UK women rushing to buy fake eyelashes to look like Cheryl Cole

London, April 28 (ANI): Women in Liverpool, Newcastle and Manchester are rushing to get fake eyelashes to copy the look of stars like Cheryl Cole.

According to Debenhams, there are girls who wear three pairs of the eyelashes at the same time to look attractive, reports The Daily Express.

Last year, sales increased by more than 1,000 per cent in the company’s stores.

Natural-looking glue-on strips cost 5-pound per pair, while extravagant 15 pounds lashes dotted with crystals are a sell-out.

“We have had to send emergency stock to certain stores to cope with the Friday and Saturday night demand,” said Sarah Meadows, cosmetics buyer at Debenhams. (ANI)

Shocking tapes reveal what MJ really thought about his family

London, September 20 (ANI): Michael Jackson had launched a string of verbal attacks on his family in secret taped interviews, it has emerged.

The King of Pop lashed out at his brothers Jackie, Tito, Jermaine, and Marlon in the Jackson 5, calling them lazy moaners and dubbing them, one by one, as dull, a copycat, a womaniser and argumentative.

The singer then went on to criticize sisters La Toya and Janet, and even called mum Katherine “disappointing” in the tapes recorded with the ghost writer of his autobiography Moonwalk, reports News of the World.

And after realising that he may have gone too far in his rants, Jackson snapped: “You can’t print that.”

He reportedly said: “The brothers didn’t give me support. We’d be working on a TV show or video and they’d be sitting around moaning and groaning but I’d be watching and learning. It takes a talent, but some people are lazy and don’t want to develop anything.”

On Tito: “Tito is into the anatomy of how a car is built. He is a grease monkey. He still goes to the hobby shop and buys airplanes and flys them. He loves putting them together – they’re on these plastic things and you glue them. That is so boring.”

On Marlon: “People used to call him ugly and make fun of him – and people would say, ‘Which brother is that one?’. He constantly imitates me on stage. Whatever I do he’ll do right after me. I hate when that happens because he looks too “doo woppy” and so old-fashioned.”

On Jermaine: “Jermaine would be either be looking for girls or going along with the jokes.”

On Jackie: “He approaches everything with so much negativity and doubting.”

On Randy: “He doesn’t listen and is real hard-headed. You say it’s dark – he’ll say it’s daylight. And he has to be macho. I’ll never forget the day we had a meeting with our producer who said you’ve got to stand up on your own. Randy stood up and said: “I’m a man’ – we are all started laughing.”

On his mum, whom he always insisted as “the closest person in his life, a great mother and provider”, he said: “She disappointed me. She did an interview (about him). I don’t like her to talk. It’s none of those people’s business.”

He added, “She wished she would have had all boys. She told my sisters that – and they agreed! That’s how my sisters are – they are prejudiced against other girls.”

On La Toya: “To me she is Mrs Nice and Nasty. I come in her room (and she says), ‘You can’t sit on her couch, sit on the bed or walk on the carpet’, She wants to keep everything fresh.

“If you cough at the table she covers her plate. If you sneeze forget it, she’s in another room. If you clear your throat, you can’t do that while she is eating. And forget about going to the movies. She doesn’t understand what I see in Star Wars, Close Encounters or Jaws.”

On Janet: “Janet is a tomboy. That is why it kills me to see her off and married. We did everything together and were just alike. We write a whole schedule for the day and follow it. It’s a terrible loss.”

On dad Joe: “I would suffer if I had to spend a whole day with him. He is a very jealous father. He isn’t gonna show you love, but anybody that gets closer to us than him he would tell them, ‘Leave my boys alone!’.”

“To tell you the truth, I never have felt close to him. He has always been like a mystery man.” (ANI)

Artist recreates Taj Mahal – with toothpicks!

London, September 12 (ANI): An artist has recreated the Taj Mahal and other famous landmarks around the world using toothpicks.

It took Stan Munro six years, six million toothpicks and more than 170 litres of glue as he built his latest exhibition, entitled ‘Toothpick City II – Temples and Towers’.

The 38-year-old’s models at the Museum of Science and Technology in Syracuse, New York, feature buildings such as Big Ben, Tower Bridge, The Vatican and Sydney’s Opera House.

“Toothpick City was so much fun to build, I decided to build another one. This one is bigger and much more detailed,” the Telegraph quoted him as saying.

