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Taylor Swift Had No Chill Watching Calvin Harris Perform

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It’s almost as though they’re dating or something?

The rumours that Taylor Swift and Calvin Harris are dating have intensified over the past couple of weeks.

The rumours that Taylor Swift and Calvin Harris are dating have intensified over the past couple of weeks.

Following reports that they met and hit it off at the Brit Awards in February, they have since been spotted hanging out at Whole Foods in matching outfits, holding hands after a concert and Calvin has even met Taylor's two beloved cats which is basically proof they're in love, right?

Frazer Harrison / Ian Gavan / Getty

Well now it seems that Taylor isn't even worried about keeping their ~rumoured romance~ under wraps.

Well now it seems that Taylor isn't even worried about keeping their ~rumoured romance~ under wraps.

Splash News / Splash News

As Calvin did his thing, Taylor put her hands in the air like she just didn't care (about everyone suspecting they're dating.)

As Calvin did his thing, Taylor put her hands in the air like she just didn't care (about everyone suspecting they're dating.)

Kevin Winter / Getty


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Oh, Just Kim Kardashian Hanging Out Completely Naked In The Desert

People Are Totally Losing It Over This Teleflora Mother's Day Commercial

A Bus Advert Featuring Topless Women Saying “Ride Me All Day” Is Being Removed

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The internet has since turned it into a meme.

Following a backlash online, New Adventure Travel, a private bus company based in Cardiff Bay, has pulled adverts featuring a naked woman holding a sign that reads: “Ride me all day for £3.”

Following a backlash online, New Adventure Travel, a private bus company based in Cardiff Bay, has pulled adverts featuring a naked woman holding a sign that reads: “Ride me all day for £3.”

Twitter


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This Is How A Blind Beauty Youtuber Does Her Make-Up

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Contour skills like whoa.

This is blind beauty YouTuber Yesterday's Wishes. Her brow game is on point.

Yesterday's Wishes is the username of vlogger Lucy Edwards. Based in Birmingham, she's 19 years old and describes herself as a "YouTuber, soon-to-be law student, and make-up artist".

youtube.com

"I only went blind about two years ago", Edwards tells BuzzFeed Life.

"I only went blind about two years ago", Edwards tells BuzzFeed Life.

"When I was 11 I became partially sighted due to a rare disorder. It's in the female line of my genetics, but my mum and grandma don't have it. To cut a long story short, I've been going to the eye hospital since I was 11."

Edwards lost sight in her right eye when she was 11, then in her left eye when she was 17, "right in the middle of my A-levels, so I've had to retake the year. I wanted to stay positive, which is why I'm on YouTube, really."

Courtesy Lucy Edwards

Her sister, Alice, worked with her to create a make-up routine that didn't require a mirror.

Her sister, Alice, worked with her to create a make-up routine that didn't require a mirror.

The process wasn't straightforward, Edwards says. It took about a year for her to be comfortable doing her make-up by herself.

"At points I've been like, 'I don't want to do this any more,' because it's been so frustrating," she says. "Like when I've done my eyeliner, and Alice [above left, with Edwards] has said, 'It's heavier than you would have liked when you were sighted.' And I'm like, 'How do you know!'

"But I have to calm down, and trust people. That's a factor when you go blind – you have to put your trust in people a lot more with the way you look.

"I have my basic routine that I do now when I'm at college. If I feel like I'm having a more spotty day then I add concealer. If I want to contour I could do that. My sister has taught me to go over my contouring with a powder on the top. I've got steps in place that make sure that I've done it right. And I do go very slowly! Because I don't have a mirror!"

Courtesy Lucy Edwards

If you're wondering how she manages to keep her brows on point, here's the secret:

"I have my brows threaded every month, and also, because they're a little sparse on my right-hand side, I use an Urban Decay Brow Box.

"I tend to use shadows on my brows with a brush. With a pencil you can easily slip with it. And if you follow the line of your eyebrow with gentle brush movements, it makes you look more like there's hair there where it's sparse. Having bright red hair, I don't want my brows to look really dark brown! Then I have a clear brow gel to just set them in place."

youtube.com


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17 Movie Scenes Made Funnier By Speech Bubbles

What’s Going On Around The World Today?

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HERE ARE THE TOP STORIES

The World Health Organization declared Liberia free of Ebola.

