Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Little Boy Chatting Up With Girls

Oh come on!!!

This is one of the nicest pranks I've seen in a while.

But what am I saying, all "Just for Laughs" pranks are really really cool.

The expression on the women faces is just priceless when the little boy starts flirting with them!

Take a look:

Interesting Article:

Some of My Top 10 Favorite Pranks You Can Do at Home

1. Tightly wrap saran wrap around the bowl of the toilet so that no folds are visible, and then lower the toilet seat. The next user will find their human waste not entering the toilet. Fill a bowl with water, stand on a chair, and place the bowl directly on the ceiling. Push a broom stick on the bottom of the bowl to keep it there. Ask someone to "just do a quick favor and hold it there for a second", then take the chair away and they are left there with no way out but to let the bowl of water fall on them. Freeze a can of shaving cream, then hacksaw off the bottom of the can and put it in a desk. The cream will expand while thawing a very large amount. Put dish washing detergent in the toilet so that when it is flushed, bubbles will emerge from toilet bowl. Take the center out of each Oreo in a package and fill with tooth paste and freeze over night. The classic of squirting whipped cream or shaving cream in a sleeping victims hand and then tickle nose with feather or hair and they will mash the cream in their face. While your victim is sleeping, quietly place a small coffee table on top of sleeping person so that there are no legs touching the body. Make sure the persons head is directly under the table. Then blow a fog horn and the sleeping person will jolt up and ram their head on the bottom of the table. Take of the top of your toilet. Using strong tape, take the tube that refills the back of the toilet container and redirect it so it is at the rim of the container. Tape the tube so that it points outward towards the toilet bowl. Replace top. The next person who uses the toilet will flush and spray themselves. If your at a beach, choose a victim, and when they get up to go to the bathroom dig a deep hole where they were sitting and put the towel back over it so when they return they will fall into a trap. This one is sort of like the ceiling bowl one, but you bet your friend that he/she can not balance two glasses of liquid on the backs of their hands for a certain amount of time. Place the glasses on the backs of their hands, (on a table) and then leave them to deal with that.

The blonde was never expecting what was to happen!

Really ?

Oh come on, what kind of gentlemen are you?

What the hell was in your mind?

Are you dumb or something.

The girl was sitting there alone and you came and did this to her...

It was not nice at all ;)

See the video here

It Looks Like A Normal Clock Tower. Then You Go Inside And It Blows Your Mind.

Most people grow up dreaming of their perfect apartment or house that they will move into when they are older. Sometimes it has a pool, maybe a big backyard. We guarantee you, though, most children aren’t dreaming of converting an old clock tower into a snazzy penthouse that’ll make their friends and family drool. Well, they SHOULD be.

From the outside, it looks just like a normal clock tower…
But the inside makes our blood boil with jealousy. Look at that view!
Just LOOK at it.
Plus, if you lived here, you could make clock puns all day.
“Hey, can you give me a … HAND?”
The clock tower apartment is located in Brooklyn and offers stunning views of the city.
There are three bedrooms, three full bathrooms and gorgeous views from almost every angle.
The giant clock face stands 14 feet tall and is surrounded by ceilings that are between 16 and 50 feet tall.
We suspect anyone who visits this apartment never gets the courage to leave.

If you have some (i.e., millions) of spare cash, you can actually buy this clock tower paradise for yourself. According to Curbed, the penthouse was originally listed for $25 million in 2009. Since then, the price was slashed down to a measly $18 million. Get your wallets out!

How to start a fire with a chunk of ice

Have you ever thought that you can lit up a fire with a piece of ice ?

Well guess what, you can, and it's so damn simple

I'm sure that this video will enlighten you adventurous folks out there to make it on your own

Check it out for yourself

See the video here

Monday, December 9, 2013

I’ve Never Seen Anything So Horrifying, Tearful, And Beautiful. This Is The Stuff You Never Forget.

Now that the year will be quickly drawing to a close, we wanted to remember some of the downright insane things have have happened this year. From the deadly to the triumphant, 2013 has been filled with events that none of us will soon forget. Countless people were injured by bombings, civil uprisings and natural disasters. However, within that tragedy, humanity’s beautiful true nature shone through. These are 28 photos that you simply must see before the end of the year.

