#live webcasting
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meelapindia · 2 months ago
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Live Webcast Solutions: Revolutionizing Virtual Events
Live webcasting solutions have undoubtedly revolutionized the way we communicate and engage with audiences. They provide a powerful tool for businesses, organizations, and individuals looking to expand their reach and deliver real-time content.
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awenydd-andros · 1 year ago
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GothVille, streaming/broadcasting from Belgium
https://gothville.radio/public/gothville
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epiknetwork · 7 months ago
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thegeekiary · 1 year ago
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The Bitching Dead Issue #54: "Fear the Walking Dead" Season 8 Finale, "TWD: The Ones Who Live" And More!
Rick Grimes in The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live Season One Episode One (Image: Trailer) The Bitching Dead issue 54 had Bekah, Tara and I discuss a whole lot of stuff. We covered the first seasons of TWD Dead City and Daryl Dixon, FTWD Season 8 Finale, and the premiere episode of TWD: The Ones Who Live. Continue reading The Bitching Dead Issue #54: “Fear the Walking Dead” Season 8 Finale, “TWD:…
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mhzmegahertz · 1 year ago
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Virtual event webcasting | Live Streaming services in Sunnyvale, CA
Virtual event webcasting and Live Streaming services AV company in Sunnyvale. We specialize in recording and streaming live events and virtual events
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24-frames-digital · 2 years ago
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Interactive Live Streaming: Engaging Viewers with Q&A Sessions and Polls
Businesses are constantly seeking inventive methods to capture their customers and develop meaningful connections in the ever-changing landscape of digital marketing. Interactive live streaming has emerged as a game-changer in the arsenal of modern strategies. As a leading live streaming company in Mumbai, 24 Frames Digital recognizes the power of engagement through Q&A sessions and polls. This article explores the significance of interactive live streaming and how incorporating Q&A sessions and polls can elevate your brand's live streaming experience, driving meaningful interactions with your audience.
1. The Rise of Interactive Live Streaming
Traditional one-way broadcasting has its merits, but in today's dynamic digital era, audiences crave a more immersive experience. Interactive live streaming allows businesses to bridge the gap between brands and customers by enabling real-time, two-way communication. Viewers can actively participate, making them feel more engaged and valued, fostering a deeper connection with the brand.
2. Empowering Audience Participation through Q&A Sessions
One of the most effective ways to engage viewers during live streams is through Q&A sessions. Business owners can use this opportunity to address queries, concerns, and comments from the audience directly. By acknowledging and responding to their audience, companies demonstrate a genuine interest in their customers' needs, building trust and credibility.
During Q&A sessions, businesses can also gain valuable insights into their target audience's preferences, pain points, and expectations. This valuable information can guide future business decisions, product improvements, and content creation, ensuring the brand remains relevant and customer-centric.
3. Harnessing the Power of Polls
Polls are another indispensable tool for driving interaction and engagement during live streams. They offer a fun and interactive way for businesses to gather opinions and feedback from their audience. Polls can cover various topics, from product and content preferences to customer satisfaction and future event ideas.
The instant nature of polls allows businesses to obtain real-time data, which can be used to tailor live stream content on the spot or to shape future marketing strategies. Additionally, polls create a sense of inclusivity, as viewers feel like active participants in the decision-making process, further enhancing brand loyalty.
4. Building a Community
Interactive live streaming, through Q&A sessions and polls, fosters community among viewers. When participants see their questions answered or their opinions considered, they feel connected to both the brand and other like-minded viewers. This sense of community cultivates a positive brand perception and encourages viewers to return for future live streams, knowing their voices will be heard and valued.
5. Data-Driven Decision Making
The insights gathered from interactive elements during live streams provide invaluable insights for data-driven decision making. Businesses can use data analysis to spot patterns, client preferences, and opportunities for improvement. With this knowledge, they may improve their products, services, and marketing tactics to better fulfill the requirements and expectations of their customers.
6. Extending Reach and Social Media Amplification
Engaging viewers through interactive live streaming can lead to increased social media amplification. When viewers have a positive and memorable experience, they are more likely to share highlights, snippets, or even the entire live stream on their social media platforms. This organic sharing expands the reach of the live stream, exposing the brand to new audiences and potential customers.
