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  • RON HOWARD + wife CHERYL at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD + BRIAN GRAZER + MICHAEL KEATON at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD + BRIAN GRAZER + MICHAEL KEATON  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD + BRIAN GRAZER + MICHAEL KEATON  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD + BRIAN GRAZER + MICHAEL KEATON  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD + BRIAN GRAZER + MICHAEL KEATON  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD + BRIAN GRAZER + MICHAEL KEATON  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD + BRIAN GRAZER + MICHAEL KEATON at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD + BRIAN GRAZER + MICHAEL KEATON at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD + wife CHERYL   at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD + MICHAEL KEATON at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD + wife CHERYL + daughter BRYCE DALLAS + family  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • RON HOWARD + BRIAN GRAZER + MICHAEL KEATON  at his second Walk of Fame ceremony held @ 6931 Hollywood blvd. December 10, 2015<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Ron_Howard_Walk_of_Fame...jpg
  • I wanna walk like you! Bear cub called Blue finally learns to walk months after arriving at sanctuary with such bad spinal problems that carers feared he would not survive <br />
<br />
A bear in Cambodia has learned how to walk after being found with spinal problems that made it difficult for the young cub to move.<br />
<br />
Blue, a sun bear who lives at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre near the capital Phnom Penh, used to be able to only take a few steps before becoming tired.<br />
<br />
The cub was found in a blue basket by Free The Bears, an organization that works to rescue bears that have been captured by black market bear farmers. <br />
Sun and moon bears are used in traditional medicine or sometimes kept as pets by hotels and restaurants for tourists' amusement. <br />
Blue, who weighs 24lbs would have likely been kept as a pet in a small cage and 'he would likely be dead as he has a curved spine,' Free The Bears told Daily Mail Online. <br />
Physical trauma at an extremely young age most likely caused the cub's spinal troubles. <br />
Sometimes he would give up altogether and stop moving. <br />
The organization consulted veterinarians after Blue's rescue and said that it faced 'difficult consideration of euthanasia if he began to show signs of chronic pain'. <br />
However, after months of exercise and medical treatment, the young bear has been able to join its speedy playmate Baker, a cub also rescued in Cambodia.<br />
'Blue is still a very young, growing bear and is not out of the woods yet, but he is dearly loved and we at Free The Bears are so happy with his progress,' rescuers said on Facebook.<br />
The bear is able to climb now and uses his teeth to help him. <br />
He still becomes tired, but is building up his strength. <br />
Free The Bears used money from donations of care kits to provide 24-hour assistance to the animal from local bear keepers.<br />
He was bottle-fed at least eight times a day and given joint supplement and anti-inflammatory medicine. <br />
Blue and Baker live in an enclosure with pools, rocks, hammocks, climbing frames,
    Exclusivepix_Bear_Cub_Learns_To_Walk...jpg
  • I wanna walk like you! Bear cub called Blue finally learns to walk months after arriving at sanctuary with such bad spinal problems that carers feared he would not survive <br />
<br />
A bear in Cambodia has learned how to walk after being found with spinal problems that made it difficult for the young cub to move.<br />
<br />
Blue, a sun bear who lives at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre near the capital Phnom Penh, used to be able to only take a few steps before becoming tired.<br />
<br />
The cub was found in a blue basket by Free The Bears, an organization that works to rescue bears that have been captured by black market bear farmers. <br />
Sun and moon bears are used in traditional medicine or sometimes kept as pets by hotels and restaurants for tourists' amusement. <br />
Blue, who weighs 24lbs would have likely been kept as a pet in a small cage and 'he would likely be dead as he has a curved spine,' Free The Bears told Daily Mail Online. <br />
Physical trauma at an extremely young age most likely caused the cub's spinal troubles. <br />
Sometimes he would give up altogether and stop moving. <br />
The organization consulted veterinarians after Blue's rescue and said that it faced 'difficult consideration of euthanasia if he began to show signs of chronic pain'. <br />
However, after months of exercise and medical treatment, the young bear has been able to join its speedy playmate Baker, a cub also rescued in Cambodia.<br />
'Blue is still a very young, growing bear and is not out of the woods yet, but he is dearly loved and we at Free The Bears are so happy with his progress,' rescuers said on Facebook.<br />
The bear is able to climb now and uses his teeth to help him. <br />
He still becomes tired, but is building up his strength. <br />
Free The Bears used money from donations of care kits to provide 24-hour assistance to the animal from local bear keepers.<br />
He was bottle-fed at least eight times a day and given joint supplement and anti-inflammatory medicine. <br />
Blue and Baker live in an enclosure with pools, rocks, hammocks, climbing frames,
    Exclusivepix_Bear_Cub_Learns_To_Walk...jpg
  • I wanna walk like you! Bear cub called Blue finally learns to walk months after arriving at sanctuary with such bad spinal problems that carers feared he would not survive <br />
<br />
A bear in Cambodia has learned how to walk after being found with spinal problems that made it difficult for the young cub to move.<br />
<br />
Blue, a sun bear who lives at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre near the capital Phnom Penh, used to be able to only take a few steps before becoming tired.<br />
<br />
The cub was found in a blue basket by Free The Bears, an organization that works to rescue bears that have been captured by black market bear farmers. <br />
Sun and moon bears are used in traditional medicine or sometimes kept as pets by hotels and restaurants for tourists' amusement. <br />
Blue, who weighs 24lbs would have likely been kept as a pet in a small cage and 'he would likely be dead as he has a curved spine,' Free The Bears told Daily Mail Online. <br />
Physical trauma at an extremely young age most likely caused the cub's spinal troubles. <br />
Sometimes he would give up altogether and stop moving. <br />
The organization consulted veterinarians after Blue's rescue and said that it faced 'difficult consideration of euthanasia if he began to show signs of chronic pain'. <br />
However, after months of exercise and medical treatment, the young bear has been able to join its speedy playmate Baker, a cub also rescued in Cambodia.<br />
'Blue is still a very young, growing bear and is not out of the woods yet, but he is dearly loved and we at Free The Bears are so happy with his progress,' rescuers said on Facebook.<br />
The bear is able to climb now and uses his teeth to help him. <br />
He still becomes tired, but is building up his strength. <br />
Free The Bears used money from donations of care kits to provide 24-hour assistance to the animal from local bear keepers.<br />
He was bottle-fed at least eight times a day and given joint supplement and anti-inflammatory medicine. <br />
Blue and Baker live in an enclosure with pools, rocks, hammocks, climbing frames,
    Exclusivepix_Bear_Cub_Learns_To_Walk...jpg
  • Extraordinary moment paralysed man WALKED 30 steps and stood to give his father of-the-bride speech at his daughter's wedding - powered by a robotic suit <br />
<br />
For most men, giving a father of the bride speech is one of the proudest moments of their lives.<br />
<br />
But after IT consultant Irving Caplan was paralysed in a cycling accident, he feared he may have to address guests at his daughter's wedding from a wheelchair.<br />
<br />
However, thanks to the latest in robotic technology, the 55-year-old walked across the dance floor of a wedding venue last month and delivered his speech standing up.<br />
<br />
Mr Caplan, from Stanmore, Middlesex, broke three vertebrae when he collided with a lorry in Edgware, north-west London on his morning cycle to work two years ago.<br />
<br />
