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Curious Mountain Goats Climb on Top of Car in Colorado

Curious Mountain Goats Climb on Top of Car in Colorado

Yahoo6 days ago
Watch this hilarious video of two mountain goats on top of a parked Subaru with one of them jumping and dancing on its roof.
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Matthew Koma Reveals Hilary Duff Had Sex with Him in Unwashed Lollapalooza Performance Top (Even If She Mocked Him First)
Matthew Koma Reveals Hilary Duff Had Sex with Him in Unwashed Lollapalooza Performance Top (Even If She Mocked Him First)

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Matthew Koma Reveals Hilary Duff Had Sex with Him in Unwashed Lollapalooza Performance Top (Even If She Mocked Him First)

Duff shared the hilarious video on her Instagram StoriesNEED TO KNOW Hilary Duff called out husband Matthew Koma in a hilarious video on her Instagram Stories After jokingly criticizing him for not changing his T-shirt after performing at Lollapalooza and flying home, he replied: "You had sex with me in this shirt. What's that say about you? The couple wed in 2019 in a California ceremonyHilary Duff is sharing a hilarious behind-the-scenes moment with her husband Matthew Koma. On Monday, Aug. 4, Duff, 37, posted a video on her Instagram Stories in which Koma, 38, lounges on a chair while wearing a white cutoff tank top with a green "Newport" logo on it. He paired the look with a green baseball cap that read "3M Automotive" and black shorts. "Pretty cool that you're still wearing your shirt that you performed in yesterday at sweaty Lollapalooza and you flew home in, and you're well into this day. Also having a pretty intense nip slip right now," Duff narrated as Koma scrolled on his phone. Koma chimed in, "You had sex with me in this shirt. What's that say about you?" to which Duff laughed. The Winnetka Bowling League lead singer took the stage at the Chicago music festival on Aug. 2. The couple first met in 2013, but did not enter a relationship until 2017. They tied the knot two years later, and share children Banks Violet, Mae James, and Townes Medow. Duff also shares son Luca Cruz with ex-husband Mike Comrie. The family regularly share updates on their little ones. On Father's Day 2025, Duff celebrated Koma with an Instagram video post featuring their sweet family moments with their kids. 'Remember when you said you wanted kids by 35?? Tricked you! Happy Father's Day to the cutest and the best — we will keep you forever,' she wrote in the caption. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. In the video, Koma is seen styling his daughter's hair. The proud dad previously shared a sweet tribute to Duff in December 2024 in honor of the couple's fifth wedding anniversary. "As I lay next to you in bed, purely exhausted after our third consecutive 14 hour day of taking our 4 kids skiing — I feel like the luckiest. You chose me to do the impossible with. And as we navigate through the truly IN IT years, I think the most exciting thing is knowing on the other side of this, we get each other," Koma wrote at the time. Read the original article on People Solve the daily Crossword

San Francisco's last video rental store tucked away in Noe Valley neighborhood
San Francisco's last video rental store tucked away in Noe Valley neighborhood