Conclusion
Interactive live streaming has shown to be an effective tool for organizations seeking to engage their customers, build meaningful connections, and increase brand loyalty. Businesses can empower their audience, acquire useful information, and develop community by introducing Q&A sessions and polls into live streaming.
As an experienced live streaming company in Mumbai, 24 Frames Digital understands the importance of interactive live streaming and its role in helping businesses thrive in the digital age. By incorporating Q&A sessions and polls into live streams, company owners may increase the engagement of their brand with their target audience. This distinct strategy distinguishes them in a crowded market, resulting in a memorable and memorable encounter. So, leverage the power of interactive live streaming and witness the transformation it brings to your brand's digital presence.
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mangionebabymama · 6 months ago
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I just found something interesting from the UPenn Archives. Though Luigi earned his Bachelor and Master’s in Computer Science in 2020, the class of 2020 Master’s and Doctoral Degree Commencement program (the graduating class he was part of) was not held in-person until May 2022, due to COVID-19.
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These pictures of him in his graduation regalia were actually taken in 2022, not 2020.
Inside the digitized Class of 2020 Commencement Program:
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There was also a live recorded webcast of the Commencement, shown here on YouTube that you can watch below:
Now, Luigi was most likely somewhere in that sea of parade of walking graduates, and may be found somewhere on footage throughout the duration of the ceremony. Unless you have immense technical and facial recognition skills, and you have an hour and forty seven minutes of your day to try and find him in this livestream, knock your socks off. I just thought this would be cool to share and add more context and clarity of the event of him graduating from UPenn.
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ostensiblynone · 2 months ago
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But frontman Liam Gallagher doesn't pretend to know why T.O. is hosting the Oasis "Net All Nighter," as it's called. "I don't know anything about it, to tell you the truth," says Gallagher, still under the covers in bed while chatting on the phone from his hotel room in Columbus, Ohio, yesterday. "I just show up and sing, keep me mouth shut, and go away." Still, Saturday night's event has been billed as the world's "first major live broadband Webcast," which essentially means that viewers with a cable modem connection or better, will get a full, video-quality picture and stereo sound. Gallagher, however, appears to have no interest in the Internet despite his young stepson James' playing on a computer at home. "No, I don't like it, man," he says in his thick Mancunian accent, which, coupled with his horizontal state, makes him harder than usual to understand. "I feel like a f---in' ass with it, to tell you the truth. I don't like computers and it's probably because I can't use them, but I'm just not into it. I'm just an old fart," he adds, joking.
—Interview by Jane Stevenson with Liam Gallagher about the Toronto Webcast | Toronto Sun April 2000
in 2025 Liam Gallagher will update his location on his Twitter bio to be TOPPERMOST OF THE POPPERMOST
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meelapindia · 10 months ago
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Live Webcast Solutions: A Comprehensive Guide
Live webcast solutions offer an incredible way to connect with a global audience in real-time. Whether you’re hosting a business webinar, streaming a live concert, or broadcasting a church service, the right platform can elevate your event and provide an engaging experience for viewers. By understanding the benefits, features, and popular Uses of webcasting, you can ensure your next virtual event is a success.
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gallifreyanhotfive · 2 months ago
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Hello! Sorry to bother you, can you explain the "Ace is a Time Lord" thing? I agree that River isn't one, she's a child of the Tardis, different, but in everything I know about Ace, I've never come across this. Thank you!
Hi! So while River never attended the Academy, Ace did. I'm going to try to limit spoilers for the stories I will be talking about, but there will be some in there (be warned).
More specifically, to start off with, there is a lost story-made-audio called Thin Ice in which we learn that the Seventh Doctor was trying to guide and shape Ace into attending the Academy. In this audio, despite the Doctor getting her ready, Ace refused to attend here.
