Good Things in the World

Back to the Future dialog remixed into a love song

Pogo takes sounds from movies and transforms them into new songs. This time he remixed Back to the Future into a song dedicated to all the lovers out there—I love it when they say things like that on the radio.

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Pogo had a few big hits in the internet already—these are some of them:

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Pogo is an amzing producer and deserves to be shared with your friends. You can check out more cool vids at his YouTube page:

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCn-K7GIs62ENvdQe6ZZk9-w

I would suggest you hit that subscribe button! :woot:
 
Charlie Day Advises Graduates to Not Give A Crap In Commencement Speech

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As videos begin to surface of this past weekend's numerous university commencement speeches, there is only one that is worth reliving graduation for: Charlie Day, who plays Charlie Kelly on It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia, gives a meandering, goofy speech to Merrimack College that results in one important lesson: don't be afraid of failure.

The speech is full of Charlie Day humor: "I sound like a ten-year-old with a smoking problem" and, after acknowledging that Merrimack—his alma mater—had granted him an honorary PhD, "I plan to begin writing my own prescriptions immediately."

The real takeaway, though, is that fear shouldn't stand in anyone's way. In a rare moment of gravitas, Day closes his speech with sincerity and encouragement, confirming his earlier maxim that "I'm much smarter than the character I play on TV."

Charlie is awesome and this is a great speech
 
120-foot bowling strike is possibly the longest bowling strike ever

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These guys decided to see if they can get a strike 120 feet away from the pins, all the way from the door of the main door of the bowling alley. It probably took a few dozen tries, but they finally succeeded, achieving what perhaps is the longest bowling strike ever.

Sweet!
 
You can't eat this burger with your hands and that's perfectly fine

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The Sookie Monster Burger is the Southern equivalent of the Asian ramen burger: Instead of ramen as buns, it uses pan-fried pimento cheese grits. Inside: "Heirloom tomato, a Louisiana hot link sausage patty, cajun spiced shrimp, smoked jalapeño, and a Sazerac roux."

http://pornburger.me/2014/05/21/the-sookie-monster-burger/

Man this looks amazing, would love to try it
 
NASA makes zoomable Earth using 36,422 selfies from all continents

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Not even Ellen DeGeneres can beat this one: NASA asked people to take selfies on Earth Day and humans from Antarctica to Zimbabwe submitted more than 50,000 photos. Of those NASA selected 36,422 photos to create this fully zoomable 3.2 gigapixel image of Earth's Eastern and Western hemispheres.

http://www.nasa.gov/content/goddard/2014-globalselfie-wrap-up/#.U34mp15vnRp

Pretty cool
 
Grilled ramen cheese sandwich: Like eating mac-n-cheese with your hands

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I'm not a fan of the ramen burger because the flavors don't combine as well as you imagine and it's way too dry. But this grilled ramen grilled cheese sandwich... this one has potential, my friends. It's like eating mac-n-cheese with your hands. The crusty golden skin should combine perfectly with the gooey interior.

http://dudefoods.com/the-ramen-noodle-grilled-cheese-sandwich/

Sounds yummy
 
Asian Small-Clawed Otters Play Keyboard at the National Zoo

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The Smithsonian National Zoo's family of Asian small-clawed otters—the smallest, cutest otter species in the world—spent some time over the weekend with one of their favorite toys: a keyboard to bang on. With their small claws, natch.

This is an exercise in animal enrichment—something the zoo says ranks with nutrition and medicine in terms of an animal's quality of life—but it's just as much fun for humans as it is for otters.

The small-claws get keyboard practice sessions twice a month, to "engage their sight, touch, and hearing senses."

This is pretty cool they do that for them
 
Teenagers Track Down Fake Nurse Who Stole a Baby From a Hospital

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A woman who dressed up like a nurse and stole a 16-hour-old baby from a hospital yesterday was arrested after a group of Canadian youths tracked her down.

Police say a 21-year-old woman dressed as a nurse walked into a Quebec nursery ward and left with Victoria, a six-pound, 16-hour-old baby.

Mother Mélissa McMahon told police that the fake nurse took the baby from her arms, saying she needed to be weighed. McMahon says she realized within minutes that something was off, but she was too late.

Security cameras caught the fake nurse driving away in a Toyota Yaris with a "Baby On Board" sign.

Police released an Amber Alert and posted photos of the fake nurse and her car on social media. Luckily, a group of four bored Canadian teenagers saw the report on Facebook and decided to help out.

"We had nothing to do that night," the teens told reporters. "We went off in search of a red car."

