Thomas Dambo was rummaging through a city dump in Minnesota when he stumbled on perfection: large yellow plastic bins that had been tossed by a tool manufacturing company.
“They were perfect for the rabbit,” said Dambo, a Danish artist, who reached out to the company to request the rest of their discarded bins.
Dambo gathered the trash and hauled in about 25 tons of scrap wood, then brought together 300 volunteers in Detroit Lakes, Minn.
Travis Kelce thanked girlfriend Taylor Swift for her online support after the Kansas City Chiefs star hit a career milestone at the weekend.
The tight end, 34, etched his names into the history books during the Chiefs’ game against the Las Vegas Raiders Sunday by hitting the 11,000-yard mark in just his 154th game.
Swift, 33, who has been a star attraction at four of Kelce’s games so far this season, was unable to witness her NFL beau achieve the feat in person as she wrapped up the South American leg of her Eras Tour in Sao Paulo, Brazil at the weekend.
Explore More A 1-year-old baby girl and a 9-year-old boy were shot dead during a hostage situation that unfolded in Mississippi Monday, leading to a suspect’s arrest, authorities said.
The Coahoma County Sheriff’s Office said deputies responded to the scene in the 300 block of Coldwater River Road in Jonestown, Mississippi, around 2 a.m. and saw 25-year-old Marquez Griffin holding a child at gunpoint.
After negotiations, cops were able to get the young hostage to safety, but when they entered the apartment, they discovered 1-year-old Averi Jones, and a 9-year-old boy suffering from gunshot wounds.
With simply four episodes staying to air, Brief training in Sentiment episode 12 has revealed numerous mysteries that watchers have yearned to be aware since its debut. The series combines sentiment, satire, mature connections, and murder secret in a smooth mix, bringing about it at present being perhaps of the most famous K-show.
Compressed lesson in Sentiment’s episode 12, named Point of Convergence among Parody and Misfortune, truly carried watchers to the focal point of both sad and comic-yet-close to home minutes.
IRVINE, Calif. — Few American writers sell as many books, live better or worry more than Dean Koontz.
“There are days that you think, ‘I can’t do this anymore,’” says Koontz, 77, author of more than 110 books that have sold over 500 million copies in 38 languages. “Of all the writers I’ve ever known, I have more self-doubt. I’m eaten by it all the time.”
Fears? He has a few.