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Aug 2nd, 2022, 12:44 pm
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I sometimes get REALLY DEPRESSED reviewing the news these days.
It's always about a global pandemic threatening life as we know it,
protests around the world, stupid politicians, natural disasters,
or some other really bad story.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

Welcome to The mobi weekly news magazine
IN OTHER NEWS
TUESDAY AUGUST 2

What is it?
Here is your chance to become an "ACE REPORTER" for our weekly news magazine.
It is your job to fine weird, funny or "good feel" stories from around the world and share them with our readers in our weekly magazine

How do you play?
Just post a story that you have come across that made you smile, laugh, feel good...
BUT NOTHING DEPRESSING :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

EXAMPLE POST
Naked sunbather chases wild boar through park after it steals his laptop bag
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A naked sunbather was seen chasing wild boar through a park after it stole his laptop bag.
Amusing photographs from Germany show the man running after the animal to try and claim the plastic bag back.
But the cheeky boar and its two piglets appear to be too quick for the sunbather, who can't keep up with their speedy little trotters.
As the incident unfolds, groups of friends and family sat on the grass watch on and laugh.
Heads are seen turning in surprise and amusement in the hilarious photographs.
The incident happened at Teufelssee Lake - a bathing spot in the Grunwell Forest in Berlin, Germany.

Rules:
Each Edition of IN OTHER NEWS will be open for 7 days...
You can post as many stories as you like, but you will only get paid for One Story in any 24 hour period
So in other words, you can only earn WRZ$ once a day.
Each news day will start when I post announcing it
OR at:
9:00 AM CHICAGO TIME (UTC -5)
2:00 PM GMT (UTC -0)

on those days I space out and forget to post or can't due to Real Life :lol:
Stories may be accompanied with images - but No big images, please! 800x800 pixels wide maximum
Videos are allowed, but please keep them short, and post a short summary for those that don't like to click on videos
No Duplicate stories - Where a post has been edited resulting in duplicates, then the last one in time gets disallowed.
And please limit this to reasonably family friendly stories :lol: :lol: :lol:

Reward:
Each news story posted that I feel is acceptable (must be a real story, too few words or simply a headline are not considered acceptable) will earn you 50 WRZ$
If you post multiple stories on any given day, you will only earn 50 WRZ$ for the first story of the Day
All payments will be made at THE END of the weekly news cycle.
Special Bonus - Each week I will award "The Pulitzer Prize" for the best story of the week
The weekly winner of the "The Pulitzer Prize" will receive a 100 WRZ$ bonus
It's just my personal opinion, so my judgement is final

So help bring GOOD news to the members of mobi, and join our reporting team...

IN OTHER NEWS


NOTE: THE RECAP AND REWARDS WILL BE DONE LATER TODAY
Aug 2nd, 2022, 12:44 pm

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Aug 2nd, 2022, 12:53 pm
Australian man finds his childhood Matchbox car – five decades after it went missing in England

From a strawberry patch in Somerset to a post office in New South Wales, an ecstatic Tim Goodwin is reunited with his customised Matchbox Ford Capri

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‘It’s my toy!’ … Tim Goodwin with the precious Matchbox Ford Capri that disappeared when he was a boy.

Peak Hill, Australia is a long way from Wellington in Somerset in the south-west of England. Further still to Doncaster in the UK. But that is the journey made by a pink Matchbox Ford Capri, originally bought by a little boy a long time ago.

That little boy is now 58-year-old Tim Goodwin, who along with his wife, Cathy, runs the Peak Hill post office in the town of about 1,000 people, in central NSW.

Goodwin reckons that Ford Capri was one of the first toys he bought just after the car was released in the early 70s. After he washed the family car, he collected his pocket money on a Friday and raced down to the local toy shop to buy it.

Goodwin and his two brothers Guy and Mark used to play with their Matchbox cars on a homemade dirt track in the back yard in Wellington. Other kids would join in, competing to run the fastest race, urging each other on and aspiring to hold the fastest record.

“I always loved Ford Capris. I have never had a real one. A couple of my teachers used to have them. You know, they were gods. A Ford Capri is an Englishman’s Mustang. I guess if an Australian in the early 1970s wanted to race Matchbox cars, it would have to be a Capri or a Mustang versus a Monaro,” Goodwin says.

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Tim Goodwin’s customised Lesney Ford Capri.

“I played with it with all my other toys out in the dirt around the strawberry patch. We were making rally tracks and stuff like that. And when it gets chipped, you’ve got to paint them haven’t you? And so that’s what I did.”

He couldn’t paint it in the house so when the boys were old enough to reach the high door knob on the garden shed, they were allowed in to paint their toys and modify them at the workbench.

Goodwin cut off the tow bar “because rally cars don’t have a tow bar”, painted the car red, except for its registration plate, and then left the little Capri to dry. (These are the crucial details that made all the difference tracking down the toy in later life.)

When the Ford Capri disappeared from the shed, Tim always blamed his brother Guy. Toys would go missing from time to time, and Tim assumed that Guy, an “entrepreneur” of sorts, had sold the car.

