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Lions Rescued From Circuses In Peru Get Their Teeth Fixed

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LIMA, Peru (AP) — King was unable to chew normally because most of his teeth had been pulled by the circus owners. Simba's front claws had been removed and his fangs broken.




The lions were among 21 rescued from Peruvian circuses in 2014 by members of Los Angeles-based Animal Defenders International. Activists say the lions were kept in appalling conditions.




"In the circuses they often break their teeth and remove their claws," said Eva Chomba, a Peruvian veterinarian with Animal Defenders. "It's a painful process in which they do not use anesthesia and those doing it are not veterinarians."




On Friday, a team of veterinarians sedated King and Simba to perform dental surgery on the big cats, which weigh more than 160 kilograms (352 pounds) and are 17 and 7 years old, respectively.




U.S. veterinarian Peter Emily, founder of the Peter Emily International Veterinary Dental Foundation, said a previous oral surgery on King had created a small hole between his mouth and nose that had become badly infected.




The veterinarians determined King requires more surgeries and the lion will be taken to an animal sanctuary in Denver, Colorado, in the coming months, Peruvian veterinarian Jorge Hun said.




On Saturday, the veterinarians will look at the teeth of 26 monkeys also rescued from circuses.




Peru banned the use of wild animals in circuses in 2011, but implementation of the law has been slow.




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Associated Press writers Mauricio Munoz and Martin Mejia contributed to this report.



His Son Was Born Cursed. He Started Filming. Now He Might Win An Oscar.

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Almost no one has Ondine’s Curse. It is an incredibly rare genetic disorder.



Leo was born one of the unlucky few, and his doctors expected the worst.



“They presented it in such a severe way, like he has no chance for a normal life at all,” his father Tomasz Śliwiński told The Huffington Post. “They said we needed to prepare to give up our professional lives completely, and just focus on the child. They were telling us so many bad things. It's amazing we didn't give up in that moment.”



For children like Leo, breathing doesn’t just happen. It is more of a conscious act. If Leo falls asleep, and he is not connected to a large ventilator, he will simply die. During the day, breathing requires concentration. If he’s distracted by something outside his window, or by the television, his breathing may weaken dangerously.



“If he concentrates on something too much, it's a moment when we have to exercise extreme caution and be ready to plug into the ventilator machine,” Śliwiński said.





Leo in his first year. Photo via Leoblog.



When Leo was born, a friend of Śliwiński’s suggested he start documenting the experience as a form of therapy. Śliwiński was in film school at the time; his wife Magda Hueckel is a professional photographer.



“We really felt like somehow our life had ended. The filming itself helped us to go through this process,” Śliwiński said. “Rather than falling into depression and thinking, ‘What has happened to us?’ we put this energy into something creative.”



Four years later, the footage captured during the first six months of Leo’s life has become an acclaimed Oscar-nominated short documentary, titled “Our Curse.” And Leo, who just entered kindergarten, will get to watch the festivities from home in Poland.







If you’d like to help, visit the National Organization for Rare Disorders or the CCHS Family Network.



FILMING A CURSE



When Śliwiński and his wife started shooting, they had no idea whether they’d ever show the footage to anyone.



Mostly they sat on their couch and talked late into the night. Whether Leo would survive was still in doubt. They were terrified that his ventilator alarm would go off and they wouldn’t hear it.



“It was the hardest thing at the beginning to understand that Leo is living on the verge, he is balancing between life and death,” Śliwiński said. “We had to somehow accept this in our heads, and accept the moment and try to be happy with the moment as it is, and not go too much in the future.”



Days turned into weeks turned into months. Leo was stabilizing. Gradually, Śliwiński and Hueckel began to adapt to their new life. And one night, they realized the time for filming was over.



“I remember we had this conversation on the couch that we'd usually have in the evening, and we noticed that we'd started repeating ourselves,” Śliwiński recalled. “We had finished the whole process of accepting the thing and now it was time to live just as normally as possible. So it felt really natural to stop recording.”





Leo in his first year. Photo via Leoblog.



Months later, a new challenge: reliving the experience as Śliwiński edited the film. “I remember smoking so many cigarettes during that time,” he laughed. “I had to go back through all those moments, and yet also somehow detach myself emotionally from the whole process. I had to treat it like a film with a character that just happened to be me.”



He ended up asking two colleagues to help trim his first cut. “I was so emotional with some scenes that were not important to the story. I just personally didn't have the guts to remove them, because I remembered all of the emotions in those scenes.”