While they were searching, one of the teenagers recognized the woman in the photo as her next-door neighbor. The group drove to the woman's home, spotted her car outside, and called police.

The baby was safely returned to her parents within the hour. The fake nurse was arrested and hospitalized for an evaluation.

http://www.cnn.com/2014/05/27/world/canada-kidnapped-baby-facebook/

I wish teens in the USA would get bored and fight crime, god bless those Canadians
 
They do it's just they haven't caught a fake nurse kidnapping a 16 hour old baby.
 
USA teens get spider powers and fight crime. Take that Canadian teens. :p
Seriously though that's awesome! :up:
 
Cool Danish Cops Redefine "Fun Police"

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Stories that start out, "Police officers were recently caught on camera," usually don't have a happy ending. But not in Denmark!

The tourist who shot this video was recently visiting Amager Beach, a public park in Copenhagen that borders the Øresund strait, when he noticed a group of youths and police officers happily coexisting.

Apparently the cool-guy cops pulled their patrol car up to a popular swimming area and started letting local kids use the windshield and hood as a badass makeshift water slide. Leave it to Denmark to redefine the term "Fun Police."

Looks like a blast
 
Asian Small-Clawed Otters Play Keyboard at the National Zoo

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This is pretty cool they do that for them


And by the end of the week, zoo officials hope the otters will be finished composing Katy Perry's next album.


Teenagers Track Down Fake Nurse Who Stole a Baby From a Hospital

http://www.cnn.com/2014/05/27/world/canada-kidnapped-baby-facebook/

I wish teens in the USA would get bored and fight crime, god bless those Canadians


They should be rewarded with a new van and a talking Great Dane.
 
89-Year-Old Woman Kicks Sword-Wielding Robber's Ass With Golf Club

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A masked man with a sword messed with the wrong 89-year-old shopkeeper when he tried to rob a Washington state convenience store Sunday morning.

The would-be robber walked behind the counter at Frank's Superette in Moses Lake, Wash., and demanded that Miyo Koba open the register for him. But Koba, who's owned the store for 60 years, isn't so easily intimidated.

"I said, 'No, I'm not going to open the till for you,'" she told KREM, "'If you don't get your hands off the till, I'm going to stab you with my scissors.'"

"He started pounding on the register trying to open it because I wouldn't do it for him," said Koba. "He pulled out his little sword out of his little jacket, and he just kind of waved it a little bit."

Police say the "little sword" measured about three feet.

The suspect shoved Koba and took off with the still-unopened register, but while she was on the ground, she was able to reach for a golf club and beat him in the legs. She was aiming for his head, but couldn't reach it.

The robber escaped with his life, riding away on a BMX bike.

Police later recovered and returned the register, but they also found something even stranger: All of the robber's clothes.

"He must have been running around in his underwear and no shoes because that's what they said, they found all his clothes," said Koba.

http://www.krem.com/news/crime/Police-search-for-sword-wielding-robber-in-Moses-Lake-260811201.html

Haha what an awesome old lady
 
Brinks Truck Accidentally Drops $125,000 in Front of an Honest Man

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A poor but honest California man did the honorable thing when he found a bag filled with hundreds of thousands of dollars because he wanted to make his family proud of him.

Joe Cornell, who told reporters he often has only $1 a day to spend on lunch, was volunteering at the Salvation Army when a bag filled with money flew off a Brinks security truck and landed on the street in front of him.

Rather than keep the money, Cornell says he turned it over to authorities because he wanted his grandkids to be proud of him.

"I thought 'What type of man do I want my grandkids to think I am?'," says Cornell, "I want them to think I'm a just man that does the right thing and I did the right thing."

According to KMPH:

When Cornell's wife found out what happened she burst into tears. She says that she's so proud of him for giving the money back, especially because they are so poor.
Cornell reportedly did not receive a reward for returning the cash.

UPDATE: Brinks reportedly gave Cornell a $5,000 reward and also plans to make a $5,000 donation to the Salvation Army in Cornell's name.

http://www.kmph-kfre.com/story/25625685/man-finds-a-bag-filled-with-thousands-of-dollars

Better man then I and I think Brinks could have stepped up and donated a little more than what they did or they would have been out a large sum of money
 
Your Ears Can Be Fooled With Illusions As Easily As Your Eyes

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We've all been left scratching our heads wondering how our brains could have been tricked by an optical illusion we looked at. But it turns out your sense of hearing is just as susceptible to being fooled.

The McGurk effect can actually cause us to hear things differently based on what we're seeing, usually relating to the movement's of another person's lips while talking. It's an unsettling effect to experience, but nothing compared to the Shepard Tone Illusion—shown during the second half of this video—which will have you wondering if you can ever trust your ears again.

