Lol Pics of Celeberties

Tuesday, June 26, 2012



For this photo of Sofia Vergara eating an ice cream cone, we asked our Facebook fans to submit a caption. This week's winner is, Madison Bailey Britt, who wrote, ‎"It's okay, this ice cream will go to my size 8 hips, not my size 2 waist.





Note to all celebrities: Pretending to be a ghost to avoid paparazzi doesn't really work. Just ask the Ghost of Alec Baldwin.





Not all people are mature enough to take care of a real pet, but practicing on an inflatable penguin is a good way to learn necessary skills, as Snooki demonstrates.







Alessandra Ambrosio models the Victoria's Secret gang look: $300 bandanna, over-sized T-shirt with your picture on it, and narcissistic hand signals.





Sorry, Heidi, no matter how much makeup and training you give to this guy, he'll just never come close to supermodel status.





Even legendary boxers get nosebleeds at inopportune times… Like when they're hanging out with Gene Simmons. Luckily, Mike Tyson brought along his Hello Kitty toilet paper.

Man restores stone house from $15K to $2M price tag

​House-flipping is an art that seems to have declined since the 2008 housing crisis, but this Nova Scotia house that's just gone to market is quite possibly the epoch's masterpiece. Sherman Heines bought an unimpressive stone house in 1982 in Nova Scotia for $15,000, and it's now on  the market for a whopping $2 million. No, it wasn't adding a pool or bowling alley that raised the market value; it was Heines' realization that the house was actually an ancient, fortified church from 1699. He dedicated himself to carefully restoring the house and tracking down period furniture (included in the asking price), a 30-year labor of love that's made the house a gem -- and may make Heines a fortune.


Built in 1699, this home known as 'The Mission' in Poplar Grove, Nova Scotia, Canada, is on the market (© Sherman Hines)

Italy's Simone Pepe Performs World Cup's First-Ever Tricycle Kick

Monday, June 25, 2012

Report: People Talking About Soccer, But There’s No World Cup This Year So It Must Be Something Else

According to a report released Friday, which noted a considerable increase in the number of people talking about soccer throughout the United States, this is not the year of a World Cup, so there must be something else going on. "Our research definitely shows a measurable increase in soccer-related conversations, Facebook updates, and tweets, which would be a perfectly natural occurrence around the time of a World Cup. However, that’s still two years away, so we’re really stumped," said Dr. Galen Clavio, a professor of sports communication at Indiana University, adding that hours of research also affirmed the increased soccer talk is not at all related to the upcoming London Olympics. "The current leading theory is that one of the famous soccer guys might have died, but the chatter only seems to be increasing rather than diminishing over time." Stating that they hope to have a definite answer within the coming week, researchers said there remains a strong likelihood that Americans were simply confusing soccer and hockey.


Topless painter shocks Thais with bare-breasted performance on TV talent show

Thailand's Ministry of Culture is investigating whether a TV talent show broke censorship laws after one of its contestants painted a canvas with her breasts, The European Pressphoto Agency reports.
Duangjai Jansaunoi, 23, drew a yellow outline of a man on a canvas, stripped off her shirt, poured paint over her breasts and proceeded to fill in the picture.

Alligator caught in Connecticut River; it's unknown where it came from


A 2- to 3-foot-long alligator wearing a collar that was roaming a residential neighborhood in Enfield, Conn., has been caught near the Connecticut River.
It was at a bus stop, according to the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection.Enfield police Sgt. Mark Squires told The Journal Inquirer of Manchester that authorities were called out around 7 a.m. Friday after the alligator was seen in the Thompsonville section of town.
A representative from the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection responded to the situation, along with animal control officers and Enfield police.It was wearing a collar, but there was no leash. It was not immediately clear where the animal came from.
No injuries were reported and the animal wil be brought to Rainforest Reptiles, an education facility in Massachusetts.
It is illegal in the state of Connecticut to own alligators, crocodiles or caimans.  They are on the list of exotic animals prohibited in the state.
 

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