Liberia was declared free of Ebola by the World Health Organization on Saturday. Liberia was one of the three hardest-hit countries when the Ebola crisis broke out last year, with 300 to 400 new cases reported each week in August and September. The other two hardest-hit countries are Guinea and Sierra Leone. Each of those two countries reported nine cases of the disease in the past week, the lowest weekly total this year, according to the New York Times.

And a little extra.

Forty-two days must pass after the last confirmed case of the virus tests negative in order for Guinea, Liberia, or Sierra Leone to be declared Ebola-free, according to the World Health Organization. Forty-two days is twice the maximum incubation period of the virus. “The end of the Ebola outbreak in the West African sub-region will be declared when the 42-day period has elapsed in the last affected country,” according to the WHO.

Members of the Women In Peacebuilding Network dance and pray on Friday in Monrovia, Liberia, ahead of the WHO’s Ebola-free declaration in Liberia.

Zoom Dosso / AFP / Getty Images

Yemen's Huthi rebels have agreed to a temporary ceasefire.

The five-day ceasefire proposed by Saudi Arabia last week will begin on Tuesday at 11 p.m. local time to allow humanitarian aid to reach civilians affected by the severe shortages of food, medicine, and fuel, according to The Guardian. A Saudi-led coalition has been bombing the country, the poorest in the Arab world, for more than six weeks.

A bit of background.

The Saudi-led coalition, which is supported by the United States, began airstrikes against the Huthi rebels and military forces loyal to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh on March 26. The coalition’s stated goal is to restore the internationally-backed government of ousted president, Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who is currently in exile in Saudi Arabia.

“The United Nations says more than 1,400 people have been killed and some 6,000 injured in Yemen since the conflict escalated in March, while more than 300,000 people have fled the war-torn Persian Gulf nation,” according to the Los Angeles Times.

Boys carry relief supplies to their families who fled fighting in the southern city of Aden, during a food distribution effort by Yemeni volunteers, in Taiz, Yemen, on Saturday.

Abdulnasser Alseddik / AP Photo

WE’RE KEEPING AN EYE ON

Many Nepal earthquake victims aren’t receiving the aid they need because there aren’t enough helicopters.

Efforts to distribute relief materials around the remote parts of Nepal that were affected by the earthquake in April, which killed more than 7,900 people and displaced about half a million, have been less effective than hoped. “Despite nearly three dozen helicopters flying all over the country for relief efforts, thousands of tons of materials remain undistributed in key districts that have suffered most from the earthquake,” BuzzFeed News’ Anup Kaphle reports from Palungtar, Nepal. There are several reasons behind this: technical issues, a lack of effective coordination by the Nepalese relief efforts, and tensions with the relief teams sent by the Indian government.

What’s next?

Nepal’s situation is worsened by a slow response among international donors to meet the country’s needs. “Jamie McGoldrick, the U.N.’s chief official in Nepal, said the agency had received $22 million so far against an appeal last week for $415 million to support relief efforts for the first three months in the Himalayan nation,” the Associated Press reports. The U.N. is also worried about the upcoming monsoon season, which could trigger landslides in the more mountainous regions and flooding in the southern plains — all of which could harm more people and hold relief efforts back.

Nepali army soldiers carry relief materials into an Indian Army helicopter at the Palungtar base in Gorkha, Nepal. Indian helicopters have been leading the aid supply flights since the earthquake struck Nepal two weeks ago.

Anup Kaphle for BuzzFeed News

DID YOU HEAR ABOUT THIS?

Former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak will soon walk free from prison, a court has ruled.

A Cairo Court of Appeals decided on Sunday that Hosni Mubarak, once the most powerful man in Egypt, won’t have to serve out a three-year prison sentence for corruption on account of time he’s already served. The court did not specify when exactly he is allowed to go free. Saturday’s sentence marked the last legal case against the former Egyptian dictator. Mubarak ruled Egypt for three decades before being ousted in 2011 by a popular uprising.

Big pharma and a public university launched a company to cure HIV.

British health care giant GlaxoSmithKline and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, have a 50-50 partnership in the new company, named Qura Therapeutics. This appears to be the first example of public and private science going into business together and splitting future profits equally, BuzzFeed News’ Virginia Hughes reports. These sorts of public-private science efforts are tricky to manage, but are likely to grow as government funding of research drops, experts say.

A blood cell infected with HIV.

NIAID / Via Flickr: niaid

More for-profit colleges are shutting down, with new U.S. federal regulations on the way.