“I always blamed Guy. And then one day, I was up in my bedroom. And I saw this kid who lives in the next street. And he was in the garden shed and he was taking my toys. I was gutted.

“Then obviously you start growing up and your toys just go into a cardboard box or whatever and you forget about it, but I have always loved Ford Capris. I have even got proper workshop manuals, that’s how much I love them.”

Life moved on. He moved to Australia in 1994, met Cathy and had two children. Ford Capris were admired from afar until one day, almost absentmindedly, he plugged the search parameters to eBay.

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Tim and Cathy Goodwin, with the car that brought back memories of Tim’s youth.

“I don’t even know why I looked on eBay. I typed in Matchbox Lesney Ford Capri. I went on to about third or fourth page or found something that looked familiar. I see my Ford Capri.”

It was a car, mostly red, but chipped to reveal the original pink paint and the pink registration plate of his beloved Capri.

The seller was in Doncaster, about 370km away from his little town of Wellington, Somerset and he bought the car for $34.62, including postage. The seller couldn’t remember where he got the car, as he buys job lots or picks up vintage toys from markets across the country.



When the package arrived in the post office, the car was tightly wound in bubble wrap. Sitting on the lounge, he was shaking like a child at Christmas, eventually resorting to his pocketknife to get through the wrap.

“Fingers crossed everyone! It’s my birthday! I’m excited! I can’t get into it. Help! It’s my toy! It’s my toy!”

Like the character of Dominique Bretodeau in the French film Amélie, whose childhood memories come flooding back after the return of his old toys, Tim returned to his own youth.

“I can remember the dirt track me and my brothers made in the strawberry patch including dirt tunnels, where you drive your car through and go over the top. I remember that and the dog playing around as well. Just so many memories came back.

“I’m totally gobsmacked that it still exists and nobody has changed the bits I’ve done. It hasn’t been painted over again. It’s all my handiwork. Now it’s up on the mantlepiece and that is going to have pride of place wherever I am.

“When we go away this weekend, I might even take with me because I don’t want to lose it again.”
Aug 2nd, 2022, 12:53 pm

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Aug 2nd, 2022, 1:25 pm
Cheeky dog eats obedience certificate just hours after graduating from class

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Training a dog isn't easy - but it's extremely rewarding them done right.

But one dog owner has come to learn no matter how hard he tries to train his pooch, she will always have the last laugh.

Speaking to Reddit, the owner shared how his cheeky dog ate her way through her obedience training certificate just hours after being awarded it.

He said: "Last night my dog graduated from a beginner obedience class. This morning we found her certificate like this."

Admitting he couldn't help but laugh, users have been urging him to frame the half-chewed certificate, as it makes for a "better story anyway".

One user said: "I don't need a piece of paper to tell the world that I can behave, man."

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Another user added: "Let it chew your diploma too so everything matches on the wall."

A third user said: "I'd be so proud. Rebel against the system pupper."

It comes after another naughty dog, named Finn, taught his owner a lesson by eating her wedding ring while she was in the midst of an important Zoom call.

Owner Shyler Brianne Kraus said: "Usually my working from home consists of him still getting whatever attention he wants but since this was such an important meeting, I wasn’t doting on him like I normally would.

"Halfway through the meeting I could hear him playing with something metallic because I could hear the little ting sounds from his teeth and nails.

"I’m not sure how I knew but in the moment I just knew it was my wedding ring."

After an unsuccessful search for her wedding ring, she ended up rushing Finn to the vets to get an X-ray.

Despite being fed a "bunch of high-fibre food" at the vets, Finn did not make any 'offerings', and Shyler was told to go home and examine his poo until her rings shows up.

She ended up "mushing up" her dog's waste for three and a half days straight - and it wasn't until 15 minutes before he was set to undergo a surgery to remove the ring that it showed up.

"I left my wedding ring on my bedside table, a mistake I no longer make, and he was able to hop up onto my bed and snatch it. Kind of a 'I'll show her! She can’t work when I want to play'," she added.

"He did what any rational-thinking puppy would do - eat the most valuable item in my possession in order to teach me a lesson."

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Aug 2nd, 2022, 1:25 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
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Aug 2nd, 2022, 2:48 pm
Feti$h: millionaire at 28 — from selling my toenails, foot skin, used panties …

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This former exotic dancer sells her body — and not in the way you think.

Rebekka Blue has become a millionaire by selling literal pieces of herself, including toe-nails, dead skin from her feet, dandruff and even a used intrauterine device. Videos detailing the skin merchant’s used rags-to-riches story have amassed thousands of views on TikTok.

“If you see me throwing something in the trash, then there’s a red flag because I’m usually keeping it in my bag to sell later,” Blue, 28, from Wilmington, North Carolina, told South West News Service of her bizarre brand of flesh-peddling.

It’s safe to say a lot of people want a piece of her. On average, the self-proclaimed “Professional Goddess” reportedly rakes in between $5,000 and $10,000 per month by hawking an array of bizarre and gross mementos from used tissues to panty-liners. She likens the popularity to the trend of people bidding on items used by celebrities.

