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This Toddler Defended His Grandmother From Authorities With A Huge Metal Pipe

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“Don’t touch my grandma! Go away, don’t touch my grandma!”

A video of a toddler defending his grandmother in a marketplace in China has received A LOT of attention recently.

youtube.com

In the video, the unnamed boy approaches a group of Chengguan in a marketplace. The Chengguan are urban management and code enforcers in China. The grandmother's setup was allegedly taking up too much sidewalk space.

In the video, the unnamed boy approaches a group of Chengguan in a marketplace. The Chengguan are urban management and code enforcers in China. The grandmother's setup was allegedly taking up too much sidewalk space.

youtube.com

The boy tenaciously screams, “Don’t touch my grandma! Go away, don’t touch my grandma!” as onlookers film and chuckle at his aggression.

The boy tenaciously screams, “Don’t touch my grandma! Go away, don’t touch my grandma!” as onlookers film and chuckle at his aggression.

youtube.com

At one point, the boy is ushered to a coach by an official, but quickly fends him off with arm strikes.

At one point, the boy is ushered to a coach by an official, but quickly fends him off with arm strikes.

youtube.com


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The Eerie Unsolved Death Of Nine Russian Skiers Will Give You Chills

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What happened at that campsite in 1959?

On Feb. 2, 1959, nine skiers were found dead near their campsite next to Otorten Mountain, Russia. This is the chilling story of their deaths:

youtube.com / Via youtu.be

On Feb. 26, 1959, the group's campsite was discovered by a rescue team. The condition of the campsite and the skiers' bodies was so unsettling it led to several theories on how they could have died.

On Feb. 26, 1959, the group's campsite was discovered by a rescue team. The condition of the campsite and the skiers' bodies was so unsettling it led to several theories on how they could have died.

Public Domain / BuzzFeed Video


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22 Of The Most Powerful Photos Of This Week

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Here are the most moving, sorrowful, and beautiful pictures from the past week.

An escaped chimpanzee screams as a man tries to capture him on the power lines of a residential area in Sendai, northern Japan, after escaping from the nearby Yagiyama Zoological Park. The chimp was eventually caught after being shot with a tranquilizer gun and falling from the power lines, Kyodo news reported.

Kyodo Kyodo / Reuters

A U.S. Navy picture shows what appears to be a Russian Sukhoi SU-24 attack aircraft making an incredibly low pass towards the U.S. guided missile destroyer USS Donald Cook in the Baltic Sea. Two Russian warplanes with no visible weaponry flew near the destroyer in what one U.S. official described as one of the most aggressive interactions in recent memory.

Us Navy / Reuters

President Barack Obama blows a soap bubble using a 3-D printed bubble wand designed by Jacob Leggette, age 9, of Baltimore, Maryland, while touring the 2016 White House Science Fair at the White House.

Jacquelyn Martin / AP

An Indian Muslim devotee on a pilgrimage to the shrine of Sufi saint Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti for the festival of Urs, performs a ritual during a procession at Ajmer in the desert Indian state of Rajasthan. The annual festival of Urs is held for over six days at Ajmer to commemorate the death anniversary of the Sufi saint.

Himanshu Sharma / Reuters


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The Most Interesting Photo Stories We Saw This Week

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This week we looked around the internet and pulled together a collection of our favorite photo stories of the week and to increase your appreciation of photography in general.

"These Haunting Photos Reveal Today's Afghanistan" — Proof

"These Haunting Photos Reveal Today's Afghanistan" — Proof

"Andrew Quilty is killing it at capturing the light and the dark sides of Afghanistan, and his interview with Proof only reinforces that fact. Check it out here". —Kate Bubacz, Senior Photo Editor, News

Andrew Quilty

"Drive-By" — Los Angeles Times

"Drive-By" — Los Angeles Times

"L.A. photographer Lev Rukhin shows us the randomness that is the streets of Los Angeles with his series “Drive-By.” His Bruce Davidson style and technique brings to life the characters and scenes he comes across as he drives around Hollywood and other L.A. neighborhoods. Rukhin attaches his camera to a tripod in the backseat of his car, along with a strobe and beauty dish attached to the outside, hence the 'Drive-By.'" —Jared Harrell, Photo Editor, News

Lev Rukhin

"Documenting a Chinese Family's Life" — Slate

"Documenting a Chinese Family's Life" — Slate

"Photographer Thomas Holton’s work came across my screen by way of friend and photo editor David Rosenberg of Slate’s Behold blog. Holton photographed the Lam family’s life in a 350 square foot apartment in New York for over 13 years. The images show a life that somehow feels both a world away and close to home.” —Dennis Huynh, Design Director, News

Thomas Holton

"The Last Golden Eagle Hunters" — CBS

"The Last Golden Eagle Hunters" — CBS

Here’s a remarkable story of a photographer exploring the vanishing culture of the burkitshi — Mongolian Kazakhs who have mastered the art of training eagles to hunt and live alongside them. Photographer Palani Mohan grapples with the unforgiving Altai mountains to document its iconic sweeping landscapes and those few burkitshi who continue to keep their culture alive.” —Gabriel Sanchez, Photo Essay Editor

Palani Mohan / courtesy Merrell Publishers


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This Woman Travelled To The Seven Wonders Of The World After She Was Diagnosed With Cancer

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“Now I have routine checks and wear a lot of sunscreen!”

