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Errol Spence Overcomes Perilous Sixth Round To Stop Yordenis Ugas

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Errol Spence (left) repeatedly used his left uppercut on the right eye of Yordenis Ugas (right) on the way to a 10th-round knockout on Saturday, which added the Cuban's WBA 147-pound title to Spence's IBF and WBC versions. (Ryan Hafey/Premier Boxing Champions)



By Lem Satterfield

Errol Spence declared “I’m the best fighter at 147 pounds and arguably the best fighter in the world” before Saturday’s 10th-round technical knockout over Yordenis Ugas in front of nearly 40,000 spectators at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.


Remaining undefeated at 28-0 with an equally impressive 22 KOs, Spence made his case once again in the ring.

The Desoto, Texas, resident nicknamed “The Truth” added the Cuban’s WBA crown to his IBF/WBC versions by out-landing Ugas (27-5, 12 KOs) by more than 2 to 1 in both power shots (192 to 77) and overall punches (216 to 96) with a 24-19 advantage in jabs.

After the victory, Spence had an obscenity-laced message for WBO counterpart Terence Crawford (38–0, 29 KOs): “Terence, I’m coming for that motherf***ing belt.”

“I couldn’t see from the eye,” said Yordenis Ugas (above), who hurt but couldn’t finish Errol Spence during the sixth round of Saturday’s 10th-round stoppage loss. With the victory, Spence added Ugas’ WBA 147-pound title to his IBF and WBC versions. (Ryan Hafey/Premier Boxing Champions)

Spence was ringside in November at Las Vegas’ sold-out Michelob ULTRA Arena for Crawford’s two-knockdown, 10th-round TKO of two-time title winner Shawn Porter. Although Crawford was not ringside on Saturday, the 34-year-old watched from afar as Spence ended a 16-month ring absence by handing Ugas, the 2008 Olympic bronze medalist, his first KO loss and fifth professional loss overall.

Crawford tweeted round-by-round responses on social media, ultimately stating: “@Errol Spence Jr. congratulations great fight now the real fight happens. No more talk no more side of the street let’s go!!!!”

The stage is now set for a clash of unbeatens between Spence and Crawford, who had defended his title for the fifth time and recorded his sixth straight knockout at 147 pounds in defeating Porter (31-4-1, 17 KOs) to improve to 16–0 (13 KOs) in title fights.

“Everybody knows who I want next. I want Terence Crawford next,” said Spence following the sixth defense since May 2017 when his two-knockdown, 11th-round knockout dethroned IBF titlist Kell Brook whose swollen left eye’s orbital bone was broken in the fight.

“That’s the fight that I want,” Spence said of a match with Crawford, “and that’s the fight that everybody else wants, and like I said, I was gonna come in here and take these straps and go over there and take his s**t too. ‘Man Down.’ It’s strap season. Y’all know what time it is, baby. …”

Fighting for the first time since the surgical repair of retinal tear in his left eye in August, Spence was a slugging aggressor against Ugas, masterfully dictating toe-to-toe action with a vicious body attack, left uppercuts and crosses as well as right hooks from behind a piston jab.

“I was throwing the left. It wasn’t working, so I started using the jab to set it up, right hooks, coming over the top and using short shots underneath. I started placing and picking my shots, letting them go,” said Spence, who was hobbled in the sixth round.

“I felt him breaking down because he wasn’t throwing like he usually does,” Spence said of Ugas. “So I was like, ‘I got him now.’ I did see the eye closing, but I was targeting what was open and trying to punch through his guard. I thought the referee was going to stop it a lot earlier, but he just let it keep going.”

Ugas’ right eye was noticeably swollen by the sixth round and ballooning into a hematoma. The worsening condition prompted referee Laurence Cole to stop the fight at the 1:44 mark of the 10th round on the advice of the ringside physician.

After Saturday’s 10th-round TKO in which he added Yordenis Ugas’ WBA 147-pound title to his IBF and WBC versions, Errol Spence (center) challenged WBO counterpart Terence Crawford to a clash of unbeatens. (Ryan Hafey/Premier Boxing Champions)

The triumph was the second during a 31-month period for Spence, who was hospitalized in critical condition after an October 2019 crash in which his Ferrari flipped several times.

“I didn’t want a tuneup fight. I wanted somebody who would bring out the best in me. I knew Ugas would bring the best out of me,” Spence said.

