Girl On Afghanistan’s "Idol" Risking Her Life
Latifa Azizi wants to be the next “Afghan Star.”
Latifa Azizi wants to be the next “Afghan Star.”
Love is a battlefield.
If you can do all of them, you are, by the rules of divahood, Beyoncé.
Way to set the bar for future product photography unnecessarily high.
What’s the use of having children unless you can mess with them constantly?
She may look like your grandmother, but J.B. Fletcher is a crime-fighting force to be reckoned with. Here’s why everyone should re-watch this Angela Lansbury classic.
This video of a bully named Jaide getting taken down after provoking another girl into a fight is going viral on Twitter. (WARNING: violence and NSFW language).
Clinton set a new record for travel for a Secretary of State. Friday is her last day at the State Department.
Fab or drab?
“My real name is David Jones and I don’t have to tell you why I changed it.”
England’s annual Tough Guy Challenge involves an eight-mile run through fire, ice, barbed wire, and tunnels made of tires.
The act of the ‘Come at me bro’ did not originate exclusively in the Jersey Shore. One can find many ‘come at me bros’ naturally occurring in the animal kingdom.
“I love haters,” she says, finally responding to that inauguration lip-synching criticism. “Due to the weather, due to the delay, due to no proper sound check, I did not feel comfortable taking a risk.” Today she did.
Seven-layer dip is fine, if you’re some kind of BABY. The Super Bowl calls for a BIG DIP.
A reminder to change your passwords if you fire your social media team.
Note to drunk football fans: Don’t approach television cameras.
Before Michael Jackson, Super Bowl halftime shows only had marching bands and stuff and they were super lame. He single-handedly made halftime better for you and for me and the entire human race.
On January 30th, Tokyo men overcome cultural norms to scream declarations of love to their significant others. (via Reuters)
“You must act. Be bold, be courageous. Americans are counting on you,” Giffords tells lawmakers.
Werner Freund, 79, has devoted the last 40 years of his life to wolves. To learn more about them and defeat the stigmas surrounding them, he became part of their pack.