Sam Elliott says he's happy to still be working into his 80s, even if he's no longer playing the "young, leading, dashing man":
"The fact that there’s a part that I can get into and really enjoy doing, it’s a wonderful thing. I determined early on that if I wanted to have a long career, I couldn’t work for the dollar and do anything that came along. I had to be selective and judicious about what it was that I got involved with."
https://t.co/ljoImyLZ5m
Bees lives less than 40 days, visit at least 1000 flowers and produces less than a teaspoon of honey. For us it is only a teaspoon of honey, but for the bee it is a lifetime of work.
Thank You Bees!
They never forget who helped them. After being rescued and treated, this beautiful Snow Leopard was finally released back into the wild.
But before heading into the mountains, it stopped to say one last, unforgettable goodbye to the man who saved its life. Watch this incredible moment of gratitude.
Incredible. Came for the celebration of Anderson Cooper’s career at 60 Minutes but watched through the end blown away seeing not just reminders of his outstanding work telling stories but the entire history of the show and its legendary journalism.
“Lyrically, now, I can’t relate to it, because it was so long ago. I would have no intention ever to write along those abstract lines any more.”
- Robert Plant on "Stairway to Heaven"
Penguins on a "Blue Iceberg" caused by thousands of years of compression
The interesting shapes are caused from wave action below and wind erosion above, where the waves cannot reach.
The blue color occurs mostly in very old ice from a very deep glacier and is the result hundreds or even thousands of years of compression and ongoing thawing and refreezing of the ice. Over time, these processes release much of the air that was originally trapped by the falling snow. As this happens, the reflective surfaces of our "snowflakes" disappear. The ability to reflect light exists only when there is air between the surfaces of the ice crystals. This very, very old, and very, very dense ice is no longer capable of reflecting light. So it no longer appears white.