“I want this exhibit to be a celebration of religious diversity, architectural achievement and historical accuracy – or just ‘wow, that’s a lot of toothpicks’.

“No one has built all these buildings to the same scale and put them side by side before – let alone out of toothpicks.

“I really wanted to see what it would look like. If you can’t travel the world, I want people to see this exhibit and think they just did,” he added. (ANI)

Dita Von Teese reveals her nipple flashing fear

New Delhi, Aug 31 (ANI): Dita Von Teese has said that one of her biggest fears while performing on stage is to lose her nipple tassels.

The burlesque dancer uses extra-strong glue to ensure that her crystal-decorated breast accessories do not slip out of place, and flash too much flesh.

“I use serious waterproof glue, because I’m in a martini glass. Crystals are heavy and there’s a lot going on,” she said.

Her favourite routine sees the 36-year-old dancer pour water over her near-naked body from a foam olive, while sitting in a giant martini glass, reports The China Daily.

“I’ve got a shower of water going down from the olive, so I’ve got to have something serious. I can’t afford to lose a nipple tassel during my show,” she said. (ANI)

Sandcastle worm’s glue inspires powerful medical adhesive to repair bones

Washington, Aug 18 (ANI): In a major breakthrough, researchers have duplicated the natural glue secreted by a tiny sea creature called the sandcastle worm, for developing a long-sought medical adhesive needed to repair bones shattered in battlefield injuries, car crashes and other accidents.

Dr. Russell Stewart, who led the study, said that the traditional method of repairing shattered bones is to use mechanical connectors like nails, pins and metal screws for support until they can bear weight.

But achieving and maintaining alignment of small bone fragments using screws and wires is challenging.

Thus, for precise reconstruction of small bones, health officials have acknowledged that a biocompatible, biodegradable adhesive could be valuable because it would reduce metal hardware in the body while maintaining proper alignment of fractures.

So the researchers copied the glue that sandcastle worms (Phragmatopoma californica) use while building their homes in intertidal surf by sticking together bits of sand and broken sea shells.

“This synthetic glue is based on complex coacervates, an ideal but so far unexploited platform for making injectable adhesives. The idea of using natural adhesives in medicine is an old one dating back to the first investigations of mussel adhesives in the 1980s. Yet almost 30 years later there are no adhesives based on natural adhesives used in the clinic,” said Stewart.

The inch-long marine worm had to overcome several adhesive challenges in order to glue together its underwater house, and its ingenuity has served as a recipe for Stewart’s research team in developing the synthetic adhesive.

Stewart’s challenge was to devise a water-based adhesive that remained insoluble in wet environments and was able to bond to wet objects.

The researchers also concentrated on key details of the natural adhesive solidification process – a poorly timed hardening of the glue would make it useless, he said.

They learned the natural glue sets in response to changes in pH, a mechanism that was copied into the synthetic glue.

Stewart said that the new glue has passed toxicity studies in cell culture.

It is at least as strong as Super Glue and is twice as strong as the natural adhesive it mimics, he noted.

“We recognized that the mechanism used by the sandcastle worm is really a perfect vehicle for producing an underwater adhesive. This glue, just like the worm’s glue, is a fluid material that, although it doesn’t mix with water, is water soluble,” said Stewart.

Stewart has begun pilot studies focused on delivering bioactive molecules in the adhesive that could allow it to fix bone fragments and deliver medicines to the fracture site, such as antibiotics, pain relievers or compounds that might accelerate healing.he study was presented at the 238th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society (ACS). (ANI)

Mom is Christiano Ronaldo’s No1 woman

London, July 8 (ANI): Although girls all over the world drool over Christiano Ronaldo, his mom remains to be the number one woman in his life.

Speaking of her relationship with the football ace, his mom Dolores Aveiro has revealed that she is the woman behind his phenomenal success.

The football ace, who was unveiled by Real Madrid last night in front of 80,000 fans, always turns to his mother for advice.

And Dolores is thrilled that her son, 24, has made the 80million pounds move to her favourite Real Madrid from Manchester United.

“Everything in his world is sunshine. I am so happy and proud. He’s delighted to be playing for Real Madrid and having lots of fun,” the Daily Star quoted her as saying.

