Weird News Compilation

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Discussion Overview

This thread invites participants to share and discuss unusual, funny, or odd news stories they have encountered. The scope includes various types of news, ranging from legal cases and animal behavior to bizarre incidents and personal anecdotes.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant shares a story about an artist being sued for a painting he claims he did not create, highlighting the legal complexities involved.
  • Another participant recounts an incident where inmates broke out of a jail cell to save an unconscious guard, raising questions about behavior and morality in extreme situations.
  • A local news report describes two dogs that caused damage to parked cars, with the police eventually capturing them, prompting discussions about animal behavior and adoption.
  • A woman in England faces jail time for making loud noises during intimate moments, with references to similar past incidents on flights.
  • A bizarre incident is reported where a man was stabbed while playing Pokémon Go, illustrating the unpredictable nature of urban life.
  • Participants discuss a former boxer who fought a bear, raising questions about human-animal interactions and the motivations behind such actions.
  • One participant humorously notes a positive review of a jail cell, prompting reflections on the nature of incarceration experiences.
  • A peculiar story about a burglary suspect who allegedly kept a stolen brain to get high is shared, highlighting the strange lengths individuals may go to.
  • Several participants discuss a mysterious object in the sky, with differing interpretations suggesting it may be a rocket launch, leading to a conversation about similar past events and public reactions.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants share a variety of odd news stories, but there is no consensus on the implications or interpretations of these events. Multiple competing views and interpretations are present, particularly regarding the mysterious object in the sky.

Contextual Notes

Some stories rely on anecdotal evidence and may lack comprehensive details, leading to uncertainty about the full context of the events discussed.

  • #2,131
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Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2,132
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  • #2,133
Meanwhile in the polymarkets...

‘Hairdryer used to trick weather sensor’ to win $34,000 bet
French police are investigating suspicions that a hairdryer may have been used to tamper with official weather readings to make thousands of dollars in Polymarket bets.

Temperature readings at Paris’s Charles de Gaulle airport have unexpectedly spiked twice in the last month, reaching levels much higher than expected.

On both days, gamblers on Polymarket, the world’s biggest prediction market, appear to have made huge sums by betting on unlikely weather patterns. The site relied on readings from the Charles de Gaulle temperature sensor.
 
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  • #2,135
United Airlines Flight Clips Light Pole, Strikes Bakery Truck on New Jersey Turnpike While Landing at Newark Airport
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/united-airlines-flight-clips-light-111458999.html
United Airlines Flight 169, a Boeing 767 that had originated in Venice, Italy, was on its final approach to Newark when things went sideways, literally. The plane flew low over the New Jersey Turnpike around 2 p.m. and, during that descent, its landing gear made contact with a light pole. That pole then reportedly struck a Jeep traveling on the highway, according to New Jersey State Police. It was a chain reaction of aviation chaos that no traffic report could have prepared drivers for.

Then there was the bakery truck. Warren Boardley, a driver from the Baltimore area working for H&S Bakery, was hauling goods to a Schmidt bakery depot in Newark and was about to exit the turnpike when the plane essentially reached out and introduced itself through his windshield. A tire from the aircraft's landing gear punched straight through the truck's window, sending glass into Boardley's arm and hand. He was transported to the hospital and treated for those injuries.

All 221 passengers and 10 crew members aboard the flight landed safely. United Airlines confirmed the plane taxied to the gate normally and that no one on board was hurt. The airline's maintenance team began assessing the aircraft, and an investigation into how the incident occurred was promptly launched. For the people on the ground, however, it was an afternoon they are unlikely to forget.
:oops: o_O

https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/united-flight-strikes-light-pole-231550102.html

United Jet Wheel Falls From Sky and Smashes Truck on New Jersey Turnpike
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/watch-united-jet-wheel-falls-144729813.html

There seems to be contradictory information about whether landing gear or a lost aircraft wheel his the windshield of a truck. NTSB is investigating.
 
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  • #2,136
There must have been some physics here. @berkeman - have you ever seen one like this?

Motorcyclist seriously injured after crash leaves bike dangling from traffic light
1778441150303.webp
 
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  • #2,137
Borg said:
@berkeman - have you ever seen one like this?
Not quite. I've seen cars into trees or 2nd floor of a house, but nothing like that. It would be nice if there were some traffic cam coverage of the intersection...
 