After undergoing a series of operations and spending 12 days in intensive care, he was left tetraplegic and needing a wheelchair to get around.<br />
<br />
When his daughter Joanne announced she was to marry fiancé Mike Beaumont, Mr Caplan feared he would be unable to walk his daughter down the aisle or deliver his speech standing up.<br />
<br />
But after he and wife Karen, 57, met a representative of Rex Bionics at an exhibition of technologies for the disabled, he was lent the robotic suit to allow him to stand and walk.<br />
<br />
'The guests were gobsmacked when I walked out. It was the usual speech, thanking everyone for coming and hoping everybody had a good evening, but I certainly surprised them all with my entrance.<br />
<br />
'It wasn't possible for a number of reasons for me to walk Joanne down the aisle, but I was able to do my speech standing up.<br />
<br />
'It is quite an issue when you end up in a wheelchair, being at the wrong height compared to everybody else. But being able to speak to everybody from the right height did make quite a difference.<br />
<br />
'It made a difference to me in the sense that I was doing it from the right perspective.<br />
<br />
'The day was wonderful. It was everything you would hope your daughter's wedding day to be. Unfortunately I could not do everything
    Exclusivepix_Paralysed_Man_WALKED2.jpg
  • Extraordinary moment paralysed man WALKED 30 steps and stood to give his father of-the-bride speech at his daughter's wedding - powered by a robotic suit <br />
<br />
For most men, giving a father of the bride speech is one of the proudest moments of their lives.<br />
<br />
But after IT consultant Irving Caplan was paralysed in a cycling accident, he feared he may have to address guests at his daughter's wedding from a wheelchair.<br />
<br />
However, thanks to the latest in robotic technology, the 55-year-old walked across the dance floor of a wedding venue last month and delivered his speech standing up.<br />
<br />
Mr Caplan, from Stanmore, Middlesex, broke three vertebrae when he collided with a lorry in Edgware, north-west London on his morning cycle to work two years ago.<br />
<br />
After undergoing a series of operations and spending 12 days in intensive care, he was left tetraplegic and needing a wheelchair to get around.<br />
<br />
When his daughter Joanne announced she was to marry fiancé Mike Beaumont, Mr Caplan feared he would be unable to walk his daughter down the aisle or deliver his speech standing up.<br />
<br />
But after he and wife Karen, 57, met a representative of Rex Bionics at an exhibition of technologies for the disabled, he was lent the robotic suit to allow him to stand and walk.<br />
<br />
'The guests were gobsmacked when I walked out. It was the usual speech, thanking everyone for coming and hoping everybody had a good evening, but I certainly surprised them all with my entrance.<br />
<br />
'It wasn't possible for a number of reasons for me to walk Joanne down the aisle, but I was able to do my speech standing up.<br />
<br />
'It is quite an issue when you end up in a wheelchair, being at the wrong height compared to everybody else. But being able to speak to everybody from the right height did make quite a difference.<br />
<br />
'It made a difference to me in the sense that I was doing it from the right perspective.<br />
<br />
'The day was wonderful. It was everything you would hope your daughter's wedding day to be. Unfortunately I could not do everything
    Exclusivepix_Paralysed_Man_WALKED3.jpg
  • I wanna walk like you! Bear cub called Blue finally learns to walk months after arriving at sanctuary with such bad spinal problems that carers feared he would not survive <br />
<br />
A bear in Cambodia has learned how to walk after being found with spinal problems that made it difficult for the young cub to move.<br />
<br />
Blue, a sun bear who lives at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre near the capital Phnom Penh, used to be able to only take a few steps before becoming tired.<br />
<br />
The cub was found in a blue basket by Free The Bears, an organization that works to rescue bears that have been captured by black market bear farmers. <br />
Sun and moon bears are used in traditional medicine or sometimes kept as pets by hotels and restaurants for tourists' amusement. <br />
Blue, who weighs 24lbs would have likely been kept as a pet in a small cage and 'he would likely be dead as he has a curved spine,' Free The Bears told Daily Mail Online. <br />
Physical trauma at an extremely young age most likely caused the cub's spinal troubles. <br />
Sometimes he would give up altogether and stop moving. <br />
The organization consulted veterinarians after Blue's rescue and said that it faced 'difficult consideration of euthanasia if he began to show signs of chronic pain'. <br />
However, after months of exercise and medical treatment, the young bear has been able to join its speedy playmate Baker, a cub also rescued in Cambodia.<br />
'Blue is still a very young, growing bear and is not out of the woods yet, but he is dearly loved and we at Free The Bears are so happy with his progress,' rescuers said on Facebook.<br />
The bear is able to climb now and uses his teeth to help him. <br />
He still becomes tired, but is building up his strength. <br />
Free The Bears used money from donations of care kits to provide 24-hour assistance to the animal from local bear keepers.<br />
He was bottle-fed at least eight times a day and given joint supplement and anti-inflammatory medicine. <br />
Blue and Baker live in an enclosure with pools, rocks, hammocks, climbing frames,
    Exclusivepix_Bear_Cub_Learns_To_Walk...jpg
  • I wanna walk like you! Bear cub called Blue finally learns to walk months after arriving at sanctuary with such bad spinal problems that carers feared he would not survive <br />
<br />
A bear in Cambodia has learned how to walk after being found with spinal problems that made it difficult for the young cub to move.<br />
<br />
Blue, a sun bear who lives at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre near the capital Phnom Penh, used to be able to only take a few steps before becoming tired.<br />
<br />
The cub was found in a blue basket by Free The Bears, an organization that works to rescue bears that have been captured by black market bear farmers. <br />
Sun and moon bears are used in traditional medicine or sometimes kept as pets by hotels and restaurants for tourists' amusement. <br />
Blue, who weighs 24lbs would have likely been kept as a pet in a small cage and 'he would likely be dead as he has a curved spine,' Free The Bears told Daily Mail Online. <br />
Physical trauma at an extremely young age most likely caused the cub's spinal troubles. <br />
Sometimes he would give up altogether and stop moving. <br />
The organization consulted veterinarians after Blue's rescue and said that it faced 'difficult consideration of euthanasia if he began to show signs of chronic pain'. <br />
However, after months of exercise and medical treatment, the young bear has been able to join its speedy playmate Baker, a cub also rescued in Cambodia.<br />
'Blue is still a very young, growing bear and is not out of the woods yet, but he is dearly loved and we at Free The Bears are so happy with his progress,' rescuers said on Facebook.<br />
The bear is able to climb now and uses his teeth to help him. <br />
He still becomes tired, but is building up his strength. <br />
Free The Bears used money from donations of care kits to provide 24-hour assistance to the animal from local bear keepers.<br />
He was bottle-fed at least eight times a day and given joint supplement and anti-inflammatory medicine. <br />
Blue and Baker live in an enclosure with pools, rocks, hammocks, climbing frames,
    Exclusivepix_Bear_Cub_Learns_To_Walk...jpg
  • I wanna walk like you! Bear cub called Blue finally learns to walk months after arriving at sanctuary with such bad spinal problems that carers feared he would not survive <br />
<br />
A bear in Cambodia has learned how to walk after being found with spinal problems that made it difficult for the young cub to move.<br />
<br />
Blue, a sun bear who lives at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre near the capital Phnom Penh, used to be able to only take a few steps before becoming tired.<br />
<br />
The cub was found in a blue basket by Free The Bears, an organization that works to rescue bears that have been captured by black market bear farmers. <br />
Sun and moon bears are used in traditional medicine or sometimes kept as pets by hotels and restaurants for tourists' amusement. <br />
