- Just a dog catching a ball
- TLC now has a show called My Teen Is Pregnant and So Am I
- At least Lombardi didn’t have his staff film practices – Michael Irvin: Bill Belichick’s name should also be on the Vince Lombardi trophy
- The rightful heir to the British throne might actually be living in Australia. I wonder if there is a scientific way to prove this through DNA.
- Arijit Guha is an Arizona State University doctoral student and is suffering from Stage 4 colon cancer. When he ran out of money to cover his medical bills, he tweeted the CEO of Aetna for help, and now his bills are covered.
- Funny placement of the NBC Olympics logo
Die Hard Fans
This is an eight-minute ESPN film about fans and death, how some fans are buried in their favorite team’s clothing and caskets and so forth. But I thought the, well, let me be delicate here, the ‘most interesting’ part of the film was how Texas A&M Aggies can be buried close to Kyle Field with their toes pointing toward the stadium as if they are cheering their team on from beyond.
Family kept grandparents’ deaths secret from Chinese diver until she won gold medal
Chinese diver Wu Minxia’s celebrations at winning a third Olympic gold medal were cut short after her family revealed the details of a devastating secret they had kept for several years.
Wu’s parents decided to withhold news of both the death of her grandparents and of her mother’s long battle with breast cancer until after she won the 3-meter springboard in London so as to not interfere with her diving career.
“It was essential to tell this white lie,” said her father Wu Yuming.
The story of Wu’s family secret has generated huge discussion in China, where the pursuit of success has been chased by the government-backed sports national sports program with unshakeable zeal over the past two decades.
Now there seems to be a backlash against the win-at-all-costs mentality after the revelations about Wu followed fierce criticism from a national newspaper when a 17-year-old weightlifter failed to medal.
In China, athletes are often taken away from their families at a young age and placed in specialist training schools where they practice for hours every day. Wu began training daily at a diving camp at the age of 6. By the time she was 16, she had left home to be installed in a government aquatic sports institute.
She has become one of her sport’s all-time greats, but her father says the success has come at a high price to her personal life.
“We accepted a long time ago that she doesn’t belong entirely to us,” Wu Yuming told the Shanghai Morning Post. “I don’t even dare to think about things like enjoying family happiness.”
The 90-year-old world record holder in pole vault
Meet Dr William Bell, world record holder in pole vault – for his age group. The 90-year old is the father of former Olympic silver medalist Earl and is still jumping three times a week at his son’s training facility in northeast Arkansas.