Top Vídeos
Prepare to have your skin crawl as we relive some of our creepiest insect moments! From Wetas that resurrect themselves from beyond the grave to being eaten whole by giant snails - it's about to get creepy.
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Welcome to BBC EARTH! The world is an amazing place full of stories, beauty and natural wonder. Here you'll find 50 years worth of entertaining and thought-provoking natural history content. Dramatic, rare, and exclusive, nature doesn't get more exciting than this.
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Two young lions venture dangerously close to a nearby village, endangering the humans and livestock who live there. Ranger Flip has to take desperate measures to fend off the lions while preserving the safety of these majestic animals.
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Planet Earth http://bit.ly/PlanetEarthPlaylist
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Planet Dinosaur http://bit.ly/PlanetDinoPlaylist
Natural World: Desert Lions
In the mid-1980s, hundreds of lions suddenly disappeared from the Namib Desert. Now, equally mysteriously, they have returned. How can such a magnificent animal survive in one of the harshest deserts in the world? Philip 'Flip' Stander has made it his mission to find out. Along with his assistant Lise and the expertise of the San Bushmen, Flip will journey into the land of scorched giant sand dunes and reveal the fascinating lives of these desert cats.
Welcome to BBC EARTH! The world is an amazing place full of stories, beauty and natural wonder. Here you'll find 50 years worth of entertaining and thought-provoking natural history content. Dramatic, rare, and exclusive, nature doesn't get more exciting than this.
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These adorable bear cubs are ready for their close up.
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Planet Dinosaur http://bit.ly/PlanetDinoPlaylist
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Natural World: Black Bears Of The Northwoods
Forty years ago Lynn Rogers began studying the black bears of the American Northwoods. During this time, he has formed a unique relationship with the bears, allowing him to spend time in close proximity with them, revealing more about their habits and characters than ever before. Through his research, Lynn Rogers hopes to prove that bears can live alongside people happily. Natural World follows Lynn and the bears for a year, revealing the nature of his relationship with his research subjects, including intimate footage of a bear and her new-born cubs.
Welcome to BBC EARTH! The world is an amazing place full of stories, beauty and natural wonder. Here you'll find 50 years worth of astounding, entertaining, thought-provoking and educational natural history content. Dramatic, rare, and exclusive, nature doesn't get more exciting than this.
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These strange creatures leap from spine covered tree to spine covered tree. Their technique is amazing as they are able to leap from tall tree trunks to land safely and securely, even with babies - if they can avoid their four footed predator, the Fossa. Subscribe: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSub
From the BBC's Life of Mammals documentary series.
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New on Earth: https://bit.ly/2M3La96
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Wild Thailand: https://bit.ly/2kR7lmh
Welcome to BBC EARTH! The world is an amazing place full of stories, beauty and natural wonder. Here you'll find 50 years worth of astounding, entertaining, thought-provoking and educational natural history content. Dramatic, rare, and exclusive, nature doesn't get more exciting than this.
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In this amazing footage from the BBC wildlife series Cousins, Dr Charlotte Uhlenbroek has her first encounter with a family of gorillas, including an impressive Silverback, having a siesta in the jungle. Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos and watch more high quality videos on the new BBC Earth YouTube channel here: http://www.youtube.com/bbcearth
A peaceful grazer becomes predator out on the African plains as a baboon stalks a gazelle. Will its reputation as one of the fastest animals on the African savannah be enough to save the gazelle from being caught? Subscribe: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSub
David Attenborough examines its survival instincts with the aid of computer graphics.
WATCH MORE:
New on Earth: https://bit.ly/2M3La96
Oceanscapes: https://bit.ly/2Hmd2kZ
Wild Thailand: https://bit.ly/2kR7lmh
Welcome to BBC EARTH! The world is an amazing place full of stories, beauty and natural wonder. Here you'll find 50 years worth of astounding, entertaining, thought-provoking and educational natural history content. Dramatic, rare, and exclusive, nature doesn't get more exciting than this.
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On the coast of Vancouver Island, the changing tides have a fascinating impact on shallow sea life. Raccoons take full advantage of the low tide to enjoy a sea feast in the spring tides. Subscribe: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSub
Taken From Blue Planet Series 1
WATCH MORE:
New on Earth: https://bit.ly/2M3La96
Oceanscapes: https://bit.ly/2Hmd2kZ
Wild Thailand: https://bit.ly/2kR7lmh
Welcome to BBC EARTH! The world is an amazing place full of stories, beauty and natural wonder. Here you'll find 50 years worth of astounding, entertaining, thought-provoking and educational natural history content. Dramatic, rare, and exclusive, nature doesn't get more exciting than this.