Blue, who weighs 24lbs would have likely been kept as a pet in a small cage and 'he would likely be dead as he has a curved spine,' Free The Bears told Daily Mail Online. <br />
Physical trauma at an extremely young age most likely caused the cub's spinal troubles. <br />
Sometimes he would give up altogether and stop moving. <br />
The organization consulted veterinarians after Blue's rescue and said that it faced 'difficult consideration of euthanasia if he began to show signs of chronic pain'. <br />
However, after months of exercise and medical treatment, the young bear has been able to join its speedy playmate Baker, a cub also rescued in Cambodia.<br />
'Blue is still a very young, growing bear and is not out of the woods yet, but he is dearly loved and we at Free The Bears are so happy with his progress,' rescuers said on Facebook.<br />
The bear is able to climb now and uses his teeth to help him. <br />
He still becomes tired, but is building up his strength. <br />
Free The Bears used money from donations of care kits to provide 24-hour assistance to the animal from local bear keepers.<br />
He was bottle-fed at least eight times a day and given joint supplement and anti-inflammatory medicine. <br />
Blue and Baker live in an enclosure with pools, rocks, hammocks, climbing frames,
    Exclusivepix_Bear_Cub_Learns_To_Walk...jpg
  • I wanna walk like you! Bear cub called Blue finally learns to walk months after arriving at sanctuary with such bad spinal problems that carers feared he would not survive <br />
<br />
A bear in Cambodia has learned how to walk after being found with spinal problems that made it difficult for the young cub to move.<br />
<br />
Blue, a sun bear who lives at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre near the capital Phnom Penh, used to be able to only take a few steps before becoming tired.<br />
<br />
The cub was found in a blue basket by Free The Bears, an organization that works to rescue bears that have been captured by black market bear farmers. <br />
Sun and moon bears are used in traditional medicine or sometimes kept as pets by hotels and restaurants for tourists' amusement. <br />
Blue, who weighs 24lbs would have likely been kept as a pet in a small cage and 'he would likely be dead as he has a curved spine,' Free The Bears told Daily Mail Online. <br />
Physical trauma at an extremely young age most likely caused the cub's spinal troubles. <br />
Sometimes he would give up altogether and stop moving. <br />
The organization consulted veterinarians after Blue's rescue and said that it faced 'difficult consideration of euthanasia if he began to show signs of chronic pain'. <br />
However, after months of exercise and medical treatment, the young bear has been able to join its speedy playmate Baker, a cub also rescued in Cambodia.<br />
'Blue is still a very young, growing bear and is not out of the woods yet, but he is dearly loved and we at Free The Bears are so happy with his progress,' rescuers said on Facebook.<br />
The bear is able to climb now and uses his teeth to help him. <br />
He still becomes tired, but is building up his strength. <br />
Free The Bears used money from donations of care kits to provide 24-hour assistance to the animal from local bear keepers.<br />
He was bottle-fed at least eight times a day and given joint supplement and anti-inflammatory medicine. <br />
Blue and Baker live in an enclosure with pools, rocks, hammocks, climbing frames,
    Exclusivepix_Bear_Cub_Learns_To_Walk...jpg
  • I wanna walk like you! Bear cub called Blue finally learns to walk months after arriving at sanctuary with such bad spinal problems that carers feared he would not survive <br />
<br />
A bear in Cambodia has learned how to walk after being found with spinal problems that made it difficult for the young cub to move.<br />
<br />
Blue, a sun bear who lives at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre near the capital Phnom Penh, used to be able to only take a few steps before becoming tired.<br />
<br />
The cub was found in a blue basket by Free The Bears, an organization that works to rescue bears that have been captured by black market bear farmers. <br />
Sun and moon bears are used in traditional medicine or sometimes kept as pets by hotels and restaurants for tourists' amusement. <br />
Blue, who weighs 24lbs would have likely been kept as a pet in a small cage and 'he would likely be dead as he has a curved spine,' Free The Bears told Daily Mail Online. <br />
Physical trauma at an extremely young age most likely caused the cub's spinal troubles. <br />
Sometimes he would give up altogether and stop moving. <br />
The organization consulted veterinarians after Blue's rescue and said that it faced 'difficult consideration of euthanasia if he began to show signs of chronic pain'. <br />
However, after months of exercise and medical treatment, the young bear has been able to join its speedy playmate Baker, a cub also rescued in Cambodia.<br />
'Blue is still a very young, growing bear and is not out of the woods yet, but he is dearly loved and we at Free The Bears are so happy with his progress,' rescuers said on Facebook.<br />
The bear is able to climb now and uses his teeth to help him. <br />
He still becomes tired, but is building up his strength. <br />
Free The Bears used money from donations of care kits to provide 24-hour assistance to the animal from local bear keepers.<br />
He was bottle-fed at least eight times a day and given joint supplement and anti-inflammatory medicine. <br />
Blue and Baker live in an enclosure with pools, rocks, hammocks, climbing frames,
    Exclusivepix_Bear_Cub_Learns_To_Walk...jpg
  • I wanna walk like you! Bear cub called Blue finally learns to walk months after arriving at sanctuary with such bad spinal problems that carers feared he would not survive <br />
<br />
A bear in Cambodia has learned how to walk after being found with spinal problems that made it difficult for the young cub to move.<br />
<br />
Blue, a sun bear who lives at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre near the capital Phnom Penh, used to be able to only take a few steps before becoming tired.<br />
<br />
The cub was found in a blue basket by Free The Bears, an organization that works to rescue bears that have been captured by black market bear farmers. <br />
Sun and moon bears are used in traditional medicine or sometimes kept as pets by hotels and restaurants for tourists' amusement. <br />
Blue, who weighs 24lbs would have likely been kept as a pet in a small cage and 'he would likely be dead as he has a curved spine,' Free The Bears told Daily Mail Online. <br />
Physical trauma at an extremely young age most likely caused the cub's spinal troubles. <br />
Sometimes he would give up altogether and stop moving. <br />
The organization consulted veterinarians after Blue's rescue and said that it faced 'difficult consideration of euthanasia if he began to show signs of chronic pain'. <br />
However, after months of exercise and medical treatment, the young bear has been able to join its speedy playmate Baker, a cub also rescued in Cambodia.<br />
'Blue is still a very young, growing bear and is not out of the woods yet, but he is dearly loved and we at Free The Bears are so happy with his progress,' rescuers said on Facebook.<br />
The bear is able to climb now and uses his teeth to help him. <br />
He still becomes tired, but is building up his strength. <br />
Free The Bears used money from donations of care kits to provide 24-hour assistance to the animal from local bear keepers.<br />
He was bottle-fed at least eight times a day and given joint supplement and anti-inflammatory medicine. <br />
Blue and Baker live in an enclosure with pools, rocks, hammocks, climbing frames,
    Exclusivepix_Bear_Cub_Learns_To_Walk...jpg
  • Extraordinary moment paralysed man WALKED 30 steps and stood to give his father of-the-bride speech at his daughter's wedding - powered by a robotic suit <br />
<br />
For most men, giving a father of the bride speech is one of the proudest moments of their lives.<br />
<br />
But after IT consultant Irving Caplan was paralysed in a cycling accident, he feared he may have to address guests at his daughter's wedding from a wheelchair.<br />
<br />
However, thanks to the latest in robotic technology, the 55-year-old walked across the dance floor of a wedding venue last month and delivered his speech standing up.<br />
<br />
Mr Caplan, from Stanmore, Middlesex, broke three vertebrae when he collided with a lorry in Edgware, north-west London on his morning cycle to work two years ago.<br />