Illusions rule!
 
I want to eat these burger pop-tarts forever

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These I Can Haz Pop Tart burgers must be delicious: "a smashed grass-fed beef patty, with a bacon onion jam, melty cheddar cheese, in a buttery pop tart pastry." I just want to wake up every day, open my mouth, and have a conveyor belt pushing six of these down my throat.

http://pornburger.me/2014/05/27/i-can-haz-pop-tart/

That looks awesome
 
Little kid dresses up in a mini Predator costume

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The best thing about having kids is making them like all the things you like and getting them to do things that you wished you did as a kid. Like dress up as a mini Predator. They can be whatever parents want them to be and no matter what, they'll be impossibly cute. Being a parent is so easy!

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I wish my parents had done that for me when I was a little one!
 
Video of the first dog in the world to fly on a wingsuit

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I wonder what was going through that dogs mind as that was going down? Hard to tell if he is jumping at the end because he liked it or is glad to be back on the ground
 
Paralysed Saudi Arabian man's tweet asking for someone to visit him in hospital becomes most retweeted message in Saudi Arabian Twitter history

For Ibrahim, life was bleak.

Bedbound and paralyzed as the result of a car accident over half a year ago, he had not had a visitor from his family in months and was in desperate need of life-changing surgery that the Saudi Arabian could not afford.

Alone and isolated, there was not too much joy in Ibrahim’s life.

That was until he posted a tweet aimed at encouraging one of the few followers he had to come and visit as he lay paralysed in his bed.

With his tweet he hoped that at least one sympathetic person might hear his call and provide some much craved company for him.

What he did not expect was the social media storm that it would create.

Within one day Ibrahim’s tweet became the most retweeted message in Saudi Arabia’s Twitter history.

The hashtag #VisitIbrahim circulated through social media circles and within just 24 hours it had been retweeted over 200,000 times.

Not only that, but Ibrahim got a lot more than he bargained for when hundreds of people from all over Saudi Arabia came to visit him.

The Ritadh hospital had to stop visitors after they began affecting the work of staff

Clutching flowers, pizza and other gifts there were cues of hundreds of people outside the King Khalid University Hospital in the country’s capital Riyadh, all with the aim of meeting Saudi’s latest social media star.

The hospital became so busy that its officials had to put a temporary ban on all of its visitors as the number of people in the building was affecting the work of its staff.

Some even resorted to feeding Ibrahim
Yet Ibrahim did not only benefit from the tweet in terms of footfall and flowers, so compelled were the Saudi Twitter community by Ibrahim’s story that they contributed financially towards the life-changing surgery Ibrahim dreamed of.

The surgery which would cost $130,000 and involve Ibrahim travelling to Germany was quickly covered by the generous donors from the oil rich middle-eastern country.

Pictures showing visitors posing, talking to and even feeding the paralyzed man were posted on Twitter.

It is now hoped a trip to Germany can be organised soon so that that Ibrahim can get the surgery he is so in need of.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...in-saudi-arabian-twitter-history-9385715.html
 
Florida Bear Lounges in Hammock, Stays There for 20 Minutes

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This weekend, hopefully you'll be chilling as hard as this black bear, who stopped by a Florida home Thursday to relax in the owner's hammock for 20 blissful minutes.

Homeowner Vincent James told local news outlet WESH:

He got in the hammock like he was a tourist or something. Then something spooked him and he ran right back there. Then half an hour later I come back and I saw there he is in the hammock again.
Rafael Torres, who snapped the photo, said the bear was unfazed by his presence 60 feet away.

It wasn't the animal's first visit to Daytona Beach, and James's neighbors told CNN they're being careful with their trash to discourage it from coming back. James, for his part, is taking down the hammock.

http://www.wesh.com/news/photos-bea...n-daytona-beach/26247854?absolute=true#!SQqWT

That's hilarious but I can see why the owners wouldn't want a bear getting too comfortable around their house
 
His name is Yogi, and he is not your average bear.
 
Off-Duty Bomber Pilot Helps Land a United 737 After Captain Passes Out

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United Flight 1637 was supposed to be a quick holiday jaunt for off-duty Air Force Captain Mike Gongol and his family. But when the 737's pilot suffered an apparent heart attack, Gongol ended up in the cockpit, helping guide the plane to an emergency landing that saved 160 souls.