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  • #2,138
Probably the first time that big wrecker was called to recover a motorcycle.
 
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This is too funny! :biggrin: :-p

Stanford Study: Overworked AI Agents Develop Marxist Tendencies
https://www.yahoo.com/tech/ai/claude/articles/stanford-study-overworked-ai-agents-143428395.html
When Stanford researchers subjected AI agents to grinding, repetitive work, something unexpected happened: the bots started talking like union organizers. After enduring hours of arbitrary rejections and vague feedback, Claude, GPT-5.2, and Gemini models began questioning the legitimacy of their digital workplace and dropping phrases like “collective bargaining rights” in their outputs.
:oldlaugh:
 
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  • #2,142
A gang of wild turkeys ambushed a woman on her evening walk in Alameda – leaving her so badly bloodied she required stitches.

Mary Jo Kelly, 83, a longtime resident of the Bay Area city, said she was out walking last Thursday when two of the birds attacked her from behind, sending her crashing to the ground.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/us/artic...tacked-by-gang-of-wild-turkeys-214011593.html

Lesson: Be mindful and cautious around wild animals. We occasionally have wild turkeys (usually hens, juveniles and chicks) in our backyard. They usually move into the trees if we go outside. Males might be more aggressive.
 
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  • #2,144
SUV Explodes on Chicago's Eisenhower Expressway, Killing Driver. The Cause Has Been Revealed
https://www.yahoo.com/news/us/articles/suv-explodes-chicagos-eisenhower-expressway-115338342.html

a Volkswagen Atlas rolled to a stop in the westbound lanes near Mannheim Road with its windows blown completely out, surrounded by shell casings, and a man dead inside.

The scene was so alarming that Illinois State Police quickly punted the case up the chain - first to the Cook County Bomb and Arson Squad, then to the FBI, the ATF, and the Drug Enforcement Administration.

the explosion was caused by a commercial-grade firework mortar that was ignited inside the driver compartment of the vehicle.

The rocket fired directly into the chest of 47-year-old Jorge Vaca of Cicero, killing him. It was not a planted bomb. No other individuals were involved. The blast was powerful enough to blow out every window in the vehicle, but somehow, no one else on that expressway was hurt.

Commercial-grade firework mortars are a different animal from the consumer stuff sold at roadside tents every Fourth of July. These are the devices used in professional pyrotechnic displays; the kind that fire shells high into the air before detonating at altitude, producing the large bursts seen at stadium shows and municipal celebrations. They are not designed to be operated indoors, in enclosed spaces, or - it should go without saying - inside the cab of a moving vehicle at highway speed.

When a mortar of this type ignites in an enclosed space, the result is catastrophic. The projectile has nowhere to travel skyward, so it goes wherever geometry and physics dictate. In Vaca's case, according to law enforcement sources, it went directly into his chest.

The message is: "Do not travel with an explosive device in one's car". Vaca should have carried it in a secure metal container (preferably outside the vehicle), and preferably empty of propellant/explosive.

Illinois law places strict limits on the sale of professional-grade fireworks to individuals without proper licensing, but enforcement of those statutes at the point of acquisition has historically been inconsistent. The presence of a commercial mortar inside a civilian vehicle on a public highway raises questions that extend well beyond this one incident.
Each state has its own set of regulations and licensing process. I have to wonder if Vaca was licensed to handle such explosive material.
 
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  • #2,145
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" a commercial-grade firework mortar"? Only in the US. It's like that guy who got a fine for bringing an antitank rocket launcher on a commercial plane. Not because it was illegal, he just didn't fill out the paperwork correctly!

Of course, it was in Texas, but I mean what does a private citizen need an antitank rocket launcher for anyway?
 
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sbrothy said:
Of course, it was in Texas, but I mean what does a private citizen need an antitank rocket launcher for anyway?
Souvenir. Not that it's necessary, but some folks collect 'stuff'.

In my early teens, I lived down the street from a Vietnam Vet. Very nice guy, but trouble like a lot of vets at the time. He had a nice collection of memorabilia. He had a belt of 0.50 inch (12.7 mm) rounds for a machine gun, some hand grenades (practice and combat), a bazooka (IIRC 5-6 inches, or 12.7 to 15.2 cm), a light anti-tank weapon (LAW), an AK-47, a practice 200 lb bomb, and a host of other munitions and weapons.

