Weird News ε' - The fifth column

Bobi breaks Guinness World Record for oldest dog ever​

A 30-year-old Portuguese dog has been named as the world's oldest ever by Guinness World Records - beating a record that stood for a century.
Bobi is a purebred Rafeiro do Alentejo - a breed that has an average life expectancy of 12 to 14 years.
The previous oldest dog ever was Australia's Bluey, who died in 1939 at the age of 29 years and five months.
As of 1 February, Bobi was 30 years and 226 days old, and is said to be doing well for his age.

His grand old age has been validated by the Portuguese government's pet database, which is managed by the National Union of Veterinarians, according to Guinness World Records.
He has lived his whole life with the Costa family in the village of Conqueiros, near Portugal's west coast, after being born with three siblings in an outbuilding.

Leonel Costa, who was eight years old at the time, said his parents had too many animals and had to put the puppies down, but Bobi escaped.

Leonel and his brothers kept the dog's existence a secret from their parents until he was eventually discovered and became part of the family, who feed him the same food they eat.
"Between a can of animal food or a piece of meat, Bobi doesn't hesitate and chooses our food," said Mr Costa, who always soaks the food in water to remove most of the seasoning.
Apart from a scare in 2018 when he was hospitalised after suddenly collapsing due to breathing difficulty, Mr Costa says Bobi has enjoyed a relatively trouble-free life and believes the secret to his longevity is the "calm, peaceful environment" he lives in.
It may also be in the blood - Bobi's mother living to the age of 18.
However, time has taken its toll on Bobi, who now has trouble walking and worsening eyesight.

Mr Costa says Bobi is the "last of a long generation of animals" in the Costa family and describes him as "one of a kind."
Bobi's crowning as the oldest dog ever comes just two weeks after Guinness World Records named another dog, Spike the Chihuahua, as the oldest living dog - at 23 years old.
Guinness have since updated its records, and announced Bobi as both the oldest dog living, and the oldest dog ever.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-64507336
 
I know that "the [group]" comes off as conspiratorial, as in "THOSE people", but why the word salad instead of "French People" or "Poor People"?
 

Bobi breaks Guinness World Record for oldest dog ever​

A 30-year-old Portuguese dog has been named as the world's oldest ever by Guinness World Records - beating a record that stood for a century.
Bobi is a purebred Rafeiro do Alentejo - a breed that has an average life expectancy of 12 to 14 years.
The previous oldest dog ever was Australia's Bluey, who died in 1939 at the age of 29 years and five months.
As of 1 February, Bobi was 30 years and 226 days old, and is said to be doing well for his age.

His grand old age has been validated by the Portuguese government's pet database, which is managed by the National Union of Veterinarians, according to Guinness World Records.
He has lived his whole life with the Costa family in the village of Conqueiros, near Portugal's west coast, after being born with three siblings in an outbuilding.

Leonel Costa, who was eight years old at the time, said his parents had too many animals and had to put the puppies down, but Bobi escaped.

Leonel and his brothers kept the dog's existence a secret from their parents until he was eventually discovered and became part of the family, who feed him the same food they eat.
"Between a can of animal food or a piece of meat, Bobi doesn't hesitate and chooses our food," said Mr Costa, who always soaks the food in water to remove most of the seasoning.
Apart from a scare in 2018 when he was hospitalised after suddenly collapsing due to breathing difficulty, Mr Costa says Bobi has enjoyed a relatively trouble-free life and believes the secret to his longevity is the "calm, peaceful environment" he lives in.
It may also be in the blood - Bobi's mother living to the age of 18.
However, time has taken its toll on Bobi, who now has trouble walking and worsening eyesight.