See: https://nypost.com/2022/08/01/im-a-millionaire-at
Aug 2nd, 2022, 2:48 pm
Aug 2nd, 2022, 3:48 pm
NYPD Officer Adopts Dog She Rescued from Locked Hot Car: They 'Will Never Be Neglected Again'

The New York Police Department's 19th precinct shared on Twitter that Officer Aruna Maharaj recently adopted a dog she helped rescue from a hot car in June

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A New York City Police Department officer is taking her work home with her after making a furry friend.

Officer Aruna Maharaj of the 19th precinct adopted a dog last week after she helped rescue him from a hot car in June. Before his rescue, the dog was locked in the car for over two hours.

"This pup will never be neglected again!" the NYPD precinct wrote on Twitter, along with a photo of the elated canine greeting his new mom.

"A month ago, this sweet doggo was rescued after his owner left him in his hot locked car for hours; yesterday, one of its rescuers, Officer Maharaj, adopted him!" the precinct added on social media. "Thank you @ASPCA for taking such good care of this lucky pup!"

The 19th precinct previously shared a video of the dog's rescue on June 18, which includes footage of Maharaj assisting with the operation. In the clip, police officers break the front passenger side window, unlock the car and retrieve the dog from the backseat, giving him a treat and some water.

"Hot car, hot dog rescue — thanks to caring NYers who saw this pup locked in a car for over 2 hours & called 911! Our cops responded discovering the car off, windows shut & distressed dog," the precinct wrote with the clip on Twitter. "They broke the window, got pup out & off to a vet for care. Criminal investigation continues."

In a follow-up tweet, the precinct noted that the temperature that day hovered in the mid-80s, which would heat up the car to "a deadly 102 degrees" in only 10 minutes.

The NYPD added: "It's prohibited to leave an animal unattended in a car under these dangerous conditions — thankfully the pup was rescued & is being cared for."

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Aug 2nd, 2022, 3:48 pm

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Online
Aug 2nd, 2022, 3:58 pm
Bear rings doorbell at South Carolina home




A South Carolina woman's security camera captured video of the moment a bear strolled onto her front porch and rang the doorbell in the middle of the night.

Wendy Watson said the doorbell camera at her Greenville County home started recording about 3:30 a.m. Tuesday, triggered by the motion of a bear that wandered up to her front door.

The video shows the bear reach out with its paw to ring the doorbell.

"The bear kind of ambled up on the porch and was reaching up around the doorbell and there was a little nose print on the window that you can see," Watson told WHNS-TV.

"He looked around a little bit and went back down. and while he was out here, he ate a lot of bird seed."

Watson said the bear is a regular visitor to her neighborhood and has destroyed two of her bird feeders.
Aug 2nd, 2022, 3:58 pm

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Believe me, you are someone's crush. Yes, you are!
Aug 2nd, 2022, 5:39 pm
U.K. Animal Group Rescues 47 Giant Rabbits it Believes Were Bred to Be Eaten

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The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) rescued forty-seven rather large rabbits from a property in England this month after learning about the bunnies' living conditions.

In a press release, the RSPCA explained rescuers visited the property in Northumberland on July 11 after receiving reports about neglected rabbits at the location. RSPCA officials found "small, dirty hutches full of rabbits who had been left to breed with each other" at the reported location, according to the organization's release.

The RSPCA ended up pulling 47 rabbits, many of them Flemish giant rabbits, from the property. Since the rescue, the rabbits' care has been signed over to the RSPCA. The bunnies are now at "a mixture of centers, branches, and licensed establishments, as well as some being looked after by inspectors — to make sure they get the best care possible," per the RSPCA.

The largest of the rabbits rescued from the sizable group weighed about 8 kilograms — over 17 pounds, which is comparable to the size of a Jack Russell terrier. The bunny also had seven-inch-long ears.

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"Although often kept as pets, Flemish giant rabbits are still bred by some for their fur and their meat, and it is believed these rabbits were being bred to be eaten," RSPCA stated in its release.

Inspector Trevor Walker, who helped rescue the rabbits, added, "These poor rabbits were living in cramped and dirty conditions, which would have been very unpleasant for them, especially in the heat."

Walker said that a veterinarian found the rabbits to be in relatively good condition, and now the RSPCA is focused on finding the animals forever homes. According to the organization, half the rescued rabbits are adults, and half are still babies.

"They will make good companion animals as they have a nice temperament," Walker said.

"Sadly, rabbits are becoming an increasing problem across the RSPCA as we are seeing more and more coming into our care, many as a result of the cost of living crisis," he continued. "We would really urge people to do their research before taking on a pet and also to make sure you get your pet neutered at an early opportunity to prevent unwanted litters of animals — all of these rabbits will be neutered, microchipped, and vaccinated before finding new homes."