Last month, on the day the Academy Award nominees were announced, he gathered with the teams behind two other Polish films that had also been short-listed for Oscar nominations.



The news came in celebratory waves, and by the end, all three Polish films had been nominated. “Everyone was shouting and happy,” Śliwiński said. “It was so totally amazing. A day I won't forget for a very long time.”





Leo in his second year. Photo via Leoblog.



LIFE IN THE MOMENT



Leo’s disorder still requires constant monitoring, complex logistical planning. If his parents aren’t with him, nurses (whose salaries are not covered by insurance) must be on call, including all day at school.



“You see what other children can do but your son cannot do. It is hard to see how differently it could have been.”



Yet none of these challenges overshadow what Śliwiński says is the universal message of his film: even the worst moments of your life can turn into something positive after all.



“I must say, we are really happy now,” he says. “It’s the most remarkable thing. Of course I would do anything for Leo to be cured. But somehow we managed to find a balance, and this became a very enriching experience. It shifted our perspective totally. We stopped worrying about useless things. We started appreciating what's really important.”





Leo in his third year. Photo via Leoblog.



Through their web site, Leo’s parents are raising funds for a surgery to implant a breathing pacer, so Leo no longer requires a tracheotomy.



They are considering adding to their family. “We think it would be very good for Leo to have a little brother or sister.” And most amazing, Śliwiński says, has been meeting adults with Ondine’s Curse while he’s traveled to promote his film. “They function totally normally, they finished university, they have families. It shows there’s a great chance Leo can live a life with almost no limitations.”



If you’d like to help, visit the National Organization for Rare Disorders or the CCHS Family Network.





Leo in his third year. Photo via Leoblog.



Transcription services by Tigerfish; now offering transcripts in two-hours guaranteed. Interview text has been edited and condensed.



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Sophia is a project to collect life lessons from fascinating people. Learn more or sign up to receive lessons for living directly via Facebook or our email newsletter.



Here's more from Sophia:

- He Asked 1500+ Elders For Advice On Living And Loving. Here's What They Told Him.

- Life Tips From The Ph.D. Who's Discovering How Meditation Changes Your Brain

- Watching Rainn Wilson Talk About Happiness Will Make You Happier



Hacker Extorts Bitcoin Ransom From Illinois Police Department

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MIDLOTHIAN, Ill. (AP) — A suburban Chicago police department paid a hacker a $500 ransom to restore access to data on a police computer that the hacker had disabled through the use of an increasingly popular type of virus.



The police department in Midlothian, a village southwest of Chicago, was hit in January by a form of the Cryptoware virus, which encrypted some files on a department computer, leaving them inaccessible without the encryption key, the Chicago Tribune reported (http://trib.in/17k9Hkv ). Midlothian Police Chief Harold Kaufman confirmed the department had been hacked, but declined further comment. A Tribune open records request turned up a village invoice listing the payment with the heading "MPD virus."



An unknown hacker said that if the department wanted to unencrypt the files, it had to pay a ransom in bitcoin, a digital currency that is virtually untraceable, said Calvin Harden Jr., an IT vendor who works with the village.



The village had to make a tough decision, Harden said, and chose to make the payment because going after the hacker might have been more trouble than it was worth.



"Because the backups were also infected, the option was to pay the hacker and get the files unencrypted, which is what we decided to do," he told the newspaper.



The problem of hackers demanding ransoms from law enforcement and government agencies around the country has been spreading over the past year or two, said Fred Hayes, president of the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police. The city of Detroit and a sheriff's office in Tennessee recently suffered Cryptoware attacks by ransom-seekers, the Tribune reported.



Hayes said his advice to departments is to back up their data.



"This is something that quite a few people recently ... have been experiencing," he said.



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Information from: Chicago Tribune, http://ift.tt/sYd3cl

Matt 'Megatoad' Stonie Sets Bacon Eating World Record

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Your move, Ron Swanson.



Matt 'Megatoad' Stonie, one of Major League Eating's top two eaters in the world, just set the bacon-eating record by housing 182 slices in five minutes.



That's a lot of pig; Stonie estimates that he ate more than six pounds of cooked bacon, which sports more than 28,000 milligrams of sodium, according to Smithfield, which sponsored the event in Daytona, Florida.



matt stonie



"The bacon was cooked just the way I like it -- a little crispy because I don't like having to chew it," Stonie told HuffPost Weird News after the feat. "I don't feel that bad. I'm used to 10 or 12 minute contests, where I'm eating 10 or 15 pounds of food. I came into this prepared."