Spence had defended his titles in December 2020, winning by unanimous decision over two-division champion Danny Garcia. Spence’s reign includes a one-knockdown, seventh-round stoppage of two-division champion Lamont Peterson (January 2018), a first-round, body-shot KO of previously unbeaten Carlos Ocampo (June 2018) and a shutout unanimous decision over previously unbeaten four-division titlist Mikey Garcia (March 2019).

Despite not fighting for so long, Spence said: “I didn’t have any doubts about myself at all. I believe in myself 100 percent. I train 100 percent. I knew I was going to come away with the victory.”

“I felt like my timing was a little off at first, but that was due to the long layoff,” Spence said of the Ugas fight. “But I was super excited to get back into the ring, and I knew I would catch on during the later rounds, so I kept working and punching,”

Spence led 88-82 on two of the judges’ scorecards and 88-83 on the other at the time of the stoppage.

“I’ve been in the gym, and I’ve been sparring, so I didn’t have any questions. Y’all had all of the questions and the doubts about whether I was the same fighter,” Spence told reporters. “As you saw, there was no tentativeness. I was fighting to get a knockout. … I felt good.”

Ugas had his best chance starting at the 1:57 mark of the sixth round, when his hard right uppercut dislodged Spence’s mouthpiece.

As Spence went looking for it, dropping his hands in the process, Ugas followed a blistering jab with a jarring right hand that sent “The Truth,” staggering against the ropes for what potentially could have been ruled a knockdown.

But Ugas failed to capitalize on a stunned Spence over the next 20 seconds as Cole stopped the clock at the 1:32 mark, allowing trainer Derrick James to replace the mouth guard.

“I thought the referee had said, ‘stop,’ so I stopped, and then Ugas hit me with three or four shots. That’s my fault. That was a rookie mistake on my part. You’re supposed to protect yourself at all times,” Spence said. “I didn’t do that. I wasn’t out on my feet. I had turned to look for my mouthpiece. He hit me, and I was like, ‘aw, s**t.’ I tried to put my hands up and the referee jumped in.”

Ugas lamented the sixth round.

“I definitely felt that I had an opportunity to win the fight there, but he recuperated well,” said Ugas.

Ugas slipped to 12-2 (5 KOs) at 147 pounds since 2016 under trainer Ismael Salas, his lone previous setback being a disputed split decision to then-WBC champion Porter in March 2019.

“I knew Yordenis Ugas would bring the best out of me,” said Errol Spence (right) seen digging a left uppercut through the defense of Ugas en route to Saturday’s 10th-round TKO, which added Ugas’ WBA 147-pound title to his IBF and WBC versions. (Ryan Hafey/Premier Boxing Champions)

“I couldn’t see from the eye, but I wanted to keep going until the end. I feel sad because I trained really hard for this fight, but all of my respect to Errol Spence. He’s a great champion.”

Spence’s focus now is firmly on Crawford, a former holder of all four major belts at 140 pounds. Crawford is among six fighters to reach the undisputed plateau along with junior welterweight Josh Taylor, super middleweight Canelo Alvarez, cruiserweight Oleksandr Usyk and middleweights Bernard Hopkins and Jermain Taylor.

Porter was knocked out for the first time in his career by Crawford and announced his retirement after their fight.

“[Crawford] is the best out of everybody I’ve been in the ring with. There’s no doubt I think that man hit me more than anybody I’ve been in the ring with,” said Porter.

“He was on point, A-through-Z. The competitor in me won’t stop looking at him and wanting to fight him again. He’s got it. I’ve said that multiple times in interviews. In and out of the ring, he has it.”

Spence plans to prove Porter wrong about who is the better fighter between Crawford and him.

“Y’all already know what time it is,” Spence said. “I said all week that after I get through with Ugas, I’m coming after Terence Crawford.”

Edited by Matthew B. Hall and Richard Pretorius

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Member Of Legendary Aircraft Plotter Unit Who Identified Enemy Targets In WWII Takes To Skies At 99

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One of the last surviving members of a legendary unit of female aircraft plotters who identified enemy targets in World War Two has taken to the skies in a glider - aged 99. (Steve Chatterley/Zenger)



By Anamarija Brnjarchevska

One of the last surviving members of a legendary unit of female aircraft plotters who identified enemy targets in World War II has taken to the skies in a glider – aged 99.


Decorated veteran Kate Orchard served in the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force in India between 1941 and 1945.

