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TRIBUNNEWS.COM - Film The Walk akan kembali tayang malam ini, Sabtu 30 November 2019 pukul 23.00 WIB hanya di Bioskop Trans TV .

Dikutip dari IMDb.com,  The Walk merupakan film yang pertama kali tayang pada 2015.

Film The Walk menceritakan tentang perjalanan melewati kawat di antara menara World Trade Center.

Film ini disutradarai oleh Robert Zemeckis dan ditulis oleh Christopher Browne dan Zemeckis.

Aktor papan atas yang membintangi film ini di antaranya Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Charlotte Le Bon, Guillaume Baillargeon.

Berdurasi 123 menit diproduksi oleh Sony Pictures Entertainment (SPE) dan dirilis oleh TriStar Pictures di Amerika Serikat dalam IMAX 3D.

Film ini didedikasikan untuk para korban serangan 11 September.

Film ini mendapatkan ratting 7.3/10 dari 112.343 penilai.

Dikutip dari Imdb.com , pria bernama Philippe Petit (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) berbicara tentang kematian kepada penonton saat dirinya berada di atas patung Liberty.




TRIBUNNEWS.COM - Film "The Walk" dijadwalkan tayang di Bioskop TransTV besok, 30 November 2019, pukul 23.00 WIB.

The Walk berkisah tentang artis Philippe Petit yang berjalan di kawat tinggi Prancis.

Ia berjalan di antara Menara Kembar World Trade Center pada 7 Agustus 1974.

Para bintang yang berperan, meliputi oleh Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ben Kingsley, Charlotte Le Bon, James Badge Dale, Ben Schwartz , Steve Valentine, dan sebagainya.

Film biografi 3D Amerika 2015 itu disutradarai Robert Zemeckis dan ditulis oleh Christopher Browne dan Zemeckis.

Film The Walk dirilis oleh Tri Star Pictures pada 30 September 2015 di Amerika Serikat dalam IMAX 3D.

Film tersebut didedikasikan untuk para korban serangan 11 September.

Sebanyak 112.329 pengguna IMDb telah memberikan suara rata-rata tertimbang 7,3 / 10.

Film The Walk dijadwalkan tayang di Bioskop TransTV besok, 30 November 2019, pukul 23.00 WIB.(imdb.com)

Dilansir dari Imdb.com , seorang pria bernama Philippe Petit berdiri di atas Patung Liberty dan berkata kepada penonton tentang kematian.




Sinopsis lengkap film The Walk Bioskop Trans TV malam ini, tayang jam 23.00 WIB, Sabtu 30 November 2019.

© 2019 TRIBUNnews.com Network,a subsidiary of KG Media .




JADWAL Acara TV Hari Ini Sabtu 30 November 2019 Trans TV RCTI SCTV GTV Indosiar, Ada Film The Walk.

Berikut jadwal acara TV dan jadwal film hari ini Sabtu 30 November 2019 di Trans TV, RCTI, SCTV, GTV, Indosiar dan TV One, ada film The Walk.

TRIBUNPADANG.COM - Hari ini, Sabtu 30 November 2019, ada banyak tayangan menarik di layar kaca televisi Anda.

Antara lain di stasiun televisi Trans TV, RCTI, SCTV, GTV, Indosiar dan TV One.

, akan tayang film Heist dan film The Walk di malam hari. Di Trans TV , akan tayang film Heist dan filmdi malam hari.

Sedangkan di Indosiar, hadir tayangan siaran langsung D'Academy Asia 5.

Di SCTV, ada banyak film FTV kocak dan romantis yang bakal bikin Anda baper.

• Jadwal Acara TV Jumat 29 November 2019 Trans TV SCTV RCTI GTV Indosiar, Film The Twilight Saga

• JADWAL Acara TV Hari Ini Kamis 28 November 2019 Trans TV RCTI SCTV GTV Indosiar, Film ACT OF VALOR

Banyak lagi tayangan menarik lainnya Trans TV, RCTI, SCTV, GTV, Indosiar dan TV One.

Berikut jadwal acara TV dan jadwal film hari ini Sabtu 30 November 2019 dilansir dari Suryamalang.com:

Jadwal Acara Trans TV Sabtu 30 November 2019:

05:00 Islam Itu Indah

06:30 Insert Pagi

07:30 Good Morning Weekend

08:30 Jalan Pagi-Pagi

09:30 Celebrity On Vacation

10:00 Transpark Luxury Living

10:30 Ngopi Dara

11:00 My Trip My Adventure


Location: Mount Blair, Perthshire

Grade: Easy hill walk

Distance: 3 miles/5km

Time: 2-3 hours

Busk, Busk Bonnie Lassie

I wanted some photographs of the southern reaches of Glenshee but needed a bit of height. A scrutiny of the map showed what appeared to be a conical shaped hill jammed between Glenshee and Glen Isla. It was called Mount Blair.

The name of the hill is interesting. Some suggest it refers to a clearing while others say it means ‘plain hill’ or even ‘hill of the plain’. Certainly its western slopes lack any real discerning features so ‘plain hill’ could be justified. The eastern slopes, above Glen Isla, are made a little more interesting by the scoop of Corrie Vanoch, which is littered with ancient tumuli – cairns, hut circles and field systems.