The Portuguese winker even takes romantic advice from his mom, who gave him approval to let his hair down this summer with a bevy of beauties, including heiress Paris Hilton, 28.

“I encourage him to go out and meet different girls while he is young and single. He’s got to enjoy himself. But he is not a playboy, despite his image,” said Dolores.

A family friend has revealed how Dolores remains a huge influence on her son’s life.

“She is a very wise woman with a strong personality. Mother and son talk every day and every decision is made by both of them,” she said.

She added: “She is like the glue that keeps the family bonded. She’s even made sure that there’s no jeal­ousy towards Cristiano from his brothers and sisters. The whole family is very proud of him and wish him the all the best. He had a very humble upbringing and she went through a lot of difficulties to help her son achieve what he has.

She helped make him the superstar that he is today.” (ANI)

Yahoo Brings Social News Site Buzz to India

Yahoo Brings Social News Site Buzz to IndiaYahoo introduced on Thursday to India its Buzz social news site, which identifies the top news stories and blog posts based on user votes and search patterns.

India is the first market outside the U.S. to get Buzz. Over 60 percent of Internet users in the country are younger than 25 years old, and there is a lot of interest among users in social media tools such as Buzz, said Frazier Miller, head of audience at Yahoo India.

Yahoo often tests out new technologies in India, one of the company’s key markets. Before rolling it out in the U.S, Yahoo tested in India its new Glue search concept that aggregates text, images and video results on a single page.

There are a lot of similarities between the U.S. and Indian market, such as the use of the English language, which makes it easier for products from the U.S. to be introduced quickly in India and vice versa, Miller said.

Yahoo is planning on introducing its products across a number of markets at the same time, Miller added.

Buzz helps Yahoo understand people’s interests and improve the relevance of content on its Indian home page, Yahoo said on Thursday. Buzz also helps publishers deliver their best content to Yahoo’s broad and diverse audience, it added.

Content from over 20,000 publishers worldwide has been submitted to Yahoo Buzz since it launched in the U.S. last year.

Yahoo Buzz in India already features content from over two dozen local publishers. Online publishers can place a Yahoo Buzz button on their Web pages to enable readers to share and vote on stories.

Yahoo does not have immediate plans to introduce Buzz in Indian languages even though it runs some of its Web sites in local languages. In the future, Yahoo may integrate advertisements into Buzz in order to generate revenue, Miller said.

Stone Age humans made ‘superglue’ 70,000yrs ago

Washington, May 12 (ANI): Stone Age humans who lived about 70,000 years ago were such good chemists that they made a sophisticated kind of natural glue by tweaking the chemical and physical properties of an iron-containing pigment, known as red ochre, with the gum of acacia trees for their shafted tools, according to a study.

While it has long been believed that the blood-red pigment served a decorative or symbolic purpose, scientists also suspected that the pigment might have been purposely added to improve glue that held the peoples’ tools together.

With a view to testing this idea, researchers at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa, recreated the ancient glue using only Stone Age materials and technologies.

The results showed that glue containing red ochre was less brittle and more shatterproof than glue made from acacia gum alone.

“We discovered that when we used ochre, the glue is much more robust, and the stone tool doesn’t come off the shaft,” National Geographic News quoted study team member Lyn Wadley as saying.

The researchers also believe that making the glue was mentally taxing work that would have needed the ancient people to account for differences in the chemistry of gum harvested from different trees, and in the iron content of ochre from different sites.

“They couldn’t possibly have known about chemical pH or iron content … but they knew that certain combinations of things worked very well,” Wadley said.

She further said that the intelligence of Stone Age humans was more akin to that of modern humans than previously thought.

“Our study shows that there’s a lot of overlap between ourselves and these ancient people. Their technology was a lot more competent than we have given them credit for.”

A research article on this work has been published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

Snails’ natural glue can be used to develop better surgical adhesives

Washington, May 3 (ANI): Researchers at Ithaca College, US, have shed new light on the nature of the adhesive mechanism that snails use to attach themselves onto slippery surfaces, which could lead to developing surgical adhesives that would bind to wet surfaces and be less invasive than suturing mechanisms.

This research follows up on an earlier study that identified the key characteristics controlling this transition from a water-based gel into a powerful yet flexible adhesive.The strength of the natural adhesive comes from the way long, rope-like polymers chemically tie together, or cross link, at certain points,” said Andrew Smith, associate professor of biology.

