tang medallion that chipped my tooth one night.

- What?

- I was throwing a chair, and then the necklace came

and chipped my tooth.

- Why were you throwing a chair?

- Tony's childhood was-- - What's wrong with you?

- You're fighting your friends.

- I threw a chair, the necklace came round, bow,

I chipped my little tooth on the bottom.

- [DoBoy] Who were you throwing the chair at?

- I had a Wu-Tang Forever birthday cake.

(laughing) - Really?

- [DoBoy] Who were you throwing the chair at?

- Dead serious.

- You are forgetting to mention one

of their greatest additions to hip hop, Def Jam Vendetta.

- Shut up!

- A video game of rappers fighting?

(overlapping chatter)

That sold like crazy!

- Ruff Ryders just need to diversify they sound,

which they didn't. - Right.

- They had everybody from the same project.

- But they held it down from '98 to like...

- '99. (laughing)

(overlapping chatter)

- At least in '98, DMX was bigger than Jay Z at that time.

- He was! - DMX was definitely bigger.

- Absolutely bigger than Jay Z.

- DMX also was covered in blood and terrifying.

(laughing) - Yes, he was.

- Diddy's greatest skill is he finds you at your best,

he gets the best outta you, and he cuts you--

- And he takes all your money.

- Takes your money, gets you rich a little bit,

and he cuts you before you flop.

- Diddy is Dollar Bill from Player's Club.

(laughing)

- And aren't you arguing for Cash Money?

- Yes.

- With Baby robbing everybody?

- First of all, we'll get into that.

- You really don't wanna argue about--

- We'll get to that, we got everybody on this label.

- He kissed Lil Wayne in the mouth and won't give him $10.

(laughing)

- Cash Money is on record for never giving Tyga

a paycheck for nothing, and he gave them Rack City.

- That's 'cause he's trash.

- He's trash?

He's on the label and he's trash,

you know that's why I didn't mention him, right?

I'd rather mention Chanel and Chanel West Coast,

who are also on the label, over Tyga.

- Wow.

- When Aftermath came into frutition, they came out--

- Frutition? - Fruition.

- What are you doing? - Top of 2000, right?

- That don't do nothing with fruit.

- And they had Dr. Dre, then they had Eminem,

Eminem held down, then they had 50 Cent.

Then they had The Game, then they circled back

and brought you Kendrick!

Kendrick Lamar, dog! - Kendrick saved them.

- You couldn't wait to drop Kendrick.

- He's in the Black Panther movie soundtrack.

(laughing)

- You couldn't wait to drop Kendrick.

- They are running it.

- If it weren't for Kendrick, it would be a wrap right now.

- Who else is on there now?

- W-R-A-P.

- Wu-Tang Clan is all you really need.

- That's true. - That's all you really need.

- I cannot argue Wu-Tang.

- Kevin started a group called Boob-Tang Clan.

- And people respect Wu-Tang.

(laughing)

- DoBoy's the old hungry bastard.

(laughing)

- Tahir is roast face killah.

- Roast face killah?

- But, yo, Eve was the hottest.

- Eve went platinum.

She's dope.

For us ladies? - I loved her.

I loved Eve back in--

- And then she had songs that we could relate to.

- She was really influential, Kev got

them same paw prints on his boobs.

(laughing)

- Show us, show us, show us!

If you were alive in the '90s, you did not turn

on your radio without hearing a Cash Money song.

They're still relevant today, because without them,

there would've been no Young Money Cash Money,

which means there would've been no Drake,

and no Nicki Minaj, so--

- Drake would've thrived without Cash Money.

- And guess what he signed with.

- Well yeah, that's 'cause he like Lil Wayne.

- Lil Wayne doesn't have any cash money.

(laughing)

- Lil Wayne has cash money.

- They call it kiss money, 'cause that's what...

(laughing)

All Baby wanna give out.

- He's like, give me the (mumbles),

he's like maybe there's a kiss.

- He's just paying everybody in kisses?

- Kiss Money Records taking over for the 99.

- The world would be a much better place

if we just allowed each other

to get paid in kisses, alright?