There are also standing stones and hut circles on the southern slopes of the hill so it’s clear that people have made use of the fertile qualities of both Glen Shee and Glen Isla for some considerable time. Although we were tackling the hill from what is possibly its least interesting aspect we reckoned the north slopes would offer us the best views, and we were right.

Leaving the campervan at a layby on the B951 we walked east to find a gate on the right that gives access to a field. Once through the gate we girded our loins for what turned out to be a straightforward but relentless climb to the 744m summit. The footpath, initially a bit on the muddy side, improved as it left the fields and grooved its way over heather slopes, climbing steadily with wonderful views in all directions.

‘Busk, busk bonnie lassie,

And come along wi’ me,

And I’ll tak ye tae Glen Isla,

by bonnie Glenshee’

The old song came to mind as we climbed, reminding me of the last time I sang it in the company of Margaret Bennet from the School of Scottish Studies and Ian McGregor, grandson of the renowned traveller and ballad singer, Belle Stewart. Ian had told me it was one of the favourites of his family when they met together for the berry-picking at Blairgowrie.

The great champion of the travelling people, Hamish Henderson, one of the founders of the School of Scottish Studies in Edinburgh, lived for a while in Glenshee and had his ashes scattered on Ben Gulabin, a hill that now dominates the southern approaches to the Cairngorms National Park near the Spittal of Glenshee, a hill that we could now see clearly from our lofty vantage point.

After some steady climbing the angle of the slope eased off and we could see the transmitter mast that dominates the summit. It didn’t take us long after that, and soon we were coorying down in the summit shelter beside the large cairn and trig pillar, a flask of tea bringing a comforting warmth in the chill of late winter.

To the north the great swell of the Cairngorms dominated everything else. Glas Tulaichean, Ben Gulabin, Glas Maol and the hills above the Caenlochan and Canness Glens were all snow-capped and made a formidable barrier. To the east the hills were less dramatic, high plateaux split by the long glens of Isla, Prosen and Clova. It was just a great place to be. Even the transmitter mast didn’t spoil our pleasure. It’s difficult to argue about these things when we all rely so heavily on mobile phones.

Cameron McNeish

ROUTE PLANNER

Map: OS 1:50,000 Landranger sheet 53 (Blairgowrie & Forest of Alyth).

Distance: 3 miles/5km.

Time: 2-3 hours.

Start/Finish: Layby on B951 at GR: NO153642. Leave the A93 at Lair, and follow B951 through the hamlet of Cray to a park at a layby by a plantation just beyond the road that leads to Dalnaglar Castle.

Public transport: None to the start.

Information: Blairgowrie TIC, 01250 872960.

Route: Walk E along the road for about 400m to a gate on the right. Go through the gate and into a field that is often muddy. Follow the obvious track uphill through the field. After some distance it leaves the field and climbs up through heather slopes. Continue uphill with widening views until the transmitter mast comes into sight. From here the angle of the slope eases off and it is an easier walk to the broad summit. Return the same way.


Conservationists say climate change threat must be addressed to avoid reef’s inclusion on ‘in-danger’ list

Call for Australia to show Unesco it's 'walking the walk' on Great Barrier Reef

Conservationists say an official government report to the UN’s world heritage committee to be released next week must show Australia has fresh plans to attack the Great Barrier Reef’s two key threats – climate change and water quality.

At a forum earlier this month environment ministers signed-off on the “state of conservation” report for the reef,which was then sent to Unesco’s world heritage committee.

Australia's science academy attacks 'cherrypicking' of Great Barrier Reef research Read more

A report to be published on Friday by the World Wide Fund for Nature-Australia and the Australian Marine Conservation Society details what they say Australia needs to do to avoid the committee placing the reef on its “in danger” list when it meets in China next year.

The report says Australia must revise its central Great Barrier Reef policy, the Reef 2050 plan, to fill a “gaping hole” left by the absence of efforts to keep global heating to 1.5C.

Australia needs an “energy transition plan”, the report argues, that is compatible with the Paris climate agreement’s ambitious target.

Richard Leck, WWF-Australia’s head of oceans, told Guardian Australia the government was now clearly acknowledging climate change as the reef’s greatest threat, and that temperatures needed to be kept to 1.5C.

He said: “With all of that in front of us, the committee may be very concerned that Australia is acknowledging the need to limit global warming to 1.5C but, at this stage, is not walking the walk.”

Mass coral bleaching along the reef in 2016 and again in 2017 killed half the shallow water corals, with northern sections hit hard. The following year, the number of new corals crashed by 89%.

In July 2019, the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority published a revised climate change position statement, when it stressed the need to stick to a 1.5C global warming target, adding: “If we are to secure a future for the Great Barrier Reef and coral reef ecosystems globally, there is an urgent and critical need to accelerate actions to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions.”

In August, the authority’s five-yearly outlook report downgraded the long-term prospects for the reef from “poor” to “very poor”. Also that month, an official review of water quality along inshore reefs found conditions had failed to improve.

