Seahawks Destroy A Bronco
At the Scrap-It in Ferndale, Washington, the Seattle fans are certainly creative. Employees had a Ford Bronco painted up in Denver Bronco livery and destroyed it with some Seahawk-themed heavy equipment.
At the Scrap-It in Ferndale, Washington, the Seattle fans are certainly creative. Employees had a Ford Bronco painted up in Denver Bronco livery and destroyed it with some Seahawk-themed heavy equipment.
For an interactive design assignment, Geoffrey Guterl interfaced a piano with an Xbox 360 as a controller. Here's the demonstration video with the game Tekken.
Get ready to ditch your Segway - the electric, self-balancing, one-wheeled skateboard is here, courtesy of OneWheel. The Kickstarter video for the project shows such high-tech features as motion sensors and a hub-mounted motor, letting you simply lean forward to speed up, and lean back to slow down.
Meet the Roborock Saros 10R — smartest and most relentless cleaning machine Roborock has ever built. Standing just 7.98cm tall, it slips effortlessly under sofas, beds, and tight corners, leaving no dust untouched and no excuse for a mess. Its StarSight Autonomous System 2.0 reads and maps your home with surgical precision, gliding across carpet and hard floors with zero hair tangling and total coverage. Engineered to clean what you can't see, the Saros 10R turns precision into perfection — all while you sit back and breathe in the quiet satisfaction of spotless living.
Presented by Roborock.
SHRED turns your phone into a hyper-personal trainer. With AI-adapted programs built by top fitness coaches, it molds workouts to your goals, schedule, and equipment—whether you're lifting at home or hitting the gym. Want hypertrophy, weight loss, or bodyweight routines? It's got you. Track progress, grab feedback, and swap plans seamlessly as you improve. Think: coach-designed results without the gym clock drama.
Presented by SHRED.
In late-1800s Arizona, the wild west was a lawless, dangerous place — and this town has some extremely bad luck to go with it. Watch Charlize Theron, Amanda Seyfried, Liam Neeson, Neil Patrick Harris, and Sarah SIlverman try to survive the American West in the latest film from Seth MacFarlane. In theaters May 30, 2014.
Newcastle almost made a Super Bowl commercial starring almost-celebrity Anna Kendrick - but they didn't. Here's the behind-the-scenes footage of the Super Bowl commercial that never was.
Oakland Raiders wideout Rod Streater hears what he wants - and steals cookies from little girls. Watch this great parody of the Hear What You Want - Beats by Dre commercials by the Who Has It app team.
If the new YouTube comment system has you down, BuzzFeed has some super-top-secret easter eggs that will brighten your comment-trolling day.
Sperry Coldbay 3‑Eye Duck Shoes delivers classic duck-boot functionality in a polished, low-profile package built for wet weather and cold seasons. A waterproof rubber shell and premium leather upper keep your feet dry while the thermal lining stamps out chill, and the molded Wave-Siping outsole delivers stable traction whether you're walking in rain, snow, or muddy conditions. The three-eye lace-up construction and higher-cut silhouette give it a rugged-meets-refined feel, making it easy to pair with jeans, flannel, or workwear for everyday winter wear. It's a practical, weather-ready boot that skips the fuss while delivering comfort and utility.
Presented by Sperry.
The Fold Bitcoin Gift Card™ makes gifting simple and meaningful. Each gift card lets you give up to $500 in bitcoin securely. Put the world's best-performing asset of the past decade directly into someone's hands. Available at Kroger stores nationwide and online.
Presented by Fold.
Beginning in 1977 — largely in part to this hit movie called Star Wars — the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences reintroduced a Academy Award category for visual effects with the new and current moniker, "Best Visual Effects". Here's a compilation with a clip from every winner since, from Superman to Life of Pi.
Go behind the scenes in Vegas to see how the oddsmakers pull in $100 million for the casinos every Super Bowl Sunday in this short from The New York Times' Matthew Orr and Joe Drape.