Last week, two major for-profit college companies announced that they were working to close down some of their schools — not long after Corinthian Colleges became the largest-ever for-profit college operator to shut down. Career Education Corporation said it plans to sell off or shut down all of its “career colleges,” which are schools that offer programs and degrees tied to job placement. Meanwhile, EDMC Corporation said it would close a quarter of the schools in its Art Institute chain. These announcements also come as the Obama administration’s “gainful employment” law is expected to go into effect this July. The law seeks to cut federal funding to programs where graduates incur significant debt but earn little money.

Quick things to know:

  • Four people were charged in connection with the fatal shooting of two Mississippi police officers on Saturday. (BuzzFeed News)

  • Tornadoes hit Texas, South Dakota, Arkansas, and Iowa over the weekend, killing three people. (BuzzFeed News)

  • German Chancellor Angela Merkel was in Moscow on Sunday to visit Russian President Vladimir Putin. Just look at how much fun they had. (BuzzFeed News)

  • In the Polish presidential elections: Andrzej Duda, an opposition candidate, is expected to win in the first round of votes and will face incumbent Bronisław Komorowski in a May 24 runoff. (The Guardian)

  • Cuban leader Raul Castro thanked the Pope for helping broker the recent Cuba-U.S. deal and said he was so impressed he might even go back to church. (NPR)

  • Music festivals are bringing younger people to Vegas. (BuzzFeed News)

  • American Idol will come to an end in 2016, Fox has announced. (BuzzFeed News)

HAPPY MONDAY

What happens when you eat a bunch of packets of really, really spicy hot sauce? BuzzFeed Books editor Isaac Fitzgerald asked the same question. So he got his hands on 100 packets of a new sauce by Taco Bell called ~Diablo~, which the company claims to be its “hottest sauce packet ever,” to see how many of them he could eat without water, milk, or bread. Remember folks: make good mistakes.

David Bertozzi / BuzzFeed

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I Watched "Mad Max" For The First Time And It Was Messed Up

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The ORIGINAL. It was so messed up.

Mad Max debuted when I was minus 7 years old i.e. way before my time. But it IS an Australian classic, so it's pretty shocking that I, an Australian, have never ever seen it. UNTIL NOW.

Mad Max debuted when I was minus 7 years old i.e. way before my time. But it IS an Australian classic, so it's pretty shocking that I, an Australian, have never ever seen it. UNTIL NOW.

Previously my total knowledge of Mad Max entailed: The fact that it was set in a post-apocalyptic time, that it involved a young Mel Gibson from back when Australia still claimed him as our own, that there was lots of cars, anger and explosions, and that Tina Turner shows up at some point in the third movie. But, with the fourth movie, Mad Max: Fury Road, out this week, I thought it was about time I actually watched the original. And here is what I discovered...

Kennedy Miller Productions

It's set "a few years from now" which is vague as hell, and opens on two people banging. You see peen and everything.

It's set "a few years from now" which is vague as hell, and opens on two people banging. You see peen and everything.

It's all very '70s and very Strayan.

Kennedy Miller Productions


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Football Fan Punches Hole In Ceiling After His Team Scores, Scorer Offers To Pay

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Paul Anderson said he would pay to repair the damage after his goal caused Ross Morgan to hit the roof.

On Saturday, Ipswich drew 1–1 with Norwich in their Championship play-off first leg at Portman Road.

On Saturday, Ipswich drew 1–1 with Norwich in their Championship play-off first leg at Portman Road.

Paul Anderson equalised for Ipswich after Jonny Howson gave the visitors the lead.

Jamie Mcdonald / Getty Images


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28 Breathtaking Wilderness Parks Around The World

These Kids Just Brilliantly Explained What Religion Means To Them

14 Text Conversations The "Friends" Characters Would Have Had

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So no1 told u lyf was gna b this way.

Phoebe texting Joey:

Phoebe texting Joey:

Alex Finnis / BuzzFeed

Rachel texting Monica:

Rachel texting Monica:

Alex Finnis / BuzzFeed

Chandler texting Joey:

Chandler texting Joey:

Alex Finnis / BuzzFeed

Gunther texting Rachel:

Gunther texting Rachel:

Alex Finnis / BuzzFeed


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Reporter Calls Out Man For Shouting 'F@&k Her Right In The P#$!y' During Her Live Broadcast

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Ban all men, do it on live TV. NSFW language ahead.

