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Three ducks caught in heated quacking argument in China

Three ducks caught in heated quacking argument in China

Yahooa day ago
On July 4, 2025, three ducks were filmed loudly squabbling in Hainan, China. The ducks stretched their necks and quacked furiously in what looked like an intense argument. Their synchronized showdown amused onlookers and quickly went viral online.
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1000-lb. Sisters' Tammy Slaton apologizes for drink she can't live without even after dramatic weight loss
1000-lb. Sisters' Tammy Slaton apologizes for drink she can't live without even after dramatic weight loss

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

1000-lb. Sisters' Tammy Slaton apologizes for drink she can't live without even after dramatic weight loss

1000-lb. Sisters star Tammy Slaton has revealed the one drink she won't be giving up despite her 500-pound weight loss: soda. The 39-year-old reality star shared a video Tuesday on TikTok about her weight loss journey, responding to someone who called her out for drinking soda in a recent post. In the comment, the TikTok user pointed out that soft drinks — which Slaton calls 'sodies' — have a lot of sugar and asked her about her current diet. Slaton responded by apologizing for her decision to drink soda. 'Everybody is different. I'm not supposed to drink the sodies as much, and that was Sprite,' she said. 'Well, sorry! So, you're right. You're right.' However, Slaton, who underwent bariatric surgery in 2022, said that she wasn't cutting soda out of her diet. Instead, she argued that she can have whatever she wants 'in moderation.' 'I drink a lot of water and I drink a lot of sodies, but I'm still three, four years post-op,' she said, referring to her weight-loss surgery. 'So everything I'm doing is not fine, but it's OK because I'm still continuing on my diet. I'm still continuing to lose weight and I'm still hitting goals.' When Slaton and her sister Amy's TLC show, 1000-lb Sisters, aired, they made their love for soda known. In an episode that aired in 2020, a dietician asked the siblings if they drink water during the day. Slaton and her sister both said no in response, noting that they mainly drank soda. Slaton then confessed that she drank about eight to 12 cans of soda a day. However, Slaton revealed in 2023 that she doesn't drink soda nearly as often. In a since-deleted TikTok, as reported by People, she said she only had two cans of soda a day or fewer. Slaton has also been open about her health journey over the years after getting bariatric surgery, which is designed to help people lose weight by altering the digestive system, in 2022. During the April season premiere of 1000-lb Sisters, she revealed that she was 'down 500 pounds.' 'When I was at my heaviest, I was 700-plus pounds. Right now, I'm weighing in at 238,' she said. Following her bariatric surgery, she underwent skin removal surgery, where over 15 pounds of excess skin were removed from her chin, arms, and lower stomach earlier this year. 'I was really nervous for the skin removal surgery because I was really just kind of afraid of how I'm gonna feel looking at myself without the belly there,' she revealed in an interview with People in June about the milestone. 'The night before my surgery, I was, like, seriously freaking terrified. I was even more nervous about having skin removal surgery than I was for the [sleeve gastrectomy] surgery because they're actually cutting the whole belly!'

Tiny Love Stories: ‘Let Joy Back In'
Tiny Love Stories: ‘Let Joy Back In'

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

Tiny Love Stories: ‘Let Joy Back In'

