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Teens notice ‘attractive’ woman in a nearby car mouthing something to them and immediately dial 911
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| With increasing problems in the world, it is more crucial than ever to be vigilant about one’s surroundings. Even subtle signs can be a call for help or a sign to take note of. Proof of this is a story of two attentive teens who saved a woman’s life 10 years ago. The then-19-year-old Aaron Arias and 17-year-old Jamal Harris revealed that they were driving down Dallas to pick up one of their friends when they noticed a young woman in the backseat of a car beside them. Harris, being in the passenger seat, looked over at the girl, claiming that he found her “attractive.” However, to their surprise, the girl seemed to mouth certain words to the boys. NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth reported that Harris immediately realized the girl was asking for help. |
| As per the 911 tape of the incident retrieved by the publication, the teens first made eye contact with the woman and then, they saw a serious expression on her face. They saw her mouthing “help me” from the car. Assuming it to be a joke, the boys considered ignoring it. However, when they saw the driver, they sensed something suspicious. They immediately dialed 911 and followed the vehicle. “Yes, I’m on the highway…I’m witnessing a robbery; not a robbery… a kidnapping,” Aaron Arias told a Kaufman County Sheriff’s Office dispatcher. “It’s me and another guy, so we’re checking out the girl in the backseat because, we’re like, ‘OK, she’s kind of attractive.’ And then, all of the sudden, you know, the guy is turned back, looking at us,” they told the 911 operator. |
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Search Party: Chaos at the Park
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| Your search for the perfect family game is over. Search Party: Chaos at the Park is an epic 3-D pop-up search-and-find adventure. |
| The people of Chaos City amusement park are in trouble and it’s up to you to follow the characters around the park to help answer questions and solve mysteries! |
| Over the course of 15 missions, you’ll sabotage mad scientists, help parkgoers find love, and more. With fun pop-up structures and a highly intricate board packed with hidden objects and kooky characters, including 300 hidden items, the whole family will have a blast. |
| The game is perfect for players 8+, so parents, siblings, cousins, and friends can all get searching together. Find it at Walmart, Target, Amazon, and Relatable.com. |
| Brought to you by What Do You Meme? Family, a Relatable brand. |
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‘Dead’ man shows up at ‘funeral’ in a helicopter to teach family the importance of staying in touch
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| According to Independent, a Belgian man faked his death and showed up at his own “funeral” in a helicopter, giving his grieving relatives the biggest shock of their lives. David Baerten claimed he staged the elaborate “prank” to teach his family members the value of staying in touch with one another. |
| Baerten shared with the French chat show Touche Pas a Mon Poste (TPMP) that he planned the stunt because he felt “unappreciated” by his relatives. A TikTok user named Thomas Faut (@el.tiktokeur2), who apparently attended the ceremony, posted a video of the 45-year-old man arriving at his own funeral in a helicopter. Mourners can be seen watching as the helicopter lands in a field and a door opens. It then cuts to a clip of people encircling Baerten, with more approaching him to hug and greet him while a film crew records the scene. Faut also shared a video of an emotional relative crying as he tightly hugged and embraced Baerten. The caption read, “You got us, I swear I was crying and then I had the shock, buddy we love you very much.” |
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Woman turns guardian angel for stranger at airport after hearing someone cry in bathroom stall
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| A woman named Cyn Symone had an unexpected encounter with a struggling mother at the LAX after she missed her first flight to Los Angeles. However, despite being upset about missing her flight, little did Symone know that she was destined to become someone’s guardian angel that day. “I missed my first flight to LA yesterday, I was so upset. But now I know why! When I finally got to LAX baggage claim, I went to the bathroom to check my makeup and I heard a woman crying hard. I was nervous and she was speaking Spanish, so I didn’t know if she’d even understand me,” Symone recalled. |
| At first, she left the bathroom but ended up returning four times while waiting for her baggage claim. When she went into the same bathroom another time, Symone heard the woman say, “The bus doesn’t come until tomorrow.” That’s when Symone’s heart dropped and she understood the gravity of the situation the stranger in the bathroom stall was facing. “I asked her if she had Zelle or CashApp she said no. So I asked her if I could pay for her a hotel until tomorrow and she stopped crying and opened the stall door,” the post continued. |
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Kevin Bacon recalls moving to New York in 1976 and living in a ‘flophouse’ $150-a-month apartment
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| Kevin Bacon recently recalled living in a New York “flophouse” after sleeping on his sister’s couch for four months. The Pennsylvania native, now 65, moved to the Big Apple in 1976 and his first ever apartment was a two-room apartment that he shared with a total stranger for “$150 a month,” he revealed on the Kelly Clarkson Show. The “Footloose” star told host Kelly Clarkson that he found his own space after spotting “an ad on the back of the Village Voice, and it said ‘Artists, actors, musicians residence,’ and I thought, ‘Well, that sounds good.'” |
| But the listing wasn’t true to the description it proclaimed it to be. “It was basically a flophouse,” he continued. “I guess there were some artists there, but not a lot.” After being told there were no single-room apartments, the actor spontaneously agreed to become roommates with the man sitting next to him at the rental office. “He was like, ‘You want to live together?’ I was like, ‘Yeah, okay.’ We lived together for four years,” explained Bacon. “In fact, I just had lunch with him the other day.” He turned out to be a classical pianist who worked nights at the Copacabana. Bacon admitted that it was “really cool” to hear him play at home. |
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