CityNews Reporter Shauna Hunt was covering Toronto FC's game on Sunday, when a fan decided to shout the crude phrase into her mic.

CityNews Reporter Shauna Hunt was covering Toronto FC's game on Sunday, when a fan decided to shout the crude phrase into her mic.

Via youtube.com

She paused her broadcast to confront the men about their behavior, asking them "you would humiliate me on live television?"

She paused her broadcast to confront the men about their behavior, asking them "you would humiliate me on live television?"

Via youtube.com

However the men defend their actions "I don't care, it is f#$king hilarious."

However the men defend their actions "I don't care, it is f#$king hilarious."

Via youtube.com


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What’s Going On Around The World Today?

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HERE ARE THE TOP STORIES

Another powerful earthquake hit Nepal on Tuesday morning.

Here’s what we know so far:

  • Nepal was hit by a 7.3 magnitude earthquake, with the epicenter in a remote area of eastern Nepal, near the border with China.

  • At least 36 people have died and at least 1,117 have been injured in Tuesday morning’s quake, according to the latest official figures, the Associated Press reported.

  • Tuesday’s earthquake follows a massive 7.8 magnitude earthquake that hit Nepal three weeks ago, which left more than 8,000 dead and many more injured.

  • Aftershocks were reported in Nepal following Tuesday’s earthquake.

  • BuzzFeed News’ Anup Kaphle is reporting from Nepal.

Patients are carried out of a hospital building as a 7.3 magnitude earthquake hit Nepal on Tuesday.

Prakash Mathema/AFP / Getty Images

U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch called the death of two Mississippi police officers a “shocking assault.”

“[The U.S. Department of Justice] will continue to do all that we can to protect our officers across the country and support all those who wear the badge,” Lynch also said in statement released yesterday. Four people have been charged in connection to the shooting deaths of two police officers in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, who were gunned down on Saturday during a traffic stop. A vigil for the two officers, Liquori Tate and Benjamin Deen, was held on Monday.

And a little extra.

Nearly 90% more U.S. police officers were killed in 2014 than in 2013. Fifty-one police officers were killed while on duty across the United States in 2014, an 89% increase from the previous year, according to a preliminary report released by the FBI on Monday. But the dramatic increase can be partly explained by the fact that 2013 saw the fewest deaths of police officers in the line of duty since 1980.

People at a makeshift memorial for the officers.

Rogelio V. Solis / AP Photo

WE’RE KEEPING AN EYE ON

The defense and prosecution in the Tsarnaev trial rested their cases yesterday.

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s defense team rested its case yesterday in the Boston Marathon bombing trial. Tsarnaev’s team has been trying to get him a life sentence instead of the death penalty by arguing that his older brother, who was killed during the incident, was the mastermind of the attack.

The last person to testify in Tsarnaev’s defense was Sister Helen Prejean, a Catholic nun and a well-known anti-death penalty advocate. She told the jury that Tsarnaev said he “was genuinely sorry for what he did,” establishing that Tsarnaev felt remorse — something the defense was not able to accomplish until that point, according to New York Magazine’s Adrienne Gaffney. The government also rested its case on Monday.

What’s next?

The trial is nearing the end of its sentencing phase, where the jury will decide whether Tsarnaev will get the death penalty for his role in the Boston Marathon bombing. Closing arguments in the trial are scheduled for tomorrow. The 12-person jury must vote unanimously for Tsarnaev to receive the death penalty — if even one juror votes against the execution, then he will be given a life sentence, according to WBUR.

Sister Helen Prejean after testifying during the Boston Marathon bombing trial on Monday in Boston.

Scott Eisen / Getty Images

DID YOU HEAR ABOUT THIS?

Verizon announced that it will buy AOL for about $4.4 billion.

Verizon has agreed to buy AOL in an all-cash deal worth about $4.4 billion — or about a quarter of what Facebook paid for WhatsApp last year. AOL owns both the Huffington Post and the popular tech blog TechCrunch. Tim Armstrong will stay on as AOL's CEO.

Malaysian authorities detained more than 1,000 migrants on Monday.

The migrants were Bangladeshi and Rohingya, the minority Muslim population that has been suffering religious persecution in predominantly Buddhist Myanmar for years. The arrests come a day after authorities rescued boats carrying hundreds of refugees, many Rohingya, off Indonesia’s Aceh province. These two events reflect a recent surge in refugees hitting Malaysian and Indonesian shores since Thailand announced a crackdown on human trafficking, according to Reuters. Thailand was previously the first destination in the region's human smuggling network.