“In our previous studies, we had shown that metals were essential to the formation of cross-links. This is unusual, as some combination of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions are commonly responsible for the formation of cross-links in other gels,” he added.lectrostatic interactions occur when a negatively charged group on one polymer is attracted to a positively charged group on another.

Hydrophobic interactions take place when regions of a polymer don’t interact with water, so they stick together to avoid contacting water.

“We used several approaches to break these interactions, and the treatments that normally disrupt them had no impact on the glue’s mechanical integrity or ability to set,” Smith said. Our study conclusively showed that electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions do not play any detectable role. Removing metals alone caused the glue to fall apart. This was exciting and unexpected,” he added.

Removing the metals, however, didn’t completely break down the gel.

The researchers discovered that a specific protein was responsible for forming strong cross-links that were unaffected when the metals were removed after the glue set. ut, when metals were removed before the glue set, the cross-links didn’t form.This is a very unusual material we’re looking at,” Smith said. “By discovering that metals are central to forming cross-links, we know there are several intriguing mechanisms that could hold the glue together,” he added.

For example, zinc, calcium and iron ions can bind very strongly to several molecules at the same time, thereby effectively joining them together. Iron and copper can also catalyze reactions that trigger strong cross-link formation.

“The significance of this is that we are much farther along the path to our goal of identifying how the glue works so that synthetic mimics can be made,” Smith said. (ANI)

Gisele Bundchen keen to adopt a Brazilian child

Washington, Mar 31 (ANI): Supermodel Gisele Bundchen, who recently walked down the aisle with American footballer Tom Brady, is desperate to adopt a Brazilian child with him.

She revealed her intention of making a difference in the life of a Brazilian under-privileged child, and giving him the best in life.

“I would also love to adopt a child from Brazil. When you come from Sao Paulo, you see five-year-olds sniffing glue on the corner. You think, if you make a difference in the life of one of them, that makes your time on this Earth worthwhile,” Contactmusic quoted her as telling Vanity Fair magazine.

Bundchen further said that she was also very fond of her husband’s lovechild John Edward Thomas Moynahan.

She got married to Brady in a catholic ceremony on February 26, and the couple are now reported to be planning a second wedding ceremony and reception for family and pals. (ANI)

‘Ghostly’ sex shop signs irk new florist owner!

London, March 22 (ANI): A florist has an embarrassing problem to deal with – her new shop just won’t let go of its past of trading in sex toys.

Clare Ross would try to scrape off the letters on the windows of her Willows flower shop every morning in Reigate, Surrey.

But the “ghostly” letters of licensed sex shop would return to the same spot the next day.

“We have done everything we can to get rid of it but it just won’t go,” the Telegraph quoted her as saying.Every day it’s back. I knew this place had been a sex shop but it was completely empty when we took it over. There were no signs of its past at all.

“Then suddenly these huge letters appeared in the morning condensation saying licensed sex shop above our Interflora sign.

“We are trying to sell love and romance, not sex,” she added.

The 40-year-old, who co-owns the place with her mother Shirley, continued: “We did everything we could to get rid of the ghostly letters that came back to haunt us.

“We had a professional cleaner in, tried lighter fluid, petrol, scouring pads. Nothing worked. The glue from the sticky lettering has seeped right into the glass and the history is locked away there.

“The only way to get rid of it would be to replace the whole window. But now everyone has got used to it, it’s become a bit of a talking point.

“People come in to ask us if we realise there is sex shop emblazoned on our window and end up buying flowers, so maybe we’ll keep it.” (ANI)

‘Glue’ produced by shellfish and inkjet printers may make for faster healing from surgeries

Washington, March 18 (ANI): North Carolina State University researchers have used the natural glue that marine mussels use to stick to rocks, and a variation on the inkjet printer, to devise a new way to make medical adhesives that can hold key to faster healing from surgeries.

The researchers say that the their technique may help replace traditional sutures, and lead to faster recovery times and increased precision for exacting operations like eye surgery.

Sutures and synthetic adhesives have been in use for joining tissue together in the wake of a surgery.

Though sutures work well, they require enormous skill and longer operating times. Their use is also associated with a number of surgical complications, including discomfort, infection and inflammation.

