
From www.deadspin.com
Reader Dave sends along this picture of renowned matador Julio Aparicio. Yes, that bull's horn is doing exactly what it looks like it's doing.
Here's how Google translates the first paragraph of this story:
The Seville bullfighter Julio Aparicio, who came to cut two ears in the Plaza de Nimes France, has suffered this afternoon Sales a chilling gore when the first bull was fighting for your lot. Fuck you surprised half the task of crutch, when I went to test the bull by the horn left. After the first muletazo encountered with the hindquarters of the bull, has been dropped and when it was rising instinctively inferred the bull gored him in the chin that has passed through the mouth.
Untranslated: "Su pronóstico es muy grave."
Unbelievably, Aparicio wasn't killed, but he's in a Madrid hospital in critical condition. I'm going to go burn my mouth on some pizza and not complain about it.
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Brett Favre's ankle after the NFC Game
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Buddy Ryan saying "Hi"
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Snack Food Stadium
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This is a picture of an event during Sundays game during a timeout at
theTexans/Jaguars game this past Sunday. I think it is self explanatory.

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New picture of Notre Dame Quarterback
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Atlanta Falcon: Worst College Football Photo Ever
With it Cal-Stanford week, it should come as no surprise that Stanford has already fired the first volley. I was sent this photo of former Bear Thomas Decoud today by a Stanford alum. (I added the inset of Decoud as a Falcon.):

The photo is not manipulated or photoshopped.
Unreal.
I’m sure Decoud will now be asked about it by Falcons beat writers today, and we’ll get the obligatory, “it was just a joke” response.
For the record, the photo was taken five years ago when Decoud was a freshman, so maybe that helps explains it. I guess.
Decoud is now a safety for the Falcons, taken in 2008 draft.
Cal fans, you’re up!
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Jerry Jones With Two Hotties Looking a Tad Tipsy
Posted by
Brooks on Nov. 17, 2009, 12:47pm
CelebrityClubber.com posts a photo of Jerry Jones today that has the Cowboys Owner appearing as if he’s had one too many, or needs a mattress - fast.

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In 2006 Florida's Tim Tebow was awarded the Heisman Trophy as a sophomore, the first time ever the award has gone to a second year player.
In addition to his amazing passing, running, and TD stats is the fact that he has NEVER fumbled the ball. How is he able to hold on to the football so well? What grip does he use?
Tim’s grip training technique was inspired from his girlfriend of 2 years, Amber.
“I really have to say, with her help, training, and support I’ve been able to strengthen my grip with either hand, even if I barely have any piece of the ball in my hand.”
Note the grip on the football shown here.

“But I feel that I can still improve my game if I stick with Amber’s training method just one more year”
Introducing the amazing Tim Tebow Grip Master Training System!!!


Questions?
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Sammy Sosa's new skin reflects an ugly mentality
By David A. Love
9:15 AM on 11/09/2009

Sammy Sosa with his wife, Sonia Sosa on May 13, 2009 in New York on the left and on November 4, 2009 in Las Vegas on the right. (Kevork Djansezian via Getty Images and Sipa via AP Images)
Many have been shocked to see recent photos of retired major league baseball player Sammy Sosa. Not only is he wearing green contact lenses, but his skin tone is considerably lighter than usual, something which he claims is the result of a skin "rejuvenation" process, some reports say. The once dark-complexioned, undeniably African-looking Sosa now looks more like Ricky Ricardo from "I Love Lucy". As the late Nigerian activist and musician Fela Kuti would have said, it appears that Sosa is guilty of having a "colonial mentality."
Throughout the African diaspora, black people internalized the racism they experienced under slavery and colonial rule. Bad habits are hard to break, and there is still self-hatred among black people today. With years of conditioning, societies were made to believe that blackness was bad, and anything associated with blackness was inferior and undesirable.
This problem is also prevalent in Latin America. For example, Brazil has the largest black population outside of the African continent at 90 million, which amounts to roughly half of its people. Yet, despite their conspicuous presence in society, black Brazilians face discrimination, poverty, and lower education and health standards than whites. According to a "racial atlas" created by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Federal University of Minas Gerais, 65 percent of the poor and 70 percent of the extremely poor in Brazil are of African descent.
In the Dominican Republic, Sosa's country of origin, people are overwhelmingly black: 90 percent have African ancestry. Yet only 11 percent identify themselves as black. And as UN experts found, there is "a profound and entrenched problem of racism and discrimination against such groups as Haitians, Dominicans of Haitian descent, and more generally against blacks within Dominican society."
A strong anti-Haitian sentiment is rooted in the country's history. Haiti is a former colonizer of the Dominican Republic, as was Spain. Yet, Dominicans only celebrate their independence from Haiti. Haitian cultural practices are viewed as inferior. The government has engaged in mass deportations of Haitians - and sometimes Dominicans mistaken for Haitians - while also attempting to deny citizenship to the Dominican-born children of so-called "illegal" Haitian immigrants.
But a large reason for this hatred of Haitians is a denial of Dominicans' own African origin. Simply put, sometimes it is difficult to stare at oneself in the mirror. For years, under the Hispanidad movement, the government of the Dominican Republic emphasized the nation's white, Spanish and Catholic heritage, and conveniently left out the black part.
The Dominican Republic is a nation whose hairdressers are known for their hair-straightening prowess and most Dominican women get their hair straightened. Although dark folks are the overwhelming majority, black skin, wide noses and 'pelo malo' (bad hair) do not fit the standard of beauty. So, hair relaxers and skin whiteners are in, and people will call themselves a number of things, such as Indian, burned Indian, Moreno and cinnamon - anything but negro (the Spanish word), or black. This is what years of submerging your culture will do.
Certainly, the U.S. is not immune from this color-coded mentality. African-Americans historically internalized racism by pitting light-skinned blacks against dark-skinned ones, and using paper bag tests for admission to exclusive clubs. Black newspapers and magazines in the 1920s through the 1960s often featured advertisements for skin bleaching creams. Typically, with promises of "lighter, brighter skin," these ads blatantly associated white skin with beauty and success, and depicted dark skin as ugly. Meanwhile, people of color in America still fight against the Madison Avenue standard of beauty, which usually takes the form of a malnourished white blond fashion model with slight facial features.
Sadly, some celebrities of color join in the color-coded madness by lightening up and going under the knife themselves. And people of all colors and ethnicities risk mutilating their faces and bodies to look like distorted cartoon characters.
Sammy Sosa and others must realize that try as you might, you cannot bleach out your history.
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In a recent entry at his blog, Photography Talk, Rovak talks about how he got this shot of St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Albert Pujols:
Albert Pujols pulps a pitch in photo by Scott Rovak. (Source: Photography Talk)
Rovak’s blog entry is worth reading for more than just photophiles. He says in 26 years of shooting baseball, he’s been able to get a photo of the ball “embedded” in the bat only three times. This one happened because he knows Pujols’ swing well enough to fire a shot as Pujols moves his lead shoulder.
During spring training, Cardinals’ team photographer Scott Rovak snapped an intriguing photo of former Cardinals top prospect Brett Wallace taking a cut during one of the scrimmages. The photo, which you can see at this previous entry in Bird Land (”The Act and Art of Bending a Baseball Bat”), stirred some discussion on if the bending of the bat was an illusion or a freeze-frame of reality. Now, Rovak has done it again. Only, this time it’s the ball that’s bending. And it’s no illusion.