Man beat wife with his manhood, Drug turned man into a gay sex and gambling addict and Pot-protecting alligators
Here are World top 5 weird, funny and sexy news of Today in reverse order....
Top 5-World’s first bacon shaving cream (very nice)
The self-styled "bacontrepreneurs" at J&D claim to have invented "the world's first bacon-scented shaving cream," but a Wisconsin-based shop has had something similar on the market for years. "Yes, the world's first bacon-scented shaving cream. Prepare to be loved, admired and possibly eaten by bears," reads the press release for the new cream from the Seattle company known for its bacon lip-balm, bacon popcorn and bacon roses, to name a few.
But Mama Bear Soaps in Florence, Wis., was way ahead of the bacon trend, having offered a bacon-scented shaving soap since at least 2010. "This smells just like fresh, maple-cured bacon right before you put it into the frying pan," the soap-maker boasts. One co-owner of J&D, Justin Esch, backed down from the "world's first" claim when shown Mama's product. "We'll go with: 'Bacon Shaving Cream is the highest quality meat-scented shaving cream on the market today," he said in an e-mail. But his partner, Dave Lefkow, is sticking by their original claim.
Top 4-Hey, sexy lady: Christmas lights, Gangnam Style (very nice video)
'TIS the season for Gangnam Style. The K-Pop juggernaut that gripped the world in 2012 will make one final flurry at Christmas, if this light show is anything to go by. Psy's YouTube record hit is the soundtrack to an impressive light show in Churchlands, near Perth, that will help raise money for the local community.Kim Illman, of World's Best Christmas Lights, has pulled in more than 60,000 views on YouTube. How did he put the
home display together?"Stats: 1,000 bulbs, 2,000 light channels, 2kms of cable and 200 hours to set up," he wrote."My past displays have raised more than $90k for community projects."The goodwill aside, doesn't this annoy the hell out of his neighbours?"A lot of the neighbours get in on the act with their own displays," he wrote."We have kids and lots of the community visit every night, it's such a great community feeling, we love it."And, amazingly, all this only costs an extra $10 a week in power. Turns out leaving the heater on is worse than rocking out to Psy.
home display together?"Stats: 1,000 bulbs, 2,000 light channels, 2kms of cable and 200 hours to set up," he wrote."My past displays have raised more than $90k for community projects."The goodwill aside, doesn't this annoy the hell out of his neighbours?"A lot of the neighbours get in on the act with their own displays," he wrote."We have kids and lots of the community visit every night, it's such a great community feeling, we love it."And, amazingly, all this only costs an extra $10 a week in power. Turns out leaving the heater on is worse than rocking out to Psy.
Top 3-Pot-protecting alligators greet U.S. police (what a welcome)
Detectives who responded to reports of a shooting at a home in Washington state found a floor-to-ceiling stripper pole, 15 marijuana plants and two angry, five-foot alligators guarding them, police said on Tuesday. The alligators were kept in a room with the marijuana plants and hissed at detectives who opened the door, said Thurston County Sheriff’s spokesman Lieutenant Greg Elwin. “This was a fairly atypical event,” Elwin said. “We see brass poles from time to time, but there were alligators.” A resident of the house in Olympia, 41-year-old Darren Shore, was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after telling detectives he had fired at a car on his property in self-defense out of fear it would run him down, Elwin said. A 30-year-old man suffering from gunshot wounds to the arm and back was treated at a nearby hospital for non-life-threatening wounds. Elwin declined to release the man’s name.
Shore’s story didn’t match up with the evidence at hand, which suggested he fired in a premeditated attack as soon as the car arrived on his property, Elwin said. Before being taken away, Shore offered to help the detectives secure the alligators. The three of them lured the reptiles into a bathroom with raw chicken parts, Elwin said. The alligators, which Shore owned legally, were left with a bathtub full of water and the chicken for food. “It was one of those frier assortments, with legs and wings,” Elwin said. “The alligators seemed to like them.” With Shore in jail, the reptiles were left in the care of a woman who also lives at the house, who Elwin identified as an exotic dancer.
Top 2-Drug turned man into a gay sex and gambling addict (interesting)
RENNES, France - A French appeals court Wednesday upheld a ruling orderin
g pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline to pay 197,000 euros to a man who claimed that its drug to treat Parkinson's turned him into a gay sex and gambling addict. The court in the northern city of Rennes said father-of-two Didier Jambart had suffered side effects after being administered the drug Requip in 2003 for the illness, which causes tremors, slows movement and disrupts speech. A court in the western city of Nantes had previously ordered the British drug company to pay 117,000 euros ($151,000) in compensation in March. Jambart, who was accompanied by his wife, burst into tears after the ruling. "It's a great day," he said. "It's been a seven-year battle with our limited means for recognition of the fact that GSK lied to us and shattered our lives." Jambart, 52, said the drug made him addicted to Internet gambling and caused him to lose the family's savings and steal to feed the habit that cost him 82,000 euros. He said he attempted suicide eight times and became a compulsive gay sex addict, exposing himself on the Internet and cross-dressing. His risky sexual encounters led to him being raped. All that stopped when he ceased taking Requip in 2005. Requip has been known for years to have undesired side effects but a warning only appeared on its package insert in 2006, his lawyers said.
g pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline to pay 197,000 euros to a man who claimed that its drug to treat Parkinson's turned him into a gay sex and gambling addict. The court in the northern city of Rennes said father-of-two Didier Jambart had suffered side effects after being administered the drug Requip in 2003 for the illness, which causes tremors, slows movement and disrupts speech. A court in the western city of Nantes had previously ordered the British drug company to pay 117,000 euros ($151,000) in compensation in March. Jambart, who was accompanied by his wife, burst into tears after the ruling. "It's a great day," he said. "It's been a seven-year battle with our limited means for recognition of the fact that GSK lied to us and shattered our lives." Jambart, 52, said the drug made him addicted to Internet gambling and caused him to lose the family's savings and steal to feed the habit that cost him 82,000 euros. He said he attempted suicide eight times and became a compulsive gay sex addict, exposing himself on the Internet and cross-dressing. His risky sexual encounters led to him being raped. All that stopped when he ceased taking Requip in 2005. Requip has been known for years to have undesired side effects but a warning only appeared on its package insert in 2006, his lawyers said.
Top 1-Man beat estranged wife with his penis (why)
A MAN has been jailed after he struck his estranged wife with his penis when she refused him sex. Fred Thomas, from Cushing, Maine, will spend five days in jail after pleading guilty to the assault, which happened in July. The 62-year-old offered her $20 for intercourse and, when she refused, he took out his penis and struck her with it, according to the prosecution, The Bangor Daily News reports. Defence Attorney Justin Andrus said Thomas was tremendously upset that his marriage of 39 years was ending. He said his estranged wife was planning to go to Pakistan to meet a man she met online. “This was not his normal conduct,” Andrus told Justice Jeffrey Hjelm during the sentencing hearing in Knox County Superior Court.
Man beat wife with his manhood, Drug turned man into a gay sex and gambling addict and Pot-protecting alligators