She joined the corps aged 20 and worked as a ‘plotter’ in Madras, India, to identify the known locations of enemy aircraft.

Allied Command could then send warnings of potential targets to the Royal Air Force (RAF) to shoot down.

She achieved the rank of Warrant Officer First Class and won both the Service and India Service medals.

Recalling her role in the military, she said: “I wanted to do something for my country, which we all wanted to do during the war.

“There was a large grid in this room with a map of India.

“As the messages came through you had to identify if it was hostile or friendly.

“The enemy was the Japanese aircraft. They were the ones we were plotting on the big grid.

“It saved a lot of lives, otherwise we would have been bombed.”

Kate, who has three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren, took to the skies to raise money for Help for Heroes, on Monday, April 18.

The widow, of Camborne, Cornwall, took off from Seahawk Gliding Club, at Royal Naval Air Station Culdrose, which is near the town of Helston, in Cornwall, in the UK.

One of the last surviving members of a legendary unit of female aircraft plotters who identified enemy targets in World War Two has taken to the skies in a glider – aged 99. (Steve Chatterley/Zenger)

She said: “I believe passionately that it’s very important that all ex-military personnel are looked after.

”Especially those unfortunate enough to have physical or psychological injuries.”

Kate was cheered on by her proud son Ben, 72, who watched from the ground.

He said: “She reacts to it positively. She always wants to do adventurous things, she took to it with great enthusiasm and loved it.

“She’s been in many aircraft many times, but this is her third glider flight. The last was three years ago. And the first was when she was 90.

“She was a plotter. Plotting aircraft as they flew in, they were either friend or foe, using the Dowding system.

“She just does things, she’s a bit mad anyhow. I just admire her for her spirit.

“She will do anything for anyone. It’s all for a good cause, for Help the Heroes.”

Kate was born into a large Anglo-Indian family with her father working as a chief telegraph inspector on the Indian railways.

She later worked for the Air Defence Centre, Number 5 Filter Room, alongside both the RAF and the Indian Air Force.

She worked as a plotter and as a teller on 24-hour watches, identifying aircraft targets and sending signals to the air warning systems.

She proudly wears her 1939-45 Service and India Service Medals when attending VE Day and VJ Day Remembrance Day services.

One of the last surviving members of a legendary unit of female aircraft plotters who identified enemy targets in World War Two has taken to the skies in a glider – aged 99. (Steve Chatterley/Zenger)

Kate recently attended the annual Battle of Britain Sunday service at Westminster Abbey, which was attended by Prince Charles and Camilla, the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall, and the UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson.

She even enjoyed a friendly chat with their Royal Highnesses at a reception following the event.

A spokesman for Help for Heroes said: “Kate is a truly amazing lady, full of spirit.

”But I suppose we should expect nothing less of the generation that served us so well during our darkest days.

“And for her to do this to help support the service personnel who followed in her footsteps is a wonderful gesture.”

To donate to Kate’s efforts and help support veterans, visit justgiving.com/fundraising/Kate-Orchard.

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Brain Can Block Unwanted Memories And Sounds Alarm If One Slips Through Net

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The brain can suppress unwanted memories - and sounds an 'alarm' if one slips through the net, according to a new study. (Steve Chatterley/Zenger)



By Anamarija Brnjarchevska

The brain can suppress unwanted memories – and sounds an ‘alarm’ if one slips through the net, according to a new study.


A region dubbed the ACC can identify intrusive thoughts and call for backup to help suppress them, say scientists.

While people enjoy reminiscing about the good times, there are some memories that are best forgotten.

This is easier said than done, however, and people often find themselves thinking unwanted thoughts.

Now Cambridge University researchers have discovered the brain has an inbuilt memory blocker.

Study author Dr. Maité García said: “When people suppress unwanted memories the ACC is among the regions more active, but its contribution to inhibitory control over memory remains undefined.

“Our findings reveal a central role of ACC in triggering inhibitory control that causes motivated forgetting.”

The brain activity of 24 participants was measured by the researchers using EEG and fMRI scans while they completed a memory test.

During the exercise, people were asked to memorize word pairings like “gate and train” which had been selected from the Thesaurus of Modern Chinese.