This is San Francisco-based filmmaker Megan Sullivan.

This is San Francisco-based filmmaker Megan Sullivan.

Via Instagram: @www.instagram.com/megthelegend/?hl=en

Back in 2015, Sullivan was diagnosed with skin cancer, was in a car accident, and fell off a cliff within the same fortnight.

Back in 2015, Sullivan was diagnosed with skin cancer, was in a car accident, and fell off a cliff within the same fortnight.

“It all started in Yosemite Valley where I had been training for three years to climb the nose route on El Capitan,” Sullivan told BuzzFeed. “I was 2,000 feet up when I took a terrifying 50-foot fall. After a fall like that, I started to question everything… from why am I putting myself into these scary situations? What am I trying to prove to myself, or better yet, to the world?”

The bad luck didn’t stop there.

“Like something out of a movie, a week later, I was hit by a car while riding my Vespa and then diagnosed with skin cancer during a routine check-up. In three weeks time I was handed the trifecta of bad luck,” she added.

Via instagram.com


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25 Things That Were Created To Piss Everyone Off

Food In Britain Vs. Food In America

Michael Bublé Doesn't Know How To Eat Corn On The Cob And It's Kinda Depressing, TBH

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“Is this a banana?” he asked, probably.

Every Canadian mom's favourite singer, Michael Bublé, was recently spotted at Disneyland having absolutely zero clue what to do with corn on the cob.

Every Canadian mom's favourite singer, Michael Bublé, was recently spotted at Disneyland having absolutely zero clue what to do with corn on the cob.

Fern Sharpshooter / Splash News/Corbis

He's just shoving it on in, tip-first, like a goddamn banana. Or corndog. Or popsicle. Or other longer-than-they-are-wide things.

He's just shoving it on in, tip-first, like a goddamn banana. Or corndog. Or popsicle. Or other longer-than-they-are-wide things.

Fern Sharpshooter / Splash News/Corbis

Fern Sharpshooter / Splash News/Corbis


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Which TGIF Hunk Should You Go Back In Time And Bang?

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Grab a condom and a time machine!

We Tried Beyoncé's Activewear Line On Different Body Types

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Ivy Park has officially arrived.

Ever since we heard Beyoncé was dropping an athleisure collection called Ivy Park, we've been dyin' to get our hands on some Bey-approved goods.

Ever since we heard Beyoncé was dropping an athleisure collection called Ivy Park, we've been dyin' to get our hands on some Bey-approved goods.

*prays this bodysuit transforms us into Bey*

youtube.com

Lara Parker/BuzzFeed


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19 Times Harry Potter Was Savage AF

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The boy who sassed…

That time Harry literally slayed a Professor.

That time Harry literally slayed a Professor.

Karma's a bitch, eh professor?

annolie / Via tumblr

"Listening to the news! Again?"
"Well, it changes every day, you see," said Harry.

Via Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

"Harry, don't go picking a row with Malfoy, don't forget, he's a prefect now, he could make life difficult for you. . . ."
"Wow, I wonder what it'd be like to have a difficult life?" said Harry sarcastically.

Via Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

That time Harry was like, "Who dis bitch be?"

That time Harry was like, "Who dis bitch be?"

Eww, it's touching me.

Warner Bros. / Via Harry Potter Wiki


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14 Times Carlos From "The Magic School Bus" Needed To Be Stopped

26 Tweets That Will Make You Laugh And Then Think

The Inspiration Behind Patrick Stewart's White Supremacist Leader In “Green Room”

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Patrick Stewart in Green Room.

Scott Patrick Green / A24

Patrick Stewart is best known for his portrayal of the incorruptible Capt. Jean-Luc Picard on Star Trek: The Next Generation, and the equally upstanding Charles Xavier in the X-Men movies — men who rarely, if ever, resort to physical violence. But in the new thriller Green Room, the actor plays Darcy Banker, the leader of a white supremacist skinhead gang.

The character operates with quiet, lethal cunning, as he organizes his gang to take out the four members of an indie punk rock band who have barricaded inside Darcy’s club after one of them accidentally witnesses a brutal act of violence there. Stewart harnesses his ability to seem like the most rational man in the room to chilling effect, especially as the band tries to reason with Darcy, only to realize with escalating terror that pleading with this man for their lives is a waste of breath.

Darcy's ability to project calm and menace in the same moment is part of what drew Stewart to the film, by writer-director Jeremy Saulnier (Blue Ruin). It tapped into one of the 75-year-old actor's deepest fears — and evoked a harrowing encounter from his past he's rarely discussed before.

"I think most of my life, certainly when I was a child, what I used to be afraid of was being in a situation where there would be other individuals who I would identify as dangerous with whom I couldn't reason," Stewart told BuzzFeed News in a recent interview in Los Angeles. "I couldn't say, 'Look, let's just have a drink and talk this over. I'm sure we can resolve our differences.'"

