Best Mkv Player

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Olegario Benford

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Jul 15, 2024, 1:37:51 PM7/15/24
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Best Player is a 2011 comedy television film that aired on Nickelodeon on March 13, 2011. The movie stars Jerry Trainor and Jennette McCurdy, from the show iCarly.[1] Filming started on October 24, 2009 in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada[2] and wrapped up production on November 18, 2009.[3]

Quincy Johnson (Jerry Trainor) is a barely employed adult gamer who lives at home with his parents. Quincy plays video games under the username "Q" and is renowned in the gaming community for his many awards and world records. Much to Quincy's dismay, his parents decide to sell their house, meaning Quincy will need to find a new place of residence. Quincy decides to try to buy the house from them for $175,000. He plans on getting the money from a tournament for a new video game called "Black Hole", where the grand prize is $175,000. He discusses the dilemma with his number one fan, Wendell (Amir Talai). While practicing for the tournament, Quincy finds a player named "Prodigy" whom he cannot defeat. Quincy and Wendell decide to find out who Prodigy really is to secure Quincy's chance of winning the tournament, also because Quincy needs a place to stay. Wendell picks Quincy up and finds out that Prodigy lives nearby. They seek a plan to beat Prodigy while together.

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When they find Prodigy's house, Quincy discovers that Prodigy is actually a sullen high school girl named Christina Saunders (Jennette McCurdy), ("Chris" for short), who thinks that he is her mom Tracy's (Janet Varney) internet date. But the plan almost fails when Mr. Johnson, Tracy's real Internet date, arrives, however, Wendell manages to stall him. Quincy decides he will have to go on a date with her, so on his and Tracy's first date, Quincy lies to her, saying that he is a home economics teacher at Chris' school. Tracy tells Chris, in front of Quincy, that if Chris gets any more F's she will not be allowed to play any video games. The next day, Wendell has set up Quincy to be the home economics teacher at Chris's school. Later, Chris goes to science class and is the first to present her project which Quincy and Wendell had sabotaged the previous night so that she would fail and not be able to play in the tournament. It goes awry and ends up with Chris getting an A+, and she gloats to Quincy about the $175,500 she will win at the tournament.

The next day, Quincy asks several boys if any one of them will take Chris to the prom, which is on the same day of the tournament. No one shows any interest and they all leave except Sheldon (Nick Benson) who reveals that he has had an unnoticed crush on Chris. Quincy takes Sheldon to the library and they research pick-up lines on the computer so they can research how to woo Chris. Quincy then tells Sheldon to sign up for the football tryouts. Unfortunately, Sheldon, being a complete nerd, is tackled by a stronger jock and given a massive, humiliating, almost atomic wedgie in front of Chris. The bully, however, doesn't stop there, dangle Sheldon by the wedgie in front of the entire bleachers full of girls. After a full minute of dangling Sheldon by his briefs, Sheldon's friend Ash convinces the bully to let go of his underpants and drop Sheldon to the floor. Quincy realizes that Chris likes Ash (Jean-Luc Bilodeau).

Later on a field trip to a video arcade planned by Quincy, Ash asks Chris to prom much to her delight. Chris, later on, tells Quincy and Tracy that Ash asked her to the prom, and she will be missing the tournament. Quincy assures her there will be more tournaments, and they look on the Internet for some other tournaments, when Chris sees Quincy on a magazine cover about video games. Realizing Quincy is Q, a furious Chris spitefully decides to "destroy" him at the tournament, even rejecting Ash's prom invitation to do so, while Tracy appears and furiously asks Quincy to leave after he tells her the truth. After leaving, Wendell tells Quincy that he is also competing in the tournament and kicks Quincy out of his house for choosing Tracy over gaming.

The next day they go to the tournament, Quincy, Wendell, and Chris each win in their respective first rounds. Sheldon (going by the name "Shell-Shock") appears, after having been released from the hospital. Quincy admits to Tracy that he loves her and has feelings for her, but Wendell convinces everyone to think it's "smack talk", which inadvertently humiliates and embarrasses Tracy in front of everyone and further worsens the rift between Quincy and Tracy. Tracy, however, who knows that is not true, is not sure about what he said. For the final event, Wendell asks Quincy if he'll work with him to destroy Chris and when they win they will share the award fifty-fifty. Quincy doesn't reply and jumps on Prodigy/Chris; leading everyone on that he will destroy her, but then he works with her to destroy Wendell. But in Quincy's final strike, Wendell and Quincy destroy each other. Chris appears to be the winner, but the game is not over. Sheldon/Shell-Shock, thought to have been defeated, gets up and defeats Chris/Prodigy to win the game.