Just as bacon hits its prime on the world stage, so has its champion. Stonie told HuffPost that he'll never lose his craving for the breakfast behemoth. Eating competitively is his job, and when he's stuffing his face on stage, he doesn't taste food the same.



"I feel the texture, I taste the saltiness, and I focus on getting it all down," he said. "But I love bacon, it goes with everything."



He added that he's picky about how his pork product is prepared: "It needs to be cooked perfectly. It can't be too crispy and if it's not warm when I get it, the fat coagulates into lard."



Going in, the new Baron of Breakfast didn't have much competition. MLE hasn't ever sponsored a true bacon-eating contest before, and for comparison's sake, unofficial eating groups show a measly 54 pieces of bacon as the previous "record." But Stonie needed to set the bar high today. After all, Megatoad is second only to Joey "Jaws" Chestnut on MLE's list of gustatory greats, and Stonie admits that the two waste no time in eating each other's records. EatFeats shows that the two are gut-and-gut in most competitions.



It wasn't immediately clear whether Chestnut would try to pilfer the pork record, but Stonie can rest easy knowing that today is his day. In fact, it has been his month -- he has set several records in Florida, including today's in Daytona and a 14.5-pound birthday cake eating record set in West Palm Beach on Feb. 14.



He also went chew-for-chew with Chestnut in the 2014 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest, though Chestnut edged him out in the final minutes, winning 61-56.


Here's How You Can Build Your Very Own Lego Oscar

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Did you see Emma Stone and Oprah Winfrey holding giant Lego Oscars and get a bit jealous? The statues from the insane "Everything Is Awesome" live-performance at the 2015 Academy Awards were made by artist Nathan Sawaya, whose creations ended up in the hands of notable nominees in the audience:





Image: Giphy




Sawaya tweeted a video of how he made the statue:












But if that was too quick of an instruction for you, below is a longer instructional video on how to make a larger version of the Oscar statue:







And for the more avant-garde, here's an instructional video on how to make an Oscar ... something:



Big Bird Spoofs 'Birdman' As Caroll Spinney Is Stalked By His Alter Ego

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Michael Keaton isn't the only Birdman.



Caroll Spinney might be the original Birdman since he's been playing Big Bird on "Sesame Street" since 1969. In a new viral video clip, he's haunted by the presence of his iconic alter ego.



"How did we get here?" the voice of Big Bird asks. "How do we get to Sesame Street?"



Check out “Big Birdman Or (The Unexpected Virtue of Orange Pants)" in the clip above. And since Spinney is also Oscar the Grouch, maybe there's some potential for a sequel: Garbageman.

Man Allegedly Goes Into Rampage At Salon Over Price Of Haircut

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STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) — A man who was unhappy with his haircut faces criminal charges after police say he became enraged and threw items around a Connecticut salon.



Stamford Police Sgt. Kelly Connelly says 47-year-old Alan Becker was angered further when he learned the trim he got Wednesday morning was going to cost him $50.



Connelly says Becker kicked a hole in a salon wall, became hostile toward staff and customers, and threw a candle display and other items, then left.



Police say Becker returned later and demanded his hair be "fixed," but the salon refused.



Authorities later arrested Becker on breach of peace and criminal mischief charges at his Stamford home.



A recording on a phone listing for Becker said it couldn't receive new messages. It's not clear if he has a lawyer.

Cockatoo Yelling Nonsense Is The Internet

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"That bird just talked! That's crazy! He just did it again!" -- Brian Fellow.



Some of you may ask, "Who is this Brian Fellow? Why is he so perplexed by this bird?" To which we can only say:



Brian Fellow is not an accredited zoologist, nor does he hold an advanced degree in any of the environmental sciences. He is simply an enthusiastic young man with a sixth-grade education and an abiding love for all god's creatures.









(h/t Reddit)











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Purple UFO Interrupts Peru TV Show

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A television production crew in Lima, Peru, videotaped a purple-colored disc-shaped UFO hovering in the distant sky near a construction site. So far, there's no official explanation for the object.



According to Peru This Week, a television show, "Alto al Crimen" ("High Crime"), was shooting an episode in the upscale Miraflores district of Lima on Feb. 10. The show's host, Lima Congressman Renzo Reggiardo, halted an interview to allow his camera operator to focus on the strange-looking purple object in the sky.



