10 Who Kids Spied On Their Parents and Got More Than They Bargained For

I have no idea why anybody would ever want to spy on their parents, but these folks apparently did and got exactly what was coming to them: way too much information.

Now, this doesn’t always have to be a bad thing. Some of these stories are actually really nice. But some of these stories… wow.

Here we go!

1. Well, you asked for it!

Photo Credit: Whisper

2. Wow, mom. Why tho?

Photo Credit: Whisper

3. Now you won’t be surprised! But maybe that’s okay?

Photo Credit: Whisper

4. Yeah, I guess you all have that going for you.

Photo Credit: Whisper

5. Ummm, cool story.

Photo Credit: Whisper

6. Are you sure your dad is your dad?

Photo Credit: Whisper

7. Okay, legit cute.

Photo Credit: Whisper

8. Okay, this is legit good news.

Photo Credit: Whisper

9. Like mother, like daughter…

Photo Credit: Whisper

10. And?!?!?!

Photo Credit: Whisper

Note to self: never, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever spy on either one of my parents.

My siblings on the other hand…

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Japan’s Wisteria Gardens Will Take Your Breath Away

Spring is in the air all around, and after a long and dreary winter, it’s truly a delight to see all of nature in bloom again. This time of year is truly a magical season, but it’s especially gorgeous in Japan.

There’s a natural tendency for most of us to think of cherry blossom when we picture springtime in Japan, but today we’re here to put the spotlight on something we think is JUST as magical (if not more) – wisteria vines.

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Wisteria plants grow long, flowering vines with flowers of various shades including white, yellow, pale blue, pink, and purple. Throughout Japan, there are several gorgeous wisteria gardens with man-made canopies for the plants to spread out on.

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One of the most popular wisteria gardens in Japan is the Kawachi Wisteria Garden, located in the northern end of Kyusu Island. This private garden is only open to the public during wisteria season (April-May) and the maple leaf season in the fall.

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The garden’s most prominent features are two 330-foot tunnels draped by 22 different varieties of wisteria plants.

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Ok, definitely adding this to my bucket list.

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The Loudest Sound Ever Heard in Human History

You probably think you know what an extremely loud noise sounds like. If you’ve ever walked by a jackhammer, for example, or stood a little too close to the speakers at a loud concert. But those sounds pale in comparison to what is officially known as the loudest sound ever heard.

It happened on August 27, 1883. On an island in Indonesia, a volcano erupted so violently that it literally tore the island apart. The noise was so loud that people heard it over 3,000 miles away — which would be like hearing a noise from Dublin, Ireland when you’re in Boston.

Photo Credit: Wikimedia

It sounds impossible, and yet it very much happened. People heard the eruption on the island of Krakatoa in over 50 geographical locations across a full thirteenth of the Earth.

At 40 miles away, the sound shattered people’s eardrums. At 1,300 miles away, it sounded like “guns firing.” At 2,000 miles away, it sounded like “a series of loud reports, resembling those of artillery.” And at 3,000 miles away, it sounded like “the distant roar of heavy guns.” By the time the sound reached such a distant location, hours would have passed (the speed of sound is about 767 mph).

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

As you might guess, this was no average volcano eruption. It was devastating enough to wipe out 165 coastal villages and settlements and kill tens of thousands of people.

So, yeah, this is not a record we should aim to break anytime soon! Only truly cataclysmic events can create such loud noise, and it hasn’t happened since 1883.

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15+ Tweets That Prove Cats Are Equal Parts Weird and Adorable

Cats. Humans can totally live without them, but it seems we don’t want to: they’re cute, they’re funny, and maybe we’re hoping that if we feed them they’ll ultimately decide not to murder us in our sleep.

The 17 tweets below prove that we’re right to be worried, because the little floofs among us are as weird as they are adorable.

#1. Are you sure that’s a cat?

#2. She has her reasons.

#3. Cats watching cats never disappoints.

#4. He just wants to make sure you still love him.

#5. Oh, hey, fancy meeting you here!

#6. Stellar use of a hidden camera, if you ask me.

#7. It’s best to make yourself look large in the face of a potential threat.

#8. This cat is basically a toddler.