According to the RSPCA, the organization has seen a 49% increase in rabbits coming into their care in the first five months of 2022.
Aug 2nd, 2022, 5:39 pm

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Aug 2nd, 2022, 8:21 pm
Who Is This for: Tiffany's Made $48,000 IRL NFT Necklaces
The legendary little blue box jeweler is selling 250 custom-designed CryptoPunk pendants,
which you can only buy if you have the corresponding NFT.

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Let the world envy your overpriced IRL CryptoPunk NFT with a diamond encrusted necklace from Tiffany & Co.

It seems like it was just yesterday when NFT proponents were busy trying to justify spending buckets of money on digital collectibles—and spewing tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere of our struggling planet—that could largely be seen for free online. But what if everyone could admire your outrageously priced CryptoPunk or Bored Ape encrusted in IRL diamonds?

This week, Tiffany & Co. announced its foray into the Web3 with its “NFTiffs,” which, unlike their NFT cousins, are physical art objects. The legendary little blue box jeweler said it would be producing 250 custom-designed CryptoPunk pendants, which will only be available for purchase by the owner of the corresponding CryptoPunk non-fungible token. The piece will feature an 18-karat rose or yellow gold chain, while the CrytoPunk emblem will be made with precious gemstones and/or diamonds, according to the company.

As you can imagine, NFTiff’s aren’t cheap. The company is selling them for 30 ETH, which at the time of publication equates to roughly $48,000. Yet, considering the lowest priced CryptoPunk currently available is going for 74.69 ETH, or $120,406, it’s probably a steal for CryptoPunk owners. For comparison’s sake, the first- and second-most expensive CryptoPunks ever sold went for 8,000 ETH ($23.7 million) in February and 4,200 ETH ($7.58 million), respectively. Demand isn’t a sure thing: The cryptocurrency and NFT markets have cratered since those massive sales. One Cryptopunk owner sold their digital art for a $7 million loss in July.

There are a total of 10,000 CryptoPunks, so it’s possible that not everyone who wants to show off their NFT in diamonds will be able to. In addition, Tiffany restricts CryptoPunk owners to three purchases, even if they own more NFTs. In its FAQ section, the company said that it expects to ship pendants in early 2023.

As pointed out by Vogue Business, it’s also not clear what would happen to the NFTiff pendant if the CryptoPunk owner decided to sell their NFT. Do they have to offer the new CryptoPunk owner a chance to buy the pendant? Or will the original NFTiff purchaser be allowed to keep the pendant even if they no longer own the CryptoPunk?

Gizmodo reached out to Tiffany to ask for clarification on this issue but did not receive a response by the time of publication.

CryptoPunks feature pixelated punks with unique attributes, such as “luxurious beard,” “classic shades,” and “crazy hair.” There are also apes, zombies, and even aliens in the collection, although they are rarer. In short, the rarer the attribute, the more valuable the NFT.

Owned by Yuga Labs, also known for its the famous Bored Ape Yacht Club collection, Cryptopunks make up one of the most popular NFT collections online. The collection has generated $1.84 billion in sales in its lifetime.
https://gizmodo.com/tiffanys-cryptopunk ... 1849360316
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And just this morning I was wondering what to do with my Tiffany's gift certificate! - Gov
Aug 2nd, 2022, 8:21 pm

I dumped Twitter - tune in, turn on, on Discord!
https://discord.gg/As9DZkGXUM
Online
Aug 3rd, 2022, 8:25 am
Extreme Alpine Football Is Only Played on the Steepest Mountain Slopes
August 2nd, 2022*

As the name suggests, alpine football is a variation of the world’s most popular competitive sport that is played on steep mountain slopes in order to make it more difficult.

Most competitive sports usually take place on level playing fields, but in the case of alpine football, one of the main conditions is that the pitch must be steep. It sounds downright impossible, but a group of football fans in the Austrian Alps claims that it’s the ultimate way to play their favorite sport. They came up with the idea for extreme alpine football during the 2014 World Cup, while watching a boring game and brainstorming for ways to spice it up a bit.

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“We were watching the games and found them very boring,” alpine football co-inventor Franz Mair said. “Then, Peppi – Peppi Knünz, the other inventor of the sport – said to me: ‘The way they play isn’t hard enough and they should try running up and down our mountains. They’d soon be out of breath…’ And then we thought: ‘They might not even be able to play – but us and our lads, we’d manage it!'”

Flat ground is very hard to find in the Alps, so it’s most often used for more important things than playing football, so fans of the sport in one such mountainous area decided to turn lemons into lemonade and use the terrain to invent a new variation. Now, locals take pride in only playing alpine football.



“Anyone can play on flat pitches,” says Alois Gantner, trainer of the ‘Supa Burschis’ team. “In Montafon, we only play on the steepest slopes we can find.”

The rules of extreme alpine football are the same as for the regular version, with the only difference being the need for strong legs and great stamina to fight against gravity on the uneven field.

Extreme alpine football looks intriguing, fun, even, but what happens when the ball starts rolling downhill every few minutes, maybe even seconds? Who goes down after it, only to have to make the climb back up to the pitch? Things start going downhill very fast if that starts happening to often, I imagine…
Aug 3rd, 2022, 8:25 am
Aug 3rd, 2022, 11:10 am
Ancient Egyptian ghost with 'evil influence' who haunts London tube station to this day
THE SPIRIT of the Egyptian Princess, Amun-Ra, is believed to haunt London's Holborn station to this day.