- Hey Meg, is you finished, or is you done?

(laughing)

That's the best thing Cash Money has brought to the table.

- Put some more respect on my name!

Hey, thanks for watching another addition of Great Taste,

make sure to like, comment, share, and subscribe,

and follow us on on our other social media,

Facebook, YouTube, Snapchat, Instagram, all that.

We outta here.

For more infomation >> The Best Rap Label | Great Taste - Duration: 10:43.

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Evangelia - Digital Age (Lyrics) - Duration: 2:42.

Hey! Type <3 if you see this :P

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Everything you need to know about railway track! (Britain's Digital Railways) - Duration: 3:44.

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[SPEEDPAINT] CardCaptor Sakura Digital Art - Duration: 6:11.

Hello Youtube!

It's Lannila here and this is my first video.

It's my first time recording a speedpaint, but I decided to do all at once: creating

an intro, putting a bit of a voice over, honestly it was more curiosity to see and test how

things would work.

It was a fun project and I learned a lot from it.

For my first video, I decided to paint one of my favorite characters of all time, Sakura

from Card Captor Sakura.

Ever since I was a child, Sakura and the series as a whole, both have inspired my creative

side a lot, so it only seems fair to get started with her.

I hope you guys enjoy this speedpaint, and if you do, please leave a thumbs up and subscribe

if you'd like to see more from me in the future.

Thanks for watching and see you next time.

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1200W 10 Tray Stainless Steel Digital Food Jerky Fruit Dehydrator with 10 Stainless Steel Shelves - Duration: 0:45.

1200W 10 Tray Stainless Steel Digital Food Jerky Fruit Dehydrator with 10 Stainless Steel Shelves Digital Timer

Coverage for product breakdowns and malfunctions. Free shipping on all repairs with no deductibles or hidden fees. Fully transferable with gifts. Cancel anytime, full refund in the first 30 days.

If you purchase this service plan and eligible product for this service plan, you acknowledge that Amazon may send the service plan seller relevant product and price information for the purpose of administering the plan.

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Costway Double Hot Plate, Portable Electric Induction Cooker Double Cooktop, Digital Display - Duration: 0:45.

Costway Double Hot Plate, Portable Electric Induction Cooker Double Cooktop, Digital Display Countertop Burner

Coverage for product breakdowns and malfunctions. Free shipping on all repairs with no deductibles or hidden fees. Fully transferable with gifts. Cancel anytime, full refund in the first 30 days.

If you purchase this service plan and eligible product for this service plan, you acknowledge that Amazon may send the service plan seller relevant product and price information for the purpose of administering the plan.

For more infomation >> Costway Double Hot Plate, Portable Electric Induction Cooker Double Cooktop, Digital Display - Duration: 0:45.

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Louise | 24 Frames | PBS Digital Studios - Duration: 27:48.

(light melancholy piano music)

(lively piano music)

- Last year

in 2016,

I got a chance to do some oral history interviews

as part of the work I do with the Southwest Collection,

and it was like pulling teeth

to get Louise to talk about herself.

Her parents had been well-to-do for one thing and another,

during the time period of the depression and other factors,

they were less well-to-do and she had siblings,

and so their folks worked very hard

to give them opportunities,

which in the 1930s was,

that took work,

it was a difficult time.

So there are great stories about that,

but the one that just jumped out at me

was her casually mentioning that as a senior trip,

you know celebrating her graduation from high school,

she got to go to the Olympics.

Well it was the 1936 Olympics.

(lively instrumental music)

- [Announcer] The picture of the opening of the 11th

and greatest Olympic games of modern times

is one that will live forever in the memories of those

who had the privilege of witnessing them.

Crowds were massed in the Berlin streets

long before the scheduled opening of the ceremonies.

From the lush gardens to the entrance of the stadium,

the streets were one long stream of color.

Green flag poles bearing a scarlet banner

with a swastika in the center were spaced every 50 feet.

- [Louis] It was spooky because you were in this crowd

of hundreds of thousands of people in the stadium

and this goofy little thing coming down,

you know prissing down the stairs.

And then to have all these countries come in you know,

the pomp and circumstance.

