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Aug 10th, 2022, 2:46 pm
This Hero Dog-Lover Keeps Seniors and Their Pets Together With ‘Peace of Mind’

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A dog rescue program specialized to help the dogs of the elderly has allowed hundreds of dogs to stay with their owners who could no longer physically take care of them.

The program also takes in and finds homes for dogs who have to be put up for adoption in the case that an elderly person has to enter a care home or hospice.

This often heart-breaking, more often heart-fortifying work is done by Peace of Mind Dog Rescue, and has so far helped find new permanent homes and families for 3,000 dogs, each with their own little stories of life alongside a senior citizen.

The heart-brain-child of dog rescue worker Carie Broecker, Peace of Mind was started when a woman with impaired movements had needed Broecker to walk her dog Savannah, but eventually was forced to part with the canine entirely.

“I said I promise I will make sure that Savannah finds a good home,” Broecker said. “She was so relieved that I could make that promise to her.”

That was in 2009, and now Broecker runs a senior citizen dog walking service, a foster program to help return the idea of a family change into dogs’ minds, and a rescue shelter for elderly dogs and dogs from the elderly.

“It blows us away over and over again how somebody will fall in love with a silly-looking blind chihuahua with a tongue hanging out and all kinds of medical issues,” Broecker said.

Often the elderly dogs need vet care, paid for by donations.

Broecker says that elderly dogs, like elderly people, often get overlooked in society. She’s working to change that, and provide a safety net for owners who want to make sure their best friends find a home after they’re gone.

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Aug 10th, 2022, 2:46 pm

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Aug 10th, 2022, 3:02 pm
The Italians Finally Chased Domino's Out of Italy
Domino's opened its first restaurant in Italy back in 2015.

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Domino’s foray into the motherland of pizza—Italy—proved to be a failure. The pizza restaurant company has closed its final Italy-based store after seven years of operating in the country.

If there’s a thing Italians don’t mess around about, it’s their food. Thin crust, Margherita-style pizza with mozzarella cheese so luscious it might as well be a liquid is a staple offering in the country. Contrast that with America’s own Domino’s—which offers a puffy, round piece of bread smothered in sauce flavored with a caricature of Italian spices and topped with shredded cheese—it’s not a mystery why the pizza chain didn’t really take off in Italy. According to Bloomberg, Domino’s has officially closed its last franchise operating in Italy after years of trying to find a foothold in the country in a franchising agreement with ePizza s.p.A.

“We attribute the issue to the significantly increased level of competition in the food delivery market with both organized chains and ‘mom & pop’ restaurants delivering food, to service and restaurants reopening post pandemic and consumers out and about with revenge spending,” says ePizza, quoted by Bloomberg, in their fourth-quarter 2021 earnings report.

Domino’s debut in Italy began in Milan as the first store in the Italian franchise. It opened in 2015 to franchisee Alessandro Lazzaroni. Lazzaroni told ABC News in 2015 that Italian Domino’s restaurants would feature a twist on the American-style pizza, sourcing ingredients locally and relying on more Italian-based ingredients like prosciutto. It was a nifty experiment that resulted in 29 stores being opened on Italian soil with a total of 880 planned, but an experiment that eventually ended in utter failure. Domino’s did not immediately return Gizmodo’s request for comment.

I’m not above ordering Domino’s every once in a while. As a New Jerseyan—one from the land of infinite local pizzerias—I’m staunch in my belief that there is always room for chain pizza every once in a while. However even with such a liberal view of the delicacy, even I can see that Domino’s Italy was doomed for failure. Arrivederci!
https://gizmodo.com/dominos-pizza-italy-1849390411
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The last time I had Domino's was sometime in the early 90's. I recall it being slightly more flavorful and easier to chew than the box it came in. I've never understood how it manages to survive here in NYC other than it's cheap. Granted, IMO the average NYC slice is worse than it used to be and the city's rep for great pizza is coasting on its legacy and going down in sludge of weak sauce and cheap cheese. I'm fortunate enough to have a few excellent spots within walking distance - along with several very well known spots that serve mediocre crap to undiscerning tourists and rake in a mint. 'scuze, me - need to go shout at some clouds now...Gov
Aug 10th, 2022, 3:02 pm

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Aug 10th, 2022, 3:05 pm
Pups get wet and wild at California's World Dog Surfing championships

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Hundreds of dog lovers and dozens of dogs have gathered for the World Dog Surfing Championships in California.

