Tag Archives: fermented

Couple Has Sex in a Mall and Other Videos of the Day

Wife VS Mistress Panda Gives Birth in Captivity Father Feeds Daughter Beer Dude Coughs up Bubble Robbers Leave Crociles in School during Robbery Inmate Assists Jail Guard Belgian Police Shoot a Woman French Bull Dog Doesn’t Like Fermented fish News Reporter Watches 26 Accidents Happen The post Couple Has Sex in a Mall and Other Videos of the Day appeared first on DrunkenStepfather .

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Couple Has Sex in a Mall and Other Videos of the Day

Ben Flajnik and Courtney Robertson: "Engaged-Dating"

Controversial lovebirds Ben Flajnik and Courtney Robertson of The Bachelor fame say they are enjoying what they’ve come to call “engaged dating.” The way this season went, that’s as good as one could hope for, if not better. “We’re still getting to know each other and taking it slow ,” Flajnik told People at a fashion show in New York. “[Things] are working out really well.” Courtney Robertson agrees, but says she still has a lot to learn about Ben. “It’s nice to see him in social settings and with his family,” says the model. “He is always the life of the party. He’s got this great personality.” While the duo is looking forward to a summer filled with travel plans and wedding invitations, they won’t be rushing down the aisle anytime soon. “We’re not even there yet,” Ben Flajnik said. Added his fiance, perhaps the most reviled Bachelor contestant ever, “[We’re] just enjoying each other.” Things are going swimmingly, though, save for minor hiccups. She’s finding out what they don’t have in common: He “hates bananas,” she says. But she has won him over with her favorite drink: “She’s got me drinking those things,” Ben says of the fermented tea-based beverage kombucha. If that’s their biggest problem now, they could prove a lot of us wrong. What do you think: Will Ben and Courtney last?

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Ben Flajnik and Courtney Robertson: "Engaged-Dating"

Elephants on drunken rampage kill three people

Binge-drinking elephants, drunk on local hooch, have killed three people and destroyed 60 homes in a four-day rampage in east India. Yesterday they were reported by local officials to be sleeping off hangovers as shocked communities tried to clear the wreckage left by the 70-strong herd in remote villages on the borders of the states of Orissa and West Bengal. With a local festival approaching, villagers had stockpiled the fermented-rice based drink which is stored in earthenware vessels and, according to Bijay Kumar Panda, a local administrator, the elephants found and drank it. They then staggered through the surrounding area and began “to fall asleep hither and thither, throwing life completely haywire”. According to the Pioneer newspaper, the “jumbos” are known “for their love of local country-made brews” which they “gulp down and make merry at the expense of the villagers”. Elephant experts say such incidents are becoming more common. With pristine forest increasingly rare, especially in the area where this latest incident occurred, Indian elephants no longer avoid contact with humans, said Dr Amirtharaj Williams, Asian rhino and elephant programme co-ordinator for the World Wildlife Fund. “These herds are effectively semi-urbanised. There are elephants who are getting a taste for food that humans prepare because it is tastier, stronger-smelling and often more nutritious and that includes rice- or molasses-based drinks. Some go looking for it.” Around 400 people are killed each year by elephants in India and nearly a million hectares of farmland damaged. Around 100 elephants are killed by villagers each year. India's booming population and economic growth have placed the historic grazing lands of elephants under enormous pressure. To avoid exhausting fodder in one area, the herds migrate. Attempts to create safe corridors for the animals' travel have foundered on bureaucratic sloth and lack of enforcement. In September seven elephants were killed by a speeding goods train. Latest estimates put India's elephant population at around 21,000 – the largest in Asia. About half of these are found in north-eastern states of Assam, Arunachal Pradesh and Meghalaya. added by: device80