A couple mourns the loss of their home in Moore, OK.
This demonstrator was shot by rubber bullets in Rio de Janiero, Brazil
A super hero window washer cheers up a sick child in Sao Paulo, Brazil
This heroic grandmother helped her grandchildren find refuge from a deadly fire in Australia.
This widow mourns the loss of her soldier husband in Afghanistan in Arlington National Cemetery.
A boy carries his dog through flood waters in Manila, Philippines.
A girl holds the hand of her mother that was deported to Mexico 6 years ago at the border fence in Arizona.
A young man in India dangles from a power line as he attempts to escape flood waters rising from the Ganges river.
A runner fell injured to the ground while police attempted to react to the Boston Marathon bombing.
Onlookers watch as water gushes from China’s Yellow River as the government attempted to remove built-up silt.
Figo, a K-9 officer, mourns the loss of his partner Officer Jason Ellis.
An Air Force sergeant surprises his family during the New York Giants vs. Green Bay Packers game.

10 year old children driving cars? Not a good idea!

What happened here is just a remembering that young children should not drive cars.

Driving with 30km/h directly into a tree is just not right.

I'm wondering who gave them the car to do such stunts...

See the video here

“That Dead Girl”: A Family And A Town After A Cyberbullied 12-Year-Old’s Suicide

In September, after a year of being bullied online, Rebecca Sedwick threw herself off a three-story cement silo, sparking an international freak-out over the responsibility social media networks like Ask.fm have in fostering this kind of harassment. But for Rebecca’s family, friends, and neighbors, the problem isn’t technology or opportunistic startups — it’s people.

Rebecca Sedwick told her mother she loved her before going to bed that Sunday night, September 8. The next morning, the Lakeland, Fla., 12-year-old was supposed to wake up her 19-year-old sister Summer to do her hair before school. She didn’t. Normally, Rebecca would put on her school uniform, grab her cell phone, and head out the door. But on this morning, Rebecca took out her phone and cleared everything on it, deleting all of the pictures, videos, and texts. She then sent two text messages to friends who lived out of state.

“I’m jumping and I can’t take it anymore,” read one, sent to a 12-year-old boy in North Carolina. The other said, “This is my goodbye for everything.” She then changed her online username from Rebecca to “That Dead Girl” and left her phone on her bed. At that point, Rebecca would have been running late to catch the 6:45 a.m. bus to Lawton Chiles Middle Academy, where she’d recently started. Instead, she walked down her street, a swampy side road lined with sleepy mobile homes huddled under large willow trees and dangling Spanish moss, and turned right at the peeling McDonald’s billboard advertising an Egg White Delight McMuffin. (“Great taste, all yolks aside.”)

As she walked down Main Street, her aunt drove by. She braked and asked Rebecca if she wanted a ride. Rebecca told her that she was headed to the bus stop, though she had already walked past it. She also wasn’t wearing her school uniform. Rebecca’s aunt — her stepfather’s sister — called the girl’s mother, Tricia Norman, as she drove away. She was unnerved by what she would later describe as Rebecca’s “zombie”-like behavior. Tricia, who’d already gotten to her customer service job, didn’t answer her phone and didn’t return the missed call, figuring that if it had been an emergency, there would have been a message.

Rebecca turned left at the old Lakeland fire station and walked down North Eastside Drive. She squeezed through the fence of the abandoned Lakeland Cemex plant, a bleak industrial site next to U.S. Route 92. She made her way up the winding yellow metal ladder until she reached the top of the three-story silo. Back at Rebecca’s house, Summer was just waking up. She went into Rebecca’s room to do her sister’s hair. Rebecca wasn’t there. Confused, she sat down on her sister’s bed, accidentally landing on Rebecca’s phone. She started going through it, but all that was left was one last text: “This is my goodbye for everything.” By 6 that night, Rebecca still hadn’t come home. Summer called her mother, and Tricia called the school. Lawton Chiles Middle Academy informed Tricia that Rebecca never arrived that day. Though the school has an automated system to alert parents of their children’s absences, it was undergoing upgrades and wasn’t in use. Frantic, Tricia issued a missing person report.

The police found Rebecca’s body around 2:30 a.m. They didn’t immediately call her death a suicide, but Tricia knew right away what had happened.

Five weeks after Rebecca’s death, Lakeland Sheriff Grady Judd arrested two girls from Crystal Lake Middle School and charged both with aggravated stalking, a felony. Although they were minors, Judd released their names: Guadalupe Shaw, a 14-year-old who went to school with Rebecca, who was the purported ringleader, and 12-year-old Katelyn Roman, her accomplice. Judd claimed they had organized a network of up to 16 other teenagers who verbally and physically threatened Rebecca in school and then bombarded her social media accounts — particularly via her Ask.fm page and an app called Kik Messenger — with cruel comments, many urging her to kill herself. And that was what elevated Rebecca’s story from a small-town tragedy to global cautionary tale for an unchecked epidemic of cyberbullying. Both Kik and Ask.fm are especially popular with teenagers desperate for more private social networks than Facebook, which is to be expected — teens don’t want to hang out with their parents, especially on the internet. Kik Messenger is a mobile instant messaging app that gives users a discreet way to chat and share videos and pictures. According to figures from this spring, more than 200,000 people sign up for the Kik app daily, and 50 million currently use it. Kik connects users with Facebook friends and people in their phone’s address book, giving them the ability to anonymously message one another. Friends and family say Rebecca often wasn’t even sure whom she was being bullied by.