The event, held at Pacifica State Beach near San Francisco, saw wave-riding pooches judged on everything from technique to confidence and size of their wave.

The hounds are placed in groups according to size, from small to medium and large-very large.

There were also tandem dog classes, as well as tandem human-dogs, with owners joining their pups on the board.



Saturday's event, billed as the "premier dog surfing event in the world", has been held in the San Francisco area since 2006.

Jeffrey Niebor's seven-year-old labrador Charlie, who started surfing at the age of two, walked away with second place in the large-very large group.

"I can’t even explain his passion for it and how much he enjoys it," Mr Niebor said.

"He has such a good time. Even when we’re not surfing competitively, if we just go to the beach and we’re hanging out and he takes his surfboard to the water and he’ll bark on the waves, people just love it and we just like to keep it positive."

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James Wall went one better with his dog Faith, a 10-year-old rescue dog, winning first place in the same category.

"She was scared of a lot of stuff as a puppy. And we just started going to the beach. She jumped on one of the surfboards and I was like, yeah let’s give it a try ... and she hasn’t looked back since,” he said.

Prerana Rani, a dog owner and spectator from Santa Clara, was curious if her pup would take to the waves like those competing.

"It was amazing to see so many dogs come together and just surf. This is the first time I've seen dogs surf so it was really good, and I hope my dog will be inspired," she said.
Aug 10th, 2022, 3:05 pm

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Aug 10th, 2022, 3:45 pm
People in stitches at sign warning them not to fall for dog faking her own death

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Dogs will do silly things to get our attention, from pulling irresistible puppy eyes to causing havoc at home. One pooch has been caught red-handed going to an extreme for cuddles and food.

The dog, named Chrissy, has a tendency to fake her own death in the middle of the road when she is denied treats - and refuses to go inside until she gets one. Her owner has been forced to put up a sign outside of their house to warn passers-by not to fall for her dramatics.

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A local walker spotted the hilarious warning and "couldn't resist" sharing it on Reddit, where it garnered 46,000 upvotes.

The post reads: "If you see a little dog near this sign... please don't worry, she is not lost, she lives here, her name is Chrissy and she is sulking, she is very friendly and loves fuss but she refuses to come inside unless we give her one of her treats... We are out of treats.

"If you witness her faking her own death by laying in the road and pretending she has been run over, walk on by, she is just looking for sympathy as she has had no treats. Thanks."

Chrissy can be spotted curled up and looking devastated behind the signpost, with Reddit users labelling her a "drama queen".

"I'd cave, off to buy her treats," an animal lover commented, whilst another said: "I'm glad I can pick up my dog because she's 100% petty enough to do this."

The hilarious post sparked a thread of people sharing their dog's best acting moments.

An owner explained: "My Lab fakes a limp too. Then I get the elastic bandage and wrap his leg and tell him he can't go play until he's better. It miraculously is healed instantly."

A second said: "Mine would pull an Oscar-worthy 'I'm being abused' act when she didn't want to go outside or in her kennel.

"Freezing, cowering, showing her belly, refusing to move... it was incredibly pathetic. But the second I picked her up she'd start wagging her tail and generally acting like nothing had happened."
Aug 10th, 2022, 3:45 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
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Aug 10th, 2022, 4:54 pm
Pirates' Rodolfo Castro loses phone during slide into third base

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Pittsburgh Pirates infielder Rodolfo Castro's phone flew out of his pants pocket as he slid into third base during a game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, creating a rare sequence and leading to a talk with his manager.

The odd play occurred in the top of the fourth inning of the 6-4 loss Tuesday at Chase Field in Phoenix.
The Pirates trailed 2-0 when Castro took a walk in the third at-bat of the frame. Pirates designated hitter Oneil Cruz then hit a slider for a line-drive single to center field. Castro flew around second base and left his feet for a dive into third.