Watch this video of the purple Peru UFO:







Both distant and zoomed-in perspectives of the UFO reveal a saucer-shaped object, with a large central bright purple section, tapering off on either end. The extreme right end appears almost black in color, while the opposite end seems to be a darker purple shade than the center part of the object. The video also reveals that sometimes the two dark ends appear to become smaller and larger.



Eyewitnesses reported seeing the aerial object for up to two hours, and yet, no video has emerged showing how the UFO left the scene. So, the question remains: How, exactly, did it go away? Did it fall to the ground, float away or speed up and vanish over the nearby ocean? Or perhaps (as in some UFO reports over the years), did it simply vanish?



The Peru chapter of the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) is investigating this case, seeking more eyewitnesses who may have videotaped the purple aerial object from different vantage points.



The image below shows the Miraflores area of Lima, Peru, bordering the Pacific Ocean, where the UFO was seen.



limaperuufomap



Some possible explanations, according to MUFONPeru.com include a drone or a kite.



The following composite image shows the object in two positions beyond the construction site where it was spotted by eyewitnesses.



peruufocomposite


Renzo The Police Dog Stripped Of Badge After Biting Dunkin' Donuts Worker

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COCONUT CREEK, Fla. (AP) — A Florida police dog is being kicked off the force after biting a doughnut shop worker and an officer in separate incidents.



Officials say 4-year-old Renzo had been with the Coconut Creek Police Department for more than a year. The Belgian Malinois bit an officer in November while tracking a suspect. Last week, he burst out of a patrol car and bit a Dunkin' Donuts worker in the calf.



The South Florida Sun Sentinel (http://bit.ly/1JtxY9e) reports Renzo and Officer Carl DiBlasi went to the doughnut shop Feb. 11 to meet a police sergeant. The sergeant approached the patrol car and began to pet Renzo. The dog lunged at her and DiBlasi struggled to restrain him. Renzo broke away and bit the worker who was nearby.



The retired dog will now live with DiBlasi.

Scan Reveals Mummy Hidden Inside Buddha Statue

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Researchers examining a nearly 1,000-year-old statue of Buddha on display in Holland discovered something very unusual hidden inside: the mummy of a meditating monk.



Calling the mummy its "oldest patient ever," the Meander Medical Center in the Dutch city of Amersfoort used a CT scanner to take images of the body inside the statue and an endoscope to examine the thoracic and abdominal cavities.



(Story continues below).








The mummy is believed to be that of Liuquan, a Buddhist monk who died in China around 1,100 A.D. During their examination, the researchers found that the mummy's internal organs had apparently been removed and the space filled with "paper scraps that were printed with ancient Chinese characters," the hospital said in a news release.



The statue was on display as part of the "Mummies: Life Beyond Death" exhibition at the Drents Museum in the Netherlands last year, and this was the first time it had been let out of China.



A brochure from the event says this may be a case of self-mummification.



These monks would typically subsist on water, seeds and nuts for 1,000 days, then roots, pine bark and a toxic tea made from sap of the Chinese lacquer tree for another 1,000 days while sealed inside a stone tomb, according to CNET.



They would breathe through a small tube and ring a bell to let everyone know they were still alive, Business Insider Australia reported. Once the ringing stopped, they'd be left inside for another 1,000 days.



Those who were mummified are said to have achieved enlightenment, Smithsonian reported.



It's not clear whether Liuquan self-mummified, but the removal of the organs and presence of scraps of paper suggest that may not have been the case.



The statue is now on display in Hungary at the Natural History Museum.

Ralitsa Nikolaeva Ivanova Drove Wrong Way While Drunk Texting

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Ralitsa Nikolaeva Ivanova, a Bulgarian super model who has appeared in Esquire and Maxim, will now be appearing before a judge.



Ivanova, 29, was arrested Wednesday for driving the wrong way down a Florida highway. She was allegedly drunk and texting at the time she was pulled over.


Which Marvel Character Has Had The Most Sex Partners? (INFOGRAPHIC)

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Some super heroes see as much as action in the bedroom as they do fighting supervillains.



Some enterprising person has figured out which Marvel characters have slept with each other.



Some of the carnal connections may surprise you, but we hope they're using super protection behind closed doors.