Mr Costa says Bobi is the "last of a long generation of animals" in the Costa family and describes him as "one of a kind."
Bobi's crowning as the oldest dog ever comes just two weeks after Guinness World Records named another dog, Spike the Chihuahua, as the oldest living dog - at 23 years old.
Guinness have since updated its records, and announced Bobi as both the oldest dog living, and the oldest dog ever.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-64507336
Hm... 30 years must be tough on a dog :)
 

People in Chile loot beer after truck overturns​

Locals in Santiago have been looting beer after the truck carrying it was involved in an accident.
The vehicle, carrying around 18 tonnes of beer, overturned when it was overtaken.
There are no reports of injuries.
https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-latin-america-64521112
 
Artist wins case to prove he did NOT paint a picture

I really want to know what the charge was, the news is not saying

Painter Peter Doig Wins $2.5 Million in Sanctions Against a Gallery That Tried to Force Him to Take Credit for Another Artist’s Work
Original story: Peter Doig Says He Didn’t Paint This. Now He Has to Prove It. (NYT paywall)

In a satisfying denouement to one of the odder legal battles in recent years, Peter Doig has won a $2.5 million sanctions ruling in federal court against the Chicago gallery that sued him for disavowing a painting. After a tumultuous 2016 trial in which Doig himself was called to testify, a judge ruled that the artist “absolutely did not paint the disputed work.”

Judge Gary Feinerman has ordered Robert Fletcher (the owner of the painting), Chicago’s Bartlow Gallery Ltd., and their lawyer, William Zieske, to pay the defendants $2.5 million in sanctions.

Original:

when Mr. Doig, whose eerie, magical landscapes have made him one of the world’s most popular artists, was sent a photograph of a canvas he said he didn’t recognize, he disavowed it.

“I said, ‘Nice painting,’” he recalled in an interview. “‘Not by me.’”

The owner, however, disagreed and sued him, setting up one of the stranger art authentication cases in recent history.

The owner, a former corrections officer who said he knew Mr. Doig while working in a Canadian detention facility, said the famous painter indeed created the work as a youthful inmate there. His suit contends that Mr. Doig is either confused or lying and that his denials blew up a plan to sell the work for millions of dollars.

But Mr. Doig, 57, has compelling evidence he was never near the facility, the Thunder Bay Correctional Center, about 15 hours north of Toronto.

“This case is a scam, and I’m being forced to jump through hoops to prove my whereabouts over 40 years ago,” he said.

Mr. Fletcher and Mr. Bartlow said the painting contains many similarities to Mr. Doig’s undisputed works, such as a horizontal striped landscape, a body of water, logs protruding from a lake, even white lichen on the trees.

Mr. Doig, however, said they are taking advantage of the similarity in two people’s names so as to profit from a far-fetched tale.

Yes, he grew up in Canada before attending art school in England. But in 1976 he was only 16 or 17, and lived in Toronto. He has never been to Thunder Bay, he said, and was never incarcerated. He denies there are similarities to his own works.

“I did not begin to paint on canvas until late 1979. (Before that, I had done some pencil and ink drawings on paper),” he said in court papers.

Never to this day, he said in an interview, has he used acrylic paint on canvas. “If I had painted that painting when I was 16, I would admit it.”

Mr. Doig and his lawyers say they have identified the real artist, a man named Peter Edward Doige. He died in 2012, but his sister said he had attended Lakehead University, served time in Thunder Bay and painted.

“I believe that Mr. Fletcher is mistaken and that he actually met my brother, Peter, who I believe did this painting,” the sister, Marilyn Doige Bovard, said in a court declaration. She said the work’s desert scene appeared to show the area in Arizona where her mother moved after a divorce and where her brother spent some time. She recognized, she said, the saguaro cactus in the painting.

The prison’s former art teacher recognized a photograph of Ms. Bovard’s brother as a man who had been in his class and said he had watched him paint the painting, according to the teacher’s affidavit.

The painting:
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Swamped,a work from 1990 by Peter Doig:

QT8Lgea.png

Spoiler Full NYT article :
O.K., Peter Doig may have tried LSD a few times when he was growing up in Canada during the 1970s. But he still knows, he said, when a painting is or isn’t his.