<br />
After undergoing a series of operations and spending 12 days in intensive care, he was left tetraplegic and needing a wheelchair to get around.<br />
<br />
When his daughter Joanne announced she was to marry fiancé Mike Beaumont, Mr Caplan feared he would be unable to walk his daughter down the aisle or deliver his speech standing up.<br />
<br />
But after he and wife Karen, 57, met a representative of Rex Bionics at an exhibition of technologies for the disabled, he was lent the robotic suit to allow him to stand and walk.<br />
<br />
'The guests were gobsmacked when I walked out. It was the usual speech, thanking everyone for coming and hoping everybody had a good evening, but I certainly surprised them all with my entrance.<br />
<br />
'It wasn't possible for a number of reasons for me to walk Joanne down the aisle, but I was able to do my speech standing up.<br />
<br />
'It is quite an issue when you end up in a wheelchair, being at the wrong height compared to everybody else. But being able to speak to everybody from the right height did make quite a difference.<br />
<br />
'It made a difference to me in the sense that I was doing it from the right perspective.<br />
<br />
'The day was wonderful. It was everything you would hope your daughter's wedding day to be. Unfortunately I could not do everything
    Exclusivepix_Paralysed_Man_WALKED1.jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - DECEMBER 08: China Out - Finland Out<br />
<br />
Dog Walks With Two Legs<br />
<br />
A pet dog walks with two legs following its owner on December 8, 2013 in Chongqing, China. The 2-year-old dog and its owner take about one and a half hours to walk every day, and the dog walks with two legs in most of the time, except going up and down stairs.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Walks_With_Two_Legs...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - DECEMBER 08: China Out - Finland Out<br />
<br />
Dog Walks With Two Legs<br />
<br />
A pet dog walks with two legs following its owner on December 8, 2013 in Chongqing, China. The 2-year-old dog and its owner take about one and a half hours to walk every day, and the dog walks with two legs in most of the time, except going up and down stairs.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Walks_With_Two_Legs...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - DECEMBER 08: China Out - Finland Out<br />
<br />
Dog Walks With Two Legs<br />
<br />
A pet dog walks with two legs following its owner on December 8, 2013 in Chongqing, China. The 2-year-old dog and its owner take about one and a half hours to walk every day, and the dog walks with two legs in most of the time, except going up and down stairs.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Walks_With_Two_Legs...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - DECEMBER 08: China Out - Finland Out<br />
<br />
Dog Walks With Two Legs<br />
<br />
A pet dog walks with two legs following its owner on December 8, 2013 in Chongqing, China. The 2-year-old dog and its owner take about one and a half hours to walk every day, and the dog walks with two legs in most of the time, except going up and down stairs.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Walks_With_Two_Legs...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - DECEMBER 08: China Out - Finland Out<br />
<br />
Dog Walks With Two Legs<br />
<br />
A pet dog walks with two legs following its owner on December 8, 2013 in Chongqing, China. The 2-year-old dog and its owner take about one and a half hours to walk every day, and the dog walks with two legs in most of the time, except going up and down stairs.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Walks_With_Two_Legs...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - DECEMBER 08: China Out - Finland Out<br />
<br />
Dog Walks With Two Legs<br />
<br />
A pet dog walks with two legs following its owner on December 8, 2013 in Chongqing, China. The 2-year-old dog and its owner take about one and a half hours to walk every day, and the dog walks with two legs in most of the time, except going up and down stairs.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Walks_With_Two_Legs...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - DECEMBER 08: China Out - Finland Out<br />
<br />
Dog Walks With Two Legs<br />
<br />
A pet dog walks with two legs following its owner on December 8, 2013 in Chongqing, China. The 2-year-old dog and its owner take about one and a half hours to walk every day, and the dog walks with two legs in most of the time, except going up and down stairs.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Walks_With_Two_Legs...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - DECEMBER 08: China Out - Finland Out<br />
<br />
Dog Walks With Two Legs<br />
<br />
A pet dog walks with two legs following its owner on December 8, 2013 in Chongqing, China. The 2-year-old dog and its owner take about one and a half hours to walk every day, and the dog walks with two legs in most of the time, except going up and down stairs.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Walks_With_Two_Legs...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - DECEMBER 08: China Out - Finland Out<br />
<br />
Dog Walks With Two Legs<br />
<br />
A pet dog walks with two legs following its owner on December 8, 2013 in Chongqing, China. The 2-year-old dog and its owner take about one and a half hours to walk every day, and the dog walks with two legs in most of the time, except going up and down stairs.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Walks_With_Two_Legs...jpg
  • Jane Seymour was reduced to cleaning her own star on the walk of fame <br />
<br />
Screen icon Jane Seymour OBE - may have won Emmys and Golden Globes and been knighted by the Queen of England - but yesterday she was reduced to cleaning her own star on the walk of fame with a tissue! Down on her hands and knees polishing her own star<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Jane_Seymour_Cleans_Sta...jpg
  • Jane Seymour was reduced to cleaning her own star on the walk of fame <br />
<br />
Screen icon Jane Seymour OBE - may have won Emmys and Golden Globes and been knighted by the Queen of England - but yesterday she was reduced to cleaning her own star on the walk of fame with a tissue! Down on her hands and knees polishing her own star<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Jane_Seymour_Cleans_Sta...jpg
  • Jane Seymour was reduced to cleaning her own star on the walk of fame <br />
<br />
Screen icon Jane Seymour OBE - may have won Emmys and Golden Globes and been knighted by the Queen of England - but yesterday she was reduced to cleaning her own star on the walk of fame with a tissue! Down on her hands and knees polishing her own star<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Jane_Seymour_Cleans_Sta...jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Pavement Planted With Trees <br />
<br />
Citizens walk on pavement where lots of trees spread near the north road of Jinan University on February 17, 2016 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. The 300-meter-long pavement are planted with dozens of trees and specific reason is unknown.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pavement_Planted_With_T...jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Pavement Planted With Trees <br />
<br />
Citizens walk on pavement where lots of trees spread near the north road of Jinan University on February 17, 2016 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. The 300-meter-long pavement are planted with dozens of trees and specific reason is unknown.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pavement_Planted_With_T...jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Pavement Planted With Trees <br />
<br />
Citizens walk on pavement where lots of trees spread near the north road of Jinan University on February 17, 2016 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. The 300-meter-long pavement are planted with dozens of trees and specific reason is unknown.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pavement_Planted_With_T...jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Pavement Planted With Trees <br />
<br />
Citizens walk on pavement where lots of trees spread near the north road of Jinan University on February 17, 2016 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. The 300-meter-long pavement are planted with dozens of trees and specific reason is unknown.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pavement_Planted_With_T...jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Pavement Planted With Trees <br />
