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Penguin Swims 8,000KM Every Year To See The Man Who Saved Him

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A Magellanic penguin that migrates from Patagonia and a retired bricklayer in a Brazilian fishing village have struck up an unusual friendship.

71-year-old retired bricklayer and part time fisherman Joao Pereira de Souza found Dindim, a South American Magellanic penguin, covered in oil and close to death. When De Souza nursed him back to health, however, he found that Dindim didn’t want to leave; when he finally did, De Souza was surprised to see him return the next year, and the years following.

“I love the penguin like it’s my own child and I believe the penguin loves me,” Joao told Globo TV. “No one else is allowed to touch him. He pecks them if they do. He lays on my lap, lets me give him showers, allows me to feed him sardines and to pick him up.”

Via

Lithuanian Police Officers Did THIS On International Women’s Day And Won The Internet

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For the last couple of years, Lithuanian officers have been pulling women over, but for a good reason – to honour them for International Women’s Day. Instead of a ticket, they hand them flowers to celebrate the occasion.

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The teacher who turned his classroom into a farm

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A life-long Bronx resident and educator, Stephen Ritz has come up with a unique way to engage his students and change their surroundings.

You can help Steve bring Green Bronx Machine to more kids who’ll love it.

Andy Samberg and The Lonely Island’s Pop Music Mockumentary Trailer Is Here

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“It takes a village… to make me look dope.” Andy Samberg plays a spoiled pop star surrounded by yes men and his err… rather important employees in Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping, a mockumentary co-written and co-directed by The Lonely Island.

Why Do Some Noises Make You Cringe? Let’s Bring In The Science

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Hank Green of SciShow offers his explanation as to why certain sounds are considered to be so awful to listen to. It’s not the actual sound, but the frequency.

…it turns out that there’s a good scientific reason why certain sounds set most people’s teeth on edge: human ears are extra sensitive to a particular range of pitches. Although where that sensitivity comes from is still up for debate. In 1986, a group of neuroscientists tried to get to the bottom of these intense reactions by doing what so many researchers do: unpleasant things to volunteers. Specifically, they asked 24 adults to rank a series of 16 sounds based on how unpleasant they thought those sounds were. And although that isn’t a very big sample size, the noises that were consistently rated the nastiest — like the sound of a fork scraping a plate or squealing brakes — all had something in common: They share a frequency range between 2,000 and 5,000 hertz, where our ears happen to be especially sensitive.

Lucy Blair, Digital Marketer, Gets It Right On Why Music Is Less Important In Youth Culture

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“We listen to more individual tracks because we’re discovering more music, but that may be leading to more fickle artist/fan relationships And in response, the music industry is mainly sitting there going ‘Shit! How do we get more plays and visibility on streaming services, and how do we crack discovery?’”

“Kids and teens discover music because they want a way to identify themselves.

“They create content that’s very episodic, short-form and very addictive, and they tend to focus on one key community first – YouTube, Instagram, Snapchat or whatever it is. They build up these huge audiences, and along the way, music is getting less important in youth culture.

“Because musicians are trying to spread themselves thin across all these platforms – streaming, social, messaging – and it’s not really working because the audiences are so much less emotionally engaged. There’s a tyranny of choice of music, and slowly but surely our emotional connection to it is being eroded.

“As an artist, it’s not about trying to sell to more people. The trick is to make people give a shit about you: to make them feel something. Those are the people who will keep coming back and streaming your music in the long term.”

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Lady Gaga Speaks Out: ‘I’ve Suffered Through Depression and Anxiety My Whole Life’

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You’ve met thousands of people who’ve been affected by the Born This Way foundation. Who is someone you can’t forget?

Lady Gaga: There are a lot of kids that I could talk about. One I’ve become very good friends with is this girl, Emma. She has cerebral palsy. She’s in a wheelchair. I met her on the [2013] Born Brave Bus, when it followed the Born This Way Ball Tour, and we shared a very deep connection about the pain she was in. There were all these people around — cameras and journalists wanting to capture the moment between us — and I said to everyone, “Could you leave us alone?” I just wanted to be alone with her and ask her if she was OK. She was in her chair, kind of hunched over, but still with this very brave smile on her face. I swore I was in the presence of maybe one of the greatest people. Moments like that make you go, “Everyone should learn from this person — this person knows what it means to self-empower through adversity, this person knows what it means to be strong when you’re not.”

When you’re listening to these kids’ stories, what’s the fundamental problem?

Lady Gaga: Depression and anxiety really link them. There is something in the way that we are now, with our cell phones and people are not looking at each other and not being in the moment with each other, that kids feel isolated. They read all of this extremely hateful language on the Internet. The internet is a toilet. It is. It used to be a fantastic resource — but you have to sort through shit to find the good stuff.

These kids just want to feel human, but they feel like robots. They don’t understand why they’re so sad. There are scientific reasons, which the foundation researches, why you feel sad when you look at your phone all day.

I’ve suffered through depression and anxiety my entire life, I still suffer with it every single day. I just want these kids to know that that depth that they feel as human beings is normal. We were born that way. This modern thing, where everyone is feeling shallow and less connected? That‘s not human.

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Video: Bing Crosby’s visit to Vancouver BC in 1948

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This cool newsreel shows Bingo Crosby visiting Vancouver, BC in 1948. It’s likely around the time of the film The Emperor Waltz starring Bing and Joan Fontaine was released. That movie, filmed on location in Jasper National Park in Alberta, is about a brash American gramophone salesman in Austria at the turn of the twentieth century who tries to convince Emperor Franz Joseph to buy a gramophone so the product will gain favor with the Austrian people.