Plastinated slices of the human brain, marked with red dots to indicate that only institutions may buy them, lie on display for sale for up to EUR 625 each at the shop of the Plastinarium on May 28, 2010 in Guben, Germany. The Plastinarium is a museum, teaching center and body preparations facility for anatomist Gunther von Hagens, whose Body Worlds exhibitions have travelled across the globe. Through his plastination procedure von Hagens is able to prevent the human body from decomposing and exhibits the bodies to further understanding of anatomy. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

They were then shown one of the words and asked to recall its pairing or focus on it without thinking about the other word.

Activity spiked in part of the brain known as the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) when participants tried to suppress their memory during the first 500 milliseconds of the task.

The ACC then relayed this information to another part of the brain dubbed the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC).

This area then suppressed activity in a third region known as the hippocampus, which is known to play an important role in helping people recall memories.

Nicole Briggs looks at a real human brain being displayed as part of new exhibition at the @Bristol attraction on March 8, 2011 in Bristol, England. The Real Brain exhibit – which comes with full consent from a anonymous donor and needed full consent from the Human Tissue Authority – is suspended in liquid with a engraved full scale skeleton on one side and a diagram of the central nervous system on the other and is a key feature of the All About Us exhibition opening this week. (Photo by Matt Cardy/Getty Images)

Activity levels in the ACC and DLPFC remained low for the rest of the trial, suggesting their intervention had been successful in blocking out the memory.

The brain’s memory blocking talents could extend even further to helping people forget, according to the researchers.

Dr. García said: “Importantly, our results suggest that proactive control did not simply prevent retrieval but also facilitated forgetting.”

If the unwanted memory was not stopped early enough, the ACC sounded the alarm, increasing its activity to signal the DLPFC to get involved, the researchers found.

Dr. García said: “In summary, this study provides evidence that theta mechanisms in ACC are key to triggering inhibitory control by DLPFC during motivated forgetting.

“These mechanisms can be proactively engaged by external warning stimuli, helping to rapidly preempt unwanted thoughts.”

The findings were published in the journal JNeurosci.

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What Your Candy Preference Says About You

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Sweetheart candy hearts are seen on the shelf at the To The Moon Marketplace on January 29, 2019 in Wilton Manors, Florida. William Newcomb who works at the store said, 'they stocked up early on the heart shape candy after learning that the Necco company had filed for bankruptcy protection and went out of business.' The Sweetheart candy was being made by Necco since 1886 and is in short supply after the company went out of business as Valentine’s Day approaches. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)



By Josh Brady

Like sour candy more than other flavors? It’s possible you might be an extrovert.


That’s just one takeaway from a new survey of 2,000 candy lovers: a person’s preference for certain sweets may say a lot about their personality and lifestyle choices.

In addition to being extroverted (59%), sour candy connoisseurs also identified themselves as more “eccentric” (53%), “funny” (50%) and “sarcastic” (51%.)

Meanwhile, chocolate lovers tended to describe themselves as “optimistic” (76%) and “shy” (67%), and fans of mint were most likely to say they’re “thoughtful” (78%).

Conducted by OnePoll on behalf of Jelly Belly Candy Company in advance of National Jelly Bean Day on April 22, the poll also dug deeper into the habits and beliefs of sweets lovers.

People who eat candy every day were more likely to identify as “night owls” instead of “early birds,” (43% vs. 17%).

Results also suggest Americans still have a sweet tooth. Overall, roughly three in four (75%) respondents eat candy at least once a week, and more than one in four (27%) claim to eat it every day.

And while 42% would offer to share their candy with friends or family members, almost two in 10 would keep it all to themselves – including twice as many women as men.

Jelly beans are shown at the Jelly Belly candy factory June 10, 2004 in Fairfield, California. The late former U.S. President Ronald Reagan was known for his fondness for jelly beans during his political career and claims the candy helped him quite smoking when he was governor of California. (Photo by David Paul Morris/Getty Images)

The poll also asked its 2,000 respondents – all of whom expressed a fondness for jelly beans beforehand – to pick their all-time favorite jelly bean flavor for even more specific personality mapping.

“National Jelly Bean Day offers one day a year for flavor feuds that dominate the jelly bean world to take center stage,” said Rob Swaigen, Vice President of Global Marketing at Jelly Belly Candy Company. “Whatever flavor you prefer, we love any opportunity to celebrate what makes you uniquely you through candy.”

Sour lemon jelly bean fanatics mirrored their sharp-tongue taste preferences in their personality, with 69% identifying as “honest.”

Cherry jelly bean lovers were more likely to be dog people (38%), while buttered popcorn lovers favored cats (43%) — and cotton candy cohorts are most likely to consider themselves not animal people (13%).