So when Mr. Doig, whose eerie, magical landscapes have made him one of the world’s most popular artists, was sent a photograph of a canvas he said he didn’t recognize, he disavowed it.

“I said, ‘Nice painting,’” he recalled in an interview. “‘Not by me.’”

The owner, however, disagreed and sued him, setting up one of the stranger art authentication cases in recent history.

The owner, a former corrections officer who said he knew Mr. Doig while working in a Canadian detention facility, said the famous painter indeed created the work as a youthful inmate there. His suit contends that Mr. Doig is either confused or lying and that his denials blew up a plan to sell the work for millions of dollars.

But Mr. Doig, 57, has compelling evidence he was never near the facility, the Thunder Bay Correctional Center, about 15 hours north of Toronto.

“This case is a scam, and I’m being forced to jump through hoops to prove my whereabouts over 40 years ago,” he said.

To Mr. Doig’s surprise, though — and the astonishment of others in the art world — a federal judge in Chicago has set the case for trial next month at United States District Court for Northern Illinois.

Art law experts say they can’t recall anything like it, certainly not for a major artist like Mr. Doig.

“To have to disprove that you created a work seems somehow wrong and not fair,” said Amy M. Adler, a professor at New York University Law School.

The stakes are high as well. A Doig painting has sold for more than $25 million. Other works have routinely sold at auction for as much as $10 million. The plaintiffs, who include the correction officer and the art dealer who agreed to help him sell the work, are suing the painter for at least $5 million in damages and seek a court declaration that it is authentic.

They have focused on what they say is a hole in Mr. Doig’s teenage years in Canada when, they assert, he cannot fully account for where he was or what he was doing.

“Every artist has destroyed work,” said William F. Zieske, the lawyer for the painting’s owner and the art dealer. “We can’t really get into his mind and say why he looked at this painting and said, ‘I am not going to own that.’ I don’t think anyone can.”

Disputes about authenticity, a vexatious topic in the art world, tend to center on the works of dead artists. Legal claims, when they arise, are usually made against experts who have doubted the art’s veracity, and not against the artist.

But Mr. Doig is not the first artist to deny having created a work and still be challenged.

Picasso denied painting a work attributed to him, “Erotic Scene” (known as “La Douleur,” or “The Pain”). (The Metropolitan Museum, which was given it, however, did some research and thinks it’s clearly his.)

Similarly, Gilbert Stuart denied having painted the portrait of George Washington that hangs in the East Room of the White House. The White House says it’s his.

Neither man, however, was sued for rejecting the work.

When artists have been sued, it has been in cases in which they disavowed works because they said they had been altered. In 2012, for example, a collector sued Cady Noland, an American conceptual sculptor, after she disavowed a work, “Cowboys Milking,” because, she said, it had been damaged.

In her defense, Ms. Noland invoked a 1990 law called the Visual Artists Rights Act. It gives artists powers to, among other things, prevent their names from being used on works that have been mutilated or distorted.

The retired corrections officer, Robert Fletcher, 62, said he bought the painting for $100 from a man named Pete Doige (spelled with an e), whom he met in 1975 in Thunder Bay, Ontario.

The young man he knew was taking art classes at a local college, Lakehead University, and said he was, like Mr. Doig, from Scotland. After the man was incarcerated on an LSD charge at a prison farm where Mr. Fletcher worked, Mr. Fletcher saw the young artist create the painting, an untitled acrylic canvas of a rocky desert scene.

The painting is signed “Pete Doige 76.”

“I am 100 percent convinced that this is the man and that this is the painting I own,” Mr. Fletcher said in an interview. He became the young man’s parole officer and also helped him find a job through the Seafarers International Union. He said he bought the painting because he feared Mr. Doige might go back to selling drugs.

About five years ago, a friend noticed the painting on Mr. Fletcher’s wall and told him it was by a famous artist. When Mr. Fletcher pulled up a video and watched Mr. Doig speaking at a college, he said, he recognized his facial expressions and mannerisms, and now feels let down by someone he believes he helped, and wants to be proved right.