There is more than one way in which this could happen. In the book At Childhood's End (this one came out relatively recently, 2020, and it's pretty good), Ace touches a Quantum Anvil and saw several futures, including one where she lived on Gallifrey (and several others from different DWEU stories, really great stuff). We hear of Ace attending the Academy in several places, such as in the audio The Lights of Skaro (really, that whole boxset is relevant). While watching over the planet Talmeson as part of this, she learned that her mother had died and left for a short while, and when she returned, she found that Talmeson had been invaded by Daleks. She tried to use an Omega device to time lock Skaro and trap the Daleks, but this created a big mess of time fractures that the Doctor and Benny had to help resolve. Anyway, after this, Ace went back to traveling with the Doctor and Benny for a while until she was ready to return to Gallifrey.
After going back, she finished her Academy education. She was eventually recruited by the Celestial Intervention Agency as seen in Intervention Earth. She had a TARDIS, was a Time Lord, the whole shebang. There is an entire storyline here that also has Romana, Narvin, Braxiatel, etc that I am not getting into because I highly recommend this series and I don't want to ruin it for anyone by putting the massive spoiler here.
On the other hand, in another timeline seen in the webcast Death Comes to Time, Ace was trained on Gallifrey by Casmus and became the first of the "new" Time Lords. Also really good and also has a lot of things in it I don't want to spoil for anyone.
Thanks for the ask! I hope this helps. I didn't put all the information in here, but these storylines are all really good. I recommend them a lot.
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gardenwalrus · 4 months ago
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grieving man who is NOT making online webcast awkward by being overly silly in an attempt to appear Fine makes mashed potatoes to promote late wife’s posthumous album to at least 9 viewers [LIVE]
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usafphantom2 · 3 months ago
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Can’t make it to Nellis?
Catch all the airshow action LIVE! 🎥✈️
📅 April 5–6
🕥 10:45 a.m. – 4:50 p.m.
📍 Watch here: dvidshub.net/webcast/35831 and dvidshub.net/webcast/35832
#AviationNation2025 #AirshowLive #NellisAFB
@NellisAFB via X
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myfandomrambles · 3 months ago
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C-PTSD & BPD Eleventh Doctor pt. 5
(Doctor Character Study part 3c.4[Redux]) 3c.1, 3c.2 3c.3
[Full on AO3]
An analysis of The Doctor as having Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (C-PTSD) along with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD).
11th Doctor 5: Grief, Loneliness, Dissociation, Avoidance & Conclusion:
The Doctor deals with a lot of grief (TV: The Hungry Earth/Cold Blood, TV: The God Complex, TV: A Town Called Mercy, TV: The Bells of Saint John, TV: The Time of The Doctor, Webcast: The Bells of Saint John: A Prequel, Prose: Dead of Winter, Comic: Dead Man's Hand, Comic: What He Wants..., Comic: The Eternal Dog Fight, Comic: Remembrance, Comic: The Tragical History Tour, & Comic: Hungry Thirsty Loops)
When dealing with learning that Sardick will lose the person he loves, and how it has closed ff Sardick’s heart we have this exchange:
“Sardick: All my life, I've been called heartless. My other life, my real life, the one you rewrote. Now look at me. The Doctor: Better a broken heart than no heart at all. Sardick: Oh, try it. You try it. Why are you here?”
(TV: A Christmas Carol)
The Doctor in this episode reflects Sardick's pain and understands what he has been through and gives him hope that you can hold onto love and feel the loss. 
In TV: The Power of Three we see The Doctor talk to Brian about travelling with the Ponds and about his past companions:
“Brian: What happened to the other people who travel with you? The Doctor: Some left me. Some got left behind. And some, not many but, some died. Not them. Not them, Brian. Never them.”
This I believe shows his grief over what has happened to the people he has lost and how he has tried to convince himself that this won’t happen again, something he can’t promise but has to believe. 
Experiencing the new loss of Amy and Rory (TV: The Angels Take Manhattan) breaks The Doctor sending him to hide away from society and wall off from all connection besides a protective relationship with the Paternoster Gang. (TV: The Snowmen) The Doctor’s history of grief is expressed in the story he told to Akhaten (TV: Rings of Akhaten)
During his travels with Alice, The Doctor understands her grief over the loss of her mother. In TV: Hide we have Clara point out that he lives in such a liminal space in time that the normal people must be like ghosts, The Doctor rejects this, but Clara has a point. The Doctor lives at all points in time making everyone alive and dead at the same time, a constant state of loss. 