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This is a channel from BBC Studios who help fund new BBC programmes. Service information and feedback: http://bbcworldwide.com/vod-fe....edback--contact-deta
(0:00) 1.White China________________________(17:53) 5.Man of Two Worlds
(3:51) 2.One Small Day______________________(22:22) 6.Heart of the Country
(8:25) 3.Dancing with Tears in My Eyes_______(27:31) 7.When the Time Comes
(13:09) 4.Lament____________________________(32:32) 8.A Friend I Call Desire
Ⓟ&Ⓒ 1984 Chrysalis.
A couple of these tracks could already be found on youtube - here's the complete thing.
Ultravox! - such a great band while John Foxx was still part of it. They appropriately dropped the '!' afterwards, having become a totally different, utterly boring and ridiculous but -oh the irony of it!- extremely successful combo.
approx.timing :
01 - I want to be a machine - 00.00
02 - Slip away - 06.49
03 - Frozen ones - 11.00
04 - Distant smile - 15.22
05 - Young savage - 18.46
06 - My sex - 22.14
07 - Artificial life - 25.08 (fades in)
08 - Wide boys - 29.50
09 - Saturday night (in the city of the dead) - 32.38
10 - The wild, the beautiful and the damned - 35.35
11 - Rockwrok - 42.02
12 - Fear in the western world - 45.25 (incomplete - fades out)
Something is growing inside that fruit fly in your kitchen. At dusk, the fly points its wings straight up and dies in a gruesome pose so that a fungus can ooze out and fire hundreds of reproductive spores.
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DEEP LOOK is a ultra-HD (4K) short video series created by KQED San Francisco and presented by PBS Digital Studios. See the unseen at the very edge of our visible world. Explore big scientific mysteries by going incredibly small.
Some of the scariest monsters are the ones that grow inside another being and take over its body. Think of the movie Alien, where the reptile-like space creature explodes out of its victim’s chest.
That monster might be fictional, but scientists are studying a fungus that’s horrifyingly real — at least for the flies it invades, turns into a zombie-like state and kills in order to reproduce.
“Oh, it’s a nightmare for the flies,” said entomologist Brad Mullens, who studied the fungus at the University of California, Riverside.
The fungus is known by its scientific name, Entomophthora muscae, which means “fly destroyer.” It lives off houseflies and fruit flies, among others.
“It’s a crazy system,” said Carolyn Elya, a biologist at Harvard. “The fungus only kills at dusk.”
Like a killer puppeteer, the fungus follows a precise clock.
At dusk on the fourth or fifth day after it picks up a fungal spore, an infected fruit fly stops flying. It starts behaving erratically, for example climbing up and down toothpicks that Elya puts into the vials where she keeps the infected insects.
Then the fly climbs to the top of the toothpick, a behavior Elya and other scientists refer to as “summiting.”
In an unusual twist, the fly then extends its mouthpart down, and some liquid drips out and glues the fly to the surface it’s standing on. Over the next 10 minutes, the fly’s wings ascend until they’re pointing upwards and it dies frozen in this lifelike pose.
Soon after, white spongy fungus oozes out of its abdomen. This white goo is made up of hundreds of lollipop-shaped protrusions which each launch a microscopic bell-shaped spore at high speed. Now the spores just need to get into another fly to grow.
--- Could this or a similar fungus “zombify” humans?
“No, it's very unlikely,” Elya said. “We can control our bodily temperature to kill invaders.”
-- Can we use the fungus as biological control?
Researchers have tried, but the spores are too fragile to grow in the lab.
---+ Read the entire article on KQED Science:
https://www.kqed.org/science/1....949314/this-killer-f
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?Congratulations? to the following fans on our Deep Look Community Tab for coming up with the top titles - as decided by fellow Deep Peeps - for a horror movie starring this fungus:
Joginiz - "Flyday the 13th'
KingXDragoon - "Pretty Fly for a dead guy"
Laura Garrard - The Fungus Among Us!!