Before the British Museum Station closed in 1933, it is rumoured spirits of the mummies made their way down to the tracks, lurking in the dark and dingy tunnels, frightening unsuspecting travellers. The spirit of one exhibit, so-called Princess Amun-Ra, is now known as “the Unlucky Mummy”, and is said to bring misfortune to those she encounters

Found in Egypt in the 1860s or 1870s, the mummy-board of the exhibit was brought to England by four travellers.

But all four of the travellers died shortly after with two being shot and the other two dying of poverty.

One of the travellers’ sisters then came into possession of the decorated mummy-board, but quickly donated it to the British Museum.

It is thought a series of misfortunes fell upon the occupants of the sister’s house, where she had kept the relic.

The British Museum’s website reads: “The celebrated clairvoyant Madame Helena Blavatsky is alleged to have detected an evil influence, ultimately traced to the mummy-board.

“She urged the owner to dispose of it and in consequence, it was presented to the British Museum.”
Aug 3rd, 2022, 11:10 am

Book request - The Mad Patagonian by Javier Pedro Zabala [25000 WRZ$] Reward!
https://forum.mobilism.org/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=5412023
Aug 3rd, 2022, 1:27 pm
High-status Danish Vikings wore exotic beaver furs

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In a new study published in the journal PLOS ONE, scientists from the University of Copenhagen have suggested that beaver fur was a symbol of wealth and an important trade item in 10th Century Denmark.
Written sources indicate that fur was a key commodity during the Viking Age between AD 800-1050, but fur doesn’t generally survive well in the archaeological record.

In the study, the researchers analysed animal remains from six high-status graves dating from the 10th Century Denmark. While no ancient DNA was recovered from the samples, identifiable proteins were recovered by two different analytical techniques. Grave furnishings and accessories included skins from domestic animals, while clothing exhibited furs from wild animals, specifically a weasel, a squirrel, and beavers.

These findings support the idea that fur was a symbol of wealth during the Viking Age. The fact that beavers are not native to Denmark suggests this fur was a luxury item acquired through trade.

Some clothing items included fur from multiple species, demonstrating a knowledge of the varying functions of different animal hides, and may have indicated a desire to show off exclusive furs.

The authors note the biggest limiting factor in this sort of study is the incompleteness of comparative protein databases; as these databases expand, more specific identifications of ancient animal skins and furs will be possible.

The authors add: “In the Viking Age, wearing exotic fur was almost certainly an obvious visual statement of affluence and social status, similar to high-end fashion in today’s world. This study uses ancient proteins preserved in elite Danish Viking burials to provide direct evidence of beaver fur trade and use.”
Aug 3rd, 2022, 1:27 pm
Aug 3rd, 2022, 2:42 pm
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I sometimes get REALLY DEPRESSED reviewing the news these days.
It's always about a global pandemic threatening life as we know it,
protests around the world, stupid politicians, natural disasters,
or some other really bad story.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

Welcome to The mobi weekly news magazine
IN OTHER NEWS
WEDNESDAY AUGUST 3

What is it?
Here is your chance to become an "ACE REPORTER" for our weekly news magazine.
It is your job to fine weird, funny or "good feel" stories from around the world and share them with our readers in our weekly magazine

How do you play?
Just post a story that you have come across that made you smile, laugh, feel good...
BUT NOTHING DEPRESSING :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

EXAMPLE POST
Naked sunbather chases wild boar through park after it steals his laptop bag
Image
A naked sunbather was seen chasing wild boar through a park after it stole his laptop bag.
Amusing photographs from Germany show the man running after the animal to try and claim the plastic bag back.
But the cheeky boar and its two piglets appear to be too quick for the sunbather, who can't keep up with their speedy little trotters.
As the incident unfolds, groups of friends and family sat on the grass watch on and laugh.
Heads are seen turning in surprise and amusement in the hilarious photographs.
The incident happened at Teufelssee Lake - a bathing spot in the Grunwell Forest in Berlin, Germany.

Rules:
Each Edition of IN OTHER NEWS will be open for 7 days...
You can post as many stories as you like, but you will only get paid for One Story in any 24 hour period
So in other words, you can only earn WRZ$ once a day.
Each news day will start when I post announcing it
OR at:
9:00 AM CHICAGO TIME (UTC -5)
2:00 PM GMT (UTC -0)

on those days I space out and forget to post or can't due to Real Life :lol:
Stories may be accompanied with images - but No big images, please! 800x800 pixels wide maximum
Videos are allowed, but please keep them short, and post a short summary for those that don't like to click on videos
No Duplicate stories - Where a post has been edited resulting in duplicates, then the last one in time gets disallowed.
And please limit this to reasonably family friendly stories :lol: :lol: :lol:

Reward:
Each news story posted that I feel is acceptable (must be a real story, too few words or simply a headline are not considered acceptable) will earn you 50 WRZ$
If you post multiple stories on any given day, you will only earn 50 WRZ$ for the first story of the Day
All payments will be made at THE END of the weekly news cycle.
Special Bonus - Each week I will award "The Pulitzer Prize" for the best story of the week
The weekly winner of the "The Pulitzer Prize" will receive a 100 WRZ$ bonus
It's just my personal opinion, so my judgement is final

So help bring GOOD news to the members of mobi, and join our reporting team...