In Prose: Shroud of Sorrow, The Doctor attaches a machine that magnifies his grief to himself, attracting a deadly force towards him in order to save other people. This not only puts him in a place to be physically killed but also causes him to relive some of his most recent grief. Like losing the Ponds. 
A loss The Doctor we know he won't admit to truly is that of his children: 
“The Doctor: Crying silently. I mean, children cry because they want attention because they're hurt or afraid. But when they cry silently, it's because they just can't stop. Any parent knows that. Amy: Are you a parent?”
(TV: The Beast Below)
He also doesn’t answer in TV: A Good Man Goes to War, and references being out of practice with kids in TV: Night Terrors. We know that The Doctor has had children The Doctor confirmed this in TV: The Doctor’s Daughter:
“Donna: Well, what is it then? Having Jenny in the TARDIS, is that it? What's she going to do, cramp your style? Like you've got a sports car and she's going to turn it into a people-carrier? 10th Doctor: Donna, I've been a father before. Donna: What? 10th Doctor: I lost all that a long time ago, along with everything else. Donna: I'm sorry. I didn't know. Why didn't you tell me? You talk all the time, but you don't say anything. 10th Doctor: I know. I'm just. When I look at her now, I can see them. The hole they left, all the pain that filled it. I just don't know if I can face that every day.”
Having this pain in his previous regeneration likely carried over into Eleven’s regeneration to the point he refuses to confirm he even has children. 
The Doctor suffers from loneliness and feels separated from other people. ( TV: Cold Blood, TV: The Doctor’s Wife, TV: The God Complex, TV: Closing Time, TV: The Doctor The Widow and The Wardrobe, TV: Dinosaurs On A Spaceship, TV: The Power of Three, TV: The Snowmen,  TV: The Bells of Saint John, TV: The Rings of Akhaten,  Prose: The King's Dragon, Prose: Glamour Chase, Prose: Tales of Trenzalore, Comic: The Friendly Place, Comic: Down to Earth & Comic: Whodunnit)
In TV: The Eleventh Hour Amy can tell he’s lonely already, though she can also note there is something underneath that, which of course there is the crack in the wall influencing The Doctor choosing her. But even more on that, as he states in TV: The God Complex, he wanted to be adored, which was still wanted by someone there, he just couldn’t stand to be on his own anymore, even if it wasn’t a fully pure connection.
“The Doctor: Been knocking around on my own for a while. My choice, but I've started talking to myself all the time. It's giving me earache. Amy: You're lonely. That's it? Just that? The Doctor: Just that. Promise.” TV: The Eleventh Hour “The Doctor: Forget your faith in me. I took you with me because I was vain. Because I wanted to be adored. Look at you. Glorious Pond, the girl who waited for me. I'm not a hero. I really am just a mad man in a box.”
TV: The God Complex
In TV: The Doctor’s Wife we see that The Doctor is angry to be without his TARDIS and how sad and lonely he is when he believes he won’t ever be able to talk to her again when she goes back into the heart. How happy he is to see her still conscious in the TARDIS heart. She is his true companion throughout the story, his only long-term connection that he doesn’t lose like his other family. We see him afraid to be alone in Comic: Whodunnit and anticipating abandonment in Comic: Downtime.
The Doctor’s loneliness can cause his mental health to decompensate when he is alone causing more erraticism and him to fall into his own worst behaviours like seeking retributive justice. We see this in TV: A Town Called Mercy: 
“Amy: This is not how we roll, and you know it. What happened to you, Doctor? When did killing someone become an option? The Doctor: Jex has to answer for his crimes. Amy: And what then? Are you going to hunt down everyone who's made a gun or a bullet or a bomb? The Doctor: But they keep coming back, don't you see? Every time I negotiate, I try to understand. Well, not today. No. Today, I honour the victims first. His, the Master's, the Dalek's, all the people who died because of my mercy! Amy: You see, this is what happens when you travel alone for too long.”