His phone then shot out of his left pocket as he hovered above the ground. The phone then bounced through the infield dirt and hit the base. Third base umpire Adam Hamari pointed to the phone on the ground to alert Castro.

The Pirates infielder then picked up the device and handed it to third-base coach Mike Rebelo, who had a surprised look on his face.

View: https://www.upi.com/Sports_News/MLB/202 ... 660133410/
Aug 10th, 2022, 4:54 pm
Aug 10th, 2022, 5:55 pm
Jaida Lee becomes 1st female to pitch in Canada Games men's competition

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Jaida Lee made history at the Canada Summer Games on Monday, becoming the first female to play in the male baseball competition since it began in 1967.

Lee pitched 1 1/3 innings for Newfoundland and Labrador in a 17-7 loss to Alberta to kick off the day's slate of games.

The 16-year-old from St. John's, who was Newfoundland and Labrador's flag-bearer in the opening ceremony, pitched a scoreless fourth inning, but Alberta came back with a six-run fifth to put the game away.

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The baseball she threw will be enshrined in the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in St. Marys, Ont.

In other results at the Games held in Ontario's Niagara region, Quebec's Mathis Beaulieu won the men's sprint triathlon, with Daniel Damian of British Columbia taking silver and Tristen Jones of Ontario picking up bronze.

Colette Reimer of B.C. won the women's event, with Ontario's Anja Krueger second and Alberta's Sophia Howell third.

Ontario's Ava Holmgren won the women's cross-country mountain bike, followed by B.C.'s Marin Lowe and Quebec's Marie-Fay St-Onge.

Mia West of Winnipeg was thrilled to win Manitoba's first gold of the Games, as she swam to victory in the 200-metre butterfly event. Teagen Purvis of Selkirk, Man., captured silver in the Special Olympics 50-metre breaststroke, and Halle West of Winnipeg won a bronze in the 50-metre breaststroke event.

Maxime St-Onge and Charles-Antoine St-Onge took the top two podium spots for Quebec in the men's event, with Ontario's Matthew Leliveld finishing third.

British Columbia, on the strength of one gold, eight silver and four bronze, leads the medal standings with 13. Ontario, with a Games-high nine golds, is next at 12. Alberta and Quebec each have eight medals, followed by Manitoba with four.

Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador each have one medal.
Aug 10th, 2022, 5:55 pm

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Currently Reading: Better Left Unsent by Lia Louis
Aug 10th, 2022, 6:17 pm
Lego train with 101 cars breaks Guinness World Record



A New Zealand teenager earned a Guinness World Record when he used Lego pieces to build a toy train with 101 cars.

Alexander Blong, 14, of Auckland, said he was inspired by his boredom during COVID-19 lockdowns and the series Snowpiercer to attempt to build a Lego train with 101 cars.

"I was bored, as most people were, and watching Netflix. There was this show I really liked called Snowpiercer, which was about this really long train that goes around the globe," Blong told The Guardian.

Blong said it took him about 50 hours to build the 82-foot-long train. His creation earned the Guinness World Record for most carriages in a toy train, beating the previous record by 32 carriages.

"This is truly incredible and inspires me to dream and create bigger projects," he told Guinness World Records.
Aug 10th, 2022, 6:17 pm

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Believe me, you are someone's crush. Yes, you are!
Aug 10th, 2022, 11:02 pm
Couple fed up by sound of neighbour’s cock take him to court

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Friedrich-Wilhelm K., 76, and his wife Jutta, who live in Bad Salzuflen in Germany, are plucking fed up with this rooster

A couple are desperate to get their next-door neighbour’s chicken to cluck off after it has made their lives ‘torture’.

Friedrich-Wilhelm K., 76, and his wife Jutta, have got their feathers in a ruffle after hearing the annoying rooster incessantly squawking up to 200 times a day.

They’ve now decided to take its owner to court to get rid of the crowing chicken, which is called Magda.

