Saturday 28 November 2015

WATCH: Deer With No Chill Crashes Through College Window

This must be the least casual walk of shame ever. 

A deer who we can only suspect had a few too many at a frat party went crashing through glass windows of a residence hall at Augustana college early Monday morning. 



Not only did this deer break through a glass window and display a chill rate of precisely zero percent, but it just could not get back on its feet.

And so, it falls. Again. And again. And again. What are they cleaning these floors with anyway? Car wax?



"Maybe if I stand reeeeally still, no one will notice me," the deer undoubtedly tells itself, circa 13 seconds into the video.  

But no. Floor trumps hooves once again. A spokesperson for the college told KWQC that the deer was eventually let out of the building by member of the custodial staff, and was unharmed. 

Ugh, how embarrassing. Get your sh*t together, Bambi. Your freshman naiveté is showing. 

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Thailand Vegetarians Pierce Themselves To Extremes (WARNING: Graphic Photos)



PHUKET, Thailand (AP) — Thailand's Vegetarian Festival is more than sprouts and tofu — it's an assault on the senses, and for the most devout, on the body itself.

The most striking element of the nine-day Taoist celebration has little to do with food. 

 

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This Mashup Of 'Hotline Bling' Is Proof 'Dominican Drake' Is Real

Drake is Dominican and he can no longer hide it.

That's how some of his Latino fans see it, at least. In fact, since the 28-year-old artist first began to show his appreciation for all things Dominican, many have theorized Drake may have a personal connection to the Caribbean country. 

And the Dominican Drake movement reached new heights Monday night, after the artist released the much anticipated video for "Hotline Bling." Drake's dance moves in the video inspired a slew of memes and mashups that have flooded news feeds and Twitter feeds.

For his Dominican Drake devotees the moves were simply more proof of the artist's true make-believe heritage. To make their case, fans masterfully paired his dancing with merengue and bachata songs. But it was this mashup of Drake dancing to Elvis Crespo's "Suavemente" that took the Dominican cake. 




Let your Dominican flag fly, Drake!





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Murder Victim Plays Dominos At His Own Wake


In a tribute to her son who died in an Oct. 11 shooting, a woman hired a company to prop him up in front of a table of dominos, giving him one last party to celebrate his send-off to the great beyond, The Mirror reports.

Jomar Aguayo Collazo was shot a few days after his 23rd birthday.

Forgoing a traditional wake, Collazo's body went on display at his mother's bar in Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico. Pictures show him propped him up at a table next to a jukebox, seeming to enjoy one last game.

Donning a blue tracksuit, he sat surrounded by dominos while friends and family took turns sitting next to him.


This tribute might remind some of "Weekend at Bernie's," but diorama-style wakes are becoming increasingly popular in parts of Puerto Rico, with at least four other bodies having been put into lifelike displays in the past eight years, as The Washington Post reported last year.

Collazo's mother worked with Marin Funeral Home in San Juan, which specializes making dioramas out of the deceased, according to PrimeraHora.com.

The Post reports that the practice is legal.


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Slo-Mo Video Reveals The Bizarre Way Balloons Burst



The bursting of a balloon is more complicated, and beautiful, than you might think.

A new slow-mo video made by scientists at the Laboratoire de Physique Statistique in Paris shows that balloons come apart in two very different ways, depending on how inflated they are before popping.

When a moderately inflated balloon is pierced by a sharp instrument, it bursts along a single split in the latex without any fragmentation:



But when a fully inflated balloon is pierced, it breaks up along multiple cracks into many fragments:



The scientists concluded that when the stress on the latex was high enough, the velocity of the initial crack would approach the speed of sound, New Scientist reported. 

At that point, "the material in front of the crack does not know it is arriving, so it cannot reconfigure its stress and mechanical properties," Sébastien Moulinet, one of the scientists, explained to New Scientist. "It cannot arrange itself so that a single crack continues." 

Instead of a clean break, there's chaos and multiple cracks spread through the balloon.

The scientists said their research could be applied to other common materials that crack, such as glass or metals, and help in the development of stronger materials that when they break, break more safely.

"[B]alloons burst the same way other materials do, but are easier to observe experimentally," Moulinet told The Huffington Post in an email.

He suggested one other, perhaps less scientific justification for the research: "In addition, we were never getting tired of watching explosions in slow motion!"

A paper describing the research was accepted Oct. 2 for publication in the journal Physical Review Letters.

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Someone Out There Thinks 'Back To The Future' Predicted 9/11



There are a lot of fan theories out there, but this one deserves a giant eye roll. 

YouTuber by the name of BarelyHuman11 posits in a 12-minute video that the 1985 film "Back to the Future" is coded with references to the 9/11 attacks, which took place 16 years later. 

The theorist points to the film's Twin Pines mall where Christopher Lloyd's character is attacked by Libyan terrorists. Twin Pines is apparently supposed to be a reference to the Twin Towers.  

What's more, according to the video, the attack takes place at 1:16 a.m -- and get this -- if you turn the sign upside down it reads "91: 1." Of course, there's no explanation as to why anyone would try to read it upside down. 

"Is this only a coincidence?" asks the video's narrator.

Yes, obviously.  

 

H/T: Collider

 

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Florida Couple Left Name In Gallery Guestbook Before Robbery: Police



PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Authorities say a man and woman left the woman's name and telephone number in the guestbook of a South Florida art gallery before stealing about $6,000 worth of jewelry.

Palm Beach police say 24-year-old Megan Ohara and 19-year-old David Ziskowski took a bracelet and a ring Sunday from the Attila JK exhibition at the ICFA Gallery. They were spotted a short time later at a nearby grocery, and police reported finding the jewelry in the woman's purse.

Officers found multiple fake email addresses and at least one obscene drawing in the gallery's guestbook. The South Florida Sun Sentinel (http://goo.gl/UEPiqq ) reports that two of the fake emails included the name "Meg" and one included Ohara's phone number.

Ohara and Ziskowski were arrested and charged with grand theft. Jail records didn't list attorneys.

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Information from: Sun Sentinel , http://www.sun-sentinel.com/

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