State of the reef

In 2017 the world heritage committee asked for Australia to submit a detailed report on the state of the reef before 1 December, which should include progress on water-quality targets.

Sign up to receive the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning

Earlier this month, environment ministers sent that report, which Unesco is expected to make public in the coming days.

At the time, the Queensland environment minister, Leeanne Enoch, said her government’s newly-enacted farm pollution laws “along with other efforts including tree clearing laws and action on climate change” would “prevent it from being listed by the world heritage committee as in-danger next year.”

The committee will review the reef again at its annual meeting, to be held in China in June next year.

Reef in danger?

The world heritage committee resisted pressure to put the reef on its “in danger” list in 2015 after the Queensland and federal government had tabled its Reef 2050 plan, which set targets to improve water quality along the 2,300-kilometre reef.

The last time the Great Barrier Reef was reviewed by Unesco, the world heritage committee said it “strongly encourages” Australia to “accelerate efforts” to meet the Reef 2050 plan’s targets “in particular regarding water quality”.

It had one major flaw. It did not include climate change Richard Leck, WWF

The report from WWF-Australia and AMCS also says extra funding should be given to enforcing water quality laws. A reforestation program should be introduced along riverbanks and other landscapes to reduce run-off into waterways that flow into the reef.

Leck said the Reef 2050 plan was an “excellent” response, but added: “It had one major flaw. It did not include climate change.

“Given what’s happened to the reef in the subsequent years, that is now a gaping hole. The next 2050 plan has to incorporate what the federal and Queensland government has recognised. A reef-safe strategy has to be 1.5C compatible.

“The Australian government clearly acknowledges the reef’s greatest threat is climate change. It’s a no-brainer that we need a climate policy consistent with the reef’s survival.”

Imogen Zethoven, AMCS director of strategy, said that to avoid a possible “in danger” listing, the Australian government needed to rapidly reduce emissions, transition to renewable energy and accelerate efforts to address local threats.

Australia pressures Unesco over impact of climate change on Great Barrier Reef Read more

In a 2017 review of the government’s climate change policies, the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority wrote: “To ensure a future for the Great Barrier Reef (ie as a functioning reef ecosystem), the latest science indicates the stronger position in the Paris agreement to restrict the increase to 1.5C (or ideally less) above pre-industrial is essential.”

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has said that even at 1.5C of warming, coral reefs around the world would decline by 70 to 90%. At 2C, coral reefs would all but disappear.

The world heritage committee has been slow to produce a new policy that would outline how it plans to incorporate climate change impacts into its decision making.

In July, the Australian government told a world heritage meeting that climate change threats on individual sites should not be used to justify “in danger” listings.

Stephen Oxley, from the environment and energy department, told the committee Australia was disappointed the policy had not been finalised.

But the department told Guardian Australia its intervention was unrelated to the reef’s assessment at the 2020 meeting.


A chara, – Further to your excellent Editorial (November 25th), regarding the need for more exercise, especially for children, might I, as a life long walker, and founder president of the Irish Ramblers Club, recommend the many benefits of walking.

Think “Ease” . . . easy, accessible, safe, enjoyable.

Many centuries ago, Hippocrates said it was the best medicine, vital for the health of body and soul.

I believe that happiness comes too, whether we walk alone or with family and friends. – Is mise,

SEÁN Ó CUINN,

An Charraig Dhubh,

Co Átha Cliath.


This article is part of our continuing Fast Forward series, which examines technological, economic, social and cultural shifts that happen as businesses evolve.

When walking on the High Line , it’s tough to look more lost than some of the tourists, but I did a pretty good job of it last month when I tripped on a curb while looking at art . (I caught myself before falling, but still.)

I was taking in an exhibition from Aery, a new augmented reality platform tailored to digital art exhibitions. Looking up to the heavens through an iPad , and not at my feet, I was using a loaner tablet to get an artwork by Richard Humann to magically appear.

But it worked: On the iPad, a constellation of a rose appeared, at an angle in the sky and topped by a crown, as Mr. Humann intended. A couple of out-of-towners who were watching me seemed mightily impressed when they looked over my shoulder at the screen.


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COLUMBIA – Clemson’s “Walk of Champions” was accomplished without incident Saturday prior to kickoff of the Clemson vs. South Carolina football game at South Carolina’s Williams-Brice Stadium.

The Walk of Champions is a longtime pregame ritual for the Tigers during which they lock arms and walk as a team from midfield to the end zone.

More: Live updates from Clemson's game against South Carolina

At South Carolina, the Tigers walk directly toward the student section.

Clemson Coach Dabo Swinney was visibly upset a couple of years ago when fans threw bottles and trash on the field during the game, drawing a penalty.

South Carolina play-by-play announcer Todd Ellis suggested last week during Coach Will Muschamp’s call-in radio show that the ritual incites Gamecocks fans.

“That’s probably the funniest thing I’ve heard all week,” Swinney said. “Somebody said we’re taunting people. We’ve been taunting people? The thing is, we’ve been doing that for 17 years. It has zero to do with the opponent or the fans. We’re talking about a warm-up.”

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