Friedrich-Wilhelm, who lives in Bad Salzuflen in Germany, told local media: ‘He doesn’t start until 8am because he is locked up at night but then he crows 100 to 200 times throughout the day.

‘We can’t use the garden and we can’t open any windows, it’s unbearable.

‘We really did a lot of tests. Our kids tried, our neighbours tried.

‘The neighbour doesn’t give up his rooster and we have to either live with that, or we have to win in court.’

Jutta added: ‘It’s hard to talk about torture, but that’s what it’s like.’

Not too chicken to complain, the couple have started recording a daily log of the noise in their bid to get the rooster removed.

Friedrich-Wilhelm claimed another neighbour actually moved away because he was so fed up with the noise – but he will not be driven to do the same.

The bird crows at an intensity of 80 decibels, which is the same level as a heavy street of traffic or a busy restaurant.

This is also only slightly lower than a welder, which wings in at up to 95 decibels.

The couple’s lawyer, Torsten Gieseke, said: ‘A cockerel doesn’t belong on a quiet housing estate.’

But the bird’s owner, Michael, claimed Magda is essential to their garden, adding: ‘The hens need the rooster, otherwise they would pluck each other.’

The case is due to be heard in court shortly.

https://metro.co.uk/2022/08/10/couple-s ... -17157634/
Aug 10th, 2022, 11:02 pm

Book request - An Idyll in Sodom by Georges de Lys [7000 WRZ$] Reward!
https://forum.mobilism.org/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=5459036
Aug 11th, 2022, 12:09 pm
Escaped capybara spotted wandering loose in Missouri
Aug. 10, 2022 / 1:29 PM*

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A capybara, a South American animal known as the world's largest rodent, is on the loose in Lake of the Ozarks, Mo. Photo by Pixel-mixer/Pixabay.com

Aug. 10 (UPI) -- A Missouri resident said she was shocked during a recent drive when she spotted an unusual animal: a loose capybara, the world's largest living rodent.

Christine Ziarkowski said she was driving on Horseshoe Bend, in the Lake of the Ozarks area, when she spotted the animal near the Blue Cat Lodge.

"I was driving and I saw it on the side of the road. At first I thought it was a dog or cat but when I circled around I saw that it was a capybara," Ziarkowski told LakeExpo.

Capybaras are the world's largest living rodents and are native to South America.

Ziarkowski's husband, Bruce, posted about the sighting on Facebook, and received a comment from Anetka Borowski, the animal's owner.

Borowski said the capybara escaped from a pen on her property.

The female pet, named Capy, had left the area before Borowski could attempt to recapture her.

Borowski asked anyone who spots Capy to message her on Facebook instead of trying to capture her themselves.
Aug 11th, 2022, 12:09 pm

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Aug 11th, 2022, 2:37 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
THURSDAY AUGUST 11

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
Aug 11th, 2022, 2:37 pm

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Aug 11th, 2022, 2:40 pm
Wildlife: Polar bear euthanized after injuring French woman in remote Norway Islands

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A polar bear was euthanized in Norway on Monday after officials said it injured a French woman who was camping in the country's remote Svalbard Islands.

The woman was part of a tour group of 25 people camping on the north side of the fjord Isfjorden when the polar bear entered her tent, Police Chief Superintendent Stein Olav Bredli told Norwegian outlets Svalbard Posten and NRK.

The woman, who is in her 40s but was not immediately identified, received non-life-threatening injuries to her arm and was flown to a hospital.

The polar bear was chased out of the area when shots were fired, Bredli said. Wildlife experts and police later located the bear and found that it was badly injured and had to be euthanized, he added.

The bear's remains were then taken to the town of Longyearbyen for examination.

Last week, a tent camp was evacuated in Ekmanfjorden after it was visited by a polar bear that was not frightened off by gunshots. Officials said it had gotten into the group's food tent.

Bredli told the Svalbard Posten that recent encounters with polar bears serve as an important reminder that the animals are dangerous.