In the previous episode, The Doctor killed Solomon The Trader (TV: Dinosaurs On A Spaceship)  after having been moving through different companions without having The Ponds as steady companions, possibly having been alone for long periods. Showing Amy's worries founded.
The Webcast: Prequel to the Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe shows The Doctor talking to himself believing being used to having people with him feeling off having no one with him after he tried to let The Ponds have time without him. During Comic: Downtime we see that he feels alone even when surrounded by other people.
Along with this loneliness The Doctor has self-isolated to deal with his depressive symptoms and grief after the loss of Amy and Roy as he completely cuts the world off in TV: The Snowmen rejecting helping others and even getting involved in mysteries that pique his interest. Then after realizing there are two Claras, The Doctor continues to stay self-isolated away from others locking away in his obsessive behaviour and leftover self-isolating depressive behaviour patterns (TV: The Bells of Saint John)
Eleven shows fatigue as a depressive symptom. Often with other people’s behaviour but also more generally. This expression of trauma and distress is much more prevalent in Doctor’s like their Twelfth incarnation but is present here. (TV: The Beast Below, TV: Victory of The Daleks, TV: The Rebel Flesh/The Almost People, TV: The Snowmen, TV: A Town Called Mercy Prose: Night of The Humans, Prose: Dead of Winter, & Comic: The Eternal Dog Fight)
We see The Doctor fall into his patterns of exhaustion when talking to Alfie [nickname Stormageddon] in TV: Closing Time:
“The Doctor: Hello, Stormageddon. It's the Doctor. Here to help. Shush. Hey. There, there. Be quiet. Go to sleep. Really. Stop crying. You've got a lot to look forward to, you know. A normal human life on Earth. Mortgage repayments, the nine to five, a persistent nagging sense of spiritual emptiness. Save the tears for later, boy-o. Oh, no. That was crabby. No, that was old. But I am old, Stormy. I am so old. So near the end.”
He pulls himself out of this place to give Alfie kindness but this shows his default state of mind can be to fall into fatigue, especially when he believes he is facing the end of his life. 
In Comic: The Four Doctors We see an alternate timeline of what would tempt the Eleventh Doctor and his is he just wanting to rest with River and not have to fight anymore. 
The Doctor experiences dissociation in a few forms throughout his regeneration as a reflection of his trauma. (TV: The Time of Angels / Flesh and Stone, TV: The Almost People, TV: The Girl Who Waited, TV: The Doctor The Widow and The Wardrobe, TV: The Angels Take Manhattan, TV: The Crimson Horror, TV: The Day of The Doctor, Prose: Night of The Humans, Comic: The Comfort of The Good, & Comic: The Then and Now, )
He blanks out during TV: A Town Called Mercy we see how the world seems to blur around him: 
“The Doctor: Hmm? Yes. I don't know. Whatever Amy said.”
Another Episode we see of The Doctor losing touch slightly with the world around him can be seen in TV: A Good Man Goes to War where we see him talk slightly to himself disconnected from other people. 
We see The Doctor even disconnecting from his own body during TV: The Snowmen to the point he acts without fully noticing:
“The Doctor: ...Next time you're in trouble, don't expect me to (The Doctor is distracted by his reflection in a mirror.)  Clara What is it? What's wrong?” The Doctor: Sorry, it's just. Didn't know I'd put it on.”
The sound around him and he separates from people around him again during Prose: Tales of Trenzalore. In Prose: Dark Horizons we see him experience dissociation with time loss and disconnection from the body to the point his pain blanks out. 
The Doctor is dissociated from his own emotions having put a barrier so high inside of him that he can’t always fully access what he is feeling or his history of emotions. (TV: Day Of The Moon, Comic: Remembrance, Comic: Pull to Open, & Comic: The Tragical History Tour) 
We see a very out front example of how unaware of his own emotions The Doctor can be in TV: A Good Man Goes to War:
“The Doctor: ... Oh, look, I'm angry. That's new. I'm really not sure what's going to happen now.”