Lysiasolo - "Parafungal activity"
De paus van de Lilith Kerk - The whitecorpse horror (as an ode to HP Lovecraft "the Dunwich horror")
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Fluffy kittens chasing a ball are beyond adorable -- but they sure aren't born that way. Practically deaf and blind, in their first few weeks they need constant warmth and milk to survive. This is a huge challenge for animal shelters, so they're working with researchers on ways to help motherless kittens flourish.
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DEEP LOOK is a ultra-HD (4K) short video series created by KQED San Francisco and presented by PBS Digital Studios. See the unseen at the very edge of our visible world. Get a new perspective on our place in the universe and meet extraordinary new friends. Explore big scientific mysteries by going incredibly small.
--
Every year, hundreds of thousands of kittens end up in animal shelters, in need of permanent homes.
But raising orphaned newborns into healthy, fluffy, frisky two-month-olds ready to be adopted requires an enormous behind-the-scenes effort. All across the country, volunteer foster parents log many sleepless nights bottle-feeding kittens every few hours. So researchers and shelters are trying to figure out ways to make it easier.
“A lot of people think fostering is taking kittens home and playing with them,” said Penny Dougherty, chief executive director of Kitten Central of Placer County, an animal shelter she runs from her house in Newcastle, California, 30 miles northeast of Sacramento.
Kitten Central receives most of its kittens from Placer County Animal Services. Dougherty cares for kittens up to one month old, as well as feral and stray cats with litters. Once the kittens weigh at least two pounds and have been spayed and neutered, she returns them to the agency so they can put them up for adoption.
“They’re very happy to have our services,” said Dougherty, “because so many shelters have to euthanize.”
When the days start getting longer, around January, cats start breeding. March is the beginning of what’s known among shelters as “kitten season.” The flow of kittens doesn’t slow down until November.
“Kitten season is kind of one of the banes of shelter existence,” said Cynthia Delany, supervising shelter veterinarian at Yolo County Animal Services, in Woodland, west of Sacramento. “Six or seven months out of the year we’re just flooded with these little guys.”
To steer clear of inundating shelters with newborn kittens, Delany’s advice is to leave any litters you might encounter alone unless they’re in immediate danger. Most of the time their mom will return, she said, so check back periodically.
In an effort to lessen the load on foster parents and increase newborn kittens’ chances of survival, Mikel Maria Delgado, a postdoctoral researcher in the School of Veterinary Medicine at the University of California, Davis, is joining forces with Kitten Central and other animal shelters to figure out if there are optimum temperature and humidity levels that make it possible to feed newborn kittens less frequently. She has distributed incubators to the groups so that two or three kittens can be kept in each one for about three weeks.
---How long do kittens' eyes stay closed?
During the first week-and-a-half of their lives, kittens’ eyes are sealed closed and their ears are folded up, making them practically blind and deaf. They’re born this way because their brains aren’t developed enough to use those senses.
---+ Read the entire article on KQED Science:
https://www.kqed.org/science/1....930803/how-kittens-g
---+ For more information:
If you find a litter of newborn kittens: https://eastbayspca.org/get-in....volved/community-res
---+ More Great Deep Look episodes:
Why Does Your Cat’s Tongue Feel Like Sandpaper?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9h_QtLol75I&t=24s
Watch This Bee Build Her Bee-jeweled Nest
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPbH1YhsdP8
---+ See some great videos and documentaries from PBS Digital Studios!
It’s Okay to Be Smart: Why Do Disney Princesses All Look Like Babies?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1gzpEktyKo
PBS Eons: The Story of Saberteeth
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hbjIhPHRZgc
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KQED, an NPR and PBS affiliate in San Francisco, CA, serves Northern California and beyond with a public-supported alternative to commercial TV, radio and web media.
Funding for Deep Look is provided in part by PBS Digital Studios. Deep Look is a project of KQED Science, which is supported by the Templeton Religion Trust and the Templeton World Charity Foundation, the S. D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation, the Dirk and Charlene Kabcenell Foundation, the Vadasz Family Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Fuhs Family Foundation Fund and the members of KQED.
The killer punch of the mantis shrimp is the fastest strike in the animal kingdom, a skill that goes hand in hand with its extraordinary eyesight. They can see an invisible level of reality using polarized light, which could lead to a breakthrough in detecting cancer.
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DEEP LOOK is a ultra-HD (4K) short video series created by KQED San Francisco and presented by PBS Digital Studios. See the unseen at the very edge of our visible world. Get a new perspective on our place in the universe and meet extraordinary new friends. Explore big scientific mysteries by going incredibly small.