Oh it was just so wonderful.

And all these people would beat up everybody,

you've seen it on the television 100 times.

But it didn't feel like that in real it was spooky.

- [Announcer] The 52 nations led by the Greeks

as is their right for having originated the games.

- [Louise] When they had the parade or whatever

that comes in the entrance and come right,

See, Hitler was,

I could've touched him almost.

- [Andy] Really?

- [Louise] I gotta jumped over a few people

but he was always coming down that

big center thing you know.

And then he was giving his speech and everybody was ...

Oh It was just,

of course we didn't know what he was saying

but he was crazy!

- [Narrator] Immediately the band stopped the march

it was playing and broke into Die Fahne Hoch.

The audience rising promptly.

- For a person to have lived such a rich life

that that's not sort of the pinnacle of things

that they can recount to you,

that says a lot about Louise.

(compelling piano music)

- [Louise] We lived in a little village called Bronxville.

- [Andy] Bronxville?

- [Louise] It's not the Bronx.

- [Andy] Right.

- [Louise] It's a little village one mile square.

- [Andy] Wow!

- [Louise] And imagine now a childhood

where you were allowed to wander.

We walked to school every day,

Doris and Home.

- [Andy] Mm-hmm.

- [Louise] But we could do anything

as long as we came home before dark.

You know after school

- [Andy] Yeah.

- [Louise] Or if we wanted to play with somebody

we could say,

"Well, we're gonna stop off at so-and-so's."

Imagine that!

- Louise married and came out here to West Texas

when Texas Technological College was a small school.

It was very dusty here in Lubbock.

She immediately became part of this community.

Raised her large family and adapted beautifully.

- Mother's been involved in the arts since she was a kid.

She grew up in New York

and her mother took them to all kinds of

theatrical performances, museums.

So when she moved to Lubbock during the war

when daddy was overseas,

to have me,

she was really concerned

that she wanted to be sure her children

were exposed to as much as she had been.

In the 40s in Lubbock that was a little bit challenging.

So she's been involved,

we all,

I'm the oldest of six

and we all participated in little theater performances,

we traveled,

we did all kinds of lessons.

Some of us took piano lessons,

some of us took dancing lessons.

So somebody always had a toe in one door or the other.

So we've all been involved in everything

there was to be involved in

in Lubbock as long as I can remember.

(light piano music)

- [Louise] So we always had a baseball team

it seems like here.

And we had the boxing!

And by golly that was about it.

And of course the little theater.

Living in a college town of course you're gonna you know,

it was such a tiny school at that time,

and tiny town,

it was 35,000 people here when I came when Jane was born.

- [Andy] Yeah.

- [Louise] So we made our own fun.

We had lots of treasure hunts.

(laughs)

- [Andy] Is it fair to ask

if you felt like you were a little bit maybe banished

to the French Foreign Legion?

- [Louise] Oh absolutely!

Absolutely!

You can imagine.

(lively piano music)

- Another thing she did that's different

was that she really believed

that you need to have bodies in the chairs.

So she showed up at everything,

and she took us,

all of us,

all our kids.

She had artist friends.

She would go to all the exhibits and the galleries

and meet people and a number of people

have said that at one point the tornado hit

and Lynwood Kreneck said

that all of his work was being framed

and the only thing that didn't blow away

was what mother had and what Lynwood had at their houses.

So she was a good friend of the artist

before they got well known.

- Yeah that reminds me,

I had a date in college,

first date,

so grandma's inviting me to a play at the university

and I thought,

"This is gonna be real impressive!"

"I'll take her to this date with my grandma!"

"My gosh I'm a caring kid."

And she took me to Equus,

I don't know if you've ever been to Equus

but eventually the guy ends up in his underwear

with a horse,

it's kind of a strange deal.

And about halftime it breaks

and I'm sitting in between my date and my grandma going,

"Oh my lord that man is riding that horse in his underwear!"

"What in the world?"

Yeah I didn't have another date with Jamie after that.

(laughs)

She took us to everything.

- She liked serious,

hard-thinking,

challenging theater.