IN OTHER NEWS
Aug 3rd, 2022, 2:42 pm

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Aug 3rd, 2022, 2:44 pm
M.M.A. Doctor’s Dilemma: To Stop or Not to Stop:

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Late one Saturday evening in June, two men in their 20s stood across from each other, shirtless and swaying, in a mixed martial arts cage in Exhibit Hall B of the Chattanooga Convention Center. The mat was sticky, a dark canvas of blood and foot sweat. Something in the combatants’ eyes made them look both terrifying and terrified, wolflike and rabbitlike at once.

The bout was one of 12 that evening in the B2 Fighting Series 166, an amateur event, and Dr. Danielle Fabry, a primary care physician with a private practice in Nashville, had been hired to make sure no one got seriously hurt. Stationed by the cage door, she had the best seat in the house.

Combat sports run on the excitement of an unstable equilibrium. In a perfectly matched fight, combatants trade blows until the final bell, bringing their bodies as close as possible to their limits. One mistake, though, and it ends violently. This combination of uncertainty and danger has helped transform mixed martial arts over two decades from a siloed obsession, illegal in a number of U.S. states, to a multibillion-dollar industry.

But even here there are limits to the harm allowed. Referees, often former fighters or trainers themselves, can stop a fight if they think a fighter is too injured to defend him- or herself. So can ringside physicians, who determine whether fighters are fit to step into the ring and to stay there. In combat sports, physicians have had to reckon with the precarious ethics of their role.

“I’m clearing someone to fight today, 20 years from now he walks into my office and has C.T.E., he has Parkinson’s,” said Dr. Nitin Sethi, a neurologist at Weill Cornell Medicine and board member of the Association of Ringside Physicians, or A.R.P., which formed in 1997. “Every doctor who works ringside should feel conflicted.”

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In 2019, Dr. Sethi stopped a fight at Madison Square Garden between two U.F.C. fighters, Nate Diaz and Jorge Masvidal. With the fourth round about to start, a deep cut above Mr. Diaz’s eye opened up; he seemed heavily concussed, and the skin on his forehead was drooping over his eye. When Dr. Sethi intervened, the crowd booed and both fighters protested; afterward, his office phones rang off the hook with abusive messages.

“But how can you let a fighter who is getting injured on your watch go on?” said Dr. Sethi, who has worked ringside for a decade. He quickly noted the paradox of this statement; every moment he sits beside the ring is a moment he lets fighters get injured. “It’s impossible to make this sport safe,” he said.

Dr. Fabry, who started her private practice in 2021, has been doing ringside work for a little over a year. When the opening bell rang in Chattanooga, she leaned forward in her seat and watched the two fighters move toward each other. It wasn’t Madison Square Garden, but the medical stakes — for her and for the combatants — were just as high.

“You can never tell how it’ll go,” she said. In her previous event, a fighter had taken three minutes to revive after being knocked out cold by an uppercut.

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Dr. Fabry drove down from Nashville on Friday, the day before the fight, with her boyfriend and a friend. By 4 p.m. on Saturday, she was in a makeshift locker room, working through pre-fight physicals for more than a dozen jittery men.

“You see the adrenaline from the second they walk into the room,” Dr. Fabry said as she waited for one man’s blood pressure reading and studied the quivering pupils of another.

“Push me away,” she instructed the second man — a test of his mobility and ability to follow basic directions. “Pull me toward you.” Then: “Can you feel when I rub down your arm?” He obeyed as the other man looked on. “Hopefully you’re not fighting each other,” she joked. They were not.

Growing up in Cincinnati, Dr. Fabry had attended a couple of combat events, but her interest blossomed in medical school, when she picked up boxing to relieve stress. “I feel like I always look at it as a doctor,” she said. “I’m like, ‘Oh, that’s going to be a problem.’ But I love boxing, and I love M.M.A. It’s something that I want to be a part of.”

Professional combat sports are overseen by state agencies, and the standards for medical screenings vary. New York requires fighters to undergo a neurological exam, electrocardiogram, dilated eye exam and an M.R.I. before each fight. Most other states just ask for blood work, to check for blood-borne diseases, and a physical. The ringside physician interprets the results and decides who can or cannot fight.

“The commission doesn’t give you anything,” Dr. Fabry said of Tennessee’s medical guidelines for amateur fights, which are overseen by the International Sport Karate Association, or I.S.K.A. “They just give you a short thing” — a vague, quarter-page checklist of body parts and organ systems. Eyes? Check. Abdomen? Check. Neurological? Check.