WebHostingBuzz - Marvel Relationship Map

New Anti-Aging Chocolate May Make Skin Look 30 Years Younger

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A world where you could eat all the chocolate you want without gaining an ounce would be pretty great, but a world where you can eat chocolate and look younger with every bite would be our dream come true. And that dream could be a reality, according to Lycotec, a UK-based company with research ties to Cambridge University.



They've created "Esthechoc" a 70 percent dark chocolate which touts some serious anti-aging claims. Researchers say the treat is so potent, just one 7.5-gram piece of the chocolate packs the same anti-oxidant punch as 100 grams of regular dark chocolate or even 300 grams of Alaskan salmon.



Creators say that, in a clinical trial of 50- to 60-years-olds, eating a piece of Esthechoc a day over three to four weeks boosted blood supply to the skin as well as reduced inflammation. "In terms of skin biomarkers we found it had brought skin back to the levels of a 20 or 30-year-old. So we’ve improved the skin’s physiology. People using it claimed that their skin was better and we can see that the product is working to slow down aging," Lycotec's Ivan Petyaev told The Telegraph.



The chocolate comes in sleek white packaging. Both the price point and retailers will be announced next month at the Global Food Innovation Summit in London, but it's safe to assume it will cost more than a Kit-Kat bar.



Chocolate also may be good for your heart, with some previous studies indicating the sweet treat can protect you from heart attacks and strokes.



So does the new anti-aging chocolate really work? Health experts say it's best to approach the beauty bar with a healthy dose of caution, saying more trials are needed to show whether it lives up to the hype.



Would you try a piece?











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'The Walking Dead' Season 5, Ep. 11 Recap: 'The Distance' Takes Us To Alexandria Or Bust

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Spoiler alert! There is no sanctuary.



Previously, our survivors made it through a major storm despite being exhausted, starving, dehydrated and mourning the losses of Beth and Tyreese. And then the suspiciously friendly Aaron showed up with promises of a new community. Can he be trusted? Or is this just going to be another Woodbury or Terminus?



By the end of Sunday night's episode, "The Distance," we get the feeling that the answer to the first question is yes -- Aaron seems like a trustworthy guy -- but until our group enters Alexandria's gates, we won't know how much of a sanctuary it really is.



Here are four main takeaways from the episode, which may have brought our group closer to salvation than they have ever been:



Rick doesn't trust anyone, but Michonne has enough faith in humanity left for the two of them.



When Maggie and Sasha bring an unarmed Aaron back to the barn and share his news of a safe camp, Rick's first instinct is to punch him in the face. Understandable, considering what the last people offering sanctuary did to them. Plus, these folks just ate a dog! Aaron's polite, L.L. Bean model looks and tales of 15-foot high walls of reinforced steel aren't enough to convince Rick that he's cool. Aaron's been following and spying on the group, which is weird, and Rick knows that he must have others hiding outside the barn. Rick wants to forget they even met Aaron because it's too "dangerous," but Michonne brings him back down to Earth. "Passing up a place where we can live -- where Judith can live -- is dangerous."



Rick obliges and stays with Aaron while Michonne, Abraham, Rosita, Glenn and Maggie go look for Aaron's cars and companion. He doesn't let Aaron get too comfortable, even when he offers up his applesauce for baby Judith. "Just because we're good people, doesn't mean we won't kill you," Rick says, promising to kill him if his crew isn't back in an hour.



Meanwhile, Michonne says she understands why Aaron is interested in their group. "People like us saved a priest ... A crazy lady with a sword. He sees that," she says. They find more good news when they locate Aaron's car and RV, filled with food like "S'ghetti Rings." When they get back, Rick wants to keep the food and send Aaron on his way, but once again Michonne makes him see the clear opportunity in front of them. "We need this," she says. "We're all going."





Aaron and the group bond over a harrowing late night drive.



Rick still has reservations as he reflects with Michonne about Terminus and Woodbury, especially the eerie silence that greeted them when they thought they had found sanctuary. Aaron refuses to tell the group where his camp is, Rick refuses to let him drive them there, take his route or even get there in daylight. What ensues is a dangerous trip, at night, through uncleared roads. We learn more about Aaron on the way, like how he's collecting state license plates to hang in his house -- his HOUSE -- and that he doesn't have any photos of his people. Michonne is disturbed by the latter and asks him the "Three Questions" just ask Rick finds his spying equipment in the glove box, the car hits a horde, they lose track of the RV and the car stalls out for good.



