Results for: area 51 vol 2
Area 51 Vol.2.rar
2008-05-08 - extension: rar - size: 93 MB
Area 51 Vol.2.rar
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Ssshhhh... don't tell anyone this secret! (Vol. 1) Ssshhhh... don't tell anyone this secret! (Vol. 1)
http://www.MLMGoldMine.com
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(More) Ssshhhh... don't tell anyone this secret! (Vol. 1)
http://www.MLMGoldMine.com
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MLMGoldMine Video Battle Stats...
Most Video Views:
#1) Mike Allen = 12,299 views
#2) Andy Dries = 6,431 views
#3) Jordan Kothe = 3,776 views
#4) Ron Reed = 3,144 views
#5) Brad Eaton 3,101 views
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Most Comments:
#1) Ron Reed = 50 Comments
#2) Tracey = 43 Comments
#3) Karin Hiebert = 38 Comments
#4) Mike Allen = 34 Comments
#5) Mia Woods = 28 Comments
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Most Favorites:
#1) Ben Derige = 51 Favorites
#2) Karin Hiebert = 21 Favorites
#3) Tracey = 20 Favorites
#4) Ron Reed = 17 Favorites
#5a) James Winne = 15 Favorites
#5b) Holly Powell = 15 Favorites
#5c) Mike Allen = 15 Favorites
#5d) Berry Collins = 15 Favorites
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Biggest Take-Aways:
#1) To Be Determined
#2) To Be Determined
#3) To Be Determined
#4) To Be Determined
#5) To Be Determined
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Multi-level marketing (MLM) is a business model that combines direct marketing with franchising.
Multi-level marketing businesses function by recruiting salespeople (also called Distributors, Independent Business Owners, IBOs, Franchise Owners, Sales Consultants, Beauty Consultants, Consultants, etc.) to sell a product and offer additional sales commissions based on the sales of people recruited into their downline, an organization of people that includes direct recruits, recruits' recruits, etc. This arrangement is similar to franchise arrangements where royalties are paid from the sales of individual franchise operations to the franchisor as well as to an area or region manager, but in some MLM programs, there can be seven or more levels of people receiving royalties from one person's sales.
Accurate information about multilevel marketing is not easy to get. Few publishers, editors, and broadcasters are willing to examine this topic in depth. Most reports reaching the public express what the companies and individual distributors would like people to believe. Nearly all MLM companies selling health-related products exaggerate their value, and the vast majority of people who become distributors do not make significant income.
Four Lies about MLM
John Milton Fogg
The lies that limit the future of network marketing began as so many untruths do. They were told initially to bolster up our insecurity -- in this case, our industry's perceived lack of self-esteem. The lies were harmless "little white" (i.e. "okay") ones, meant to make us seem bigger and better than we really thought we were. As they always do, the lies backfired. Now, when people ask us about this or that "false-fact", and we have to admit to their fabrication, we come up looking smaller and worse than we are.
What lies am I talking about? These:
* The Wall Street Journal has said that by the year 2000, 60 to 70 percent of all goods and services will be sold through MLM.
* "Network marketing is taught at Harvard and Stanford business schools and in numerous other leading colleges and universities throughout the country.
* Some 20 percent of all the millionaires in America were created through network marketing.
* John Naisbitt, in his best-selling book, Megatrends, says network marketing is the wave of the future.
There are others. These are the leading offenders. I have yet to speak to any group of people about network marketing -- from established MLMers to the general public -- and not be asked about one or all of these statements. (Less)
Shelter from the Storm bob dylan shelter from the storm cover in "open E"(ive got it tuned down to "open (More) bob dylan shelter from the storm cover in "open E"(ive got it tuned down to "open D" with a capo on the second fret
i promised lynette some dylan...this is one of my favorites from blood on the tracks. when i discovered that every song on the album was in open D and open E tuning i decided to relearn every song...very edifying :o)
Eric Clapton once said about Dylan: "His way of playing anything is totally hybrid. It doesn't make sense musically to the scholar. [...] At first listening, everything he does is just real hopeless. Then you look back and realise it's exactly right." As a scholar I take this as a challenge: If something is "exactly right", but still doesn't make sense to the scholar, it is either the scholar's sense or the scholar's analytical tools that are inadequate. I take the liberty of disregarding the first possibility -- although that is probably the commonest cause for scholarly not-being-made-sense-to-ness -- and concentrate on the second: the problems inherent in musical analysis of music of Dylan's kind.
Blood on the Tracks is singer-songwriter Bob Dylan's 15th studio album, released in 1975 by Columbia Records, which marked Dylan's return to Columbia after a two-album stint with Asylum Records.
The album, which followed several years of lukewarm reception for Dylan's work, was greeted respectably by fans and critics. In the years following its release, it has come to be regarded as one of his very best albums - making it quite common for subsequent records to be labeled his "best since Blood on the Tracks."[1] [2] [3] [4] It is also commonly seen as a standard for confessional singer-songwriter albums, though Dylan has denied that the songs are autobiographical, his son Jakob Dylan has stated: "The songs are my parents talking."[5] Most of the lyrics on the album revolve around heartache, anger, and loneliness.
The album reached #1 on the Billboard U.S. pop charts and #4 in the UK. The single "Tangled Up in Blue" peaked at #31 on the Pop singles chart. The album remains one of Dylan's all-time best-selling studio releases, with a double-platinum US certification to date.
The songs are largely seen as inspired by Dylan's personal turmoil at the time, particularly his separation from his then wife Sara Dylan.
All ten songs on the album were originally recorded at New York City sessions produced by Phil Ramone. With Columbia set to release the LP, Dylan pulled back at the last minute, and at year's end re-recorded five of the ten songs in Minneapolis with a crew of area session musicians assembled by his brother, David Zimmerman.
Dylan's fans theorize endlessly about his reasons for revamping the album, with one unconfirmed view being that the musical feel of the album had been monotonous, with too many songs in the same key and the same languid rhythm. It has also been said that, just two weeks before the release of Blood on the Tracks, Dylan played an acetate of the record for his brother, his ensuing comments leading Dylan to re-cut the album. [1]
Told of the album's lasting popularity, Dylan was later to say (in a radio interview by Mary Travers): "A lot of people tell me they enjoy that album. It's hard for me to relate to that. I mean, it, you know, people enjoying the type of pain, you know?"
In Dylan's 2004 memoir, Chronicles, Vol. 1, he claims that although one album of his songs was entirely inspired by short stories by Anton Chekhov, many of his fans and critics treat it as autobiographical. This passage is often cited as a reference to Blood on the Tracks.
] Track listing
Side one
"Tangled Up in Blue" -- 5:42
"Simple Twist of Fate" -- 4:19
"You're a Big Girl Now" -- 4:36
"Idiot Wind" -- 7:48
"You're Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go" -- 2:55
Side two
"Meet Me in the Morning" -- 4:22
"Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts" -- 8:51
"If You See Her, Say Hello" -- 4:49
"Shelter from the Storm" -- 5:02
"Buckets of Rain" -- 3:22 (Less)
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