Latvian-based Ask.fm, though still relatively unheard of in the States, has been a villain in the British press for over a year now and is also centered around anonymity. Since its launch in 2010, the site has steadily gained popularity, and it currently boasts over 70 million users worldwide. In the last year, the media has linked it to the suicides of nine different teenagers, including Rebecca, earning it the nickname “the killer app.” But when you actually look into each story, the bullying started for these kids long before an Ask.fm account entered the picture. Irish teenagers Ciara Pugsley and Erin Gallagher had been attacked for their weight and appearance by peers at school. After the two girls killed themselves last fall, the Irish Examiner presented their deaths as part of a worrisome trend of cyberbullying-related suicides, quoting hysterical parents from the community calling for Ask.fm to be banned. British teenager Daniel Perry was tricked into Skyping with someone pretending to be a girl who liked him. He was blackmailed with screenshots of the conversation before jumping from a local bridge. At the time, The Mirror directly connected his death to other Ask.fm suicides. Another British teenager, Joshua Unsworth, was bullied by classmates who made fun of his laborer father and harassed him about his dating life. Much of the abuse came in the form of Ask.fm comments. After Joshua’s death, The Daily Mail described his Ask.fm page as “a stalker’s paradise.”

One could assume that the claustrophobic mix of physical and digital bullying could bring teens more easily to the brink of suicide. The question, though, is how much more easily? Statistically speaking, teenage suicide is on the rise. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, rates have increased from 6.3% in 2009 to 7.8% in 2011. As of 2012, 1 in 6 teenagers report contemplating suicide and 1 in 12 have attempted it. That can’t be tied to cyberbullying alone, nor does it keep pace with the increase in reports of bullying and cyberbullying on a national level. These stories, complete with hysterical calls for social media bans and sweeping legislative reforms, don’t exactly reflect what has been happening in Lakeland. Tricia Norman began moderating two different Facebook pages to organize the community and changed Rebecca’s Kik username from “That Dead Girl” to “That Missed Girl,” which became a slogan of sorts for her friends. The same technology that alienated and isolated Rebecca, that was so quickly held to blame, is also allowing the community to come together and heal.

About a month prior to Rebecca’s suicide, worries about Ask.fm hit a fever pitch in the U.K. after Hannah Smith, a 14-year-old from Leicestershire, England, hanged herself. Once again British media, and this time even Prime Minister David Cameron, hungry for someone to blame, aggressively went after Ask.fm, repeatedly calling for “youngsters” across the nation to boycott the site. Ask.fm’s team, which typically does not cooperate with press, issued a statement: “Ask.fm is just a tool which helps people to communicate with each other, same as any other social network, same as phone, same as piece of paper and pen,” Ask.fm founder Mark Terebin posted on his page. “Don’t blame a tool, but try to make changes. Start with yourself. Be more polite, more kind, more tolerant of others. Cultivate these values in families, in schools.”

News vans litter the front lawn of Lakeland’s Crystal Lake Middle School as students leave for the day. A cameraman hanging out of a van’s open doors sips a sweaty iced coffee and smokes a cigarette. A field reporter crouches down into the grass in his suit, scrawling notes. The neighborhood is silent aside from the hum of idling cars and the occasional ticking bug. The suburban junior high school stretches across the top of a hill, perched over the body of water after which it’s named. Lakeland, with its population of nearly 100,000, sits between Orlando and Tampa. It’s a quiet community of suburban neighborhoods surrounding a city center dotted with Spanish-style stucco buildings. Fast-food restaurants and strip malls line the sides of the nine large interstates that race through the area, spilling out into the satellite clusters of trailer parks and industrial yards that frame the city. Its largest claim to fame, before Rebecca, is that it was used as the filming location for the mall in Edward Scissorhands.

As the Florida sun goes down, parents start sheepishly trickling into the school’s cafeteria. Sheriff Judd is supposed to arrive at 5:30 to host one his Internet Safety Parent Nights. Though it’s a class he gives regularly to help parents keep up with the best ways to make sure their children use social media and smartphones responsibly, it’s never been the focus of this much attention. Read the full story here