* NEW VIDEOS EVERY OTHER TUESDAY! *
Aggressive, reef-dwelling mantis shrimp take more than one first-place ribbon in the animal kingdom. Outwardly resembling their lobster cousins, their colorful shells contain an impressive set of superpowers.
There are two types of mantis shrimp, named for their attack mode while hunting prey: smashers and spearers. With their spring-loaded, weaponized legs, these predators can crack a snail shell or harpoon a passing fish in a single punch.
The speed of these attacks has earned the mantis shrimp one of their world records: fastest strike in the animal kingdom.
Scientists are finding that another of their special abilities -- incredible eyesight -- has potential life-saving implications for people with cancer.
Mantis shrimp can perceive the most elusive attribute of light from the human standpoint: polarization. Polarization refers to the angle that light travels through space. Though it’s invisible to the human eye, many animals see this quality of light, especially underwater.
But mantis shrimp can see a special kind of polarization, called circular polarization. Scientists have found that some mantis shrimp species use circular polarization to communicate with each other on a kind of secret visual channel for mating and territorial purposes.
Inspired by the mantis shrimp’s superlative eyesight, a group of researchers is collaborating to build polarization cameras that would constitute a giant leap for early cancer detection. These cameras see otherwise invisible cancerous tissues by detecting their polarization signature, which is different between diseased and healthy tissues.
--- How fast is the mantis shrimp punch?
Their strike is about as fast as a .22 caliber rifle bullet. It’s been measured at 50mph.
--- What do mantis shrimp eat?
The “smasher” mantis shrimp eat hard-shelled creatures like snails and crabs. The “spearers” grab fish, worms, seahorses, and other soft-bodied prey by impaling them.
--- Where do mantis shrimp live?
In reefs, from the east coast of Africa to the west coast of Australia, and throughout Indonesia. A few species are scattered around the globe, including two in California.
---+ Read the entire article on KQED Science:
https://ww2.kqed.org/science/2....016/11/15/the-snail-
---+ For more information:
Caldwell Lab at U.C. Berkeley: http://ib.berkeley.edu/labs/caldwell/
---+ More Great Deep Look episodes:
Nature's Scuba Divers: How Beetles Breathe Underwater
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T-RtG5Z-9jQ
Sea Urchins Pull Themselves Inside Out to be Reborn
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ak2xqH5h0YY
---+ See some great videos and documentaries from the PBS Digital Studios!
Physics Girl: The Ultraviolet Catastrophe
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FXfrncRey-4
Gross Science: What Sound Does An Ant Make?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yif0c0bRA48
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KQED, an NPR and PBS affiliate in San Francisco, CA, serves Northern California and beyond with a public-supported alternative to commercial TV, Radio and web media.
Funding for Deep Look is provided in part by PBS Digital Studios and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. Deep Look is a project of KQED Science, which is also supported by HopeLab, the S. D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation, the Dirk and Charlene Kabcenell Foundation, the Vadasz Family Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Smart Family Foundation and the members of KQED.
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Dermestid Beetles are fast and fastidious eaters. They can pick a carcass clean in just days leaving even the most delicate bone structures intact. This makes them the perfect tool for museum scientists-- if you keep them far, far away from valuable collections.
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In nature, Dermestid Beetles are death-homing devices. They’ll find a dead body about a week after death and lay eggs in the drying flesh. The larvae emerge with a voracious appetite, outgrowing their skins six to eight times in just days before pupating, becoming adults and flying away to start a new colony.
These Dermestid Beetles at the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology at UC Berkeley are direct descendants from the original colony established in this museum in 1924. The process now used at museums around the world was pioneered here. These are the beetles you see here in this flesh-eating beetles time lapse.
Scientists in the prep lab downstairs receive nearly a thousand carcasses a year. It’s their job to preserve each animal for long-term use in the collections upstairs. And the work is not for the squeamish.
What makes beetles ideal for cleaning museum specimens is that they’re fast and fastidious eaters. They can pick a carcass clean while leaving even the most delicate bone structures intact.
It takes a large beetle colony 24 – 48 hours to clean the bones of small animals like rabbits and owls, and they can work on 100 - 200 specimens at a time. Larger animals like deer or coyotes take about a week.
But the alliance between beetles and museum is an uneasy one. Downstairs the beetles are a critical tool. But if Dermestids got loose upstairs, they could wreak havoc in the library stacks, munching through specimen drawers and ruining entire collections.