CBS News

time14 hours ago

  • CBS News

San Francisco's last video rental store tucked away in Noe Valley neighborhood

Once a staple of neighborhoods everywhere, video stores all but vanished in the age of streaming. But tucked between a Supercuts and a nail salon in San Francisco's Noe Valley is a surprising survivor: a small, independently owned video shop where movies are still picked by hand and watched on disc. Welcome to Video Wave, it's believed to be the last remaining video rental store in San Francisco. It has rows and rows of DVDs and a loyal crowd keeping an old ritual alive. Owner Colin Hutton said he never thought he'd be the last one standing. "There's been many, many moments when I thought I wouldn't survive it," he said. The trouble began around 2008, when streaming services took off and video stores across the country began to fade to black. But then, something unexpected happened: Customers started to come back, some drawn by nostalgia, others by curiosity. For 23-year-old Kailxn Xephyr, it was a refreshing experience. "When it comes to things that are streaming on your phone, it feels like everything's demanding your attention right away, and these other things are like a step removed from that," Xephyr said. Believe it or not, DVDs are having a moment. Not quite a blockbuster comeback, more of a cult-classic rewind. While overall DVD sales dropped more than 23% last year, 4K editions jumped 10 percent, and collector versions climbed 25 percent, according to the Digital Entertainment Group. "There's been a real resurgence in tangible media," said Lucas Hildebrand, chair of Film and Media Studies at UC Irvine. Hildebrand said for Gen Z, part of the appeal isn't just the films. It's the boxes, the artwork, even the act of browsing. "There's also hunger for people who grew up with social media, who grew up with the Internet, to actually have in person interactions," he said. Ironically, the future of the store may depend on the very thing that nearly wiped it out: a subscription model. Hutton said he had 556 subscribers, just enough to keep Video Wave from avoiding the final cut. "With my business model being subscription, if I had 150 more subscribers, that would be the difference between not making it and making it," Hutton said.

Amazon's latest move spells trouble for audio-based podcasting
Amazon's latest move spells trouble for audio-based podcasting

Fast Company

time17 hours ago

  • Fast Company

Amazon's latest move spells trouble for audio-based podcasting

Amazon is gearing up for a significant restructuring of Wondery—the podcast studio behind popular shows like Scamfluencers, Dr. Death, and Business Wars —and it might be a signal that the podcasting industry is shifting to more video-centric formats. Wondery was founded in 2016 as a studio dedicated to spotlighting long-form, narrative-based podcasts (think stories and formats along the lines of This American Life 's iconic Serial). It was acquired by Amazon in 2021 at the height of the pandemic-induced podcast boom for a reported $300 million. Now, Wondery's brand and existing shows will be shuffled off into larger Amazon products as its CEO Jen Sargent and around 110 employees are let go from the company. A recent analysis from the analytics firm Grand View Research shows that the global podcasting market size was estimated at $30.72 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $131.13 billion by 2030. But while podcasting is still on an upward trajectory, the way that fans consume podcasts is clearly shifting: Now, listeners are turning to podcasts that also include a video component, with popular podcasts like The Joe Rogan Experience and Call Her Daddy increasingly relying on repostable video formats. 'The podcast landscape has evolved significantly over the past few years,' Steve Boom, Amazon's vice president of audio, Twitch and games, wrote in a memo to Wondery staff viewed by Fast Company. 'The rise of video has also blurred the lines on what it means to be a podcast creator.' Bad news for audio-only podcasts In an initial report on August 4, Bloomberg claimed that Amazon was planning to fully shutter Wondery. However, Amazon has since clarified that it is not closing down the brand, and instead plans to keep at least some of its properties afloat under a new structure, but things are changing. The team responsible for Wondery's narrative podcast series, including Dr. Death, Business Wars, and American Scandal, will now report to Amazon's Audible podcast vertical. Meanwhile, celebrity-led podcasts including Dax Shepard's Armchair Expert and Jason and Travis Kelce's New Heights will join a new organization called 'Creator Services' under the Amazon umbrella. 'This new team will continue to operate our creator-led podcast studio under the Wondery brand, working with a select number of top creators to drive scaled listenership and unlock broader and long-lasting relationships across Amazon,' Boom wrote in the staff memo. In response to Fast Company 's request for more details on whether any Wondery shows will be canceled, and Amazon spokesperson shared, 'We're still finalizing content distribution details for specific shows, and will share updates once decisions are made.' On the reasoning behind the restructuring, they added, 'The podcast landscape has evolved significantly in the past few years, particularly with the rise of video-forward, creator-led content. These changes reflect that evolution and will streamline how Wondery integrates further into Amazon.' The video-based podcast evolution is having ripple effects across the entire industry. Currently, YouTube is the number one place that podcasts are consumed, topping one billion total podcast views per month this February. This year, Spotify picked up on the trend by leaning hard into its video podcasting arm, taking cues from social media in its UX design. Netflix that it may make a move into video podcasting.

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