Illegal Bangladeshi migrants wait at the police headquarters in Langkawi on Monday, after landing up on the Malaysian shores earlier in the day. Nearly 2,000 boat people from Myanmar and Bangladesh, many thought to be Rohingya, have been rescued off the coasts of Indonesia and Malaysia since May 10.

Manan Vatsyayana / AFP / Getty Images

The NFL suspended New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady for four games.

The league suspended Brady without pay for the first four games of the 2015 season after determining that he was likely the driving force behind two Patriots attendants deflating footballs below league requirements. In addition to Brady’s suspension, the Patriots will be fined $1 million, and will lose its first-round draft pick in 2016 as well as its fourth-round pick in 2017. Brady’s agent says the quarterback will appeal his suspension.

Image credit: Al Bello / Getty Images

The White House told health insurance companies they must cover all forms of female contraception.

The Obama administration said insurers must cover all 18 forms of contraception approved by the Food and Drug Administration, “including the patch and intrauterine devices (IUDs), without imposing co-payments or other charges,” according to the New York Times. The guidance to insurers also includes genetic testing for women with a family history of breast or ovarian cancer, as well as preventative services for transgender people. FiveThirtyEight also has a piece that examines whether more women will get IUDs as they become more affordable.

Quick things to know:

  • President Obama announced that his presidential center, which will include a library and museum, will be located on Chicago’s South Side (BuzzFeed News)

  • George Zimmerman, who was acquitted in 2013 after the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, was involved in a shooting incident and suffered minor injuries (WESH-TV)

  • A Chilean non-governmental organization has created a satirical YouTube video campaign of “termination tips” to demonstrate the negative effect of the country’s ban on abortion. (BuzzFeed News) Oh, and we’ve got the article in Spanish, too.

  • Did you know that Uber CEO Travis Kalanick’s net worth is equal to 92 Kardashians? (BuzzFeed News)

  • Records broken: The latest Game of Thrones episode has broken the all-time TV piracy record: it was downloaded more than 2.2 million times in less than 12 hours after airing on TV. (Variety) And a Picasso painting that was sold for nearly $180 million yesterday is now the most expensive artwork ever sold at auction. (BuzzFeed News)

Christie’s employees pose for pictures with a painting by Pablo Picasso called “Les femmes d’Alger (Version “O”)” at the auction house in London.

Tim Ireland / AP Photo

HAPPY TUESDAY

The West Point Women for Health and Development Association, had spent a year fighting Ebola in Liberia, which was declared Ebola-free this weekend. So when they heard about the Nepal earthquake, they knew they had to do something. The women donated $200 to the Nepal quake relief efforts, $5 at a time. Nelly Cooper, the association’s president said: “You always receive from other people, but when other people are down, why can’t you help them? Even if we don’t have enough [to solve the problem], we can still give.” A little bit can go a long way. (Here are a few places you can donate.)

One of the teams working with Women’s Health and Development to fight Ebola in West Point last year.

Global Giving / Via globalgiving.org

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Here's What Happens When You Ask A Chef To Make You Breakfast

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If anyone can turn a pile of vegetables into a decadent breakfast skillet, it’s April Bloomfield.

Design by Alice Mongkongllite / BuzzFeed. Photos by Lauren Zaser / BuzzFeed

Mention the British-born, NYC-based chef's name to anyone who cares about food and restaurants and they'll likely rave about the roquefort cheeseburger and the chicken liver toast at The Spotted Pig, or the lamb burger and the whole suckling pig at The Breslin. (And with good reason.) What they might not mention, though, is that she's also doing incredible things with vegetables.

With four restaurants in NYC and one in San Francisco, Bloomfield now splits her time between the two coasts. "What I love is being able to get off the plane and go straight to the farmers market," Bloomfield tells BuzzFeed Life. "Being able to see the contrast between the two coasts is awesome." Her new cookbook, A Girl and Her Greens, is filled with rustic, hearty vegetables recipes categorized by season. . And don't worry — fussy, overly chef-y recipes aren't her thing.

"This is a very French Basque, peasant-y way to cook," she says of the recipe below, which is representitive of the earthy, rustic food she's known for — a style she attributes in part to her time at The River Café in London. "When I started working at The River Café, I was amazed that I didn't have to, like, cut things into tiny squares. It was a revelation for me, and I was like, 'Oh my gosh, I feel like I've come home.'"

