My story "7 Creatures That Look Like Hell" on the National Geographic website made it to their front page! Couldn't be happier or more proud! And more stories are on the way. :)
"Would you like to go where you've always wanted to go and do one of your favorite things ever?" That's not how the press trip to Best Friends Animal Society sanctuary in Angel Canyon, Utah was put to me, but that's how I heard it. I've long wanted to see Utah and Best Friends held the promise of playing with dogs. And cats. And seeing horses, goats and probably a few other things that were on your See-and-Say: The Farmer Says. Animals never lose their magic. This was one of the most magical trips I've ever been on (and I've been to the Playboy Mansion). I'm working on my story for Alternet right now; this is photo companion for pics of the things I talk about in that. I may post more on other aspects of the journey. Wait. I just got it. That's what was different. This wasn't a trip. It was a journey, one I hope as many people get to go on as possible. Above: Pima learning about cameras from Melissa Miller in puppy social...
Listening to my friends talk about the COVID-19 test I thought it was going to feel like getting a lobotomy. “They stick a swab so far up your nose, I felt like it was going into the back of my eye,” one said, but when free drive-through testing was offered in my little Florida beach town I went. I can pinch a penny until Lincoln starts crying and if something is free, I’m going to get one, even if it means being skewered like a corn dog. The test was mildly irritating. You tilt your head back and they do, indeed, poke a swab up your snoot farther than you’d expect it to go. It felt like I’d been bike riding and got ladybug stuck up my nose, a sensation which lasted about 45 minutes after the actual sticking. It wasn’t as bad as I anticipated, but I’d anticipated getting my eyeballs yoinked out through my nostrils. Anything else was emotional found money. What left a more lasting impression than the test was ...
Ready for the weirdest game of 'Hot or Not' you've ever played? Okay, does anyone else think this gorilla is quite attractive ? Quite a lot of women in Japan do. In fact Shabani, who lives at the Higashiyama Zoo and Botanical Gardens has caused a flurry of stories because the ladies find him so handsome. CNN says about 100 admirers at a time surround his enclosure and that they call out to him, like concert goers to a pop star. (The image above came from Australia's NineMSN Pickle page , via @hapyyuka on Twitter). Leave it to Japan,where the young population is famously apathetic about sex and dating to make a heart throb out of member of another species. Just throw it on the giant pile of reasons that Japan is fascinating and I want to go to there. The BBC’s “ Shabani: The Making of a Metrosexual Gorilla .” let's us know that the model primate is in a May-December relationship - his “wife” is 24 years his senior (hooray for older ladies). ...
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