Screenshot: YouTube
The Office may have finished its nine-season run on NBC in 2013, but the workplace sitcom has etched its place in TV history and now in the streaming wars as well. The comedy has only grown in popularity over the last few years, drawing in a new generation of fans while on Netflix. But as of January 1, 2021, the high-profile show has moved to NBCUniversal’s new streaming platform, Peacock.
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In a way to lure in viewers, the first two seasons are available to stream for free but just as it gets good (sorry, but season three and four are peak
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The Office: Peacock Shares Kevin Malone s Special Recipe on National Chili Day
There are over 200 episodes of
The Office, which means there are plenty of iconic cold opens throughout the series run. One of the most famous episode beginnings came in Season 5, Episode 26. Casual Friday kicked off with Kevin Malone (Brian Baumgartner) bringing his famous chili into the office, but things go horribly wrong when he drops it on the carpet. In honor of today being National Chili Day, Peacock has decided to share Kevin s recipe with the world. You can check out all of the ingredients and steps below:
Camera traps bring you closer to the secretive natural world and are an important conservation tool to study wildlife. This week we’re meeting one of the most iconic African animals: the zebra. The plains zebra (Equus quagga), also known as the common zebra, is one of the three species of zebra that exist in Africa. […]
Something was amiss with the giraffes. The animals, which looked healthy in daylight, seemed to sprout strange underarm tumors at night. This bizarre scene was captured by nocturnal camera traps as part of the Snapshot Serengeti project in Tanzania’s Serengeti National Park.
Concerned, the project’s citizen scientists alerted the experts. “They were like, what’s going on with these giraffes?” recalls Meredith Palmer, a behavioral ecologist with Snapshot Serengeti. Careful examination revealed a surprising culprit: dozens of yellow-billed oxpecker birds, which had taken to cuddling in giraffe armpits at night.
Why didn’t researchers notice these freeloaders sooner? The artificial intelligence algorithm tasked with processing camera data missed them entirely.