<br />
Citizens walk on pavement where lots of trees spread near the north road of Jinan University on February 17, 2016 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. The 300-meter-long pavement are planted with dozens of trees and specific reason is unknown.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pavement_Planted_With_T...jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Pavement Planted With Trees <br />
<br />
Citizens walk on pavement where lots of trees spread near the north road of Jinan University on February 17, 2016 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. The 300-meter-long pavement are planted with dozens of trees and specific reason is unknown.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pavement_Planted_With_T...jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Pavement Planted With Trees <br />
<br />
Citizens walk on pavement where lots of trees spread near the north road of Jinan University on February 17, 2016 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. The 300-meter-long pavement are planted with dozens of trees and specific reason is unknown.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pavement_Planted_With_T...jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Pavement Planted With Trees <br />
<br />
Citizens walk on pavement where lots of trees spread near the north road of Jinan University on February 17, 2016 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. The 300-meter-long pavement are planted with dozens of trees and specific reason is unknown.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pavement_Planted_With_T...jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Pavement Planted With Trees <br />
<br />
Citizens walk on pavement where lots of trees spread near the north road of Jinan University on February 17, 2016 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. The 300-meter-long pavement are planted with dozens of trees and specific reason is unknown.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pavement_Planted_With_T...jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Pavement Planted With Trees <br />
<br />
Citizens walk on pavement where lots of trees spread near the north road of Jinan University on February 17, 2016 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. The 300-meter-long pavement are planted with dozens of trees and specific reason is unknown.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pavement_Planted_With_T...jpg
  • May 18, 2016 - New York, NY, USA - Singer John Legend walks his dog Pippa, who sports a fancy pearl collar<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_John_Legend_walking_his_dog1.jpg
  • May 18, 2016 - New York, NY, USA - Singer John Legend walks his dog Pippa, who sports a fancy pearl collar<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_John_Legend_walking_his_dog3.jpg
  • May 18, 2016 - New York, NY, USA - Singer John Legend walks his dog Pippa, who sports a fancy pearl collar<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_John_Legend_walking_his_dog4.jpg
  • May 18, 2016 - New York, NY, USA - Singer John Legend walks his dog Pippa, who sports a fancy pearl collar<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_John_Legend_walking_his_dog5.jpg
  • May 18, 2016 - New York, NY, USA - Singer John Legend walks his dog Pippa, who sports a fancy pearl collar<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_John_Legend_walking_his_dog7.jpg
  • May 18, 2016 - New York, NY, USA - Singer John Legend walks his dog Pippa, who sports a fancy pearl collar<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_John_Legend_walking_his_dog6.jpg
  • May 18, 2016 - New York, NY, USA - Singer John Legend walks his dog Pippa, who sports a fancy pearl collar<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_John_Legend_walking_his_dog2.jpg
  • Aug. 26, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Yoko Ono In New York<br />
<br />
New York City....Yoko Ono walks in the West Village on August 26 2014 in New York City <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Yoko_Ono11.jpg
  • Aug. 26, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Yoko Ono In New York<br />
<br />
New York City....Yoko Ono walks in the West Village on August 26 2014 in New York City <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Yoko_Ono12.jpg
  • Aug. 26, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Yoko Ono In New York<br />
<br />
New York City....Yoko Ono walks in the West Village on August 26 2014 in New York City <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Yoko_Ono13.jpg
  • Aug. 26, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Yoko Ono In New York<br />
<br />
New York City....Yoko Ono walks in the West Village on August 26 2014 in New York City <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Yoko_Ono16.jpg
  • Aug. 26, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Yoko Ono In New York<br />
<br />
New York City....Yoko Ono walks in the West Village on August 26 2014 in New York City <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Yoko_Ono15.jpg
  • Aug. 26, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Yoko Ono In New York<br />
<br />
New York City....Yoko Ono walks in the West Village on August 26 2014 in New York City <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Yoko_Ono14.jpg
  • GPS Trackers Reveal Cat’s Adventures During The Night<br />
<br />
If you let your cat outside and think it stays near your house, think again. A recent research used GPS trackers to show the daily movement of pet cats and its results surprised their owners.<br />
“When you speak to a lot of cat owners they say: “Oh my cat just sleeps on the end of my bed, it doesn’t go anywhere,” senior land service officer Peter Evans said. Turns out some of the cats have “gone three kilometres from home.”<br />
“I thought Semi particularly would be just local — bottom of the garden or next door’s yard,” one of the pet owners said. He was shocked when he learned that Semi was going into bushland and “over the hill and far away.” The owner is guessing that the cat is “looking for food which is probably the primary thing because he’s usually around eight and a half kilos which [the vet says] is far, far too heavy.”The survey was carried out by The Central Tablelands LLS at Lithgow, in central-west New South Wales.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Cats_Adventures_During_The_Nig...jpg
  • GPS Trackers Reveal Cat’s Adventures During The Night<br />
<br />
If you let your cat outside and think it stays near your house, think again. A recent research used GPS trackers to show the daily movement of pet cats and its results surprised their owners.<br />
“When you speak to a lot of cat owners they say: “Oh my cat just sleeps on the end of my bed, it doesn’t go anywhere,” senior land service officer Peter Evans said. Turns out some of the cats have “gone three kilometres from home.”<br />
“I thought Semi particularly would be just local — bottom of the garden or next door’s yard,” one of the pet owners said. He was shocked when he learned that Semi was going into bushland and “over the hill and far away.” The owner is guessing that the cat is “looking for food which is probably the primary thing because he’s usually around eight and a half kilos which [the vet says] is far, far too heavy.”The survey was carried out by The Central Tablelands LLS at Lithgow, in central-west New South Wales.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Cats_Adventures_During_The_Nig...jpg
  • April 13, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - <br />
<br />
Hindu worshippers hang themselves from HOOKS and pierce their skin with metal rods as they take part in the folk festival <br />
<br />
Spectacular images have captured the celebrations of Charak Puja, a Hindu folk festival held in southern Bangladesh and West Bengal.  <br />
Celebrated on the last day of the last month in the Nepali calendar, people believe the festival will eliminate the sorrow and sufferings of the previous year and carry prosperity into the next. <br />
In this festival a human 'Charak' is made to satisfy the Lord Shiva. The 'Charak' is tied with a hook on his back and then he is moved around a bar with a long rope.<br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
<br />
After years of practice, they are able to pierce the sharp hooks without damaging the veins and causing less pain. They then use these hooks to swing around the tree.<br />
