YETI BUTTS
Roy and Ryan Seiders founded Yeti back in 2006, a company of portable fridges specially created to go out to picnic, barbecue, fishing or other outdoor activities.
Apparently the company's been growing, perhaps and partially thanks to their initiative #YetiButts, an Instagram account where they publish photos of their female clients sit on their resistant, light portable fridges.
I'm afraid this would be considered as sexist in many European countries and we would see protests on Twitter, Facebook and other social networks against the company, but in America it's different, they value the ability, the creativity and the success over bullshit.










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Instagram.
Yesterday we published on Telegram a new video of
EmiliaChCh... that pretty brunnette who shook their boobs to the beat of Rihanna...
Fotos de su Instagram...
# instagram.com/emiliachch
CARIBBEAN PIRATESThe real Caribbean pirates were a whole different breed than the Hollywood kind—though just as savage. They ruled the seas between the 17th and 18th centuries, especially around the Gulf of Mexico, the Antilles, and the northern coast of South America. These guys were rogue sailors, ex-soldiers, or just hustlers who saw piracy as a fast (and seriously dangerous) way to get rich.
They attacked ships loaded with gold, silver, rum, sugar, and anything valuable coming from the American colonies to Europe. Some worked solo, but many were privateers—basically pirates with government permission to rob enemy ships.
Bartholomew "Blackbeard" (Edward Teach) was one of the most feared. He tied smoking fuses into his beard to look even scarier. With smoke pouring from his face, he looked more like a demon from hell than a Disney pirate.
Anne Bonny and Mary Read disguised themselves as men to join pirate crews. They fought like anyone else and didn’t mess around. And Calico Jack became known for his iconic flag (the classic skull with crossed swords) and for sailing alongside Anne and Mary. Spoiler: he ended up hanging by the neck.
The pirate life was brutal. Scurvy, betrayals, brawls, rotten food, and no showers in sight. But there was also a kind of pirate democracy—they voted for their captain, split the loot fairly, and had their own rules, including punishing crew members who stole from each other.
Once they started hitting ships without caring about flags, the major European powers got fed up and hunted them down almost to extinction by the early 18th century.
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Training both body and mind.