Tags Stuff

World's Top Chef Admits Being A McDonald's Fan

Spanish chef Ferran Adria may be known for owning El Bulli, which was recognized four times in 2002, 2005, 2007 and 2008 by Restaurant magazine as the best dining establishment.

Although he had been called the most imaginative generator of haute cuisine on the planet, his taste buds also appreciate fast food, particularly McDonald's hamburgers.

University Chaplain Arrested For E-mailing Video Pornography

Students and faculty members at the St. John's University in Queens, New York City were shocked after authorities arrested university chaplain Father Charles Plock for allegedly emailing pornographic videos to an investigator guised as a 14-year-old.

Plock, 64, was charged after a Colorado police detective posing as a young boy received two home video containing scenes of Plock masturbating in his bathroom's apartment inside the campus.

British Representative Forced To Eat Powdered Cream To Prove It Wasn't Cocaine

A British politician had a scare recently when armed Colombian soldiers mistakenly took his powdered coffee-mate to be raw cocaine.

Michael Fabricant, 58, who represents the Staffordshire constituency of Lichfield and Burntwood, was on a trekking vacation in South America when he and his friend ran into a group of soldiers in the jungle. The gun-wielding militants searched their belongings and found an unlabeled jar of powdered coffee creamer.

Study: U.S. Bills Most Contaminated With Cocaine Among Paper Money

Two Spanish chemists have found that U.S. dollar bills contained the highest traces of cocaine powder, indicating the popularity of the illegal drug.

The study by Sergio Armenta and Miguel de la Guardia from the University of Valencia published in the latest issue of the journal Trends in Analytical Chemistry also found that Spanish euro notes are the most contaminated with the drug among European currencies.

Spanish Children End Up In Mental Clinic For Excessive Mobile Phone Usage

Two Spanish children have been sent to a mental health institution by their parents to get treatment for addiction to their mobile phones. The children had allegedly ceased to undertake normal activities without first having their phones.

The children, aged 12 and 13, were admitted to Child and Youth Mental Health Centre in Lleida, in northeastern Spain near Barcelona, three months ago. Their concerned parents brought them in after they spend an average of six hours a day on their phones, talking, texting or playing games.