It's a chaotic scene, especially when a flare from Aaron's counterpart goes up in the distance. We can see that Aaron is really worried, another sign that he's an okay guy, and he further redeems himself when he helps Rick, Glenn and Michonne escape walkers in the dark woods (although, that flare gun trick that Rick pulled off was pretty effective). Glenn almost gets bitten (for the millionth time) and has a particularly poignant moment with Aaron. Confirming that he was spying on the group, Aaron says what Glenn said last week: "We can make it together, but we can only make it together."



With that in mind, the four of them finally make it to the flare location where the RV group is safe and has gotten acquainted with Glenn's friend Eric.



Aaron has the love and trust that the group is missing.



Speaking of Eric, HOW CUTE?! Aaron is concerned about his lover's broken ankle, an injury that happened while he was waiting for Aaron to finish getting kidnapped by Rick. Eric also got Aaron a license plate for his collection, not knowing that he would lose them with the car. It's been a while since we've seen affection and a strong relationship like this. Earlier, when the group found the RV, Abraham has a tender moment with Rosita when he asks if she really tough he would hit her while he had his "D.C. is a lie" meltdown, but they are still rocky.



Aaron thanks the survivors for helping him and Eric and finally reveals where they are headed: Alexandria. Rick has loosened up (Aaron is no longer tied up, after all) but he still wants to isolate Aaron while they sleep. Ever the voice of reason, Glenn convinces Rick to let his guard down. The next morning the group takes the most cheerful car ride they've ever taken: Eugene and Tara are playing cards, Aaron gives Noah hope for fixing his limp in Alexandria, and Rosita and Abraham have a sweet moment when they spy the Washington, D.C., skyline. Abe looks at the gas tank and says, "We can make it." Everyone feels good! So full of hope!



... But are they really ready to re-join society?



Cut to: they're broken down. As we have already learned on this show (and in life), nothing good can last forever, and they need a new battery. But that's not what's really holding them back -- it's Rick. Michonne tells him that he has to let go, that the fight is over. Rick remembers what Bob tried to tell him back at the church about letting people in. "The rules keep changing," he says, and he's not wrong. He picks up a blender pitcher in the woods before they leave and hides a gun inside of it. After what happened at Terminus, who could blame him?



After the RV starts back up and the group pulls up to Alexandria's gates, Rick and Michonne have a moment. They can hear children playing inside the fences -- not the silence they're used to. "Are you ready?" Michonne asks him. Based on how he picks up baby Judith and smiles, it appears so. But Carol's comment at the end of the episode about Rick's skeptical approach to Aaron is a bit foreboding: "Even though you were wrong, you were right." Let's hope not.

'We Promised This Was Their Forever Home': Animal Refuge In Peril After Co-Founder's Cancer Diagnosis

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An Australian animal refuge that won hearts around the world after releasing viral videos of critters -- like Stephie, the peanut butter-eating goat, and Sweetie, the purring chicken -- may be in trouble, as one of the sanctuary's co-founders has been diagnosed with an aggressive brain tumor.



“Every second I have now is absolutely dedicated to being present for my children, family, friends and animals,” Fiona Fox, co-founder and co-owner of Manning River Farm Animal Sanctuary in Kimbriki, Australia, told The Huffington Post via email.



goat

Fiona Fox and Flash the goat in August 2014



Fox, 49, was diagnosed with stage 4 brain cancer the first week of February, according to a statement from the sanctuary.



“It all happened within a week,” Fox, who owns and operates the sanctuary with co-founder Sharron Woodward, told HuffPost. “One minute I was floating along at the sanctuary and the next I was in hospital having brain surgery to remove a tumor, and the next I was told that I have incurable brain cancer.”



Doctors have not given Fox a specific prognosis, but the median life expectancy for her condition is 14 to 15 months, her 22-year-old son, Kane, told HuffPost.



Fox said she now fears for the future of the sanctuary and its 50 animals, which range from goats taken from an abusive home, to roosters abandoned at a veterinary office, to calves rescued just before they were sent to slaughter.



bo



“At present, Sharron and Fiona can afford the place,” Kane Fox, who is also the IT manager for the sanctuary, told HuffPost, explaining that the organization relies on private donations and the combined incomes of his mother and Woodward. “But Sharron won't be able to take on the full 100 percent of the financial cost.”



He said that if “the worst” happens, staff will make sure the animals that call Manning River home are sent to “loving vegan sanctuaries.” Nevertheless, he said, sending the animals away would be “a heartbreaking and devastating decision.”



