The robot was so convincing that the mountain gorillas accepted it into their troop.John Downer ProductionsUgandan gorillas as seen from the POV of the robotic gorilla.
If you thought primate behavior was remarkably human before, wait until you see a troop of mountain gorillas joyfully singing and farting while eating dinner together. Documentary filmmakers managed to capture this remarkable footage for the first time ever using a realistic robotic “spy” gorilla.
When the local government in Taiwan threatened to demolish Huang Yung-Fu's home, he began painting — and created the world-famous Rainbow Village. Allan Lau/Pixabay fanglanhsu/Flickr 3Q_9527/Flickr ironypoisoning/Flickr chia ying yang/Flickr Bored Panda Victor Liu/Flickr pang yu liu/Flickr Trendy Wang/Flickr Nisa yeh/Flickr othree/Flickr chia ying Yang/Flickr othree/Flickr othree/Flickr seplaire/Instagram othree/Flickr ironypoisoning/Flickr Like this gallery?
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Taiwan’s Rainbow Village Is A Testament To The Power Of Art View Gallery Huang Yung-Fu wakes up well before dawn every day.
Pieper Lewis, 17, was also sentenced to five years of probation for killing 38-year-old Zachary Brooks on June 1, 2020.TwitterPieper Lewis pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter and willful injury.
When Pieper Lewis was 15 years old, the man who called himself her “boyfriend” started trafficking her for sex. After she was repeatedly raped by a man named Zachary Brooks, Lewis became enraged, grabbed a knife, and stabbed him to death. Now, a judge has ordered that she must pay Brooks’ family $150,000.
On the afternoon of July 26, 2009, Diane Schuler sped the wrong way on the Taconic State Parkway and crashed into another car, killing eight people.It was 12:58 on the afternoon of July 26, 2009. Warren Hance received a phone call. His 36-year-old sister Diane Schuler’s number appeared on the caller ID, but when he answered, his own young daughter was on the line.
Hance listened intently as his worried 8-year-old Emma explained that aunt Diane was having trouble seeing while driving and wasn’t speaking clearly.
Legend has it that in times of persistent hardship, Japanese families would abandon their elderly in the woods. Here's how it happened — that is, if it did at all.Wikimedia Commons
The practice of Ubasute marks a dark time in Japan’s history, but did it ever really happen? Ubasute’s supposed roots reach far back into Japan’s distant past, and the event it describes is as cruel as it is chilling. Literally translating to “abandoning an old woman,” the legend goes that families facing particularly hard times engaged in the act, which forced sons to carry their own elderly mothers to the top of a mountain before abandoning them there, leaving these frail women to die in an effort to cut costs during times of famine.