9/30
A father was caught on camera whipping his two teenage daughters brutally with a cable wire for posting to Facebook a s**ually suggestive "t**ng" video.However, according to The Blaze, the man shown in the clip above allegedly whipped his daughters for filming and posting to Facebook a video showing them doing a dance move called "t**ng" in which they shake their behinds in a s**ually provocative manner.
10/2
I read about how Micheal Jordan said " he could beat LeBron 1-on-1 in his prime, but not Kobe, because ‘he steals all my moves.LOL !!! . In a one-on-one matchup between M.J. and LeBron is the kind of cla**ic barroom argument that necessarily ultimately goes nowhere.
10/3
LeBron James might not have been the first player to make a talcum powder toss part of his pregame ritual, but he's certainly the most famed practitioner of recent vintage. The creation of a cloud over the scorer's table prior to tipoff became a nightly staple during James' days with the Cleveland Cavaliers, even inspiring one of the cooler James-focused commercials Nike produced during his time in Ohio. James brought the practice to South Beach when he joined the Miami Heat in the summer of 2010 and earned a bit of nasty pub for revisiting it at Quicken Loans Arena during his first road game against the Cavaliers following the move; then again, just about everything James did that year earned him a bit of nasty pub.
10/4
Brooklyn Nets head coach Jason Kidd has been suspended two games for pleading guilty to driving while his abilities were impaired, the NBA announced Friday morning.Kidd was arrested in the early hours of July 15, 2012 — mere days after signing a contract to become the newest member of the New York Knicks — on suspicion of drunk driving after crashing his 2010 Cadillac Escalade into a wooden telephone pole near his Long Island, N.Y., home. Earlier this summer, after retiring from the NBA and becoming the Nets' new head coach, Kidd pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor drunken driving charge, but was able to secure a deal that allowed for a change in the official charge.