To make this vegetable-filled brunch dish, you'll cook onions in lots of olive oil until they're soft and super sweet, then add garlic, bell peppers, pre-made tomato sauce, and basil, let it all come together, then cook some eggs right on top.

Here is everything you'll need to make this breakfast:

Here is everything you'll need to make this breakfast:

Red and yellow bell peppers, red onion, eggs (not nearly that many!), sea salt, black pepper, tomato sauce (there's a recipe below, but you can use any simple jarred pasta sauce), basil, garlic, pequín chiles. Crusty bread for serving is optional, but recommended.

Lauren Zaser / BuzzFeed


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Paul Scheer Is Bringing Back "TRL" (Sort Of)

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His latest video venture is called “ScheeRL” and it’s gonna be awesome.

Do you miss the days of TRL?

Do you miss the days of TRL?

JASH

Comedian Paul Scheer will follow up his parody of The Arsenio Hall Show — aka ArSCHEERio — with a spoof on everyone's favorite after-school show.

A look at the new series — produced by JASH — reveals lots and lots of late '90s throwback glory.

View Video ›

buzzfeed-video1.s3.amazonaws.com


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Watch This Baby Goose Make The Most Adorable Crash Landing

Can You Actually Speak Welsh?

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You never know until you’ve tried.

An Aristocrat With “Boot Polish” On His Face Crashed Into A Lamppost While Three Times Over The Limit

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“I do feel I have been rather foolish,” Lord George Worsley admitted to a police officer.

Lord George Worsley was arrested by police in Grimsby after crashing his car into a lamppost while three times over the drink-drive limit and with his face smeared in boot polish, a court has heard.

Lord George Worsley was arrested by police in Grimsby after crashing his car into a lamppost while three times over the drink-drive limit and with his face smeared in boot polish, a court has heard.

The 24-year-old was spotted by police swerving from side to side on the A180 towards Riby Square, the Grimsby Telegraph reported.

An officer pursued the aristocrat – the son of the Earl of Yarborough – who eventually came to a halt after colliding with a lamppost.

Worsley, whose face appeared to be covered in boot polish, told the police officer: "I do feel I have been rather foolish," the Daily Telegraph reported.

Abby Ruston / Caters News Agency

Just before 2:30am on 25 April, a police car which was travelling towards Lockhill roundabout noticed a dark-coloured vehicle approximately 100 metres in front. It was travelling with no lights and a large piece of debris came away from the car, which appeared to be the fragments of a bumper or tyre.

The officer then noticed one of the tyres was fully deflated and radioed the control room. He noticed the car was swerving from side to side and that there was only one person in the car. Further fragments fell off the vehicle.

The vehicle collided with a lamppost near Riby Square which caused it to stop. The officer said the driver looked shocked and stunned and his face appeared to be covered in a black substance, which looked like boot polish.

In mitigation, Worsley's defence lawyer, David Ewings, tried to show the aristocrat's good character, mentioning his charity work in Kenya and Singapore and flagging up the fact that he was setting up his own fashion newspaper in London, the Grimsby Telegraph reported.

"My client concedes that this was a true moment of madness and it was simply out of character for this young man," Ewings said.

"He is contrite, remorseful and exceptionally embarrassed about what has happened. He demonstrated all the behaviour of a good and upstanding citizen and immediately admitted that he had been drinking."

He was handed a 12-month community order and disqualified from driving for 28 months.

He was also ordered to pay court costs.


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Another Round, Episode 9: You're Gonna Be A Boss One Day

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On this week’s episode: the emotional labor no one ever lists on job requirements, a listener question about unrequited love, and a chat with the coding wunderkind Kaya Thomas.

Happy Podcast Tuesday! Kanye and company are just as hype as we are for this week's episode.

Happy Podcast Tuesday! Kanye and company are just as hype as we are for this week's episode.

demoniac.tumblr.com

We got to interview Kaya Thomas, the 19-year-old coder who will probably be all of our bosses very soon.

We got to interview Kaya Thomas, the 19-year-old coder who will probably be all of our bosses very soon.

Kaya is the creator of We Read Too, an app intended to serve as a resource for anyone seeking children's books by and about people of color.

Heben Nigatu

w.soundcloud.com


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