The Charak tree stands around 30 to 40 feet tall and has no roots or branches. The tree is worshipped by priests before being placed in a ditch and balanced by bamboos. <br />
After the Sanyasis perform their penance acts, the tree is immersed into the river. The Charak Sanyasis then brings it back to the puja ground, which is a local ground. <br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_worshippers_hang_themse...jpg
  • April 13, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - <br />
<br />
Hindu worshippers hang themselves from HOOKS and pierce their skin with metal rods as they take part in the folk festival <br />
<br />
Spectacular images have captured the celebrations of Charak Puja, a Hindu folk festival held in southern Bangladesh and West Bengal.  <br />
Celebrated on the last day of the last month in the Nepali calendar, people believe the festival will eliminate the sorrow and sufferings of the previous year and carry prosperity into the next. <br />
In this festival a human 'Charak' is made to satisfy the Lord Shiva. The 'Charak' is tied with a hook on his back and then he is moved around a bar with a long rope.<br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
<br />
After years of practice, they are able to pierce the sharp hooks without damaging the veins and causing less pain. They then use these hooks to swing around the tree.<br />
The Charak tree stands around 30 to 40 feet tall and has no roots or branches. The tree is worshipped by priests before being placed in a ditch and balanced by bamboos. <br />
After the Sanyasis perform their penance acts, the tree is immersed into the river. The Charak Sanyasis then brings it back to the puja ground, which is a local ground. <br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_worshippers_hang_themse...jpg
  • April 13, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - <br />
<br />
Hindu worshippers hang themselves from HOOKS and pierce their skin with metal rods as they take part in the folk festival <br />
<br />
Spectacular images have captured the celebrations of Charak Puja, a Hindu folk festival held in southern Bangladesh and West Bengal.  <br />
Celebrated on the last day of the last month in the Nepali calendar, people believe the festival will eliminate the sorrow and sufferings of the previous year and carry prosperity into the next. <br />
In this festival a human 'Charak' is made to satisfy the Lord Shiva. The 'Charak' is tied with a hook on his back and then he is moved around a bar with a long rope.<br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
<br />
After years of practice, they are able to pierce the sharp hooks without damaging the veins and causing less pain. They then use these hooks to swing around the tree.<br />
The Charak tree stands around 30 to 40 feet tall and has no roots or branches. The tree is worshipped by priests before being placed in a ditch and balanced by bamboos. <br />
After the Sanyasis perform their penance acts, the tree is immersed into the river. The Charak Sanyasis then brings it back to the puja ground, which is a local ground. <br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_worshippers_hang_themse...jpg
  • Aug. 26, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Yoko Ono In New York<br />
<br />
Artist Yoko Ono went to a Soho restaurant on August 26 2014 in New York City  <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Yoko_Ono8.jpg
  • Aug. 26, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Yoko Ono In New York<br />
<br />
Artist Yoko Ono went to a Soho restaurant on August 26 2014 in New York City  <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Yoko_Ono9.jpg
  • GPS Trackers Reveal Cat’s Adventures During The Night<br />
<br />
If you let your cat outside and think it stays near your house, think again. A recent research used GPS trackers to show the daily movement of pet cats and its results surprised their owners.<br />
“When you speak to a lot of cat owners they say: “Oh my cat just sleeps on the end of my bed, it doesn’t go anywhere,” senior land service officer Peter Evans said. Turns out some of the cats have “gone three kilometres from home.”<br />
“I thought Semi particularly would be just local — bottom of the garden or next door’s yard,” one of the pet owners said. He was shocked when he learned that Semi was going into bushland and “over the hill and far away.” The owner is guessing that the cat is “looking for food which is probably the primary thing because he’s usually around eight and a half kilos which [the vet says] is far, far too heavy.”The survey was carried out by The Central Tablelands LLS at Lithgow, in central-west New South Wales.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Cats_Adventures_During_The_Nig...jpg
  • GPS Trackers Reveal Cat’s Adventures During The Night<br />
<br />
If you let your cat outside and think it stays near your house, think again. A recent research used GPS trackers to show the daily movement of pet cats and its results surprised their owners.<br />
“When you speak to a lot of cat owners they say: “Oh my cat just sleeps on the end of my bed, it doesn’t go anywhere,” senior land service officer Peter Evans said. Turns out some of the cats have “gone three kilometres from home.”<br />
“I thought Semi particularly would be just local — bottom of the garden or next door’s yard,” one of the pet owners said. He was shocked when he learned that Semi was going into bushland and “over the hill and far away.” The owner is guessing that the cat is “looking for food which is probably the primary thing because he’s usually around eight and a half kilos which [the vet says] is far, far too heavy.”The survey was carried out by The Central Tablelands LLS at Lithgow, in central-west New South Wales.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Cats_Adventures_During_The_Nig...jpg
  • GPS Trackers Reveal Cat’s Adventures During The Night<br />
<br />
If you let your cat outside and think it stays near your house, think again. A recent research used GPS trackers to show the daily movement of pet cats and its results surprised their owners.<br />
“When you speak to a lot of cat owners they say: “Oh my cat just sleeps on the end of my bed, it doesn’t go anywhere,” senior land service officer Peter Evans said. Turns out some of the cats have “gone three kilometres from home.”<br />
“I thought Semi particularly would be just local — bottom of the garden or next door’s yard,” one of the pet owners said. He was shocked when he learned that Semi was going into bushland and “over the hill and far away.” The owner is guessing that the cat is “looking for food which is probably the primary thing because he’s usually around eight and a half kilos which [the vet says] is far, far too heavy.”The survey was carried out by The Central Tablelands LLS at Lithgow, in central-west New South Wales.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Cats_Adventures_During_The_Nig...jpg
  • GPS Trackers Reveal Cat’s Adventures During The Night<br />
<br />
If you let your cat outside and think it stays near your house, think again. A recent research used GPS trackers to show the daily movement of pet cats and its results surprised their owners.<br />
“When you speak to a lot of cat owners they say: “Oh my cat just sleeps on the end of my bed, it doesn’t go anywhere,” senior land service officer Peter Evans said. Turns out some of the cats have “gone three kilometres from home.”<br />
“I thought Semi particularly would be just local — bottom of the garden or next door’s yard,” one of the pet owners said. He was shocked when he learned that Semi was going into bushland and “over the hill and far away.” The owner is guessing that the cat is “looking for food which is probably the primary thing because he’s usually around eight and a half kilos which [the vet says] is far, far too heavy.”The survey was carried out by The Central Tablelands LLS at Lithgow, in central-west New South Wales.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Cats_Adventures_During_The_Nig...jpg
  • GPS Trackers Reveal Cat’s Adventures During The Night<br />
<br />
If you let your cat outside and think it stays near your house, think again. A recent research used GPS trackers to show the daily movement of pet cats and its results surprised their owners.<br />
“When you speak to a lot of cat owners they say: “Oh my cat just sleeps on the end of my bed, it doesn’t go anywhere,” senior land service officer Peter Evans said. Turns out some of the cats have “gone three kilometres from home.”<br />
