This might be the best feel-good video ever. You think a cat would ever do this? Hell no. They probably hadn’t even noticed they were gone. Just another reason why dogs are the best thing ever, always.
This might be the best feel-good video ever. You think a cat would ever do this? Hell no. They probably hadn’t even noticed they were gone. Just another reason why dogs are the best thing ever, always.
Not sure which video sums up the female sex better…this one or “Shit Girls Say”
(ABC) - On Saturday, Florida Highway Patrol troopers say that a drunk driver fleeing the scene of a prior accident struck and killed a 53-year-old Sarasota woman while she was walking her dog. The driver of the vehicle, Blake C. Talman, 22, lost control of his Nissan Altima and hit Donna L. Chen and her dog Barney on a city sidewalk. Chen was killed in the accident, and Talman is facing DUI manslaughter charges while being held on $121,000 bail. The accident took place on State Road, and Barney was so terrified that he fled the scene, made his way to the beach, and swam for the horizon. Most would expect that to be the tragic end to an already sorrowful tale, but fate had other plans for Barney. A local fisherman in his kayak happened upon the waterlogged dog just as he was pulling far away from shore – likely too far to make it back.
And this is why dogs are, and always will be, better than cats. Truly the best friend a man can have. The dog somehow survives the car accident that it’s owner was killed in and decides that the only thing it wants to do is to commit suicide to reunite with her. So it does the only thing it knows how and swims out to sea like you would see in a frickin movie. Dogs are better than everything all the time.
Jack Jablonski, the paralyzed teen hockey player who wore #13, may have inspired his own miracle on ice.
Two unbelievable coincidences occurred during last weekend’s Blaine-Wayzata high school hockey game. As is often the case in high school hockey, the game featured a “Chuck-a-Puck” event. Spectators buy a numbered puck, then throw the puck on the ice in between periods. The puck that ends up closest to the center dot wins, and that person gets a cut of the puck sales.
The winning puck turned out to be #13, and you won’t believe who threw it.
Wayzata’s JV hockey team, you might recall, was playing Benilde-St. Margaret’s JV team when Benilde sophomore Jack Jablonski was checked into the boards from behind, severing his spinal cord and fracturing two vertebrae. Doctors have since said they doubt “Jabs” will walk again.
Fittingly, proceeds from the Blaine-Wayzata puck toss were to be given to Jablonski’s family.
Blaine-resident Mark Nowicki organized the puck throw. He said the reason Blaine hockey boosters selected last weekend for the Jabs benefit is because Blaine parents wanted to show the Wayzata players and parents that “everyone is in this together.”
“We wanted to reach out and say, ‘hey, we feel your grief and pain,’” Nowicki said.
So the puck toss proceeded during one of the period breaks, and what do you know? Jablonski’s No. 13 happened to be emblazoned on the winning puck. Kind of strange, right? Sure, but not as strange as what happened next.
Nowicki had to find out who tossed the winning puck. There were around 160 pucks strewn on the ice — a higher number than usual, thanks to the Jabs tribute — and a chill went down his spine when he saw #13 on the puck smack-dab in the middle of the center dot.
He said he thought to himself, ‘how does this happen?’ But he still didn’t know who threw the puck.
A few minutes later, Nowicki learned the parent of a Wayzata JV player bought the #13 puck, then gave it to someone else.
Who was that someone else? None other than the very same Wayzata player who checked Jablonski into the boards, changing both of their lives forever.
Nowicki said: “It was a great thing. It really just ties the whole story together.”
Perhaps it was meant to be. Either that or it’s a very unlikely coincidence. But as far as Nowicki is concerned, the combination of hard-to-believe circumstances indicates a “greater power” was watching over that puck toss.
The Wayzata player later reclaimed the winning puck and plans to give it to Jabs in person. Understandably, he has reportedly been feeling quite bad about what happened to Jabs, and by all accounts there was no maliciousness involved in the paralyzing hit.
“I really feel bad for that kid,” Nowicki said. “It wasn’t a bad hit — it was a fluke thing and he’s having a hard time with it.”
In total, the event raised $1,246 for Jablonski’s family. For his winning effort, the Wayzata player took home about $200 himself.