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https://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News ... 659970652/
Aug 11th, 2022, 2:40 pm
Aug 11th, 2022, 3:16 pm
Gorilla Sliding Entrance Stuns Zoo Visitor and Goes Viral

A TikTok video of a strangely behaving gorilla showing a zoo visitor a "butt lift" went viral with more than 70 million views.



CNN's Jeanne Moos spoke with the woman who made the term "gorilla glide" a trend.



According to the zoo, 'Cenzoo does do this often to remind the other gorillas and our zoo guests that he is the boss. It is his way to show off for the ladies".

https://edition.cnn.com/videos/us/2022/08/10/gorilla-slide-tiktok-video-viral-zoo-visitor-jeanne-moos-pkg-vpx.cnn
Aug 11th, 2022, 3:16 pm

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Believe me, you are someone's crush. Yes, you are!
Aug 11th, 2022, 3:58 pm
Dog keeps kidnapping tiny turtles and taking them home to 'make friends'

Dogs will often form the most unlikeliest friendships with cats, rabbits and even chickens - but one pooch keeps going out of her way to make friends with turtles. Mya the great Pyrenees has got a newfound love for the tiny reptiles and often 'kidnaps' them to take home.

Her owner Rachel Laposka, 19, filmed Mya's latest capture and uploaded the hilarious video on TikTok, where social media users were smitten with her gentle nature. The six-year-old white dog can be seen carrying a turtle in her mouth and waiting at the back door to be let in with it.

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She is reluctant to release the small animal and lays on the floor with her cheeks full. After much persuasion from Rachel, Mya drops the turtle to the ground and looks at it guiltily.

Student Rachel, from Sharpsburg, Georgia, US, says this isn't the first time the white pooch has kidnapped a turtle and brought it home.

"Mya only recently discovered she can pick up turtles, and she's only done it twice," Rachel explained.

"She's a great Pyrenees, which is a breed that used to be used for things like herding and protecting cattle on a farm.

"Chances are she saw the little turtle and decided she wanted to protect it, it's also likely she saw it and just wanted a friend."

The video captured the hearts of TikTokers and racked up 1.4 million views, with users laughing over her "stubborn nature" and desperation to make friends.

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And it seems Mya isn't the only pooch with a fascination for reptiles as lots of dog owners could relate.

"Glad to know my dog isn't the only one that does this. My dog makes us chase after him to save the turtles," one person commented.

"My bulldog does this. She never hurts them, she's just obsessed with having them live inside," another explained.

Though many animal lovers did warn Mya to be careful adopting wildlife, with one saying: "She'll learn her lesson when one of them bites her on the tongue."

Another dog has struck up an unusual friendship with a chipmunk - and won't let anybody else join their gang.

American bulldog Winston loves to play and hang around with Mike the chipmunk, and always feeds him breakfast.

Owner Gary Townsend, from Ontario, Canada, said: "Winston always wants to come out early every morning with me for my coffee and feed the chipmunk so we do this almost every day and constantly throughout the day."
Aug 11th, 2022, 3:58 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
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Aug 11th, 2022, 5:53 pm
For Sale: The ‘Sexiest’ Hourly Rate Hotel in Manhattan
The owner calls the Liberty Inn “the cleanest short-stay hotel in town.”
But in a changing neighborhood, “a hotel like this doesn’t make sense,” he says.

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The Liberty Inn, the last hourly rate hotel in Manhattan’s meatpacking district, sits alone on a tiny triangular block beside the West Side Highway. Its website bills its rooms as the “most sexiest” in the city, and for nearly 50 years it has provided sanctuary for bouts of afternoon passion, clandestine affairs and lunchtime quickies.

So when it was reported that it had been put on the market with hopes of fetching about $25 million, I decided to check in, to bear witness to a kinky vestige of old New York before it was gone.

The hotel is a nondescript three-story brick building with a burgundy awning at the entrance. Long before Google’s New York headquarters sprouted up a few blocks away, the hotel’s pint-size building endured decades of change, persisting through several cycles of Lower Manhattan history.

