Yin Yue s current exhibition at an art centre in Beijing features mushroom-headed figures sitting on chairs, as if posing for a family portrait. Photo: Instagram/YinYue Duzii
Using a long needle, Chinese artist Yin Yue diligently pokes a piece of wool onto a pink-purple elephant made out of wool felt in her studio in Beijing.
She stumbled onto wool felt art about a decade ago, and has turned it into a career. Her current exhibition at an art centre in Beijing features mushroom-headed figures sitting on chairs, as if posing for a family portrait. I came across pictures about wool felt art online by chance. I was very interested in this kind of material so I did some research and started to try to make something, said the 31-year-old Yin.
Boy Fights for Life After Swallowing Magnetic Balls in Deadly TikTok Trend
On 5/24/21 at 11:23 AM EDT
Ellis Tripp, an 11-year-old boy in Worcestershire, a county in the West Midlands region of England, was reported to have been fighting for his life after accidentally swallowing five small magnetic balls, possibly as part of a TikTok craze.
The social media trend reportedly sees TikTok users pretend to have a tongue piercing using magnetic balls, which are placed on either side of the tongue. The balls are moved around to create the illusion that the tongue is pierced.
Amy Clarke, the mother of Tripp, warned in a post on her Facebook page: I m in a nightmare. This TikTok craze could/would have killed him if left any longer. Please talk to your children and tell them how DANGEROUS THESE ARE.
Some folks are able to pull off frankly amazing feats with diecast cars. Whether it’s a gorgeous photoshoot or a kitchen-table clip, you’d be forgiven for thinking you were looking at the real deal for a few minutes. But prepare to have your mind blown by something even more incredible: full-blown diecast car racing.
Space Jam merch.
Warner Bros. has enlisted more than 200 partners from Nike to Kraft Heinz to create licensed merchandise for its upcoming movie,
Space Jam: A New Legacy, set to debut in theaters on July 16 and on HBO Max a month later. A follow-up to the original
Space Jam from 1996, the new movie will again pair Looney Tunes characters such as Bugs Bunny with the top star in basketball, which is this time LeBron James, rather than Michael Jordan as in the first movie. Accompanying the theatrical release will be what Warner Bros. is describing as one of its largest-ever merchandise programs for Looney Tunes.