Lmao, too funny. What a great advertisement!
Hot Blonde Gets Rid of One Night Stand [via]
Lmao, too funny. What a great advertisement!
Hot Blonde Gets Rid of One Night Stand [via]
You Had One Job [via]
Lmao, this is great!
Evolution of End Zone Dancing [via]
Best Birthday Wish…EVER!
Surprise Reunion, A Wish Come True [via]
Because laughter is contagious, I love these videos!
Best Baby Laughing Video Compilation 2013 [via]
People Can Be So Evil ~ 15 Pics [via]
Wow, someone really wanted some McNuggets!
McNugget Rampage ~ Security Cam [via]
An Australian man who has been donating his extremely rare kind of blood for over 50 years has saved the lives of more than two million babies.
James Harrison, 77, has an antibody in his plasma that stops babies dying from Rhesus disease, a form of severe anaemia. He has enabled countless mothers to give birth to healthy babies, including his own daughter, Tracey, who had a healthy son thanks to her father’s blood. James’ blood contains a life-saving antibody which prevents Rh(D) negative women developing Rh(D) antibodies during pregnancy, which can harm the unborn child.
Man with the golden arm saves over 2,000,000 babies [via]
Original “USS Enterprise reacts to MTV’s Video Music Awards.” Too Funny!
Captain Kirk Watches Miley Cyrus Performance [via]
PORTLAND, Ore. Â An Oregon man was sentenced to 10 years in prison after hiring another man to kill his wife.
Susan Kuhnhausen fought off the hit man and actually strangled the attacker with her bare hands killing him.
In September 2006, Susan found an intruder in her southeast Portland home.
“I saw a man step out of the shadows and he began to hit me in the head and the face with a hammer,” said Kuhnhausen.
For the first time publicly, she described how, fearing for her life, she fought back.
“I got the hammer and started hitting him with the hammer several times. My father, the carpenter, always taught me a hammer could be used for self defense —Â the claw end would work the best,” said Kuhnhausen.
The attacker was Ed Haffey, a drug addict who it turned out was hired by Michael Kuhnhausen to kill Susan.
“I yelled: ‘who sent you here? Yelled again, ‘who sent you here?'” Kuhnhausen said in court.
The plan failed as the emergency room nurse relied on her hospital self-defense training and began to bite, hit and choke Haffey.
“He turned blue as I told him you’re not going to kill me.” said Kuhnhausen.
Instead, she killed Haffey. Police later found notes in Haffey’s backpack linking him to Michael Kuhnhausen.
Susan called it a cowardly plan. “If I ever believed you deserved to be dead, I would at least have had the balls to kill you myself,” declared Kuhnhausen.
“I hurt a lot of people over the last year and I’m sorry. That’s all I can say, I’m sorry,” said Michael Kuhnhausen.
After laughing at that statement, Susan Kuhnhausen began to cry.
She was grateful her former husband apologized but she was also happy to know he too is suffering.
Michael Kuhnhausen pled guilty to soliciting to commit aggravated murder and was sentenced to 10 years in prison.
Oregon woman kills hitman hired by her husband [via]
It was a final chance to say goodbye for grieving mother Kate Ogg after doctors gave up hope of saving her premature baby. She tearfully told her lifeless son – born at 27 weeks weighing 2lb – how much she loved him and cuddled him tightly, not wanting to let him go. Although little Jamie’s twin sister Emily had been delivered successfully, doctors had given Mrs Ogg the news all mothers dread – that after 20 minutes of battling to get her son to breathe, they had declared him dead.
At first, it was just a gasp for air that was dismissed by doctors as a reflex action. But then the startled mother fed him a little breast milk on her finger and he started breathing normally.
‘I thought, “Oh my God, what’s going on”,’ said Mrs Ogg. ‘A short time later he opened his eyes. It was a miracle. Then he held out his hand and grabbed my finger. ‘He opened his eyes and moved his head from side to side. The doctor kept shaking his head saying, “I don’t believe it, I don’t believe it”.’
The Australian mother spoke publicly to highlight the importance of skin-on-skin care for sick babies, which is being used at an increasing number of British hospitals.
In most cases, babies are rushed off to intensive care if there is a serious problem during the birth. But the ‘kangaroo care’ technique, named after the way kangaroos hold their young in a pouch next to their bodies, allows the mother to act as a human incubator to keep babies warm, stimulated and fed. Pre-term and low birth-weight babies treated with the skin-to-skin method have also been shown to have lower infection rates, less severe illness, improved sleep patterns and are at reduced risk of hypothermia.
Mrs Ogg and her husband David told how doctors gave up on saving their son after a three-hour labour in a Sydney hospital in March. The doctor asked me had we chosen a name for our son,’ said Mrs Ogg. ‘I said, “Jamie”, and he turned around with my son already wrapped up and said, “We’ve lost Jamie, he didn’t make it, sorry”.
‘It was the worse feeling I’ve ever felt. I unwrapped Jamie from his blanket. He was very limp. ‘I took my gown off and arranged him on my chest with his head over my arm and just held him. He wasn’t moving at all and we just started talking to him. ‘We told him what his name was and that he had a sister. We told him the things we wanted to do with him throughout his life.’
Jamie occasionally gasped for air, which doctors said was a reflex action. But then I felt him move as if he were startled, then he started gasping more and more regularly. ‘I gave Jamie some breast milk on my finger, he took it and started regular breathing.’
Mrs Ogg held her son, now five months old and fully recovered, as she spoke on the Australian TV show ‘Today Tonight’. Her husband added: ‘Luckily I’ve got a very strong, very smart wife. ‘She instinctively did what she did. If she hadn’t done that, Jamie probably wouldn’t be here.’
Miracle Mom Brings Baby Back to Life With Two Hours Of Loving Cuddles After Doctors Pronounce Him Dead [via]