- I, as an artsy-fartsy individual,

she encouraged us so much.

Any of us that said,

"Hey, I wanna try this."

"I wanna try that."

When she could she came out to everything.

I did a play down here on 34th Street,

I don't want to speak ill of it but it wasn't very popular.

So one night I think we looked out before it started

and it was like this guy had one friend

and this girl had a boyfriend

and I had grandma.

There were literally four to six people there,

we knew 'em all.

We were like, "Can't we just take 'em out for a beer?"

(laughs)

Just forget the show?

But she sat through the whole thing

and she had notes.

She's like, "You look good."

"This could've been better."

But she sucked it all in.

She just loved the theater which is probably why I'm great.

- I think she always said that she wasn't an artist herself,

but she saw her role as a connector.

That she could introduce people who were interested

in something that other people

who might want to be involved in it.

I think that was one of her-

- Yeah.

She would host parties here at her house

and invite people from different walks of life,

City Council maybe,

artists,

any of the big players in town and then

she'd have them sitting next to each other and talking.

So that they were sharing ideas

and things that could advance their purpose.

- We began to work together on various community projects

as well as being friends but of course the most important

was without question the foundation of the board

that would lead to the establishment

of the Louise Hopkins Underwood Center for the Arts.

(lively piano music)

- We have some pictures here and while we frame these up,

Mrs. Underwood many have pointed to you

as being the inspiration behind this entire process.

In fact they've been so inspired by you

that they're actually renaming the facility.

What an honor,

the Louise Hopkins Underwood Center for the Arts.

How does that make you feel?

- Oh boy!

(laughs)

I'm still overwhelmed by that.

- Mm-hmm.

- I have worked hard but there have been so many

that have worked right along with me.

We got representatives from all the arts groups

and around our dining room tables

is how this all came about.

- Louise had been thinking and talking

about establishing some type of center

where local and regional artists could display their work

and have it appreciated by people in this area.

Gradually here thoughts began to come together

and that there should also be a museum

or gallery would be properly say associated with it.

- Louise was very interested

in getting this center together.

Not to have her name on it.

In fact I think she resisted that.

She was interested because she understood

that the center was more than a physical place.

It was more than a building.

It was a collection of people.

It was a culture.

- We were trying to get a place that the artists

could not only show their work but sell 'em!

They couldn't make a living

outside of their professorship or whatever.

But now I think it's just been a tremendous boost.

And what CASP has done.

- We were friendly,

I knew her.

But we became close through the affiliation

between CASP & LHUCA.

The two non-profits work together as much as we can.

We try to support each other as much as we can.

We consider ourselves completely separate and autonomous,

but we share what we call a campus.

She wanted LHUCA to be a catalyst for all the arts

as opposed to being a producer of art.

She wanted LHUCA to be some place where people could come

and look at art and show their art.

So she's there for view,

we're there for make and we're a great partnership.

- It was to help artists,

performers,

actors,

musicians have a place to come together and do their thing.

I think that whole complex it wouldn't be the same

without Charles' loving arms wrapped around the whole thing,

but the combination has just made such a wonderful place

for people who've never thought about throwing a clay pot

or getting behind a metal ...

I don't even know enough about metal working

to know what you get behind to do all that stuff.

(laughs)

Anything that gave people a chance to express themselves

or to learn a new fun thing.

- I think it meant the world to her,

but I think it also meant the world

to everybody that touched it.

I'm a broke actor in California.

I'd send $50, $100.

That was back when it was an old fire station

and a pile of dirt and to see what it's become

and I know I didn't give a whole lot

but I think that everybody that's darkened those doors

feels that way.

But it was her vision

and I really have this sneaking suspicion

that she hung on til the 20th anniversary,

that really meant a lot.

Everyday she was blown away by what was going on up there.

(lively piano music)

- One of the great successes I think

is the First Friday Art Trail,

which when we first started it,

it was this building and across the street

and that was the extent of it.

That's all the people had to do was come here

and walk across.

Not all this was finished it was all brand new.

And yet we know what that's like today,

it's a major event in this community once a month.

- The reason individuals gave funds for it's establishment

and for it's expansion into the campus that it is now

all really is because of Louise.