Synthetic adhesives, though widely used, are the source of increasing concerns over their toxicological and environmental effects.

Since non-biodegradable synthetic medical adhesives do not break down in the body, they may lead to medical problems.

The new study shows that adhesive proteins found in the “glue” produced by marine mussels may be used in place of the synthetic adhesives without such concerns, as they are non-toxic and biodegradable.

Dr. Roger Narayan, one of the authors of the study, says that the mussel proteins can be placed in solution and applied using inkjet technology to create customized medical adhesives, which may have a host of applications.

He thinks that this approach may “significantly improve wound repair in eye surgery, wound closure and fracture fixation.”

“This is an improved way of joining tissues because the use of the inkjet technology gives you greater control over the placement of the adhesive. This helps ensure that the tissues are joined together in just the right spot, forming a better bond that leads to improved healing and less scarring,” Narayan says.

The researcher adds that this increased control would be a boon for surgery that relies on extreme precision, such as eye repair.

A research article on this study appears in the Journal of Biomedical Materials Research B. (ANI)

‘Nanostitching’ could make airplanes 10 times stronger

Washington, March 5 (ANI): The future of flight seems safe, with engineers at MIT using carbon nanotubes only billionths of a meter thick to stitch together aerospace materials in work that could make airplane skins and other products some 10 times stronger at a nominal increase in cost.

Moreover, advanced composites reinforced with nanotubes are also more than one million times more electrically conductive than their counterparts without nanotubes, meaning aircraft built with such materials would have greater protection against damage from lightning, according to Brian L. Wardle, from the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, MIT.

The advanced materials currently used for many aerospace applications are composed of layers, or plies, of carbon fibers that in turn are held together with a polymer glue.

But, that glue can crack and otherwise result in the carbon-fiber plies coming apart.

As a result, engineers have explored a variety of ways to reinforce the interface between the layers by stitching, braiding, weaving or pinning them together.

All of these processes, however, are problematic because the relatively large stitches or pins penetrate and damage the carbon -fiber plies themselves.

“And those fiber plies are what make composites so strong,” Wardle said.

So, Wardle wondered whether it would make sense to reinforce the plies in advanced composites with nanotubes aligned perpendicular to the carbon-fiber plies.

Using computer models of how such a material would fracture, “we convinced ourselves that reinforcing with nanotubes should work far better than all other approaches,” Wardle said.

His team went on to develop processing techniques for creating the nanotubes and for incorporating them into existing aerospace composites.

As to how nanostitching works, the research team said that the polymer glue between two carbon-fiber layers is heated, becoming more liquid-like.

Billions of nanotubes positioned perpendicular to each carbon-fiber layer are then sucked up into the glue on both sides of each layer.

Because the nanotubes are 1000 times smaller than the carbon fibers, they don’t detrimentally affect the much larger carbon fibers, but instead fill the spaces around them, stitching the layers together.

“So, we’re putting the strongest fibers known to humankind (the nanotubes) in the place where the composite is weakest, and where they’re needed most,” Wardle said. (ANI)

Controversial Fritzl satirical play opens in Vienna amid death threats

London, Feb 24 (ANI): A controversial stage comedy inspired by the case of Josef Fritzl, the Austrian man who fathered seven children with his daughter while keeping her captive in his cellar, has opened in Vienna.

The play, described as a satire, opened under heavy security after the director received death threats.

Originally called Pension Frizl: A Cellar Soap, the title was changed to Pension F: The Ultimate Media Satire following nationwide protests that culminated in vandalism attacks against the 3raum-anatomietheater, where the premiere is taking place in the presence of police and private security.

Hubert Hubsi Kramar, a controversial actor, has written and directed the Fritzl play and plays the main role.

Speaking on the phone from the stage immediately before the performance, Mr Kramar, 60, told The Telegraph: “I have received anonymous death threats, the exterior of the theatre was vandalised, and people ripped the promotion posters and put glue in the lock of the stage entrance door.”

He said tickets for the first night had sold out, mainly to foreign journalists.

Kramar, a Harvard graduate, said that he had to hire a private security company, in addition to requesting police protection, in order to guarantee the safety of his ensemble and the theatre staff.

“It is all a result of a smear campaign after the tabloid press immediately assumed it was an incest comedy poking fun at the victims of a terrible crime, which is of course not true.

