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lately, the news section here at spikedhumor has been a bit dead.
the lack of activity is due to the fact that most of our editors have been working on another site - shoutwire.
this is mainly due to the possibility that shoutwire may be incorporated into the spikedhumor setup sometime in the future, but also because shoutwire is new and becoming increasingly popular (over 20,000 members since its launch in mid-november). i encourage everyone to sign up and get involved - it's an excellent source of diverse news and information - just check it out before you shrug it off.
that still doesn’t change the fact that we know a lot of you like to read news here, so we've decided to make an effort to resurrect the news section. myself and a few other editors will be paying special attention to this section in the next few weeks with the goal of bringing you more news in a more timely fashion.
we hope that in doing this we can encourage more discussion, votes, and views in this section. be sure to get involved with shoutwire by "shouting" your favorite articles and also adding commentary. thanks!
, spiked staff
for those of you who didn't already know, spikedhumor's audio section still exists. too bad we can't upload audio clips anymore...
david blaine's next stunt
courtesy of actiontrip.com
perfect pairing.
yann & gregory ros trial riding.
visitors to a new zealand acquatic centre were stunned to see one shark give another shark an impromptu caesarean section. staff at kelly tarlton's underwater world in auckland were initially dubious when visitors came running to tell them there were baby sharks spilling from a wound in a female school shark's stomach - courtesy of a large bite by another shark. but they found a female with a large gaping stomach wound and four babies swimming in the tank. kelly tarlton's aquarist fiona davies said it was common for sharks to take chunks out of each other, even in the wild, but she had never heard of anything like this. "it had to bite a certain part to let them out and do it without killing them [the babies] or her [the mother]." ms davies said the unusual delivery had probably saved the baby sharks' lives. staff did not know the mother was pregnant and, had she given birth naturally, most likely at night, the babies would have been eaten by adult sharks and stingrays before staff could rescue them. the young sharks have been taken to a "nursery" tank with some baby eagle rays, where visitors can see them before they are released into the wild. source