#9. That’s everyone’s dilemma, my friend, regardless of profession.

#10. He’s pretty sure no one can see him now.

#11. Er.

#12. They do not care about your wants, human.

#13. An apt comparison.

#14. I’m going to go ahead and blame “parenting.”

#15. Someone is confused about the predator/prey relationship here, and it’s everyone.

#16. She’s not exaggerating. Fair warning.

#17. Just living up to his namesake, is all.

Cats: Still the best argument for the internet.

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Back In the 1980s, America Was Apparently Terrified of “Dungeons & Dragons”

These days, we tend to view “Dungeons & Dragons” as being the realm of harmless, generally well-meaning fantasy nerds who love sharing a good adventure with their friends. Basically, it’s the least dangerous thing ever, and as nerd culture becomes more mainstream, it’s even become slightly “cool.”

Back when it first came out, though? TOTALLY different story. Evangelists across America got their drawers all bunched up at the mere prospect of something that doesn’t absolutely demonize the occult.

When D&D showed up in popular media, it was linked by reporters to things like Satanism, witchcraft, and the dark underbelly of youth culture.

Seriously.

Below are 8 super nutty mentions of the game in 1980s media.

#1. Some serious warning labels.

In 1985, Knight-Ridder (a periodical) covered the crusade of the group BADD (Bothered About Dungeons & Dragons) to require that D&D come with warning labels. Dr. Thomas Radecki, a psychiatrist and chairman of the National Coalition on Television Violence, was cited as saying,

“Dungeons & Dragons is essentially a worship of violence. It’s a very intense war game. Talk to people that have played it. It’s very fascinating. It’s a game of fun. But when you have fun with murder, that’s dangerous. When you make a game out of war, that’s harmful. The game is full of human sacrifice, eating babies, drinking blood, rape, murder of every variety, curses of insanity. It’s just a very violent game.”

As anyone who plays the game can tell you, pretty much none of that is remotely accurate.

#2. An expansion of witches.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

An Oregon minister wondered in 1985 whether or not D&D was behind an increase in the local witch population.

Assuming there was one.

“Rev. Jon Quigley of the Lakeview Full Gospel Fellowship says he’s concerned about the game “Dungeons & Dragons…Players of the game, known to devotees as “D&D,” assume the roles of fantasy characters and pass through adventures to achieve some goal. There is a strong emphasis on magic.”

The minister went on to claim D&D “opens up young people to influence or possession by demons” and that there are “more than 600 full-fledged, practicing witches” in the immediate area.

He also wanted the game removed from schools because it “amounts to teaching a religion and violates the separation of church and state.”

Wow.

#3. Warnings of brimfire.

Sharon Sipos, a stay-at-home mother of two, believed D&D is more than a game – it’s an “alternate lifestyle” that can only be battled with the Lord at her side.

She spoke out against the game on 30 different radio and television programs.

“They’re always planning what they will do the next time. Kids have lost jobs, flunked out of school. They totally confuse reality and fantasy. It becomes their god.”

#4. Implicated in a murder-suicide.

The police working a tragic murder-suicide in late 1984 wondered whether D&D had something to do with the crime.

“My understanding is that once you reach a certain point where you are the master, your only way out is death. That way, no one can beat you.”

D&D had nothing to do with the crime – one of the brothers involved was facing a prison sentence and couldn’t face the idea of life in prison.

#5. A trend toward Satan.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

An article titled “Officers Offer Warning of Trend Toward Satanism” appeared in the Capital Times in 1990. It was written by Pamela Cotant and digs deep into potential Satanic or gang-related activity related to Wisconsin youth.

She describes “nocturnal youths” roaming the streets during her night shift and flashing symbols of Satan. And a local priest was quick to agree, stating that youths interested in Satanism tended to dabble in other crimes as well, like suicide, abuse, burglary, etc and that their secret activities could include games like D&D.

#6. An evil board game.

Even in 1986, people were trying to connect the violent nature of a game to the increasingly violent behavior exhibited by some teenagers. The answer to society’ problem was, of course, to restrict or ban the games in question.

You’re just going to want to read this Chicago Sun-Times article for yourself, but beware – they want to get rid of Monopoly, too.