“I thought Semi particularly would be just local — bottom of the garden or next door’s yard,” one of the pet owners said. He was shocked when he learned that Semi was going into bushland and “over the hill and far away.” The owner is guessing that the cat is “looking for food which is probably the primary thing because he’s usually around eight and a half kilos which [the vet says] is far, far too heavy.”The survey was carried out by The Central Tablelands LLS at Lithgow, in central-west New South Wales.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Cats_Adventures_During_The_Nig...jpg
  • GPS Trackers Reveal Cat’s Adventures During The Night<br />
<br />
If you let your cat outside and think it stays near your house, think again. A recent research used GPS trackers to show the daily movement of pet cats and its results surprised their owners.<br />
“When you speak to a lot of cat owners they say: “Oh my cat just sleeps on the end of my bed, it doesn’t go anywhere,” senior land service officer Peter Evans said. Turns out some of the cats have “gone three kilometres from home.”<br />
“I thought Semi particularly would be just local — bottom of the garden or next door’s yard,” one of the pet owners said. He was shocked when he learned that Semi was going into bushland and “over the hill and far away.” The owner is guessing that the cat is “looking for food which is probably the primary thing because he’s usually around eight and a half kilos which [the vet says] is far, far too heavy.”The survey was carried out by The Central Tablelands LLS at Lithgow, in central-west New South Wales.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Cats_Adventures_During_The_Nig...jpg
  • Russian bodybuilder travelled to top of Mount Elbrus with a Barbell<br />
<br />
A Russian bodybuilder has travelled to the top of the highest mountain in Europe and Russia - Mount Elbrus. He didn't travel alone. He took his favorite 75 kilo (or around 150 lbs) barbell together with him on his shoulders. It took him eight days to reach the height of 5,642 meters (18,510 feet)! He got severely burned and was tired but still went forward and on September 6th he reached his goal. A few photos are inside.<br />
<br />
He left his barbell on top of the mountain as a live monument of his achievement.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Bodybuilder_Mountain_Clib_with...jpg
  • Russian bodybuilder travelled to top of Mount Elbrus with a Barbell<br />
<br />
A Russian bodybuilder has travelled to the top of the highest mountain in Europe and Russia - Mount Elbrus. He didn't travel alone. He took his favorite 75 kilo (or around 150 lbs) barbell together with him on his shoulders. It took him eight days to reach the height of 5,642 meters (18,510 feet)! He got severely burned and was tired but still went forward and on September 6th he reached his goal. A few photos are inside.<br />
<br />
He left his barbell on top of the mountain as a live monument of his achievement.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Bodybuilder_Mountain_Clib_with...jpg
  • Russian bodybuilder travelled to top of Mount Elbrus with a Barbell<br />
<br />
A Russian bodybuilder has travelled to the top of the highest mountain in Europe and Russia - Mount Elbrus. He didn't travel alone. He took his favorite 75 kilo (or around 150 lbs) barbell together with him on his shoulders. It took him eight days to reach the height of 5,642 meters (18,510 feet)! He got severely burned and was tired but still went forward and on September 6th he reached his goal. A few photos are inside.<br />
<br />
He left his barbell on top of the mountain as a live monument of his achievement.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Bodybuilder_Mountain_Clib_with...jpg
  • Russian bodybuilder travelled to top of Mount Elbrus with a Barbell<br />
<br />
A Russian bodybuilder has travelled to the top of the highest mountain in Europe and Russia - Mount Elbrus. He didn't travel alone. He took his favorite 75 kilo (or around 150 lbs) barbell together with him on his shoulders. It took him eight days to reach the height of 5,642 meters (18,510 feet)! He got severely burned and was tired but still went forward and on September 6th he reached his goal. A few photos are inside.<br />
<br />
He left his barbell on top of the mountain as a live monument of his achievement.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Bodybuilder_Mountain_Clib_with...jpg
  • April 13, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - <br />
<br />
Hindu worshippers hang themselves from HOOKS and pierce their skin with metal rods as they take part in the folk festival <br />
<br />
Spectacular images have captured the celebrations of Charak Puja, a Hindu folk festival held in southern Bangladesh and West Bengal.  <br />
Celebrated on the last day of the last month in the Nepali calendar, people believe the festival will eliminate the sorrow and sufferings of the previous year and carry prosperity into the next. <br />
In this festival a human 'Charak' is made to satisfy the Lord Shiva. The 'Charak' is tied with a hook on his back and then he is moved around a bar with a long rope.<br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
<br />
After years of practice, they are able to pierce the sharp hooks without damaging the veins and causing less pain. They then use these hooks to swing around the tree.<br />
The Charak tree stands around 30 to 40 feet tall and has no roots or branches. The tree is worshipped by priests before being placed in a ditch and balanced by bamboos. <br />
After the Sanyasis perform their penance acts, the tree is immersed into the river. The Charak Sanyasis then brings it back to the puja ground, which is a local ground. <br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_worshippers_hang_themse...jpg
  • April 13, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - <br />
<br />
Hindu worshippers hang themselves from HOOKS and pierce their skin with metal rods as they take part in the folk festival <br />
<br />
Spectacular images have captured the celebrations of Charak Puja, a Hindu folk festival held in southern Bangladesh and West Bengal.  <br />
Celebrated on the last day of the last month in the Nepali calendar, people believe the festival will eliminate the sorrow and sufferings of the previous year and carry prosperity into the next. <br />
In this festival a human 'Charak' is made to satisfy the Lord Shiva. The 'Charak' is tied with a hook on his back and then he is moved around a bar with a long rope.<br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
<br />
After years of practice, they are able to pierce the sharp hooks without damaging the veins and causing less pain. They then use these hooks to swing around the tree.<br />
The Charak tree stands around 30 to 40 feet tall and has no roots or branches. The tree is worshipped by priests before being placed in a ditch and balanced by bamboos. <br />
After the Sanyasis perform their penance acts, the tree is immersed into the river. The Charak Sanyasis then brings it back to the puja ground, which is a local ground. <br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_worshippers_hang_themse...jpg
  • April 13, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - <br />
<br />
Hindu worshippers hang themselves from HOOKS and pierce their skin with metal rods as they take part in the folk festival <br />
<br />
Spectacular images have captured the celebrations of Charak Puja, a Hindu folk festival held in southern Bangladesh and West Bengal.  <br />
Celebrated on the last day of the last month in the Nepali calendar, people believe the festival will eliminate the sorrow and sufferings of the previous year and carry prosperity into the next. <br />
In this festival a human 'Charak' is made to satisfy the Lord Shiva. The 'Charak' is tied with a hook on his back and then he is moved around a bar with a long rope.<br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
<br />
After years of practice, they are able to pierce the sharp hooks without damaging the veins and causing less pain. They then use these hooks to swing around the tree.<br />
The Charak tree stands around 30 to 40 feet tall and has no roots or branches. The tree is worshipped by priests before being placed in a ditch and balanced by bamboos. <br />
After the Sanyasis perform their penance acts, the tree is immersed into the river. The Charak Sanyasis then brings it back to the puja ground, which is a local ground. <br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_worshippers_hang_themse...jpg
  • April 13, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - <br />
<br />