People admired her.

People liked her,

they respected her and what she was doing.

Frankly if it had been someone else

I don't think that center would exist

in the form that it now exists.

And as long as she lived she always went to every event.

Even if she went in a wheelchair toward the end of her life.

- Every month she would say,

"Well I don't know,

maybe I'm too tired to go to the Art Trail."

and then she'd say about 4 o'clock in the afternoon,

"Oh I think I'm gonna go one more time."

So off we'd go

and inevitably someone would come up to her and say,

"You're the reason,

you and what you've done down here

are the reason I stayed in town."

You know, or,

"I grew up here and I never dreamed it would be,

that this many things coming from different directions

would be available.

All kinds of new ideas and innovative ways

to look at things and learn things."

It was just kind of rejuvenating.

- I started at LHUCA on the 28th

and my very next Friday was First Friday.

She was OMNI President First Fridays.

So that was my first meeting of Louise.

Everybody had built her up

and there was so much anticipation

and she was just this lovely human being

who made everybody feel welcome and pleased to be there.

- Louise was extraordinarily proud of this place

and again not because her name was on it

but because it represented a fulfillment

of the dreams of a lot of people,

from the start this idea of a campus.

She was quite proud of what had happened.

Also I hope that one of the things she recognized,

although you couldn't get her to say this either,

was that she was this perfect mediating influence

on the various factions in creating something like this.

At the same time she inspired them and that's tough to do.

It's one thing to be the hall monitor,

you know when you have people with varying stakes

in a big endeavor like this,

but to able to keep the kids

from scruffling around the halls

and inspire them to do better,

that's a real talent.

(bittersweet piano music)

- One of the things I do every year,

and I've done this for years,

is I take a small group of fourth year

medical school students right before they graduate

and I try to work with the hospices around town

and ask the hospice if I could have a patient

that my students could interview as they're actively dying.

I got a call from hospice they said,

"We've got it set up."

"We have a very special patient for you."

I had never met Louise Hopkins Underwood before,

so this was very special to me,

of course everyone knows her in Lubbock.

So it was really a treat and I thought,

"Wow, what a generous lady to do this."

I had no idea that we actually met with her

about 96 hours before she died.

That's when I met her.

So that contact is important because she struck

and left such an impression on me

and also my medical students.

I ended up taking six students with me that day.

Louise was at home in her beautiful home

and invited us in.

That first of all struck me as incredibly generous

and really over and above what you would expect

someone who's dying to do.

So I was incredibly appreciative of that.

She was sitting up in bed.

She had her makeup was perfect.

I knew that she had been in the hospital

but you would never have known it

the way that she carried herself,

the way that she presented herself.

More than that,

usually when I meet with folks who are in this condition,

we'll meet for about 15 or 20 minutes.

Oh, no, no, no, no,

not with Louise Hopkins Underwood,

she kept us there for an hour and a half.

I finally said,

"I am sure that we are wearing you out."

You would never have known that she lacked a bit of energy.

The next day we got a thank you note from her.

We got a note from her saying,

"Thank you for coming."

"Thank you for bringing those beautiful medical students

to talk with me."

"It really made my day."

And I thought,

"Wow, this is a very special person."

I've never gotten that before.

I've been doing this a long time,

but she's remarkable.

(bittersweet piano music)

- The weekend before she died she went to the gala,

the LHUCA Gala,

which she didn't dream she was,

but after all it was the 20th Anniversary.

So she better get up and go.

Then she went to First Friday Art Trail.

She went to the theater because they had Raisin in the Sun,

which had never been performed in Lubbock.

She went out to the Ag Museum and saw the old train car

and looked around out there.

- Met her great-granddaughter,

Cheryl's daughter.

- Yeah.

Sorry, newest great-grandchild,

and then was gone.

(laughs)

It was just remarkable.

- On the way out she,

in her final hours ...

(laughs)

she wanted to make sure that we hired a bartender and ...

- Got out the good china.

- Got out the good china.

(laughs in unison)

- So she knew she was leaving.

(laughs)

- She really did change the fiber of life in Lubbock.