“The piece is actually based on the media coverage of the case, it is a satire that deals with the depiction of victims and perpetrators and culminates in a tragedy about the role of media and politics,” Kramar said.

Fritzl, 73, a retired engineer and property developer, will appear in court on March 16 for incarcerating his daughter Elisabeth, 42, for over 24 years in a purpose-built concrete dungeon connected to the cellar beneath his home in the town of Amstetten.

He has been charged with murder, as well as false imprisonment, rape, incest, slavery and coercion. (ANI)

Bio-scientists, curators pool expertise to preserve world’s art, heritage

Washington, Feb 9 (IANS) Biotech scientists have teamed up with curators to stem the decay of world’s art and cultural heritage, hastened by the depredations of climate change.

Many of the world’s cultural treasures are created out of organic materials like paper, canvas, wood and leather which, in prolonged warmth and dampness, attract mould, micro-organisms and insects, causing decay and disintegration.

‘With the world financial crisis and the advent of climate change effects, there is a state of emergency at the museums of several tropical countries…,’ informed Alvaro Gonzalez, director, Venezuela’s Cultural Heritage Conservation Foundation, which is hosting the four-day UN affiliated event.

New biotechnology techniques that will be deliberated upon, include the use of micro-organisms to remove fungus and other problems on artwork, photos, documents, masonry and more.

‘The normal concern about single artefacts is no longer paramount. Storing and protecting entire collections safely has become a priority and scientists have a key role: developing techniques and procedures that are fundamental to heritage conservation,’ said Jose-Luis Ramirez, director of United Nations University’s Programme for Biotechnology for Latin America and the Caribbean (UNU-BIOLAC), an event sponsor.

Giancarlo Ranalli, professor at Universitá degli Studi del Molise in Pesche, Italy, for example, will describe his successful use of micro-organisms instead of chemicals to remove black crusts, nitrates, sulphates and other alterations from masonry, as well as unwanted animal glue from important painted frescos in Pisa and elsewhere in Italy subjected to well-intentioned but ill-advised restoration and preservation attempts in the 1980s.

His masonry restoration work has included the base of Michelangelo’s Pietà Rondanini and the Cathedrals of Milan and Matera.

Similarly, Sofía Borrego Alonso of the Archivo Nacional de la República de Cuba, said using costly chemical biocides to combat infestations of micro-organisms and insects, the principal agents of biodeterioration of cultural documents, not only harms the people that apply them, they accelerate the materials’ deterioration.

She will advocate the use of natural, plant-derived products successfully tested in Cuba’s National Archives.

Spanish researcher Nieves Valentin Rodrigo of the Instituto de Patrimonio Cultural de España, Madrid, takes the idea a step further, promoting the use of micro-organisms as bio-sensors to forewarn curators of potential risks to art objects from such threats as pollution and dust levels.

She said fungi and bacteria can be harnessed to warn of significant environmental fluctuations and the impact of too many visitors.

Besides biotechnologies, experts will revisit ancient ideas such as the Japanese technique of preserving frail items within multiple boxes. And they will highlight the potential use of styrofoam packaging to economically protect items from rising heat, humidity and other environmental hazards, said an UNU-BIOLAC release.

The Institute of History of Cuba will describe its innovative method to assess objectively the state of heritage photo and document collections, while experts from the Philippines will outline their system of ranking artwork restoration priorities.

Lady GaGa’s latest song too naughty to handle

London, Jan 15 (ANI): Pop star Lady GaGa has dazed all with her follow up to her chart-topping ‘Just Dance’, as it is filled with naughty-violent lyrics.

The song in question is X-rated ‘Poker Face’, and it features lyrics about guns, gambling and much more.

‘Poker Face’ features lyrics like: “I wanna roll with him a hard pair we will be/ A little gambling is fun when you’re with me.

“Russian Roulette is not the same without a gun/ And baby when it’s love if it’s not rough it isn’t fun, fun, fun.”

The song sends a message of using guns and gambling to Lady GaGa’s young fans, reports the Sun.

Other lyrics are as follows “I won’t tell you that I love you/ Kiss or hug you.

“Cause I’m bluffin’ with my muffin. I’m not lying I’m just stunning with my love glue gunning. Bluffin’ with my muffin? Love glue? ” (ANI)