And more importantly, is this legal? After all, Justin Bieber may have a swag overload, but he is still under 18. Despite this minor issue, infamous sculptor Daniel Edwards grabbed his tools and created a statue of Bieber and his gf Selena Gomez (nearly) completely nakies with only a Canadian Maple Leaf and Texas Lone Star covering their privates, and the words "Justin & Selena Forever" at the base of the bronze likeness. Apparently he's a fan. Edwards is known for his over-the-top artwork such as Britney Spears giving birth, Suri Cruise's poop, Octomom in pink, Paris Hilton's insides and Angelina Jolie nursing....All of these, um, masterpieces created visions in our minds that we could have lived without. And now we have another.
How-Neo-Nazis tricked by T-shirts
Sad-Woman falls in recycling bin dies
A 62-year-old Ohio woman suffocated Friday after she fell headfirst into a recycling bin and couldn't escape. The coroner's preliminary report says Shelia Decoster died from positional asphyxia, meaning her position in the 240-litre container prevented her from breathing properly.
Her husband of 43 years, Richard, found her body after he returned from work to their East Toledo . Ohio , home
Strange-Goose caused major power outage in Northern Ont.
SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. — Blame the goose.A Canada goose flew into a sub-transmission line and knocked out power to part more than 8,000 homes in this northern Ontario city early Wednesday. Service was cut to 8,320 customers in the city's east side when the bird hit the line. It caused a breaker to trip and stopped the supply of electricity to four substations, said vice-president of operations and engineering Dominic Parrella.
The outage started at and lasted 16 minutes."It affected the entire east end of the city," he said.The bird, destroyed in the mishap, hit "the most impactive circuit" in the area.
Wow-Baguette vending machine provides fresh bread 24 hours a day in France
The Frenchman’s 24-hour automated baguette dispenser bakes partially pre-cooked loaves and dispenses them to customers at 90p a time. After a decade of planning he has two machines, one in his home city of Paris and another in the north-east town of Hombourg-Haut . The dispensers sold almost 4,500 loaves in July and in its debut month moved 1,600 baguettes. The machine holds 120 pieces and everything is fresh with any product not sold within 72 hours being tossed away. ‘This is the bakery of tomorrow,’ said Mr Hecht, who plans to expand across Europe . 'If other bakers don't want to enter the niche, they're going to get decimated.'
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