A Blue Stone for My Desolate World Typhoid imprisoned me — 6 years old, aching, silently watching the ceiling at home in Ambala, India. My cot moved to the veranda every evening; I watched the world play without me. Loneliness settled like dust. One dusk, my friend Madhu's mother arrived like a breeze. She spoke in stories, then slipped a ring onto my finger: rolled gold, with a sea-blue stone. 'For the princess,' she said. It shimmered like a spell. I whispered to it, held it up to show the sun. It became my secret friend, my talisman. That small circle of beauty let joy back in. — Viney Kirpal The Love He Could Give I moved from the city to a small town for work — single, uncertain, joking to friends that I was David Rose from 'Schitt's Creek.' Then I met him. Though he'd just left a 16-year-long relationship, he made me feel chosen. One sunny morning, as I reached for my shoes, he called. 'I'm coming over,' he said. Minutes later, he arrived — leather jacket, wet curls, steady brown eyes — holding a vase of tulips, ruscus, wild veronica. He'd arranged them himself. He kissed me softly, then whispered, 'Have a beautiful day, papi chulo.' The flowers stayed. A week later, he didn't. — Mayank Chugh 'I Know She Was Difficult' After the call, I was awash with relief. My troubled, depressed mother, just deceased, would never again brand Dad an idiot, an ignoramus, an imbecile. He had selflessly cared for her during her many declining years. Kind Dad could finally find a woman who appreciated him, I thought. 'I still miss your mum,' he told me years later. 'I know she was difficult, but I choose to remember the good times.' Tall, handsome Dad, the most eligible man in the care home to which he eventually moved, never showed the slightest interest in the possibility of a new romantic relationship. — Tony Elston With a Little Help From Our Friend Each year, in Berlin, a friend invited my now-husband, Andreas, and me to her birthday party. We never met there. But one day, he asked her to bring a friend to a party. She chose me: 'He is just your type.' A grunge musician with long blonde hair, he was indeed. After becoming a couple, we discovered that neither of us had ever liked our friend's birthday parties. I had always come early to leave early. He had always arrived as late as possible. No chance to meet there. Still, it's our friend's gift that we met at all. — Isolde Peter See more Tiny Love Stories at Submit yours at Want more from Modern Love? Watch the TV series; sign up for the newsletter; or listen to the podcast on iTunes, Spotify or Google Play. We also have swag at the NYT Store and two books, 'Modern Love: True Stories of Love, Loss, and Redemption' and 'Tiny Love Stories: True Tales of Love in 100 Words or Less.'

Character.AI launches social feed to let users interact, create, and share with AI personas
Character.AI launches social feed to let users interact, create, and share with AI personas

Fast Company

time5 hours ago

  • Fast Company

Character.AI launches social feed to let users interact, create, and share with AI personas

BY Listen to this Article More info 0:00 / 2:34 is going social, adding an interactive feed to its mobile apps. Rolled out on Monday, the new social feed may initially look similar to traditional social media platforms. But rather than liking friends' holiday photos or commenting on influencers' posts, users interact with user-generated characters, from computer game avatars to Elon Musk and Harry Potter. 'The new feed is the front door to the app and a great way for users to discover new creators, characters, and content,' Character. AI CEO Karandeep Anand tells Fast Company. 'Unlike traditional social feeds, users don't just watch creator content—they actively participate. They can customize, adapt, and build on what they see, making the experience uniquely their own.' Instead of passively scrolling, users are encouraged to become active cocreators. They can rewrite narratives, insert themselves into storylines, or shift characters from scenes to streams. 'Our goal with the feed is not to push purely AI-generated content like some other platforms,' Anand added. 'Instead, it's to showcase and encourage human creativity with the help of AI.' users can post Chat Snippets, which capture parts of conversations with AI chatbots, stream character debates, or share custom Character Cards that preview specific characters. 'We have a really engaged community of creators who are building fun content of all kinds with these new features,' said Anand. 'For consumers, the feed unlocks the more immersive experience they've been looking for.' Paying subscribers with access to new video generation feature, Avatar FX, can also post short AI-generated videos of any character on the platform, along with AI-generated images based on their chats. already boasts over 100 million characters in its library. With users spending more than 2 billion minutes per month chatting with virtual personalities, the shift toward a more social and public experience raises safety concerns, especially given the scrutiny the platform has faced. 'Our goal is to provide an engaging space that fosters creativity while maintaining a safe environment for all,' Anand says. 'Along with our general text and video classifiers, the community feed will be moderated by our trust and safety team in addition to community moderation. Users are also able to hide and flag inappropriate content if needed.' The early-rate deadline for Fast Company's Most Innovative Companies Awards is Friday, September 5, at 11:59 p.m. PT. Apply today. Sign up for our weekly tech digest. SIGN UP This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Privacy Policy

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