Age may also play a factor in the type of jelly bean flavor you prefer. Almost one in five baby boomers say licorice is their favorite, compared to just 6% of Gen Z.

For pear jelly bean lovers, “eccentricity” is a common personality type. Close to six in 10 align with that description, putting them alongside cherry (68%) and buttered popcorn (59%) fans as the most likely to consider themselves eccentric.

Jelly beans sit in a bin waiting to be packaged on the assembly line at the Jelly Belly Factory April 2, 2007 in Fairfield, California. The Jelly Belly Factory produces approximately 14 billion jelly beans a year. With less than a week before Easter Sunday, retailers stock their shelves full of jelly beans, chocolates, and other traditional candies for Easter. (Photo by David Paul Morris/Getty Images)

Just because two-thirds (67%) of orange jelly bean lovers like to volunteer in their free time doesn’t mean they’d give lottery money to a charitable cause. Orange lovers were also the most likely to invest the money if they won (38%).

But cherry jelly bean lovers are going off the grid. Perhaps because 79% identify as introverts, 29% would purchase their own private island if they won the lottery.

“Just as no two personalities are alike, no two flavor preferences are alike either,” said Swaigen. “That’s why innovation is so important in the confectionary category, to the point where Jelly Belly currently offers over 100 jelly bean flavors, so there is something for everyone to love, regardless of palette and taste.”

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Estate Of Star Wars ‘Boba Fett’ Actor Jeremy Bulloch To Be Sold At Bristol Auction

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Jeremy Bulloch attends a photo call at the Star Wars Identities: The Exhibition on July 26, 2017 in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by John Phillips/Getty Images)



By Gabriella Petty

BRISTOL, England — The estate of Star Wars ‘Boba Fett’ actor Jeremy Bulloch is to be sold at auction – including his own life-size toy.


Over 1,000 unique items of memorabilia from the actor’s collection such as scripts and autographs will be available to buy on May 4th – International ‘Star Wars Day’.

Jeremy played villainous Bounty Hunter Boba Fett in both The Empire Strikes Back (1980) and Return Of The Jedi (1983).

Despite being on screen for mere minutes the character has become one of the best-loved and most recognisable in the franchise.

The auction follows Bulloch’s death in 2020 from complications relating to Parkinson’s disease which he had suffered from for many years.

A portion of the proceeds from the auction will be donated to Parkinson’s UK.

The collection has been amassed over the actor’s lifetime of attending conventions and meeting excited fans.

His wife, Maureen Bulloch, said: “During the twenty or so years that Jeremy attended conventions in relation to his role as Boba Fett from the Star Wars films, he acquired a large collection of memorabilia.

“He was also given items made by fans as well as a lot of artwork, some of it by well-known artists.

“Jeremy loved and appreciated every single item and proudly displayed them in his office.

“We, as his family, would now like to offer some of this memorabilia for fans to enjoy. May The Force Be With You.

Jeremy Bulloch attends a photo call at the “Star Wars Identities: The Exhibition” on July 26, 2017 in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by John Phillips/Getty Images)

The sale, starting at noon on 4th May, is being held by East Bristol Auctions.

Some of the highlights from the collection include a Boba Fett statue (£8,000-£12,000) modelled on Bulloch in the 1990s and stored in his attic for 30 years.

There is also unseen footage from Return of the Jedi (£3,000-£5,000) showing early Ewok test film.

An autographed picture by Princess Leia actress Carrie Fisher (£500-£800) bearing a totally unique dedication is also included, along with Bulloch’s script from Revenge of the Sith (£1,500-£2,500)

A Boba Fett helmet (£600-£800) given to Bulloch in the 1990s will also go on sale, along with autographs from co-stars such as Mark Hamill and Dave Prowse.

Auctioneer Andrew Stowe said: “Jeremy was quite clearly an avid collector – he didn’t just star in the films, he enjoyed them as much as any other fan.

“Not only that but he was regarded as one of the most approachable and friendly actors, so fans adored him – and he amassed many gifts wherever he appeared.

“His collection is remarkable, and completely unique!”

The statue was created in the late 1990s and Bulloch actually spent several weeks modelling and being cast for the piece.