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---
More great DEEP LOOK episodes:
Where Are the Ants Carrying All Those Leaves?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6oKJ5FGk24
What Happens When You Put a Hummingbird in a Wind Tunnel?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyqY64ovjfY
Pygmy Seahorses: Masters of Camouflage
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3CtGoqz3ww
Related videos from the PBS Digital Studios Network!
Can Microbes Solve Murder Mysteries? - Gross Science
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kRUt9pqMCSg
The Surprising Ways Death Shapes Our Lives - BrainCraft
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Joalg73L_gw
Do Animals Mourn Their Dead? - It's Okay to Be Smart (ft. BrainCraft and Gross Science!)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rHJDmMSKlHM
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Funding for Deep Look is provided in part by PBS Digital Studios and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. Deep Look is a project of KQED Science, which is supported by HopeLab, The David B. Gold Foundation; S. D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation; The Dirk and Charlene Kabcenell Foundation; The Vadasz Family Foundation; Smart Family Foundation and the members of KQED.
#deeplook #dermestids #dermestidbeetle
[PS2] Kung Fu Panda El Videojuego - Parte 1 - Español
El Sueño de Po
Mais vídeos, acesse: http://meusgamesvideos.blogspot.com
Quebrando o tabu de jogos baseados em filmes, experiência é divertida e agradável sem grandes pretensões; videoanálise
Disponível para Xbox 360, Playstation 3, Playstation 2, Computador. Nintendo Wii e DS.
Level 2: Tournament of the Dragon Warrior Kung Fu Panda walkthrough Xbox 360 PS3 Wii PS2 PC full Walkthrough / Playthrough & movie Gameplay no commentary
Kung Fu Panda Walkthrough Part 2 No Commentary (X360, PS3, PS2, Wii)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a2fw-Jgoolw
WishingTikal
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♥♥♥♥♥ #WishingTikal About: Hey there, I'm Gen, or Tikal. I worked years on Gamefaqs writing walkthroughs. Now I make video guides out of them. I do 100% collectibles runs to show where all of the secrets are. I record all footage all by myself, every single one, and edit them together to remove mistakes, or loading times, to make for the best and most fluid viewing experience possible and help others. My walkthroughs are usually of superior quality, so pick mines! I record in 1080p most of the time, except my older videos which are in 720p. I use HDPVR2 to record. I work the hardest possible to provide you the best gaming help. All games are posted with permission from the owners and some game codes are also often given by the publisher.
Please read the Description Box/Info Box before writing anything.
Spoiler alert!!
I only record these games for Entertainment Purposes, for myself, friends and other people that have interest for the videos. I never record the video to show off my gaming skill; I'm just showing of the games. I'm not doing guides to teach anyone how to play a game. None of my video suppose to be one either unless it stated otherwise! Read before you write any complain! Talk about the game however you want, but insult that are directed to me will be remove!
~~~~~~~ Enjoy the Video! ~~~~~~~
.: Info about this Video :.
English Title: Kung Fu Panda
Platform: Microsoft Windows 7, Wii, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 2, Xbox 360, Nintendo DS
Played on: PlayStation 3
Developer: Luxoflux (PlayStation 3, Xbox 360); Beenox (PC); XPEC Entertainment (Wii, PlayStation 2); Vicarious Visions (Nintendo DS)
Publisher: Activision
Genre(s): Action-adventure
Mode(s): Single-player, multiplayer
The game revolves around Po, a giant panda who dreams of becoming a great kung fu fighter. Unfortunately his weight and clumsiness makes this ambition seemingly unattainable. However, soon he finds himself going on a journey to save the land from an evil snow leopard named Tai Lung. But also joining the fray are the forces of the Great Gorilla, Tai Lung and the Wu Sisters' wolves, the Boar Gang, Imperial Golden Croc Gang and the Lang Shadow Army, bent on capturing the Jade Palace's treasures. Also, unlike the film, the Furious Five are captured by various gangs only to be saved by Po.
Recording Device use to record this video:
- AVerTV DarkCrystal HD Capture Station C874
"Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."
Selina, Robbie and Mel all sit down and play some of the Kung Fu Panda mini games!
A pesar de los insultos recibidos a través de diversos medios de comunicación, que la etiquetaron como "la mujer más fea del mundo", Lizzie Velasquez salió adelante y actualmente da charlas motivacionales y ha publicado dos libros, explicando en qué consiste la verdadera belleza.
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