#7. A chat with Satan.

Photo Credit: Wikimedia

An article published in the Richmond Times-Dispatch – “Game Said to Inspire Mind, Raise Satan” – is pretty amazing all on its own. It chronicles a group of parents and religious fundamentalists hellbent on saving their kids from a “satanical” game.

They believed the game “teaches Satan-worship, spell-casting, witchcraft, rape, suicide, and assassination.”

#8. A letter to the editor.

Also in 1985, a religious group in Springfield, IL, was trying to prevent AC/DC from performing a show. That, combined with a news segment on BADD and D&D, inspired the letter to the editor below:

Dear Editor,

This has been an interesting week. Sunday night I tuned into the tail end of “60 Minutes” and was confronted with some lady in a big flap about the game Dungeons and Dragons. I never did get her point — whether she wanted the game taken off the market or just wanted to publicly air her sorrow over the suicide of her son which she blames on D&D. I commiserate. Losing a teen or preteen child to suicide must be the most agonizing thing a parent can face. The rest I took with a grain of salt.

My younger son has played D&D since the third grade and it has never occurred to me to check him for suicidal tendencies. In the eight years he has been playing, I’ve spent close to $600 on books, modules, dice, lead figures and other accouterments of the game. I guarantee you, when I spend that kind of money I pay attention to what it’s all about. I’ve listened to many an hour of it. I don’t exactly see what they get out of it — it seems rather boring to me — but I’ve had games continue on the kitchen table for days and I fail to see the harm in it.

Two days later I hear on the radio that AC/DC cannot appear at the Prairie Capital Convention Center because the local clergy and a few concerned parents think their music promotes Satanism. Amazing! Now I suppose I’ll have to keep watch on my cats and the neighbors’ dog in case my sons decide to indulge in some of the more gory rites of Satanic sacrifices. After all, we have and play every AC/DC album that’s been cut.

I secretly wanted to go to the concert myself but really couldn’t because, first, I’d embarrass my kids to death, and, second, my eardrums can’t take the decibel level they could when I was 16. But if I did decide to go I surely wouldn’t do so in fear of my mortal soul — or my sons’. If people don’t want their kids to go, keep them home. Or if they don’t want them playing D&D, don’t buy the game. What has that to do with the rest of us? I think all this brouhaha is ridiculous.

Glenna Burns Beckner, Pleasant Plains [Illinois]

You gotta be pretty focused on all this terrible stuff in order to see it everywhere, don’t you think?

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Scientists Just Partially Revived Dead Pigs’ Brains Just Hours After They Were Killed

THE END IS HERE. It’s all there, right in the title: scientists have managed to partially revive the brains of dead pigs, hours after they were killed.

Oh god.

While your brain swims with images of pig zombies coming to seek revenge on us all, let me try to explain the science. A research team at Yale restored some cellular activity in the brains of dead pigs, hours after they’d been killed in a slaughterhouse. They did this by soaking the brains in a “specially formulated chemical cocktail” for six hours.

Mmmmmmmkay.

The team has been careful to clarify that the revived brains are not conscious or aware.

“This is not a living brain,” neuroscientist Nenad Sestan explained, “but it is a cellularly active brain.”

The discovery marks a major breakthrough — but not because the scientists are actually trying to bring pigs back from the dead.

Instead, they’ve been trying to figure out how to directly study brain cells while they’re still in an intact organ. Restoring cellular function to a deceased brain is one way to do that.

With this breakthrough, researchers will be able to study brain diseases and injuries in an entirely new way.

“We could actually answer questions that we can’t now,” researcher Zvonimir Vrselja said.

Still, this comes way too close to zombies for comfort. People are kinda flipping out, and can you blame them?

Given the apocalyptic-feeling state of the world in 2019, we can just go ahead and add this to the long list of possible ways that the world might soon end. More nightmare fuel, NBD.

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7 Documentaries With Shocking Twists the Audience Never Saw Coming

There’s something about a good documentary that just gets me hooked. I think it’s got to do with the fact that I know that it’s all real- this is something that actually happened. It just goes to show how truth can be stranger than fiction.