The costume worn by Jeremy Bulloch as Boba Fett is seen during the ‘Star Wars Identities’ Exhibtion Press Preview & VIP Opening at Odysseum on May 20, 2015 in Cologne, Germany. (Photo by Sascha Steinbach/Getty Images)

Just 500 were made and issued by a company called Rubies and were sent for display in restaurants and shops.

Bulloch’s half-brother was Star Wars producer Robert Watts and he shot the Ewok footage in November 1981 in North Carolina.

It is believed to be unseen ‘newly discovered’ footage.

Watts gifted the two reels to Bulloch and they remained in his safe storage for many years – unseen.

Carrie’s autograph is dedicated ‘’Jeremy – thanks for the nite of hot monkey love – Carrie Fisher.’

The unusual dedication relates to an unknown joke between the two and is ‘completely unique’.

The replica Boba Fett Helmet presented to Bulloch in the 1990s. Bulloch wore the helmet for interviews and videos taken in his home.

It was his go-to helmet for videos on his website, and it can be seen in dozens of interviews and photographs.

The full catalogue can be viewed online at bid.eastbristol.co.uk.

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Meet the Winners After USFL’s First Weekend in Birmingham

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Exuberant Birmingham Stallions fans celebrate as their team wins the USFL opener on Saturday April 16 at Protective Stadium in downtown. (Solomon Crenshaw Jr. For The Birmingham Times)

By Solomon Crenshaw Jr.

For The Birmingham Times

Wood You Spot It? Body Paint Fan Not Treesily Spotted

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Man paints himself to perfectly integrate with the background in Jinan, China. (hh58585/Zenger)



By Emily Wu

A camouflage artist who paints himself to fit in perfectly in any environment is baffling fans in China.


The artist – named only as Wang in Chinese media – spends up to three hours covering himself in paint to match his surroundings.

In one display – at a park in the city of Jinan, the capital of the eastern Chinese province of Shandong on April 11 – he transformed himself to blend into a field of multi-colored flowers.

Man paints himself to perfectly integrate with the background in Jinan, China. (hh58585/Zenger)

In another video, Wang paints himself as part of a tree trunk surrounded by golden leaves so perfectly he turns virtually invisible when he stands still.

In the video, he said: “Look, everyone, here is a new camouflage cloth, and it matches the color of the surrounding environment really well. I stand here motionless, simply a fake image over the real.”

Other films show Yang perfectly camouflaged inside a restaurant with customers passing by without even noticing him.

He had even promised to pay for the first person to see him when passing by, saying: “Today’s meal is paid by me! The only condition is that you have to find me. My invisible spot is very tricky from the front.”

He later added that he had paid today’s big winner’s meal cost of 328 yuan (30 GBP).

Man paints himself to perfectly integrate with the background in Jinan, China. (hh58585/Zenger)

Another shows him posing on top of a modernist skyscraper as part of a flower garland, standing on a glass pane over a sheer drop below.

He seems nervous about heights but continues nevertheless, saying: “We are at 388 meters [1,272 feet]. It is too high here, even for me. Are we sure to want even to start to draw here?”

Not everyone, though, is a fan – and one video shows him being thrown out of a building by security guards, although they later repent and let him in when they see his project to blend in from the outside.

Man paints himself to perfectly integrate with the background in Jinan, China.  (hh58585/Zenger)

The artist insists he does all the artwork himself, using a simple mobile phone image to see constantly how the image is taking place and how the camouflage is working!

Man paints himself to perfectly integrate with the background in Jinan, China.(hh58585/Zenger)

He proudly showed off one video for example where he is on a pathway through fields of flowers and boasted: ”Many friends came and didn’t find me until they moved to my side.”

But he was spotted by the female security who grabs the artist by the ear to haul him out of the flowerbeds as can be seen in the video.

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Read-Y To Go: Teacher Writes Random Things On The Board To Check Students Are Paying Attention

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Middle school teacher tests students with strange white board directions. (@miss.guevarez/Zenger).



By Arian Movileanu

This is the moment a teacher tests her students’ attention by posting random things on the whiteboard and ends up having to wait for days until they notice.


McKenzie Guevarez, in her upper 20s, who hails from the northeast of the USA, posted the video on TikTok and it now has over 150,000 views.

In the video, the teacher shows her and the whiteboard with the random sentences written on it. One of the sentences jokingly promises students a prize, saying: “If you say Mooo at your desk today I will give you a sticker.”

Middle school teacher tests students with strange white board directions. (@miss.guevarez/Zenger).