“We promised the animals that this was their loving, safe and forever home,” he said.



sheep



It may also be hard to match the level of care and attention that the animals receive at Manning River.



“The amount of time Fiona has spent with all of our animals -- whether it be laying down in the hay singing to the pigs at night, building trust with the sheep through long weeks of sitting and waiting for them to approach her outstretched arms, or playing ball with the cows and goats -- is the reason why our animals are so happy,” her son said.



He added that the sanctuary focuses on rehabilitating animals that come from factory farms “because they experience the most horrific circumstances."



Fox said she hopes the sanctuary can not only continue to exist as a haven for abused animals, but also become “a place of healing for people” suffering from cancer and other illnesses.



“For me, that has been the best therapy -- to just sit and be in the serene of nature, peaceful with all species,” she said. “I have these dreams now of Manning River Farm Animal Sanctuary becoming a place of happiness for everyone and anyone in need.”



To learn more, click here or here.



pig







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This Glow In The Dark Ice Cream Was Inspired By A Rave

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In Melbourne, Australia, a pop-up parlor is serving up vibrant scoops of glow in the dark ice creams that are dairy free andvegan.



glow in the dark ice cream



196 Below sells liquid nitrogen ice cream; their Neon Nitro Ice Cream is most exciting because it can be eaten at a rave, on an unlit street in the evening or underground in a dark cave.



The luminous ice cream comes in three flavors: Redskin (raspberry), pine-lime and mango passion fruit. A UV-reactive liquid food coloring, which has been certified by the TGA, Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration, is what provides the treat with its glow. It sells for $8.50 a serving and, despite its power plant vibe, is free of preservatives.



Steve Felice, 196 Below's co-owner, came up with idea, inspired by his adolescent days as a raver. "I used to be a dance party child in the 1990s and early 2000s and I used to make party clothes out of neon material,"he told the Daily Mail. Groovy!



H/T: Eater





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Nebraska Coach Tim Miles Bans Players From Lavish Locker Room After Blowout Loss At Home

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Nebraska basketball coach Tim Miles might as well have steam coming out of his ears.



Following a 74-46 blowout loss at home to Iowa on Sunday -- the team's fifth in a row, and its seventh loss in eight games -- Miles decided to put the "lock" in locker room, banning players from the lavish $18.7 million facility.



That facility, by the way, includes walls of massive televisions, wooden lockers with built-in iPads, a pool table, and plenty of other luxury appointments:








"There will be chains on the doors locking it from the outside,” Miles said at a post-game press conference, “until further notice."



Miles said he didn't know where players would dress, but he showed little sympathy for the problem. "They're creative young people," he said.



The coach told the Omaha World-Herald he wished he could send players to work side jobs until they could "pay back the fans the cost of their ticket."



Assistant coach Chris Harriman wasn't happy either. He took to Twitter to apologize to fans and made a pledge: "It will never happen again."









Naked Festival Isn't Quite As Naked As You Might Think

Dogs Can Spot People Who Are Trying To Fool Them, Study Shows

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Dogs are certainly no dummies when it comes to understanding humans.



Canines can understand our voice commands and know what it means when we point (something even chimps have trouble with)--and recent research shows that they can even read our facial expressions.



Now a study from Japan suggests that dogs can tell when a human is trying to dupe them.



"Dogs have more sophisticated social intelligence than we thought," Dr. Akiko Takaoka, a researcher at Kyoto University and a co-author of the study, told the BBC. "This social intelligence evolved selectively in their long life history with humans."



For the study, which was published Oct. 24, 2014 in the journal Animal Cognition, the researchers tested 34 pet dogs as they interacted with a human and a pair of containers (one containing a food treat, the other empty).



In the first phase of the study, an experimenter pointed at a container that held a treat--essentially giving good advice. In the second phase, the experimenter showed the dogs the contents of both containers and then pointed to the empty container. In phase three, the experimenter pointed once again at the treat-filled container, just as in phase one.



What happened? The dogs were much less likely to heed the experimenter's guidance in phase three than in phase one. That suggests that they can tell when we mess with them--and know not to be too trusting.



As the researchers wrote in the abstract of the study, "These results suggest that not only dogs are highly skilled at understanding human pointing gestures, but also they make inferences about the reliability of a human who presents cues and consequently modify their behavior flexibly depending on the inference."



Woof!
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