In place of meatpacking plants and after-hours clubs, there are now brunch spots for the tech crowd and boutique hotels, including the Standard, with its penthouse night spot Le Bain. Across the highway, Little Island, built at an estimated cost of $260 million by the mogul Barry Diller, rises out of the Hudson.
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In the early 1900s, it was the Strand Hotel, a boardinghouse for sailors. When the Titanic sank in 1912, and the Carpathia arrived with its survivors at Pier 54, The New York Times rented out rooms at the Strand for reporters to file dispatches about the disaster. In the late 1960s it was called the Hide-a-Way Motel. And until the mid-1980s, the hotel shared the building with the Anvil, a famed gay nightclub.
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When I stopped by last week, a family of tourists was buying ice cream from a truck parked out front. Inside the narrow lobby, a vending machine sells condoms, cookies and candy, and the front desk is protected by a window of bulletproof glass. A sign listed the room rates: $95 for a two-hour stay; $155 for six hours.

“Just you?” the concierge asked.

I nodded.

“OK, fine, but someone can’t come and join you after.”
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He slipped me a key through the slot, and soon I entered room No. 204, a cozy den bathed in red light. The bed had a faux reptile-skin headboard. Hanging above it was a ceiling mirror accented with cloud drawings. Purell packets sat on the night stand. A sign by the door read: “ALWAYS Turn Knob on Lock to Prevent Mistaken Entry!”
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A black stump-like object sat against a wall. I soon discovered that it unfolded and realized it was the Liberator, a wedgelike apparatus that helps lovers contort into imaginative positions. The room was pristine, but I discovered one scrawl of passion on the Liberator’s surface: a faint handprint.
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When I caught my reflection in the ceiling mirror, I experienced a flashback to my own encounter with the Liberty when I was 21 or so. I was just starting to see someone, but we both still lived at home with our parents, and so one night we took a blurry cab ride to the Liberty. What ensued is fuzzy, but I remember that an iPhone, tucked into a cup for amplification, was used to play Arcade Fire, and a Jolly Rancher got stuck to someone’s hair. The clumsy adventure ended two hours later, but it bonded us, and the relationship became the first serious romance of my life.
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The phone rang toward the end of my brief stay.

“Fifteen minutes,” the concierge said.

On my way out, I hoarded a bunch of Liberty Inn-branded products like slippers and soap bars as keepsakes, and I’ve since added them to my collection of old New York ephemera: matchbooks from Toots Shor and Maxwell’s Plum, coat check tags from the Four Seasons, a swizzle stick from the Waldorf Astoria.

The Tour
For a few days, I’d been trying to contact the Liberty’s owner, who, according to an 2011 article in The Times, was named Robert Boyd, but I was having trouble reaching him. I also grew confused, because an article in Crain’s New York Business about the building’s prospective sale said the owner was a man named Edward Raboy.

On a return visit to the hotel, I told the concierge I was the journalist who had been calling and asked if either Robert or Edward were around. He made a phone call, relaying to someone that I’d arrived, and then he grinned and told me: “They’re the same guy.”

Momentarily, a man in his 70s wearing glasses and a hearing aid walked down the stairs to meet me. He said he was Mr. Raboy and politely explained that he had used the name Robert Boyd as an alias over the years to help him deal with the idiosyncrasies that can come with running a business as peculiar as the Liberty Inn.

“What does it matter now?” he told me. “I’ve got nothing to hide.”

Mr. Raboy said his father had run the establishment when it was called the Hide-a-Way, adding that he took over in 1977, back when meatpackers in bloodstained aprons still worked in the neighborhood, and he soon started running it with his wife. He said that he was reluctant to tell his hotel’s full story, because he hoped to recount it one day in a book, but he agreed to give me a tour of its rooms.

First we visited No. 103, which featured a hot tub and wall art that depicted eroticized characters from “Alice in Wonderland.”
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“As you can see, there’s a full-length wall mirror, which people appreciate,” he said. “We don’t use rugs because they can become the dirtiest thing.

“Our team is constantly deep cleaning every inch of every room,” he continued. “Cleanliness is next to godliness. Even back when we first started, we were the cleanest short-stay hotel in town.”