The TV: The Doctor The Widow and The Wardrobe has another example:
“The Doctor: Think of home. Just picture it, feel it! You have to really feel it. Can you do that? Your mind is controlling this vessel. You can fly us all back for Christmas. Madge: My head is full of trees, Caretaker. Can't you fly us home? The Doctor: I don't have a home to think of. And between you and me, I'm older than I look and I can't feel the way you do. Not any more. And you really need to feel it, Madge. Everything about home that you miss until you can't bear it. Until you almost burst.”
We know he can feel till he cries, as he puts it late in the episode “humany” emotions. He cries happy tears when he sees his own family, and he doesn’t even fully realise he’s crying till he touches his face.
During TV: Vincent and The Doctor is out of touch with his trauma reactions where he has had depressive symptoms and breakdowns of his own but is forced to face some of his struggle with loneliness with the krafayis. 
In TV: The Snowmen we see how he tries to block out his emotions completely. In Prose: Tales of Trenzalore we see The Doctor repressing emotions in order to interact with the other people at all. Similarly in Prose: Dead of Winter he is alienated from emotions. It is stated about The Doctor’s inner monologue from the crossed minds:
Amy:" he's off about emotions sometimes like he's crossing them off in a spotters guide ah yes that'll be anger, that'll be fear, I have a hunch that's love "
We also see a more structural dissociation of his memories (TV: The Beast Below, TV: The Day of The Doctor,  & Comic: The One) In Comic: Pull To Open we see The Doctor’s own mind treat him cruelly, fight him, his memories playing out like an interrogation, something dissociated apart from him. 
In both TV: The Lodger and TV: The Day of The Doctor we see him unable to remember how old he is, I believe showing he has completely lost track of time concerning himself even though he has senses for time..
“The Doctor: Ah, I don't know. I lose track. Twelve hundred and something, I think, unless I'm lying. I can't remember if I'm lying about my age, that's how old I am.”
(TV: The Day of The Doctor)
He understands time fully but has split his identity so much and has spent time like the Time War dissociated he can’t place the time. We know that Eight also didn’t know how old he was at that point so it makes sense that the idea that Nine and Ten made up for his age might also be made up in the first place, but Eleven has forgotten even how old he is in relation to that count. This shows he has dissociated even in relationship to the time that Eleven has lived. 
His dissociation affects his identity as well:
He blocks off the entire section of his life that is The War Doctor, he has dissociated this part of him so completely that he is never mentioned or remembered by The Doctor. 
We see him bluntly reject him as not fully being The Doctor in TV: The Name of The Doctor.
“(The Doctor looks forward to where a man is standing with his back to them.) Clara: Who's that? The Doctor: Never mind. Let's go back. Clara: But who is he? The Doctor: He's me. There's only me here, that's the point. Now let's get back. Clara: But I never saw that one. I saw all of you. Eleven faces, all of them you. You're the eleventh Doctor. The Doctor: I said he was me. I never said he was the Doctor. Clara: I don't understand. The Doctor: Look, my name, my real name, that is not the point. The name I chose is the Doctor. The name you choose, it's like, it's like a promise you make. He's the one who broke the promise...He is my secret. War Doctor: What I did, I did without choice. The Doctor: I know. War Doctor: In the name of peace and sanity. The Doctor: But not in the name of the Doctor.”
This continued to be true in TV: The Day of The Doctor in how we see both The Tenth Doctor and Eleven react to what The War Doctor describes as “dread” and all of them struggle to understand him as part of their larger identity narrative until they can understand themselves better and re-integrate that part of their story when they grow empathy for that part of them. 