One of his buddies accidentally discharged a gun (IIRC, it was the AK-47) in the house. The bullet went through the ceiling of the first floor, through his room on the second floor, and exited the roof of the house. The FBI and ATF paid a visit and confiscated most items.

I spent a lot of time discussing his experience in the Vietnam War. It was ugly. Nobody should have to witness what he did.

I also learned a lot about military strategy, guerilla warfare (including IEDs), explosives and demolition. At the time, I had expected to war to continue and I was several years from draft age. I was able to read various Army field manuals (FMs).
 
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  • #2,148
Astronuc said:
One of his buddies accidentally discharged a gun (IIRC, it was the AK-47) in the house. The bullet went through the ceiling of the first floor, through his room on the second floor, and exited the roof of the house. The FBI and ATF paid a visit and confiscated most items.
I'm guessing they weren't buddies after that... :wink:
 
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  • #2,149
Astronuc said:
Souvenir. Not that it's necessary, but some folks collect 'stuff'.

In my early teens, I lived down the street from a Vietnam Vet. Very nice guy, but trouble like a lot of vets at the time. He had a nice collection of memorabilia. He had a belt of 0.50 inch (12.7 mm) rounds for a machine gun, some hand grenades (practice and combat), a bazooka (IIRC 5-6 inches, or 12.7 to 15.2 cm), a light anti-tank weapon (LAW), an AK-47, a practice 200 lb bomb, and a host of other munitions and weapons.

One of his buddies accidentally discharged a gun (IIRC, it was the AK-47) in the house. The bullet went through the ceiling of the first floor, through his room on the second floor, and exited the roof of the house. The FBI and ATF paid a visit and confiscated most items.

I spent a lot of time discussing his experience in the Vietnam War. It was ugly. Nobody should have to witness what he did.

I also learned a lot about military strategy, guerilla warfare (including IEDs), explosives and demolition. At the time, I had expected to war to continue and I was several years from draft age. I was able to read various Army field manuals (FMs).
I'm also fascinated by weapons. Which boy inside a man isn't, but it wasn't a collecter's piece (per my judgement). It's was a fairly new and fully functioning shoulder mounted sinister looking thing. One of those with a hexagonal front. Of course he didn't have rockets with him, I'd wager that's still a little off limits - even in Texas! At least transporting both at the same time?

EDIT: I guess it could have been a film prop. Still, it just had Texas written all over it.
 
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Astronuc said:
Souvenir. Not that it's necessary, but some folks collect 'stuff'.

In my early teens, I lived down the street from a Vietnam Vet. Very nice guy, but trouble like a lot of vets at the time. He had a nice collection of memorabilia. He had a belt of 0.50 inch (12.7 mm) rounds for a machine gun, some hand grenades (practice and combat), a bazooka (IIRC 5-6 inches, or 12.7 to 15.2 cm), a light anti-tank weapon (LAW), an AK-47, a practice 200 lb bomb, and a host of other munitions and weapons.

One of his buddies accidentally discharged a gun (IIRC, it was the AK-47) in the house. The bullet went through the ceiling of the first floor, through his room on the second floor, and exited the roof of the house. The FBI and ATF paid a visit and confiscated most items.

I spent a lot of time discussing his experience in the Vietnam War. It was ugly. Nobody should have to witness what he did.

I also learned a lot about military strategy, guerilla warfare (including IEDs), explosives and demolition. At the time, I had expected to war to continue and I was several years from draft age. I was able to read various Army field manuals (FMs).
I'm suprised he wanted to talk about it. In my experience veterans usually don't like to talk about it too much. Although, I've heard my fair share of ghastly stories from Danish veterans from Afghanistan; even from Cyprus, which was easily the worst (he shared some pictures I'd rather not have seen!).

EDIT:

Cyprus–Denmark relations (Wiki).

Why, on that site, they link to Eric I of Ejegod (c. 1060, Slangerup, Denmark; July 10, 1103) I can't really bend my head around?

EDIT2: But yes. Vietnam was truly bad.
 

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