Room 104 glowed in a soothing blue light. Room 209 had a hand-painted mural on its ceiling depicting a frisky couple. The bed in Room 210, which Mr. Raboy said was one of the Liberty’s most popular suites, had giant red lips for a headboard.
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“There’s something cute and different about each room, and we have people who take to certain rooms and keep requesting them,” he said. “We’re trying to induce people into a good time here. We don’t follow them into their rooms, but we understand what they’re doing in there.”

Reflecting on his years running the Liberty, Mr. Raboy said that the decision to put the building up for sale was bittersweet, adding that it also just made sense. He cited wanting to retire and the neighborhood’s gentrification among his reasons for leaving the business.

“So much has changed since the 1970s, back when I called this area the ‘Wild West Side,’” he said. “It’s now turned into an almost sedate kind of place. What was then appropriate for a hotel like this doesn’t make sense quite the same way anymore. Above all, the building is now more valuable to other people financially, because it’s so unique.”

“Hourly hotels are like that Rodney Dangerfield quote, ‘You don’t get no respect,’” he added. “But it’s been a fabulous run.”

After the tour, I perched on the High Line just across the street to observe people entering and leaving the Liberty. One man led a woman inside with the swagger of someone who had been there before. Another pair entered with some hesitation. As I kept watching the afternoon couples emerge back into the tumult of the city, I realized they were all holding hands.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/10/style/hourly-rate-hotel-manhattan.html
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Oh man, The Liberty. The last time I was there two hours ran $50 and ten bucks got you another hour if you needed more time when the 15-minute warning came and you still hadn't. Then the quick clamber into enough clothes to run downstairs and throw a greasy sawbuck through the plexiglass barrier to the bored, cranky cashier. If you were there on the late side on a weekend there was usually a backup in the small lobby of other "lovebirds" waiting their turn to for one of the small and surprisingly decently clean rooms. The entire cross section of NYC came to the Liberty to get their (largely) illicit rocks off. If I close my eyes I can smell the waft of the industrial strength ammonia they used to hose down the halls and the rank stank of nervous B.O. and heavy, sweet perfume and aftershave that hung in the lobby. Might just have to take one last trip there before it gets sold - Gov
Aug 11th, 2022, 5:53 pm

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Aug 11th, 2022, 6:10 pm
6-Year-Old Bodie Boring Survives Being Run Over by Bulldozer: 'Strongest Little Boy in the World'

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Bodie Boring, a 6-year-old from Texas, is recovering after he survived being run over by an 18,000-pound bulldozer.

According to CBS affiliate KBTX, Bodie was at a job site with his father when he was run over by the bulldozer on July 27.

The young boy has since been hospitalized while recovering from fractures in his pelvic bone, two bruised lungs, a skull fracture, a blood clot in his brain, and a brain bleed, the news station reported. He was also recently diagnosed with COVID-19.

But in a recent update to Facebook, Bodie's mother, Samantha, said he may be going home by Friday.

"Although it is scary with him still having the blood clot they said they will still monitor him closely with frequent follow ups & imaging so that give me a little comfort," she wrote in a post on Thursday.

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"We are so blessed," she added. "God is Good all the time #BodieStrong #bodietough."

The family also posted a video of Bodie walking slowly inside his hospital room — a sign of the progress he has made so far.

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"He has amazed me so much," Samantha told KBTX. "His spirit has been so positive this whole time. Even in his worse pain, he's just been amazing."

She continued: "This is a miracle, and there's only one explanation as to why he's still here and I truly believe that that's God."

he bulldozer that ran over Bodie weighed as much as 18,000 pounds, per the Miami Herald. Bodie's family has since started a GoFundMe campaign to help raise money for medical expenses.

"Our sweet Bodie Glenn was in a terrible accident today where he was run over by a Bull Dozer," a description on the page said.

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"He's the strongest little boy in the world and he is pushing through but he has a long road to recovery," it continued. "If you are able, please donate to help cover his medical expenses and time away from work that Samantha and [Bodie's father] Dugan will need to be by his side during his recovery."

The campaign has raised nearly $50,000 as of Thursday afternoon.
Aug 11th, 2022, 6:10 pm

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