Friday, December 9, 2016

Pregnant man loses hope on traditional medicine after 12 years, finally undergoes surgery!!

A man named Zhang Cheng from Leshan City China felt sudden pain in his stomach since 2004. He took some medications to ease the pain and went to the doctor. The doctor said that he has a stomach tumor and need to be removed however he refused.

He regretted his decision before to have it removed. Now, it grew bigger and he looks like pregnant. The tumor was so big and it weighs 15 kg. Good thing that there were group of doctors who helped him and he got operated. Thank GOD the tumor was successfully removed and his now back living a normal life.




Original Posted: pnoyviral.com

13-year-old Filipina Programmer Creates Company to teach 10-year-olds to Code—Amazing!

This was what 13-year-old Isabel Sieh when she founded her company “Girls Will Code” three years ago. Girls Will Code is a community of young girls interested in coding. Girls Will Code hopes to encourage schools to teach their students basic programming language or make it an after-school activity. Being the Philippines’ youngest programmer to date, Isabel wanted to share her passion for coding, and teach children her age how to do so.
“When I was around 10 years old, my teacher noticed that I really love math so he suggested that I start coding. He showed me this website called Code Academy,” Isabel Sieh said.
At 10, she started learning Hypertext Markup Language and JavaScript through online classes. HTML is a standardized system for tagging text files to achieve font, color, graphic, and hyperlink effects on World Wide Web pages while JavaScript is a programming language that makes websites interactive.
Very supportive of her daughter’s endeavor, Isable’s mom Ronna encouraged children to learn coding: “As parents, we’re intimidated (at first), but we have to be open and give them space to do it.”


Source: viral4real.com

Thursday, December 8, 2016

The longest running Comedy show Bubble Gang Creates "Tadyakan" Spoof Up Dharma Down's 'Tadhana'

The longest running comedy show Bubble Gang spoofed the famous Up Dharma Down hit song "Tadhana" for the 21st anniversary episode show. This video becomes viral on social media.
The veteran comedian and Bubble Gang lead Micheal V played the role of Up Dharma Down singer Armi Millare with wearing the black jacket and sunglasses.


Girl caught on camera stealing from tip jars


The suspect has targeted at least two restaurants in the Los Angeles area, including Komodo and Slicetruck Pizza.

On Wednesday night, the thief entered Slicetruck Pizza on the 2000 block of Sawtelle Boulevard and appeared to be talking on a cellphone, according to restaurant owner Chris Hanley. She distracted the employees, and when they moved away from the cash register, she reached into the tip jar.

Restaurant owners say the Girl didn't get away with much, but it's the principle of the matter. They say the money was set aside for employees for their good service.

"It's one of those things, everyone knows what tips are for. It rewards somebody for their work," said Hanley.

The restaurant owners have filed police reports and released surveillance videos of the suspect on social media to spread the word to other restaurants.



Source: abc7.com

These Couple crossed All limits of Dignity In Delhi Metro

The young couple had crossed all limits of shamelessness.When you are traveling in Delhi Metro, Lover creates obscene acts which exceed the limits so often refer.


They thought that their activities in the subway are not noticed, but sometimes these things prove wrongly
All arrangement of security in Delhi Metro’s safety standards has been maintained, but has been seen many times by ignoring these standards to the young couple pass obscene acts.


Some days back we had the leak of a young couple in the subway was shown you porn videos. Once again we released another video of the Metro. In the video, the young couple had crossed all limits of shamelessness.


Original Posted: stuntkedeewaneofficial.com

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Hillarious video: 2 girls were fighting on the road for a guy.

The fight was between two girls due to a boy. Both were saying that he is her boyfriend. That boy was also trying to stop their fight.


Original Posted: stuntkedeewaneofficial.com

The Muhammad Ali Underwater Training Hoax

Early in his career, Muhammad Ali convinced the media that he regularly trained underwater.


The Sept 8, 1961 issue of Life magazine featured a photo essay about a young boxer, 19-year-old Cassius Clay, who had an unusual training technique. He trained underwater.

Clay had recently won a gold medal in the 1960 Olympics, and since going pro he had won his first eight matches. He was also making a name for himself outside the ring as a charismatic and outspoken character. 

In 1964 he would win the world heavyweight championship and change his name to Muhammad Ali, by which history remembers him better. But in 1961 Clay was busy training for his ninth match, against Alex Miteff who outweighed him by twenty pounds. However, Clay was confident that his underwater training would give him the edge in the ring. The text of the photo essay explained:

"Not to be bragging or anything like that," says 19-year-old Cassius Marcellus Clay, "but they say I'm the fastest heavyweight in the ring today. That comes from punching under water." Taking a cue from the immortal Ty Cobb, who weighted his shoes in training so that he would feel feather-footed when the season started, Clay goes into a swimming pool and, as these underwater pictures show, does a stunt of submarine shadowboxing. "You try to box hard," he explains, "Then when you punch the same way out of water you got speed."

Clay did proceed to beat Miteff, knocking him out in the sixth round. So evidently the underwater training worked. Except, no. Clay didn't train underwater. In reality, the photoshoot he did for Life was the one and only time he ever trained underwater. He had invented the story about underwater training as a stunt to get publicity. 

However, for years no one questioned the claim about training underwater. It was simply accepted as part of the lore of Muhammad Ali. Until finally, around 1997, the photographer who did the photoshoot, Flip Schulke, revealed that Ali had invented the story.


Life — Sep 8, 1961
The Story of the Photoshoot
In 1961, Sports Illustrated had assigned Schulke to take pictures of Clay. So Schulke traveled to Overtown, Florida where Clay was training.

When he first met Clay, Schulke tried to impress the young boxer by sharing examples of his work. For instance, Schulke revealed that he specialized in underwater photography and had recently had photos published in Life showing water-skiers from below the surface of the water.

Seeing these photos, Clay immediately told Schulke that it so happened that he trained underwater in a swimming pool because, "An old trainer up in Louisville told me that if I practice in the pool, the water resistance acts just like a weight."

Clay demonstrated by jumping into the pool at the hotel where he was staying (The Sir John Hotel) and started to throw punches in the water.

Underwater training sounded plausible enough to Schulke, and he thought photos of it would make an interesting feature, so he pitched the idea to Sports Illustrated. But the editor there, as Schulke later said, "thought I was crazy for taking pictures of a boxer in a swimming pool."

However, the editor also gave Schulke permission to pitch the idea to Life, saying, "Go ahead and ask Life if you want to. If they're dumb enough to, let them do it." 

So Schulke called Life, and they liked the idea. Schulke proceeded with the photoshoot. The pictures ran in Life. And they became among the most celebrated sports photos of all time.

One of the pictures (below) from that shoot, showing Clay fully underwater with his fists raised, is one of the most famous pictures of Ali ever taken. But it didn't run in Lifebecause the editors there thought it looked too posed.




Schulke next met Clay three years later, after the boxer had won the world heavyweight championship. In his 2003 book Witness To Our Times Schulke described this meeting:

We were looking through a scrapbook, and when he came across my underwater pictures he winked at me. I realized he had taken me. I learned later he and his trainer had come up with the whole story on their own. He didn’t even know how to swim…. he fooled everybody - and it made fantastic pictures.


For another Muhammad Ali-related hoax, see Cassius Clay Wins Literary Prize (April 1, 1963).




Original Posted: hoaxes.org