She also said: “Whiteboards can be written on with markers and that can be easily wiped. They are usually used for teaching or presentations.

“A more popular way of whiteboards nowadays is the interactive whiteboard also called a smartboard, which is a large interactive display board in the format of a whiteboard and has the ability to connect to the Internet and digitize the operations.

“They are used in classrooms, boardrooms, engineering, coaching and the strategic planning of many types of projects.”

Zenger News spoke to McKenzie and she said: “I had some students tell me they didn’t read the board’s directions, they only listened to me so I figured I’d give them a reading a test. I also remember, growing up, teachers giving my classes reading directions tests.”

She noted that this experiment shows her that her students are not very independent, and added: “They like to hear me tell them what to do before reading it so it’s a skill we can work on. It also shows me that maybe I have too many words on the screen and it makes me think about how I can better accommodate them.”

Middle school teacher tests students with strange white board directions. (@miss.guevarez/Zenger).

McKenzie told Zenger News about her students’ reaction to her video: “They saw it on my TikTok and were absolutely shocked. It was kind of hilarious to see how surprised they were. Those who saw it online try and search for more prizes sometimes now.

“I have already started doing more and plan to continue. After my students saw my TikTok some started searching for them (the prizes).

Middle school teacher tests students with strange white board directions. (@miss.guevarez/Zenger).

“I definitely think that I can start adding directions with more pictures or even videos to see if students would watch/view those more. The issue is we don’t have headphones for every student so videos could be difficult for that reason.

“I loved some of the other advice, but for me, it’s not about the prize. It’s about getting students who have become very dependent on others since the pandemic to become more independent.”

Middle school teacher tests students with strange white board directions. (@miss.guevarez/Zenger).

In the end, she concluded: “I love to teach and I love these kids, even if they don’t always follow directions.

“School shouldn’t be something where kids can’t have fun and joke around.”

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Bully For You: TikTok Comic Confesses – I Was School Bully

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Joe Erwin, from Oklahoma, US, shared a video on TikTok telling a story of how he used to steal his classmate's lunch every day. (@joe_erwin_comedy/Zenger).



By Arian Movileanu

A TikTok comic who used his show to confess to once being a school bully has been reconciled with his victim after tracking him down again.


Joe Erwin – a comedian and influencer – used his social media platform to admit his thuggish past.

In the clip, he asks his 100,000 followers: “What’s a terrible thing you did as a child that you feel really bad about as an adult?”

He then confesses: “I used to steal a kid’s lunch every day and eat it right in front of him.”

The TikToker – from Jenks, Oklahoma, USA – later tracked down his school victim and named him as Dylan after his clip went viral with 8.4 million views.

Joe Erwin, from Oklahoma, US, shared a video on TikTok telling a story of how he used to steal his classmate’s lunch every day. (@joe_erwin_comedy/Zenger).

Joe – who also works for the Fellowship of Christian Athletes – told Zenger News: “I found a 1st-grade yearbook to see what his last name was.

“Once I found it, I reached out to Dylan to show him the video and make amends. He absolutely loved it and surprisingly has seen some of my videos online.

“We have a plan to meet up on May 14. I’m going to take him to any pizza restaurant he wants.

“Not that it will make up for what I did, but just as a gesture to say ‘I’m sorry’ and reconnect with him.

“I grew up in church thinking I needed to earn my way to heaven by doing good things.

“But the bad definitely outweighed the good.

“It wasn’t until I was 17 that I realized Jesus had already paid the price on the cross, I just needed to admit I was a sinner in need of a savior.

“So I asked Jesus into my heart, now I have a relationship with him.”

Joe Erwin, from Oklahoma, US, shared a video on TikTok telling that he found his classmate whose lunch he’d steal every day and they set a date for a meeting. (@joe_erwin_comedy/Zenger).

Joe told Zenger News: “The first video had a few million views already and I noticed some people were saying things like ‘you’re a terrible person’ and ‘you’ll never be forgiven’ so I thought if I make a follow-up video and share my faith in it, a lot of people will click on that video and they did!

Joe Erwin, from Oklahoma, US, shared a video on TikTok telling that he found his classmate whose lunch he’d steal every day and they set a date for a meeting. (@joe_erwin_comedy/Zenger).

“Now 560,000 people have heard about how Jesus changed my life.

“It feels great to be able to do this. I’m thankful that Dylan is willing to meet up with me because I’ve been thinking about this for years.”

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