To fill in her knowledge, Dr. Fabry said, she spent a few days looking over sports-physical checklists online: “I wanted to know, ‘What else should I be looking for?’” After a couple of fights, she had the hang of it. “It’s a lot like the physicals I do as a primary care physician, just a lot faster,” she said.

‘Why We Do What We Do’

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After check-in, the fighters gathered awkwardly in the locker room as officials laid the ground rules: No kneeing a downed opponent. No elbows to the face. No eye pokes, crotch shots, glove-grabbing. “The number one thing for us is fighter safety,” said Brandon Higdon, a B2 promoter.

Bobby Wombacher, the night’s referee, added: “It’s all about fighter safety.” Todd Murray, who was overseeing the event for the I.S.K.A., chimed in: “We don’t want any of y’all getting hurt.”

As the meeting ended, Mr. Higdon hinted that he might give a $100 “locker-room bonus” to fighters who could pull off special finishes — something more dramatic than a judge’s decision. Amateur fighters are otherwise unpaid. In contrast, the U.F.C. pays its top fighters for each bout, plus as much as $50,000 for a particularly spectacular knockout or submission.

The regulation of combat sports is inherently contradictory: A good fight is violent and unsafe — but not too violent or unsafe. (The U.F.C. has fired officials who have allowed fights to go on too long.) From a medical standpoint, each time a fighter is hit in the head, he or she risks a brain bleed that can kill within minutes. And repeated trauma can result years later in chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or C.T.E., which can cause aggressive behavior, depression and eventually dementia.

Many physicians, as well as the American Medical Association and the World Medical Association, have called for the elimination of sanctioned combat sports. “We need to spread the word that brain-bashing is not a socially acceptable spectator sport,” Dr. Stephen Hauser, a neurologist at the University of California, San Francisco, wrote in 2012 in the medical journal Annals of Neurology.

For those who opt to be involved, the A.R.P. has created a standardized set of instructions and recommendations to remove some of the ambiguity of ringside medicine. The group has certified more than 100 doctors across 34 states and 11 countries since its founding.

But once the bell sounds, every ringside physician is alone, charting a calculus of risk, harm and entertainment. “You cannot become a fan,” Dr. Sethi said. “You stop it too late, and the damage is already done.”

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A week earlier, Dr. Sethi and several dozen physicians had attended a virtual seminar hosted by the A.R.P. — a new course on the basics of ringside medicine. This was “Round 8,” dedicated to ethics, and it was led by Dr. Ed Amores, an emergency medicine specialist at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital and an association board member.

Dr. Amores began by showing a video of a South African boxer who had died from a subdural hematoma a couple of days earlier. The video was from the end of boxer’s tenth round, and the fight had been called; the boxer was clearly injured, punching the air above him. “This is why we do what we do,” Dr. Amores said to the attendees.


Dr. Amores nodded, noting that the American Academy of Neurology recommends the presence of a doctor at combat events. Then he added, “Sometimes I feel very enthusiastic about making this unsafe sport safer, and sometimes I really question myself and wonder whether I really should be doing this.”

Dr. Sethi spoke up: “Ed, if you’re not feeling conflicted, I think there’s something majorly wrong.”

Boxers in their twenties come to Dr. Sethi all the time asking to be cleared to fight despite M.R.I.s brimming with small “white” scars that form after traumatic brain injuries. “On our watch, we probably have a bunch of athletes that are going to develop C.T.E.,” he said. “When you and I hang up our gloves, would you be comfortable going to bed and saying, ‘I did the right thing?’”

On that Saturday night in Chattanooga, Tyler Britt entered the cage wearing a cape of animal pelts and a demon mask; it was the penultimate fight of the night, and the crowd was buzzing. He glared at his opponent, Antonio Holt, and drew a finger across his throat.

Mr. Wombacher, standing in the middle of the cage, checked in with the fighters one last time. Ready? Ready. Ready? Ready. Ringside, Dr. Fabry rubbed her legs in anticipation. “This is going to be good,” she said.

At one point in the bout Mr. Britt twisted underneath Mr. Holt and grabbed his right arm, pulling it back like a chicken wing — a kimura lock. “Break his arm!” yelled fans in the crowd. “Break his arm!”

Mr. Holt, stuck in the lock, did not tap to concede the fight, but he did not move. The bones in his forearm looked as though they might burst through the skin. “I’m gonna break your arm,” Mr. Britt said through clenched teeth, tightening the hold.

Mr. Holt reached back, trying to relieve pressure by grabbing his right hand with his left. He swiped at the air once or twice. “I think he’s trying to tap,” Dr. Fabry said aloud to herself; she was poised to rise from her seat. A broken arm could mean the end of Mr. Holt’s fighting career and thousands of dollars in medical bills.

“He’s tapping! He’s tapping!” came voices from the crowd. The referee let the fight continue.

Later, when the excitement had died down and the hall was emptying — after Mr. Holt managed to escape the kimura and went on to win in a technical knockout — Mr. Wombacher and Dr. Fabry stood in the locker room. There was a brief conversation about the fights, and then the doctor headed off to a bar with her companions. Mr. Wombacher lingered. He acknowledged that he could have stopped the Britt-Holt fight during the arm lock.