The 7 below definitely fit that description, but be warned – some of the descriptions do contain minor spoilers.

#1. Capturing the Friedmans

Andrew Jarecki set out to make a short film about children’s party entertainers in NYC, featuring a popular clown named “Silly Billy.”

The film takes an unexpected turn when the filmmaker discovers that Silly Billy’s brother and father had both pled guilty to child sexual abuse in the 1980s.

#2. Gimme Shelter

David Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin set out to capture The Rolling Stones’ US tour on film, with the end sequences taking place at the Altamont Free Concert. You might watch it thinking it will be a fun thing, with the added bonus of George Lucas and Martin Scorsese, and you’d be right…for awhile.

Then, suddenly you’d be watching the murder of an 18-year-old kid who tried to rush the stage and ran into some Hell’s Angels serving as overzealous security.

#3. Icarus

This award-winning film starts as a movie about cycling but takes a hard left into government doping and conspiracy theories that will leave your head spinning, while keeping you completely enthralled.

#4. Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father

At first this seems like a touching tribute to a deceased father for his kid, but it quickly morphs into a true crime documentary that will leave you sobbing into your throw pillows.

Zachary is the son of the filmmaker’s best friend, Andrew Bagby, who was murdered by Zachary’s mother before the baby was born.

Sadly, that’s not the worst part of the story.

#5. Tickled

Filmmaker David Farrier is a light-entertainment TV journalist from New Zealand, so no one – least of all him – expected what happened as he researched “competitive endurance tickling.”

If you think that sounds slightly naughty, well, that’s because it is, and Farrier’s requests for information from the company behind the videos, Jane O’Brien Media, are met with open and increasing homophobic hostility.

As Farrier keeps digging and multiple former employees air their dirty laundry, you’ll start to wonder what the heck you’re watching – and you’ll have no idea until the end.

#6. Shooting Bigfoot

You might think that legends like Bigfoot are total bunk, but when you start to hear the respected scientists who are iffy on the subject, it’s not hard to begin re-thinking what you “know.”

The premise of this 2013 documentary was to shine a light on the Sasquatch-hunter subculture but the filmmaker, Morgan Matthews, ended up kind of, sort of…believing?

#7. 9/11

It starts off as a story about a young firefighter at the start of his career and ends you can guess where – but French filmmakers Jules and Gedeon Naudet tell the story in such a way that you’re still shocked by the footage, which is one of only three recordings of the actual collision of American Airlines Flight 11 into the Twin Towers.

I’ve got some more TV to watch!

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10+ “Genuises” Who Forged Documents and Didn’t Think They’d Get Caught

Before I start tearing all these forgers a new one, ask yourself a question: when is the last time somebody compared the signature on your credit card with the signature you signed?

Probably can’t remember, can you? True story… I’ve literally just written a big, fat “X” down in the signature field and people have accepted it, no questions asked. Of course, it was my credit card, but nobody asked me for my ID.

So we definitely live in a world, where people just take documents at face value. No questions asked. But our signatures are supposed to be our bond. How can we get back to that?

The following 12 people know this all too well, and most were successful in their deceit.

1. Just a minor violation…

Photo Credit: Whisper

2. Okay, that is seriously fucked up.

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3. Caught!

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4. Caught again!

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5. Damn.

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6. You’re probably just hurting yourself, but whatevs…

Photo Credit: Whisper

7. How would diabetes disqualify you from a job? Seems shaky…

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8. Nailed it.

Photo Credit: Whisper

9. How would they ever check this anyway?

Photo Credit: Whisper

10. Well, that didn’t work out as planned…

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11. Ivy league scammers, your day will come…

Photo Credit: Whisper

12. “Many a signature” almost sounds charming. Almost.

Photo Credit: Whisper

Forgery is a legit crime, and if you’re caught you can get some serious prison time.

Basically, don’t try and get away with doing stuff like this. Because it’s more likely than not that you’ll get caught.

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Henry Lee III was a Calvary officer…

Henry Lee III was a Calvary officer during the American Revolution who helped the US secede from Great Britain. His son Robert E. Lee, was a Confederate general who tried to help the Confederacy secede from the US.