And Stewart hasn't quite overcome this fear, either. "Given the world we're living in presently, I often find myself imagining some situation whereby I might be in the presence of an extremist who has no respect for me or for my life," he said. "Would I have the guts to challenge them? I'd like to think that I'd give it a shot, and try to talk about how they feel and what they want to achieve, if they want to achieve anything. Because of what we read in the newspapers weekly, the chances of our encountering people like that are growing every day. And I think at the moment, that is something that frightens me more than anything else."

Jake Kasch, Macon Blair, and Patrick Stewart in Green Room.

Scott Patrick Green / A24

When asked if he had ever dealt with an extremist like Darcy Banker, Stewart paused for a long time, and then replied, "No, I have not."

But then he took a deep breath, and proceeded to tell a story about a time in his twenties when he got to know his town's local ne'er-do-well.

"His name was Alan," Steward said. "He was a gifted writer, but he was very troubled. I knew that he had done time in prison for GBH — grievous bodily harm. And I knew that he had, especially when he had been drinking, a tendency to violence. But he was a very interesting writer — and when sober, an interesting man."

Stewart had spent enough time getting to know Alan that he thought it was fine to go drinking with him and some other friends one night at a pub. He realized just how wrong he was after he excused himself to go to the bathroom and Alan followed him inside.

"He closed the door, stood with his back to the door, and pulled out a knife."

"He closed the door, stood with his back to the door, and pulled out a knife — a really nasty knife," Stewart recalled with a grimace. "I didn't recognize him. His face was changed. I knew I must have said something when we were in the group that had upset him. It might just have been a joke that misfired, or a comment the he didn't like. And, I suspect, he might have felt threatened by it. And when threatened, he only had one default action, which was to attack. … I felt certain that something really bad was going to happen, and that he meant me harm."

Stewart suddenly had to confront the possibility that his deepest childhood fear had just become a reality. So he did what has served him so well for so much of his career: He reasoned with the man. "I talked, and talked, and talked, and talked to him,” Stewart said. “I talked about our friendship, and how much I respected his work and his writing. And how much knowing him had meant to me." He took in a deep breath. "And finally, he put the knife away."

Afterward, Stewart said the two continued to be friendly. "But I was much more cautious when in his company," he said. "I made sure I was never alone with him again, and that there were always others around. He would have bitterly regretted having harmed me. I know he would. But it would not have stopped him."

Patrick Stewart, Brent Werzner, Samuel Summer, Colton Ruscheinsky, and Mason Knight in Green Room.

Scott Patrick Green / A24

It was such an indelible encounter that Stewart found himself recalling it as he developed his approach to playing Darcy Banker in Green Room. "I've only talked about it ever a couple of times, but it was very much in my thoughts," he said. It wasn't just the palpable sense of danger Stewart felt, either — it was also the false sense of safety he had taken for granted around Alan, and the wariness he always felt around him afterward.

"Because it's essential to the storytelling of the movie that the audience for a time believe this guy's going to make it all right," he said. "The others are crazy, but he's arrived now, and nothing bad is going to happen. … He wants to reassure [the band members]. He wants them to be what he needs them to be, which, of course, is dead."

It’s a sensibility Stewart is able to convey with biting clarity in Green Room because it’s one he remembers all too well from his experience more than 50 years ago. “What Alan communicated to me in that pub toilet,” he said, “was what I thought [would] be interesting to explore in Darcy Banker."

How Many Of These Sci-Fi Films Can You Identify?

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“Today’s science fiction is tomorrow’s science fact.” — Isaac Asimov


Which Super Funny Tweet Do You Need To Read Right Now?

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Oh, funny tweets. What would we do without you?

Are You More Chris Traeger Or April Ludgate?

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“The only things I like are dogs, sleeping late, and weird birthmarks.” — April Ludgate

21 Signs That You And Your Best Friend Are Meant To Be

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You’re not married legally, or religious, but ~spiritually~.

They're the first person you want to tell your good news to.

They're the first person you want to tell your good news to.

Paramount Pictures

They're also the first person you turn to when you have bad news.

They're also the first person you turn to when you have bad news.

Warner Bros. Television

They're pretty much the first person you turn to, whenever.

They're pretty much the first person you turn to, whenever.

Even when all you have to say is that you saw a cool dog.

New Line Cinema

You're on first-name terms with their parents.

You're on first-name terms with their parents.

You're probably Facebook friends with them too.

Buena Vista Pictures


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17 Times "Grey's Anatomy" Got Hilariously Real

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It’s actually pretty relatable when no one’s dying!

When no one had any idea how to do this whole adulthood thing.

When no one had any idea how to do this whole adulthood thing.

ABC

When Cristina contemplated this eternal question.

When Cristina contemplated this eternal question.

ABC / Via rebloggy.com

And when she mapped out the solution right in front of us.

And when she mapped out the solution right in front of us.

ABC

When Lexie lived the struggle.

When Lexie lived the struggle.

ABC


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21 Selena Fans Tell Us Why They Love The "Queen Of Tejano"

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