We can see flashbacks happen, (TV: Day Of The Moon, TV: The Day of The Doctor, Comic: The Then and Now, Comic: The Memory Feast, & Comic: Strange Loops) 
The above-discussed episodic dissociation, panic, and outward emotional episodes can often be traced back to triggers related to trauma around loss and war. (TV: Victory of The Daleks, TV: Flesh and Stone, TV: The Lodger, TV: The Doctor's Wife, TV: Asylum of The Daleks, TV: A Town Called Mercy, TV: The Snowmen, TV: Cold War, TV: Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS, TV: The Day of The Doctor, Audio: Paradise Lost, Comic: The Only Good Dalek, & Comic: The Tragical History Tour)
The Doctor is triggered easily into protective mode and believes he is in danger by seeing Cybermen in TV: Nightmare in Silver, he then stays in this stressed state causing trouble for them all. In TV: The Name of The Doctor he is triggered by the mention of Trenzalore causing him to break down into tears. During Comic: The One the mention of libraries while River Song is present causes a momentary moment of stress and causes him to be visibly upset due to it reminding him of his loss. Comic: The Memory Feast has Eleven triggered back the Time War due to the death of the Xersxes, which causes him to keep himself and others in danger due to his trauma. Being reminded of the Time Lords who previously caused him pain. In TV: SkyJacks reminders of both what Time Lords like Omega and The Master have done snd the Time Lords having been gone and what’s attacking them only being an echo cause him to fall into a screaming fit. 
The Memories themselves are often referenced as painful like in the above-discussed scene with Akhaten (TV: The Rings of Akhaten) But also comes up in Comic: The Scream where memories are referred to as "burning", while some of this may be sci-fy style [like The Doctor's Name] but can also reference how overwhelming and traumatic much of The Doctor's life has bee. The Comic: The Lost Dimension also shows how Eleven’s memories are so full of pain and hatred they scare a baby TARDIS. 
The overwhelming memories The Doctor has been expressed in TV: The Rings of Akhaten:
“The Doctor:... Take my memories. But I hope you've got a big appetite, because I have lived a long life and I have seen a few things. I walked away from the last Great Time War. I marked the passing of the Time Lords. I saw the birth of the universe and I watched as time ran out, moment by moment, until nothing remained. No time. No space. Just me. I walked in universes where the laws of physics were devised by the mind of a mad man. I've watched universes freeze and creations burn. I've seen things you wouldn't believe. I have lost things you will never understand. And I know things. Secrets that must never be told. Knowledge that must never be spoken. Knowledge that will make parasite gods blaze...”
His painful memories also allow him to have empathy for people like Madge Arewll, 
“Madge: Lily and Cyril's father, my husband, is dead and they don't know yet, because if I tell them now, then Christmas will always be what took their father away from them, and no one should have to live like that. Of course, when the Christmas period is over, I shall. I don't know why I keep shouting at them. The Doctor: Because every time you see them happy, you remember how sad they're going to be, and it breaks your heart...Because what's the point in them being happy now if they're going to be sad later...The answer is, of course, because they are going to be sad later.”
(TV: The Doctor The Widow and The Wardrobe)
He is also willing to give his life for his companions, seriously concerning sacrificing himself in TV: Flesh and Stone,  hoping Amy could pull him back but willing to be outside the big bang in TV: The Big Bang, Willing to face Akhaten alone in TV: The Rings of Akhaten or dying for Alice in Comic: Supremacy of the Cybermen. 
He attempts to avoid his distressing memories by running, running away from everything both literally like his death in series six ([Mainly]TV: The Impossible Astronaut & TV: The Wedding of River Song) but also from his mind, being continuously active as talked about above, never stopping and taking a break. Doing so stops him from having to think. He finally stopped staying in Christmas and protecting its people even after he got his TARDIS back for hundreds of years because he was needed. He had to deal with his people reminding him of the Time War and a constant battle leaving new physical and emotional scars but he stood still, accepting his death. Even when he got his regeneration energy back he still faced regeneration with relative grace compared to his previous face accepting his own death with understanding. Wanting to remember when the doctor was him, not forgetting and running from his pain and loss but holding it:
“The Doctor:..I will not forget one line of this. Not one day. I swear. I will always remember when the Doctor was me.”
(TV: The Time of The Doctor)
Overall He shows a significant amount of C-PTSD & BPD Symptoms: hyperarousal, hypervigilance, schema disruption, anxiety-spectrum symptoms, agitation, depression, heightened emotions, impulsiveness, recklessness, need for control, relational difficulties, identity disturbance, guilt, complicated grief, loneliness, dissociation, and avoidance. 
