Watch this hefty little guy huff, puff, and squeal his way up a single step. I can't say I don't have moments like this on a daily basis, but when I sweat the stairs, I sure don't look as adorable as this furry fella. For the love of cute, will someone please get this baby panda a stepping stool?!
Cats get stuck up in trees all the time, but canines? They're too doggone busy sniffing and peeing on fire hydrants for that kind of trouble. Cody, however, climbs trees with the best of 'em and unlike her cat counterparts, she doesn't get stuck.
I once had a dog who had the most elaborate and creative ways of escaping the backyard when he had the urge. We could never figure out how he always got away without damaging the lawn and digging underneath the fence. A magic carpet maybe?
We've already determined that Google Maps is more than a useful navigation tool. It's a hothouse of candid moments caught on tape. Women giving daytime lingerie shows.
This bear is not a first time offender. He's been spotted kicking back in this hammock before, so it's no surprise to see him again. But it's amusing to watch him maneuver his hefty self inside the hammock this time around, or at least try to!
This Irish Setter loves to hang with the dog next door, but a six foot wall stands in his way. So when the 'rents won't escort him over, he takes matters into his own paws. Watch this dog attempt to sneak out of his house by climbing (and walking?!) a wall in the backyard.
What's a bored house cat to do? He sits in the sun, asks for a treat, grooms himself, walks on a napping person's face. And then what?
This is what people get when they start dragging Christmas out before Thanksgiving. (Is it just me, or is Christmas music playing earlier and earlier in the season these days?) Santa's doing some promotional thing by climbing a wall, his beard gets stuck in the rope, he's gotta cut the beard off, and embittered children watching down below are never the same again.
I have no doubt that pole dancing, as a press release for California's first pole-dance championship next month puts it, "requires strength, agility, flexibility, and endurance." Nor do I believe that pole dancing is "just posing against a pole" but rather involves "spinning, inverts, climbing, and power holds."
But what does it mean to elevate to a sport an act that originated in strip clubs and which symbolizes a woman's role as a sex object?