Mr. Fletcher, who lives in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, consigned it to a gallery in Chicago on the recommendation of his brother, who lives there. The gallery, run by Peter Bartlow, contacted an auctioneer, hoping no doubt for a payday similar to those achieved by several recent Doig sales.

Mr. Fletcher and Mr. Bartlow said the painting contains many similarities to Mr. Doig’s undisputed works, such as a horizontal striped landscape, a body of water, logs protruding from a lake, even white lichen on the trees.

A Sotheby’s specialist, to whom they sent an image of the picture, said it was “rare to see such a complete and highly resolved early painting by Doig” and said it had Mr. Doig’s “trademark eeriness of the empty landscape,” though she later said she never inspected it firsthand and did not authenticate it, according to court papers.

“There are so many of defendant Doig’s commonly used techniques and elements in the disputed work that it could be the most typical of all of his works,” Mr. Fletcher and Mr. Bartlow say in court papers.

Mr. Doig, however, said they are taking advantage of the similarity in two people’s names so as to profit from a far-fetched tale.

Yes, he grew up in Canada before attending art school in England. But in 1976 he was only 16 or 17, and lived in Toronto. He has never been to Thunder Bay, he said, and was never incarcerated. He denies there are similarities to his own works.

“I did not begin to paint on canvas until late 1979. (Before that, I had done some pencil and ink drawings on paper),” he said in court papers.

Never to this day, he said in an interview, has he used acrylic paint on canvas. “If I had painted that painting when I was 16, I would admit it.”

Mr. Doig and his lawyers say they have identified the real artist, a man named Peter Edward Doige. He died in 2012, but his sister said he had attended Lakehead University, served time in Thunder Bay and painted.

“I believe that Mr. Fletcher is mistaken and that he actually met my brother, Peter, who I believe did this painting,” the sister, Marilyn Doige Bovard, said in a court declaration. She said the work’s desert scene appeared to show the area in Arizona where her mother moved after a divorce and where her brother spent some time. She recognized, she said, the saguaro cactus in the painting.

The prison’s former art teacher recognized a photograph of Ms. Bovard’s brother as a man who had been in his class and said he had watched him paint the painting, according to the teacher’s affidavit.

Mr. Fletcher and Mr. Bartlow have no record of Mr. Doig being imprisoned in Thunder Bay, but they said that’s because he was a minor and his records were probably expunged, or paperwork was just lost. (In June, The New York Times asked the Ontario authorities to search their records in an effort to come up with conclusive evidence. They were able to easily search only records going back as far as 1985; a deeper search would take more than six weeks.)

Mr. Doig plans to present his own set of records, school documents, correspondence, photos and testimony to demonstrate, he said, that he never attended Lakehead University and that during the months in 1975 and 1976, when he is said to have created the painting, he actually was in Toronto or working on oil rigs in western Canada or traveling outside the country.

He asked the judge to dismiss the case, arguing that he should not be tried in Illinois. But Judge Gary Feinerman of United States District Court decided in April this was a dispute that could be resolved only at trial.

“The presence of the Lakehead and the Seafarers records for Doige, but not for Doig, certainly favors Doig,” Judge Feinerman said in his decision. “There is no doubt about that. But it’s not strong enough evidence, given all of the evidence in the record,” the judge said, to eliminate any chance that Doig “was not the person at Thunder Bay who was the author of the painting.”

Mr. Bartlow said that, at first, he thought Mr. Doig disowned the painting because he was embarrassed by that period in his life. But Mr. Doig has never denied his association with past drug use. Some of his paintings have been inspired, in part, by LSD.

Now, Mr. Bartlow said he thinks the artist refuses to acknowledge the painting because it shows he has been using similar formulaic compositions for four decades.

Mr. Bartlow has made dozens of videos to demonstrate his case, some posted on YouTube. He financed some of the costs of bringing suit by soliciting contributions from about six or seven private contacts, with whom he promised to share some of any payouts.