The Eleventh Doctor is an example of C-PTSD that might not be the most positive with his complicated relationships and sometimes cruel behaviour. But he is a fascinating one and worth analysing. He is key to understanding the effects of the Tenth Doctor’s run and how the Twelfth Doctor and forward form.
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mhzmegahertz · 1 year ago
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Virtual event webcasting | Live Streaming services in San Mateo, CA
Virtual event webcasting and Live Streaming services AV company in San Mateo. We specialize in recording and streaming live events and virtual events
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24-frames-digital · 2 years ago
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The Benefits of Live Streaming
Live streaming town hall meetings has become increasingly popular in recent years due to advancements in technology and the widespread availability of high-speed internet connections. This innovative approach to civic engagement offers numerous benefits that can enhance democracy, foster transparency, and promote inclusivity. In this article, we will explore the advantages of live streaming town hall meetings.
One of the primary benefits of live streaming town hall meetings is increased accessibility. Traditionally, town hall meetings were limited to those who could physically attend the event. This excluded individuals who were unable to attend due to various reasons such as distance, mobility issues, work commitments, or childcare responsibilities. Live streaming breaks down these barriers by allowing people to participate remotely from the comfort of their homes or offices. This inclusivity ensures that a broader and more diverse range of voices can be heard, leading to a more representative democracy.
Another advantage of live streaming town hall meetings is the potential for increased engagement. By making the meetings accessible online, a wider audience can participate, including individuals who may not have been aware of or interested in attending in-person meetings. Furthermore, live streaming enables real-time interaction and feedback through comments, polls, and Q&A sessions. This interactivity fosters a sense of community engagement and encourages citizens to actively participate in the democratic process. Additionally, those who miss the live stream can often access recordings later, ensuring that important discussions and decisions are not missed.
Transparency is a fundamental principle of democracy, and live streaming promotes it in town hall meetings. By broadcasting the proceedings live, citizens have direct access to the discussions, debates, and decision-making processes of their elected representatives. This transparency helps build trust between the government and the public, as citizens can witness firsthand how decisions are made and how their representatives engage with important issues. It also serves as a deterrent against misconduct or unethical behavior, as public officials are aware that their actions are being observed by a wide audience.
Live streaming town hall meetings can also provide cost-effective solutions. Organizing and conducting physical town hall meetings often incur expenses related to venue rentals, equipment setup, and logistical arrangements. By adopting live streaming, these costs can be significantly reduced or even eliminated. Moreover, the online platform allows for the potential of reaching a larger audience at a fraction of the cost, maximizing the impact of the meetings within the community.
Furthermore, live streaming town hall meetings can empower citizens by giving them a platform to express their concerns and ideas directly to their elected officials. In traditional town hall meetings, individuals may feel intimidated or uncomfortable speaking in public. Live streaming provides a more relaxed and familiar environment, enabling individuals to voice their opinions without the anxiety associated with public speaking. This empowerment encourages citizen participation, strengthens the relationship between elected officials and their constituents, and promotes a more engaged and informed electorate.
In addition, live streaming town hall meetings can serve as a valuable educational resource. Students, researchers, and journalists can access the recordings to gain insights into local governance, public policy discussions, and decision-making processes. This access to information fosters a more informed and knowledgeable society, enabling citizens to make better decisions when participating in future elections or engaging in public debates.
Finally, live streaming town hall meetings can help increase accountability and promote good governance. When public officials are aware that their actions are being broadcast live and scrutinized by a wide audience, they are more likely to act responsibly and make informed decisions. This transparency and scrutiny help prevent corruption, promote ethical behavior, and hold elected officials accountable to their constituents.
In conclusion, live streaming town hall meetings offers a multitude of benefits that strengthen democracy, foster transparency, promote inclusivity, and enhance civic engagement. By increasing accessibility, encouraging engagement, promoting transparency, providing cost-effective solutions, empowering citizens, offering educational resources, and increasing accountability, live streaming contributes to a more participatory and responsive governance system. As technology continues to advance 
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archivist-crow · 1 year ago
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Radiohead - “Headmaster Ritual”
Performed live for the Thumbs Down webcast (2007)
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