5 Sports Fans Who Ruined Sports
Sporting events have one thing in common with concerts: A few douchebag fans can ruin everything. They're running onto the field, they're blowing some...
Sporting events have one thing in common with concerts: A few douchebag fans can ruin everything. They're running onto the field, they're blowing some...
Danny Groner | Posted 05.25.2011
As we bid farewell to another year, some pop culture critics are doing more than reflecting on trends gone by -- they're speculating about what it all means. Here, the best explanations.
The Huffington Post | Catharine Smith | Posted 05.25.2011
Twitter recently unleashed a list of 2010's top trends, which reflect the topics that dominated the 25 billion tweets sent this year. Twitter defi...
languagemonitor.com | Posted 05.25.2011
AUSTIN, Texas November 15, 2010 -- The Global Language Monitor has announced that Spillcam is the Top Word, Anger and Rage the Top Phrase and Chinese ...
OneTravel | Posted 05.25.2011
From a monotone musical instrument's rise to global stardom to one very teed-off Jet Blue employee, 2010 was certainly a year chock-full of stories that made us say "whoa!"
mashable.com | 35 Minutes Ago Brenna Ehrlich 2 | Posted 05.25.2011
Google has added an awesome little Easter Egg to the service when one surfs through maps of South Africa: a vuvuzela clutched in peg man's hot little ...
AP | Posted 05.25.2011
WIMBLEDON, England — Quiet, please. Organizers are making sure there will be no racket from vuvuzelas at the Wimbledon tennis championships....
FanHouse | Posted 05.25.2011
World Cup organizers are considering a vuvuzela ban at World Cup 2010. What's the vuvuzela, and why ban it? The vuvuzela is the horn responsible for t...
Roger I. Abrams | Posted 05.25.2011
The egregious mistakes made by World Cup field officials are far more insufferable than the incessant vuvuzelas. These kinds of errors, made while the world is watching, can be both embarrassing and dangerous.
AOL News | Andrew Schneider | Posted 05.25.2011
The South African researchers found the noise in the stadium "reached dangerously high levels," averaging 131 decibels but up to 144 decibels. At thes...
Posted 05.25.2011
As if car bombs and train accidents weren't enough to disturb New Yorkers, now we have to deal with this Vuvuzela Guy. Maybe the plastic horn is real...
Posted 05.25.2011
If you've seen any World Cup match so far - or for that matter know anyone with a TV - you've heard the sound: BZZZZZZZZZZ. It's awful. And it never s...
Posted 05.25.2011
Don't worry Yankees fans, your ears are safe. While the vuvuzela -- those plastic horns that sound like a swarm of bees-- has quickly become the scou...
Huffington Post | Catharine Smith | Posted 05.25.2011
What's the latest buzz about the FIFA World Cup? It's more of a buzzing sound, and it's coming from thousands of soccer enthusiasts blowing on their v...
Jim O'Grady | Posted 05.25.2011
Noting how viewers of the World Cup love the song of the vuvuzela, FIFA has decided that future tournaments will encourage fans of the host nation to ...
HuffingtonPost.com | Jason Linkins | Posted 05.25.2011
We may be helpless in the face of the oil that's spilling into the Gulf of Mexico but, by God, if you are as sick as I am of hearing the terrifying "D...
Posted 05.25.2011
If you've watched any matches of World Cup 2010, you've surely heard it: an ongoing buzzing noise filling the stadium. What is that buzzing sound? ...
Craig Kanalley | Posted 05.25.2011
Despite some legitimate criticisms of the horns, the vuvuzela is all about South African pride. It has become a huge part of the country's identity and it has united a people. It's not time to silence the noisemaker.
Cracked.com | David Moye | Posted 01.27.2012