“There is no question that Peter Doig painted the painting,” he said. “You see the outline of our painting in his other works.”

Both sides plan to call experts to debate this point. The drawn-out process is a stressful distraction for an artist at the peak of his talents, said Gordon VeneKlasen, Mr. Doig’s dealer at Michael Werner Gallery in New York.

“This has become about much more than Peter’s painting,” Mr. VeneKlasen said. “It’s about authorship. It’s about being forced to put your name on another artist’s work.”

In a statement, he went further: “In our case, the artist and dealer have the resources to carry on this fight, but I wonder about all the artists who might not. Do they simply acquiesce and let inauthentic works into the market if they are the product of a similar attempt at bullying and rampant greed?”

To win, art lawyers say, Mr. Fletcher and his advisers will have to persuade the judge that the painting is real.

But even if the court favors Mr. Fletcher, it could be a hollow victory. Since the artist himself and the dealer who represents him say it’s not a Doig, the art market is unlikely to assign much value to it, art experts said.

A decision against Mr. Doig, and any costly award for damages, would nevertheless probably send a shock wave through the art world.

“It would,” said Nicholas M. O’Donnell, a Boston art lawyer who has no role in the case, “put all artists in the cross hairs.”
Truly crazy!
 
Man uses 'emergency' excuse to beat drunk driving charge (he was escaping his angry wife who caught him cheating, and apparently he was lying to his other lover so there was TWO angry women after him).

Lastly, the defendant must prove he did not “substantially contribute to the emergency,” the district attorney said.

Read more at: https://www.sacbee.com/news/california/article272322013.html#storylink=cpy
Curious how his defense attorney pulled that one off...
 
Life finds a way!

The test showed the father to be Itō, a 34-year-old agile gibbon, who was in an adjacent enclosure to Momo around the time she became pregnant.

The zoo told CNN on Friday it believed that Momo and Itō had managed to mate through a small hole in a steel plate between their enclosures. The hole measured about 9 millimeters (0.3 inch) in diameter.
Lol girth wasn't Ito's strong suit but it worked out for him.
 
Brexiiiit!

Tomato-free pizza on UK menus as chefs choke on the price of fruit and veg

Italian restaurants are forced to replace classic dishes with ‘white’ versions as cost of their staple ingredient soars

Spoiler :
Get ready for tomato-less pasta sauce and white pizza. Italian restaurants across Britain are having to ration tomatoes, increase prices and in some cases remove the pomodoro from their menus entirely as costs soar.

The price of tomatoes has increased as much as fourfold in the past year, from £5 a case to £20 a case, according to the Federazione Italian Cuochi UK (FIC UK), a chefs’ association.

The price of canned tomatoes has doubled, it said, from £15 a case to £30. The cost of that insalata staple the iceberg lettuce has also soared, from around £7 a box to £22.

Tomatoes are among the species worst affected by the UK’s fruit and vegetable shortage, which has left supermarket shelves empty. The government has blamed bad weather in southern Europe and north Africa. High electricity prices have also hit supplies of produce grown in greenhouses in Britain and the Netherlands.

Enzo Oliveri, FIC UK’s president, said that following issues with rising costs and Brexit, now was a “very difficult” time for Italian restaurants, and warned that some may go out of business. “I don’t see any light at the end of the tunnel,” he said.

His members normally source their tomatoes from Italy, Spain or Morocco. “But because there’s everywhere a shortage, there’s no tomatoes coming from any place,” he said.

Oliveri is working with tomato suppliers to secure quantities of high quality canned and crushed tomatoes, but these are also seeing shortages.

Some restaurants, Oliveri said, are adapting by moving their menus away from the ingredient, and instead offering “white” tomato-less pizzas and pasta dishes.

Chefs are using cheeses such as ricotta, or vegetables including courgettes or aubergines as a base and to thicken sauces. “White pizza, white sauces for pasta or less tomato. We’re making it a trend because prices are going up and because of shortages.”