Hindu worshippers hang themselves from HOOKS and pierce their skin with metal rods as they take part in the folk festival <br />
<br />
Spectacular images have captured the celebrations of Charak Puja, a Hindu folk festival held in southern Bangladesh and West Bengal.  <br />
Celebrated on the last day of the last month in the Nepali calendar, people believe the festival will eliminate the sorrow and sufferings of the previous year and carry prosperity into the next. <br />
In this festival a human 'Charak' is made to satisfy the Lord Shiva. The 'Charak' is tied with a hook on his back and then he is moved around a bar with a long rope.<br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
<br />
After years of practice, they are able to pierce the sharp hooks without damaging the veins and causing less pain. They then use these hooks to swing around the tree.<br />
The Charak tree stands around 30 to 40 feet tall and has no roots or branches. The tree is worshipped by priests before being placed in a ditch and balanced by bamboos. <br />
After the Sanyasis perform their penance acts, the tree is immersed into the river. The Charak Sanyasis then brings it back to the puja ground, which is a local ground. <br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_worshippers_hang_themse...jpg
  • April 13, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - <br />
<br />
Hindu worshippers hang themselves from HOOKS and pierce their skin with metal rods as they take part in the folk festival <br />
<br />
Spectacular images have captured the celebrations of Charak Puja, a Hindu folk festival held in southern Bangladesh and West Bengal.  <br />
Celebrated on the last day of the last month in the Nepali calendar, people believe the festival will eliminate the sorrow and sufferings of the previous year and carry prosperity into the next. <br />
In this festival a human 'Charak' is made to satisfy the Lord Shiva. The 'Charak' is tied with a hook on his back and then he is moved around a bar with a long rope.<br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
<br />
After years of practice, they are able to pierce the sharp hooks without damaging the veins and causing less pain. They then use these hooks to swing around the tree.<br />
The Charak tree stands around 30 to 40 feet tall and has no roots or branches. The tree is worshipped by priests before being placed in a ditch and balanced by bamboos. <br />
After the Sanyasis perform their penance acts, the tree is immersed into the river. The Charak Sanyasis then brings it back to the puja ground, which is a local ground. <br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_worshippers_hang_themse...jpg
  • April 13, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - <br />
<br />
Hindu worshippers hang themselves from HOOKS and pierce their skin with metal rods as they take part in the folk festival <br />
<br />
Spectacular images have captured the celebrations of Charak Puja, a Hindu folk festival held in southern Bangladesh and West Bengal.  <br />
Celebrated on the last day of the last month in the Nepali calendar, people believe the festival will eliminate the sorrow and sufferings of the previous year and carry prosperity into the next. <br />
In this festival a human 'Charak' is made to satisfy the Lord Shiva. The 'Charak' is tied with a hook on his back and then he is moved around a bar with a long rope.<br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
<br />
After years of practice, they are able to pierce the sharp hooks without damaging the veins and causing less pain. They then use these hooks to swing around the tree.<br />
The Charak tree stands around 30 to 40 feet tall and has no roots or branches. The tree is worshipped by priests before being placed in a ditch and balanced by bamboos. <br />
After the Sanyasis perform their penance acts, the tree is immersed into the river. The Charak Sanyasis then brings it back to the puja ground, which is a local ground. <br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_worshippers_hang_themse...jpg
  • April 13, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - <br />
<br />
Hindu worshippers hang themselves from HOOKS and pierce their skin with metal rods as they take part in the folk festival <br />
<br />
Spectacular images have captured the celebrations of Charak Puja, a Hindu folk festival held in southern Bangladesh and West Bengal.  <br />
Celebrated on the last day of the last month in the Nepali calendar, people believe the festival will eliminate the sorrow and sufferings of the previous year and carry prosperity into the next. <br />
In this festival a human 'Charak' is made to satisfy the Lord Shiva. The 'Charak' is tied with a hook on his back and then he is moved around a bar with a long rope.<br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
<br />
After years of practice, they are able to pierce the sharp hooks without damaging the veins and causing less pain. They then use these hooks to swing around the tree.<br />
The Charak tree stands around 30 to 40 feet tall and has no roots or branches. The tree is worshipped by priests before being placed in a ditch and balanced by bamboos. <br />
After the Sanyasis perform their penance acts, the tree is immersed into the river. The Charak Sanyasis then brings it back to the puja ground, which is a local ground. <br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_worshippers_hang_themse...jpg
  • April 13, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - <br />
<br />
Hindu worshippers hang themselves from HOOKS and pierce their skin with metal rods as they take part in the folk festival <br />
<br />
Spectacular images have captured the celebrations of Charak Puja, a Hindu folk festival held in southern Bangladesh and West Bengal.  <br />
Celebrated on the last day of the last month in the Nepali calendar, people believe the festival will eliminate the sorrow and sufferings of the previous year and carry prosperity into the next. <br />
In this festival a human 'Charak' is made to satisfy the Lord Shiva. The 'Charak' is tied with a hook on his back and then he is moved around a bar with a long rope.<br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
<br />
After years of practice, they are able to pierce the sharp hooks without damaging the veins and causing less pain. They then use these hooks to swing around the tree.<br />
The Charak tree stands around 30 to 40 feet tall and has no roots or branches. The tree is worshipped by priests before being placed in a ditch and balanced by bamboos. <br />
After the Sanyasis perform their penance acts, the tree is immersed into the river. The Charak Sanyasis then brings it back to the puja ground, which is a local ground. <br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_worshippers_hang_themse...jpg
  • April 13, 2016 - Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh - <br />
<br />
Hindu worshippers hang themselves from HOOKS and pierce their skin with metal rods as they take part in the folk festival <br />
<br />
Spectacular images have captured the celebrations of Charak Puja, a Hindu folk festival held in southern Bangladesh and West Bengal.  <br />
Celebrated on the last day of the last month in the Nepali calendar, people believe the festival will eliminate the sorrow and sufferings of the previous year and carry prosperity into the next. <br />
In this festival a human 'Charak' is made to satisfy the Lord Shiva. The 'Charak' is tied with a hook on his back and then he is moved around a bar with a long rope.<br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
<br />
After years of practice, they are able to pierce the sharp hooks without damaging the veins and causing less pain. They then use these hooks to swing around the tree.<br />
The Charak tree stands around 30 to 40 feet tall and has no roots or branches. The tree is worshipped by priests before being placed in a ditch and balanced by bamboos. <br />
After the Sanyasis perform their penance acts, the tree is immersed into the river. The Charak Sanyasis then brings it back to the puja ground, which is a local ground. <br />
<br />
The tradition behind Charak Puja is worshipping the Charak tree. Several acts of penance are performed by Charak Sanyasis around and on the tree on 14th April every year. This includes inserting hooks through devotees back. <br />
Amazingly, the priests are able to pierce sharp hooks at the bodies of participants with very little cut or injury. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_worshippers_hang_themse...jpg
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