@yurybeltrao: #LIVEIncentiveProgram #LIVEwithlowfollowers #PaidPartnership

yury Beltrão
yury Beltrão
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Region: BR
Thursday 18 June 2026 22:41:09 GMT
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danstellatofilho
DanStellatoFilho :
Deu 50 tipo de Lumbrigas
2026-06-19 15:53:09
63
luanacristina9868
Luana Cristina :
só não faço esse pudim porque meu balde quebrou😑
2026-06-22 02:12:26
22
elonriber
Elton Ribeiro :
TEM DOCUMENTO ESSE PUDIM?
2026-06-19 13:03:17
25
paraguaiadms
natipequena :
até salivei 😅😂
2026-06-24 02:43:49
2
magd_alen34
magdalen34 :
receita: 12 latas de leite condensada, 12 cartelas de ovo ,um litro de vaunilha, um panela de 50 litros 🤣🤣
2026-06-19 12:48:41
15
bekoonho
bekoonh :
pq eu não gosto de pudim 😳 prefiro mousse de maracujá e gosto de maracujá 😋
2026-06-19 15:48:27
9
user845951425
Thaiane Alves :
Meu marido me enlouquecendo por causa desse pudim kk
2026-06-23 00:20:12
2
grazielagiordani
Graziela Giordani :
pronto agora vou ter que fazer um pudim e pedir pro meu marido falar pudim 😂😂😂😂
2026-06-20 00:55:11
14
bolsomitoraiz
Diego Bolsonaro 2026 :
a forma foi uma bacia??
2026-06-19 13:31:01
8
andre.luiz.ferrei45
Andre Luiz Ferreira :
parabéns Yury, seus vídeos são impagáveis.
2026-06-19 15:39:38
3
alexandre.pereira219
Alexandre Pereira :
vc faz vida aos comentários mano 😂😂😂
2026-06-24 00:09:41
1
monigermano1
monigermano1 :
Só uma fatia é um kg 🤨🤨
2026-06-23 00:06:57
4
tibiri.oficina
Luiz :
a forma um baude de obra 😂
2026-06-19 23:26:39
4
jonasferreira42
Jonas Ferreira :
parabéns hoje eu conheci inveja
2026-06-20 01:44:48
1
sivaldoquistomber
Lobão :
Acho que esse pudim 🍮 devi ter escritura top demais meu sonho de consumo
2026-06-21 21:56:43
2
fabricia.teodoro
Fabricia Teodoro :
isso não é um pudim... É um pudão
2026-06-22 02:12:56
5
deboraoliveira.g7
Studio Débora Gomes :
Foi com pudim que meu marido ficou diabético kkkkk
2026-06-23 03:58:58
2
delvieira27
delvieira27 :
Se é loko.....
2026-06-19 21:12:45
1
ninadiasoficial
Nina Dias :
10 kilos de pudim 🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-19 10:29:38
4
jackelinesampaio1
Jackeline Sampaio :
onde ela achou uma forma desse tamanho
2026-06-19 14:14:27
3
edson.neguinho.333
Edson Neguinho 333 :
Eita meu preferido melhor sobremesa 🥰🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-19 10:21:47
3
janetecezarmarque
Janete :
Eu racho de rir ver vc falando pudim kkkkkkkkkkkkk
2026-06-19 12:57:55
4
deusefielsempre148
Jairo Adriano. :
😅pudinzaoooo
2026-06-19 03:39:29
2
claudemir.teles.d75
Claudemir teles de menezes Tel :
vc apresenta sempre umas receitas muito loukas ai ,
2026-06-19 21:21:35
1
gabrielgloria37
gabrielgloria37 :
Me vê dois pra viagem
2026-06-19 16:55:32
3
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Other Videos

The striking images of bird nests woven from glowing, thin strands of fiber-optic cable in Ukraine are entirely real. This surreal phenomenon is a direct byproduct of a major technological pivot on the battlefield. Why is there Fiber-Optic Cable Everywhere? As electronic warfare (EW) and radio-jamming technologies have become incredibly sophisticated, traditional radio-controlled First-Person View (FPV) drones are frequently grounded or lost due to signal interference.   To counter this, both Ukrainian and Russian forces deployed tethered FPV drones. These drones carry a massive internal spool of micro-thin, unshielded fiber-optic cable that unspools behind them as they fly—sometimes stretching across distances of 20 to 65 kilometers (~12 to 40 miles). Because the control signals travel physically through the light strands, the connection is 100% jam-proof.   The downside is purely environmental: once a drone crashes, detonates, or completes its mission, kilometers of nearly invisible glass-and-polymer threads are left draped over trenches, fields, and forests.   How the Birds Are Reacting Birds are highly opportunistic builders. Confronted with miles of strong, flexible, and lightweight plastic-coated string littering the war-torn landscape, various species have begun harvesting it alongside traditional grass and twigs.    The Discoveries: Several of these nests have been documented by frontline soldiers and researchers. One notable example was found in the Donbas region after a Russian glide bomb knocked over a tree, spilling a tiny nest woven heavily with the distinct colored or translucent drone fibers. Another was highlighted by the 12th
The striking images of bird nests woven from glowing, thin strands of fiber-optic cable in Ukraine are entirely real. This surreal phenomenon is a direct byproduct of a major technological pivot on the battlefield. Why is there Fiber-Optic Cable Everywhere? As electronic warfare (EW) and radio-jamming technologies have become incredibly sophisticated, traditional radio-controlled First-Person View (FPV) drones are frequently grounded or lost due to signal interference.  To counter this, both Ukrainian and Russian forces deployed tethered FPV drones. These drones carry a massive internal spool of micro-thin, unshielded fiber-optic cable that unspools behind them as they fly—sometimes stretching across distances of 20 to 65 kilometers (~12 to 40 miles). Because the control signals travel physically through the light strands, the connection is 100% jam-proof.  The downside is purely environmental: once a drone crashes, detonates, or completes its mission, kilometers of nearly invisible glass-and-polymer threads are left draped over trenches, fields, and forests.  How the Birds Are Reacting Birds are highly opportunistic builders. Confronted with miles of strong, flexible, and lightweight plastic-coated string littering the war-torn landscape, various species have begun harvesting it alongside traditional grass and twigs.  The Discoveries: Several of these nests have been documented by frontline soldiers and researchers. One notable example was found in the Donbas region after a Russian glide bomb knocked over a tree, spilling a tiny nest woven heavily with the distinct colored or translucent drone fibers. Another was highlighted by the 12th "Azov" Special Forces Brigade near Toretsk, showcasing a nest made almost entirely out of the fiberglass threads.  Avian Ingenuity: Local birdwatchers and soldiers have noted that some species, like the Eurasian penduline tit (known for weaving incredibly complex hanging nests), have become remarkably adept at harvesting the material. They clamp the thin wire in their beaks and quickly snap it to break the inner glass core to the exact length they need.  The Dark Reality While it can look like a darkly poetic "cyberpunk" adaptation to war, environmentalists and ornithologists warn that it poses a serious threat to local wildlife: The Environmental Hazard: Because the fibers are incredibly thin, strong, and do not biodegrade, they create massive entanglement traps for birds, bats, and small mammals. Furthermore, as these polymer-coated cables degrade under the sun or break into tiny fragments, they introduce high levels of microplastics and sharp glass shards directly into the ecosystem and the animals' bodies. It stands as a stark visual reminder of the "apocalyptic" footprint modern warfare leaves behind, where even the local wildlife is forced to physically integrate the debris of technology into their survival. #sad #fyp #birds #Love #parati

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