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Showing posts with label Viral video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Viral video. Show all posts

Monday, June 9, 2014

HANGOVER - PSY FEATURING SNOOP DOGG


PSY Debuts New Alcohol-Fueled ‘Hangover’ Video with Snoop Dogg



[Billboard - PSY Debuts New Alcohol-Fueled ‘Hangover’ Video with Snoop Dogg]

‪#‎PSY‬ ‪#‎HANGOVER‬
PSY's "HANGOVER" Music video released on Sunday evening following "Jimmy Kimmel Live :Game Night". PSY and Snoop Dogg appeared on Jimmy's show to promote “HANGOVER”.
http://youtu.be/HkMNOlYcpHg

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

JENGA PLAYING CAT VIDEO GOES VIRAL


Look at This Jenga-Playing Cat

Courtesy of Jay Hathaway - http://gawker.com/look-at-this-jenga-playing-cat-1582062396?utm_campaign=socialflow_gawker_facebook&utm_source=gawker_facebook&utm_medium=socialflow



Moe playing some Jenga.

Jenga-playing-cat + rage-quit = internet love!

This video is represented by Break.com - For any licensing requests please contact licensing@break.com

Moe the cat is pretty good at Jenga, but he doesn't have a lot of patience. Or a lot of respect for the rules. Or opposable thumbs.
 
It is incredible that any part of the tower is still standing by the end of this video.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

HERO CAT SAVES YOUNG BOY FROM DOG


MY CAT SAVED MY SON - VIDEO

http://youtu.be/qggsy3Cxg4U

 
 
 
 

Cat saves boy from dog: Video shows family feline save child from attack

Courtesy of Kashmiri Gander http://www.independent.co.uk/news/weird-news/video-shows-cat-save-boy-from-dog-attack-9373043.html 

A brave feline has proven that cats can be just as loyal as man's best friend, by saving its young owner from a dog attack on a California street on Tuesday.

In the footage entitled My cat saved my son, which appears to have been shot by a CCTV camera, a young boy is seen riding his bike on a driveway next to a parked car.
A shot taken from a different angle then shows a sandy-coloured dog trot into view on the opposite side of the stationary vehicle, and run up to the child.

Suddenly, the animal viciously bites into the boy’s leg and drags him from his bike onto the tarmac.
Within seconds, the boy’s cat hurtles towards the dog and chases it away, while the boy’s mother tends to her son.

Having dealt with the dog, the cat returns to the boy, and the family flees the scene.
At the end of the footage, the boy's father assures viewers that his son is now safe and well - and shares a grisly photo of the boy's wound which required stitches.

The wound inflicted by the dog who attacked the small boy (YouTube)
Bakersfield police said the attacking dog, identified as an 8-month-old Labrador-Chow mix, had been surrendered by its owner's family after the Tuesday afternoon attack and was in quarantine and would ultimately be euthanized.

Police spokesman Sergeant Joseph Grubbs said the dog's owners, who live in the same neighborhood as the boy, said the dog did not like children or bicycles. He did not identify the owner by name.
Additional reporting by Reuters

Thursday, May 1, 2014

THE 'REAL' GRAVITY - RUSSIAN SPACE SUIT LOOKS LIKE A DEAD ASTRONAUT FLOATING IN SPACE



This looks like the Russians threw a dead astronaut out of the airlock

Courtesy of http://sploid.gizmodo.com/the-case-of-the-dead-cosmonaut-stranded-in-space-and-1482670306

SEE VIDEO ON LINK (AND BLOG HOME PAGE) ... COURTESY OF http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2577285/Watch-terrifying-moment-astronaut-spins-ISS-meet-fiery-death-dont-worry-theres-no-one-inside-suit.html#v-3321653563001

...but the reality is not as macabre as that. Is is, however, quite wacky. Sam Wilkinson—a former intern at NASA and Sploid reader—explains this spooky picture in this article about awesome stuff in space that he sent for publication.
There are a couple of man-made objects in space that almost everyone will know about: the International Space Station, the Hubble Space Telescope, Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity and maybe Voyager I and/or II. However, there is so much other man-made stuff in space it's crazy (and it's actually starting to become a problem). This abundance of space-faring objects can make it hard for some truly awesome experiments, missions etc to get much exposure! I'd like to fix that with a recurring blog post series called "Awesome Stuff in Space". Since this is the inaugural post, I'm going to cover two of the coolest lesser-known things currently in space, as well as an awesome example of recycling.


When asked what the most precise method currently available for determining the position of a place on earth was, my first response would probably be military-grade GPS, but I'd be wrong. In fact, the most precise way to determine your position on earth is by bouncing a laser beam off of what is essentially a disco ball in space. That disco ball would either be LAGEOS-1 or LAGEOS-2 (LAser GEOdynamics Satellite), two 60cm wide spheres each covered in 426 retroreflectors (a special mirror that reflects light back the way it came) currently orbiting the earth at 5,900km above us. By measuring the time taken for a laser pulse to travel to a LAGEOS satellite and back, the distance between the ground station and the satellite can be calculated to a very high degree of accuracy (~1 inch for thousands of miles). Since the orbits of the LAGEOS satellites are very stable, their positions can be determined to a high degree of accuracy. This coupled with the distance between the ground station and the satellite can be used to determine the precise location of the ground station. There are ground stations performing these measurements in many countries, and the results are used to study tectonic plate movement by groups from around the world.

The concept behind SuitSat-1 is quite simple, put some simple electronics (radio communications system, telemetry) into a Russian Orlan spacesuit, then throw it out of the airlock.
According to Frank Bauer of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, "SuitSat is a Russian brainstorm, some of our Russian partners in the ISS program … had an idea: Maybe we can turn old spacesuits into useful satellites." Aside from broadcasting voice messages from students around the world, and some telemetry data, SuitSat-1 also looked really eerie.
Do you have other really cool articles for Sploid? Send them here.