He called for the government to cap tomato prices, warning: “When the prices go up we’re in trouble. We cannot calculate the margins any more.”

Carmelo Carnevale, president of the Italian Culinary Consortium, said that tomato prices have gone up three times in the past two weeks alone. While restaurants are still getting tomatoes, they are not getting them in their usual quantities.

“It’s very stressful for us, especially that we also have ours imported from Italy twice a week. We’re lucky to get it,” he said. “Tomatoes are in a lot of our dishes. We as a company promote ‘made in Italy’ and we have to keep our identity without compromising the quality. We can’t increase our prices either, so we’re not making any profit.”

Restaurant owners are worried for their futures, he said, adding this is “not a good time at all”.

Antonio Alderuccio of vegetarian restaurant Plant Club in London, said prices for passata (sieved tomatoes) had risen by 70% in the past year. “The tomato price is skyrocketing at the moment.”

One of his Sicilian producers blames the climate crisis. “In Sicily the temperatures during last winter averaged 22C,” he said. “That meant the tomatoes ripened really quickly, and that is why a lot of products haven’t arrived on the market.” Alderuccio is still cooking with tomatoes but has raised prices so he can preserve quality without losing money, he said.

Chef Theo Randall, who specialises in Italian cuisine at his restaurant at the InterContinental Hotel in Mayfair, said he had not experienced issues yet, but had noticed suppliers seem to be rationing passata.You order 10 tins and get three,” he said.

To get around any supply issues, chefs are basing their menus on what ingredients are available. “Everything has gone up,” he said. “Essentially you’ve just got to put your prices up.

“And you’ve got to look at ingredients you can afford to use. For all restaurants, it’s is a very difficult time. Over the past few years the hospitality industry has been hit by so many things, and this is another one.”

The Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs said last week that the UK had a “highly resilient food supply chain and is well equipped to deal with disruption”.

A spokesperson said it was in “close contact with suppliers, who are clear that current issues relating to the availability of certain fruits and vegetables were predominantly caused by poor weather in Spain and North Africa, where they are produced.”

Ministers, they added, would soon be holding an industry roundtable discussion with supermarkets about how to help return supplies to normal.

People in Chile loot beer after truck overturns​

Locals in Santiago have been looting beer after the truck carrying it was involved in an accident.
The vehicle, carrying around 18 tonnes of beer, overturned when it was overtaken.
There are no reports of injuries.
https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-latin-america-64521112
People here actually butcher cows and pigs whenever a truck has a ‘problem’, but that's a different thing.
 
One of his Sicilian producers blames the climate crisis. “In Sicily the temperatures during last winter averaged 22C,” he said
I'm calling BS on this, at no point did temperatures in Sicily reach 22 last winter, let alone average 22.
There has been other years where it hit 22 in winter: 2020, 2018, 2017, 2013
 
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I honestly can't tell if this is satire. I think it might be real. :lol:

The Root, 27 February 2023 - "Karen Calls Cops on Men for Shoveling Snow While Black"

The Root said:
Gregory McAdory and his friend have a snow removal business in Rockford, Illinois, per the report. The two had gone to shovel their friend’s driveway Feb 17th and afterwards they decided to move on to clear the sidewalk in front of the neighbor’s house. McAdory told The Daily Beast the owner of the house suddenly came outside fussing about their act of service.

On cue, he took a TikTok video showing the ridiculousness which captured the Karen pulling snow with her shovel back on to the freshly shoveled sidewalk.

“Are you seriously mad because we cleaned off your sidewalk? We’re helping you,” McAdory says behind the camera. The woman then throws her shovel on the ground and pulls out her phone appearing to call 911.

“They’ll come faster if you say there’s two [negroes] over here,” McAdory says in the video.

The woman proceeds to tell the police, “These guys are African American. I don’t get along with them.”
WTH...
 
black people doing service free is politically unacceptable , which then justifies her actions or whatever . How bad it would have been for her if videos went online showing Blacks clearing snow in front of her house ?
 
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