Explorers's Posts
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booqee:I'm with you, if the feature will be possible. Short videos like 1 to 2 minutes of running time. Moderators will also be standing by to remove unecessary/irrelevant videos. |
More.
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Man Reverses His Car From V.I. To Ikoyi In Lagos, See Reactions (Pics/Video) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bHZdnheASBw https://www.instagram.com/p/BmiJhrlhbJX/?utm_source=ig_share_sheet&igshid=1h9w3nd6xs3z2
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[quote author=iamloyalty post=70316058][/quote] ![]() |
Funjosh:Na so bro, bean good o. ![]() |
Funjosh:Na so bro, bean good o. ![]() |
zaynie:Lol.... |
qhutetomsel:Omo see crayfish. |
cutiereborn:Yea, bean or dodo. |
cutiereborn:Lol..... Keep laughing me o |
jagugu88li:Take am easy na. |
Rice, beans with Efo riro, and ata.
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PurestBoy:Na to just turn back jeje. |
eddyghali:Lol. |
A police officer directs traffic at a darkened intersection during the historic blackout which knocked out traffic lights. After the nation's worst ever blackout, utilities have made improvements and New York has spent millions of dollars on new high-tech gadgets to avert the chaos that followed
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These vendors decided to relieve the stress of the average New Yorker by selling cold beers during the blackout. Brooklyn residents are forced to eat by candlelight at a local restaurant on the night of August 14, 2003. Transit officials guide stranded subway commuters out of a subway car during the outage.
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The outage stopped trains and elevators, and disrupted everything from cellular telephone service to operations at hospitals to traffic at airports. Stranded travelers try to keep cool in Grand Central Terminal. It took more than30 hours for power to come back in the New York area.
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The power companies did manage to get their grids back online in a few places, but a blackout persisted in New York City for more than a day. New York City police officer Paul Piotrowski watches over pedestrians leaving downtown Manhattan and crossing the Brooklyn Bridge. Pedestrians and bicycle riders make the trek across the Brooklyn Bridge after the power outage shut down subway service.
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Commuters sleep on the steps of the Post Office on 33rd Street and Eighth Avenue in New York during the early hours of Friday, August 15, 2003. People try to board the back of a crowded New York bus in Manhattan on August 14.
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People sleep on the sidewalk outside the Renaisance Hotel during the blackout on August 15, 2003. People prefer to rest on the sidewalks rather than make the long-distance journey home by foot.
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New Yorkers are seen above waiting outside Grand Central Station on August 15, 2003. The busy terminal is a vital link that connects commuters from New York City's northern suburbs and Connecticut to Manhattan. On the second day of the massive power failure, stressed travelers try to get out of New York City at a crowded and closed Port Authority bus station. The subway station at 23rd street and 6th avenue in Manhattan is empty after the blackout hit.
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The largest power blackout in U.S. history rolled across a vast swath of the northern United States as well as southern Canada on Thursday, driving millions of people outdoors into stifling rush hour streets, then darkness. Commuters were forced to use the pedestrian walkway on the Brooklyn Bridge because the subways shut down. Pedestrians and traffic leaving downtown Manhattan crossing the Queensboro Bridge after the onset of the largest power blackout in American history. Mynd44
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Dramatic pictures from exactly 15 years ago reveal the chaos and confusion caused in New York City by the biggest power cut in US history *. On August 14, 2003, tree branches interfered with power lines in Ohio, causing a massive chain reaction that would knock out power for 60 million people. *. The outage affected New York, Cleveland, Detroit, Toronto, and Ottawa. *. While most areas had their power restored within a few hours, it took about 30 hours for officials to reconnect New York City to the grid. *. Images from that day show masses of commuters walking across the East River crossings, stranded subway riders being rescued inside tunnels, and people sleeping on the sidewalks. Stunning images have emerged showing New York City being plunged into complete, almost pitch-black darkness during the 2003 blackout that affected the Northeast United States and parts of Canada. It was a regular mid-August day 15 years ago and the temperature outside in New York City was hovering around 90 degrees. As is usually the case during the summer time, electricity usage was above average as 20 million customers in New York State kept themselves cool indoors. But just after 4pm, everything changed. Just before people started to head home for the rush hour commute, 21 power plants shut down within a span of three minutes. The Empire State building in midtown New York City is dark with a few lights onin surrounding buildings as a ferry passes on the Hudson River as seen from Jersey City, New Jersey on August 14, 2003. Cars are seen on the FDR Drive as they drive by darkened buildings in Lower Manhatan. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6057157/Dramatic-images-15-years-ago-chaos-caused-2003-New-York-City-blackout.html Lalasticlala, Mynd44
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vosquare:Funny thing, if you miss your way, it can take you another 10miles or 10minutes drive to get back on track. |
SPDAZZY:I know say 3months training course go dey for that that interchange. |
Highway access in Dubai, UAE. Intersecting highways, near London, UK.
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A complex freeway interchange in Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
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Modern City Guangzhou traffic overpass, Guangzhou, China. Elevated interchange in Tianjin, China
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Four-level interchange on Interstate, Santa Monica Mountains, California, USA. Four-level intersection in Anaheim, California, USA
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Highway intersection in Taichung, Central Taiwan.
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Yan'an East Interchange, Shanghai, China.
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