She changed the culture here.

We were more than cotton and football

after Louise got hold of Lubbock.

I think that's huge.

I often think about what Louise was able to accomplish.

She started LHUCA when she was 78 years old.

When she passed away

my little hashtag that I did on Facebook

when we were all kind of posting our sadness

about Louise being gone was live like Louise.

And the more I thought about that the more I'm like,

"Hey, I've got a 20 year jump on her!"

"I could actually maybe do something at 52."

She left Lubbock better than she found it.

- It think it was my Uncle Bussie that said it first.

I called him crying and he said,

"There's no reason any sadness on our part it's selfish."

She checked every box you can imagine and then some extras

which is really, really awesome.

- She lived a good long life and she was ready to go.

It was time.

Her body was wearing out.

Fortunately her mind didn't wear out.

- There wasn't anything

she wasn't able to say she didn't do.

Oh my gosh I can't believe I'm gonna tell this story.

When I was in Costa Rica at a ...

- (laughs) I can't believe you're telling this story either!

(laughs)

- So I was in Costa Rica

and I went to this bar that was just fantastic!

You're in Central America,

so you don't see bars that remind you of home

and there's this long wooden bar with pictures of

Willy Nelson and Waylon Jennings on the wall

and I was just loving it.

I called mom and I was like,

"I think I found the coolest bar!"

But then someone told me that it's a whore house so ...

- You had a lot of luck with your dates didn't you?

(laughs)

- Yeah, exactly!

So mom told grandma

and grandma's like,

"Oh, I've been there!"

"Yeah, they got a little hair salon right next door."

(laughs)

- You go to the left it's the beauty shop,

you go to the left it's the whore house.

(laughs)

I said what's wrong with me,

I'm the only one who's not been to the whore house

in Costa Rica.

But she was that kind of a mother that you would ...

David said,

"I can't believe I'm calling my mother to tell this."

And I said,

"Well, I'm gonna call my mother and tell her."

(laughs)

So it's a long family heritage.

- Louise changed my life.

She changed the course of my life

and she's also changing the course of other people's lives

and she'll do it long after she's gone through her facility,

through this arts district.

We have interns that work in these facilities

and subsequently when they look for new jobs,

when they hit the market they're not just a Masters student,

they're a Masters student with experience

and she enabled that to happen.

So she's changing kid's lives

as well as the general public's.

- Knowing Louise all those years,

five decades.

It was not only a great experience

to have a friend like Louise,

but to know well someone who truly

made a positive impact on a great number of people

and on the community in which we live.

- Louise's death,

or physical death is a reminder that first of all,

even if you're as spry and sharp and with it as Louise was

right up to the end

but we're all gonna go,

it reminds us of our own mortality,

but it also reminds us

that irrespective of what religious belief you may have

or world view about what happens to a soul when it's gone,

you don't have to look very far from Louise's life

to see that there's a lot that is still alive about Louise.

This place is one thing,

but her children,

her friends,

all of us who were influenced by her,

that still goes on.

I think our challenge

is not how do we continue the work of Louise,

she would want us to say,

"How do we continue our own work?"

And that is maybe as big and important a gift

as anyone could ever give you as an artist.

- I think right now there's a wonderful spirit downtown.

I think there's a wonderful momentum happening.

There's a wonderful symbiotic relationship

between tech and downtown

and they're getting more off-campus and doing ...

I just think there are great things happening all over.

But it's very easy just to get on the Marshal South

and go back to the Southland and never come out.

I think if we're not careful we can lose it all again.

It's gonna be dependent on all of us to show up.

I can't tell you how many times mother would call and say,

"Let's go to so-and-so."

and I'd be like,

"I can't do another thing."

and then I would be so happy I didn't miss it

because they're you know, I just ...

- And something would come from that right?

- Yeah.

- You learned something there that would take you over here

and zam you were helping something over there.

- Exactly.

- She's amazing.

- Yeah.

We got a lot of work to do.

(laughs)

(bittersweet piano music)

For more infomation >> Louise | 24 Frames | PBS Digital Studios - Duration: 27:48.

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