“It was really deep,” he said, squinting. “Look — the guy kept saying ‘I’ll break your arm’ while on the ground. Well, don’t just say it. Do it.”

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Tyler Britt, left, and Antonio Holt, during their fight.

View: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/29/health/mma-combat-sports-doctors.html
Aug 3rd, 2022, 2:44 pm
Aug 3rd, 2022, 2:45 pm
Ants crawl inside Brazilian woman's Kindle...and start buying books

A Brazilian woman has shared her surprise after ants made a nest inside her Amazon Kindle device, and even started 'buying' books.

Journalist Mariana Lopes Vieira shared a video of the ants crawling all over the Kindle, which appeared to be emanating from the tablet's charging port.

In the footage, hundreds of the bugs can be seen scurrying over the front and back of the infested Kindle and in and out of the hole at its base.

Vieira said she had put her kindle down for a few weeks to read a physical book. Once she finished, she wanted to return her virtual reading.

But when she want to pick up her Kindle, she found the ants had invaded it.

Writing a blog post about the incident, she said the ants had entered the charger hole and made a nest inside the device - rendering it unusable.



'I was desperate! I have several digital books, many of them are sold out titles in the physical edition, I thought it was gone', the journalist wrote.

Vieira said the ants even changed from their usual darker colour to a 'albino' shade - suggesting those coming from the hole were young ants from the nest.

'Ants, little red ants, started their diaspora out of the device, in a terrifying scene. After a while, the dots change colour and scale, and even smaller, albino animals run over each other.' she wrote.

Some species of ants, such as the Nylanderia fulva (Raspberry Crazy Ants) that originate in South America, tend to hide in small placed that generate heat. As a result, electronic devices can be a popular nesting place for such bugs.

She said she was even more shocked when she started getting email notifications saying two books had been purchased on her account. "After a few minutes, I got a notification: 'Congratulations on your purchase'," she said.

Among the purchases was Robots and Empire by Isaac Asimov. (Clearly the ants are sci-fi fans.)

When she turned to her Kindle to see how the purchase had happened, she discovered that the touch screen wasn't working anymore.

In that time the ants had purchased O Anel de Gyges by Eduardo Giannetti. (now adding fantasy fiction to their repertoire).

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The purchases had been made by the ants, she said, which had gotten into the casing of the Kindle and were causing it to send commands as if in use by a person.

Vieira said she had the 'one-click purchase' option enabled, meaning she can purchase books with just a single tap. This would have made it easier for the insects to trigger the device to make purchases, she said. She quickly used her computer to disable the one-click buy option on her Amazon account.

However, because of the infestation she found that many of the tablet's other functions were not working, or causing it to carry out other unwanted actions - such as eBook pages turning by themselves.

Her friend, writer Fabiane Guimarães, shared her video on social media. Her post gained more than 66,000 likes and sent the name of Amazon's e-book reader to the top of Brazil's trending list on Twitter.

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Speaking to TecMundo, a Brazilian tech news website, Rafael Rech di Muzio explained how the ants were causing the unwanted actions.

'Kindle uses a capacitive touch, which detects capacitance changes on the display so it knows where the touch was made,' the Mechatronics Engineering graduate said. He explained the ant's movements were registered by the devices as touches.

'The ants, in large numbers, can change the capacitance of the tracks and the equipment understands that there was a touch or some gesture on the screen.'


Taking a friend's advice she placed the Kindle in a plastic bag and then in the freezer.

"I thought it was a little extreme, but as it wasn't working anymore, when I got home I put it in the freezer," she said.

When the Kindle came out of the freezer the ants had gone to heaven and the touch screen was working. Experts have said that the method is not foolproof, and could damage the device, with Amazon explaining to the tech website that customers 'should also not use their devices near sinks or wet places (if their model is not waterproof) and should not leave them exposed to extreme heat or cold.'

(Terry Pratchett would be proud he predicted the future. His Discworld computer, Hex, included ants.)
Aug 3rd, 2022, 2:45 pm

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Aug 3rd, 2022, 2:51 pm
Black bear enters Connecticut home, raids snacks from kitchen



A Connecticut man doing yard work at his home went inside for a drink and found a black bear snacking in his kitchen.

Christine Vannie of West Hartford said her husband, Bill, was working in the yard Sunday morning and decided to go inside for a drink.

The man went into his kitchen and found a black bear eating marshmallows and peanut butter crackers that had been left on a counter top.

"Go on, that way. Go. Get out of here," Bill Vannie can be heard saying in a video he captured while chasing the intruder back outside.

The couple determined the bear had broken through a screen door to enter the house.

Christine Vannie said the refrigerator in the home's garage had been ransacked a few days earlier, and the couple suspects the same black bear was behind both incidents.

Vannie said the incidents were reported to the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection and officials said a bear trap will be placed near the couple's home.
Aug 3rd, 2022, 2:51 pm

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Believe me, you are someone's crush. Yes, you are!