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January 14, 2008
Topics chicken, head, magic, legs, film, china, chinese, television, dead, animal, life, city and man
A man from China got the shock of his life upon discovering a chicken he placed in the freezer for two days came out alive and crowing. According to Gan Shugen, of Chengdu City, he got the hen which was wrapped in a thick plastic bag with its legs bound as a gift from a relative.
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January 8, 2008
Television host Jeremy Clarkson has no one to blame but himself for losing money after publishing his bank account details in his newspaper column. Clarkson, who hosts the show "Top Gear," revealed his account numbers as he tried to downplay an incident involving the loss of 25 million people's personal details on two computer discs. But apparently, he was proven wrong after he discovered someone, who presumably read his column, used the details to charge a $986 donation to the charity Diabetes U. K. against his account just days after he published the details of his account at Barclays in his column at The Sun
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January 6, 2008
Topics art, video, television, gallery, weather, bomb, real, tv, phone, life, money and face
A group of award-winning Czech artists are facing prison terms for hacking into a TV weather broadcast to air footage of a nuclear explosion. All six members of the artist group, Ztohoven have been named in the complaint filed by Czech Television after the group hacked their Panoram program last June and interrupted their airing of peaceful scenes of the local countryside by video clips to make it appear as if a nuclear bomb had been blasted.
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December 31, 2007
Police in Santa Fe, Texas, have taken a man into custody for burglarizing his neighbor's home and stealing some of her undergarments. Thirty year-old Charles Michael Clark is reported to have broken into the woman house while she was out of town. On returning home when the lady found a barefoot man in the living room, she was stunned to find the man who fled instantly. She immediately reported to Police, and complained of her missing undergarments, Sergeant Eric Bruss
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December 30, 2007
A television advertisement for a chain of electrical stores denying the existence of Father Frost, Russia's version of Santa Claus, has been banned by the Russian government. According to the BBC, the Federal anti-Monopoly Service found the advertisement for Eto electrical stores had broken rules for advertisers not to discredit parents and teachers when it declared that Father Frost was non-existent.
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