A troubled 15-year-old boy attempting to cope with the recent death of his mother sets out to research Dr. Max Gerson’s claims of a diet that can cure cancer as his first assignment for home-schooling in this documentary from filmmaker Steve Kroschel (Avalanche, Dying to Have Known). Garrett is a boy who has always been close to nature. He lives on a reserve with a menagerie of orphaned animals, and over the years he’s become especially sensitive to the nutritional needs of the diet-sensitive animals he’s charged with caring for. When Garrett’s mother suffers a tragic and untimely death, the boy falls into a dangerous downward spiral and nearly flunks out of school. Increasingly concerned for Garrett’s well-being and determined to strengthen their bond despite the many challenges on the horizon, his father makes the decision to begin home-schooling the distressed teen. Garrett’s first assignment: study a controversial book written by Dr. Max Gerson, a physician who claims to have discovered a diet that’s capable of curing cancer. Is Dr. Gerson’s therapy truly the legitimate, alternative cure it appears to be? In order to find out the truth behind this long-suppressed treatment, Garrett interviews not only Dr. Gerson’s family members, but various doctors, skeptics, and cancer patients as well. His studies completed and his findings revelatory, Garrett now sets out to tell the entire world about The Gerson Miracle.
]]>Britta Riley wanted to grow her own food (in her tiny apartment). So she and her friends developed a system for growing plants in discarded plastic bottles — researching, testing and tweaking the system using social media, trying many variations at once and quickly arriving at the optimal system. Call it distributed DIY. And the results? Delicious.
]]>A kid is at the table and receives a Kinder egg. Very excited, it is quick to loosen the packing, and then instinctively, it puts it into the mouth to break the shell of chocolate. When he properly bites the egg, the kid regrets he did it, because his parents have packed a real chicken egg, that boy broke it, and whites and yolk have seeped out, leaving him with broken skin between the teeth.
About the Romanian Calusari
Part I – Introductory music with Beyond the pale
Part II – Unesco and Wikipedia about Calusari
Part III – Romanian dance and music of Calusari
The Căluşari (Romanian pronunciation: [kəluˈʃarʲ]) were the members of a Romanian fraternal secret society who practiced a ritual acrobatic dance known as the căluş. According to the Romanian historian Mircea Eliade, the Calusari were known for “their ability to create the impression of flying in the air”which he believed represented both the galloping of a horse and the dancing of the fairies (zine). Indeed, the group’s patron was the “Queen of the Fairies” (Doamna Zinelor), who was also known as Irodiada and Arada, and who Eliade connected with the folkloric figure Diana.
Due to their connection with the fairies, the Calusari were believed to be able to cure the victims of fairies and for around two weeks – from three weeks after Easter till Whitsunday – would travel to all the local communities where they would dance, accompanied by a few fiddlers, in order to do so. In their dance, the Căluşari carried clubs and a sword, as well as a flag and a wooden horsehead. They swore on the group’s flag to treat each other as brothers, to respect the customs of the Calusari and to remain chaste for the next nine days. Upon their return home, their flag was fixed into the ground, with one member climbing up in and crying out “war, dear ones, war!”
The origins of the Calusari are unknown, although the first written attestations are from the 17th century musical notations of Ioan Căianu. Eliade noted that “Although the oath taken is made in the name of God, the mythico-ritual scenario enacted by the calusari has nothing in common with Christianity” and that, in the 19th century at least, there was clerical opposition to the group, with its members being excluded from taking communion for three years in some regions
]]>Although it has only 23, Aaron Evans could play in the most spectacular action movies in Hollywood.
He managed to do a flick-flack over a car headed toward him at a speed of 30 kilometers per hour.
His performance was also recorded in the Guinness Book of Records. Its secret lies in how he manages to control his breathing.
The young man make such jumps with fantastic easyness. He is known for Flick Flack’s while he throws himself from various buildings.
]]>Drawing from some of the most pivotal points in his life, Steve Jobs, chief executive officer and co-founder of Apple Computer and of Pixar Animation Studios, urged graduates to pursue their dreams and see the opportunities in life’s setbacks — including death itself — at the university’s 114th Commencement on June 12, 2005.
]]>Predictive Programming and the Human Microchipping Agenda confirms the reality of the microchip agenda, and shows that the weapon of propaganda has been used against the public for decades in order to familiarize us with the idea of being chipped. This process is called predictive programming and its purpose is literally to program the mind of the victim so as to accept without question whatever is required by the programmer – in this case, the idea of being microchipped at some point in the future. The victim is generally unaware of being programmed, believing that it’s all just harmless entertainment. For this reason it can be a powerful and effective weapon against us.
We are not showing you this as a definitive conclusion, but since we are an open television, we are subjecting this matter to the public consideration. So YOU are the one who will comment upon this ideas.
Thank you for watching and we are strongly encourage you to express your free oppinion, either pro or contra.