do you guys remember that episodfe of the magic school bus where the class gets transformed into fish eggs and get fertilized with fish semen



(Source: lipsstitchedtight)
Saying What We’re All Thinking of the Day: Sarah Burge, who is in the Guinness Book of World Records for undergoing the most plastic surgeries, appeared this week on Anderson Cooper’s show, where the “Human Barbie” told the host about how she was getting her daughter on the same process and encouraging her to pole dance.
Finally, Cooper had had enough, and he gave her the boot:
I honestly have nothing more to talk to you about… I gotta be honest, I gotta just stop. I’m sorry. I try to be really polite to all my guests, but I just think you’re dreadful and I honestly don’t want to talk to you anymore.
Cooper later admitted: “I regret having her on in the first place, and I regret that that’s how things ended.”


Documentary of the Day: It’s like The Cove, but with seals.
Animal Planet will air next month a one-hour documentary, Seal Wars, on Namibia’s brutal seal slaughter — more than 85,000 Cape fur seals (the majority are pups) are clubbed or shot to death each year. According to Humane Society International,such methods are not only cruel, but also unsustainable to the South African seal population.
The footage for the documentary was shot covertly last year, when Sea Shepherd Conservation Society launched Operation Desert Seal in an effort to expose “Namibia’s dirty little secret” and drive international awareness “until the Southern Hemisphere’s sole seal cull is abolished.”
“We created quite a controversy in Namibia,” said SSCS’s Steve Roest, who led the team into Namibia. “But the suggestion by the Namibian government that we breached their national security and the fact that they used the navy, army and police to keep this slaughter hidden speaks volumes to the corruption involved.”
The documentary airs June 8.
[mnn]