Archive for January, 2012

Raw Video: Obama Sings Al Green

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‘I would never consider doing it in a million years’: Woman with two vaginas rejects $1million offer to make adult film

By: Maysa Rawi – Dailymail.co.uk

A woman with two vaginas who has captured the attention of the porn industry has said she would never consider accepting any role in a film.

Hazel Jones appeared on TV earlier this week,  where she revealed she was diagnosed with ‘uterus didelphys’ – a condition which means she has two wombs and two cervixes.

The 27-year-old has since been approached by Vivid Entertainment, a U.S. adult film production company.

But the horrified blonde, from High Wycombe, claims she would turned down any deal.

According to This Morning, she said: ‘I have never received any offers of this kind of work nor would I never consider doing it in a million years.

‘I just want to be left alone.’

The response comes after founder of Vivid Steven Hirsch  wrote a letter to Ms Jones offering her $1m to star in one of his films, TMZ.com revealed.

In the letter, Hirsch wrote: ‘You are obviously an extraordinary woman and I would like to make you an offer to star in an upcoming Vivid production.
‘We would pay you up to $1 million for your services.’Hirsch also promised to cover travel and accommodation expenses, as the film would be shot in Los Angeles.

Hirsch wrote: ‘We would fly you out to L.A. as soon as you are available and provide you with first class accommodations’

A spokesperson for Vivid confirmed the offer, saying: ‘It’s true.

‘Steven made an offer to Hazel Jones.’

Vivid became the first studio to introduce celebrity sex tapes, showing footage of Pamela Anderson and then-husband Tommy Lee and Kim Kardashian.

Hazel Jones has yet to respond to the offer.

But she told ITV’s This Morning she was comfortable with having the condition - despite the fact she had to effectively lose her virginity twice.

‘Once I found out what it was I told everybody,’ she told TV hosts Holly Willoughby and Phillip Schofield.

‘I thought it was amazing and it’s definitely an ice-breaker at parties’

She added: ‘If women want to have a look, I’m quite happy to show them, it’s not something I’m embarrassed by.’

Hazel went to the doctor after her long-term boyfriend told her she was ‘different’ in the genital area.

Hazel said previously she had found sex very uncomfortable, but now she didn’t suffer any adverse effects.

She turned down surgery as it could have left significant scar tissue.

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The Woman with Two Vaginas!


By: Tony Pringle – Scottsdale, AZ
Market Mix Up | MarketMixUp.com

(Scottsdale, AZ) Hazel Jones has made headlines worldwide and raised eyebrows by most men when she went on a British Talk show to discuss her unique medical condition. To better understand Hazel’s unusual condition know as “Uterus Didelphys”. Hazel was born with two separate uteruses, cervixes, and vaginas.

From the interview seen above, Jones didn’t realize her condition until she was 18 and her serious boyfriend at the time told her something was different. While her Mother and doctors didnt’ notice her unique condition at birth. Jones was faced with some challenges when she began to have her period. She even asked one of her friends which hole to put the tampon in. Due to the embarrassment this caused because her friends started to make fun of her. She kept her mouth shut for a while. But every time she had her period, she’d suffer terrible cramps.

Now that Hazel Jones has appeared on talk shows, she has been offered a $million to appear in a porn movie. That’s $500,000 for each vagina… but unfortunately, Hazel turned rejected the offer.

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Mimic Octopus and Jawfish

A new film captures a circular game of copycat: a fish that mimics an octopus that mimics fish.

First described by scientists in 1998, the remarkable mimic octopus (Thaumoctopus mimicus) can shift its shape, movements and color to impersonate toxic lionfish, flatfish and even sea snakes. Such mimicry allows it to swim in the open with relatively little fear of predators.

The black-marble jawfish (Stalix histrio), on the other hand, is a small, timid fish. It spends most of its adult life close to a sand burrow that serves as its hideout if a predator comes along.

“All jawfish are really specialized for living in burrows,” said researcher Luiz Rocha, an ichthyologist at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco. “They’re almost never found outside their burrows.”

Unexpectedly, during a diving trip in Indonesia in July, researcher Godehard Kopp of the University of Gottingen in Germany filmed a partnership between the pair of animals. He saw what appeared to be a black-marble jawfish closely tagging behind the octopus as it moved across the sandy seafloor. The jawfish possessed brown-and-white markings similar to ones on the octopus it was following that made it difficult to spot among its many arms. The octopus, for its part, did not seem to notice or care for its entourage. [ Watch the video ]

“It’s a pretty unique observation of mimicry — most of the time, a mimicking animal doesn’t actually follow the model it is mimicking,” Rocha told LiveScience. “But the mimicry wouldn’t work otherwise for this jawfish.”

The researchers suggest the jawfish hitches a ride with the octopus in order to safely venture away from its burrow to look for food.
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“The jawfish found a way to get around in the open and not get eaten by anything else,” Rocha said. “It’s not a good swimmer, so any grouper or snapper or predatory fish would easily grab it otherwise.”

In Rocha’s opinion, this jawfish evolved its brown-and-white coloration first and then later discovered the advantage of sticking close to the octopus. “Those jawfish that did gain this advantage survived more often and got more offspring, so this behavior spread throughout the population,” he explained.

“Unfortunately, reefs in the Coral Triangle area of southeast Asia are rapidly declining mostly due to harmful human activities,” Rocha said. “We may lose species involved in unique interactions like this even before we get to know them.”

Rocha, Kopp and their colleague Rich Ross detailed their findings in the December issue of the journal Coral Reefs.

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