Ash appears from the crowd to Chris's surprise. He congratulates her despite not winning and says he intended to spend the evening with her anyway, and that there is still time to go to the prom. Quincy apologizes to and reconciles with Tracy and asks her to the prom, to which she accepts. In the ending credits, you see prom photos of Ash, Tracy, Chris, and Quincy.

I guess that I can either persevere with trying to get the download to work within Plyr, or alternatively I can just add another button (outside Plyr) as a normal element in webflow (similar to as suggested here.

I ended up using amplitude.js
-source/amplitudejs
Had to do a fair bit of coding to create my own custom player, but managed to get it receiving CMS links for soundcloud tracks to populate on the front end.

Listen, I don't try to live my life as a contrarian. That's not true -- I kind of do. I spend a lot of time in public houses and taverns, and I have a two-hour commute that allows me to hear a lot of the sports world's most popular opinions. Sometimes, I think it's best to take a look at the other side.

In this space, I articulate positions that are the opposite of what most people think -- unpopular opinions, if you will -- and explain why, well, my unpopular opinions are right and everyone else is wrong. Below, I explain my pick for the greatest NFL player ever.

Walter Payton is the best. I know that's not really an unpopular opinion by any stretch. In fact, it might be the most popular opinion I've ever stated. But here's my thing. The running backs for the NFL All-Time Team will be revealed on Friday night (8 p.m. ET on NFL Network), and if Walter Payton is not given his proper due, I will riot. And you might be thinking to yourself, "that's fair, Rank, but everyone knows he's easily one of the best running backs ever!" And you're absolutely right about that, dear reader. But that is not what I'm saying.

Now, your response will likely be "OK, boomer" as you move on to spam me with clown emojis on Twitter. Which is fine. I sort of expect this when I advocate for a player who was pre-Madden. The point being, most of you didn't see him play. I barely saw him play. But Walter Payton is an iconic figure, admiration for whom is passed down from generation to generation in the greater Chicagoland area even to this day. My grandparents and parents were there to watch many of the great Bears running backs from the past, including Gale Sayers, Bronko Naguski and Red Grange; but there was nobody like Payton. And I'll let you know right now that this isn't some sort of sentimentality vote, either. He earned all the praise that he was given.

Payton was the fourth overall selection of the 1975 NFL Draft. He was picked after some guys named Steve Bartkowski, Ken Huff and, well, I suppose Randy White was pretty good. He's in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, after all. But still, nice one, guys. I would say I wonder how it feels to pass up the best player in NFL history in the draft for a guard or mid-card quarterback. But then I remembered that the Bears drafted Mitchell Trubisky over Deshaun Watson and Patrick Mahomes, so I know exactly how it feels.

Anyhow, it took just over one season for Payton to show people he would be, at minimum, one of the most dominant running backs of his era. He was the kind of player with a combination of speed and power that hadn't been seen in the NFL until his arrival, save for maybe those old, grainy videos of Jim Brown. Payton could do it all. He could run. He could block. He could catch. He could even throw the ball, as evidenced by his eight career touchdown passes. I've often joked that the three best Bears quarterbacks of my lifetime are Jim McMahon, Jay Cutler and Payton on the halfback option. (And if you want to know who the fourth is, I'll say ABRG -- Anybody But Rex Grossman.) Dude was even the team's emergency punter.

Payton led the NFL in rushing in 1977, with 1,852 yards. That included the game against the Minnesota Vikings in which he rushed for 275 yards with a 104-degree temperature, meaning Michael Jordan doesn't even have the best fever game in Chicago sports history. I should point out that the 1977 season featured a 14-game schedule. Payton averaged 132.3 rushing yards per game and was voted the NFL's Most Valuable Player.

Payton was one of the most durable and reliable running backs in the league over his 13 seasons. He started every game he played in from 1976 through 1987. He consistently notched more than 300 attempts per season. I mean, dude carried the ball 321 times and finished with 1,715 all-purpose yards and 11 touchdowns in 1986 when he was 32 years old. I know all of you who play fantasy football would kill for a guy to have this kind of production. And he was a punishing running back who delivered hits and never took the easy way out.

And what you also might not realize, given how players go from franchise to franchise in the modern NFL, is that he did it all for the same, miserable team. Yes, the Bears were dreadful for most of his career. Sure, he willed them to the playoffs during his MVP season in 1977. But the team finished .500 or worse in seven of his first nine seasons. This all took place before the NFL adopted its modern free agency system. It wasn't like there was some sort of quick fix or chance to bring in some additional firepower to the Bears offense. He was it. He was the only offensive weapon on that team for years. Defenses schemed and loaded the box against him. They still couldn't stop him.

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