The Des Moines-to-Denver flight's diversion last December was well publicized at the time, but Gongol's role in its safe conclusion seems to have come to light last week, after a military reporter published his story:

Gongol, his wife and daughter were on the way from Des Moines International Airport Dec. 30, with 151 other passengers and six crewmembers, after spending the holidays with his family. To him and his family, the day was just like any other, except for a short flight delay due to weather.

Approximately 30 minutes into the flight, Gongol, a B-1B Lancer pilot, noticed the engines power down to idle. The thoughts immediately started jumping through his head; there were a variety of reasons why the engines would shut down to idle, none of them categorized as normal. Slowly, the aircraft began to descend and turn right.

"Over the public address system; a flight attendant asked if there was a doctor on board the plane," said Gongol. "A few more calls went out for medical professionals and the flight attendants were all hurrying to first class with their beverage carts and a first-aid kit."

At that moment, Gongol thought it was a medical emergency with a first class passenger, his instincts told him to stay seated and stay out of the way. A fourth call went out, "are there any non-revenue pilots on board, please ring your call button." Immediately, Gongol realized the pilot was the patient. He looked to his wife; as she gave him a nod, Gongol pressed his button and headed toward the flight deck.

All snark and Airplane! references aside: Holy ****ing ****. On the long list of places I never want to be, let's bump "commercial jet in a dive with flight attendants searching for doctors and pilots" near the top.

Now, Gongol—shown above in front of his usual ride—didn't land the plane all alone; he merely helped the flight's first officer realize her own badass potential, which is a pretty stellar quality in itself:

"After they moved the pilot, I was asked by the first officer, 'are you a pilot,' which was quickly followed with 'what do you fly,'" said Gongol. "I knew she was in a serious situation and that question gave her five seconds to judge if I would be useful. I also had about five seconds to asses her, 'was she panicking, or was she OK to fly the aircraft?' We both finished our silent assessments, she made the right judgment and told me to close the door and have a seat."

From there, Gongol was calm and collected, and the first officer decided that he would be most useful to talk on the radios, back her up on the aircraft's checklists and look for anything going wrong.

Having been an aircraft commander, Gongol is used to making decisions, but he knew the best way to get the aircraft down safely was to play a support role to the first officer and make things as normal as possible for her. In an emergency situation, he had the ability to place himself outside the situation for a second and make the right call.

"She was calm, but you could tell she was a little stressed, who wouldn't be," said Gongol. "At the beginning, I interrupted her flow of operations, but we figured everything out extremely quickly. She was very impressive."

Though safely on the ground, traffic controllers didn't realize the medical emergency that had grounded the flight was the captain, so they didn't give great instructions on how to taxi. The first officer had never landed at Omaha, so Gongol—who'd landed there while training as a B-1 bomber pilot—gave her another hand.

The captain, by the way, made a full recovery, thanks to the quick landing and a nurse who was also aboard the aircraft.

Gongol had nothing but praise for the crew he worked with. "I saw nothing but the finest professionalism under pressure out of the flight attendants, the nurses and the first officer," he said.

But he added: "Every pilot thinks 'what would I do if this all goes wrong' on an aircraft they are not controlling."

http://www.afspc.af.mil/news1/story.asp?id=123412412

Good thing he happened to be there to help out!
 
Americans Are Big Believers In Science, If You Ignore the Tea Partiers

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You know all that fuss about how liberals love science and conservatives hate it? Well, it turns out that a sizable majority of all Americans have faith in the quantifiable, reproducible conclusions of empirical observation. As long as you leave self-identified Tea Partiers out of the equation.

Mother Jones' Chris Mooney flagged the results, which come from a survey of 568 New Hampshire residents by university pollster Lawrence Hamilton:

This is pretty striking: The first three political groups—Democrats, independents, and non-tea party Republicans—all trust scientists on the environment. But then you come to tea party members, and suddenly, distrust in scientists soars. The numbers are stark: 60 percent of traditional Republicans trust scientists on the environment, versus only 28 percent of tea partiers.

Hamilton says he's surprised by the strength of these results. "I didn't realize it would be at the level of division that it was," says Hamilton. He adds that while Republicans and tea partiers in New Hampshire aren't precisely the same in all respects as they are elsewhere in America, "in general, New Hampshire is not drastically unrepresentative." When it comes to tea partiers and more traditional Republicans on the national level, Hamilton says that he "would expect similar gaps to show up."
Basically, Tea Partiers and their ilk don't believe in climate science—and since you can't have climate science without the science, they're discarding faith in all science more generally. And they're skewing the overall look of conservatism and the Republican Party.

But in fairness to the skeptics: BENGHAZI.

http://www.motherjones.com/environment/2014/05/tea-party-climate-trust-science

Good to know most sensible people have faith in science
 

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